"Had 2 excitements in last 24hrs. Last night, at 0230z, with staysail and 2 reefs, hitting 22 knots (fast for this boat and very fast for this skipper!), decided to go to 3rd reef. Broad reaching, trying to do more quickly than my usual methodical self. Ended up with a mess up against the mast, spreaders, rigging, eventually got halyard and tack right, but clew reef line #3 was wrapped around wrong side of sail, so needed to go out there. So out I go, back to the cockpit, not quite sorted, out I go again, and don't anybody send that picture to my mother, hanging off the end of the boom, pitch black dark of night, boat still going 18-20 knots in the surfs, and the skipper is out there. It's when you're glad of good autopilots."
"Today, trying to conserve amperes, turned off computer, network, inverter, monitor, between navigation sessions, back to cockpit, and then alarms sounding, pilot alarms, leap to the tiller, but its still steering, but on compass, not wind. What's up? Turn off, hand steer, wait for a calmer patch, leap below, turn off instruments, back to tiller, minute later back to turn on instruments, back to compass pilot. OK, then notice no wind speed. Look aloft. Anemometer still there spinning, and that's a long way up there. Can switch to backup, but can't get past thought that turning off the inverter had something to do with it, too. Coincidental, within 30 seconds, after a while, windspeed reappeared, for about 3 minutes, then off again, then 20 minutes later, on again for 5 minutes, then off, then came on again and has stayed on for 3 hours straight. There is so much electronics going on in such a small space that maybe it was a big software glitch. Let's fervently hope so. Anyway, still on compass pilot, not quite daring to use wind quite yet, but rocketing along nonetheless."
Rich Wilson (Great American III) in his daily message.