Wednesday, 4 June 2014

NOT FOR SISSIES – 8th May to 4th June 2014


Henry and I set off for our 2014 sailing adventure with lots of mixed feelings in May. We were both tired, there seemed even more than usual to tie up before setting off. We were anxious about sailing in Turkey – unchartered waters for us and quite different to our much-loved Greece. We were worried about whether the wintering work had been done on the boat. Mostly, we were dreadfully sad that our friends Fran and George Alagiah would not be joining us at the end of the week as planned as George had been diagnosed with cancer.
We were leaving on election day, so we flew via Johannesburg, planning to vote and then fly – only to find that we had very consciously and carefully left our ID’s in a safe place at home as we would not be needing them for travelling. Home Affairs surprised us, and within 2 hours on the morning of election day, we marched off to the polling station with temporary ID’s, put our crosses where we thought they would be most useful – and set off with a spring in our steps.
Oren, where our boat was being stored on the hard, is described in travel books as a delightful surprise……“that rare Turkish sea side town, untouched and undeveloped with few villas and even fewer tourists”








 At first sight, it is dusty and a bit dismal – or maybe it was the grey, cold weather that made it so. But we went exploring, and discovered a fascinating old town, built against a mountain covered with the ruins of an ancient Mycenaean city – thousands of years old. Roman and Byzantine ruins, often using the stones from the ancient city lie in-between century-old Greek houses – many abandoned during the infamous swap of Greek and Turkish populations in the 1920’s.






The work on the boat took a while to finish, but Wednesday was launch day – something that had been filling us with trepidation.  For thousands of years, boats have been launched using the sledge system with wooden tracks and a winch, and here in Oren they still do it  – this was going to be our first experience of it. I was terrified! As the winch slowly let us down into the water and the hull started to submerge, the boat crashed to one side and we felt a hard bump. It bumped a few more times as Henry tried to reverse straight backwards – not an easy thing with the broad beam that Pegasus boasts. We went skew and got stuck. We tried again, but still stuck.  One of the workmen dived to dislodge us, and we eventually managed to reverse far enough out of the shallows to set sail. We sailed 3 hours across the gulf to a pretty bay where we planned to spend a few nights getting our sea legs back.

Pegasus being inched down to the sea on sledge and tracks
Ready to launch

 And then on Friday morning, disaster struck. Henry got up to make coffee and found the floor-boards floating. The boat was 9 inches under water.  We madly baled and pumped until we had most of it out and could see a steady stream of water coming in. It is impossible to indentify where from as there is a double skin making up the hull. Henry closed all the seacock’s and checked everything he could think of – no luck. All we could think is that the bump had caused damage. We arranged with the boatyard to come back the next morning at 5h30am.

Every hour during the night, the alarm went and we had to pump the bilges dry. At 5h30, we left and motored for about 20 minutes – and disaster struck again. Smoke started pouring out of the engine and the engine alarm was screaming.  Henry had forgotten to open the engine seacock and the engine had overheated, and part of the exhaust had melted. No engine in mid sea………one of my biggest fears (aside from Henry falling overboard). We raised the sails, and I took the helm while Henry tried to fix the holes with Pratleys putty. But there was no wind.  For a while we managed to sail at 1 knot, but the wind disappeared completely and we were drifting. With no wind, there was no control of the boat. I imagined the rocky cliffs getting closer and closer – it was beyond terrifying. An hour later when we tried the engine with the mended exhaust pipe, the anxiety was terrible. Within seconds, water was pouring in to the engine – there were more holes, impossible to fix. We called Adnan in the boatyard for help.
Henry hanging his head in desperation
But, as with all stories, there is a happy side. We had made friends in the boatyard with Fabian and Jeff from Paris who had already been incredibly kind to us. The relief I felt when, 3 hours later, we saw Jeff and Adnan motoring up in Jeff’s inflatable dinghy was indescribable. They tied up to us and pushed rather than towed us in, 9 hours after we had set out. But by now the weather had changed, the wind we needed earlier had risen and it was too windy and wavy to get onto the sledge, so we made for the small fishing harbour. The next challenge – to manoeuvre Pegasus in with no engine and a cross-wind.  After many attempts and excessive fear building once again on my side, with the dinghy nudging and Henry steering, we managed to tie up.
Adnan and Jeff to the rescue
Oren fishing harbour
Fabian and Jeff - dinner on Pegasus

Fabian and Jeff were amazing – they showered us with warmth and generosity and the next morning with a working engine, we motored to the boatyard, got lifted out onto the dreaded sledge and fixed a thin crack between the keel and the hull.

Joy and relief……….but not for long!
We launched, and there was still water pouring into the bilges. I wanted to weep – correction, I did weep. To make matters worse, I was sick and had lost my voice completely. We changed course and anchored in the tiny village of Cokertme.
And this is where the story gets happy again. We did not find the leak. But the help of everyone in the village was incredible. Captain Ibrahim, whose restaurant pontoon we were tied to, helped Henry dive, procured dye to try and detect the leak, brought a diver friend with tanks to plug all the seacock’s to hopefully eliminate the problem…….nothing worked, but we were so bowled over by the help and kindness, we were in a beautiful place, the pump was working well (we had to pump every hour night and day), the restaurant food was delicious – we did not want to leave.

Cokertme with Pegaus on the pontoon
Captain Ibrahim

With Fabian and Jeff at Cokertme

But we had to sort the leak out, so we arranged (through our many new contacts) to go to Bodrum Marina where Atilla was standing by to help. Six days later, with 3 guys working on the boat, trying everything they could think of to find the leak, we eventually had dry bilges and a plugged hole at the engine valve – impossible to detect without cutting part of the inner fiberglass skin away.
Atilla and his team - the "Inshallah guarantee" they gave worked
We set sail last Thursday - nearly 3 weeks after arriving - and are now in Kos, Greece. Although there is a wicked wind blowing, Pegasus is safely moored in the harbour and we have taken refuge in the town square to drink Mythos and catch up with our lives.
All I know, this sailing thing is not for sissies!!!!!

2 comments:

  1. Well, my beauties, you have survived! What an epic tale.
    We, too, have had fun and games.
    But it looks as if you have passed scilla and charybdis, and found friendly waters! Wish we were with you - I am marking exam papers in chilly Stellenbosch, teaching at Sustainability Institute. Two sleeps until Europe - off to Amsterdam Saturday, then Muenster Sunday, then Denmark and Switzerland.
    Give our love to the gentle waters - are yo now heading for the Aegean? Love, Raymondo.

    ReplyDelete