We're
back in Whangarei town basin, having now sailed all the way around
this beautiful and sometimes windy country. Whangarei is a convenient
place to stock up and get parts for the boat before we head back to
the pacific islands. The town is quite small so all shops and useful
businesses are close by. We've been doing an awful lot of ordering
and buying around town, a job made significantly quicker, easier and
more fun with our new folding bikes.
We
have been pretty busy getting Impetuous ready for the off as well as
finding a little bit of time to have fun with some friends who like
us left their boat in New Zealand whilst they went back to Europe to
earn some pennies. So busy infact, that we haven't written a new
blog. Fortunately we have a story from the last time we were here
that we never got round to posting. Now that we have our new foam
mattresses, various pretty, hefty and useful bits of bronze and new
kitchen worktops ready to shape and fit at a later date its time to
go. We set out towards Fiji on Sunday.
There
are some facts in this watery life upon a boat that need no
explanation. Why a boat floats or for that matter why they sink. How
altering a foil in the water; the rudder, affects the direction a
boat travels in and why rocks are bad.
There
are other details that though they may take a little pondering over,
are essentially perceptible. The ebb and flow of the tides and their
relationship to the moon and sun or the necessity to trim sail to
take best advantage of the wind direction.
But
occasionally there is a phenomenon which evades all reason! There is
a conspicuous lack of logic. For example, How the concept of sailing
to wind, can usefully be explained by the analogy of squeezing a
dried pea between a thumb and forefinger, why some people motor when
they could be sailing or why boat hooks are not always made to float
if dropped.
There
was undoubtedly a look of disbelief as the pole that had slipped
beyond the tentative grasp of Ruth's outstretched arm fell in to the
harbours still, murky water and didn't float. Petulant with
frustration Ruth muttered a number of choice expletives, which
basically boiled down to 'why doesn't that float'.
Everyone
has dropped a boat hook at least once in there life, surely.
Undoubtedly, more often realised that they were lucky not to have
dropped it. Before long I was cynically pottering around town looking
at potential replacements and it dawned on me that perhaps there was
a conspiracy amongst boat pole manufacturers. Deliberately
manufacturing them to sink, thus ensuring future sales.
The
pole in question was a particularly fine example. Telescopic
stainless steel tubes, a handle that the designer, clearly capable of
having lucid thoughts, had riveted on; Its usually the handle that
slips off the pole, that results in the poles loss. And a variety of
interchangeable heads to collect: hook, brush, mop etc. Giving one
all the enchantment of a child collecting a Worzil Gumage toy. But
best of all we kept the boat hook head in a drawer, so when, and
admittedly rarely was I asked, 'where is the boat hook?' I really
could legitimately say 'Second drawer down of the chart table.'
Still
with an edge of cynicism and melancholy about our loss I tried to
look on the bright side. Several years ago I had bought Ruth a bronze
boat hook head, maybe now was the time to marry it to a pole. Now
you're probably thinking one of several things. How lucky Ruth is to
have a boyfriend who buys her pretty pieces of bronze, perhaps, Or
maybe. Bronze, lovely alloy, great for marine applications, not
generally known for its inclination to float.
As
it happens it was I who was lucky to have Ruth as a girlfriend, for
whilst I searched listlessly for a replacement pole, Ruth searched
stoically for the lost one. With mask and Fins she scoured the drop
zone until triumphant she emerged from the murky effluent rich depth
clutching her very own Excalibur, complete with detachable head.
So
now we are a two pole boat. There, lashed down amongst the dinghy
mast detritus, are the boat hooks. Poking out like twin exhaust
pipes, But somehow poles apart. One made from buoyant wood, the other
a product of a different age, a salesman’s dream, with its multiple
sell 'head variations', contractability and its negative buoyancy.
Safely stored away is the boat hook head in the second draw down of
the chart table ready for me to tell an unsuspecting guest where we
keep our boat hook. Or rather the spare, because now we will use the
one that floats.
Duncan, what happened to the bike you were always on in Houston that you once rode completely around New Zealand? Did you sell it or do you still have it along with the new folding bikes???
ReplyDeleteHi Mike, that bike stayed in new Zealand the first time. The bike you remember was retired again in new Zealand after many years of salty service the rust was too much. The new ones are cheap Chinese so we'll see how long they last!
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