Following the Wind

Author: Miranda
Location: Clarence Town, Long Island

 

So, we may have been slightly ambitious.

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And probably stupid for even drawing up a route in the first place. But, one has to have goals and a general structure for where to be when on a cruising route, especially when there are hurricane seasons involved. We were excited while planning this little sabbatical, and I have been blessed (cursed, really) with a “can’t stop, I just can’t stop” approach to organization and planning.

But, as we truly assimilate ourselves into this cruising lifestyle, we’ve realized very quickly that the best laid plans are just that, lofty plans, and you can plan all you want, but if the weather and the wind don’t cooperate, you might as well rip up that cruising map as use it for toilet paper for all good it will do you once you start sailing. And if you knew how expensive toilet paper was in the Bahamas, this would make even more sense.

Our plan was always to head east, exploring the curving Caribbean island chain, and high tail it to Panama when the time came. We knew the prevailing winds blow hard from the east and northeast during the winter, but we underestimated how time consuming, how uncomfortable, and how much diesel would be required head more-or-less straight into the wind. Entire books have been written on how to get to the windward islands of the Caribbean outside of hurricane season. Generally, you need one of two things. A lot of time or a lot of diesel. Although, often you need both. And, going with the latter option doesn’t just mean a hit to the budget, it also means banging your boat into the wind, into the waves, and still not expecting to make much headway as you force your sailing vessel into a powerboat, and instead of using the wind, you’re fighting it, taking one step backward for every two steps forward.

To us, this is clearly not what sailing should be about.

So, we are changing plans.

We will head to Matthew Town, the southernmost settlement in the Bahamas, then we’ll shot for Colombia, going through the Windward Passage between Cuba and Haiti. Let’s hope we don’t need to go ashore for emergency rations a day or two in. Although all this talk of lifting the embargo, makes a trip to the land of Castro and communism fairly enticing. Anyway, with any luck, we’ll be able to celebrate our first-year anniversary in the place where we got hitched. Seems much too serendipitous to pass up.

It wasn’t what we had in mind, and skipping out on the entire eastern Caribbean does bum us out a touch, but, hey, being from the states, they are right in our backyard and a good excuse to head out cruising again later on in life. We’ll get there. Eventually.

So for now, we’ll make the smart decision to go where the winds take us, and slot the eastern Carib for the next time around.

 

 

Fort Lauderdale to Miami

Author: Miranda

Our first passage took two attempts, but we are safe and sound in Miami at the moment, so life is good.

At about 10:00 am, when the current was at it’s least pain-in-the-arse stage for the day, we backed out of our berth at the marina, which was stressful, but Pete did a great job, and it was beautifully unexciting.  With the boat show happening in Fort Lauderdale in just a few weeks, we were flanked on both sides by multi-million dollar power boats. Adds just a tiny bit of excitement to the entire ordeal.

As we headed out of the canals of Fort Lauderdale, we had several opportunities to call bridges on the VHF for openings.  I barely noticed, but Pete was beaming from ear to ear when the bridge operator called him “captain” for the first time.

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We were all smiles and excitement until we got out on the open water and realized that our roller furling was jammed.  If you can’t open your sails, it makes it quite difficult to actually go sailing.  Headed back into protected waters to play around with it, but quickly realized it wouldn’t be an easy job.

Decided to go back to our marina, get a mooring ball, and work at it while tied up.  It took a few hours, but my wonderful husband managed to unjam the system, and we set out to complete some other tasks for the afternoon.

See how beautifully the red & white rope sits in those little grooves.  Well, it didn’t look like that at the beginning of the day.

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So, we didn’t make it to Miami on our first attempt, but on the plus side all our cleats are labeled.  How did I function properly in life before I owned a label maker?!  I do not know.  To say that I’m in love with the thing would be an understatement.  Life changing, seriously.  But, I digress.

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day 1

 

 

So, we tried again the following day, and we were much more successful.  Sails opened up, and for the first few hours of our trip, the wind blew on a perfect board reach of 9-12 knots.

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day 2

 

Then, the wind died.  Completely.  Check out that sorry, flaccid flag without wind in the picture above.  So, the motors went on, and we continued on our way.

The port of Miami was packed with jet skiers out to enjoy their Saturday, barges headed out to god-knows-where, and cruise ships full of excited vacationers ready to enjoy their trip around the Caribbean.

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It was a beautiful day, and a great first sail.  I’m deeming it successful for two reasons: (1) We started the day in Fort Lauderdale and ended it in Miami, and (2) I’m still willing to go out and sail another day.  Having a scary experience now, and being too nervous/fearful to get back out there again is something that we both are very cognizant of.  Here’s a overall look of our route:

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oh.. ps… then we saw dolphins.   Not only did we see them, but they swam over right next to the boat.  Then, they starting jumping out of the air as if to say “hello.”  Life is good ladies and gentlemen.  Life is good.

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ASA Sailing Course 104

Author:  Pete

Location:  Bower’s Harbor, Michigan

 

Day 5:

Woke aboard the Osprey, a 39’ O’Day.  She’s the creakiest boat we’ve ever slept on.  Okay, we’ve only slept on one other boat before this.  But Osp is pretty loud.  She lightly thunked, sputtered, groaned, grated, and chuttered all night.  Didn’t bother Pash and I too much though.

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In the morning we met Dirk our new instructor, a tall southern man with a charming, smoky drawl.  Also got to know our classmates, Bob and Lynn from St. Louis, MO, just up for a week or so to do the course.  They’re about our parents’ age, but seem so much younger with their witty sense of humor and Midwestern charm.  Miranda was especially excited to hear that they are also alums of Ripon College, a tiny private college where she did her undergrad that no one else seems to have heard of, much less have attended.

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We tore the O’Day apart from stem to stern looking at different systems.  We spent a great deal of time discussing the workings of the marine engine.  Cooling, fuel, and transmission systems were all covered in detail.  We talked about troubleshooting problems and finding solutions.  Dirk was knowledgeable and direct with his instruction.  We find that, as teachers, it’s difficult to be taught anything without analyzing the teaching style of our instructor.  Dirk certainly knows his stuff.  It comes off with all of that ‘good ol’ boy’ charm too, which is all the more fun.  Bob and Lynn had more sailing experience than us, but perhaps not as much technical reading about the components, so we had similar questions and levels of understanding, which made the discussion enriching for all.

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After walking through the boat we went to Tom’s food market (the Northern Michigan version of Whole Foods, without the snobbery), and provisioned the boat.  We bought chow to feed five for three days.  In total three lunches, two breakfasts, and a dinner, snacks, copious wine and beer for about $260.  At about  $50 per person, not too bad for five people eating well for a long weekend.

Loaded the boat and made ready to sail.  Dogged hatches, closed forward seacocks, cast off lines, and motored out of the slip.   I took her out into the bay where we raised main and head sails and headed north.  Along the way, Cap’n Dirk taught us how to make a towing bridal and practiced on the dinghy we’d been dragging on the port cleat.

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The fickle wind swung on us during our sail north, sometimes coming from the west, providing a gorgeous beam reach, other times turning to north, forcing us to tack.  The Osprey didn’t like to point too far upwind, making for a slow and inconsistent approach to Bower’s Harbor.  Along the way we worked on knots and sail theory and got to know our new friends aboard.

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Turned west into the marked channel between Marion Island and the mainland and anchored in the sheltered north harbor a few hundred meters off a wooded area.

Practiced anchoring with a stern anchor to keep the boat from swinging.  Miranda and I rowed a Danforth anchor out in the little dinghy that Osprey had been towing.  Didn’t have too much faith in the little anchor when we sent her down, but it held us through the evening as the wind swung.

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And then it was cocktail hour.  We had drinks and snacks and began to prepare our dinner.  I took a quick swim.  The water was still pretty darn cold despite being the middle of July, but the deep blues and aquamarine tones of clear Lake Michigan make up for it.  Grilled shish-kabobs, potato salad, and a green salad all went down pretty darn well.

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Then before we blinked it was another day in paradise filled up.  The stars came out.  Bob, our St. Louis contingent, bemoaned the lack of stars in the city.  We pointed out Cassiopeia, the dippers, and Polaris.  Nice to be in the northern hemisphere and see them again.  Then it was off to bed at our calm, little anchorage.  I’m sure they won’t all be this peaceful.

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DAY 6:

Woke leisurely to a glassy bay.  Some light clunking and wafts of coffee lured us out of our cozy stern berth.  Stood on deck and looked out over the bay before we breakfasted on yogurt, granola, bagels, and coffee.

Spent the morning at anchor going over classroom stuff.   We learned about chart plotting and calculations.  Not a problem for two math teachers.  Significant applications for algebra, stoichiometry, vectors, and trigonometry.  And they said that the Law of Cosines wasn’t useful…

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We ran a few man overboard drills in bay.  There was no wind to speak of, so we focused on those most useful to being under power.  The big Osprey really took longer to stop than anything I’ve piloted.

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Motored north towards Suttons Bay.  Worked on triangulation location and plotting routes.  Smooth seas made for easy work below deck.

Put up full 160% genoa and got headway even with really light air.  Turned south-west into S.B.  Got close to running aground on sandy point.  Should’ve been marked with buoy.

Pulled into S.B marina and lightly ‘kissed’ dock.  I wasn’t at the helm, so it was okay.  Tied up, had more drinkies, and went in to town for dinner.  Came back and sat in the cockpit for a while watching the stars come out before going to bed.

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DAY 7:

Night at the dock is significantly louder than at anchor.  Squeaking dock lines, waves slapping the hull broadside, people talking on shore, and the like.  I’m sure my preference to be ‘on the hook’ will only extend to calm seas and low wind.

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The day brought almost no wind.  We did some classwork aboard Osprey for an hour or so, discussed routing strategies and methods, then shoved off.  Motored through the negligible wind out of Sutton’s Bay and headed south down Grand Traverse Bay.

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The flat seas made for good navigation practice.  We navigated by dead reckoning, and triangulation from sightings, and used GPS to check our verify our position.  We discussed sources of error in navigation and calculated leeway and current.

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Smooth motoring all the way back to Traverse.  Not as great as being able to sail back to port, but the hum of the engines and the easy glide of the boat made for a nice afternoon.

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And just like that, we finished our week-long set of courses from the American Sailing Association.  We took and aced our last of the three tests, and then headed back to Charlevoix to reconnect with my folks.  All done, for now.  But, what a blast to spend seven days sailing, sleeping on a boat, and sharing stories with experienced sailors.  We’d love to take a catamaran class while we’re down in Florida, but having our own boat should give us plenty of practice, and any money we spend on more lessons is less money for the trip.  So, we’ll see.  We feel like we’ve learned great deal, and really honed our skills.  I know Miranda was struck my how much we had already learned from Mario during our lessons in Chile… maybe our Spanish is better than we give it credit for.

I know one thing for sure- how will we ever wait it out until September to get back to Florida to start up this adventure?  These past week really solidified how excited we are to start sailing on our own, and reinforce that, hopefully, this isn’t such a crazy idea.  Right, Mom?