Posts Tagged ‘route’

Thursday 30th July

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Gate watchman Off at 09h00 sharp and into the sea lock of the Caledonian Canal where we interview the Lock keeper who is very friendly and informative.  The canal system is well organised and very carefully maintained ~ fantastic to experience heritage as a working and functional environment.

We proceed slowly through series of swing bridges, lock gates and wooded canalised waterway sections that finally open into Loch Ness which is an extraordinarily beautiful stretch of deep water bounded by rugged wooded hills ~ this is the beginning of the Great Glen, a natural fault line that bisects Scotland diagonally between Inverness and Fort William.

The crew of course are more interested in the virtual world, Tapio and Mike (and even the skipper Lars) are below, on-line ~ I am the analogue boy preferring to handwrite and draw up on deck.

Dreaming of sighting the Monster and a single malt when we dock this evening!   We tie up in Fort Augusta at the Northern end of Loch Ness, no Monster but the single malt is highly possible as the lock sides are lined with comfy bars which we loiter in too long and miss dinner ~ having to make do with fish and chips!

Wednesday 29th July

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Inverness We continue to work up the East coast the air is extraordinarily clear, as is the sea.  The coastline looks beautiful and dotted with small settlements as we gradually track to the West into the Firth of Inverness where we plan to moor overnight before entering the Caledonian Canal.

We are accompanied by pods of Dolphin up the Firth which I take as a good omen and finally berth in a small and brand new marina just west of the suspension bridge.  The marina has a distinctly Nordic population, our Danish flag fluttering alongside Norwegian and Swedish pennants; there is even a sailing replica of a Norse longship on our jetty, a reminder of the cultural heritage of these islands ~ it is only a two day sail to Norway from here.

We re-supply in Inverness and spend the evening on-board preparing work schedules and equipment.

Tuesday 28th July

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Neptune is still demanding his pound of flesh but I am getting on top of the nausea and can begin to focus again.  The solo night watches are have sublime moments with phosphorescence streaming out from the twin transoms and large wracks of rain filled cloud looming over the horizon.

On the midnight to 02h00 watch a serious spate of hand steering as the ship roars dead downwind, sails set Goose-wing and big lumpy breaking rollers piling up from behind pushing her this way and that.   Finally we spy the Scottish coastline and follow it northwards keeping a sharp lookout for the coastal and oil-rig traffic centred about Aberdeen.

Mike volunteers to make a pasta and I realise that I am starving and actually want to eat, even though the idea makes me nervous.  I manage to keep it down and am glad that the boat motion in the following seas is quite different than the rocking horse effect when going straight into it!

Grayscaling

Monday, July 27th, 2009

IMG_0047 One enters a mode where seeing an oil drilling platform is a treat, a change in the grey horizon. When there is no land in sight, the sea takes on a greyscale nature in wet weather, with winds whipping the sailors, yet the boat also forward with relatively good speed. It gives also time to reflect what it means to physically move across this rather small water, the North Sea, in relation to taking a plane to the other side of the world. In a way, this could be a sustainable future way of travel, perhaps with a technology upgrade. Nevertheless, one feels physical proportions in different scales, and travel means also more like work, rather than dosing off on a chair and waking up somewhere else.

I try to keep spirits up and food down, thus I make great ginger carrot soup, a receipe from Nina Czegledy. A bit improvised for the sea, but does the trick. First day or two we used up green salads and barbaqued some chicken, marinated Indian style, cooked with Pasilla chillies I had brought along (sauteed in some red wine)… and boosted by green chillies.

At this point I have to admit that I have some concerns too, as I had thought that the boat has weather information system, which it does not. Would the weather change quickly, we would have no idea, except when it hits us. So I put down on my shopping list a Nasa weatherfax receiver. Just in case. I had thought we’d have HF modem to make minimal connection with land, but instead, we rely on 3G coastal access.

Winds range from 8-9 m/s to 12-15 m/s, waves 1-2 meters mostly. Think it was around 17 m/s on the coast, and in gales (as we also hit a thunder storm area) perhaps a bit more.

North Sea 24/7/2

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

solar on solar It seems my stomach likes sailing. My colleagues look at me with surprise when I sip a cool beer after my watch is over. The weather ranges from sunny and brisk wind to rain and cold gales. We enter a mode where it is difficult to tell the difference between one day from another. Sailing 24/7 in two hour segments.

The boat behaves fairly well with South Westerly winds, yet often a wave hits its underbelly and makes a loud bang. We are hoping for winds to turn South to push us with the waves, not to tack across them.

The larger solar panels (BP 120W) in a 4 panel array give 5-8 amps charging power to lead acid battery set of 3, 135 Ah each. My 2×80 watts panels are better positioned towards the sun, still charging at 1-1.5 amps only. They charge a 150Ah gel battery, which charges up much faster than lead acid ones, so even if we use that to charge laptops and batteries, we are quite soon running batteries at 90-100% charge level. Not that we can really consume that energy until we are at calmer seas though!

September winds

Friday, July 24th, 2009

I had never sailed North Sea before. I do remember a ferry trip from UK to France, where a man was so sick he was green, which amused his girlfriend tremendously. So I was surprised of two things; that most of the coastline North of Germany and Holland is quite shallow, with many riffs and even way out to the sea, depths of 8-10 meters, and very far out to reach 20 meters. I had thought that the Baltic Sea was very shallow, but this gave new perspective. Unfortunately the shallowness also meant that waves would be rocking the boat to set a rather projectile tone to the sailing experience of Michael and Nigel. I don’t know where it comes from, but I had no nausea at all and could sleep in my cabin, even though the bigger waves would lift me slightly from the mattrass, and sounds around me were like being in a big washing machine, full of hard objects.

Already the first day was informative with regard to working on board: no reading, typing in this type of weather. More learning to balance and cook tea without hitting your forehead more than twice a day would be the appropriate, embodied research to take place on board. At the same time we would be learning a lot of how to sail this cat using the Raymarine C80 plotter, and connected wind meter and echo sounder. We went to 2-hour watches from the very first day. Except for understanding the lights on ships, most things were relatively OK to handle.

In Borkum we witnessed a celebration of the island’s mini railway on our way to an Internet bar, to get decent weather forecasts and communicado. After a night well slept, we decided that instead of going against the wind towards the Channel, we would sail straight out to England. Off we sailed, with quite many big ships crossing our route yet not from very near.

Catamaran speed was rather slow at start, maybe due to incoming tide. We got the boat moving up to 9.4 knots. On average, we sailed around 7 knots, 6 knots if unlucky.

Friday 24th July

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Borkum wind turbine We are operating a 2 hour on, 4 hour off watch system which is pretty civilised!  I take the 00h00 ~ 02h00, Tapio and Mike the 02h00 ~ 04h00, Lars the 04h00 ~ 06h00, I again the 06h00 ~ 08h00, Tapio and Mike the 08h00 ~ 10h00 and Lars the 10h00 ~ 12h00 and so on.  We coast Westwards along the Friesland shore, which apart from the extraordinary amount of wind farms is devoid of features.

We arrive in Bokum around 16h00 (a 26 hour transit) and tied up and settle the ship.  The hafen has a small restaurant flying an enthusiastic array of national flags and is surrounded by three massive wind turbines which whine like banshees in the stiff breeze.

We are consoled by Tea from bone china tea sets and very good Apffel Kuche ~ my stomach feels much happier.    Our intentions are to overnight and depart early next morning weather permitting.

Planet Ocean

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

“How inappropriate to call this planet Earth when it is quite clearly Ocean.”

So said Arthur C. Clarke, an imaginary science fiction writer who inspired me greatly in my teens. I can’t deny it: my childhood reading Jacque Cousteau magazines and being an acute watcher of any clip on telly with underwater imaginary, marine biology was a career option for me, and at least a desire of something to explore. Now, years later, I am starting an expedition which I hope is mostly about serious research, but still on a personal level allows me to (con)figure my relationship with the sea. I will sometimes in my M.A.R.I.N. logbook be very philosophical, sometimes practical, sometimes technical, and sometimes explore also the affective relationship with the sea and seafaring. As it is though so easy to remain looking at the surface of the sea, with the M.A.R.I.N. project we also aim at creating windows of transparency and amplification, where data of a location becomes visible, and connecting researchers and artists’ skills, knowledge and desire may lead to combinations that also matter on multiple levels. We are talking about a very incremental project. Still, setting foot on the first M.A.R.I.N. boat has a feeling of being at home in a mobile sense, and also facing fieldwork, and expedition and some adventure.

As usual, the specs on a PDF I had downloaded and the wind turbine received did not match. So I go to a hardware store, where they sneer but tell me where a plumber lives. The plumber points me to a shop window that says Volvo on it. There, they reassembled the wind turbine shaft with the turbine itself.

July 23rd, heading West against the wind along North Sea German coast, getting into the position where we could sail to our destination. It feels like autumn, the wind is persistent.

Wednesday 22nd July

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Kiel Kanal

Today is a long haul, up at 06h00 at a guest house in London, lugging too much gear on the local bust to Heathrow.  Catch up with Mike on the 10h30 flight to Hamburg and then into the momentary confusion of German train world.   Three trains and one long bus ride later we are in Brunsbuttel but with scant idea as to the location of the ship.  We find the Alter Hafen but the boat location has been changed ~ more confusion ensues.  Finally we arrive by taxi dispatched by Tapio to the marina near the Kiel Canal sea lock and meet Lars Dall our skipper and look over our ship ~ “Boogie Woogie” a 11.9 metre catamaran. Overnight at Brunsbuttel.

M.A.R.I.N. starts sail

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

After 10 months of preparation, July 22nd, M.A.R.I.N. project starts by preparing its first journey at sea. We will take the catamaran vessel to the Irish Sea. On board are Nigel Helyer (AU), Michael Lake (AU) as artists in residence with Tapio Mäkelä (FI) as a resident artist, and Lars Dall (DK) as a captain of the boat. Other artists in residence will join us in Belfast for ISEA2009 and continuing to work with the AND Festival in Cumbria and Liverpool.

Starting location is Brunsbuttel, a harbor at the mouth of Kiel Canal. Depending on the wind predictions, we are going either West via English Channel, or North-West up coast of Scotland. First day is filled with equipping the boat with solar panels, batteries, computing and sound gear, water, and food. We watch huge ships go by. Part of the solar panels, wind turbine, and 3G router arrive from Slovenia via Marko Peljhan, who is preparing an expedition to Baffin Bay with Matthew Biederman in Arctic Perspective Initiative. Both will join the residency for ISEA2009 in mid August. Shipment from Germany is delayed, and we wait until all gear has arrived and leave on the 23rd at 2.30 PM. Our course is West, as the weather on open sea seems unpredictable with gales.