ROUNDING CAPE HORN

'From now, and every day henceforth, there will be fires lit below and attended by the people on watch.' I ordered. This was to counter the unhealthy dampness that was beginning to cover everything. I also made a roster so every afternoon the men listed will pump fresh water down to the bilges then pump it up again until it is clear. The officers of the watch will determine this.'
        
         The 20th. March – we struck the first southern gales between Cape Virgin Mary at the eastern entrance to Magellan Striates and the Falkland Islands. It is exactly what I feared!
         The violent squalls caught us entirely by surprise and gave me little time to bring the ship under the mizzen main sail. I decided to sail nearer the coast, and headed towards Tierra del Fuego.
        
         The 23rd. March – fortunately the gale died and at two this morning and a coastline loomed out of the darkness. We had sighted land – the first since the Canaries! Although I knew the greatest test was yet to come I immediately ordered a sheep killed to celebrate the event.
         Rounding the horn at the beginning of winter was ahead of us – and a fearsome prospect. I went below and began to study my charts. Eventually I decided that the safest course was to go as far south of Staten Island as I dared in order to avoid the powerful currents that run near the land. The choice was between the cold and the ice, or the currents. The Striates of Magellan I determined too dangerous and totally out of the question in these conditions.


        
         It is the 24th. of March and I keep a constant vigil. The weather remains clear, but now in the afternoon, the sky is much streaked with high wind. I fear the worst.....
         ...It is the next morning and I have ordered the ship to be cleaned and dried and the top hamper to be brought down in preparation for bad weather.
         Midday and thick cloud ... 8pm. Now comes the fog. I am becoming watchful and time allows me to write only snatches!
         Morning again and a strange calm with a clinging wet mist surrounds us ...
         ...Later in the day now and we experience fresh breezes alternately with banks of freezing fog...
         Finally the wind has got up, the fog cleared and the sea starting to run. I order double reefs then close reefs.
         ....Midday and the wind is tearing through the rigging and whipping the shrouds; we are surrounded by wind streaked foam.
         The night, the 28th. of March and our ordeal has truly begun. The westerly gale is bringing strong slanting rain striking our arms and faces as if it were shot from a musket, with the seas breaking completely over the deck. I have never experienced worse conditions. It is with great difficulty that I write my log and these few words!
        
        
         HMS 'BOUNTY' ROUNDS CAPE HORN 1788
        
         April the 23rd – three days later. It is difficult to write my log as I am thrown all about the cabin ... then possibly the worst moment of all!.... This morning I just managed to struggle up on deck following a futile attempt to sleep. I could hardly fail but observe the terrible conditions. A huge sea that was white, as drunken foam and boiling milk mixed together, and we were caught in its grip. I cast my gaze up searching for a break in the greyness above. Nothing! For us in 'Bounty' ... no sun, no sky and little hope, just aa grey, semi-darkness of angry clouds and an infuriated sea. I felt terrible but still I was more useful than my officers.
         I struggled hand over hand along the rail and looked up. I could not believe my eyes. Someone had set an extra sail. Men were balanced on yard arms, reefing wet canvas, clutching at wet rope. I looked around and spied a huddled figure emerging from a quarter deck hatch. 'Mr Fryer' I yelled above the wind, 'your report!' I stared furiously at the man, as a result of his incompetence, eagerness, or plain desperation to get around the Cape, it was his judgement to carry the extra sail, and in so doing he showed no patience, and a total lack of regard for the lives of all ... in particular the men he ordered aloft. I was even more put out by the fact he waited for me to go below before making his decision! Any competent officer should have known better, much better than to risk the ship so!
         I glanced up and saw a sailor miraculously hanging in the rigging ... grimly clutching at swaying yards. I yelled at Fryer above the roaring sea, 'order the men down instantly.'
Then I observed the sail and gulped. Second yard main mast, close reefed and stretched to breaking. Clutching a safety rope I leaned out over the ship's gunwale and peered into Neptune's black depths. Waves were ripping past. Bows down we were ploughing along before the wind with a reckless speed certain to destroy us all. Only the merest change in the wind direction, a sudden shift, a gust to turn us just one or two degrees keither way and we were done for. I yelled to the nearest seaman, 'Get me an axe – make haste man!' The tenor of my voice did little to hide my concern and the man jumped to it. I eased my body towards the stays; now humming like strung cat-gut under their great load. I looked aloft The sail they retained seemed like a solid object, not canvas- – such was its tautness I thought ... if I could only part the stays before...


         I sensed it before I felt it. Too late by God! Too late the wind shifted. An axe materialised in my hands and I swung wildly at the rope, again, and again ... but alas, too late! She swung, she turned as a top caught in the fullness of its spin. We broached.! The rope snapped, it cracked like a released bowstring and whipped by my face stinging my frozen cheek – but I could not care less! All I felt was the vertigo as I was pitched against the rail. We turned side on to the raging inferno, our masts now almost horizontal - if one were able to rule a line across that raging fury of green, black and white . Then we turned full circle, anti...clockwise I think, and were lent over, our starboard keel out of the sea.... like a virgin's thigh it was never supposed to be bared to the elements  Would we go under? Now I thought for the moment of truth. I clung on as I felt the cold sea enveloping me. Freezing but not too painful – I felt some relief as I closed my eyes to make the dying easier.... but in the blackness of that despair, I realised, it was my imagination – and my mind struggled as I fought a way back to reality. I opened my eyes. Remarkably we were still afloat. The bows had swung back away from the wind, clockwise, away from danger. My arms were still locked square into the rails as she righted herself. I looked around to where terrified sailors clung to various parts of the ship as a clutch of frightened monkeys would cling to a fleeing parent. I raced across the deck and released the remaining stay. The sail was destroyed but thankfully we were saved.
         I praised God – and my relief was so tangible I almost felt I could hug it.
         At last all the men were down and HMS.'Bounty' brought under the smallest stay and mizzen sails without loosing way. Yes, today was by far the greatest peril I have ever experienced.
        
         ...I have decided that it would be improper and too dangerous to continue any longer. The wind has changed yet again and in just two days we have been forced back to a position we passed some three weeks ago. Heavy winds and snow falls are so violent that I have been forced to 'lay to'. The wind is backing to the west and the sea running high. What choice do I have? I decided we must turn back.
        
         ....William Bligh in a letter to Duncan Campbell and from the log of HMS.'Bounty'

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