Category: Boat (Page 2 of 2)

Crossing the Atlantic

There’s a lot to say about this trip, so much that I’m going to write multiple posts about the weather and our routing service, provisioning and meals, making repairs at sea, and anything else that I decide. Of course I’ll follow up with notes about all the places we visit. But this first post is just about the passage.

Kalyra’s motley crew: Greg, Nicole & Trip

It was a tale of two sails, if I can sum it all up. The first half was exhilarating, a little scary, exhausting, and a bit awe inspiring. The second half was relaxed, consistent, and dare I say a little bit boring after our start?

Trip & Greg

Our first two days sucked us in with perfect winds, sunny skies, dolphin pods swimming alongside, and even a whale spout sighting or two. Then we hit the first of what would be three gales that we experienced. Though the boat could have handled it, we never opted to sail directly through them. As long as the wind was favorable (ie. not in our faces, making for a very uncomfortable point of sail), we reefed as much as necessary to balance things out and continued on. The wind vane (self steering) worked for the first few days, but we were hand steering as the winds built, and the seas built.

Reefing the main

Trip woke up exhilarated after a solid sleep and was ready to keep going. Greg and I were whipped from the constant surfing all night and asked if we could try out heaving to. For the first time since we had practiced in much milder conditions, we positioned the boat into the wind with a triple reefed mainsail only, tied off the wheel, and went below to rest. The wind and the rocking didn’t abate, but we were able to collectively eat and rest. We managed to drift 50 miles in the right direction, so all was not lost.

Greg and Nicole in more benign conditions

The gale took the wind with it (quite common), so we motored the next 24 hours. We fixed the wind vane, and got it operating in time for it to break as we hit our next gale. Once again, wind in the high 20’s, big seas that involved surfing. The three of us spent the night in the cockpit together with Trip at the helm singing sea shanties while Greg and I watched the froth around us. Morning brought lower winds, calmer seas, and even a pod of Beluga whales! Unfortunately it also brought some soaking rain, and we have a very exposed cockpit. At least we got the view of a spectacular double rainbow going horizon to horizon after the fact.

Man o wars, seen by the thousands during our passage.

We had a day of light winds and then once again we were facing another gale. We headed north and rode the edge as long as was comfortable, then hove-to again and let the storm carry us along. We made a crazy loop, but it did carry us further north where we would be able to take advantage of the top of a weather high that would allow us to sail southeast toward the islands with the winds aft of our beam.

Swimming/bathing

We were still screaming along at 7+ knots, with high winds but manageable seas. While Trip rested, Greg and I sat in the cockpit with the autohelm running, watching the wind build into the 30s & 40s. The seas were still huge and we buried the end of the boom three times, but it was amazing to feel the boat do her thing.

And then the wind died again. The engine wouldn’t start, so we drifted, did laundry (by hand), repaired the mainsail (webbing attaching the slugs to the headboard had worn through), took showers and even went for a swim (Greg). Everything dried just in time for the wind to come back.

Post showers rainbow

We were north now, way north, could have sailed to Iceland north, but the winds shifted to the north northwest, and we began a beautiful downward sail to the islands. Comfortable winds, tolerable seas, it was day after day of what sailing should be like! We were finally even able to hoist the spinnaker one day! We had time to make repairs to the engine, and Greg landed a false albacore which made for two night’s dinners. Earlier, with an engine that wouldn’t start, we had emailed Linda Lane Thornton (fellow OCC member, coauthor of the Atlantic Islands book, and resident of Sao Jorge in the Azores). Having to possibly sail to anchor and needing technical services, she recommended the two ports on Terceira. Running through a series of tests recommended by our friend, James (an electrical engineer and owner of a boat like ours), we managed to get the engine to start. Based on other information that Linda gave us plus our own resolve, we decided to make our first landfall on Terceira anyway (a somewhat backward route for boats sailing from the US). A few days later we were dropping anchor as we had made it. Twenty two days I will never forget.

Angra do Heroismo on the island of Terceira

Bug Bites

I will spare you all the photos, but the one thing I have been suffering from since arriving in the Caribbean are bug bites.  Though I’ve seen mosquitos about, I think these are the results of no-see-ums that come out at dusk and dawn.

THEY ITCH.  I don’t care how many people tell me not to itch, it’ll scar, blah blah blah – my legs looked like raw hamburger until yesterday.  I finally posted to the Women Who Sail Face Book page figuring someone else had already figured this out and could shed some light.   I desperately need relief from the bites I already have and a means of preventing new ones.  I’m at 102 comments and growing.  Though most are recommending things that I need to buy via Amazon (not really an option right now), I’ve gotten some solid replies:

  • Anything with DEET or picardin (each of which have their own issues)
  • Essential oils
  • Coconut oil
  • Benadryl (gel & pills)
  • Calamine lotion
  • Lanocaine
  • Hot water/hot spoons (a new one that I had never heard of)
  • Long pants & sleeves (good luck managing that in 95 degrees on a daily basis)

 

I took a shower last night and scrubbed well, then applied Benadryl by spray, as well as popping a pill.   Since the sun had gone down I did put on long sleeves (linen is fabulous and lightweight and airy) and scrubs (thank you Dr. Steve Voss!) and socks (nearly killed me but my feet are really exposed).  It was a pretty comfortable night.  I sprayed myself with Repel Lemon Eucalyptus Oil this morning which seems to both repel anything further and manage the sting of the current bites.  I also picked up some coconut oil as it’s also supposed to be a good hair conditioner, which I’m sure I’ll need as the sun takes its effect on me down here.

 

More to come…..

Off Shore Run to the Caribbean

1400 miles. 17 days. 1 boat. 4 crew. So hard to describe, but I will try……..

Day 1

Crew

We had a proper send off mid morning at Gary & Greta’s dock in Norfolk. Everyone was there to wave us off as we headed out. The ride out of Norfolk was much faster than the ride in, with a steady current in our favor. As we passed Hampton, we were soon joined by other boats as the Salty Dawg Rally was leaving the same day. Boats were generally split into two categories: Those that were heading south and then east, or those that were heading east and then south. We were in the latter category – pushing to get across the gulf stream as quickly as possible and also avoiding some stormy weather that was moving up the coast.

We had quite the array of sealife that first day. The usual pelicans were everywhere. Dolphins came out to swim alongside the boat. And at one point we even saw whales!

The only downside was the motoring, which we did for the first 24 hours. We knew it was a risk we faced and pretty much everyone was facing the same issue – motoring and looking for wind further off shore.

Dinner: soup and leftover focaccia

Day 2

Dolphins

More dolphins at sunrise, this time playing all along the bow of the boat and racing us (guess who won). We were finally able to sail a bit as we headed into the gulf stream. You know you’re in the stream because the water becomes this deep indigo blue – a color I’ve never seen anywhere else in my life.

Now that cell phones were truly out of range I began playing with the InReach device and I was happy to report that everything was working as planned. I had tracking points set to mark our progress every 2 hours and planned on sending a daily one or two lines to update family/friends as needed.

Short lived spinnaker hoist

As the winds shifted we tried to put up the spinnaker, but that only lasted for 5 minutes before we went back to the main and jib. That poor spinnaker saw less than 5 minutes action in the last 5 months.

Dinner: pesto tortellini with peppers, onions & kielbasa; freshly baked chocolate macadamia nut cookies

Days 3-4

Damn Gulf Stream just doesn’t want to let us go, grrrrrrr. We’re barely making 3 knots whether under sail or under motor, it’s really rather frustrating. Crossing the stream is an art form and though we’ve done it well on the Bermuda runs, this time it seems to be striking back a bit. To add insult to injury there’s no animals to keep us distracted today. Trip is listening into the Salty Dawg Rally SSB net so we know there’s a few other boat within 20 miles of us.

One plus side to the trip is that Trip is finally letting us use the auto helm. Normally a stickler for steering by hand, we started using it more this summer when we were motoring. I started using it for everything on this sail and he hasn’t protested.

At dawn, however, we noticed something was up with the autohelm – the drivestop would hit it’s limit, an alarm would sound, and the autohelm would turn off. There were all sorts of possibilities as to what was going on, but the worst case scenario was that we had lost control of the rudder, which would have been very, very bad. We put the emergency tiller in place in case something was up with the wheel. While Trip descended below to investigate, I began to imagine the worst – having to call the Coast Guard for pickup, determining what essentials I’d take with me, etc. The good news is that Trip was able to perform the repair while underway – the arm on the autohelm had slipped and was prematurely stopping the rudder from moving further over. Disaster averted, whew.

I hadn’t been paying attention to the InReach and it rebooted at some point. What I didn’t check was that our tracking points had stopped. Poor Viviane had to send me a note to start them up again. And the jokes began about how we would describe 24 hours of blank space on the map. Alien abduction? Pirate evasion tactics? Our minds ran wild.

Showers on deck

Knowing our own situation and listening to the SSB nets, everyone doing this cruise was soon going to be facing a fuel issue. Some boats were heading to Bermuda to refuel. We had to keep heading east, so we would keep Bermuda as a possibility, but the general intent was to sail, no matter how long it took. We’re a smaller boat than most doing the run (37 feet compared to 45 and up) which means we carry less diesel (55 gallons for this trip), have a smaller engine (get 5 knots an hour compared to 7 plus). But we have sails and it’s a sailing trip, so we were committed to making it work even if it meant more time at a slower pace. After doing some rough calculations we decided to limit our motoring, if necessary, to less than 4 hours a day to maintain a reserve to get into St Thomas safely.

We did have a little bit of company with not one but 3 cruise ships passing by. Two of them were Disney cruiselines and you could see Mickey’s prominent image in the smokestacks.

Not quite like the salon, but it works for shampoo & rinse

Things were calm enough that we decided to shower. Nothing feels better than soaping up with saltwater in the cockpit and then doing a freshwater rinse. I know crews in the past would go multiple weeks without showering but there simply was no need. Besides, weather might soon pick up where it wasn’t an option, so why not take advantage of it now?

Dinner: chicken and vegetable stir fry with quinoa & rice

Days 5-7

Lawrence got inspired as he was coming off watch and made a huge batch of scramble eggs with peppers & onions. We had a few whales as visitors again, and despite a forecast of light and variable winds, we were comfortably running 5 knots. We hit our first bit of rain which also came with a lovely rainbow afterward.

And then the autohelm died. It started making strange noises – sounding almost like morse code – before it would error out and die. We consulted the manual but pretty much determined that something that old (original to the boat) had simply led a good life and was toast. I was thrilled that we had even gotten 5 days out of it, since Trip could have just as likely insisted we hand steer instead. Despite this – the next few days would turn out to be the lovliest of the entire trip.

Coffee strong enough to keep anyone awake on watch

We sailed through the night, thus banking 4 hours of fuel to use another day. That evening brought out the most amazing star studded sky and the beginning of shooting stars. It wasn’t uncommon for any one of us to see multiples during the night and this went on for night after night. Dinner: pasta with olives & carmelized onions in tomato sauce

Since conditions were calm enough I decided to give it a shot making bread. Not bad for my first attempt while crossing the high seas – it was a basic sandwich loaf from the NY Times and won’t be the last. We devoured it while Lyle gave his report of sea serpents (Sargasso grass) and mermaids in the local waters. I entertained myself watching the flying fish skimming the surface of the water. Yet another day with no need to motor and hitting 7 knots at times – we could add another 8 hours to the fuel bank. Dinner: leftover pasta with fresh bread

Fresh bread

Just a little bit of bread left over the next morning so I made BLTs for breakfast – not a bad way to start the day. For three days now we have not touched the sails and have been moving comfortably at least 5 knots. It would be heaven if this were the route down to the Virgin Islands, though not likely. The one downside is that because we haven’t run the engine, the batteries are getting low. The solar panels aren’t aimed in the right direction for enough of the day and the wind generator is proving to be crap at generating much power at all – a big disappointment for the overall investment. So we run the engine for an hour or so to top off the batteries. On a sobering note, Trip hears over the Salty Dawg SSB net that a new friend of ours is having to divert to Bermuda because of fuel levels and battery discharge problems. Unfortunately he’s also losing his crew there, so I do hope he’s able to make things work and make it down to Antigua soon.

Things are calm enough that we feature a cocktail hour in the cockpit with everyone, complete with music, between watches. Dinner: Jambalaya with johnny cakes, chocolate pudding

Day 8

After rooting around in the fridge I was able to come up with smoked salmon, cream cheese, capers, shallots & lemon on the last bits of bread for toast. I decided to make more bread again, but didn’t have quite as good results. Our oven takes forever to heat up (bad gaskets) and I hadn’t factored the heat and humidity, so the loaf was over proofed by the time I put it in to bake. Not as pretty looking as the first loaf but it did still taste good.

After several days of no company we finally saw two sailboats on the horizon. We spoke to one who mocked us for our speed (2 knots? That’s not drifting). I had my brother look him up and it turns out he was the captain of a boat that had hit the rocks up in Cape Cod in 2013. We went back to drifting while they motored with unlimited fuel to some fabulous yacht club in St Thomas. Lyle started making plans to confront the douchebag if we ever came across him in the islands.

Dinner: tomato and red pepper soup with rice with grilled cheese sandwiches, oatmeal chocolate chip cookies

Day 9

Squalls to the left

We started the day dodging squalls and feasting on the last of the bread as French toast. The winds were growing, but unfortunately coming out of the south. We had run through our fuel, with the exception of what we were holding in reserve to charge the batteries and motor into harbor.

I texted my brother Chad on the InReach and asked him to start sending trivia questions. He comes through in stellar form and the boredom on board is alleviated.

Squalls to the right

Dinner: leftover jambalaya with more johnny cakes

 

Day 10

It was only a matter of time before we hit the squalls. We’ve been running parallel to lightning storms for hours on end but none have crossed over to us, and there’s no sign of thunder which indicates they’re pretty far out. We’ve developed a pretty good system for reefing and we’ve become pretty efficient as a team at getting sail changes in place as the weather sours. We declare the trade winds (supposedly steady 10-15 knots from the east) traitorous winds, but at least we’re able to move south (albeit southeast or southwest) at 5 knots under a double reefed main and reefed jib.

There’s no way we’re going to make this trip in any of the forecasted time of 9-10 days. 12-14 is far more likely now. With the winds or lack thereof and our inability to sail well into the wind, it’s going to be a long slog. At least we have plenty of food and trivia questions.

Using the InReach we asked Christine to rebook Lyle’s flight. We forgot that we’re getting in the week before Thanksgiving (early this year), so flights are at a premium. At least we have the InReach to communicate.

The shooting starts are at least still with us at night so there’s still a comforting factor.

Dinner: chicken tetrazzini

 

 

Flying fish

Days 11-13

The big winds hit and they bring confused seas. I’m done cooking for a few days so it’s sandwiches and soup to keep the crew going.  Even that is a bit of a challenge bracing myself to fix meals.

We’re down to the 500 mile mark but it doesn’t feel like it – still a long way to go. Lawrence’s seasickness, which we thought was a thing of the past, comes back with a vengeance. We move into three hour watch rotations since none of us seem to be sleeping for more than 2 hours at a time.

We do finally see more boats on the AIS and talk with Taiko, one of the boats from the ARC 1500 rally going to Tortola. Because there’s essentially no one for miles around we chat for quite some time on channel 16. It’s fun to hear other voices heading in the same direction. Dinner: sandwiches (much too rough to cook)

Galley work

The seas are a little bit more comfortable the next morning, so I break out a watermelon which I had been saving. Lawrence still isn’t feeling well, but the watermelon does a lot to start to revive him.

We’ve been running squalls all night and I’ve found out the hard way that my foul weather gear (now 10 years old) is not waterproof anymore. We’re soaked to the bone.

400 miles to go. Dinner: soup (too rough for much else)

And then Lawrence is finally on the mend again as his scopolamine patch kicks in – Lyle’s little buddy ‘Patch’ is back in the game. 300 miles to go. Dinner: soup again

 

 

Days 14-17

WTF!…….. what happened to the consistent trade winds that we could ride down to the islands? The wind is consistently coming from exactly the direction we need to go. Tacking is doable but we cover half the distance as the crow flies that we need to now.

I’ve begun texting James on the InReach for marine forecasts – I don’t know why we didn’t think of doing this sooner rather that Trip trying to listen into the SSB forecasts and hoping to catch the right quadrant.

No surprise – more squalls with really heavy rain. The evenings are a little creepy when there’s no stars, no moon, and all you can try to do is feel squalls as they approach. We do have a sense of humor though – the new crew song is Escape (the pina colada song) which we sing at full volume as each new squall begins to build. Dinner: kielbasa and sweet potato/potato hash

Lawrence & Contigo

Good weather was finally facing us in the morning, along with a huge pod of dolphins swimming along side of us. A number of them are leaping out of the water and one so high we could see the pink/purple of his underbelly. We also had another visitor – a little bird swooped in and settled right on Lawrence’s water bottle for an hour or so. I’ve never seen an animal so small show no fear, he just sat there while we ogled and took pictures. Lawrence named him Contigo after the water bottle and he left shortly thereafter.

We had mimosas to celebrate crossing over into the 20th latitude. The countdown has begun. Bread didn’t seem like a good option in still lumpy seas but pita bread was perfectly easy to make. I had bit of smoked salmon leftover so we did open faced sandwiches again.

We were wrong about the signs for good weather, by the way. They were more like little hints that it was going to be a long slog and we’d better buckle up. Funny how the human brain rationalizes things at the time.

At least some squalls bring rainbows

We crossed paths with a French Canadian boat called Zen Lattitude and spent some time chatting on the radio with them. They were kind enough to radio us later that night with the warning of a northeastern squall moving in in the middle of the night. We had all of 2 minutes to get some reefs in before that one hit and we were more than grateful for the advance warning. Dinner: pesto tortellini

Kicked off the day with breakfast burritos – a new crew favorite. Things are really starting to get frustrating now – are we ever going to get there?

One particularly big squall tonight – Lyle just held on to the wheel and went for a ride as the wind climbed. We’ll never know what speed it hit – 50 knots?

I text Viviane on the Inreach and ask her to call BoatUS to see if they have operations in the USVI (marine version of AAA) and if they would deliver fuel. The answer is a resounding yes, but we’re 50 miles out and we need to be within 25 miles. We manage to cover 25 miles under sail that night, getting us into range.

Are we there yet?

We’re now drifting, nowhere near getting any closer to the island (though clearly in sight) and the forecast is for more southerlies for the next several days.

We’ve eaten the last of the potato chips and bacon and drunk the last of the beer, it’s time to contact Boat US. Unfortunately they’re still using the coordinates from the night before so someone now feels obligated to call the Coast Guard. I’m getting messages instructing us to activate our EPIRB (emergency beacon) which is ridiculous. Lawrence gets a hold of the Puerto Rico Coast Guard and explains that there is no distress whatsoever. They acknowledge and offer to relay info to the Boat US captain.

When Boat US shows up they insist they didn’t get any message about fuel and instead are there to tow us in. We have a decision to make. It seems a rather discouraging moment to sail over 1400 miles and have to get towed in the last 12 miles, but it was possibly going to be days before we could get in on our own. (In retrospect I’m sure the skipper gets paid more for a tow than a fuel delivery so he was probably behind the ‘miscommunication’). We hook up the bridle and settle in for the ride to Red Hook.

We pass through one of the most violent thunderstorms under tow – there were three distinct bolts of lightning and claps of thunder that physically shook the boat. It was raining so hard I’m not sure anyone even noticed us coming in under tow.

Red Hook, St Thomas

At last, dry land again.

In retrospect, it was the voyage of a lifetime. Frustrating at times when the winds wouldn’t cooperate and uncomfortable at others in confused seas or hard on it or in the middle of a squall, but never in a situation where I felt both the boat and the crew couldn’t get through. Friendships that are cemented for life, knowing that it will be so difficult to explain to others what it was like out there together. Mind blowing things that we began to take for granted, like the brilliant moon, star studded skies (too many shooting stars to count after a while), flying fish, dolphins, birds. The color of the sea as we passed through the deep indigo of the gulf stream into the carribbean blue.

And this is just the beginning.

Special thanks to three people who have been declared honorary crew:

– Viviane (Lawrence’s wife): for her daily fun checkins and all of her help once we decided to contact Boat US.
– Chad (my brother): for his updates on news of the day and trivia that provided many a needed distraction during the moments of boredom.
– James: our new offshore meteorologist. He may not have delivered good news, but the forecasts were always timely and much appreciated.

Off-shore Run

Aaaaaand we’re off!  The OCC crowd saw us off the docks (many thanks again to our wonderful hosts, Port Commanders Greta & Gary) and we motored out.  There’s almost no wind so it’ll be a day of motoring before we can set sail, but the weather window is right.  It might take us a few extra days but who cares if the conditions are right and we have plenty of food.

 

Next stop US Virgin Islands!

 

Coastal New Jersey (overnight run)

Damn. Damn. Damn.

We’re 0 for 3 on our overnight passages this year. Normally there is nothing better than sailing along at two in the morning with a full moon or a star-studded night. Gliding along and enjoying the solitude.

Not this year. You’ve already read about our first overnight to Block Island where we turned the spinnaker into a drogue. And the second overnight from Maine to Boston with crazy winds and seas. Well our run down the coast of New Jersey to the Delaware Bay fared no better.

Maureen & Stephen – our farewell crew

After a ten day at-home-intermission, our friends Maureen and Stephen were kind enough to drive us back to the boat and provide a proper farewell. We spent the day stowing our gear and provisions and getting everything ready. We got a solid night sleep, had a great breakfast, and left late morning. Trip anticipated a 30 hour run, getting into Cape May inlet mid-afternoon the following day.

Yikes – In our harbor a sunken boat clearly marked by mooring balls

And the first few hours were a lovely sunny sail across Raritan Bay out past Sandy Hook. And then things changed. We had known the forecast wasn’t optimal with 3 foot seas and southwest winds. But the seas had a long interval (which makes them easy to ride) and we could sail hard on it to make use of the southwesterly winds. But as usual the actual weather had other plans for us. The easy 3 foot seas were more like 4-6 with a 3 second interval, creating quite choppy seas. And the winds were pretty much from the south, exactly the direction we needed to go. Motor sailing into the wind and seas only got us 2 knots (you can walk faster). So we decided on a series of longer tacks off-shore.

My studly captain – you’d never guess how rough things were at sea

The long tacks did make things more comfortable and we certainly moved faster, but it was still a rock and roll ride. To make matters worse, when we tacked back to land we not only lost speed, but also found ourselves moving northwest instead of southwest. Three miles forward, one mile back. A day and night of this and by the next morning we were discouraged to find we had only made 35 of the 100+ miles we wanted.

We were tired and cranky so we looked at our options. Too much of the New Jersey coast line is shallow – much too shallow for us to consider stopping to rest. Atlantic City was an option, but we wouldn’t get there before sundown and I HATE going into new anchorages at night. The winds and seas had calmed a bit and we were able to motor sail so we opted to plow on through a second night. I finally remembered that we had a sleeping bag down below which I pulled out into the cockpit for whoever wasn’t on the helm to tuck into and rest. It’s amazing how warming up can improve a mood.

at least sunrise was enjoyable

After a second night of being sore and cranky – I studied the charts and found a different option. Lewes Delaware was the very bottom  of Delaware Bay and further south than Cape May (an additional 10 miles – what was I nuts????), but it looked to be a much easier in and out, with a series of breakwaters that would provide protection from any seas. We wouldn’t have to worry about the availability of anchoring options in Cape May or the heavy commercial traffic.

We got in late afternoon in time for a long-deserved cocktail, dinner and some much needed rest.

When I started the blog I mentioned that cruising is 95% boredom and 5% terror. Funny enough we’ve had 6 days (tops) of uncomfortable sailing out of being on the water 120 days – puts us right in that 5% range. Like I was planning or something.

As much as sails like this suck, I do remind myself that at no point did we ever feel unsafe. The boat performed spectacularly, we managed all the right sail configurations at the right times, so things were uncomfortable but not dangerous. Being wet and tired adds to the crankiness, but it eventually ends. And I promise Trip and I are still married and talking to each other.

Enjoying sunset once we anchored

Storms

There’s nothing worse than the sinking feeling in your stomach when you look at a weather forecast and read ” wind 30 knots, gusting to 45, seas 7-9 feet.”  Our boat is heavy, we know when to shorten sail (have the minimum amount of canvas up to sail safely), and we can take it.  But how nice not to be out in it if you really don’t have to.

Late summer and early fall in New England always bring remnants of hurricanes and nor’easters.  No matter what plans you might have or who you might be meeting in any specific port, you’re better off not testing the weather and taking unnecessary risks.  As we sail we constantly look at anchorages and keep them in mind if they would make good hurricane holes.  (A hurricane hole is a harbor that is landlocked enough to block high winds and small enough to prevent fetch (seas) from building.)

When we were in Newport we started reading reports that Hurricane Jose, though not making landfall in the US, would come close enough to shore to bring high winds and high seas.  Luckily, the three days before the storm was projected to hit, we were going to have wind in our favor or no wind (easy enough to motor).  So we made a plan to get as far down into Long Island Sound as we could where we could find protection.

Saturday morning we topped off gas, diesel and water tanks in Newport and then headed to Fishers Island.  We had to motor pretty much the whole way and it was foggy, but we’ve been to Fishers Island before and it’s an easy, wide open anchorage, so there was little risk in doing it in the fog.

Sunday morning (again, very foggy), we headed further southwest to New Haven.  We anchored in Morris Cove, which is south of the city by several miles, but an easy in and out, and good protection with multiple breakwaters in place.

Monday we made our final push down to Northport with a fantastic wing-on-wing (main on one side, jib on the other) sail.  We had several options, but picked Northport because:  a) The mud is incredibly thick which means it holds the anchor well, b) North of the mooring field is a wide open bay where we could safely anchor away from other boat traffic and reduce the risk of being hit if someone dragged, and c) The bay is a decent hurricane hole.  It doesn’t have high enough land to protect from much of the wind, but it is almost entirely landlocked, so very little fetch can build.

We stripped the windage (anything that might blow away), put extra lines around the sails and sailcovers, tied off the wind generator, and hunkered down for three days.  And we got lucky.  The original forecast called for winds gusting to 50 and seas 8-10 feet.  The storm instead moved further east and we saw winds of only 30-35 knots and almost no fetch.  I got a lot of reading done, Trip did a bunch of projects, we watched several movies, and then we moved on.

Fog

Sailing through fog used to scare the crap out of me.  Not being able to see anything 50 feet in front of you, limited ability to hear if you’re motoring, it can be unnerving.  We’ve done it enough that it’s still uncomfortable but I can laugh a bit when we describe it as ‘sailing by braille.’

Luckily we have a number of tools to help make things easier…

Horn:  This is probably the most low tech of everything we have on board but this lets other boaters know that you’re out there.  One long blast tells them that you’re motoring, one long blast followed by two short blasts tells them you’re sailing.  Carefully listening lets you know the proximity of other boats in the area.  In the past skippers haven’t been as good about using them, but I heard quite a few this summer.

Chartplotter

Chartplotter plus AIS:  The chartplotter displays a digital version of our paper charts.  While nothing is better than being at the helm and seeing for yourself what’s in front of you, a chartplotter does allow you to sail blind.  We try to get close enough to certain landmarks, or at least channel markers (green or red buoys) to confirm what the charts are telling us.

See the black triangle on the chartplotter screen picture?  That’s us.  The outlined triangles are other boats that also have AIS (automatic identification system, or marine GPS).  It’s very helpful to be able to see other boats out there on the screen if you can’t see them in person, or even hear them.

iPad navigation apps

The iPad is  pretty much the same as the chartplotter, but handheld.  Redundancy is always good…..

Radar

Radar:  Our radar is a bit old, but it’s still good to have on board, which spots all boats or land in the area – not just what we can see on the chartplotter.

And that, my friends, is sailing by braille.  Fog.

Somesville, ME, continued

The calm before the storm……

We’re still at anchor in Somes Harbor, but now it’s a bit of a waiting game. We had a lovely time at the theatre last night, the local repertory troup put on a rather fun performance of Agatha Christie’s Black Coffee with Hercule Poirot. The walk back to the dock was a bit treacherous with no light in town or out to the docks, but a number of people from boats had come in for the same reason and most of us had flashlights to light the way back.

The water was like glass and the sky its usual amazing star studded self, and we were awake at midnight (long past our usual bedtime of 10) so we poured ourselves an aperitif and sat out in the cockpit to enjoy the night. Though we couldn’t see them, we could hear the ‘pouf’ sounds from the local porpoises swimming near the boat.

The porpoises:   Smaller than dolphins, there appears to be a family living here in the harbor and we see them surface multiple times a day from the boat. Apparently, they have a wicked sense of humor because they like to disappear and then resurface not 30 seconds after a group of kayakers have gone past, plaintively asking if we’ve seen the porpoises. And the bald eagles: There are four here I’ve seen flying past and one came so low I wondered if he was looking to pick off a porpoise or a solo paddleboarder.

We woke up to a grey day, which we were expecting. The forecast was calling for rain most of the day. More importantly, the remnants of Hurricane Gert had just passed the east coast. Though hundreds of miles off shore, she was expected to deliver some serious wind and swell. This is very typical for this time of year in New England – mid August to mid September  & we usually hit one of these storms during our summer vacation. The good news is that you can see them coming days away and prepare well in advance (unlike the tornados I grew up with in the Midwest that struck with no notice). I tend to check multiple sites daily for weather forecasts as I’m a little obsessive about sailing in conditions that I like. We knew the rain was coming, but we were also potentially expecting winds gusting up to 35 knots and swells of 4-6 feet. We’ve sat through higher winds at anchor, though I’m never crazy about them occurring at 2 AM when it’s pitch black and you can’t get your bearings to ensure you’re not dragging on your anchor (we immediately take bearings and note latitude/longitude when we drop anchor ). Trip pointed out that the swell would have to pin ball its way up the sound which should help dissipate things by the time it reached us.

We had a few hours before the rain would start so we did a dinghy tour around the harbor. I had seen multiple kayaks coming out of one end so we went over to investigate and found a huge campground. As with most, tent sites were located at the water’s edge while campers were tucked further back. Interestingly there were multiple platforms provided for tents – I’m wondering if the ground is simply so rocky they have to provide that or poor campers would never be able to pitch a tent.

As a total aside I’ve made Trip promise that once we’re shore bound again we’d do a bit more camping and kayaking/canoeing. As an incentive I told him we’d build this together some winter to match my wooden kayak. The biggest temptation once that’s in place is whether we sail in Maine or camp!

Coming back to the boat I was analyzing our distance to the next boat behind us (god forbid we drag during the night) while Trip just went on his merry way. Trip looks once, decides we’re a good distance and carries on. I look out multiple times a day and re-calculate and worry. What a pair. The good news is that I checked the forecast again and wind speed had dropped significantly. Swells are still aiming to be high, but I’m not as concerned given a) now protected we are, and b) how heavy we are (rocks you to sleep like a baby while other boats are rolling uncomfortably).

We settled in for an afternoon of books and I decided to make chicken noodle soup since it was only in the 60’s and what better to have on a night like that?

Update:  One boat dragged at around 2 AM (it never does happen mid day when you can see clearly), but as Trip pointed out in his sleep, ‘they’re down wind of us, who cares?’  They reset their anchor and everyone went back to bed.

Take a Tour

Wondering what it’s like to live aboard a 37 foot sailboat?  Picture a small New York studio apartment with much better storage and waterfront views…….

Though most home owners want spacious kitchens, imagine being able to do everything you need from one position.    With just a single pivot I can get food out of the fridge or freezer, slice/dice/chop as needed, slip into the oven to bake, and clean up in the sink.  Have I had to give up the gadgets like the food processor and the standing mixer?  Yes, but the fundamentals are all on board.  Good knives, solid cookware (one treasured Le Creuset dutch oven), stainless steel cutlery are all there.  I did give up my good crystal after a couple of wine glasses shattered but the plastic wine glasses have come a long way.  You can’t see it, but there’s even a full liquor cabinet & wine locker hiding in the background.

 

This is where the majority of life happens down below.  Note all the beautiful teak – the original owner took amazing care of the boat and we’ve inherited something beautiful that requires a bit of care.

The table includes leaves that fold up and we can seat up to 9 for dinner. The starboard settee folds out into a double bed.  The cabinets above are only one set of storage, there’s more behind the settees not shown here.

There’s a fuel tank underneath the starboard settee and a water tank underneath the port settee with another water tank in the bilge underneath the floorboards.

 

It doesn’t look like it but that’s a double bed that fits us comfortably.  Shelves and cabinets on both sides hold our clothing.  The space underneath the berth is spacious enough to hold our spinnaker sail as well as two folding bikes that we can use on land.

 

 

The head, or bathroom, is a smaller version of what you’d see at home with it’s own separate shower stall.

Across from the head are a set of hanging lockers for our foul weather gear as well as ‘dress clothes’ for going ashore.

We have a separate aft cabin that right now is being used as a storage spot till we get organized but we’ve got plenty of room for guests.

 

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