Weather dominates the life of a sailor. Yesterday my
daughter was one of a crew delivering a yacht from Brightlingsea to Pin Mill. I
would not have fancied taking her place, because the wind was hovering
around a Force 7 blowing against the flood running down the Wallet. She described
the conditions as very lively, and their trip was not without incident – a smack
boat capsized and the yacht being delivered sustained a damaged bowsprit. For sure, the conditions were too rough
for a little sailboat like ‘Sandpiper’, and I was glad I was not sailing her at the
time.
Today, the wind moderated, and maybe ‘Sandpiper’ could have
coped on the sheltered River Crouch. Instead of being tempted to launch her there
and give her a go, I stayed at home to be with my grandchildren and great
grandchildren. They spent the day with my wife and me so that their parents
could have a break. The tiny tots were a lively bunch – all boys and noisy too,
but they played well together. They had plenty of toys to fire their
imagination and bags of space for running around. Hide-and-seek was the most popular
game, followed by football, a close second.
Together we had a great day, and I delighted in seeing them
so happy, healthy and ‘normal’. We all came out of it unscathed. The children
fell asleep the moment their heads touched their pillows.
Tomorrow will be another adventure for both young and old.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteI have been reading your blog for quite some time now. I just wanted to get round to saying how much I enjoy it and it's an inspiration to how many posts you get out every month.
Certainly puts me to shame.
Really good stuff.
Thank you
Thanks Thom.
ReplyDeleteYour blog majors on quality and content. I’ve been so taken with it, that for the past couple of hours I’ve not been able to tear myself away to do the things I planned to do. I was particularly riveted by your firsthand account of Enza’s capsize.
Life is never the same after such an experience.
Ships Blog According to Thom
http://deckheads.blogspot.co.uk/
Best wishes,
Bill.