During the early afternoon, that bowlin knot in the sheet at the head of the mizzen
staysail slipped loose and the sail fell on deck. That sheet became entangled
in the rigging. Try as I could, I could not jerk that sheet out of the rigging.
I left it whipping about all afernoon. So, I had no
line to put the mizzen staysail up again. I didn't know it at the time but I
had set a trap for myself.
At 4:30,
Kathleen came up on deck and said that she had heard on the radio that a hard
"norther" was on the way with winds up to
55 miles per hour. It was time to change tactics since we could no longer hold
our course under sail anyway. I went up to take the sails down and called for
Kathleen to start the motor. She started the motor and put it into gear.
Instantly that mizzen staysail sheet fell out of the rigging, went overside and into the propeller. This was just the beginning
of troubles. The chickens came home to roost in quick succession. the engine locked up tight, stopped dead by the rope. There was nothing to do but cut that rope out
of the wheel.
We were sailing west in a north
wind on a starboard tack. I took my clothes off and went overboard with a
butcher knife. Good waves were rolling and we were sailing parallel to them,
Kathleen steering. We were making knots,
even with only two sails drawing. The boat was going at such a rate through the
ridges and valleys that I could scarcely keep my grip on the rudder. I was
about to be left swimming behind. I yelled up to Kathleen to come up into the
wind and slow the boat so I could work. The brave old Queequeg
came up close hauled and almost in irons. I soon hacked the rope out of the
wheel.
But besides being tangled in the
wheel, it was wrapped around the shaft with many turns. I unwound it and
climbed over the rudder to the deck.
"Put her in gear", I
said.
Kathleen put it in gear but
nothing happened.
"Give it some gas", I
called.
Still nothing happened. The motor
reved up but the boat didn't surge ahead. Now what??
I took up the motor compartment
hatch which is on the bridge deck between the mizzen mast and the cabin to look
inside. The motor was running but the propeller shaft was no longer attached to
the the motor. There is a plastic spacer between the
flange on the shaft and the flange on the motor. The four bolts in the shaft
flange had pulled out of the plastic spacer and we were adrift with no power.
The wind was exactly in the direction we wanted to go and the howling norther was bearing down on us.