A Voyage For Madmen

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A Voyage For Madmen Page 12

by Peter Nichols


  In the same article, the Sunday Times took its first serious look at Donald Crowhurst’s preparations, reporting on the trimaran’s onboard computer and Crowhurst’s ‘patented’ self-righting device.

  The paper also reported that Lieutenant-Commander Nigel Tetley, taking unpaid leave from the Royal Navy, was about to sail from Plymouth in his trimaran.

  Tetley sailed the next day, Monday 16 September. Victress carried a banner on her cabin side proclaiming the name of Tetley’s sponsor, Music for Pleasure, which had sent him off with a boatload of cassette tapes. Brass band music blared from his wheelhouse speaker as he ran down Plymouth Sound. He was surrounded by the usual flotilla of press boats, which managed not to collide with him, perhaps due to his escort of navy launches, including a commander-in-chief’s ‘barge’ carrying a vice admiral. His wife Eve waved from a nearby boat. Tetley noticed that she was beating time to the music, and as the brass band started a soulful tune, he was overcome with sobs. Later, as he passed Eddystone Lighthouse, when the boats had all turned back, he bolstered his mood with the bagpipe music of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders and ate smoked trout for lunch.

  The northerly wind was aft and Tetley had set twin running headsails held out to catch the wind by poles mounted on the foredeck. This downwind rig had been popularised by British sailor and author Eric Hiscock, who with his wife Susan had by then circumnavigated twice (by way of the tropics and the Panama and Suez canals in a small 30-footer) using this twin-headsail arrangement to faciliate self-steering. As Victress moved offshore, the wind rose and Tetley decided to take the twins down, but as he was doing this, the wind caught a loose sail, flung it aback, and broke its wooden pole in two. The sail then collapsed into the water with the broken pole, which unhooked itself and floated away.

  During the first night an upper-spreader on the mainmast broke loose and banged and whirled on the end of its wire in the rigging. The motion was too violent for Tetley to go up the mast to make a repair, so he tried to steer the boat on a gentler course further downwind, but found this difficult without the missing pole. Demoralised by these two early mishaps before he was even out of the English Channel, he consoled himself by eating a chicken Eve had roasted for him, while listening to Handel’s Water Music. In the afternoon the wind moderated and Tetley got the trimaran heading downwind, climbed aloft on short rungs screwed to the wooden mast, and repaired the broken spreader.

  The next day, his run of unlucky accidents continued: while clearing seaweed off the trailing log line, he accidentally dropped it overboard. He had one spare line, which he wisely left coiled in the log’s box.

  That night the wind was squally, at times reaching gale force and blowing from the southwest, so Tetley tacked northwest to keep clear of the rocky, tide-ripped French coast. On the third day the wind blew at gale force and the burdened trimaran slammed into the rising seas, until he hove to for the night.

  From the start, Tetley conscientiously noted the music provided by his sponsor. He faithfully recorded in his logbook what he listened to and when. ‘Later, ominous black clouds appeared ahead, and clad in oilskins, I sat in the wheelhouse ready for the worst, listening to Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony.’

  In addition to standards of the classical repertoire, Music for Pleasure had given him a mix of tapes that could be called eclectic: albums by the popular music pianist Russ Conway; the Mousehole Male Voice Choir (Mousehole, pronounced ‘Mowzle’, is a village in Cornwall); George Formby, who sang bawdy tunes in a flat, nasally northern accent while playing his ukulele; the Red Army Choir; music from the Greek islands; and meditations in Indian sitar music.

  He also recorded much of what he ate, accompanied by his rations of music: lunch of cold chicken, tomatoes, fruit, and smoked cheese; dinner of Chinese-style chicken and beef, onions, beans, tomatoes, mushrooms, and peppers, with half a bottle of Beaujolais; roast duck and a bottle of wine for another supper; scrambled eggs and cod roe for breakfast. These oddly resemble the meals writer Ian Fleming used to set before another naval commander – James Bond.

  Tetley was also eating with a purpose: Victress was heavily laden when he departed and sluggish in the strong winds he encountered at the beginning of his voyage. He calculated that his consumption of food, water, wine, and fuel lightened the boat by about 10 pounds daily.

  Teignmouth Electron was launched into the river Yare at Brundall, Norfolk, on 23 September. Clare Crowhurst made a short speech and swung a champagne bottle against the hull. It failed to break. In the seaman’s world of attenuated superstition, this was supposed to be unlucky, an ominous failure at the outset of a vessel’s life. But John Eastwood told Clare that the same thing had happened to Sheila Chichester at the launch of Gypsy Moth IV.

  The boat was far from finished. It was still without masts, rigging, sails, and literally hundreds of pieces of hardware inside and out that made it liveable in and sailable. Eastwoods’ crew of boat-builders laboured another week of long days, while John Eastwood and Crowhurst, who was now in the yard full-time, argued constantly and bitterly, both giving conflicting instructions to the workmen.

  They also argued about money. Eastwoods claimed that the extra work of Crowhurst’s improvements, additions, and innovations had nearly doubled the cost of the boat, and they demanded that he provide a £1,000 releasing fee before he took the boat away from the yard.

  The still-unfinished trimaran was pronounced ready to sail – as far as Teignmouth anyway – on 2 October. Crowhurst set out expecting to make the trip in three days.

  John Eastwood, his partner John Elliot, Crowhurst’s friend Peter Beard from Bridgwater, and some boatbuilders from the yard were the boat’s crew on the first leg. Setting off down the Yare, through the picturesque Norfolk Broads, Teignmouth Electron’s maiden voyage commenced with ill fortune. As they approached a village, the local chain ferry set out across the river ahead of them. An ebb tide was sweeping them on. John Eastwood thought there was plenty of room and depth on either side of the ferry, but Crowhurst was worried that the hulls might snag on the underwater chain, and he ordered the yardmen on the bow to let go the anchor. As the anchor dug in, the tide swung the boat around and it crunched into pilings near the bank, making a hole in the starboard hull. They sailed on to Great Yarmouth on the Norfolk coast, where the yard’s men patched the damage and then left with John Eastwood. At 2 a.m., in rain and wind, Crowhurst, Elliot, and Peter Beard sailed out into the black North Sea.

  The seas were rough and all three men became seasick, but Crowhurst was the worst affected. He began vomiting repeatedly, but remained either at the helm or below at the chart table, navigating and steering through an evil night. He was in a terrible mood, angry at his own weakness, and short-tempered with the others, but John Elliot found him impressive. ‘Oddly enough it was watching him then that really convinced me he was a man to sail around the world. He revealed his incredible determination and stubbornness. Once he had decided to do something, neither disaster nor persuasion could deflect him.’

  With a favourable wind, the trimaran sailed fast down the East Anglian coast, across the Thames estuary, around North Foreland, and along the Kent coast into the English Channel. The boat’s progress so far had pleased Crowhurst. But as they passed the South Goodwin light vessel, the wind changed into the west, on the nose, and Teignmouth Electron was abruptly stopped.

  Multihulls, because of their shallow keels and poor grip on the water, cannot sail as close to the wind as conventional deep-keeled hulls, and their poor windward performance is the major compromise they suffer in return for greater speed and live-aboard comfort. It’s an acceptable compromise for ocean voyaging when a greater proportion of winds are expected to be from aft or on the beam. But tacking down the English Channel in stormy autumnal weather against the prevailing westerly winds and racing tides would be an exasperating exercise for the most seasoned multihull sailor. It took Teignmouth Electron five hours to cover the 10 miles from the Goodwin light vessel to Dover, a
nd by then Crowhurst was dismayed by his boat’s sluggardly performance.

  There were good reasons for it: the boat was unweighted by any stores and so had an even more marginal grip on the water; its new sails and rigging were untried; its shortened mast reduced its effective sail area; and Crowhurst had never sailed a trimaran. All sailboats have their idiosyncrasies, strengths, and weaknesses, and their owners must learn, with time, how to get the best out of them.

  Crowhurst and his crew experimented with various sail combinations, but soon the tide turned against them and a short time later they found themselves off the Goodwin light vessel again. They tacked far offshore where the tides ran less hard and came to within 3 miles of the French coast, where the wind fell light. Crowhurst used this respite in the weather to try shipping his outboard motor. This meant getting it out of a storage locker beneath the cockpit and sitting it on a bracket at the stern of the port hull. The outboard weighed nearly 100 pounds, and he wanted to do this by himself without help from his crew. It took him an hour, using a block and tackle on the main boom, during which he grew furious. They motored on down the French coast. A little later, while charging batteries with the boat’s portable generator, Crowhurst burned his left hand on the generator’s exhaust pipe. Clare Crowhurst, who was superstitious, was disturbed when she later saw the burn. It had erased the lifeline on her husband’s palm.

  For three days they tacked between the French and English coasts, finding at each landfall that they were only a few miles beyond their former positions.

  One night, mid-channel, as John Elliot slept, Peter Beard asked Crowhurst how he was going to get this boat around the world when they were having such a hard time getting it down the English Channel. Crowhurst dismissed the problem, pointing out that the majority of the winds he would encounter would be favourable.

  But what if they weren’t? Beard persisted.

  ‘Well, one could always shuttle around in the South Atlantic for a few months,’ said Crowhurst. He drew a rough map in Beard’s logbook, circling an area in the South Atlantic between Africa and South America. ‘There are places out of the shipping lanes where no one would ever spot a boat like this.’

  Crowhurst laughed.

  After four days of fruitless effort, Beard and Elliot announced to Crowhurst that they had to go home. Both had commitments ashore. Elliot promised him he would send two of his men from the yard to replace them. Running the outboard, they put into Newhaven on the Sussex coast. Robin Knox-Johnston, who was now approaching Australia, almost halfway around the world, had stopped here more than four months earlier on his way to Falmouth – that trip down the channel from London had taken Suhaili six days.

  For two days after the replacement crew arrived, they remained stormbound in Newhaven. Then they sailed for two days, getting as far as Wooten Creek on the Isle of Wight before the two boatbuilders abandoned ship – they’d had enough of sailing with Crowhurst. He sailed on single-handed a few miles along the Isle of Wight shore to Cowes, where he found another late entrant to the Golden Globe race, Alex Carozzo, making his final preparations. Known (in Italy) as ‘Italy’s Chichester’, Carozzo had been chief mate on a Liberty ship being delivered to a breakers yard in Japan several years earlier when he built a small sloop on the ship’s deck. On arrival in Japan, he launched his sailboat over the ship’s side and headed for California. Ten days out, the sloop was dismasted in a typhoon. Carozzo spent eighty-three days sailing to Midway Island, where he repaired his rig and shoved off on a fifty-three-day passage to San Francisco.

  Construction on his 66-footer, built expressly for the Golden Globe race, had begun at the Medina Yacht Company in Cowes on 19 August, and was largely finished seven weeks later, an incredible accomplishment. Carozzo’s audacity and confidence were a tonic to Crowhurst, who spent a day in Cowes talking with the Italian.

  On Sunday 13 October, Crowhurst set out from Cowes with a local sailor, another Royal Navy lieutenant-commander, Peter Eden, as crew. They made four long tacks across the channel before reaching Teignmouth two days later on 15 October. Eden was later to report that Crowhurst’s sailing skills were good, but that his navigation was ‘a mite slapdash’.

  It had taken Crowhurst thirteen days to cover the roughly 300 miles from Great Yarmouth to Teignmouth, at an average speed of 23 miles per day.

  He now had sixteen days before the Sunday Times’ 31 October deadline to prepare his boat to sail around the world.

  13

  ON FRIDAY 20 SEPTEMBER, Loïck Fougeron came close enough to a fishing boat off the Cape Verde Islands to hand over a plastic bag containing film and letters for the Sunday Times. He also handed over his cat, Roulis. She had eaten through the aerial wire of his radio (receiver), chewed through bags containing powdered eggs, and spread the powder around the inside of his boat, she had fleas, but most worryingly, he believed she was pregnant. Fearing a boatload of kittens, he wrote to the Times, he had even considered making up a raft and setting the cat adrift near land.

  The plastic bag and cat were delivered to a Mr Foulde, the British consul for the Cape Verde Islands. The bag was sent on to the Sunday Times in London, but Mr Foulde kept the cat. Very soon, however, he sent a cable to the newspaper asking to be relieved of the cat, which had proved too destructive to the consulate. The Sunday Times was not in the cat business, and eventually Mr. Foulde found a home for Roulis on the island.

  Fougeron’s progress was slow. He was enjoying himself, and the novelty of a single-handed voyage. But he knew that he had already been overtaken by Bill King (King regularly radioed his position back to England, and Fougeron would have heard this on his receiver), and that his friend Bernard had streaked far ahead of him (Moitessier was then past the equator in the South Atlantic), and any hopes Fougeron might have had of winning the race would have been fading fast.

  On 29 September, Moitessier raised the remote South Atlantic island of Trindade out of the horizon ahead. He hoped to drop off film and letters for the Sunday Times there. The island belonged to Brazil, and his South American pilot book, which contained sailing directions for Trindade, was one of those he had left behind while lightening his boat. Still, the land was high and jagged, and by the look of it he believed there would be deep water inshore, allowing him to approach close enough to attract attention, and perhaps a boat to come out to him.

  As he sailed nearer and the island’s details grew clear he saw the beautiful green of land that is always startling after weeks at sea. He hoped to get close enough to smell it.

  The weather was good, clear and sunny, the wind moderate from the northeast, and Joshua glided in from the sea like an albatross. Through binoculars he spotted the roofs of a settlement and the wreck of an old iron ship half-sunk off the village.

  He let off a blast from his foghorn and sailed back and forth along the shore. Not a living soul appeared. It was midday on a Sunday, and he wondered if everyone was at church, or indoors having a noisy Sunday lunch. After an hour and repeated blasts from the horn, he was on the point of leaving when people began to pour out of a house and stare back at him, one of them with binoculars. Otherwise, they didn’t move. Moitessier raised his MIK signal flags (which, when flown together, mean, ‘Please report my position to Lloyd’s of London’) hoping the man peering at him through binoculars would read Joshua’s big white letters and report him to somebody. Still the people ashore didn’t move but watched him as though he were an apparition.

  He gybed, waved again with both arms in a gesture meaning good-bye, and headed Joshua out to sea. Suddenly, as if breaking from a spell, all the people ashore began waving madly. Some ran down the beach into the sea up to their waists, shouting after him, imploring him. But they had no boat that could come out to him, and without a chart or sailing directions, Moitessier dared sail in no further. He sailed away.

  He sailed southeast into cooler seas, steering now for Cape Town, where he hoped to shoot off a packet of mail. Well north of the fortieth parallel (south), in an are
a supposedly dominated by easterly winds, he found strong westerlies and big seas, almost Southern Ocean conditions. Moitessier clapped on sail and streaked diagonally across the South Atlantic in a series of tremendous daily runs, as high as 182 miles in one twenty-four-hour period. The wind continued from the west, strong enough to make him reef his sails and send Joshua surfing, yet these were conditions with which he and his boat were familiar, and he was happy. In a week he covered 1,112 miles – an average of 158 miles per day, well above the Chichester pace.

  Ever since his dramatic storm-surfing episode in the Southern Ocean between Tahiti and Cape Horn, Moitessier had believed that lightness and speed were the key to fast and safe passage-making. Without a doubt, he now realised, the ton of excess weight he had removed from the boat in France and England had improved its performance. Now, in a ruthless, exhilarated mood, he looked around inside the boat and began to throw overboard anything else he could consider deadweight: a box of army biscuits (35 pounds), a case of condensed milk (45 pounds), twenty-five bottles of wine, 45 pounds of rice, 10 pounds of sugar, 30 pounds of jam, a box of batteries, four jerry cans of kerosene, gallons of denatured alcohol, a coil of 3/4-inch nylon line weighing about 60 pounds. (Thirty-three years ago, in a world apparently far less threatened by pollution than we know it to be today, such a dumping at sea would have seemed harmless, even among enlightened nature lovers like Moitessier.)

  This enabled him to empty Joshua’s forward and aft cabins completely, concentrating all her weight amidships, making her more buoyant and able to surf in heavy seas. It also meant the boat would sail faster in light airs and require less sail raised to drive it in heavy winds.

  Stripping away the last threads of superfluous restraint (and one must suspect that his wife Françoise and some of the tidier notions of marriage had been one of these), Moitessier was getting closer and closer to his idealised state of man and ship flying as one across the sea in a way few had ever approached. He also knew he was becoming a stronger competitor in the race every day. ‘The great game of the high latitudes is just ahead,’ he wrote in his logbook. And he and Joshua were readier than they had ever been.

 

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