We were woken by the sound of goats, which is something of a first for a sailing holiday. There are a whole herd of them living on the side of the hill that forms the eastern half of this bay. It seemed that they gathered with someone who I assume would be called a goatherd, for reasons we could not figure out, then after a while all tramped back onto the open hillside.

The best part about being at anchor or on a bouy is that you can have a swim before breakfast. With night time temperatures in the mid 20s the boat is pretty stuffy even with all the hatches open, so a quick dip before breakfast is definately a good idea. One downside of this time of year is the heat. We have had 30 to 40 degrees in the day and 20+ at night. When we are sailing it is not so bad under the sunshade in the breeze, although as the boat rolls around so the shade moves! When we have arrived some places mid afternoon, in the sea is the only bearable place to be.
After the usual hassle of stowing the dinghy without dropping to outboard in the sea, we had a fast long run down to Kos, carrying a bit too much sail made the boat hard work to steer in the rolling swell but pushed us along at 8 knots, which is about as fast as a boat this size wants to go. We rounded the corner of Turkey to sail past Bodrum to find ourselves in the middle of a yacht race going the other way.

It is very ungentlemanly for a cruising yacht to get in the way of a race so we had to keep our eyes open and work out where they were all going and then thread our way through. We quickly took down one sail to halve our speed which made this a bit easier, but these guys were not hanging around.

Kos is quite a major base for charter yachts so the marina was pretty busy, we had to queue up to refuel, then radio the marina to find out where to moor up. Happy to tie up without incident and listen to heated arguments in at least 2 languages going on outside over the radio. We have only used 20 litres of diesel the entire week, which not much at all, the boat has at least a 200 litre tank. With such good wind we have only used the engine to get in and out of bays and ports, and occasionally to charge our batteries and chill the beer in the fridge. The boat is pretty self sufficient, it carries 400 litres or more of fresh water, can store heat from the engine to heat enough water for 4 showers effortlessly, and we have huge batteries to run our lights and navigation gear. In towns and Marinas we can sometime plug in to shore power, but we have not been able to do that for three nights, so the beer was only just cold…. The super yachts of course have generators, aircon and desalination plants, but they burn 20 litres of diesel in a couple of minutes…..
Anyway, that’s it for another year, once again, we had a great time, met some great people, and learned a lot about sailing, and this part of the Greek islands.
I’ll update the parial entry from Lipso so if you scroll back to that you can read the whole thing.
The Skipper.