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	<title>Barque Picton Castle Crew Journals</title>
	
	<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals</link>
	<description>Journals of the Crew and Sail Trainees of the tall-ship, Barque Picton Castle.</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:15:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Coming Home in Halifax</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/07/24/coming-home-in-halifax/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Jul 2007 14:52:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bart Sutherland</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[East Coast Tall Ships Challenge 2007]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Pirate Master]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/07/24/coming-home-in-halifax/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Standing on the dock in Halifax, waiting for the Picton Castle to arrive, was a very odd feeling. As most of those who have sailed on her know, we very rarely get to see the ship come into port because we are normally aboard.

It was July 12th and the beginning of Tall Ships Nova Scotia [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Standing on the dock in Halifax, waiting for the <em>Picton Castle</em> to arrive, was a very odd feeling. As most of those who have sailed on her know, we very rarely get to see the ship come into port because we are normally aboard.</p>
<p>
It was July 12th and the beginning of Tall Ships Nova Scotia festival in Halifax. Torunn (WV 4) and I (WV 3 &amp; 4) had flown in from Victoria B.C. to visit the ship and many of our friends, some still sailing and some anchored (ever so tentatively) to land. Waiting with us on the dock were Johanna, Catharine, Erin, Tracy (all WV4) , numerous parents of present crew and a few trainees about to board the ship. The fog was quite thick that afternoon. When the ship slowly emerged from it she certainly looked her part from the recent TV show, &#8220;Pirate Master&#8221;. Fore course and lower topsail hanging loosely, ready to be stowed and her paint scheme of black hull and wood grain superstructure looked very impressive. It was a wonderful feeling to see our home once again! Once safely alongside we had a chance to go on board and visit with old friends and meet a lot of the new faces. Old friends on board included, Kjetil (WV4) who had just flown back from Norway to rejoin, Rebecca and John K (WV 3 &amp; 4), Lynsey (WV 2, 3 &amp; 4), the Captain and Chibley.</p>
<p>We spent Friday and Saturday helping with deck tours and visiting many of the other ships in Halifax for the weekend. We found past crewmates on a number of other ships, Chelsea and Mike M  (both WV 3) on board Maine Maritime Academy&#8217;s <em>Bowdoin</em>, Tracy (WV 4) on <em>Virginia</em> , and &#8220;Mike from New York&#8221; (who volunteered on board in Cape Town for a few weeks during WV4) working on <em>Pride of Baltimore II</em>.  The weather was great for most of the weekend, sunny and warm for the most part. I heard that about 250,000 people came out to see the ships on Saturday alone! The organizers should feel very proud of themselves, they put on an excellent event and I would recommend it to any tall ship lovers in the future.</p>
<p>
After public viewing was over on Sunday night the <em>Picton Castle</em> hosted a party for crews of all the other ships. More alumni showed up as well, Helle (WV 3) and Maggie (WV 4)&mdash;actually Mags was running around all weekend doing the stuff that needed to get done. I may have missed some names of former crewmates and for that I apologize, but the point I would like to make is this: anyone who has sailed aboard the <em>Picton Castle</em> is family! We can show up anywhere at any time and be welcomed on board. It was great to see old friends and to meet the new members of our family who are sailing our beloved ship in our places, those who chip, paint, sand, varnish, clean heads and do dishes, all for the purpose of keeping this way of life alive. To the new crew I say &#8220;thank you!&#8221;</p>
<p>The Parade of Sail was on Monday afternoon and I would love to tell you about that, but I can’t. Watching the <em>Picton Castle</em> sail without me? Well, that would be too hard to do.</p>
<div><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1359&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=1054,height=818');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/userpics/thumb_World_voyagers_at_the_crew_party_Sunday_night_in_Halifax.JPG" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="World voyagers at the crew party Sunday night in Halifax" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">World voyagers at the crew party Sunday night in Halifax</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1360&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=1054,height=818');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/userpics/thumb_World_voyagers_wait_for_the_ship_to_come_through_the_fog_in_Halifax.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="World voyagers wait for the ship to come through the fog in Halifax" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">World voyagers wait for the ship to come through the fog in Halifax</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=128" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></div>
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		<title>The Picton Castle’s Very Own Pirate’s Passage Through the Caribbean</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/05/09/the-picton-castles-very-own-pirates-passage-through-the-caribbean/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2007 14:59:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Pirate Master]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The crew of the Picton Castle have been sitting on a big secret the past few months, but now the secret is out and we are very excited to acknowledge we&#8217;ve been a part of it.
The winter months have been filled with island paradises and remarkable sailing experiences and our trainees have learned the ropes [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The crew of the <em>Picton Castle</em> have been sitting on a big secret the past few months, but now the secret is out and we are very excited to acknowledge we&#8217;ve been a part of it.</p>
<p>The winter months have been filled with island paradises and remarkable sailing experiences and our trainees have learned the ropes surrounded by postcard-perfect white sand beaches and volcanic islands that dot the lagoon-blue Caribbean waters of the West Indies. The warm sun, clean sailing breezes, and quiet, relaxed lifestyle of the islands has rubbed off on the crew. The delightfully hot days and sweaty nights quickly thawed our bones and sail commands and shipboard terms such as galleys and ladders quickly erased the words for the kitchens and stairs in our homes. After I rejoined the ship in early February, we painted her 179-foot-long hull and her clean clipper-bow an imposing shade of black while at anchor in Bequia and in Martinique. Instantly she looked longer and faster and all who witnessed her transformation remarked on how much she looked like the pirate ship of childhood fantasy. Strangers motored out to the ship in the small boats, which is not uncommon, but this time the energy was different and the crew felt it too. I still get tingles when I have the opportunity to see her from the water or shoreline. Sailors are notorious for holding fast to tradition, but this change is an exciting one.</p>
<p>In March we were joined in the Commonwealth of Dominica by CBS&#8217;s best-of-the-best for the creation of an exciting new reality-adventure show called <a title="Visit the Pirate Master Website" href="http://www.cbs.com/primetime/pirate_master/"><em>Pirate Master</em></a>, featuring 16 of America&#8217;s most persuasive Pirate wannabes. We had the opportunity to experience a little bit of Hollywood&#8217;s magic and our naturally pretty little barque was given a little &#8220;make-up.&#8221; We had our superstructure, chart house and galley house painted with such skill that the decks of our 1928 steel ship were transformed to the wooden deck structures of a pirate ship from 200 years ago. And I never knew there were so many options for decorating with canvas!</p>
<p>We had a rather monstrous figurehead mounted on our bow which our crew watched with morbid curiosity when we took the ship for a sail in any sort of wind or swell, and she stared ahead with her cold, dead eyes and clung tenaciously to the skull of someone we imagined could have conceivably crossed paths with a gang of pirates. The figurehead was seriously fierce and thrilling, but being the sailors we are, we couldn&#8217;t help but wonder whether the production&#8217;s art department could produce and then properly lash a truly seaworthy fiberglass figurehead to our ship&#8217;s bow. It held up beautifully.</p>
<p>We also received a bit of a movie-makeover on our stern. The Aloha rail was built up to meet the quarter deck and the space was enclosed to just aft of the boat davits in the breezeways, eventually taking shape as a fairly elegant transom with pane-glass windows and beautifully detailed woodwork. What took weeks of hammering, drilling and painting to create took only 48 hours to take apart with crowbars and grinders.</p>
<p>The Pirates lived, worked and sailed aboard our fine barque and they very much became a part of our ship, performing the heavy, dirty, and challenging tasks that a ship requires from her crew daily. Most importantly, they learned to sail our ship alongside her more experienced crew; a fine job they did of it, too. After many weeks aboard our vessel the Pirate crew could virtually hold their own in most sail handling maneuvers. Captain Moreland and our crew worked very hard to teach them all of the skills that we know, but if we did our jobs well, you will not see our crew in the weekly episodes.</p>
<p>It was a tremendous learning experience for our ship&#8217;s crew—and also for the seasoned professionals at CBS, who have never before taken on such a large-scale marine-based project! We were graced with the presence of hundreds of men and women who rotate through CBS&#8217;s highest-rated programs such as <em>Survivor</em>, <em>The Amazing Race</em>, <em>The Contender</em>, <em>The Apprentice</em>, and so on! On every level from sound, lighting and camera operators to segment producers and the big-time executives, they were eager to learn about and share our world (which revealed itself to be outside the comfort zone of many, but they are an adventurous lot who were up to the challenge) and were patient in helping our crew to become accustomed to the significantly more fast-paced and intense world of TV production. It goes without saying we had a soft spot for the men and women in the Marine department who accompanied our ship everywhere with their ridiculously over-powered boats. We were lucky enough to work closely with one boat operator in particular named Dan, whose home is in Halifax, NS! He was a good friend to our crew and kept us supplied with local news and Trailer Park Boys episodes throughout the production.</p>
<p>It is incredibly exciting for the <em>Picton Castle</em> crew to be part of something that is going to be shared with a literally global audience, a glimpse of our very real lives aboard this very beautiful training tall ship. I won&#8217;t hold my breath for a cameo of myself, but for all of our proud parents and easily excitable family and friends, press your nose close to the TV and you just might recognize those rough hands trapped in a close-up frame or perhaps a familiar silhouette against the sun-drenched sail canvas.</p>
<p>It was a great deal of fun for us to participate in this production, but after several months in one location (initially a struggle for our crew, who are accustomed to short visits in port and longer passages at sea) it was time to say goodbye to the very good friends that we had made in Dominica (Mr. Rudolf who took us everywhere!) and head back to sea (well, we took Frederick with us)! We&#8217;ve since revisited Martinique (and Martine, the tattoo artist) and the crew&#8217;s all-time favourite Caribbean island, Jost Van Dyke, and are presently making our final passage of the winter training season, bound for Charleston, South Carolina, the first stop on the <em>Picton Castle</em> summer trip, the 2007 ASTA East Coast Tall Ship Challenge!</p>
<p>These sailors are very tired but contented and after months in the Caribbean, we are again faced with the necessity to assimilate ourselves back into the fast-paced Western society from whence most of us came. Nine more days and we&#8217;ll be in the USA! <em>Pirate Master</em> airs on CBS at 8:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time on Thursday, May 31. Watch it in your home and then come see us in person!</p>
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		<title>Anchor Windlass Overhaul</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/03/28/anchor-windlass-overhaul/</link>
		<comments>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/03/28/anchor-windlass-overhaul/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2007 17:21:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Caribbean Winter 2006-07]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2007/03/28/anchor-windlass-overhaul/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Caribbean is anything but windless, and many of the islands&#8217; lee sides provide the perfect opportunity to complete routine maintenance aboard our ship. Our most recent maintenance project focused on one of the most important tools we use aboard our ship: the windlass. On the foc&#8217;sle head of the Picton Castle sits a large [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Caribbean is anything but windless, and many of the islands&#8217; lee sides provide the perfect opportunity to complete routine maintenance aboard our ship. Our most recent maintenance project focused on one of the most important tools we use aboard our ship: the windlass. On the foc&#8217;sle head of the <em>Picton Castle</em> sits a large piece of steel equipment that resembles what would be a rather uncomfortable adult-sized teeter-totter. This is the <em>Picton Castle</em>&#8217;s &#8220;Armstrong&#8221; patent windlass made by the Lunenburg Foundry, and it is a tool that we use to heave up the anchor. It is straight out of the age of sail. At times it can be a great deal of work to heave up a ton of anchor and hundreds of feet of monster chain, but Captain Moreland keeps things in perspective when he points out that the entire process would be significantly more difficult without the windlass!</p>
<p>A few days ago, Captain Moreland and Captain Phil Watson of <em>Bluenose II</em> (who visited us as Chief Mate for a short time) took advantage of a beautiful Caribbean afternoon to inspect, adjust, and improve on the working parts of the windlass while four members of the on-watch hovered around them like shadows in order to learn a thing or two. A fun thing about working aboard a traditional sailing ship, such as this, is that traditional hand tools are often enough to get the job done. Today, for instance, we used a sledge hammer and section of tree stump, a raw-hide mallet, steel C-clamp, a chisel, a crescent wrench, an oil pencil, and steel chipping hammers to get most of the job done. An advantage of working in a traditional sailing ship in this day and age is that we have access to AC power when we need it, and Captain Moreland and Captain Phil needed power to operate a belt sander, a grinder and a cutting wheel so that the job would be finished properly before the sun went down.</p>
<p>For a piece of equipment that I&#8217;ve used what feels like hundreds of times, I know remarkably little about the inner workings of our ship&#8217;s windlass. I know that to heave up the anchor the brake must be off, the clutch in gear, and the windlass bars in. Then we wait for the Captain&#8217;s order to &#8220;Heave along&#8221; and we haul up the hook. Today, however, I had the first opportunity to see inside the typically enclosed windlass shoes to appreciate the quality and technology of this antique device.</p>
<p>Captain Phil took the belt sander to the steel band inboard of the Starboard Gypsy head and Captain Moreland took the grinding wheel to the steel band to Port, while deckhand Katie (Chicago) and I rust-busted the Port band with chipping hammers, preparing it for Captain Moreland. It was a very noisy place to work with two power tools and two steel hammers grinding and pinging away on the bare steel, but we were happy with our racket because we knew we were doing an important job, and few things in life are more satisfying than seeing instant results in a labour-intensive project.</p>
<p>It is very important to keep the steel friction bands of the windlass bare, and that can be tricky on a ship sailing the salt sea where the bands are exposed to the elements 24 hours a day. Typical methods of steel preservation such as sealing, greasing, or painting will only interfere with the way the windlass works, so this is one of those areas that we just have to keep an eye on. When Captain Moreland and Captain Phil were pleased with the shiny new finish on the steel bands, it was time to open up the &#8220;shoes&#8221; of the windlass. The shoes are crescents of heavy steel that slide up and down on the forward side of the windlass. Inside each shoe is a small, curved, &#8220;free falling&#8221; steel plate. When the windlass is in operation, the plate alternates between being jammed and falling free within the curved bare steel surface inside the windlass shoe. If both surfaces are not smooth, the plate will not slide or separate properly, creating a great deal of uneven wear and preventing the windlass from working properly, if at all.</p>
<p>When the shoes were disassembled, Captain Moreland and Captain Phil divided and conquered the tasks at hand. Captain Moreland took the grinding wheel to the inside of the shoe to make adjustments to the angles of the openings while Captain Phil took the small steel plates to the Well Deck and adjusted the individual curve of the plates with a little persuasion from the sledge hammer and tree trunk.</p>
<p>Those of us standing by watched silently with intense interest and responded promptly to the Captain&#8217;s instructions to heave up or down slowly and gently on the windlass while all of the heavy pieces were reassembled and balanced properly back into place. It was a tedious, labour intensive, trial-and-error sort of afternoon, but we were all very pleased to have learned something new and to not have crushed the Captain&#8217;s hands. We were still smiling when we wound up the hose after a thorough deck wash in the hot-pink and buttercup-coloured Caribbean sunset.</p>
<div><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1333&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=258,height=354');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/userpics/thumb_Captain-c_wheel_best.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Captain-c wheel best" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Captain-c wheel best</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1334&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=258,height=354');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/userpics/thumb_Captains_Dan_and_Phil.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Captains Dan and Phil" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Captains Dan and Phil</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1335&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=258,height=354');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/userpics/thumb_Inside_shoe.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Inside shoe" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Inside shoe</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=117" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></div>
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		<title>The Picton Castle’s Homecoming</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/06/18/the-picton-castles-homecoming/</link>
		<comments>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/06/18/the-picton-castles-homecoming/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Jun 2006 15:22:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Location: Home! Alongside in Lunenburg Harbour, Nova Scotia!
At about 0710 this morning the Picton Castle passed the buoy called &#8220;Fig&#8221; and by 0730 we had reached White Point, where the mates had us loose all sail to dry. After a hearty breakfast of bacon and cheesy scrambled eggs the crew got to work pulling heavy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Location: Home! Alongside in Lunenburg Harbour, Nova Scotia!</p>
<p>At about 0710 this morning the <em>Picton Castle</em> passed the buoy called &#8220;Fig&#8221; and by 0730 we had reached White Point, where the mates had us loose all sail to dry. After a hearty breakfast of bacon and cheesy scrambled eggs the crew got to work pulling heavy hawsers and Samson braids (dock lines) out of the chain locker and off of the top of the galley house, where they had been flaked to dry after their use in Shelburne during Alberto.</p>
<p>We flaked hawsers on the forecastle head and forward on the well deck to be used as head lines and bow springs; we flaked two hawsers amidships to be used as after-leading and forward-leading ‘midships springs, and we flaked hawsers aft on the aloha deck to be used as stern lines and stern springs. Bites from each hawser would be sent ashore to be made fast over bits on the dock and then the slack would be taken out of the hawsers aboard and made fast around big cleats on the deck called &#8220;bits.&#8221; We have done this many times throughout our voyage, but this day would be the most nerve-racking because there would be an enormous crowd of friends and family waiting for us there. Captain warned us that it would be easy to lose focus in those circumstances, and our priority was to get the ship safely tied up.</p>
<p>At 0845 we braced the yards to heave-to long enough to launch the skiff. We put Zimmer, Brent, and John in the boat to clean the topsides and make the ship&#8217;s steel bright white for our homecoming. At 0935 all hands were called to hoist the skiff back into her starboard davits and again make way for Lunenburg.</p>
<p>At 1035 we set all fore-and-aft sail and all hands were busy painting seizings, rust-busting and spot-painting white on rusty spots. Some hands had turned-to to do a major domestics (house cleaning) of the ship&#8217;s living spaces, and Kolin was leading the hose in a thorough deck wash. When the Captain told the mates &#8220;That&#8217;s well!&#8221; we cleaned all the brushes and packed away the painting supplies for the last time.</p>
<p>At 1100 we had reached Rose Point, Cross Island, and Battery Point. All hands were called to set tops&#8217;ls, t&#8217;gallants and royals. We had a nice sailing breeze and therefore did not need our engine. We had set all of our flags and our pennants and we looked quite beautiful with all of our sails filled in the breeze and bright colors flying at the tops of our masts. There was no more work to do, so we sat there in kind of an electrified state—tired from turning-in to bed late and from rising early. I was a bundle of nerves, completely wound up like a cheap watch! We were only a few hours away from reuniting with our families!</p>
<p>The day was been so exciting that I forget what lunch was, but I remember eating soup and a beautiful fresh fruit salad.</p>
<p>When lunch was all cleaned up, it was close to 1300 and we were due to make our arrival in Lunenburg Harbour at 1400. I was sitting on the cargo hatch when a whale-watching boat roared up from abaft our starboard beam. The people on board were cheering at us and waving signs. A handful of my shipmates and I were trimming the foreyards and taking slack out of the starboard sides, and we carried on doing so while the boat paced alongside us and the passengers aboard cheered. We didn&#8217;t pay them much mind.</p>
<p>Through the hauling and marrying of lines I learned that one of the ship&#8217;s major investors, and a close personal friend of Captain Moreland, was aboard the whale watching boat and he was going to cruise into Lunenburg aboard the <em>Picton Castle</em>. Then I heard Drew shout that his parents were aboard the boat. Kathleen&#8217;s parents were aboard also, and they got to see her bringing the ship towards Lunenburg from her position on helm! When she discovered they were there she became emotional and distracted and handed the helm off to Becky, who was standing by.</p>
<p>We are used to boats cruising alongside us and cheering because we are likely the only real pirate-looking ship the majority of people have ever seen up close and in person. So I did not pay much mind to the passengers aboard the whale watching boat; I merely waved politely and smiled for my shipmates who had family aboard. Drew had even managed to kiss his mother when the whale watching boat got close enough to let Edgar Crocker board the ship. I had a hold of his waistband so he did not lose his balance over the rail. It must have been very nice for Drew to be the first to kiss his mom after joining us in Cape Town about four months ago.</p>
<p>I was standing by on the cargo hatch trying to get warm in the sunlight when I heard someone shout, &#8220;Erin! You&#8217;ve got someone on the boat too! What do those signs say?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;What are you talking about?&#8221; I asked to no one in particular because I did not know who spoke to me first. I looked over the rail.  Sure enough, the first thing that caught my eye was a bright white sign with blue letters waving high above the passengers&#8217; heads, and it read &#8220;100,000 Welcomes!&#8221; in Gaelic, a traditional language still spoken in parts of Cape Breton. Then I saw another sign that read, &#8220;What&#8217;s yer father&#8217;s name?&#8221;—a classic Caper phrase often asked when you are first introduced to someone new. Chances are good that if they run through your list of relatives, they will know someone in your family. There was another sign that read, &#8220;Holy mackerel! Oh, me nerves!&#8221; This one baffled the crew, but I knew it just read that they were excited. There were two more signs and on the end of the pickets holding the signs high were the arms of seven of my family members! &#8220;Oh, me nerves&#8221; is right! I was shocked and cried to see my family whom I had missed so much, and laughed hard at the fools they are! You can be sure wherever you take a Caper they will steal the show!</p>
<p>Our crew and our families on the boat had a short time to shout greetings back and forth over the rail before it was time for the boat to leave and for us to concentrate on sail handling. We had to focus on getting ready to bring the ship past the familiar foghorn on Battery Point and into the mouth of Lunenburg Harbour.</p>
<p>A fresh breeze blew up then, giving us an extra knot of speed or so, just when we did not really want or need it. We began to clewing up all sails in rapid succession and the Main Engine was fired up to bring us in under control, with Cape Breton native and assistant engineer Brett at the engine controls on the bridge. Even though we arrived at the dock under motor power, our families and friends had seen us come home under full sail and witnessed the skill and speed we&#8217;ve mastered at taking in sail.</p>
<p>At 1400 we launched the skiff with Zimmer and John K. in the boat. They were in the water to stand by to receive the Captain&#8217;s orders to push the ship by her bow in one direction or the other.  We approached the dock among a deafening racket of Scottish bagpipes and horns blasting from the Primo, Zebroid, other local vessels and also from the Atlantic Fisheries Museum. For every horn we answered three horn blasts back. It was so loud that it was difficult to receive and relay instructions from the Captain.</p>
<p>We approached so that the end of the dock was forward of our starboard beam. At 1408 Chief Mate Sam tossed the first line ashore to shipmates Brent and Jack who were waiting on the dock to make lines fast. We warped around on the headline until our starboard beam was parallel to the dock. Susannah got a forward-leading and after-leading ‘midships spring on the dock and surged or took up on the lines smartly until the Captain decided the ship was where he wanted her. At 1416 the Main Engine was secured and the ship was officially alongside at Lunenburg Harbour.</p>
<p>Hundreds of people lined the docks of the <em>Picton Castle</em> and the Lady Janet and others still had climbed up onto the decks and the rails of the Primo, who shares a dock with the <em>Picton Castle</em>. There was the clapping of hundreds of hands and voices cheering and calling out to loved ones. It was really an overwhelming moment. Our hearts were pounding and more than one of us whispered our knees were shaking.</p>
<p>The Captain kept us focused by snapping us back into reality with the order to square the yards—gear, sheets, tacks, lifts, and braces. I think we had those braces squared and trimmed in record time. When the yards were square and the lifts and braces were made fast, the crew got the order, &#8220;Up and stow!&#8221; Our crew sang out, repeating the order together, many of us already partway up the shrouds.</p>
<p>Following Captain&#8217;s orders, Pania Warren (from Pitcairn Island) and I ascended all the way to the Main Royal yard to stow our favourite sail. Pania and I are the same size and we work well together aloft, often having to take breaks to recover from fits of laughter. It was my pleasure to stow sail for what may be the last time with my shipmate and cabin mate, Pania. Directly below Pania and me on the T&#8217;Gallant yard were Andrea M. and &#8220;Baby&#8221; Jack, and so on down the mast. The <em>Picton Castle</em>&#8217;s sails were stowed in record time with especially neat and lovely harbour stows, some of the finest of the voyage!</p>
<p>When we were finished stowing the Main Royal, Pania and I leaned our bellies against the yard from where we were sharing the foot rope on the Starboard Main Royal yardarm. We looked below and down to deck and saw that our shipmates were already returning to deck because the sails were stowed. We looked down upon the heads of the hundreds of people standing on the dock and they stared upwards at our crew working aloft. We waited together aloft for as long as we could get away with before the Captain called the muster on deck.</p>
<p>When all hands were down from aloft, Captain Moreland called, &#8220;All hands, muster midships!&#8221; His crew gathered around him on the cargo hatch and he told us to go get our cameras and hand them to someone ashore because we were going to pose for our official crew photo. We have never taken a picture of all of our crew posing together before because it is bad luck to do so before the voyage is complete. I sat between Doc Jeremy and Pania, helping to hold up our ship&#8217;s white and red life ring with her name stenciled upon it. Our crew stood around us and behind us with arms wrapped around one another and big grins on their faces as we all faced the crowd on the dock. We are the picture of the healthiest and happiest crew that ever went to sea on this old barque out of Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.</p>
<p>After the last photo was taken, Captain Moreland waved his arm toward the crowd and told our crew, &#8220;Get out there and see your families!&#8221; There was absolute chaos It was a blur of crew dashing over the rail and onto our old and familiar dock, pushing our way through the crowd and calling out the names of our parents. I found my family standing in front of the Primo.</p>
<p>After we had a chance to reunite with our loved ones, we began branching out to meet each other&#8217;s families. It happened quite naturally. Fathers and mothers approached their children&#8217;s shipmates and finally touched the hands of someone they had never met but felt they knew so well. My shipmates and I embraced people we had only seen in one another&#8217;s photographs from home, but were quite familiar with all the same. &#8220;How is so-and so? Where is the dog today?&#8221;</p>
<p>Shortly thereafter the crew scattered from the ship to spend time with our families and to take hot showers in their hotel rooms. After dinner with our folks, the entire crew and all their loved ones met up at the Knot Pub, where we watched the hockey game (the Oilers won! The day just kept getting better and better), and shared cold drinks and hundreds of laughs. We have thousands of stories to share with anyone who is willing to listen! It was around 1:30 in the morning before many of our parents had an opportunity to leave and turn-in to rest!</p>
<p>Already the ship feels empty because shipmates have gone to stay ashore in soft beds and warm rooms with bathtubs and hot water showers. One by one bunks are stripped of the familiar printed sheets and photos are taken off the overheads. Taxis to the airport have begun making their rounds and contact information has been exchanged.</p>
<p>Tonight is <em>Picton Castle</em> Awards Night at the old Fish Factory. This promises to be a very light-hearted and playful event and I expect we will expose quite a bit about our lives and relationships aboard to the family and friends. But they will never really know the half of it.</p>
<p>Job well done, Captain, Mates and Crew of the <em>Picton Castle</em>&#8217;s World Voyage IV! It&#8217;s been a sincere pleasure sharing the last 28,000 nautical miles with you.</p>
<p><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1070&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=670,height=530');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Homecoming/thumb_Barque_PICTON_CASTLE_arrival,_by_Barry_Schnare_055.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Barque PICTON CASTLE arrival, by Barry Schnare 055" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Barque PICTON CASTLE arrival, by Barry Schnare 055</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1069&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=478,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Homecoming/thumb_Homecoming_Crew_Portrait_2006_for_web_site.JPG" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Homecoming Crew Portrait 2006 for web site" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Homecoming Crew Portrait 2006 for web site</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1071&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=478,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Homecoming/thumb_Johanna--Homecoming_2006.JPG" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Johanna--Homecoming 2006" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Johanna--Homecoming 2006</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1072&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=670,height=530');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Homecoming/thumb_The_Barque_PICTON_CASTLE_068.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="The Barque PICTON CASTLE 068" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">The Barque PICTON CASTLE 068</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1073&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=670,height=530');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Homecoming/thumb_The_Barque_PICTON_CASTLE_122.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="The Barque PICTON CASTLE 122" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">The Barque PICTON CASTLE 122</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=69" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></p>
<p>Photos of ship arrival by Barry Schnare<br />
Portrait of crew and Johanna by Erin Standing</p>
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		<title>So Close We Could Smell It!</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/06/17/so-close-we-could-smell-it/</link>
		<comments>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/06/17/so-close-we-could-smell-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Jun 2006 15:47:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Late afternoon on June 16, the Picton Castle crew brought their ship to anchor in quiet, sheltered Port Mouton, Nova Scotia. We were chilled to the bone at sea, but nearly encircled by the beautiful shoreline and lush green landscape, the sun and the air quickly warmed the ship nicely. Layers of sweaters and toques [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Late afternoon on June 16, the <em>Picton Castle</em> crew brought their ship to anchor in quiet, sheltered Port Mouton, Nova Scotia. We were chilled to the bone at sea, but nearly encircled by the beautiful shoreline and lush green landscape, the sun and the air quickly warmed the ship nicely. Layers of sweaters and toques began to peel off. When we went aloft to stow sail it was warmer still; Doc Jeremy attributed it to being high above the frigid Atlantic water.That evening we held our last Marlinspike party together as crew of the <em>Picton Castle</em>&#8217;s fourth World Voyage. Of our 51 crew 36 have been together since April-May of last year, I believe this may be a record for this old sailing ship. We know our ship and we know one another, inside and out.</p>
<p>Before the Marlin Spike was to officially begin, Captain Moreland called an all-hands muster amidships. We stood in front of the scuttle to the Main Salon, leaned on the main fife rail and lower tops&#8217;l sheets, sat atop the fore braces on the port side, and as many of us who would fit sat cross-legged on the cargo hatch to hear the Captain speak. Then our Captain addressed us privately for the last time. His words made our hearts swell with pride at our massive accomplishments: we travelled 28,000 nautical miles throughout our global circumnavigation, and we put our ship and one another above anything else in our lives for an entire year. We were loyal and committed and we brought ourselves safely around the world.</p>
<p>At one point or another during the Captain&#8217;s speech my nose began to sting and I had a lump in my throat so big that it ached to get enough air in my lungs. My eyes were burning and began to water and I think I can even pinpoint the second my heart broke. I turned my back to my Captain and my shipmates so that no one would catch me silently blubbering from my perch atop the port pin rail. I tried to focus all my attention on a red and white local fishing boat that was motoring into the distance. The water was as calm and smooth as a sheet of ice.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s very little chance that I was the only one welling up with emotion. Our crew have a lot to be proud of. We have achieved what we set out to do, and the reality was that the next afternoon our ship&#8217;s family would separate and face the world that should be most familiar to us, but we have to rediscover it without the excitement and chaos of experiencing it with 50 shipmates.</p>
<p>The Captain gave the order for the Galley Crew to go into the hold and get the beer that had been chilled in the freezer for us! What a treat to have a cold drink aboard! The Galley Crew set up the Marlinspike punch on the starboard pin rail and Joe fixed up an enormous pot of his infamous popcorn, which was plopped down at the port forward corner of the cargo hatch, within easy reach of anyone cruising past.</p>
<p>Sea chanteys and traditional maritime music piped down on the Marlinspike from where Maggie had lashed the stereo on the Bridge. A pink sun set all around us and reflected on the ship&#8217;s white hull and the faces of those of us standing at the rail. For old times&#8217; sake, Kjetil slipped away from the party unnoticed and returned wearing one of the funniest costumes we&#8217;d seen all year—a perfect way to end the voyage&#8217;s final Marlinspike!</p>
<p>At 0615 this morning (the 17th), Kolin gave everyone their wake-up and the crew dragged their groggy selves on deck. We joined one another stretching and yawning on the foc&#8217;s&#8217;l head waiting for the order to heave away on the windlass.</p>
<p>The mud was thick and the old hook dragged her fluke and heavy chain link by link. Andrea M. stood on the foc&#8217;s&#8217;l head with the fire hose and hosed down the chain as it clinked up the hawse pipe one link at a time. Five people manned each of the red and green painted windlass bars and about 30 more stood by to lend a hand at heaving up our anchor one last time. At 0645 we had the starboard anchor clear of the water and were underway, bound for Lunenburg. We expect to arrive there around 2 PM.</p>
<p><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1074&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=478,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/So Close We Could Smell It/thumb_Bending_sail_on_the_new_yard..jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Bending sail on the new yard." /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Bending sail on the new yard.</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1075&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=478,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/So Close We Could Smell It/thumb_On_our_way_Home!.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="On our way Home!" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">On our way Home!</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1076&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=366,height=498');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/So Close We Could Smell It/thumb_Putting_finishing_touches_on_the_sail_for_C._W._MORGAN..jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Putting finishing touches on the sail for C. W. MORGAN." /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Putting finishing touches on the sail for C. W. MORGAN.</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1077&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=366,height=498');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/So Close We Could Smell It/thumb_Royal_yard_goes_up..jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Royal yard goes up." /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Royal yard goes up.</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=1078&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=282,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/So Close We Could Smell It/thumb_Touching_up_a_few_spots_with_paint_to_look_our_best!.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Touching up a few spots with paint to look our best!" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Touching up a few spots with paint to look our best!</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=70" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></p>
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		<title>Picton Castle Temp Agency?</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/05/11/picton-castle-temp-agency/</link>
		<comments>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/05/11/picton-castle-temp-agency/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 May 2006 20:27:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Location: 06° 30.2&#8242;N / 050° 10.7&#8242;W
What will become of us all now? In 37 days our year-long adventure aboard the sail training ship Barque Picton Castle will come to a bleary-eyed end and the majority of us will wander away with the same dumbfounded expressions as those portrayed on the faces of the &#8220;returnees&#8221; on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Location: 06° 30.2&#8242;N / 050° 10.7&#8242;W</strong></p>
<p>What will become of us all now? In 37 days our year-long adventure aboard the sail training ship Barque <em>Picton Castle</em> will come to a bleary-eyed end and the majority of us will wander away with the same dumbfounded expressions as those portrayed on the faces of the &#8220;returnees&#8221; on shipmate Ollie&#8217;s show, The 4400. The Captain jokes that our lives are now ruined forever, just as his is. However, this is not made-for-TV fantasy. There is no quarantine center for displaced, world-voyaging, deep-sea sailors, and likewise there is no debriefing seminar to help us process all of the experiences and knowledge we have gained in this past year. My shipmates and I are facing the unique challenge of having to take ourselves out of this special fraternal world that we have been living in and are now defined by, and to try and relate to the people we were before this all took place.</p>
<p>I guess a good place to start is to take a look back at who we were in our pre–Picton Castle days. We were contractors and businessmen, head hunters and graphics designers, rocket scientists, heart surgeons, dentists, and biologists. We were students of every fathomable faculty of learning. We were librarians and actors, lawyers and editors, bankers and farmers. We were anthropologists and physical therapists, respiratory therapists and occupational therapists. We were professional poker players, bartenders and taxi drivers. We have a long and impressive list of our identities, but is there room to live a double life and split our time between being an &#8221; &#8216;ist &#8221; and being a deep sea sailor/ world voyager extraordinaire?</p>
<p>The good news is that we have a whole new realm of skill sets to add to our old ones. We can lift heavy things and wash 10,000 dishes a day. We are excellent problem solvers and can reorganize a 50-tonne cargo hold in a day. We are master exterminators and can sew a patch on anything. We can competently row a whaleboat and embark on overnight expeditions to unfamiliar tropical islands. We can say &#8220;Hello&#8221; and &#8220;Thank you&#8221; in ump-teen languages and can tell you the currencies and exchange rates for as many countries. We can climb high ladders and work with both hands. We are fanatic converts of the concept of &#8220;island time&#8221; and are avid story-tellers to anyone who will listen. We know now rather than simply believe (believing is sort of weak watery stuff compared to knowing) that we are no more than equal to the amazing people we have met, and maybe not quite that. We are aware that children are smarter and funnier than we are, so we are willing to step back and let them take the lead. We can crawl on our bellies in dark, low spaces, fix marine heads, and can withstand extreme temperatures. We can do any and all of these things not only ashore, but also on a rolling ship! We are the same familiar people, just now available in new and cooler models with loads of special features.</p>
<p>I asked Lead Seaman Kjetil (Norway) what would become of us if we retuned home and found ourselves unsatisfied with our old lives and unable to compete with the adventures we&#8217;d just had. I had a plan for when this voyage was finished and I had to walk away, just as my shipmates had plans to return to the businesses they had built up and temporarily left behind. All of our plans have changed in some way or another. I do not expect that very many of us will be discontent to return to our lives, especially now that we are capable of seeing options that before now we could not have known existed.</p>
<p>As Kjetil and I talked, I told him of my mental images of a mob of empty-shell people milling about, hopelessly trying to apply our willy-nilly list of fine-tuned skills. Kjetil&#8217;s response was that we have no reason to worry because we can always open a <em>Picton Castle</em> Temp Agency—our collective crew is qualified to do just about anything! He ran through examples that are similar to those outlined above, and then he used his classic quirky humour to relax my furrowed brow and end the conversation all at once. A Temp Agency for <em>Picton Castle</em> crew was the best solution for us because, he said, &#8220;Only one person needs to be competent; the rest of us are good at following orders.&#8221;</p>
<p>Captain says that we have no idea how truly competent we are now, but he says that &#8220;You&#8217;ll see, little fish.&#8221;</p>
<p><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=897&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=478,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Temp Agency/thumb_Crew_working_on_the_way_to_Bali.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Crew working on the way to Bali" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Crew working on the way to Bali</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=896&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=282,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Picton Castle Temp Agency/thumb_Kjetil_lurking_on_the_way_to_Bali.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Kjetil lurking on the way to Bali" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Kjetil lurking on the way to Bali</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=54" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></p>
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		<title>The Night Log of the Barque Picton Castle</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/04/16/the-night-log-of-the-barque-picton-castle/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Apr 2006 20:03:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Bound from Jamestown, St. Helena Island to Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil
Location: 11° 26.1&#8242;S / 011° 37.4&#8242;W
I may have misrepresented how wonderful it is to sail on a year-long round-the-world voyage. Well, it is wonderful, but there are occasional moments of discontent. I know people have been waiting for juicy tidbits of evidence of crew [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Bound from Jamestown, St. Helena Island to Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil</strong></p>
<p><strong>Location: 11° 26.1&#8242;S / 011° 37.4&#8242;W</strong></p>
<p>I may have misrepresented how wonderful it is to sail on a year-long round-the-world voyage. Well, it is wonderful, but there are occasional moments of discontent. I know people have been waiting for juicy tidbits of evidence of crew squabbles or evil Mates, or something of the sort. Well, I can&#8217;t help you there; our crew gets along quite extraordinarily well for cramming 50 adults from all walks of life into a 179-foot-long Barque, and our Captain and Mates treat us well. We learn a great deal from their examples. We have things pretty easy compared to crews on ships in the Age of Sail: roomy bunks, fresh food and water, lots of time to explore ports of call, etc. Is the food bad? Absolutely not! Joe works hard every day; we always have fresh bread and hot, balanced meals and he makes sure to stock up on all our favourite treats when provisioning. So what is it that pushes our buttons and can even trigger foul moods? Only the most significant event of the crew&#8217;s day: The Wake Up.</p>
<p>This morning was the straw that broke the Camel&#8217;s back. Even the most even-tempered and understanding of our crew were annoyed to the point of drawing the lead seaman&#8217;s attention to the terrible Watch wake-up we had received. Tonight it went like this, &#8220;ERIN! WAKE UP!&#8221; and then squeaky sandals and a red flashlight turned and went out the door, just like that! Each member of our Watch was rudely jostled awake, unfortunately including innocent shipmates, such as the six other girls sleeping in the Bat Cave, who do not rise at 0330 for Watch. It is not reasonable to expect to be cooed into consciousness, but when a person is sleeping on a ship, it is important they know what they are being waked for. Has something happened and it&#8217;s all hands on deck? Is it time for Watch and am I late for muster? Is it still raining outside and do I need to bring anything with me in case I will not have the opportunity to go below?</p>
<p>I blinked a few times in the dark and took a few deep breaths, but the damage had been done. A bad wake up = one cranky girl. You read the above and perhaps you think we are all over-reacting. Perhaps you are right, but there is a balance and courtesy we strive to maintain aboard so that we make one another comfortable. We have learned to give the wake-up that we would like to receive—as much information in as few hushed words as possible. A short conversation allows your brain the opportunity to adjust to reality. The typical script for a wake-up goes like this: &#8220;[insert name], it is 3:35 AM (they wait for your reply). This is your wake-up for Watch. They sky is clear and you may want to bring a sweater. See you on deck.&#8221; Then they leave only after they are assured that you are, in fact, awake (after all, their Watch cannot be stood down until the on-coming Watch is all present and accounted for).</p>
<p>This morning&#8217;s negative reaction was merely a snowball of frustration stemming from the less-than-stellar wake-up trend that has developed, shocking us into wakefulness the past three nights. For example, two nights ago, the person on wake-ups (who has lived aboard for a year) stumbled around our living compartment trying to find the correct bunks of the people he was responsible for waking. Using a large flashlight with a bright, white bulb, he directed the beam directly into each and every sleeping face, and then he directed the beam of light onto a highly reflective piece of plastic to review the bunk chart again. We were all awake at this point, and merely groaned with annoyance. After a half hour of being on deck, it was not given a second thought.</p>
<p>Last night a different person was responsible for wake-ups, and this person also wielded a bright flashlight. It&#8217;s dark, I understand, but it is also dark on deck, and our eyes hardly have to adjust. There is no furniture to rearrange and trip over in the living spaces, negating the necessity of using a flashlight in the dark. (As a rule, if one must use a flashlight, we cover the lens with our fingers, allowing out only small cracks of softened light, cast downward.) Then he proceeded to try and wake a crew member who has never lived in our cabin, visiting the bunk of someone else entirely. Then before reaching my bunk, he woke the on-coming galley person 2.5 hours earlier than they needed to rise. He spoke in a regular indoor voice, rather than in hushed tones or whispers that we typically engage so as not to disturb the other sleepers.</p>
<p>Maybe we are all just a bunch of babies, but we are mature enough that this morning&#8217;s annoyance stems from individual aggravation and not mob mentality. Every person on our Watch flopped on the hatch for muster with a sigh. Perhaps this is part rant, but also this is an historically accurate portrayal of how very small annoyances in a closed environment, such as that aboard a ship at sea, can be incredibly frustrating. The journals of apprentice deckhands during the Age of Sail write of the gruff and surly wake-ups barked by more experienced sailors, directing the slumbering men (seasick or otherwise) immediately onto deck for some unpleasant chore or another. There are accounts of entire crews demanding that a Captain make improvements to some aspect of their life aboard. Of course, the most serious demands being related to issues such as an end to corporal punishment, to rations of alcohol, to better food, etc., but it is well established that lesser issues can fester if not corrected over time.</p>
<p>A crew mate of ours, Ollie, tells a story about his four seasons aboard the Norwegian full-rigged training ship, the SØrlandet. Ollie is a very tall man and he could almost sit up in his rack on the Sørlandet, if it were not for a beam than ran horizontal across his overhead. He said that throughout the four seasons he volunteered aboard, there was one woman to whom the task of waking Ollie&#8217;s Watch always fell. He describes her as a hearty, abrupt (but kind) woman, and he claims that each and every time she would wake him, she would say it so loudly and abruptly that he would be shocked into an upright position, smashing his head against the beam. He claims this happened so frequently that he took pains to sleep in positions that would conceivably protect his head, but even if he slept with his head at the foot of his bunk, the wake-ups would still jar him out of slumber with such a start that he would inevitably bruise his brow. He laughs about it now and says that she remains his friend and one of his favourite crewmates to this day.</p>
<p>Two hours into Watch and we are beginning to relax again. At the beginning of Watch we reviewed how to give a proper wake-up, something one would assume we&#8217;d have down-pat by now, but obviously needed re-visiting.</p>
<p>All that aside, there are a lot of exciting things happening aboard the <em>Picton Castle</em> to look forward to! Today is Sunday, and with that brings the famous 2.5 hour all-you-can-eat, anything-you-want breakfast that we call &#8220;Chibley&#8217;s Café&#8221;! Hurrah and huzzah! Being a Sunday at sea, it also entails a lovely, light lunch and an afternoon Marlin Spike! As if all that were not treat enough, today is not just any Sunday; it&#8217;s Easter Sunday! This means a nice, big Easter dinner at 1800 (6 PM)! I caught Chief Mate Sam, and Becky sneaking around the deck at 0430 this morning, hiding chocolate eggs and other treats around common places on the ship (in coils, in the ship&#8217;s boats, etc). The crew are going to love this!</p>
<p>Sundays are certainly something worth getting excited about (and we do!), but another cause for celebration today is that we finally got our Force 4 sailing breeze! All of Pania&#8217;s whistling and sweeping at the masts has apparently pleased Neptune, and his Royal Saltiness has given our once-blessed barque (curse those reeking pollywogs!) her fair SE trade winds! We are now making around 6 knots of speed, which is a marked improvement from the 2.5–4 knots we had been making before. We have only taken in two or three sails (fore-and-aft, to help adjust steering) and the <em>Picton Castle</em> is in her glory!</p>
<p>As we cruise along through the South Atlantic, we have all of a sudden become privy to sunsets and sunrises (also the rising and setting of the moon) of such shocking beauty that we could not experience again after those of the Indian Ocean! The water trickling across the deck is becoming noticeably warmer and the crew is getting excited for our much-anticipated arrival at the beautiful island of Fernando de Noronha, Brazil. Only another 1400 nautical miles to go. Then on to Grenada in the Caribbean!</p>
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		<title>South Atlantic Sunsets–Crew’s Eyeview</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/04/15/south-atlantic-sunsets-crews-eyeview/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Apr 2006 13:54:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Location: 13° 14.5&#8242;S / 010° 21.2&#8242;W
This evening just before dinner, Greg the Second Mate sang out the orders to set all sail, to pass the sheets and set the fore and aft sail, and to rig and set the stuns&#8217;ls. The 4–8 Watch and any other hands who were on deck relaxing sprang into action [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Location: 13° 14.5&#8242;S / 010° 21.2&#8242;W</strong></p>
<p>This evening just before dinner, Greg the Second Mate sang out the orders to set all sail, to pass the sheets and set the fore and aft sail, and to rig and set the stuns&#8217;ls. The 4–8 Watch and any other hands who were on deck relaxing sprang into action and in minutes the <em>Picton Castle</em> was sailing along, powered by 22 sails gently filling in the Force 3 breeze. Twenty-two sails and more than 175 lines of running rigging (halyards, sheets, bunt-lines, clew-lines, leach-lines, braces, down-hauls, tacks, clews, brails, out-hauls, in-hauls, lifts&#8211;not sure if that includes the stuns&#8217;l gear, fish and stay tackles or gantlin&#8217;s). After ten months at sea (it is now twelve months aboard for those of us who arrived early for the month of preparation in Lunenburg before we set off on her Fourth World Voyage), the &#8220;old hands&#8221; are quite quick at setting several sails at once, and while the green hands are learning quickly, it&#8217;s easy to see they are caught up in the excitement and get overwhelmed still. We can relate; when we were the new hands, the orders sounded like a foreign language and there was a lot of confusion when you have to take clews, bunts, leeches, tacks and sheets into account (plus the chaos of 20 hands running about the deck casting off and hauling on lines).</p>
<p>After all sails were set and all the lines were coiled and hung, there was just enough time to go aloft and nip bunts before the dinner bell rang. I went aloft on the Main and Jeff B. went aloft on the Fore. With the gentle breeze and the crests of the slight wind waves hardly breaking, it was impossible to make myself hurry through the task. The sun was low and fiery in the sky, and it would sink behind the horizon in about 45 minutes. When I was aloft, the dinner bell rang and Greg told me to come down and fill my plate and then finish up nipping the bunts. I had only one bunt-line left to nip and I made sure to take my time doing it so that I could steal a million more glances at the ship with all her sails set, sailing into the setting sun.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s moments like these that all superfluous brain functions stop so that every one of your senses can function at its peak performance. My brain geared down to process the yellow fireball backlit by a pink sky and fuchsia and purple clouds; the feeling of being dwarfed while perched amidst more than 12,500 square feet of canvas coloured by the rain and sun and streaked by the grease on the masts; the subtle sound of the breeze in the rigging and the sloshing of the ocean all around us. The jackstay and thick canvas under my fingertips were still warm from the sun. The pressure of the narrow footrope nestled on my arches to just alongside the balls of my bare feet; and the weight of my body as it pressed into and eased away from the yard on the low, gentle swells; and finally, the smell of the salt in the air and of the musty smell of my sea chest that had permeated my cotton t-shirt.</p>
<p>After I climbed down the shrouds and was safely back on deck, Greg talked to me in &#8220;that tone&#8221; to let me know I&#8217;d been caught climbing up the lee shrouds. I admitted my shame because I knew the difference and don&#8217;t want the new trainees to get bad habits, and with his message still ringing in my ears, I skipped down the ladder and onto deck to coil the buntlines that I had cast off. I wasn&#8217;t a bit hungry and my mind was still trying to process what I had just experienced in less than a five-minute span of time. &#8220;That was beautiful,&#8221; was all I could say, half to myself and half to Andrea, who was sitting on the spar watching me coil. She nodded her head as she ate a forkful of peas, but we both knew she didn&#8217;t see it they way I had seen it.</p>
<p><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=811&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=282,height=386');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/South Atlantic Sunsets/thumb_Sunset_on_the_way_to_Fernando.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Sunset on the way to Fernando" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Sunset on the way to Fernando</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=810&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=252,height=346');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/South Atlantic Sunsets/thumb_Sunset--the_crew_s_eyeview.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Sunset--the crew s eyeview" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Sunset--the crew s eyeview</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=44" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></p>
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		<title>Tour of St. Helena in an Old Fire Truck</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/04/13/tour-of-st-helena-in-an-old-fire-truck/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2006 21:35:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ Location: 15° 12.7&#8242;S / 007° 44.8&#8242;W
Bound for Fernando de Noronha, Brazil
Our crew was very keen on exploring the island of St. Helena, infamous for being the place where Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was exiled from 1815 until his death 1821. We asked around and Maggie was sent to the home of a woman who was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> Location: 15° 12.7&#8242;S / 007° 44.8&#8242;W</strong></p>
<p><strong>Bound for Fernando de Noronha, Brazil</strong></p>
<p>Our crew was very keen on exploring the island of St. Helena, infamous for being the place where Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was exiled from 1815 until his death 1821. We asked around and Maggie was sent to the home of a woman who was known for arranging tours. Jamestown, St. Helena is nestled in a deep, narrow valley and is not densely populated, so when she was told to visit &#8220;the blue house with the blue trim&#8221; it was not difficult to find at all! She arrived at the door of a tall house located on the main street (built in early 1800s) and after a few minutes, she had negotiated a tour for 18 of our crew for the very next day. The woman added as an aside, as if it was obvious, that the tour would be given by her father, who was going to take us in the town&#8217;s old fire truck.</p>
<p>The next morning we all gathered outside the blue house with blue trim and met Colin, the sweet old man with pretty hazel eyes (quite striking since the majority of the population is quite dark (Portuguese, Malay, Indian, Chinese, English, Dutch and African Boer descendants) generally with brown eyes, sometimes hazel. We also got our first look at the old fire truck. It was green and had no top on it and it had been refitted with rows of seats whose leather covering became quite hot in the bright sunshine. The fire truck was quite old fashioned. It resembled a longer version of the Jalopy that Archie drives in the &#8220;Archie and Jughead&#8221; comic books!</p>
<p>Colin drove us through the narrow and winding streets of Jamestown and up the hillside where we could get a nice view of Jamestown and the harbour from up high. The road was a little wider than a single lane and cars driving down the hill have to &#8220;pull over&#8221; and stop to let cars pass that are driving uphill. There was only a low, stone retaining wall to prevent cars from tumbling into the deep valley below. With the old buildings (built in the 1700s and 1800s) and the old European-style streets, the asphalt that paved the roads was the only indication that we were in fact in the modern era. Atop the hillside Colin stopped the car so that we could look down into the valley and absorb the landscape. He pointed out the heart-shaped waterfall that flows only in certain seasons, and he pointed out the first home that Napoleon stayed in when he first arrived to the island. Apparently he wrote of this residence as his favourite on the island because he had the opportunity to be with the family who lived there. Atop the hill opposite us was a large fort that had been built by the English. There were forts all over the island to protect it from being conquered by another country.</p>
<p>Our first stop was Longwood, the home where Napoleon lived and died while he was exiled to St. Helena. It was a rather elegant cottage with many rooms decorated to the height of fashion in England at the time. Napoleon was dethroned and exiled to St. Helena allegedly for reneging on a contract with the English. The English, however, were also guilty of not completely fulfilling their end of the deal, so while they deposed Napoleon as Emperor of France, they did give him the rank of General, and he was kept according to a General&#8217;s standards. In fact, in the final days of his life, a new home was being built for him because he did not like that Longwood was so damp. It also had a terrible rat problem, and it is recorded that a servant sleeping in a companionway had a portion of his leg chewed off by rats in the night! Longwood and the tomb where Napoleon was first interred (his body was exhumed 19 years later and returned to France) are still considered French soil, although St. Helena belongs to the English. Longwood has undergone extensive restorations and appears now as it would have when Napoleon lived there (minus the rats and dampness, and with added electric lights), and the English have taken over the responsibility of maintaining it on behalf of the French.</p>
<p>After our visit to Longwood, we loaded back into the ancient fire truck (it stalled out from time to time, but ran remarkably well considering its age!) and drove along a beautiful scenic highway (still one lane) with plunging green valleys on one side, and the peak of a 2,000 ft mountain on the other. We drove to the place where Napoleon was buried. Apparently he and his escorts would walk along the valley&#8217;s mouth from Longwood and he liked to spend a great deal of his time in the little clearing that he requested he be buried in. It was quite a hike down a slippery, green path, but we were rewarded with the most beautiful forest clearing I have ever seen. There were fragrant purple flowers growing on tall shrubs, their petals dotting the clearing where they had blown free. There were tall trees lining the clearing, with their thick foliage and stumps blocking out the world around us. There were seemingly hundreds of birds singing together. I understand why Napoleon spent so much time there and chose to rest there for what he thought would be forever! In the center of the clearing was a large concrete slab (about 10 x 10 feet) surrounded by a tall wrought-iron fence that marked where the tomb had been. We were very lucky to be able to visit Longwood and the tomb because they are normally closed on weekends. The staff having opened them especially for our crew! The walk back up the steep forest path to where to truck was parked at the top of the road, was alarmingly difficult. We puffed along out of breath with our leg muscles cramping from the exertion. We have become stronger physically from working on the ship, but we do not have any stamina because our aerobic activity comes in short bursts and we do not have to walk about the decks of the ship much (and it is not a great distance from bow to stern, anyhow).</p>
<p>We loaded back into the truck and Colin took us on a scenic tour of the island, showing us an American satellite observatory that was erected on a hilltop. The hills were lined with flax, which used to be a major export from the island to make fabrics, but it became redundant with the development of nylon materials. Flax still grows in abundance on St. Helena, but it is now considered a weed. Its main function now is to protect the steep hills from soil erosion.</p>
<p>As we drove along the winding roads, we saw how dramatically different the lush vegetation inland was from the harsh, barren appearance of the shoreline and cliffs facing the ocean. The air was so sweet and clear that one smell struck me more than any other: after months at sea with salty air, I was struck now by the smell of fresh water! The plants, the drizzle, the trickles of water running down the rock faces smelled richly of fresh water. Leave it to a sailor to detect that difference!</p>
<p>After a lovely drive we came across an old, magnificent plantation (now serves a political purpose) where Colin invited us to hop out and pass through a fence and onto the plantation grounds. We had walked only a few feet before we encountered what he had brought us to see. An enormous tortoise named Jonathon crept along at a fabled turtle&#8217;s pace, pulling clumps of grass out of the ground with his rounded &#8220;beak.&#8221; We walked up to Jonathon and petted his long, leathery neck and legs. He pulled his head in at first but then relaxed when he realized what we were. Jonathon is used to people, but he is blind now in one eye (because of a cataract) and we had approached him from his blind side. He was a gentle and patient tortoise, despite a little hissing from time to time when he wanted us to let him alone so he could eat. Vicki peeled a banana for him, which he nudged aside until later. As it turns out, his favourite fruit is grapes, but we had no grapes with us. Jonathon, we learned, is a whopping 174 years old! He is not the only tortoise at the plantation. He shares the sprawling lawn with two female tortoises, each around 40 years old. I did not catch where the tortoises came from, but I believe the French may have brought Jonathon. After we stood in awe of this ancient animal, the notorious island drizzle chased us back to the truck.</p>
<p>We circled around the other side of the island and visited a fort that overlooked Jamestown and the harbour, where the <em>Picton Castle</em> was anchored. We ran around the abandoned battlement and inspected all of the winding corridors and empty spaces whose ceilings seemed to stretch upwards forever. I had to step on my tiptoes to see out the slits cut in the high walls for the gunmen to be protected from enemy fire. The fort was quite large for an isolated island. Some rooms were so dark I dared not go in for fear I&#8217;d fall into a storage pit of some sort. From the fort, Colin brought us to the top of Jacob&#8217;s Ladder, the last spot on our tour. Since the bottom of the ladder is only a few hundred feet from the blue house with blue trim, Pania, Kathleen and Brett could not resist the temptation to climb down the 700 steps and meet us at the bottom. Their legs were quite sore the next two days.</p>
<p>Once we returned to where we had began our trip more than four hours earlier, we thanked Colin for showing us so much and for taking the time to spend the day with us. The rain had cleared up, so we left Colin and headed straight for the Castle Gardens to chatter about our adventures that day and to relax on the park benches amidst a fountain and thousands of flowers. We caught up on writing our postcards and played with some young children who are lucky enough to live inside the Castle Garden&#8217;s walls.</p>
<p>Although Napoleon hated it there, St. Helena and its people struck us with their beauty, and we know how incredibly lucky we are to have had the opportunity to visit one of the most historic and isolated islands in the world (it can still be accessed only by ship). As with Pitcairn, only the luckiest few of us might someday have the opportunity to return.</p>
<p><div class="cpg_album"><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=801&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=252,height=346');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Old Fire Truck/thumb_Castle_gardens_with_fountain,_St._Helena.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Castle gardens with fountain, St. Helena" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Castle gardens with fountain, St. Helena</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=800&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=252,height=346');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Old Fire Truck/thumb_Cllimbing_Jacob_s_ladder,_St._Helena.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Cllimbing Jacob s ladder, St. Helena" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Cllimbing Jacob s ladder, St. Helena</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=802&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=326,height=272');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Old Fire Truck/thumb_Napoleon_s_drawing_room.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="Napoleon s drawing room" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">Napoleon s drawing room</div></div><div class="cpg_thumb_div"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="window.open('http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/displayimage.php?pid=803&fullsize=1;','myWindow','width=326,height=272');"class="cpg_albumimagelink"><img border="0" src="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/albums/wv4_crew_journals/Old Fire Truck/thumb_View_of_Jamestown_from_the_hillside_road,_St._Helena.jpg" class="cpg_albumthumbimage" alt="" title="View of Jamestown from the hillside road, St. Helena" /></a><div class="cpg_img_title">View of Jamestown from the hillside road, St. Helena</div></div><div class="clearing"> </div><p><a href="http://www.picton-castle.com/galleries/thumbnails.php?album=35" class="cpg_albumlink">View the the rest of this Album</a></p></div><div class="clearing"></div></p>
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		<title>Erin’s Replies to Student Letters, Continued…</title>
		<link>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/04/13/erins-replies-to-student-letters-continued%e2%80%a6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.picton-castle.com/voyage/crew_journals/2006/04/13/erins-replies-to-student-letters-continued%e2%80%a6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2006 20:40:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator />
		
		<category><![CDATA[Atlantic Ocean]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Leg 4: Cape Town to Lunenburg]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[World Voyage 4]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The adventures of the Picton Castle and her crew on this voyage have been followed closely by elementary school students all over the world. One school in particular has been working very hard to send art projects and letters filled with wonderful questions about what it is like for us to live and work at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The adventures of the <em>Picton Castle</em> and her crew on this voyage have been followed closely by elementary school students all over the world. One school in particular has been working very hard to send art projects and letters filled with wonderful questions about what it is like for us to live and work at sea. For some background information, the students are from Jubilee Elementary in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and the school&#8217;s vice principal is Erin&#8217;s (onboard educator) proud father.</p>
<p>Erin wanted to share with everyone her replies to the student&#8217;s letters because they answer many of the questions that have often been posed to our crew throughout our voyage.</p>
<p>******************************************</p>
<p>Dear Tyler,</p>
<p>We have sailed through the North Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea, the Panama Canal, the South Pacific, the Torres Straits, the Indian Ocean, have rounded the Cape of Good Hope and are now in the South Atlantic, bound for Nova Scotia (with some nice, tropical stops along the way).</p>
<p>At the end of our 12-month voyage the <em>Picton Castle</em> crew will have sailed 28,000 nautical miles and will have circumnavigated the world! We crossed our half-way point about a day before we arrived in port at Bali, Indonesia.</p>
<p>When we leave port, Joe the cook sees to it that we have plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables aboard, as well as fresh meat stocked in our five freezers. We have plenty of canned and dried foods in our cargo hold—enough to feed a crew of 50 for a month if we have to stay at sea longer than we planned. The food is very good. We have all the sorts of things that we eat at home—but tropical fruit like bananas and mangoes taste way better where we&#8217;ve been than they do coming out of the grocery stores at home.</p>
<p>It is sometimes easier to write or email home than it is to call our families because the <em>Picton Castle</em> has been on the other side of the world. That means that recently it has been difficult to call when we would like to because the time zones are so different that we are not even on the same calendar day as North America!</p>
<p>Chibley took a good sniff at your letter. I think that means she says Hi back.</p>
<p>Thanks for your questions!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>*****************************</p>
<p>Dear TJ,</p>
<p>I love being out at sea. I love the routine and I love my shipmates. I love being strong and doing hard work and I love that I learn new things every single day. We do get to go ashore quite often. We spend about three weeks at a time at sea, and then we spend anywhere from three days to four weeks in each port. This eats up the 12 months it takes to sail around the world! I like meeting all sorts of new people and learning about their cultures and learning new words in their languages. Did you know that in many of the places we&#8217;ve visited, the children typically speak a minimum of two or three languages? I think that is quite extraordinary, and they thought we were strange for only speaking a little bit of a second language like French or Spanish.</p>
<p>Captain Moreland is a very good captain and he treats his crew well. He is not the type of scary old-timey sea captain we read about sometimes in books, who would have crew members flogged with the cat o&#8217; nine tails if they displeased him. The only cat I&#8217;ve ever seen in his hands is Chibley! He teaches us many things about sailing ships and being a good sailor, and he takes us to all of his favourite places in the world and shares his experiences and friends with us. We are very lucky to have such a nice Captain.</p>
<p>On a ship we navigate using a sea map, called a chart. A chart &#8216;maps&#8217; out the ocean so that we know where we are at all times. Each hour we plot our position (which we take from our GPS or Global Positioning System) and measure how far we&#8217;ve gone since the last plot. The Mates use the plots and the chart to help determine what course we will sail to get us where we want to go.</p>
<p>Thank you for your questions and your well wishes. We are having quite a lot of fun and the Captain and the entire crew enjoyed reading your letter as well. Thank you for putting so much thought and effort into it!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>Dear Caressa,</p>
<p>It is a very interesting experience living on a ship. I had to learn how to walk again because the deck is always swaying in one direction or another, and I had to learn an entirely new language! Nautical words and instructions sound like gibberish at first, and it takes a while to get used to hearing them and understanding what is being said. When my parents came to visit me on the ship before we sailed, my father mentioned right away that I was speaking with an entirely new vocabulary. It works for us when we are aboard our ship, but when we go ashore, sometimes we forget how to use regular English and often confuse the people we are talking to—and ourselves as well!</p>
<p>Chibley is doing really well. She had a sore tail last week, courtesy of a nasty dock cat; she is nearly all better now because she has been getting extra attention and Ollie gives her tons of extra treats.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve sailed in I think six different oceans so far and have visited just shy of 20 countries, I think! I&#8217;ve lost count! We are in the South Atlantic now, sailing up the coast of Africa to our next port of call in Namibia. We will be home in three months. It will be over so soon!</p>
<p>Thank you for your questions!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p>Dear Melissa,</p>
<p>When we left Lunenburg last May it was very cold at sea. We hit warmer waters within a week and traded our foul weather gear for shorts and t-shirts and bare feet. Within 11 days we were in the Caribbean Sea, and it was beautiful, hot, tropical sailing from then until about a month and a half ago, when we made the three-week passage from the Indian Ocean, around the Cape of Good Hope (the southernmost point on the continent of Africa) and into the South Atlantic. The South Atlantic is as cold as the North Atlantic, and we are wearing layers of pants and sweaters again. Two months ago it was 44 degrees outside and now the water rolling across the deck is so cold on my bare feet that it makes my bones ache!</p>
<p>I love sailing on the sea! We see all types of marine life! We&#8217;ve had whales play alongside our ship, but most frequently we have dolphins playing in our wake and seabirds perching on our yards! I really love watching the dolphins play. I think they might be magic—I&#8217;m not sure. I should go to sea again and do more research on it!</p>
<p>Thank you, Melissa, for your questions!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>************************</p>
<p>Dear Megan,</p>
<p>I do look after Chibley and I have help from other crew who love her, like Pania from Pitcairn, Ollie from the USA and Kimberley from the UK. I am in charge of feeding her every morning (she prefers canned food, and makes me chop it up for her too!) and I clean out her litter box every Sunday (Eeww!). She is a good cat, so I am happy to do it for her. She is also very persuasive and talks many of the crew into sneaking her treats all day and night.</p>
<p>I have had a lot of fun sailing aboard the <em>Picton Castle</em>, Megan, but it isn&#8217;t always pretty! Boys and girls, pony tails or not, our hair gets so tangled in the wind that we do not always bother to brush it anymore! The sun and salt water has also bleached our hair quite a bit. I am afraid that it all might just crack off any minute. It would save us all the trouble of getting a haircut!</p>
<p>I love to climb high in the rigging and I love fetching pails of water from over the side. I love teaching new crew the things I&#8217;ve learned and I love standing forward lookout at sunset. I&#8217;ve never seen prettier sunsets in my life as I have in the Indian Ocean. I wouldn&#8217;t be able to say these things if I&#8217;d never gone to sea!</p>
<p>Thanks for your letter, Megan. I enjoyed reading it.</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>****************************</p>
<p>Dear Shealene,</p>
<p>Chibley is doing very well, Shealene! We&#8217;ve had nine new trainees join us in Cape Town, South Africa, and she has been breaking them in nicely. Chibley has a habit of testing new sailors by napping in their bunk. When they try to climb in too, she refuses to budge and forces you to sleep in awkward positions shivering without your blanket! But, the ship is her ship, so the cat gets her own way.</p>
<p>We are all doing very well; thank you for asking! We&#8217;ve been having a lot of fun learning to sail. We&#8217;ve been gone ten months already! It&#8217;s hard to imagine! In only three short months we will be in Nova Scotia again, and it all feels like it is happening too soon for me. I miss Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island. I miss my family, but I really, really love our ship. I am not ready to get off yet, Shealene! Many of our crew are feeling this way.</p>
<p>A ship is a great place to live because it is big and there are always tons of people around to talk to. There is always someone to help you do your chores and you learn new things every day. You get to sail in the hot sunshine and in the warm rain when the wind is blowing a holy hooley. You get to visit tropical islands and learn ten different ways to get into a coconut. You also learn to never, ever sit or nap under a coconut tree! You get to stitch every seam in every sail with your own hands if you want to, and you get to climb high into the rigging to make sure that the sails will always work properly. It&#8217;s pretty cool to live on the <em>Picton Castle</em>.</p>
<p>I hope that you have the opportunity to visit the ship someday when we get back to Nova Scotia! Thank you for your questions!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
<p>********************************</p>
<p>Dear Brandon,</p>
<p>Thank you for saying so, and yes the <em>Picton Castle</em> is a very cool ship! She&#8217;s big and she&#8217;s safe and she&#8217;s a great place to live and work. Do you think you&#8217;d like to sail some day? Do you think you&#8217;d like to climb up the rigging and work almost 100 feet above the deck? My shipmates look like Lego men when I look down to deck from that high aloft!</p>
<p>The crew works very hard, but the Captain gives us Sundays off so that we do not have to complete any ship&#8217;s work, and he always encourages us to have fun with our work and when we have time off. We have costume parties and dance on our cargo hatch. We baked nine pies and more than 500 cookies at Christmastime and ate them all (the entire crew felt sick for days from all the sugar)! We live with our 50 closest friends and get to explore exotic islands with them and we help one another learn to be better sailors.</p>
<p>I like hearing the wind and the waves folding into themselves. I like that when I walk, it is impossible to walk in a straight line because the deck is always moving. I do not like when it is rolling so badly that my body cannot lie still in my bunk, but thankfully that does not happen too often!</p>
<p>What sorts of things do you want to do when you are all finished school? Is there anything that you are as excited about as our crew is about sailing?</p>
<p>Thanks for your questions, Brandon!</p>
<p>Erin</p>
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