| Title: | SAILING |
| Notice: | Please read Note 2.* before participating in this conference |
| Moderator: | UNIFIX::BERENS |
| Created: | Wed Jul 01 1992 |
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 2299 |
| Total number of notes: | 20724 |
As I sit here after a weekend of "boat-building" in 34deg weather and
freezing rain, I must admit to a bit of pressure. It is a feeling not
unlike an upcoming shuttle launch where you suddenly find that you have
been selected to go.
Ten weeks from now I have to (well, ok, "want" is more accurate)
transport Assassin to Kenosha on her own bottom. People keep saying,
"Hey, trucking is easy." Yes, yes, yes, but trucking is not fun and, in
my humble opinion, is not what sailboats are meant for.
But the "list" gets longer rather than shorter. This Soverel has been a
day sailing puddle jumper, (Lake Saint Claire is only 18mi across)
since it was launched and was not even launched from 1990 to 1994. Last
year, it was launched but almost nothing worked, and absolutely nothing
worked well.
How to get this complex package of systems up for a 1000mi one way
transit is what is building the pressure. And, I want it to be fun, not
an exercise in crisis management.
Consider: Water pump bad
injector bad spray pattern
fuel tank full of muck
All filters contaminated
No VHF radio
No autopilot
Loran has 1.5mi errors
Shore charger voltage is 13.1v max
All the seacocks are sticking
Holding tank hoses leaking
All charts are circa 1989
Fluxgate compass display is dead
LRX will not read range data
Mainsail's slugs are really bad
Milldew has set up permanent residence in the bow
Batten pockets are nearly blown out.
Runner tails have seen better days
All the winches are Barient (uh-oh)
Electric bilge pump is dead-o
The good side: all standing rigging (after magnifying glass review) is in
good shape. All of the other sails are in excellent shape. The hull is
sound everywhere I could think to look.
So I need to find a project manager hat to wear somewhere. This
weekend the the fuel tank came back spotless and Mack Boring delivered
the injector after a tuneup. I replaced the entire waterpump, all the
fuel line twixt tank and engine, the filters and separator. Still need
to bleed it and crank it up though.
The main is at the loft, the Apelco is back (again) at the factory. I
have the Guest charger apart on the kitchen table. But the list still
seems endless. A new readout for the Sailcomp is on the way, and the
LRX is due in next week after a firmware upgrade.
Still the idyllic setting in Georgian Bay in mid July beckons.
Next visit to Detroit, I think I'll be a plumber........
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2204.1 | No Sweat just keep working | TOLKIN::HILL | Wed Apr 19 1995 09:22 | 11 | |
Having launched three boats, a Seafarer 23, 31, and a Morris 36
(Presently for sale). (I bought these boats unfinished and finished
them). I understand the pressure and sense of urgency. My lists never
were completed either.
The best part is watching it launched and then diving below to find
the bildges dry as a bone.
Best of luck.
Bill Hill
| |||||
| 2204.2 | making progress | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Thu Apr 20 1995 11:53 | 38 |
What a week! Everything coming in at the same time. My new Autohelm
arrived as did the Apelco (it would not initialize - does now). The LRX
is here too. And the mainsail is done.
While I was at the loft, they asked me (they know about the trip) if I
planned on "shooting" the channel at night. Huh? "You know, Gage Channel
into Lake Michigan." Well I did not know.
We got out their charts, mine have not arrived yet. Yikes! 100miles
(wide) of lake is blocked by a million little islands with one deep
water channel through them. There are all sorts of exotic anchorage's
to be had. I particurly like the one on to the south that has a
semicircular bay facing the ESE with 150ft of water in it.
The Manitou's?
The gradient
is so steep that you literally beach the bow of your sailboat on the
sand, step off and tie your anchor line to a tree! I draw 6ft too. One
fellow recommend setting a windscoop from the backstay to keep the
stern out. He also said that this is magnificent for the prevailing
westerlies but if a SE builds you need to get out of there in a hurry.
You cannot anchor effectively in the bay (too deep). And the steep
gradient does really wild things with waves on the shorline.
Anyway, I will be a plumber next trip. Plumbing, Engine, Navigational
stuff. Worry about the rest after that. So far:
Mainsail refit: $304.00
Autohelm AH800/2 $249.00
Yanmar rework $ 58.00
Apelco free
KVH LRX free
Fuel System refit $ 83.00
Charger nothing (not repairable - replace later)
Running rigging $ 55.00 (tails for running backstays)
-------
$749.00 ytd
| |||||
| 2204.3 | some days are diamonds, others stones | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed May 10 1995 11:35 | 34 |
Hooked up the charger again.....nothing. Not low voltage. No voltage.
Ok, I only needed half an excuse anyway. First things first, I cannot
work on this sorry ship without recharging the batteries. So off to the
local marine store. Bought a Guest 2815, spent 1.5hrs hooking it up and
flipped on the breaker. Nothing! oh oh.....
A bad crimp in the ground fuse. Fixed that and ....yahoo, 14.0v
pumping into my batteries. A long term problem cured. ($195.00)
About three hours later, while installing (another story) the
autopilot, in comes a squall. Batten down the car windows! the
forehatch, put away the tools, cover up my deck gelcoat work with
buckets, duck below. just in time as the firs big rain drops are
smacking down. A wall of wind lashes, 49.4knots, holy cow a microbust!
It fades to gusts of 20-25kn. The boat is vibrating on the cradle.
A vivid actinic glare followed by a crash of sound three seconds later.
Maybe I should power down the electrics. I do this and try to think if
I've forgotten anything in the lashing wind and rain of the squall. I'm
standing in the companionway enjoying the weather tantrum when a second
bolt strikes only three hundred meters away.
Something snaps below, I heard it but in ducking down cannot spot what
that was. A pungent smell fills the cabin, oh-oh, (again).
I check the breakers, the main AC is off, I had forgotten to turn it
off so that must be the snap I heard. I turn it on, it snaps off again
after a second. More smell and smoke from abaft the engine room where
the newly mounted charger resides. Yes, it was cooked. Evidently,
nature augmented what Detroit Edison was providing for a few seconds.
The breaker was not quick enough to save the charger.
Not a good day so far........
| |||||
| 2204.4 | POWDML::HO | Wed May 10 1995 12:47 | 19 | ||
re .3
Well....there is still the old charger. Coulda been just a bad crimp
in the ground wire in that one too.
If all the prep were done on time and under budget, there would be
nothing left for the rest of the season but sitting there and
aimlessly wandering about a large body of water at a pathetically slow
rate of speed.
Face the truth, it ain't the destination. It's not even the journey.
It's the prep work. For the anal rententive, obsessive compulsive
amongst us, everthing else is anti-climax. I'm already craving the
irresistable smell of iso-cyanate paint. The anticipation of getting
fiberglass shards all over my body is giving me goose bumps as I
type. But....even *I* draw the line at HIGH VOLTAGE. You have to have
some standards.
- gene
| |||||
| 2204.5 | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed May 10 1995 18:44 | 34 | |
And the good news.....When I told Guest about the story, including the
lightning bolt, they sent me a new one. They said a spike on the line
should not have fried the unit, popped the internal fuse maybe, but not
a dead short. Direct strike, sure, but not a 1000' far away one.
Also the diesel lit right off and purred against the governor, after
warm up, at 3800rpm like a turbine. The new injector and filters fit
the bill. The battery combiner works coupling the batteries as charge
voltage goes over 13.1v. The Autohelm worked exactly right, the Apelco
loran tuned in finally (but never, oh never with the AC charger
running) and the LRX reads range data!
The Sailcomp new display works as expected, the Huron and Michigan 1995
chartkits arrived ($120 gone there). All the electronics plugs are
replaced, the seacocks lubed, and the pressure water tank installed.
The reworked mainsail is spot on, The new long battens (longer, not
full length) look great.
After a run like that, I said, "Sure, rub out the hull. And why not fix
that 1988 ding in the starboard gunwale where yours truly failed his
first test of opposing wind and following current while docking."
Geez, what's left??? New reefing lines and an eyespice in the foreguy?
Oh yeah and rerigging the cunningham. Long list huh!
And of course......the bottom paint!
and pathetically slow speeds??? Not on this flyer. I am so looking
forward to 700miles of westerlies when my principal distances will be
300miles north and 400miles south. The rest? Yep, you guessed it,
check out my personal name....beating from Detroit to Chicago sorta
like.
| |||||
| 2204.6 | progress, always progress | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Tue May 30 1995 09:16 | 17 |
Countdown:
Five (weeks)
Four
Three:
Sitting on the cradle, new coat of VC17 looking like a brightly
burnished copper penny. New reefing lines installed, Eyesplice done on
the foreguy, Mainsail installed, furled and covered (on the cradle no
less).
My van is full of sails, The list is done. Now I'm just trying to
internalize hundreds of twisty little channels in Georgian Bay.
| |||||
| 2204.7 | DV780::CHAPIEWSKYS | Tue May 30 1995 17:38 | 5 | ||
What was the status of the boat before you began your "rebuild"?.
Also, what size is the boat? If there is a note already discussing
this, please just indicate the number.
Scott
| |||||
| 2204.8 | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed May 31 1995 11:33 | 32 | |
This sailboat is a Tartan built Soverel33. It was the last one ever
built (hull#90). It was built to order by me in January 1988.
Soverel33's are ultralights; in 1988 they were, by today's standards
they would be considered light displacement. Tartan changed the rules
somewhat by adding cruising amenities, four more ring frames, a
reinforced deck, and about 1000lb. Assassin weighs in at a "heavy"
6800lbs in racing trim; about 7500lbs ready for cruising. The sail area
to displacement is 26.2 (turbocharged).
A Soverel33 has an 11ft beam, draws 6ft, and has a waterline length of
31.5ft. It also has a radical reverse transom that is open. Looks not
unlike "Thursday's Child" from the rear. And not unlike a 1 ton from
the side. Mark Soverel designed the hull as a wildcat. NO rules
applied. She is 15/16's fractional rigged with runners and checkstays.
Deck layout is full race with eight winches, six self tailing and
eleven spinlock GP clutches; two on the main halyard. Windward sheeting
traveller, dual 587 harken cars on each of the 12ft genoa tracks,
spreachers, and an adjustable backstay round out the controls.
The added weight only hurts in one design racing and only in the
lightest air. It impacts my acceleration after a tack or a mark
rounding. As payback, Tartan stiffened the hull, so I point about three
degrees higher.
The boat sat from 1990 to 1994 unused on the cradle, while I worked
through some personal difficulties. I sold a lot of the electronics and
racing equipment, but not any rigging or sails. The sitting is what
"damaged" a lot of things, especially the fuel systems and electrical
wiring.
| |||||
| 2204.9 | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Sun Jun 18 1995 23:39 | 26 | |
Five days to go....
Assassin was launch at 8:45am Friday morning. Within three hours we
left on a three day and two night shakedown minicruise around the west
end of Lake Erie. Air temps in the city averaged 90+, but the lake was
still 62 deg and there fore the SE winds were at least 15deg cooler.
Apparent wind built from 10kn to 19kn during the day. My saling partner
struggled with the adaption from wheel to tiller for a while, but
eventually she could hold any course and carry on a meaningful dialog.
We caught a white bass, a yellow perch and a walleye to augment our
chicken barbeque while anchored overnight in Moulee Bay. Winds clocked
to the south during the night and lightened. The Windscoop kept the
boat wonderfully ventilated. When the heat of the day left, so did the
biting Erie flies that we had prepared for. Avon Skin-so-soft is the
perfect deterent for those pest. Swimming in the bay was brisk work but
refreshing.
All systems and equipment worked flawlessly except the Loran which kept
crashing and recovering. You cannot enter "goto" data while the error
light is flashing. (I keep thinking Garmin, Garmin,)
What's left? Reprovision, ice, fuel and depart....
Noontime, Friday the 23rd.
| |||||
| 2204.10 | First day out | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Mon Jul 10 1995 00:45 | 66 |
Day One: 23 June, 1995, 13:20hrs
The chores this morning were minimal. I have described the preparations
previously. Today was reserved for gathering our fresh vegetables, six
blocks of ice and some whole chickens (dead ones, naturally). I still
wanted one more diesel can of about three gallons that would precisely
fit in a space reserved under the port side pilot berth. Olivia
Diamond, my sailing companion, chief editor, and significant other,
humors me and we go looking. As before, it could not be found. So I
settled for a 3gal gasoline can, plastic, with a hearty spout. All of
this done by noon, we loaded up the last of the provisions, and cast
off.
As we were about an hour and a half late, I decided to forego the
pleasure of sailing out to the end of the livingstone channel. I took
the gap between Grosse Isle and Celeron Island, then turned northwest
up the passage between Hickory Island to cut through the "hole in the
wall" on the Livingston channel. We entered the upbound shipping
channel, effectively cutting off 90 minutes and regaining all of the
lost time.
It is a beautiful day. Mostly. There is a thunderstorm currently raging
about three miles ahead. But it is traveling westward and is gone
before we enter its area of influence. Winds out of the northeast at
5kn, 85 degrees. To light to sail in this current, so we motor. At
3000rpm, its 6.4kn boat speed but the Garmin says 3kn over the ground.
I learn that there still is an air bubble in the fuel line. It
manifests itself every time the boat heels more than 15 degrees to
starboard, such as when a powercruiser passes. Then it sounds like an
old 57 Chevy with the choke stuck. After the fourth or fifth time, I
leave the cover off and a wrench handy to do an instant bleed when the
opportunity arises. The bubble turns out to be much larger than I
believed. This bleeding process takes two days! After a couple of
hours, I turn on the Autohelm and relax. This unit is the new model 800
II. It is supposed to have some smarts about "learning" your helm
requirements. It works well enough but I learned last weekend that the
power harness plug is very flakey. With the slightest nudge the power
to the unit is interrupted and the thing goes into standby. This is a
devious trait because you cannot tell at first that the helm is now
just lashed instead of being intelligently (?) directed.
Just before Detroit the river turns east I think about setting the
main. Shortly after, but before I can get my mind made up the wind
begins to clock to the east, so we motor some more. We enter Lake St.
Claire at 7pm and alter course to the north.
Steering about 025 lets us hoist the main. A racer, with their full
crew, a Santana 30 called Warlock, motors along side and sets their
main. I killed the diesel and got the #3 on deck. Now winds are only
about ten knots so this is seriously undersailed. But there are only
two of us so less is more. Warlock gets her genoa up first and passes
us. Or they try to. We get our 100%, battened kevlar blade up in time
to keep our nose in free air and it's a drag race. In ten knots, flat
water, at a very tight reach, a Soverel 33 will not be denied. I got
our nose out in front, flattened the main, and started pointing. We
gassed them soon enough and Warlock tacks away.
Oh yeah, we are supposed to be looking for that waypoint. OK back to
business. In the dark the Garmin 45 guides is into the tuning point
from the channel to the Clinton River. Again it homes us right into the
entrance to the river. All from the cockpit. This thing is super. I use
it momentarily to get a position, a bearing and then turn it off again.
It finds the satellites so quickly, it is not necessary to leave it on
all the time.
Since I did not feel comfortable with doing the St.Claire River at
night, we didn't. We used the dealership where I bought this boat as a
layover. We arrive at 24:10hrs. Only 43 miles today and most of that
motoring. The good news? 1.5 gal of diesel consumed. I am impressed. In
previous years, I would push at rated RPM (3400), gain one half knot
and burn twice as much fuel. Tomorrow is new horizons.
| |||||
| 2204.11 | Day two: diesel melodies | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Mon Jul 10 1995 00:50 | 79 |
Day Two: 24 June, 0930hrs
"Why won't this E-string tune?" she says. "I keep tightening it but it
stays at the same pitch."
"Maybe it has lost its elasticity." I replied. Olivia tells me that it
is a steel string. I recommend checking the anchor points. Rigging
works that way. Too late, she has removed the string and it breaks from
a kink on the post. This little escapade took about 45min in the
morning, but who cares. We have no timetable now. I want to get under
the Blue Water bridge by dark and that is surely possible.
We get underway, stop for some granola bars and to replace the fuel we
burned. I carry only fourteen gallons all told and as little as 1.5gal
is, it's still ten percent of the total. The wind is south this morning
and somewhat stronger at 9kn true. Again we motor at 165 degrees to get
into the St.Claire channel. Turn east and hoist the main. It really
helps as the speed comes up to 7.3kn with the diesel still at 3000 rpm.
The St.Claire River is a twisty course that starts east and turns
north. With the current, which is stronger than the Detroit River, it
was clear that motor-sailing was the only way.
The south wind backs to the east shortly before the river turns north.
No matter, it is so light now that it makes no difference. I leave the
main up and press on. After we turn north, this light breeze helps
some. Thunderstorms threaten all day but all are no shows. We get about
to hours of rain starting around noon. After the rain, the wind backs
still further and its time to take down the main. We had been closing
on a double ender for the last two hours. Now with sail down we catch
him more quickly. Our difference was still less than half a knot so we
were able to hold a conversation for a while.
Carasco is on her final leg of a circumnavigation. Her master, whose
name I could not catch, had just come from Uruguay. He was heading home
to Port Huron, only a few miles up this river. This ship had done
20,000 miles in fourteen months. He had bought the boat in Europe and
had headed east. A serious bit of sailing.
An hour later fabulous smells issue from below. For a bachelor it is a
rare treat to have someone cooking while underway. Olivia is an
accomplished "one pan" chef, a skill perfectly suited to the sailing
environment. "What are your brewing down there." I holler over the
throb of the diesel. She replies that the fare of the evening shall be
Venison stew with zucchini and onions. You cannot believe how wonderful
this tasted. It was served cockpit mode; which is to say, in the pot
with utensils arranged around and both of us dig in. There was way more
than we could eat so the pot went back on the stove. Midnight snacks,
don't you know.
We grind up the river to arrive at the Blue Water Bridge at dusk. The
current is very, very strong surpassing eight knots on the west bank
where the river is over sixty feet deep. On the east side it is slowed
in the rocky shoreline to about 5.5knots. A sailboat must pick its way
using depthfinder to stay between the 15 to 20ft line or be swept away.
This is not autopilot work. The swirls and eddies are very violent.
Directly under the bridge I am less than twenty feet from the abutment
but still in 41ft of water. I am doing 3600rpm and scarcely moving. I
do not dare to close on the bridge, the boat is jinking from side to
side. On a wheel boat this might be even harder. In conditions like
this Assassin is underpowered. Thrust to weight is OK but thrust to
hull drag is another matter. Eventually we get past the bridge and into
shallower water. My GPS now shifts from 0kn to 1.1knot at 3600rpm. My
diesel is rated for one hour at this speed so I keep the coal on for
about twenty minutes more before backing to 3000rpm as we drive into
Lake Huron.
A knowledgeable sailor told me to advance well into the lake before
trying to sail in light conditions. Otherwise, you might well be sucked
back into the funnel. It is a funnel. The lake's average depth for many
miles is only 20ft. Yet the approaches to the bridge rapidly deepen to
three times that. How far is "far"? I did not know the answer to this
question but the true wind speed is only 2.4kn so I motor on. At
fifteen miles, my concern for remaining diesel fuel outweighs my worry
about the current. Up with the main, the light number one, and off with
the clatter.
The wind is light and frivolous. The Autohelm cannot be expected to
follow nearly fifty degrees of shifts and neither can I after eighteen
hours. The sea is a glassy sheet. There are stars everywhere. We are
now in 60 feet of water. Anchor or drift. Dropped all the sails, lashed
the helm over, and drift. Dawn is less than three hours away and I
believe the sun will drive the wind. Olivia is long gone, I zonk as
well. We are fifteen miles from the eastern edge of the freighter
channel. I set the NKE to alarm at winds stronger than 5kn and hit the
sack.
| |||||
| 2204.12 | Day three: big lake sailing (Huron) | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Mon Jul 10 1995 00:55 | 58 |
Day Three: 25 June, 0550 hours
"Ahoy Assassin!" The words penetrated my unconsciousness without being
very clear. "What!" is my waking thought. The call is repeated bringing
my befuddled brain and body up the companionway. It is another sailboat
about 35 ft long heading east towards Canada. They had spotted our
slowly turning circles in the early morning light and had come to
investigate. The breeze had picked up to four knots, enought to turn us
but not enought to alarm the sailing computer.
It is 7:10am. We are inundated with 2 million flies. Fortunately they
are not the biting kind. They seem to be dying off but as soon as I
wash them away more land. The wind is from the NNW so I set the light
number one and we head off toward the Canadian shoreline steering 86deg
at about four knots of boat speed.
As the sun climbs into the morning sky, its power drives the breeze.
Soon we are traveling at 6knots. Wind shifts slightly east so we tack
back toward the US shore now thirty miles distant. Even though the
starboard tack is lifted again we cannot clear the Saginaw Penninsula.
We tack back to port and out into the lake at 11:50am
Good news arrives in the afternoon with a building breeze for more
speed and veering to the east which is a header on port but should lift
us over the penninsula. There is something annoying about all this
easterly work when the ultimate destination is Lake Michigan. By 2pm
the starboard tack has been lifted to 330deg and we are on our way.
With 10knots of wind and flat water Assassin hustles up the lake at 7kn
or more. The flies cannot land anymore but the ones with us seem in no
hurry to leave.
At 2:45pm a small bird heads past going south. Just as I think how
surprised I am at this land bird over thiry miles out from shore, it
does a turn onto its base leg and then on to final. This redwing
blackbird does the neatest day trap on my afterdeck with a perfect
glide in and hover landing. Without delay my visitor puts in a
refueling request and, once approved, goes to work on the flies. In
forty-five minutes the voracious little bird works his way up the port
rail. all over the foredeck, down the starboard rail, including within
three feet of where I sit, and then goes to work on the cockpit. The
bird cleaned the boat! Satified, he lifts off and heads south once
more.
At 3:50pm the winds build to 13kn true. The light number one is
begining to show some stress and the helm is heavier with the 23deg of
heel. We are still making 7.75kn but it is time to change to the #3 again.
When done, I decided to leave the #1 on deck as I expected the winds to
lighten as the sun goes down. I tied it securely with a couple of sail
ties as well as using the foredeck retainers. Heel is better at 14deg
and speed did not suffer much at 7.4kn.
The breeze did indeed lighten at 6:15pm. We changed back to the #1,
planning on using that all evening. We are now lifted to 355deg; all
most enough to clear Thunder Bay. Our destination is DeTour passage
into the North Channel. There I hope to find a "perfect" spot to park
and relax for several days.
At sunset, the wind nearly died. It looked like another all night
drifter. As boat speed fell away, we were headed again. It seemed that
another night of light air tacking back and forth was in store. This
expectation could not have been further from the truth.
| |||||
| 2204.13 | Day four: Working the boat | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Mon Jul 10 1995 01:05 | 121 |
Day Four (the test): 26 June, 2340 hours
The breeze really freshens and lifts us to 015 deg. A few minutes
before the end of her watch Olivia calls me to help get down the #1 as
apparent wind is approaching 20kn. We get this done and it is Olivia's
turn to head below for some shuteye. I'm on til 4am. I lash the #1 on
the foredeck as before. The wind builds even further. We are now close
reaching along at 7.85kn and will easily clear Thunder Bay if this
course holds.
Far ahead, I see flickers of lightning over the lake. No thunder is
audible. The wind still builds to 25knots apparent. I flatten the main
but the Racing #3, with its battens, is a perfectly behaved even eased
off as it is. Over the next two hours we tear along at close to eight
knots, the lightning display coming ever closer. Soon thunder is
audible and within a few minutes the storm is upon us. We had put one
invioable rule in place. At night, or alone, the one on watch wears
harness and tether with inflateable PFD. Just how important this is was
about to be demonstrated. I decide that its time to reef the main, past
time in fact. I've had to ease it to keep the boat on its feet and it
is banging around a bit. I input a 10 degree course correction to
weather into the autohelm to get the main a little closer to
centerline. The bow takes a big wave and suddenly falls off to leeward.
The autohelm cannot correct. We have tremendous lee helm all of a
sudden. What the heck? Using the maglight stuck in one of the winch
holders I check sailtrim. A flash of white in the water catches my eye.
It is the light #1. The sail has escaped and is in the drink, at
8.5knots and 27knots apparent. I jump out of the cockpit, checking my
tether and race forward. Although it has been lashed in five places the
majority of the sail is in the water and filling. I grab a bunch of
cloth and heave. Slowly it comes. As I get more on board it gets harder
and harder until I cannot budge it. With the flashlight, I can see that
I'm trying to lift many cubic feet of water. The Tack! It's still
engaged at the stem. I scuttle forward to remove the retainer but I
cannot force the tack ring off the horn. The load is too much. While
I'm at the stem a green wave comes over and sends me flying backward. I
grab for the lifeline and miss. The tether comes up short on the
starboard jackline dropping me to the deck on my butt with a thud.
Somehow I still have the flashlight. I turn to the bow again and get
another wave in the face. This brings new meaning to drinking from a
fire hydrant. The water filled sail and my weight are really loading
the bow.
I grasp both fists around the sailcloth just behind the tack, like I'm
going to throttle a goose and heave. I get some slack and the ring
falls of the horn. The tack is free. The foredeck is steeply pitched to
leeward. With one hand on the jackline I drop down until I can brace my
left foot on the first stanchion and my right foot on the very minimal
garboard. In order to free the #1, I have to untie the #3 sailbag
first. It has two ties. Finding the right end of each slipknot to yank
is difficult with all the water. The rail is awash with me on the low
side. I find the first and get it free an the then the second. Hoping
that the forehatch is not locked, I work my way up to it and undog it.
In goes the sail bag, followed by half a wave. Down by the sail I
release the restrainers and get the after sail tie off. The front one
is a real bugger but I have nothing to cut it with so I keep trying.
During this entire effort, my mind is conscious of the actinic flash
and immediate crack of thunder of countless bolts. We are in the middle
of the storm. But the sail overboard keeps me from thinking about it.
Each heave gets more of it aboard. It is getting easier as well. I open
the hatch again and dump in what I can. Finally it is all aboard and
below. After this is done I scoot back to the cockpit on my butt, my
legs are too shakey to trust, I realize that the majority of the bolts
are well to leeward. We are through it. I go below to plot a fix and
check the time. We have been tracking at 308 deg for some time. It is
3:05am and Olivia is up and ready to come up. "Problems?", She asks. "A
mildly exciting time on the foredeck.", I reply. She looks at the
massive ball of wet sailcloth up in the bow and says, "Time for a new
rule, wouldn't you say." I knew what she meant.
Since there was another T-storm headed down upon us, we decided to
shorten the shifts to two hours for the duration. We went through two
more storms that night, but did gain enough to weather to clear Thunder
Bay. We now had a clean shot at DeTour Passage. The loran said 64miles
to go. I went to bed at 7am. I woke up at just after 8am with the
sensation that my car had just taken a tremendous skid only to recover
at the last second. I lay awake wondering about the sensation when it
happened again. The noise of the wake was impressive. Rolling over in
my bunk, I punched up boatspeed on the master multfunction of the NKE.
It reads 9.56kn then jumps to 9.87kn. Holy Cow! Windspeed is still
22true and the same apparent since we are now steering 330deg. Whats
going on? We have a lot of heel on as well. I get out of bed just as
Olivia comes down. She complains, "We are not balanced, but I don't
know how to solve it."
On deck, the answer is that the wind has veered even more, putting us
in a beam reach. I ease the main. This is part of the equation, The
seas have finally built to 1.5 meters. I was surprised how flat the
water was in last night's storms. I guess a lake that is 450ft deep is
harder to disturb than the 35ft of Lake Erie. Eight hours of wind have
finally managed to work it up. I notice that the autohelm is managing
to cope with the waves. For while apparent wind is 90 degrees, true
wind is much deeper; 136 degrees relative says the computer. So the
seas are quartering, yet the autohelm meets each with a ten degree
stroke of the rudder when the sterns begins to slide. The bow is
immediately forced back dowwind and we shoot down the wave. It happens
again and again. I'm impressed. Sure, a live helmsman could anticipate
and steer a straighter course, but for thirty hours straight? It also
occurs to me that this might not work out on another boat. I have a
very large elliptical rudder that is highly efficient. Just a few
degrees have a lot of effect. This means the reaction time of the
AH800II is sufficient to meet the conditions. A smaller, skeg mounted
blade might not be as good a match.
I hit the hay again. At 9am we switch once more. We are still clocking
high 9's for speed. The wind has not moderated at all, nore does it for
the next three days. By noon it is blowing 25 true once more. I
actually see 10.05kn for an instant. It is a great ride that is boiling
away the miles. Thirty one miles to go at Noon and only twenty two at
1PM. At 3:10pm, I can make out the DeTour light. At 3:40 we are in the
channel and the trusty #3 is dropped. 6.2knots under main alone seems
like a crawl now. A mile from the harbor, we start the diesel, get rid
of the main, stow the jib below, and motor for the marina. By 4:30pm we
have fueled, pumped out, and begin the lengthy job of drying the boat.
I did managed to stow several cubic feet of water with the genoa off
Thunder Bay. The diesel required 4.5 gal, all in the spare cans, to my
immense relief. That ammount of fuel drove us up the St.Claire river,
fifteen miles out into the lake, and powered a 4hr battery charge
session just before the T-storms hit.
We decided a lay day was in order to fully restore cleanliness and
comfort. The extra time would allow us to select the perfect spot for
gunkholing. Our plan was to park the boat in isolation for five or six
days while we made serious progress on our books. Most of these
narrations were the first tasks to be completed.
| |||||
| 2204.14 | Day Six: Pilot Cove | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Mon Jul 10 1995 01:13 | 80 |
Day Six: 28 June, 1300 hours
It is a ridiculous proposition, I know that but can not exorcise it
anyway. The nagging thought concerns the conditions at Pilot Cove. This
anchorage sounds like exactly what I had in mind, as if it had leapt out
of some vague subconscious concept into full blown reality. I had
casually asked Barbara, the proprietor at the fueling station at
DeTour, yesterday about a quiet little anchorage such as Harbor Island.
She had said that this was always populated with a cruiser or two and
several fishermen. She had recommended Pilot Cove but had no chart that
showed what it was like. She said to talk to "Ed" at the Sports Center
in town. Barbara also said that she knew of a 45footer that had visited
there some time ago.
Before I met Ed, I checked everywhere for data on Pilot Cove. I could
find nothing. Not even a map reference, even though Barbara had shown
me exactly where it was on the northeast end of Drummond Island. This
was a mixed blessing. For while I had no data, it was unlikely that
anyone else even knew of this place. It was a local knowledge only type
of thing. Ed seemed reluctant but did show me a guide that he thought
might mention it. Mention was the correct word. A single paragraph that
talked about a forbidding entrance but 8ft to 17ft of water inside.
Totally protected. OK, I'm game. I dug out the most accurate lat/longs
from my charts and put them into the Garmin. We left at 9am, but
decided to troll for salmon for a few hours. We motored along at
2.5knots making our way through the Potagannissing Bay. This place
reminds me very much of Winnipasauki except there are no mountains and
a lot more water. As another sailboat crossed our path ahead, the idea
was born. What if they were going to Pilot Cove? What if there was only
room for one more boat?
Olivia finally said, "No fish are biting. Let's go." We hoisted the
main, then the #3. Close reaching, we overhauled the other cruiser in
ten short minutes just beyond Koshkawong point. We drove up under Beef
Island and tacked over onto port. Driving down behind Salt Island
toward the Seines gave us clearance to break out of the bay north of
North Seine Island. Good-bye flat water, hello two meter swells. For
three days the wind had worked the North Channel up. Starboard tack was
a pounder. The wind was still moderate and my #3 did not have the drive
to punch through the waves. We tacked to port again to drop down to
calmer water near Drummond Island. The breeze did not cooperate. It
veered to the southeast, heading us and we tacked again, now steering
98deg. A gift, the wind built to 20knots and the #3 came alive. Driving
force established, we powered upwind. It was a glorious beat. Spray
thrown high and wide, Assassin dug her bow in to blast through the
waves. The wind continued to freshen. Soon we had 27knots. Ok, reef the
main. Done in a jiffy, we did not lose any speed and even gained a
degree or two upwind. In ninety minutes we cleared the eastern end of
Drummond Island and tacked over towards the south. The Garmin says
8.64nm at 162deg. The shift favors us. We are able to track 165degrees.
At 7.6knots, the numbers quickly tumble down to less than a mile. We
get the sails off and start the diesel. I follow the Garmin in toward
shore. We sweep along the shoreline. There is no entrance to any cove
visible. There is a huge white rock that looks not unlike a baked
potato on the beach. I reverse course to the North to take another
look. Nothing. Olivia suggests that it is around the point, that maybe
we haven't gone far enough. The Garmin says we have, but there is no
opening.
We motor around the point into a driving rainstorm. We cannot see a
thing past 100 meters. We motor southwards for about two miles as the
coast becomes more rugged. The rain sweeps past us and I turn north
once more. It has to be back there. We must have missed it. Remember
the entrance is "forbidding". As we come upon the point, two loons call
out before diving under the water. As I look over to them, a flash of
light catches my eye. It is gone in a second but I do not doubt that it
is light reflected from water behind the trees.
Hiking up my resolve I cut close inshore into only 20ft of water.
Magically an opening in the peastone banks appears. An opening that we
missed twice before. It is 30ft across at the most. It is angled 45
degrees to the right so that the banks overlap. You cannot see this
from 150yds away.
I can see boulders at the bottom. Dead slow ahead, right down the center.
Thump! Dead stop. Well, the left side looks deeper. Back up a bit, try to
the left. 14ft over here. We are in. It is a deep water lagoon that is
100meters across and 150 long. The only opening was the one we came in by.
The west bank is so steep I can beach the bow of Assassin while the keel
floats. This bank is a mere spit of land that separates the lagoon from
the bay. It is no more than thirty feet wide but is high enough to hide
the hull completely when viewed from the far side. We are home. We tie
a line to a tree to port and starboard and one to the bow. Assassin
becomes part of the fixtures. The loons chase off across the waters of
the outer bay, laughing all the way.
| |||||
| 2204.15 | Day 11: back to tackin' again | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed Jul 12 1995 01:23 | 99 |
Day Eleven: 03 July, 0615 hours
We have been tucked away in this secluded cove for six days. We have
explored the island and the shoreline, found bedded deer that we did
not disturb, listened to the loons each night, and watched the wind
shift from southeast, to east to north to west. Today it is northwest
and pumping up even at this early hour. With about 360 miles behind us
and many more to go, it is time to leave. We have 100 miles of westerly
work before we can enter Lake Michigan and turn south.
We have lived
entirely on the ship's systems but now the holding tank is full, the
ice is almost gone and we are running out of fresh food. We have been
isolated until last night. Three other cruisers joined us at dusk. The
sailboat, a Nonsuch, grounded heavily after entering the cove. He had
swung too late and came into too fast. Her master rowed over later to
ask if we had a heavy metal bar. It seems that he has bent his rudder
shaft and the rudder will no longer clear the hull. It's jammed to
port. He is out of Cheboygan and this is the first day of two weeks in
a passage bound for the North Channel and Georgian Bay.
I have no heavy metal. Just classical and an oar. I found the oar
floating so I give it to him as a gift. He intends to try to pry the
rudder back. I point to a length of 2x4 drift wood in front of my bow.
It is very sturdy. He takes that too. The 2x4 fit so he did not have to
use the oar. He got enough clearance so that the rudder can be moved to
starboard but with significant force on the wheel. He is trying to make
up his mind about abandoning his vacation and heading home. I wish him
well and feel for him. I WILL be doubly cautious myself.
We single up to the weather line attached to the anchor on shore. I
back off the beach and drag the anchor into the water. Then I motor
forward where Olivia can lift it from the peastones and drop it below.
I turn a slow lazy circle toward the entrance at 0.5kn. The northwest
wind has the bay really worked up so its breakers on the nose to leave
the cove. We inch out until we cross the four fathom line, then I pour
on the power until we are a half mile off shore. We get the main up and
as I set the autopilot and head for the jib I hear a scream from aft.
Olivia has lost her magical Digital cap overboard. I have a pact with
the sea. Once fed a cap, I don't ask for it back. Olivia is having none
of it. We go back or I pay the price. I grumble about runners and
gybing and such but kick off the autopilot and "gybe ho!" Olivia gets a
fishnet from below and runs up in the bow. She misses the first pass
and throws a little temper tantrum up there. It was actually kind of
funny to see but I was careful not to smile as I hardened up on
starboard then tacked over on port and reached across to make a second
pass. Just as she scoops it out of the water, the starboard runner,
swinging in the wind, sweeps my cap from my head. It goes in the drink.
What the heck, in for a penny, in for a pound. Gybe Ho! Back we go
again. I can only imagine what the skipper on shore must be thinking
about our mainsail setting dance. He was watching us leave.
Caps in place we foot out NNE to clear the point then bear off to the
east. We get the jib up and the speed jumps up to almost 9 knots. We
gybe again in a couple of miles to a southerly course to transit the
false Detour passage. The wind backs to the west a little and builds as
the sun rises into the morning sky. By 8am it is pumping 25knots and we
are off on the proverbial screaming reach, surfing off the waves into
double digits. The highest I saw was 11.42knots. Man o man, would I
love to have the kite up on this.
Eventually and not all that much later (15 miles goes quick at 10+
knots), we enter Lake Huron and pay the piper. Starboard tack is still
favored but only by about 20degrees. It is going to be a long day. I
throw a reef in the main and we start to weather. As Huron funnels down
toward the straits, we begin to time our tacks to avoid the reefs. This
part of the lake is full of reefs. We avoid Spectacle reef then
Raynolds. Next we tack away from Lighthouse point on Bois Blanc Island
only to be forced back on starboard by Goose Island shoals. Finally we
can line up on the channel between Mackinac Island and Round Island. We
are given no gifts today. It is directly upwind and the channel is only
1500 feet wide. Stubbornness sets in. Sailboats are for sailing. We'll
beat through it. Olivia and I work up our timing. She'll handle the jib,
I'll do main and runners. We'll use the Autohelm's autotacking feature
for the rudder. We are cooking. Eight tacks into the channel and
halfway through it, we clear the breakwater as we tack back onto
starboard. I reach for the mainsheet after getting the runner back in.
It's gone. I mean literally. I'm looking at an empty traveller car.
Yikes!, the clevis has blown and the boom is swinging out over the
water to port. I catch the end of the sheet and trim forever as the
tackle feeds line. No good. I cannot hold the main in this wind. We
cannot tack without it. Bail out. Gybe and downwind we go. Olivia gets
another clevis as I gybe again. Finally, I get us going dead down and
we get the new clevis installed and the mainsheet rerigged. Gybe
again. The first two tacks are awful. We are just a little off the
pace, but begin to get back into it again. Just as we clear the
breakwater, the Autohelm locks in mid tack, then completes the tack.
Needless to say our timing is shaken by this. It does it again on the
very next tack then it freezes up altogether.
That's about enough. I disengaged it, gave up on the runners, to focus
on main and tiller. The wind is lightening rapidly in any regard.
Finally we are through the channel and into deep water again. We duck
Major's shoals and head for Mackinaw City Marina. We have done 115
miles today. Most of it upwind. A little bit of trouble shooting before
bed tells me that the Autohelm is cooked. It has lost a phase. Too many
consecutive tacks and gybes I guess. Assassin will self steer but only
on a beat. Do I really want to wish for upwind work the rest of the way
home? Lake Michigan has 280 miles of water between where we are and
where we are going.
| |||||
| 2204.16 | drifting along | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed Jul 12 1995 22:47 | 66 |
Day Thirteen: 05 July, 0815 hours
After laying over an extra day to see the sights in Mackinac City, we
get up early in the morning, add an extra block or two of ice into the
cooler and depart. We have a southwest breeze of about 7knots true. It
is a bright and sunny but humid and hazy day. We are able to set the
light #1 genoa and in this fickle wind then meander our way under the
Mackinac Bridge and into Lake Michigan. It is fourteen miles to the
northern entrance to Grays Reef channel, but it takes us over three
hours to get there. The channel is only five miles long and 2000 ft
wide at the narrowest point. It is dead up wind. There is not much wind
now maybe four and half knots true in the puff's. I start the diesel
and make short work of the channel. Then we foot off to the south
southwest between Beaver Island and the lower penninsula of Michigan.
We are somewhat closer to Beaver Island. But I believe both shorelines
are at least ten miles away. I didn't bother to measure it on the chart
from each fix. I am taking them (fixes) every hour. It is remarkable
how little you travel when your boat speed is hardly ever reaching
5knots.
We are inundated with flies. The biting kind. They seem to live on the
surface of the water. When a boat comes by, they jump on and try to
feast on the crew. 100% deet does not work. It does not even slow them
down. I put on jeans and a long sleeve shirt (in 90 degree weather) to
keep them at bay. They seem to want to go for your feet and ankles. One
even bit me right throught the leather of my boat shoe. The answer is
to get out of the cockpit. With the helm tied, Assassin is tracking the
fickle breezes reasonably well. I sit on the cabin house and read a
book. Fly swatter in hand, soft drink near by, just soaking up the
rays. It is very hot in all these clothes but I remember a hotter time
in a land far away. Let the sweat run down your back and ignore all
unpleasantness. It works and the miles slip quietly and slowly away.
The wind goes south, heading us. It happens so abruptly, the boat
cannot follow the change. I bear off and set up the tackle again. five
minutes later we are headed again, so we tack onto port. Our new course
is 185mag which is not enough to clear Grand Traverse Bay. I bear off a
little but the wind is too light to let the boat track unless we are
hard on the wind. Permantly attached to the tiller back there in fly
heaven is not my idea of a good time so we stay hard on the wind. Maybe
this new SE wind will back even farther and strengthen.
It does not happen that way. About 6pm we are headed on port. The wind
builds to 10 knots continually veering until we are steering 280.
Great. We tack onto Starboard and are still lifted to 190 then to 200.
We clear the bay and head past Fox Island. In the distance we can see
North Manitou. Our destination is Leland (Fish City), Michigan. This
quaint old fishing villiage is a cottage industry town that has managed
to save the structures from the turn of the century and modify them
into shops. I had hoped to arrive during daylight as the approach seems
a little tricky on depth. It is not to be. Light air all day long has
kept our speed in the four to five knot range. In sixteen hours we have
managed 72 miles and still have nine to go. As the sun slips behind
North Manitou, the wind dies. It is diesel power once more. For the
first time today (well really the second, Grays Reef was the first) we
break six knots. With the cooling temperatures, the flies go dormant.
Good thing, the fly swatter is in tatters. We need reinforcments in
that regard.
I manage another night landing in a strange port without incident. We
tie up at the gas dock then bomb the boat with Yard Guard. After the
death of 9000 or so flies, we hit the bunks.
As I reflect on this day more than week ago, it occurs to me that I
would rather have the thunderstorms than the drifters. Also there are
no flies at night, at least no biting ones, even when its warm. Maybe
they cannot see in the dark.
| |||||
| 2204.17 | riproarin' crossin' | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Tue Jul 18 1995 00:43 | 154 |
Day Fourteen: 06 July, 0930 hours
We decided to get a good breakfast this morning. Great joy! It is
pumping up 15-20knots today. WIND!!!! The direction is not so cool as
it is from the southwest and that is where we must go. 115 miles of
rhumbline. Yeah, Ok, we're tough...... At least there will be no
flies....
We get a great breakfast at the Early Bird resturant and head out. We
set the main and then the everpresent #3. Heading due west, I line up
to go to weather of the Manitou passage light. Olivia takes over on the
helm for a spell. We are moving well, going about 6.8knots hard on the
wind. I'm looking at the overall picture on the large scale charts.
Manitou passage is a tricky thing when you need to go up wind. Bars and
reefs reaching out from all over and the wind is barreling in between
North Manitou Island and the mainland. It seems like you pinch on
either tack even when the tacking angle is 100degrees. Steep chop as
the waves pile up in the shallows (45feet or so). We get headed so that
we cannot keep the light to port. We tack again and then again. Now we
can lay it. As we close on the light, something scary happens, the
bottom comes up fast, first to thirty feet, then to twenty then to
fourteen. Geez, bail out!
We tack then gybe to backtrack. We didn't even mess with the sails just
helm over and get out of here. We sort things out then try again a
little further from the light. I have never heard of a light that is
set inside the reef. I am uneasy about this. On the second pass, we get
the same thing but a depth of nineteen feet seems to hold. Something is
seriously wrong. This is supposed to be a freighter channel which means
30+feet. As Olivia holds course, I scurry below for the charts. Where
the heck is the starboard buoy? I thumb through the kit for the detail
pages. Half expecting to hear the rumble of grounding at any minute, I
keep looking. Here it is! Big Oops! The light is the starboard buoy,
the reef extends from N. Manitou Island to the light, not from the
mainland to the light. How did I get that wrong? Another look a that
larger scale tells the story. The lable for the light is nearer to the
port buoy on this chart. A real dumb mistake on my part. Luckily the
shoal is minimum fifteen feet for some distance so we are ok. But a far
less complacent navigator has to go explain his faux pas.
We tack back on Starboard to get off the reef which we do but get head
just the same. It takes us nearly three hours to get out of the passage
as we have to beat past South Manitou Island and two more reefs to get
away from the grasping claw of land. As we finally clear South Manitou
Island, a grim reminder appears to starboard. The afterend of a Great
Lakes freighter protrudes from the surf about two hundred yards
offshore.
A great gift. About noontime, a giant shift appears. The wind backs to
the South and picks up steam. We are seeing 22kn true now. I can steer
215 but 240 is the rhumbline so we foot at 235 to invest a little. 7.9
to 8.2 knots is our speed. At 1300 the wind freshens even further to 25
true. In goes a reef. The boat likes it and gives 8.5kn.
Gone is the pounding chop. We are in 760ft of water now and two meter
swells. This is Lake Michigan. The motion is significant but steady and
pleasing. The boat is skating down from the crests, sometimes breaking
into the nines. At 1445 the wind hits 27true and we take in another
reef. We are getting good at this reefing stuff. I cannot ever remember
doing it before this trip. There is no loss of speed whatsover.
I need to change into foulies, so I go below, hit the head, take a fix
and take my time. As I'm getting set, Olivia calls, "Front coming
fast." I come up. It's real ugly looking. One of those inverted
trapezoids that is pitch black. We are already double reefed. What to
do? I cannot think of anything but to get rid of the jib. This
morning's brush with complacency still lingers, and helps with the
decision. Down comes the number three and it is completely dry. It goes
below and we wait for the nastiness under double reefed main only. It
comes with driving rain but it looked worse than it was. The true wind
hits 37kn for a about ten minutes then steadies on about 30kn. We are
doing 4.75kn with the main only. The boat feels sluggish, loose and
uneasy.
After 45min the wind moderates to 19kn. Olivia and I dive below to
repack the jib in its turtle. I am not going to hoist it loose and risk
blowing the tape out of the foil. We get in on deck. A deck that you
cannot walk on. The seas are over 3 meters now and it is like trying to
step from car to car on a rollercoaster. We are, of course, in harness
and tether. Wouldn't you know it, just as I start the head of the jib
into the groove a wave pitches the bow, upsetting my balance and I end
up ripping the head out of the foil. Damn! there is only one way to
cure this in a seaway. I take out my knife and slice the luff tape just
below the feeder and back it out. I restart and carefully feed past the
cut. It's ready.
Up goes the #3 and we have SPEED again. 7.4kn until we shake out a reef
and then 7.9kn again. The wind comes back to 27true and we have to put
back in the second reef. This is the steady state now. It does not
moderate at all for the rest of the leg. It is 1700 hours when Olivia
dives below. She is going to whip up a hot meal. At 1745 some good
smells come up. I ask what is the fare? She calls back, "Residue stew!"
Curious, I go down to find out just what classifies as residue. It is
the last of the zucchini, the redskins, the venision and the only
surviving onion. It is hard to cook at 25-30 degrees heel.
Topside again and about half an hour later, I hear a metal clang from
the galley. I stick my head in to see if all is well. It is not. Olivia
tells me that the stove is runaway. The second burner has flared on and
even with both shut comepletely off flame is flaring out all around the
stove. I come down. The place smells of charred fiberglas and burning
wood. This is getting serious. I pass a halon bottle but tell her to
wait just a bit. Everything is too hot to touch so we wet some rags and
get the pots off. Safely stowed, I get the cover off the Origo 4000.
Both burners are going like gang busters. I turn on the sink and spray
them down. I still had to blow them out. Water cooling takes care of
the rest, but I have got a big whiff of charred fiberglass and suddenly
am struck with intense vertigo. I have to get out of the cabin fast. On
deck, the vertigo goes, but mild nausea remains. Oliva stows the stew
in the cooler after it cools. It will be done in anther half hour but
we cannot risk trying again.
The miles are coming down but we still have sixty five to go. I try
granola bars but my stomach gets rebellious. Am I seasick? I have never
been before. I do not throw up, but the nausea is persistant. I have a
mild headache and am very cold. Olivia says, "Hit the hay big guy. I'm
not doing an all nighter alone."
The berth is warm and comfortable. I am asleep in minutes. An hour
later and very cozy, I wake up a new man. No nausea, or headache. I get
the shivers climging into my foulies, but that is the difference in
relative warmth, not a symptom. I take a fix from Loran and GPS. Whoa!
Loran is crashed. Even as I watch it recovers and crashes again. I put
the antenna extension on and it is fine. They agree to .1mi. It is
dusk at 2100hours. Fifty two miles to go. Still bearing 235deg Mag. I
have not adjusted the tiller in nine hours. The boat is sailing to the
wind.
About 0300 the lights of Wisconsin appear over the horizon. As we near
the shore line be get a big header. Bummer. I let it take us in on
255mag and tack over about five miles out. Steering 160 on starboard we
are lifted to 180. This is the pits. This is the old true wind
direction and the waves have not changed. Slam! Slam! Slam! This really
robs speed and is damn uncomfortable. I foot off resenting the
surrender of extra miles. In an hour we are far enought south to tack
back and lay Manitowic. We are steering 270 and it is a relief. Hard on
the wind, but waves abeam. Two miles out at at 0445, we get the sails
off and power up the diesel. We enter the harbor as dawn breaks. I pull
up to the marina gas dock and tie up. We check out empty slips as we
expect to grab one and sleep for a couple of hours. Surely they will
not be open until 8am or so.
Wrongo. The harbor master shows up in a few minutes. He said his house
overlooks the lake. He saw us work inshore and turn into the harbor. He
decided that we might need him early so he came to work. About four or
five other sailboat crews come up to ask about conditions. They have
been laying over for a few days. We are still in full foul weather gear
with inflateable belt packs and harnesses. I feel like we did an
atlantic crossing or something with the fuss they make about our
passage overnight. Come to think of it, those conditions were somewhat
like a ocean crossing. Yeah, it feels good. But so will a hot shower
and about six hours of shuteye. Layday? Youbetcha....
| |||||
| 2204.18 | Homeward bound.... | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Wed Jul 19 1995 13:25 | 72 |
Day Sixteen: 08 July, 0615 hours
A day of hot showers, hot stew, theater, museums, music shops, and
plenty of rest prepared us for the final leg. We decided that we would
not do a sailing marathon the last day. We set our sights on Port
Washington, about 50 miles down the coast toward Chicago. Kenosha is
another fifty or so. We figured to make a daytime arrival (for a
change) and end on a relaxed morning sail on Saturday. To make sure, we
decided to leave as soon as possible. So at this moment, we have
slipped the lines, backed out of the marina and are headed out toward
Manitowic Harbor.
We have been presented with another great gift. The southerly that
blasted us across the lake, then turned to southwest as we closed on
the harbor yesterday morning, has moderated and veered another seventy
degrees. We have 18kn from the Northwest. It will be beam reaching and
flat water. As we clear the breakwater, up goes the mainsail, then the
Jibtop reacher. This is the first time for this sail. It is a 150% high
clew sail that is trimmed through the spreachers, just like a
spinnaker. We go out to the ten fathom line and turn south about 7am.
Our course is 190. We steer 180 to keep some reserve distance off
shore. After we turn, the jibtop comes alive. Big numbers, 8.85kn then
9.2kn. 9.60 in a gust. The true wind averages about 17kn with puffs to
23kn. The miles really spin down. At 1230 we have reached Port
Washington. Goodbye Port Washington, hello Kenosha.
The wind moderates at 1pm to about 13kn true. It is 100deg apparent on
the starboard side. It stays there for a half hour before I yield to
temptation. Yes, we packed a spinnaker. A great whomper of a .75oz
chute that has 1094 square feet of area. Boat speed is 6.4 knot now
with 12.5 true showing.
Ok, Ok...... Pole up, but the kite needs banding for a short handed
launch. I rig for a one side trim, no gybing this time. Everything is
set, up she goes. The bands hold it collapsed like a sausage. I get the
jibtop down and secure, then get to the sheet. Olivia is set on the
helm but nervous. I heave the sheet a couple of times, the bottom bands
pop, then, in rapid fire the rest of them go. Whump! It fills and you
can feel the acceleration. I over trim it and cleat it. Then Olivia
turns the helm over. Boat speed zooms throught the sevens, the eights
and deep into the nines. Apparent wind goes forward, turns the overtrim
into a just right trim and suddenly we are overpowered.
I bear off a little, depower the main and come back to it. The
difference between curl and no curl is a solid knot. As you might
guess, the wind comes back up a little, pushing as high as 19kn at
times. At those times we get into double digits with 10.4 being the
highest I saw. We carry this kite for two and one half hours and sail
past Milwaukee about 4pm. Twenty five miles in 2.5 hours. Sweet. The
breeze begins to die soon after and by the time we get to Racine, it is
1.4kn true and the chute is lifeless. We hang a bit longer it is
obvious that there will be no wind. We get douse the spinnaker, pack up
the jibtop, and motor sail for a while. We have 16 miles to go. Every
now and then a puff comes along that adds a half a knot to the diesel's
best speed. In the end, we make still another night landing, arriving
just after full dark at 9:30pm.
As we put the boat away, I find that I am not sad that it is over. This
trip has brought a real sense of accomplishment that could not be
realized until it was over. Almost 800miles, sixteen days, all kinds of
conditions. The Soverel handled heavy weather sailing far better than I
ever thought it would. The sail choices for the trip were spot on. We
used them all and wanted for none. The autopilot packed up as I half
expected after reading about so many others that had this happen. But
we did just fine without it. It did save the bacon in the night of
terror off Thunder Bay. All in all a most enjoyable and successful
adventure. Olivia was not a seasoned sailor. She was very new to the
sport. She has gained a great sense of confidence and a bit of pride,
knowing that she is unlikely to get seasick (her biggest worry).
And we are still friends........
| |||||
| 2204.19 | Great story ... | GRANPA::KMAYES | Starboard! | Wed Jul 19 1995 15:37 | 4 |
Well written, and good reading! Thanks for taking the time to post. Regards, Keith | |||||
| 2204.20 | thanks | MOVIES::WIDDOWSON | Brought to you from an F64 disk | Thu Jul 20 1995 03:34 | 1 |
Wot he said. Tremendous. | |||||
| 2204.21 | wish it was me. | HIGHD::MELENDEZ | Thu Jul 20 1995 13:30 | 2 | |
Cool!
| |||||
| 2204.22 | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Fri Jul 21 1995 10:42 | 11 | |
Thanks for the kind words. My motivation for entering this was to
"blaze a dim trail" for those who, like me, had not done any
significant passagemaking. It's not what you expect, but it is very
doable and very rewarding.
Olivia's most telling comment to me was something like, "A sailing
voyage seems to require a flexibility of mind and spirit. You must
accept whatever comes your way with innate confidence that you will be
able to cope."
| |||||
| 2204.23 | postscript | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Fri Jul 21 1995 11:08 | 11 |
When I sent the Autohelm unit in, I described the failure mode. I also
told them that it had become somewhat more noisy but could not be sure
that this was really true or just my imagination.
Autohelm replaced the unit. They did not repair the old one. The reason
was that the old one was full of water. Not just wet, but full of
water. Defective seal they said. My mind goes back to the voyage. Five
thunderstorms in one night. The only period of rain before the unit
failed. Glad it worked for a while when acting as an aquarium.
| |||||
| 2204.24 | View from a different mountain | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Tue Aug 15 1995 08:13 | 24 |
At the risk of leading a reader back through much of what was written
here, I'm going to add another perspective. My sailing partner sent me
her contribution from her journal. I have her permission to enter it
here.
At first I was going to edit out all the repeats, some of the personal
stuff to make it more concise. But it seemed to me that the phaseology,
the flow and the humor was essential to the entire document, like all
of the colors an artist might use in painting a masterpiece. So it's
all here, quite long, and very enlightening. As least I think so.
Olivia gives me more credit than I feel is due. But she "sees, feels
and thinks" stuff I never would. Hindsight tells me that I took a real
risk bring a non-sailor (one weekend afloat does not a sailor make) on
such a passage. If this is done, you need to truly analyze the makeup
of the person, be fully aware of their mental, physical and
psychological makeup. Can any person be so aware. I was lucky.
I am amazed at what I did not see or feel. I guess this is why we find
so much value in partnership with the opposite sex. Each enriches the
other's experience.
You might want to print the next entry first and read it later.
| |||||
| 2204.25 | Sailing: one woman's view | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Tue Aug 15 1995 08:25 | 1811 |
OLIVIA:
Were in St. Clair Lake and its night time,
heading for the Clinton River Marina. This morning we awoke
about nine oclock, provisioned the boat and then motored up
the Detroit River, passing a lot of freighters in the
process, past Sugar Island, which in the 1920s was a resort
and gambling spot. The resort burnt down in the 1930s and
that ended the romping place of the rich and famous (this
local history from Rod, my tour guide).
Rod also pointed out BobLo Island, which a few
years ago still had an amusement park, but folks found it
too much trouble to boat out there for the day. We passed
many steel foundries and a Morton Salt installation. We
passed Fire Island and then neared Detroit, passing under
the Ambassador Bridge leading to the Canadian side. We saw
the shores of Windsor, Ontario, across the river from
Detroit. We motored past the Renaissance Center and the
other skyscrapers of Detroit. Next came Belle Island, a
pretty recreational area. Opposite on the Canadian side was
the Canadian Club distillery and associated buildings. We
put up the mainsail and jib, crossing St. Clair Lake under
sail until it grew dark and the wind died down. Then we
took the sails down (terribly unnautical language but what
does a landlubber, prairie princess, like me know?) When
the sails went down, I also went down -- down below to
journal the sites of the day, falling asleep in the process.
When I awoke Rod was at the helm, trying to
discern the lights of the Clinton River Harbor. He
negotiated the harbor to the Mt. Clemons marina and we
docked in darkness, about midnight, a hot and close summer
night, with nary a breeze blowing. We walked a mile down
the road to a harbor tavern where we dined about 1:00 a.m.
on cod. All through this first day of this Great Lakes
Sailing Adventure I have felt cleansed by wind, water and
sun, and fell contentingly to sleep in the Assassins
comfortable berth, rocked almost imperceptibly by the now
gentle motion of the harbor waters.
It's Saturday, heading for the St. Clair River. Rod
was up early to make the screening for the hatches when
we're up north fishing in preparation for any insect
invasion. I tried to tune my guitar and broke the E-string -
- the one I had just replaced. That scuttled the music-
making part of the expedition. Before leaving the Mt.
Clemens Harbor, we stopped for diesel fuel. I went into the
dock store to load up on granola bars. While there I added
two klondike ice cream bars to the breakfast menu of granola
bars. All day we spent motoring up the St. Clair river with
Canada on one side and the U.S. on the other. We saw lots
of freighters -- a biggie new experience for me, so I had
to take lots of pictures of them. Many were out of
Wilmington, Delaware, because, as Rod explained it to me,
their taxes are notoriously low. One freighter was from
Greece, another from Hong Kong. We passed a sailboat. The
captain said he was nearing home, Port Huron, Michigan,
after 14 months circumnavigating the globe. I took a
picture of the vessel, which did not appear to be much
bigger than ours. We saw several ferry boats, taking
vehicles from one side of the river to the other. I
prepared my first cooked sea meal -- a pot of venison stew
with potatoes, onions and zucchini -- no spices (forgot to
bring any) but it has so much natural flavor and juices from
the ingredients, it didn't make any difference. Tonight Rod
says when we get in Lake Huron, we'll be motoring all night
in three hour shifts. Needless to say, I did not jump up
and down with this news, but I'm willing to earn my keep on
this vessel. Big help I'll be! I'm supposed to keep my eye
out for other craft and if one comes near to wake Rod up. I
think I can manage this.
Earlier in the day we had some stormy weather -- just
rain -- my first opportunity to wear the foul weather gear.
The rain was not hard and did not last long. I did my
watches during the night. It afforded the first opportunity
to wear the deck harness. Rod had prepared well for any
eventuality. During the night there was a little bit of
showering, but otherwise nothing remarkable transpired, at
least while my eyes were open as I struggled to keep awake.
My overriding impression of the second day out was that
to bask in the sun for most of the day and to not wonder or
to care about what hour of the day it is, were delicious
sensations. A sailing trip is a vacation in the extreme.
Life all along was meant to be enjoyed at this pace. It
retards the aging process.
It's about noon. I'm writing on the stern. Semi-clear
day, no boats in sight with wind picking up. Under said at
6.67 knots on Lake Huron. Crossed under the Port Huron
Bridge last night at nightfall. We took out turns last
night, watching for boats. We were becalmed most of the
night. When it was getting light on the lake, the sky was
cloudy and greyish pink, the surface of the water like
glass. The wind started to change. I woke Rod up, but there
just wasn't any wind. We threw our fishing lines into the
water, thinking it was a good opportunity to catch
breakfast. The water was so smooth it looked like you could
walk upon it. We got tired and decided to make up our sleep
deficit while the water was becalmed. We awoke to hear
another boat hailing us "Ahoy, Assassin!" I guess they
wanted to make sure we were still alive, since there was no
sign of activity aboard and we were drifting. We emerged
from below to reassure them and they headed east. I slept
some more until I heard Rod exclaiming that the wind had
picked up. After a sleepless night I felt beat up. Rod
rigged the deck shower up. After shampooing my hair and
showering, I felt alert and perky again. While resting on
the bow, the wind really picked up and Rod set the sails and
automatic pilot and went below to catch up on his sleep.
Compared to Lake Erie and and Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron is
deserted. Not a pleasure boat or freighter in sight. We
were completely alone with the elements. During last
night's watch, the stars were visible. At night the
directional guides on the masthead are lit. There is also a
foredeck light which provided ample illumination when Rod
put up the jib last night. During last night's watch, I saw
one lighted freighter off to the east.
Reviewing the events of day three, I would have to say
that, although this could be portrayed as a romantic dream
vacation for two, it also involves work and what would be a
lot of monotonous hours of sameness for an individual who is
not happy in his own head or with the contemplation for
hours on end of sky and water. Day three reinforced the
principle too that no trip can be without at least some
pesty, minor discomfiture. On a sailing trip it appears that
flies and bugs that ultimately seem to love to congregate on
deck in the mornings. We hosed the deck down to remove
countless dead flies, although we were by then a long way
from land. The insects were so listless and apathetic, they
had been dying in droves.
It's about 6:00 in the evening on Lake Huron. I'm
sitting in front of the hatch alone while Rod naps in the
berth below. I'm watching the fingertips of the sun strike
the waves like the string of a cello in a long strip of
water stretching from the horizon. Not a gull, ship or land
in sight since a freighted passed by fifteen minutes ago
heading south towards Port Huron.
About 4:00 in the afternoon I prepared chicken with a
noodle and broccoli mix, which we ate from the pot on deck.
It was a challenge, the boat was heeling to the port side
where the galley is, going about 7 knots. We had good wind
since about eleven o'clock in the morning. While the meal
was cooking, Rod watched a redwing blackbird from who-knows-
where eat all the dead flies off the deck. There goes the
ornithologist's lecture at the bird-banding station back
home in Northern Illinois during which I was informed that
blackbirds are found on fence poles and along grassy
roadsides.
This stout-hearted redwing blackbird had a difficult
time negotiating the wind to get on deck, but he lustily
headed against wind twice to get back on deck to pick up
more flies. Our presence did not seem to disturb his eating
habits in the least, as he eagerly devoured every insect
that his busy beak could find. Eventually, he disappeared.
How he was going to find his way back to his prairie habitat
is still a mystery to me.
After supper Rod dragged the cooking pot in the water
to clean it and hosed down the silverware, then I dried and
stowed everything away. Shipboard cookery involves one-pot
meals, but that has always been my specialty.
The wind dropped off to four knots, but later in the
evening we really picked up speed and were breezing along at
8-9 knots. I slept first and Rod served first watch. When I
went up to watch for freighters, the wind was really
blowing. I woke Rod when a freighter came into sight. After
it passed, Rod stayed up and took his turn at the watch. I
went below to sleep. Then all hell broke loose. I awoke to
the sound of thunderclaps, the boat heeling so bad, I
seriously thought there was nowhere to go but down. I heard
Rod running back and forth on deck, cursing like a sailor.
We had run into a rip-roaring thunderstorm off Thunder Bay,
no less. I cowered and cringed in the berth gripping to the
metal brace on the hull, saying to myself, "Jesus, Mary and
Joseph, get me out of here!" and vowing if I made it through
this, there would be no more night sailing for me.
I was petrified to get up, but upon consideration, I
knew I had to get in an upright position, get my foul
weather gear on and join Rod on the deck. If I didn't get
up, I'd die in that berth, caught below. I wanted to die
standing up instead of in that crawl space. I determined
I'd rather die with Rod than live without him. I'd rather
die out in the open than be buried below. Thus, I tried to
summon courage to get up and put my gear on, only to be
prostrated again with another crack of thunder and another
bash of a wave against the bow of the ship, leaving me
whimpering and cowering again. Then, the hatch opened,
water and sail poured into the cabin, accompanied again by a
rain of expletives from deck.
I gripped the metal brace tighter, my reservoir of
courage draining. I thought to myself, "Now, I know this is
what all the other women in his life could not take." As I
clung to the side of the berth with the boat listing
terribly, I asked myself aloud, "Rod, why did you invite me
on this trip? To kill me?" Then better sense took over and
I thought "No, he knows what he's doing; he's tethered to
the jack lines. He won't fall off the boat." If I survived
this storm I just wouldn't sail at night anymore and I'd
always sail with a weather report. I'd tell him please no
more night sailing and let's get the weather forecast before
venturing out for a sail.
While I was thus trying to "screw up my courage to a
sticking post," I heard Rod ask, "How are your doing down
there?" from the front hatch. I could visualize him as he
asked the question with a smile in his voice if not also on
his face. I was still too petrified to respond. After
hearing the sound of his voice, I thought "He thrives on
this! He's not a bit perturbed! In fact, he loves it!" As I
struggled to summon courage to get in an upright position
and put my foul weather gear on, I felt the storm was
letting up somewhat.
I finally retrieved all my gear where it had been
thrown, got myself harnessed up and buckled the life
preserver belt on and got my weary body out onto the deck
again to serve my watch. By that time the storm had
subsided, but the rain was still coming down. There was one
more mini-storm to go through before that night from hell
was over. But at least now I was on deck
After the night of day four, I knew that if I were to
make a passage I could be no "sunshine" sailor. I had a
heady dose of medicine to cure me of any foolishly romantic
notions of sailing the ocean blue. If I could not take the
bad with the good, I'd best take a closer look at whether
sailing really was for me. Was this a metaphor for the
school of life, or what? Would I be one who always wanted
smooth sailing and when the going got rough, got going? No.
I didn't want that for myself. I preferred to make myself
equal to this or any challenge. But it would take time for
me to have the knowledge and the confidence in the craft to
dispense with fear.
Who needed a Great America Amusement Park for a cheap
thrill anymore? "Not I," said chicken little, "bauk-bauk,
bauk-bauk."
Monday after the storm, the wind was very strong,
pushing us all the way to DeTour Village, so we were able to
arrive about 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon. We were very
tired. Still in my foul weather gear, I was to tired to
throw a dock line properly. I threw both ends and it landed
in the water and sank. As soon as we were tied up at the
dock, we headed for the marina showers, then we walked into
town and found a restaurant on the main street which fronts
the marina. No one-pot stew tonight but Reuben sandwiches
and cold beer at the Fog Cutter Inn. As soon as we got back
to the boat, we went directly to sleep and slept until 11:00
the next morning.
We spent Tuesday, June 27th in DeTour Village. The
first order of business when we awoke from "the sleep of the
dead" was to clean up the cabin. I made a breakfast of eggs
and Canadian bacon, which I felt was singularly appropriate
in such close proximity to the pink slab of meat's namesake.
Then I cleaned up the galley (I'm making progress; I no
longer call it a kitchen -- memories of what my brother Mike
said to me before I made this trip kept haunting me:
"Olivia, are you sure you're prepared to make this trip?
You're still calling a galley a kitchen! You don't even have
the terminology down pat!) We stowed away loose stuff,
organized and cleaned the cabin. We bagged the sails and
stowed them in the other berth. We dried out the cabin with
the little space heater. We washed out some clothes and
towels. We hung the wet things to dry on the life lines. Rod
hosed down the cockpit and the deck. Then he pulled out the
cushions from the cabin seats, which had been soaked when he
threw the sail down the hatch during the storm, and took
them up to dry on the deck.
I laid out all the books that got wet, trying to dry
them as well. My journal was a little bit wet too, testament
that it weathered a storm along with me.
After all the clean-up, we took a stroll through DeTour
Village. We stopped at a sporting goods store where Rod got
more information about Pilot's Cove. He wanted to find out
about depth and any markers. We walked down to the ferry
boat landing and watched vehicles drive off, returning from
Drummond Island. There was a small museum of local history
by the landing and we went in there to browse. We stopped
for lunch and then stopped at the frosty cone where Rod
bought me a two-scoop praline ice cream cone for winning a
bet on a point of history. He claimed the area was first
settled in the 1750's. I said "no," the French had already
been here about the 1650's. My point was verified at the
village local history museum.
We spent a quiet evening aboard, writing. Rod set up
the laptop and worked on his book. It was windy and overcast
most of the day, so it was just as well we anchored at
DeTour to rejuvenate and rest.
Wednesday morning dawned at DeTour Village windy and
overcast again. I prepared breakfast. Then we showered. I
did the laundry at the laundromat. We returned to the boat
and prepared to leave the harbor. Rod mapped a course around
Drummond Island to Pilot's Cove where we planned to anchor
in seclusion for a few days. As we motored through many
small islands we trolled, but had no luck at all fishing.
Visions of all the fish we were going to fry up were failing
to materialize. Then we got under sail and fairly zoomed
over the waves. The spray was splashing on the foredeck and
white caps were rolling. It was more fun than any amusement
park ride. Who needs roller coasters and water log slides?
We sped along at this pace for a few hours before rounding
Drummond Island. I got plenty of practice tacking under
Rod's direction.
Rod had calculated the position of Pilot's Cover
exactly, but when we arrived we could not find the entrance
for all our efforts. A heavy rain with gusty winds descended
upon us as soon as we neared the shore. We motored past the
point a ways, then Rod turned back, certain it must be a
trick inlet obscured by another point of land. He was right.
This time we motored closer to shore, and saw the narrow
entrance. It was marked by a big boulder. The first time we
had been too far away from shore to discern it. Rod spotted
water between trees and moved toward it.
There is a narrow strip where the keel can go through.
There is nothing but a lot of rocks on the right side of the
entrance. Once through this needle's eye of an entrance, it
is perfectly sheltered, surrounded snugly on all sides by
trees. We pulled in; I jumped into the water and tied a line
to a tree. Rod threw the anchor out the stern, so that the
boat was tethered for the night.
As soon as we had secured the boat, the sun burst
through, the wind died down, and peace descended on the
cove. We have arrived at a safe haven. It was as if peace
was meant to prevail as soon as we made ourselves at home in
the cove; compensation for weathering all the storms and the
winds of the passage. We hung up our wet clothes and foul
weather gear on the mast and life lines. Again we took out
all the wet things from the cabin to air out (my fault for
not screwing down the hatch tight enough this time -- one
more chance to do it right).
Rod tried his luck at fishing while I started to
prepare a concoction of chicken, bell peppers, vegetable
corkscrew noodles and zucchini squash for supper. We ate in
the cabin by scented candlelight. As night descended Rod set
up the laptop again to do some serious writing. I edited my
manuscript.
Pilot's Cove, Thursday, June 29.
I awoke about 6:00 a.m. and the sky was still overcast
from showers of the night before. I had a headache, so
brewed some herbal tea and went back to sleep until about
9:00. Hallelujah! The sun was shining; the wind had
subsided! We were surrounded by blue sky, glistening water
and tree-lined shores. We ate our left-overs from last
night and then tried our luck at fishing again. Alas,
dreams of fresh wall-eye sizzling in the pan did not
materialize. Rod was dissatisfied with the way the boat was
moored. In case the wind changed, he wanted it on the
opposite shore. I paddled out in the dinghy to untie the
line from the tree. After we were tied up to bushes,
secured also with the anchor on the other shore, I explored
that side of the cove facing the North Channel. There was a
stone fire pit set up with a grate. Other camp sites were
found, evidence the cove was well-visited. We threw the
fishing lines with bobbers and worms off the shore, leaving
the poles to explore the coast for a while. The shore line
is rocky. We turned into a path around the cove and
discovered other camp fires and a profusion of wild flowers.
Rod almost tripped over another denizen of the cove as the
furry creature skittered from his den, down the bank into
the water -- Bucky Beaver. It was not our last sighting of
this other occupant of the cove. We followed a trail around
the cove, finding fresh deer droppings along the trail in
front of where the bow was moored the night before.
Following the trail farther to the rocky North Channel coast
line, we found a large dead salmon, confirming the fact our
assumption there were fish in these parts must be right; so
why weren't we catching any????? So we didn't have to walk
all the way back around the cove, Rod swam across the narrow
neck of the cove entrance to retrieve the dinghy and we
paddled back to the boat in the dinghy.
I spent some time in the morning meditating on the
foredeck. Thoughts of my darling Leila again flowed through
me. I prayed to be released from this great sorrow that
ever creeps up on me even in my moments of intense
happiness. It is something that will be with me for the
rest of my life.
After our exploratory trip on the island, we got down
to the serious business of conducting the Rod and Olivia's
Great Lakes Writing Conference. The laptop was set up
again. The evening menu consisted of venison prepared on
the deck grill. The evening was spent literally and
figuratively in a sea of tranquillity writing and listening
to classical tapes. If a would-be writer cannot write in
Pilot's Cove, he cannot write anywhere. I made great
progress on editing Gardens.
Pilot's Cove, Friday, June 30.
Lo and behold, the year is half over and I'm here in
Pilot's Cove on a dream vacation. I have to rub my eyes and
take a reality check. Yep, it's real! Dawn broke foggy on
the bay, but cleared by 9:00 in the morning. It is as calm
and sunny today as yesterday. We breakfasted on eggs and
Canadian bacon. I did 14 pages of edited Chapter 15 with
some added dialogue to improve pace. I'm on a roll now.
Editing does get easier as I go along because my writing did
improve as I wrote this book.
This morning's meditation suited the lugubrious
thoughts that I had yesterday for a while. The meditation
was titled "Comets," referring to people who go swiftly in
and out of our lives and leave their light as they go. The
metaphor applies to people who die young. It was an
affirmation that the light stays with us. It was a caution,
which I always need from time to time, not to dwell in
grieving the comet's passing. That is what it is like now
for me. My grief comes inevitably, but I do not dwell upon
my grief. I release it.
Terry Lynn Taylor writes in this meditation that "The
angels know that each comet person who has left the earth at
a young age exits in a burst of light that remains for the
good of those left behind. A comet would never want us to
mourn its disappearance." This reading provided what I
needed. The reflection that went with it also supplied just
what I needed at the moment: "I know in my heart that love
continues to grow across the barriers of time and space." I
can't help but believe that the light of Leila's comet has
helped to manifest the happiness which is mine now. As long
as there is breath in me, there is new life to experience.
Never can it be said that I have seen enough, adventured
enough, played enough, laughed enough or loved enough. To
have met someone of like mind is a boon for which I am
eternally grateful.
Most of Friday morning was spent editing. I worked on
the laptop for several hours. We lunched on a parmesan
noodle mix, then did more laundry, after which we went on
another island trek. The turtle we saw yesterday was
basking on the same rock. We climbed through thick woods on
the west side of the cove, following deer trails. Rod had
packed into his camera case granola bars and bathing suits.
For the woods trek, I wore a sweatshirt and sweatpants and
soon was sweating like a pig; even snorting like one while I
followed Rod through the deep woods.
The woods was heavy with cedar, moss-covered ground and
rife with wild flowers. Even this woods was not untouched
by human kind, for we came across bottles and cans in the
densest underbrush -- a hunters' trail? When least
expected, a bambi darted out in front of Rod. I watched it
bound through the forest as near as I ever laid eyes on a
fawn in my life, its white spots and white tail clearly
visible as it nimbly leapt through the limbs and fallen
branches. Rod turned and said, "If there's one bambi,
there's got to be another one close by." I opened his
camera bag on his back belt and as quietly as I could handed
him the camera. Sure enough, he was right. He did not have
far to look to spot the second bambi. Less than 15 feet
away, he pointed to where the second bambi lay low between
some fallen timber, staying straight at us. Rod positioned
himself to take a picture of its little face peeking out.
Rod explained that "It was frozen, doing what it's mother
had trained it to do." He said the other one had fled
because we had come right up upon it. We left the bambi
lying in its secluded spot and pushed branches and brambles
aside as we continued our trek. A short distance farther,
Rod picked up one deer antler and handed it to me. "Your
souvenir." We emerged from the woods on the North Channel,
facing the open water to the south of the cove. Rod picked
up a flat rock with a perfect hole worn by the action of the
water. "Another souvenir," he said.
When we arrived back at "our" cove, we took a dip in
the cool water after the heated workout the forest trek had
given us. We returned to the sailboat to relax and to read
before beginning supper. The weather turned overcast again
and just as supper was ready, it rained. I boiled redskin
potatoes and Rod barbecued chicken on the deck grill. We
dined again by candlelight in the cabin with a glass of
Sambucco di'Amore, a fine licorice-flavored liqueur. Rod
struck a match to our tiny liqueur glasses and a blue flame
licked the surface, warming it to the taste. It enhanced
the taste of the meal, making everything go down smooth as
velvet.
After cleaning up the meal, we settled down to write
for the evening, snug in the cozy cabin even if it were a
grey and overcast evening.
Pilot's Cover, Saturday, July 1.
Cool today, but sunny; anchored in Pilot's Cove for
another day of the writing. I had planned to start the day
with a swim in the cove, but the wind and air were just a
bit too nippy for me, so I opted for a sponge bath. I
warmed some water to shampoo my hair. Then we prepared a
breakfast of venison steak and scrambled eggs with green
peppers and onions. Rod settled down at the laptop for his
stint of writing. The quietude of the morning was
interrupted by the need to unplug the sink. (Call a
plumber?) Tools at hand in Rod's ready bag and his ingenuity
unstopped the drain. Yes, the sailboat has all the comforts
and discomforts of home.
In the afternoon, we went spelunking again It was very
chill and windy. We walked along the bay shore on the North
Channel. The waves were rolling in with white caps far out
to sea. The shoreline was rocky. We turned into the
forest. There were birch trees at first, then more cedar
and fir. Again we wound our way through deer trails.
In the afternoon our cove was invaded by a sailboat. A
cabin cruiser soon followed. A big yacht appeared in the
evening and a fourth big monster after it. Our cove was not
so secret! Considering it was Saturday, that explained the
invasion. We decided we would leave early Sunday morning.
The guy who came in first with the sailboat had bent his
rudder shaft on the rocks in the narrow neck of the cove.
We determined to be super-cautious when left in the morning.
We had already bumped a rock when we came in -- but
fortunately no damage.
The invasion of the monster boats left no doubt it was
time to pack up and leave the formerly pristine cove. We
will have spent five glorious nights and four days in the
cove. Time to close-down the writers' conference and move
on. Our last evening was spent writing and reading as
usual, free of insects because it had turned unusually cold
for the first of July.
Sunday, July 2.
We awoke at 6:00 o'clock and dragged the anchor in from
the shore and cast off, no time to spend for breakfast, just
beat our way to Mackinac Island. That made it rather
convenient, since we didn't have any breakfast food left
anyhow! Would scurvy strike before we got there? As soon
as we cleared the cove, I lost my "digital" sailing cap.
Boo hoo, bawl, whine, cry, wail, piss and moan! I paniced.
There it bobbed in the wake. I whined that we had to go
back and get it. If the cap were not retrieved, Rod would
have to get a new girlfriend! I scurried below to get the
long-handled fish net. I could tell Rod was not pleased as
he turned back. I was under extreme pressure to net that
cap when it came along side or my goose was cooked. I can't
perform well under pressure like that when it requires
physical prowess of any kind, and this required a lot of
physical prowess to scoop that little sucker out of the
water at just the right moment. So needless to say, I blew
it, as it was my wont to do under circumstances such as
these, I proceeded to whine and moan again, kicking and
mewling on the foredeck at my bad shot.
I was afraid Rod would not turn back again, but
apparently my tantrum had done some good and he was turning
the boat around to take another shot at it. This time I
knew I just had to do it. This was no easy task with the
wind and waves. This time I did scoop it up.
Unfortunately, in the process, Rod's cap had blown off his
head. There it was bobbing on the waves. It again took two
sorties to retrieve his cap from the water.
Finally, we headed out of the bay bound for Mackinac
Island, beating the waves across the North Channel, Lake
Huron and through the strait to Mackinac City the whole day.
The wind was from the south. I got plenty of exercise
tacking. We decided to go to Mackinac City rather than
Mackinac Island where there would be little likelihood of
getting a slip over the fourth of July holiday weekend. The
fort at Mackinac City appealed to the history buffs in us
more than a carriage ride around an island, particularly
since we had just done some real island trekking in the
wilds of Drummond Island. Besides Mackinac Island meant
more people. It was about 8:00 in the evening when we
motored past the Mackinac Bridge, the sun setting behind it.
The marina office was already closed when we tied up at the
dock. Another mariner advised us all the slips were filled,
but he was going to stay tied up at the other side of the
dock and we should do the same thing. We did.
We trash-canned the week's garbage and strolled up the
main street which led straight down to a gateway arch in
front of the ferry boat landing to Mackinac Island. The
harbor area had the air of a fairway. There was a night
time carnival atmosphere about it with a band playing in the
open air. There were a host of souvenir and curio shops.
We stopped at Mama Mia's Pizza. We were ravenous, and of
course, ordered more than we could eat -- a huge taco pizza.
Rod, per usual, accused me of eating more than he did;
by now, I know it's blarney. As a matter of fact, I can't
keep up with his rate of consumption when he's really
hungry, although I give it the old college try. He gobbles,
gets done before I do and then accuses me of eating more
than he does when I'm still eating. We got ice and
groceries and walked back to the boat. The plan was to lay-
over one day at Mackinac City. I was zonked and counting
"z's" right away.
Mackinac City, Monday, July 3.
We awoke at 6:00. I started the day by doing the
laundry at the marina facilities. Then I took a shower, We
walked a mile to Fort Michilimilimac -- a stockaded fort
near the Mackinaw Bridge. There were a lot of historical
exhibits on the early history of the area, the fur trade and
birchbark canoe-making. We watched a cannon-firing
demonstation by British colonial soldier reenacter and then
watched a demonstration of the Virginia reel. We spent some
time, browsing in the museum shop. Then we walked back to
the main drag for fish and chips at the Scalawag Restaurant.
Dessert was ice cream at TCBY.
Rod went back to the boat for a nap and I went souvenir-
shopping -- got a Great Lake board game for Khalid, place
mats and other junk After I got done loading myself down
with mostly useless junk, I was ready for a nap. After
nappy-wappy time, we went to the IGA grocery store to
provision for the next leg of our passage on the morrow.
The evening was spent as usual with music, writing, reading
and fuzzy navel drinks.
Our July 4th holiday was spent sailing from Mackinaw
City to Leland, Michigan. We started early Tuesday morning,
but did not arrive at Leland until midnight. Although the
winds started out well, they were changeable. Late in the
day, there was nothing. We were pestered by flies the entire
way. We swatted and sprayed. It was a ship of flies with Rod
as Lord of the Flies. He was merciless. I vacuumed out the
cabin from dead flies several times. As fast as I could suck
them up, a layer of new dead flies appeared. The decks was
matted with squashed flies.
This is why the Hindus believe in reincarnation, I
thought. This is why they never swat a fly; they learned ten
more just pop up. I sunned on the deck a lot, read
voraciously from Thomas Tryon's In the Fire of Spring. In
the novel I read during a time-out from our battle of the
flies, Aurora's account of her combat with the rats in Italy
-- not much of a diversionary tactic to get my mind off
pests and vermin? We approached Leland at night with
fireworks being shot off from the shore, visible from two
miles out. Probably the main excitement, other than the on-
going struggle with the flies, of our passage from Mackinac
City to Leland was the negotiation of Grey's Reef with its
shallows.
As was to be expected due to our late night arrival,
the marina at Leland was full up. We docked again by the
fueling station until morning. We were up at 6:00 again when
the dock master arrived the next day to get a slip just long
enough to shower and eat breakfast before setting sail
again.
After we showered, we breakfasted at the Early Bird
Cafe. Leland is a quaint fishing village. The weathered
fishing huts sit close to the shore. The main street is
cutely decorated with arts and crafts shops. It has a lot
more charm than Mackinaw City. It's fresh and cozy with a
lot of flower boxes in windows and a tree-lined main street.
It is purported to be an artist colony. The fishing industry
is still active here. Rod was intent upon getting fly paper
and two new fly swatters as the one he had been using died
in the war.
He also needed a new cap, having lost two already to
the Great Lakes on this passage. He found the fly paper
worked well. The only trouble was for me to avoid getting
hair caught in it, particularly when the boat swayed. We
started out in the morning with a good wind. When we got
between the Manitou Islands we ran into trouble with the
changing winds and shoals. Rather than keep tacking we
motored out of the islands to save time. It was 93 miles to
our next destination -- Manitowoc, Wisconsin. Wisconsin,
yeah, Wisconsin! Wisconsin meant we were on the right side
of Lake Michigan heading home. Wisconsin was finally my neck
of the woods (waves?).
We scooted along the high waves, finally on the open
waters of Lake Michigan, hip hip hooray, my lake! In my
youth, staring at the wide waters and cresting waves
pounding Montrose Harbor or the boulders at Northwestern
University, never, in the wildest flights of my imagination,
did I think I would be out on a 33-foot sailboat on these
grey and moody crests! I was a landlubber par excellence.
Now big white caps broke across the bow of the boat. It was
thrilling. We sat high on the deck watching for the highest
waves to roll and break against the bow. We got out our
cameras to capture the peaks and troughs of these exciting
waves.
Wow! Pow! Bang! Boom! It was great! Even being doused
with water from one mother of waves did not dim my
enthusiasm. It was exhilarating in the extreme until the
weather grew uglier as we headed into foul weather, beating
the waves as we went. Then the storm came and the rain fell
and Olivia was not so eager any more. Her chicken feathers
began to show again. After beating the waves all day, I was
growing weary. When I get over-tired, I get weepy. The sail
had to be reefed twice. At one point, I started crying in
the storm. Oh, not again! What a baby! I was becoming a
nervous wreck with the rain, wind and watching Rod furiously
work up on the foredeck. I tried to cook a meal -- residue
stew from our remaining perishables -- red potatoes,
venison, bell peppers, zucchini squash. The boat was heeling
so bad that the stove caught fire twice. Rod had to come
below and put it out. The flame from the one burner was
blowing sideways so much that eventually the other burner
caught fire. Luckily, he did not have use the fire
extinguisher, but a part of the fiberglass counter burned.
We beat against the high winds and waves southwesterly
across Lake Michigan. Rod only slept one hour the entire
night. I was beginning to feel "as useless as teats on a
pig" as my U.S. Navy vet father always used to say, among
other more colorful expressions, with Rod doing all the
work. I was shamelessly tired and wanted to sleep, sleep,
sleep, get in my warm zip-up flannel jammies and go to bed
with my teddy bear and pacifier.
We motored into Manitowoc Harbor by the dawn's early
light. It was around 5:00 o'clock in the morning and the
dock attendant was just arriving. He said he had spotted our
boat coming in from his house. Early risers at the marina
were curious about what we had encountered as we tied the
boat up still in our foul weather gear, harnessess, and life
preserver belts. First we took a hot shower at the marina. I
stood under the water with the ground still swaying under
me. As soon as we returned to the boat, we crawled into the
berth and slept soundly.
Manitowoc, Wisconsin, July 6, Thursday.
I awoke from deadbone sleep about 11:00 a.m. and went
to do the laundry at the marina. I read a book while waiting
for the laundry to be done. When I returned to the boat, Rod
was awake and cleaning up the cabin. He had warmed up the
"residue stew" from the night before, which neither of us
had time or inclination to eat in the foul weather and loss
of appetite we had experienced after the fire-fighting
activities of the night before. We dined at the cabin table
with place mats and table settings again. What a rest after
the storm! I went back to let the clothes go through another
cycle in the dryer. Rod halped me fold the clothes and carry
them back to the boat. We decided to do something totally
mindless like going to a movie and hit upon seeing "Congo."
Before show time, we took a walk to downtown Manitowoc.
A river divides the city. A Budweiser brewery sits on a
point at the river's mouth -- a sure sign we were in the
state of Wisconsin. Its motto: "A tavern in every clearing;
a bowling ball in every alley; a beer in every belly." We
saw a mariner's museum on the bank of the river. Rod spotted
a submarine anchored in back. It was a U.S. WWII, the
"Cobia." Just as we were leaving, a tour group left the
submarine. Rod wanted to take the tour. We went inside to
see about the tour. It was a 45-minute tour. I was
disinterested in touring a sub -- I'd been on such tours
when I worked at Great Lakes Naval and at other museums. I
was ho-hum about viewing a hunk of metal and steel. I really
wanted to get to the music shop before the movie started.
Rod changed his mind about the tour. I trust it was not
because I was not jumping up and down with excitement about
it. I honestly preferred just to walk than to be cooped up
inside a sub for 45-minutes with metal gear and contraptions
all around.
We crossed the river at 10th Street and went up two
blocks to the Golden Ring Folk Music Store. It genuinely was
a folk musician's store. It carried mandolins, banjos,
dulcimers and harmonicas plus all the folk music tapes and
songbooks of the Midwest. It even carried "Sing Out"
Magazine. I bought my guitar strings, finally replacing the
one I needed after the mishap of the first day out. Rod
bought a new b-flat harmonica. Din-din was at Pizza Hut,
then on to the movie. I find it increasingly difficult to
sit still in movies. My legs bother me. I can't get
comfortable in movie theater seats. I had to stand up and
walk a bit. I came back and had the same problem with my
legs. I had to do something unladylike and put my legs up on
the seat in front of me. I also have problems staying awake
in movie theaters. I slept through half of the movie. Rod
assured me I didn't snore. He said the movie was not as good
as the book.
When we got back to the boat, I managed to read a
little before falling asleep. Tomorrow we would get up and
head for Kenosha -- the last leg of our journey. God
willing, it would be a west wind.
Friday, July 7.
We set sail early. By 7:00 o'clock we were out in the
Manitowoc Harbor. A fishing boat was bobbing in front of us.
I was at the helm. Just as I approached, the boat decided to
motor in front of me. I veered to the port side. Because of
the fishing boat's injudicious action, its line got caught
on our boat. The day started out chill and overclouded. As
we progressed southward, the day brightened more and more
until we shook off our sweatshirts and jackets and put on
bathing suits. The wind was in our favor for a good 50 miles
pushing us along as high as 9 knots. Rod put the spinnaker
up (which word I can now put the correct syl-la-ble on) and
got as much mileage as he could out of the sailing
conditions.
I sunned myself on the foredeck for most of the
afternoon, watching the billowing spinnaker, its navy blue,
red and white colors filled out in the wind. The sun
glistened on the more tranquil waters of Lake Michigan. Who
would believe that this was the moody lady who had thrown a
fit on Wednesday when we crossed over to the Wisconsin side
from Leland, Michigan? I gloried in the warmth of the sun
and its cleansing powers washing over me. I prayed for
lightness to embrace the troubled and brooding Khalid.
I saw angels of the lake walk the waters of Lake
Michigan. Their sprite-like forms danced, hovered upon the
surface in oblong shapes of light yellow. I saw them earlier
too on the upper reaches of Lake Michigan. The wind, sky,
sun and water blessed the final day of the passage, wishing
us, perhaps, a "fare-thee-well." What a wonderful finale to
our journey! It was similar to the bright day we first set
sail on June 23rd from Gibraltar, Michigan. The skyline of
Milwaukee shone like a New Jerusalem from 25 miles off. I
sat on the foredeck with my feet dangling between the life
lines.
On this unearthly beautiful day as we sailed Lake
Michigan with the skyline of Milwaukee in view, thoughts of
Leila assailed me again. This was the city where she was so
deliriously happy. And here I was at the most intense moment
of my earthly happiness, enjoying Nature at its most
intimate and benign level, and grief overwhelms me again.
All the pain of her loss washes over me. Why could she not
be experiencing what I am experiencing? The ectasy of
Nature; the peace, the bliss, the clarity of this day? Why
was this all out of her grasp? Surely, she wanted it.
Surely, it could have all been hers like it is mine now.
Yet, wait, perhaps her bliss, forsaking this earth, is
greater than mine. But I choose the lightness, choose to
venture courageously forth and claim what is my birthright -
- this wonderful earth, the open air. This is what I have
desired and striven to attain all my life. It is the
fulfillment in the now, which every man and woman wishes to
attain. It is only in their unhappiness and in their
depression that their frustration manifests itself in a
failure to attain this unity. It is there for the having,
but each man and woman must first connect with their inner
core, find that peace which passeth understanding before
they can share it with someone else. Before that, they have
only a great need, a great hunger to ask of a partner. A
hunger which their partner, whomever he or she may be, can
never satisfy.
Tears ran down my cheeks with the sadness which loss of
Leila brings. I had to reclaim my happiness, reaffirm to
myself that I deserved the abundance I was now experiencing.
Abundant joy. Abundant peace. Abundant love. That love which
extends beyond the grave is manifest. I cannot help but
believe that Leila in conjunction with the angels is
providing this balm to my soul. The sea has wrought this
happiness. The terrors of the sea mirror the terrors of the
human heart. They can be managed as Rod manages the sails to
weather the storms. He stated to me, Trust in your
knowledge and in the ship. The craft is designed to meet
the wind and wave. The heeling of the boat only terrifies
the souls who do not understand the dynamics of the boat.
Leila did not understand the dynamics of the ship of life.
She was terrified. She jumped off instead of sticking with
it. I wiped my eyes, determined to go on and to enjoy the
blessings which have been bestowed upon me.
The wind died down to nothing and we were forced to
motor from south of Milwaukee to Kenosha. We docked at
Southport Marina about 10:00 at night. We celebrated our
successful passage at his quarters with the last of the
ships's provisions: bratwurst, rice, corn on the cob and
fuzzy navels. Everything had been planned, managed and
calculated down to the last provision. Nothing remained of
the ships's stores.
OLIVIA'S FINAL RELECTIONS UPON
THE GREAT LAKE SAILING ADVENTURE OF 1995:
It's time to pause and to take stock of what this great
sailing passage from Lake Erie to Lake Michigan at Kenosha
has meant for me.
I would say that it has has been "the time of my life."
I have been fortunate to have seen and to have done many
unusual things in my life. I have traveled far. I've
lived in a different country, yet nothing has ever moved me
as intensely as sailing. I must say that it is a sensuous
experience. It is an elemental experience. If a mariner
never could quite fit in society after sailing the seven
seas, I can very well appreciate why now.
I have some appreciation of what a transatlantic voyage
must have been like albeit on a much smaller scale. The
longest we were on the sea was three days, but it was a
relief always to dock and walk on land for a while. That is
not to say, that I did not as eagerly set sail away. I
enjoyed the high waves; I enjoyed the motion of the boat; I
enjoyed the spray hitting me in the face. Zipping along at a
fast clip on a sailboat made me feel like Queen of the
World.
In the storm, it is true, I lost my nerve. I was
frazzled and overtired. I whimpered and whined. Rod handled
the entire situation while I cowered and cringed. It did
teach me that the storm can be weathered, but you have to
know how to react and act, anticipate and move with what the
wind and rain dish out. It is not a mission impossible. I do
not have the knowledge of reading charts and working the
instrumentation which Rod has. He always knew our position,
avoided shoals and shores. He knew the depth and always
planned a course away from shallows, reefs, places where we
would be liable to run afoul.
I learned what it feels like to have a man in whom I
could put complete faith and trust. I've never had such a
man. Rod never let fear overcome me. I traveled a lot with
Abdu, but I always questioned the sanity of what he was
doing. Even traveling across the U.S. with him, I had
inordinate fears; he didn't know what to do; he didn't know
where we were going; the trip was ill-planned; he wasn't
spending the money wisely; on and on. The fact of the matter
is I've never had a man so capable and so solicitous of my
well-being and my feeling as Rod is. The trip made that
abundantly clear, as if it had not been before.
Rod thrived on studying the wind, planning the course,
working the sails and soaking up the pure joy of wind, rain,
sun, wave and sky. He is a very sensuous man. That is a very
positive adjective. It means he is a very alive, aware human
being. He does not miss a trick. He observes everything. He
picks up every nuance of meaning, natural phenomena, which
comes within his range.
The sea is sensuous. It is changeable, as changeable as
life. In being so, it teaches us to accept joy and sorrow.
Each in its turn comes. We must roll with it, set our sails
to meet what life deals us, and with all, the journey must
continue, until our passage is completed. In actuality, our
passage is always completed only to embark upon a new phase,
a new life; for life is never-ending like the endless ebb
and flow of the sea.
A sailing vacation is the ultimate get-away. There is
no better way to simultaneously get away from "civilization"
and to get into yourself and who you are. You must confront
head-on your physical, spiritual and intellectual make-up.
The elements alternately sooth and assail your body. Your
five senses are at work constantly. Fortunately, you are
inhaling fresh air. The inhalation and exhalation of these
airs at sea purify you and wash the toxins of negativity
from your soul.
The passage, thus, must have been the greatest vacation
of my life. I lived at close quarters with Rod for sixteen
days. We experienced all kinds of weather and sailing
conditions. We shared the joys and the discomforts of the
voyage. The mundane tasks of cleaning, cooking and laundry
had to be tended to. It was not all a picture postcard of
sails on Sunset Bay. We cooked, worked, laughed and played
in a cooperative environment. We did this while being
confined to a 33-foot long space in the middle of big body
of water. No other amusements were present but Nature, the
boat, the music, writing, two books and the company of each
other. Nary an unkind word. I'm not disillusioned, I'm not
sorry I made the passage. Pinch me; I am not dreaming. I am
enlarged and expanded beyond my wildest expectations. This
is not fiction; it's non-fiction. If you want to read
fiction read Rod's Disciples or my Gardens as soon as they
hit your local bookstores.
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