Please select your home edition
Edition
Flagstaff 2021AUG - Excess 12 - LEADERBOARD

Letter from the Med- Bilbao to La Coruna

by Ian and Andrea Treleaven on 3 Sep 2007
Old town Bilbao Ian & Andrea Treleaven
Ian and Andrea Treleaven report on the latest stage of the current European Cruise

For the past week we could be sailing the English, New Zealand or Tasmanian coast but no, this is the northern coast of Spain. Cold, wet and wind in the wrong direction, we never did see the Pyrenees. A lush green coastline with unspoiled villages, if we could see it in better weather it would be more appealing.

Our stay in Bilbao lasted six days; we left many times only to return. No matter when the next window of opportunity is to leave, we will have to put in long trips to get west and then south. One thing about ports along the coast is they have huge break water walls, sometimes two, to form sheltered bays for shipping and Yacht Marinas. They have certainly used their EU contributions very well in the marine area.

To make the most of the situation the Royal Yacht Club in Bilbao, Real Club Maritimo Del Y Real Sporting Club, formed in 1893, was very welcoming where Ian found a ‘Cable’ in the corner with his circle of friends running the CYCA, a ‘Shifty’ waiting to tick off anyone and a ‘Swanny’ having had a few, telling lots of lies. Nothing changes in yacht clubs! (For those that don’t know, this is the CYCA on a Thursday night.)

Once a grand sandstone building, it was blown up by ETA, the Basque separatists in 1973, but is now a new very traditional yacht club with indoor tennis courts and swimming pools.

Holed up here with us in another yacht is ISAF member John Crebbin, his wife Jennifer and brother-in-law John. A dinner ashore together at the club was enjoyed by the two crews with many mutual friends in Australia and New Zealand. Other nights we venture into old town Bilbao to join in with the Aste Nagusia Festival week. The bars are set up in the streets to take the overflow from the Alhambra style, chandler bars, and a favourite, Café Irvea where the queues for the Moroccan chicken skewers are longer than the queues for the bar.

Wet weather gear, safety harnesses and life jackets on, our first opportunity arrives, only 50nm to Santander to wait yet once again. Rain, rain and more rain. When we arrived we where boarded by the Guardia Civil only to be told to take our small Basque flag down. It’s only a provincial thing as we are now in Cantabria; the man who boarded us said 'this is not possible'. They even questioned our CYCA burgee.

Finally a wind direction change and we sail 70nm to Gijon a very important port for the Romans but bombed very badly in the Spanish Civil war by Franco. Only a night stop as an easterly wind will send us very nicely west. Next port Ribadeo, with 30 knot winds, we sail wing and wing, roller coasting down waves for 70nms.

No stopping Ian - I’m ‘shit scared’ alone in the cockpit while Ian’s down below fixing something. He loves this stuff, as would all yachtsman, but my nerves are shattered. Anyway, we made Ribadeo entering between breaking sand banks, lining up bridges, church steeples and leading marks in less than 8 hours, averaging 8.5 knots.

Nothing like a good restaurant and wine at Saint Miguel, a good night’s sleep and another early start to get that feeling of rounding the top of this continent and heading south. It turns out to be a good and bad day. The sun comes out and the boom comes down… what is it with Ian and booms?

One nut falls to the deck and that’s the end of sailing, good company and whatever we had planned for that day. Arriving in La Coruna and that first breeze across my face is warm, our spirits are lifted.

The boom is now temporally repaired and Janey, our daughter, arrives today from Sydney. The forecast is looking very good, spare parts are arriving and its all go for a September Summer.

Cheers

Andrea and Ian

PS from Ian: In the bad weather we have had to use our radar. When a rescue tug came from astern, we were able to mark her on the chart and radar at the same time. It gave us her position, course and speed, much more advanced than our previous system and easier to avoid a collision. The radar can now be shown on our computer and also on the deck screen at the same time.

Boat Books Australia FOOTERZhik 2024 March - FOOTERSelden 2020 - FOOTER

Related Articles

Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix Day 1
Aussie's come out firing on opening day After crashing out in the previous event, Tom Slingsby's Australia SailGP Team completely dominated the opening day of the Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Fired up Slingsby wins two in Bermuda
Australia dominates fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda Australia has bounced back from its devastating Christchurch penalty by dominating fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda.
Posted on 4 May
The Transat CIC Day 7
Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa over 70 miles ahead of Charlie Dalin The top trio on the Transat CIC solo race to New York from Lorient, France are charging towards the finish line averaging over 22kts.
Posted on 4 May
Armstrong Midlength FG Board redefines foiling
Armstrong Midlength FG Board gives you the freedom to define how you ride. The choice is yours Armstrong Foils have announced the new Midlength boards, they are epic for wing and prone surf among many other things. The Armstrong Midlength FG Board Range truly redefines when and how you can go foiling.
Posted on 4 May
La Grande Motte International Regatta preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs ahead of Paris 2024 The Nacra 17 World Championship along with the 49er and 49erFX European Championships is attracting 148 teams to La Grande Motte in the South of France for six days of racing.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Spectacular on board video of USA capsize
USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda in Friday's third Practice session. Surprisingly given the violence of the capsize, none of the crew were injured.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Kiwis push back at Media Conference
Burling disagrees that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by an Australian snafu in Christchurch New Zealand driver Peter Burling has disagreed that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by Australia's Christchurch penalty, arguing ‘we have earned our right to be here'.
Posted on 4 May
Antigua Sailing Week Day 5
Classic conditions on Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day Racing at Antigua Sailing Week came to a spectacular finale with Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day. Full trade winds blasted across the race area, bathed in sunshine.
Posted on 3 May
SailGP: Tense times in Bermuda
A capsize in Practice, along with the effect of season points penalties puts big pressure on teams The NZ Black Foils are determined to keep hold of top spot as Australia looks to bounce back from Christchurch horror show. The pressure comes on all the teams to secure a place in the $2 million Championship Final Race in San Francisco in July
Posted on 3 May
The Swarm Podcast Episode 13: Jordan Roberts
The man behind the lens at all major WASZP events Jordan is the man behind the lens at all of our major events at WASZP. General Manager Marc Ablett joins Jordan to discuss what we try and achieve through our coverage.
Posted on 3 May