Monday, November 30, 2009
Nov 30: Back Aboard
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Nov 24: Canaveral
Monday, November 23, 2009
Nov 23: South to Port Canaveral
The troublesome autopilot is performing as poorly as it ever has, refusing to do its duty about 90% of the time. It was previously unreliable, but more often than not, seemed inclined to work more than half the time. Anyway, I have had enough. I opened the remote the other day (it is much more than a mere remote and appears to contain about ½ the system’s “brains”) and found it to have a great deal of gunk and corrosion on its circuit board, microchips, etc. I cleaned it up as best I could with contact cleaner achieving nothing other than the complete disabling of the LCD display. It sill worked, I just couldn’t read the display. Yesterday, I spent a good deal of time trying to locate a replacement without any luck. Simrad no longer manufactures my particular system and not even the over-stock and surplus stores seemed to have any in stock. Rather than mess around any longer with trying to make an obsolete system work, I decided to just bite the bullet and order a new one. Thankfully my trackline takes me close enough to shore to maintain a good cellular connection, so I was able to go online and figure out what I wanted, and then call Defender to order the system. Sunday, the very helpful lady who helped me out, went way out of her way to get me what I needed. The kit I wanted was backordered, but she made a number of calls to other dealers, struck a few deals on the side, and was able to piece together all the components for me. She has promised to monitor the receiving and shipping of my order and assures me that my stuff will arrive in Port Canaveral by Friday. The world needs more people like Sunday, though they don’t necessarily need to be named Sunday.
It looks like I’ll be hand steering the remaining 120 or so miles to Port Canaveral. There is virtually no wind at the moment, so I am motoring until some builds. Alana needs to average 4.8 knots if I am to get to the marina by the slack water predicted for noon tomorrow, so I can’t afford to sit around and wait on the wind.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Nov 22: Mayport, FL
Today is forecast to be one filled with rain and light winds, a good day to chillax in port, tidy up, feast and get ready to do it again tomorrow. The next planned stop is Cape Canaveral, where I hope to arrive Tuesday. I’ll then rent a car and spend Thanksgiving with Jessica and her family in Inverness, FL before resuming my journey toward Pensacola.
Alana is 1,600 sailing miles into this adventure. I see that we are 886 nautical miles from Salem, MA where it all began. This 2:1 ratio is skewed by the week spent tooling around in the Chesapeake Bay, but is still a little startling. I think that it is also distorted by the fact that I have for the most part, been sailing regardless of the wind direction. If the circumstances permitted, I could certainly have improved the ration by hanging out in ports until ideal winds present themselves. I have generally taken the approach that some distance toward my destination is better than none, so have wasted a lot of time beating to windward – not Alana’s best point of sail. I think that I probably need to tighten the forestay to get a little sag out of the headsails, but for now, I'm just going to live with it.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Nov 21: Georgia on My Mind
Since departing Charleston the winds have been out of the north or northeast, making for easy 5-knot sailing under genoa alone. It is supposed to veer toward the east today and be southerly by Tuesday, those southerlies being a large part of my motivation to press on while I have the wind on my side.
Just before sunset last night I saw a large shark fin pass down Alana’s side. I jumped to get a lure in the water, but I was either too late or he was not sufficiently intrigued by the lure. I’m not sure what I would have been able to do with such a fish, I suppose he would have just stripped all the line off my reel, but it would have been fun while it lasted.
I took about a dozen 15-minute naps last night and am feeling reasonably fresh this morning. I think that breakfast and a couple of more naps in the warm sunshine, which appears to be just around the corner, will set me up for another fine day of sailing. When not napping, I listened to a variety of classic rock right wing talk on Sirius, as well as a couple of literary tales ready by B. J. Harrison. I sipped coffee and hot chocolate, chewed jerky, messed with the sails and stared at the stars; were it 20 degrees warmer, it would have been perfect.
Friday, November 20, 2009
Nov 20: South from Charleston
I can’t pass the Charleston jetties without thinking of the case of the S/V Morning Dew which, back in the late 90s, plowed into the north jetty costing all four persons aboard their lives. At a time before everyone had a GPS, I recall that Morning Dew was trying to enter Charleston in the wee hours of the morning in fog, a few days after Christmas. They thought they were between the jetties (largely submerged jetties with rocks peaking above the surface here and there), but in fact were north of the north jetty. A passing boat reported hearing cries for help and notified the Coast Guard, but could not locate the source of the yelling. The CG’s response left much to be desired and after much litigation and congressional investigation, a great many policy changes were put in place. This was one of the truly shameful events in CG history, ranking up there with the Simas Kadurka incident. I shall endeavor to keep Alana off the rocks.
With the autopilot being entirely unreliable, my plans are flexible. I’m hoping to get to Sapelo Island tomorrow, but that may be a bit ambitious if I have to hand-steer all the way. Given the northwesterly winds, I suppose I could always nose up to the beach, drop the hook and take a nap if I get tired. It is less than 300 miles to Port Canaveral, so I don’t need to kill myself to get there by Wednesday. Truth be told, Canaveral is just a goal. I can always leave Alana a bit north of Canaveral while I meet Jessica for Thanksgiving if necessary.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Nov 19: Chillin' in Charleston
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Nov 18: Myrtle Beach to Charleston
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Nov 17: Southport, NC to Myrtle Beach, SC
I’m starting to see shrimp boats, confirming that the sun on my back has already suggested – I’m getting closer to Florida and further from New England….good riddance!
Monday, November 16, 2009
Nov 15/16: Morehead City to Bald Head Island
The autopilot, I’m sorry to report, is still acting up. It does OK for a while, but then goes through periods of rebellion. So far I’ve resisted the strong temptation to smash it to pieces with a winch handle, but I’m not sure how long I can maintain my current level of restraint. The autopilot really is a key piece of equipment, particularly when sailing alone. It probably isn’t absolutely essential, but it’s very close. I shall have to make a concerted effort to whip it into shape once I get to Bald Head Island tomorrow.
The need to stay close to the wheel has curtailed my culinary plans. There has not been sufficient time to assemble fancy sandwiches, so I enjoyed a box of the tasty soup Mom sent down with Dad for lunch and will be having leftover chicken and rice for dinner.
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Finally, Hope of Better Weather
Friday, November 13, 2009
Delays, Delays
I have reserved a slip at Bald Head Island Marina, just inside the mouth of the Cape Fear River. I plan on staying just one night, enough time to buy some stores and do a couple loads of laundry. It would be great if I could take care of those items here, while wasting away in Morehead City, but the river is just too rough to allow me to take the dingy to and fro. Once leaving Bald Head Island I will need to pick up the pace significantly if I plan to get to Pensacola before the onset of next year’s hurricane season.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
The Boy in the Bubble
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Fresh Water Washdown
It looks I have fixed the autopilot. I didn’t find any loose connections, but did discover that a rudder feedback parameter was incorrectly programmed into the system’s “brain.” I know for a fact that I didn’t change it, so for now I’ll attribute it to a glitch. I’ve had it steering a course here, anchored in the current and it has had no difficulties, so for now I’m going to stop worrying about it. The true test will come once this weather passes through and I head south again.
Happily, there is nothing else that needed fixing, so I spent the rest of the day nibbling, reading, watching a couple shows on Hulu, and just generally being lazy. It’s a good thing I’m not inclined toward obesity.
I think tonight may be a long night. Until the anchors have proven themselves in 40 knots of wind (plus current), I’ll probably spend a fair amount of time staring at the plotter. Both plotters are set to alarm if we drag, it’s just hard, and perhaps stupid, to bet everything on hearing an alarm in the middle of a howling gale.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Nov 10: Y'all Goin' Parachutin'?
Today, I made a couple runs into town for fuel, water, paper towels and milk. I left the dingy at the public dock, but not wanting to leave an expensive inflatable life jacket unattended, wore the itto the store. The very nice southern belle working the checkout asked me, "Y'all goin' parachutin'?" I guess she thought that the manual release on my life jacket looked like a ripcord.
Monday, November 9, 2009
Nov 9: Hatteras to Cape Lookout
Originally, I was planning to get a slip in Beaufort, but since I’ll likely need to stay until Friday when the weather is expected to break, I instead dropped the hook in Onslow Bay, just east of the channel leading into Beaufort and Morehead City. As I type, Alana is rolling furiously back and forth as though she’s trying to buck off her hatches. There is no wind at the moment so she is just wallowing in the trough. Tomorrow I’ll make a couple of dingy runs into town to pick up some diesel, water and a couple other essentials. Once the shopping is done, I plan to investigate a recurring problem with Alana’s autopilot. It's intermittent, so I’m hoping it is as simple as a loose connection,
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Nov 8: Just North of Hatteras
It actually got warm enough in the sun today to remove my jacket. It will be cool tonight, but soaking up some sunshine was fun while it lasted.
I saw a lot of fish slapping around on the surface, including one very large one (4-5 feet) that leaped clear of the water. I couldn’t identify it, but I have a line out now in the hope of perhaps snagging dinner.
Nov 7-8: South from Cape Charles
I had an unpleasant surprise this morning (Sunday) around 4:00 when I started my old nemesis, the generator, to charge batteries. The loud exhaust sound and high RPMs signaled some sort of problem, and then the generator shut itself down, a light indicating a high exhaust temperature. I checked the strainers, finding them clean, then removed all the gear stowed forward of the generator compartment. Once I was able to access the offending machine, I restarted it to see if I could get any visual clues as to what the problem was and immediately noticed the toothed belt which drives the water pump, recently tightened by Charles, was not driving the pump. I discovered that most of the teeth were missing from the belt which was very close to breaking. I managed to install a replacement without great difficulty, grateful that I did not have to replace the impeller, and the generator returned to normal.
Sunday morning dawned with a beautiful sunrise and a perfect breeze from the southwest, allowing Alana to steer directly for the next waypoint off Diamond Shoals on what I hope will be one, uninterrupted starboard tack.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Nov 6: Portsmouth to Cape Charles
Dad left before the crack of dawn this morning for his long drive back to Ohio. I spent the morning taking care of some minor chores and hoping that the strong north winds would die down a little. The winds eventually did moderate by about 1:00 in the afternoon, allowing me to depart Tidewater Yacht without mishap. It was sunny by quite chilly on the way out of Chesapeake Bay and became positively chilly once the sun went down.
I dropped the hook in the mouth of the bay, just south of Cape Charles, just before 10:00 this evening. I’ll sit here and await a weather window which will allow me to get around Cape Hatteras, hopefully in the next few days.
Dad will be missed. True, I do now get to listen to whatever music I like, but everything is just a little more complicated by one’s self. I find that more thought must go into every evolution in order to avoid unnecessary running around, and of course tethering oneself to jacklines on the deck can add tangles and tripping hazards.
I'll decide in the morning whether to stay here, head for Hatteras or look for another spot to await the weather I need. I had planned to wait in Rudee Inlet just south of Virginia Beach, but the grounding in Willoughby Channel has frankly got me a little gun shy.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Things That Go Bump In The Night
Around 8:00 Dad and I weighed anchor and moored in slip D-49 at Tidewater Yacht. We washed down and organized the boat, then Dad drove me around to run some errands . Upon getting back to the boat I repaired the head faucet which was accidentally wrenched from the counter when Alana took a roll, and Dad completed a repair/upgrade of the doors to the chain locker. We celebrated our respective successes with a tasty spaghetti dinner, then went to Food Lion for groceries.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Doh!
We were intending to anchor in Willoughby Bay, just inside the Hampton tunnel. We turned south between markers 1 and 2 and had a clear view of 3 ahead. These are all fixed aids, so there was little doubt about their position, but an uncharted green can buoy labeled 1A was in what appeared to be the middle of the channel between beacons 1 and 3. This is the point at which I should have retreated, but instead I altered course to starboard so as to leave 1A to port. Almost immediately Alana ground to a halt in the mud, defying my brief attempt to power back into the channel. Dad helped me quickly rig the dingy so that we could get a kedge upwind, and here is where I screwed up again. I chose the starboard CQR with an all-chain rode and quickly discovered that the dingy’s 6hp motor simply lacked the umph to overcome the weight of the chain which kept me from being able to effectively set the CQR. I dropped the CQR where it was and returned to Alana for the Bruce anchor. The Bruce’s rode is primarily 5/8” 3-strand so I had no difficulty carrying it as far up wind as I could before dropping it from the dingy. That accomplished, Dad and I heaved around on the line, maintaining a steady strain in order to draw the boat a little closer to good water every time a swell lifted her from the mud. While this was going on I used the dingy and considerable effort to retrieve the CQR and its chain (we couldn’t risk heaving around with the windlass for fear of breaking out the Bruce). I parked the dingy alongside Alana’s bow and Dad used the windlass to recover the CQR and chain without further incident. We got lucky in that we ran aground right at low tide, so I never really doubted that we would eventually float free, but just to help the process along, we pumped both water tanks overboard. Once Alana floated free I became concerned that we would not be able to retrieve the Bruce in the normal manner without drawing Alana into the shoal water on the opposite side of the channel, so we marked the line with a fender, threw the whole mess overboard and motored across the ship channel and a safe, temporary anchorage. Once safely anchored, I returned to the scene of my humiliation in the dingy and recovered the Bruce and its nylon rode.
Alana suffered only some very minor scratched to her paint where I ground the chain between the dingy and her hull, so in the end there was no real harm done. I just feel stupid at having gotten myself into the situation to begin with. We did alright freeing ourselves; there just should never have been anything to free ourselves from.
Once the whole grounding was behind us we transited down to the anchorage off of Tidewater Yacht Marina where we’ll be tying up tomorrow. Dinner consisted of green bean casserole, a change from the planned spaghetti, but without any potable water aboard, spaghetti was out of the question.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Day 5: Onancock to Mobjack Bay
Monday, November 2, 2009
Day 4: Point Lookout to Onancock
We enjoyed a speedy reach across the bay under genoa alone, and then motored about five miles up the creek to town. There was no real rain, but a steady mist kept things cool and damp throughout. After dropping the hook in about nine feet of water, we rowed the remaining ¼ mile to the docks, filled a couple of water jugs, dumped some trash and headed into town in search of the greasy burgers we had been craving. Alas, we discovered that virtually every business in town was closed on Mondays, so we retreated to the docks where we had left the dingy. Here we intended to pick up a few items at the General Store, and were again stymied when we discovered that the store has been converted into a bar/restaurant/museum. The restaurant served our purposed just fine, and there were really no “essentials” on our shopping list, so all in all the expedition was a success.
Next on the list is to check the weather for tomorrow which will help to determine our destination so as to get back to Norfolk in a reasonable time with minimal tacking.
Day 3: Reedville to Point Lookout
After banging around most of the day, eating little but a couple of boiled eggs and some jerky, we finally reached the shelter of Cornfield Harbor, just inside Point Lookout, at the mouth of the Potomac River. We’ve got the boat pretty well squared away and are looking forward to some rice and lentils before crawling into bed. Weather permitting; we should be able to reach Solomon’s Island tomorrow.
Please note the similarity between the picture of Dad above, and that of Mike taken on September 11 - Like father, like son.
Day 2: Cape Charles (kinda) to Reedville, VA
Once safely anchored we set about securing the boat, shutting down the generator/engine, and securing unneeded equipment. It was during this process that I found the refrigerator was broken; it would not turn when I closed the breaker, nor was there any response when I tried resetting the overload circuit on the compressor. Thinking that perhaps a clogged strainer had caused the refrigeration unit to overheat, I check the sea strainers (including the 3 non-refrigerator strainers as well). The refrigerator strainer was clean, but I did find a good deal of grass in the engine strainer as well as more grass and a small fish in the generator strainer. The fish resisted our efforts to flush him/her out, so I set about sucking out the dirty Reedville water with a turkey baster, basically just trying to get a good view of him so that I could grind him into small, water pump-friendly pieces with a blunt object. Luckily for him/her, he/she was sucked firmly against the tip of the baster allowing me to return the much-traumatized fish to the sea. By sparing the helpless creature I apparently earned some positive karma, because it suddenly occurred to me that perhaps the refrigerator was simply as cold as it was set to get, that perhaps the thermostat was preventing the compressor from kicking on. Sure enough, Dad turned down the thermostat and the refrigerator immediately sprang to life. Wow, what a good feeling it was to discover that operator error (stupidity) was to blame. After the generator nightmare of the last couple weeks, I suppose I am a little too gun shy, a little too ready to assume that every hiccup signals a catastrophic, wallet-crushing equipment failure. I should have known Alana would not let me down.