Sunday 6 August 2017

Reformed


I have two different memories of Tom Black. 

In early high school some days it seemed to rain like the apocalypse was upon us.  And in the grey skied aftermath we'd have to scuttle past gaping puddles in the pavement, clutching our folders with eager fingers.  On just such a day a friend and I were making for the canteen.  A group of older boys were loitering by a brick wall the way some boys do, with a gentle bantering "toughness".  One of them I faintly recognised, I thought, to be Tom Black. 

His reputation preceded him; his younger sister, a quasi-friend of mine from primary school, had tattled about his brawls, bad attitude and tertiary suspensions. 

In a moment that hung in my memory on puppeteers strings, three of the boys leapt.  They hung there, halfway to us, a little boisterous and a little menacing.  And then they fell.   Water sprayed in dirty cold arcs, up my legs and across cardboard shield of the folder that I hugged.  I was not certain what I'd expected from the boys. 

I can't recall whether my first reaction was accusation or embarrassment.  I'd like to think I glared in a holier-than-thou accusatory fashion and cowed the trouble makers into submission.  But I have to admit it was more likely that I merely ducked my head and felt needlessly embarrassed.    If I didn't do the latter immediately I certainly did after they started chortling at our expense. 

It was a number of months before I remember seeing the notorious Tom Black again.  Like many of his buddies he'd dropped out of school, tried to join the army I'm told.  He came skulking back to the school again with a crew cut and a pile of textbooks under his arm.  He had a pair of reading glasses and frowned as he deciphered exam papers.  In the library I sat with him for all manner of tests, carefully reading aloud the material and the questions and then watching him so seriously move his pen across the paper in response.  He was one of the ones who tried. 

I read aloud test papers or wrote down dictated answers for countless students in my junior years.   Some were despondent and spent most of the allotted time drawing pictures or staring defiantly out the windows.  I remember one such girl telling me curtly that Celtic was  pronounced with a hard "c" not a soft one.  Or maybe it’s the other way around.  My dictionary (which happens to be six inches thick not that that makes any difference) tells me both  are correct but people do have their foibles.  One boy I read for was the happiest I've ever seen though even at fourteen I was literally double his height.   He truly was a marvel with all the things he could do with just one stunted arm.  We chatted most of our time away but so long as he was okay with that.  The hardest I think were the students for whom English was far from a first language.  It didn't matter that I was a clear and careful speaker, the questions still skirted their understanding. 

But Tom, I don't know what the doctors and optometrists called it, probably that ambiguous title "dyslexia".  He read slowly because his brain had trouble rearranging the words on the page.  The glasses helped later but I think at first he just was frustrated with himself.  Teachers and the other kids might have looked at him and called him slow.  So why wouldn't he build up vicious defence mechanisms?  Get sent out of class so he didn't have to read aloud?

Tuesday 7 February 2017

Chilly Challenges - 8 - Young Endeavour Voyage

6/2/2017

(written 7/2/ 0325)

Watches Kept:

  • 0000-0400 Middle Watch (a.k.a the Guts)

  • keeping warm on guts watch again
  • hammock built to sustain 21 youthies
  • I lectured on crochet
  • assaulted Kingston Beach
  • command day finished - handover and debrief
  • Jimmy (an egg version of our watch leader) jumped and did not make it
  • learnt astronavigation basics
How am I feeling?
Fatigue and cold really set in for the guts watch and continued as we weighed anchor at Kingston Beach.  

Command Day was challenging on so many bizarre front that on debrief and hindsight I can be really impressed at human perseverance and the necessity to keep learning and adapting as a team, thanks to increased multi-directional communication.

Morale was pretty low over the 24 hours but as with all challenges we've convinced ourselves that it was amazing and rewarding even if oftimes our mood swayed from hating cold to pessimism about seemingly pointless activities.  

Its proper wintry weather here now, exposed on the water.  Kingston Beaches lights cluster like fairies or fireflies on the shores in many directions.  

Storm Bay Command Day- 7 - Young Endeavour Voyage

5/2/2017

(written 0318 7/2/2017)

Watches Kept:

  • 0300-0400 Anchor watch

  • Rest up
  • Hand-over to youth crew (start 24h of youth command)
  • Retrieve command day instructions from Isle of Dead
  • Photo of everyone aloft
  • Chalk mural
  • woken up for tacks at 2100 and 2300
I decided waking up via swing into the Tasmanian sea was actually not the bet so I resisting urging to jump in.  

Up the mast an icy wind buffets us, chilling us, youth prepared for milder conditions.  It was a sign of what was to come.  As streaks of white foam painted lines across the increasing bay swell we held on for dear life.   Entering Storm Bay once more we reached rocky seas again.  

That was fine but on waking up for the first tack we found the rain was all too ready to soak our gear and at times the ship seemed like to throw us.  The frigid winds sapped my enthusiasm for the adventure although being responsible for calling the jib was a highlight.  Even with my breaking sleepy voice I directed the crew to heave it in against violent 30 kt winds with shouts of "2, 6, Heave!"


Saturday 4 February 2017

Sunrise Dolphins and Sunset Ghosts -6- Young Endeavour Voyage

1747 4/2/2017

Watches Kept:

  • 0400-0800 Morning Watch
Sunrise behind the ship.  Photo credit: Sammie Costin

Unconsecrated church Port Arthur.  Photo Credit: Jimmy Potter
  • Talked about teamwork
  • Apples and Onions (Brought up Good and Not so Good things about people in our group)
  • elections for command day
  • demonstrational tacks (seeing how tacking works from the bridge)
  • Came in to Port Arthur
  • Ghost Tour
Preserved house Port Arthur.  Photo Credit: Jimmy Potter
How am I feeling?
Not scared by the ghost tour although the room in the parsonage was pretty creepy.  Great hot chocolate on return to the ship.  

Feeling pretty confident on the calls for setting (bringing out so you can sail) and furling (putting away) sails but I will inevitably make some mistake.  That's okay, I'm sure we'll all make mistakes.  

Land dizziness is crazy! (You get seasickness moving from land to sea and moving back the other way you start rocking back and forth on land.)

I chucked up my hand for sail master (I was getting pretty keen for it after demonstrational tacks) but Gus (a more experienced boater) got the vote.  I did get watch leader though.  It was disheartening to see the factions created by the watches (red, white and blue).  

A pod of large dolphins greeted us in the morning and some seals watched out adventure past Tasman island.  
Tasman Passage.  The seals were too shy to be photographed. Photo Credit: Jimmy Potter

Friday 3 February 2017

Swimming in a Wineglass -5- Young Endeavour Voyage

2030 3/2/17

Watches Kept:

  • 1800-2000 Last Dog

  • Early morning swing off course yard
  • Then in to the beach
  • Climbed Dove Mountain to lookout
  • Weighed anchor about 1400
  • Will sail overnight
  • Massive nap
  • Dolphins


Swimming in Wineglass Bay before being ferried back to the ship. Guess which person is me.  Photo Credit: Jimmy Potter

How am I feeling?
Waking up to "Take a chance on me" was fantastic. 

Wineglass Bay was beautiful so I went for a swim up to the waist (still pretty cold) before coming back.  

Watched dolphins from the bowsprit - its so cool that every day they have come to see us and swim in the wave before the prow.  

Found a pink bruise over my eye; guessing I was elbowed while heaving in on the sheets (though I didn't notice at the time). 

Water was cool but not as icy as Lake Macquarie in winter.  

Contemplating positions for command day (when youth crew take control of the ship for 24h).  I like having a bit of responsibility but total decision making scares me a bit.  Still I'm thinking Sail Master (second-in-command), Navigator or Watch leader (manages one of the three watches (or groups) of deck hands whilst its their turn on watch).  I'd also be find to be a basic deckhand.

View of Wineglass Bay from the lookout.  Photo Credit: Jimmy Potter

Sailing made Easy -4- Young Endeavour Voyage

2/2/17
(written 2030 3/2/17)

Watches Kept:

  • anchor watch 0100-0200
  • 1600-1800 First Dog
  • anchor watch 2200-2300 (means uninterrupted sleep Yay!)

  • weighed anchor at St Helens point (i.e. pulled up the anchor to leave)
  • sailed to wineglass bay, manning the helm as we entered
  • watched film about Peking (fully rigged barque ship)
Photo from:
 https://www.amazon.com/Peking-Battles-Cape-Horn/dp/0930248066

How am I feeling? 
So tired by the time I got to bed. 

Setting the sails and climbing the masts in the morning was a good workout, stretched out all my muscles.  I did some stretching nearing sunset in wineglass which was much needed.  

The size and beating that the Peking took (in the film) was incredible.  

Climbed the tops'il yard (the middle one) to undo gaskets and it was stupidly easy after the high seas.  Helming in to wineglass was a huge highlight and the view of the whole coast was beautiful.  Sat on the bowsprit for a full hour, watching the other boats around us, including the "Enterprise", a smaller, tubbier tall ship.
I think this is by the entrance to Wineglass Bay.  Photo credit: Jimmy Potter

Wednesday 1 February 2017

Beautiful Binalong -3- Young Endeavour Voyage

2200 1/2/17

Watches Kept:

  • prev. day 2000-0000 First Watch
  • 0800-1200 Morning Watch

  • sea-furled the course sail (tied it up)
  • shore trip to beautiful Binalong
  • 3-way chats
  • changed positions to near St Helens
Course yard is the lowest horizontal beam, but it has the biggest and heaviest square sail. Photo credit: Jimmy Potter
How am I feeling?
Great, the vibe on the ship is fantastic with no one sick now that we've reached the eastern side of Tassie.  

Our watch had the fastest speed/furthest distance travelled last night (29.9 nm or 7.5 kts the whole way).  

The crust of salt on my rain jacket after being left out on
 deck in Bass Strait.  I could never forget that it was salt water that
 was spraying across the ship.  It would dry on all surfaces into salt
and sting my face.  
Food is a great joy atm, the cook Marcos is fantastic (I was galleyhand yesterday and this morning).  Makes not being sick double worth it.  

Binalong was beautiful: turquoise water and fiery orange moss on the rocks and white-white sand.  The bay was called the Bay of Fires, which could have been due to the moss (but actually because there were fires blazing on the shore when the English decided to name it). Had a lovely mocha from the restaurant and sat in the sun on the beach.  The wind and swell had picked up by the return trip in the shore boat and I was splashed all over with salt.