I took many photos of our Christmas Day, but ran out of steam for a post…
so..
here are some views of our day!
We started together on the little sofa, with coffee and Vendee Globe catchup!
Lox, cream cheese, capers, pickled onions on my own sourdough bagels … and a side of latke to cover all of the bases :) (Hanukkah ended a week ago but ….) Christmas Breakfast!
Christmas breakfast sweet = cinnamon roll with frosting!!
I have some photos, but I have just watched the weekly recap of VendeeGlobe 2020 and nothing I have compares …
SO, even if you do not sail or know about sailing …
So much science, athleticism, technical knowledge, seamanship extraordinaire … I used to follow US sports, not for some years … and now, the idea of following “balls” and the absolutely childish behavior in US sport… Vendee Globe is above and beyond any sport that I have ever followed.
I have come to love all of the skippers and have also looked at their sponsors. Many of the skippers are sponsored by charitable organizations (detail in future posts, hopefully!)
From somewhere in the video:
“Anyone who finishes the Vendee Globe returns a different person”
I will add … if you follow the Vendee Globe, you WILL return a different person. I am already … not quite half way through … a different person.
I hope a better person.
I hope a more civil, a more compassionate, a more respectful person.
Here, at 48N, sunset is 4:40 p.m. and with the sun angle very south, it is dusk shortly after 4:00 p.m. Sunrise is after 8:00 a.m. Short days
Two weeks until the Winter Solstice and we turn around to longer days.
Daytime has not been exceptionally bright the last few days. The cloud deck is low. Temperature is a constant 27F day and night. The humidity from the low cloud deck makes it feel colder than 27F.
BUT! Emmett and I have returned to walking on the State Land behind my property. Hunting season is over. The bears are hopefully denned up but at any rate, the vegetation has died and I can see over the terrain.
It is wonderful to add more variety to our outings.
We get longer walks and more stuff to sniff!
Winter light.
***EDIT Especially for Margaret … so sorry … I returned the drone. It just was not the right time for it. One day!
But, the leading peloton of Vendee Globe 2020 sailors are there.
And the Southern Ocean has not been kind to several of them.
To be fair, the Atlantic had it’s go at some of them also.
Sam (Samantha) Davies and Seb (Sebastian) Simone suffering what is likely race-ending damage when they were both racing VERY well and then encountered UFO (unidentified floating object).
Simone (ARKEA PAPREC) went to the search zone of PRB’s Kevin Escoffier. Escoffier spent 11 hours in a life raft after his boat literally broke in 2. 5 racers (including Simone in ARKEA PAPREC) were sent to the zone and Kevin was rescued.
And then… Heart breaking as ARKEA PAPREC subsequently suffered damage from an UFO! Shortly after, Sam Davies on Initiatives Coeur also struck an object.
Meanwhile, here in the U.S. it is embarrassingly childish behavior by grown up people: from the President to local persons.
I choose to take refuge in the courage, persistence, athleticism and strength of the Vendee Globe sailors: their teams, their sponsors, the organization and the ocean sailing community.
But.
I live in NW Montana. A place I chose. And I don’t have aspirations to be an ocean sailor, but I do appreciate … so very much … this time of being able to go around the world with the Vendee Globe sailors.
So, some scenes from home…
Lovely stuff: Auggie, Emmett and my home…
But, my thoughts and prayers are with the courageous sailors that are now in the Southern Ocean: sail fast, sail safe and thank you to all of them who have shared so much on social media. The opportunity to go around the world with the best sailors in the world is an incredible privilege.