Hebe Jebes Jan/Feb 2014 | Page 46

Features Over a few Skype calls, we agreed the ‘conditions’. I was to cook and help with provisions. The cooking was a bit worrying, as I hadn’t really cooked for many years. I was also to carry out solo, alternate threehour watches at night. I would share in the everyday living costs and make a USD 10 daily contribution to some of the costs such as the costly Panama Canal fees. Being keen to do a passage down the Canal, and the overall daily cost being less than my current living expenses in Singapore, I thought this reasonable. It did cross my mind that sailing off with a stranger may have some pitfalls, especially living in a small confined space on a boat which is somebody else’s home, with possibly rough seas. Despite this, I booked my flight to Trinidad to join Moonshadow, with a little trepidation, but looking forward to my adventure. Within a few weeks of being online, and with some dedication to shaping my profile, I had an offer to sail with Richard on his yacht, Moonshadow. Moonshadow is a very pretty 38-ft traditional full-keel cutter, based on a Norwegian lifeboat from the mid 1800s. It’s a Colin Archer–type boat with a long bow sprit and, for the size of boat, it has a large sail area. Despite her weight, she doesn’t need much wind to get sailing. She seemed a safe and solid boat and, whilst not roomy down below, matched the sort of boat I wanted to sail. Richard and his partner from Portland had sailed on Moonshadow westwards around the world over the last 11 years. As his partner has returned to Portland to be with her grandchildren, Richard has been accompanied by various crew members sailing through from the west Mediterranean and over the Atlantic, on to Barbados and Trinidad—where I was to meet up with him as his crew member. We would be sailing on to Panama through the canal and maybe to Costa Rica. He was then planning to return to Portland, sailing up the West Coast via Hawaii, finishing his circumnavigation. 44 Hebe jebes • Jan/Feb 2014 The rest of the story is on my blog site—except for those events that should always stay on the boat (if interested see the archives www.emgtame.wordpress.com). I would do it all again: the three-hour watches, the cooking, the sunsets, those wonderful places of Bonaire Island, Cartagena, San Blas Islands, the interesting towns of Colon and Portobello, our passage in the pouring rain through the Panama Canal and, of course, the many interesting people I met. Many thanks to the Captain and the yacht Moonshadow; I have now had a taster of cruising. 45