Andy's Blog

Southbound

Arcturus made it to Florida. Barely.

I'm writing from St. Lucia actually, sitting in the restaurant at the Palm Haven hotel, where across the street at Rodney Bay Marina over 200 boats are tied up, having just completed the Atlantic Rally for Cruisers, a 2800 mile Atlantic crossing from Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, to the Caribbean. Which is why it took us only two weeks to cover the 1100 miles between Annapolis and Ft. Lauderdale. We were in a hurry.

Arcturus is resting comfortably in Pompano Beach, about one mile down the road from my grandparents winter home. Incredibly, Mia has agreed to live with me in their guestroom for the winter - hard to imagine that this is actually the second winter in a row that I've lived with my grandparents. Though I shouldn't joke, they are wonderful people and it's equally wonderful being able to spend time with them. Pappap is supposed to be bringing my golf clubs down in the car with them after Christmas, so hopefully I'll get into the weekly team matches, maybe even win some money (though more likely will lose it).

I'm hoping that our boat hasn't sank yet at the dock. During the first three days of the trip down the ICW, we noticed a small leak in the bilge. I knew that the packing gland needed re-packing, but the bilge was starting to fill faster than it had in the past - so fast as to require 100 strokes of the manual bilgepump per hour while motoring. It turned out to be a pinhole exhaust leak in one of the hoses - which, of course, was directly underneath the engine. I cursed it, though didn't bother fixing it. This trip was about getting south south south, and any delays were out of the question. I could cope with 100 strokes per hour, as long as it didn't get worse. We'd deal with it over the winter.

On day one, the engine decided to quit. This before we discovered the exhaust leak. Rather inconveniently it was in the first 50 yards of the Dismal Swamp Canal, which is rather narrow, to say the least. Thankfully there was one boat behind us, a Canadian single-hander, and he offered us a tow while I changed the filters. We didn't miss a beat. An hour later the engine roared back to life, though I had given in an arranged for our fuel to be polished in Elizabeth City the following morning.
Dave from USA Fuels dropped by early in the morning and had our fuel filtered and back in the tank before 10AM, so the delay was minimal. The engine purred like a kitten, though it was still an enormous struggle to motor 5 knots. It's incredibly how easy she sails, and how difficult it is to make her motor.

After a lovely stay in Oriental, where we took an accepted delay, laying over for the day in the rain. We met Roy of Aeleolus, a sistership to Arcturus. Roy was a reminder of how very interesting and welcoming it is to be a Seabreeze owner. His boat was gorgeous, docked just behind his equally beautiful house on a small creek near Oriental, NC. He had dinner with us onboard. Afterwards Mia and I joked  that between the US and Sweden, we have more friends in their 80s than we do our own age. I guess we're just very mature beyond our years. We love them all.

I got fed up with the engine when we left Roy's the next morning. It sputtered to a stop again only 30 minutes out of Oriental, before the sunrise. I changed the filters yet again, and we rumbled on, finally making Wilmington, NC a few days - and a few more engine shutdowns - later.

That was it. Between the engine shutting off and the 100 pumps of the bilge every hour, I'd had enough of inland 'sailing.' We decided to go offshore at Wrightsville Beach. I know little of diesel engines, but I know lots about sailing, so that's what we decided to do. At the dock in Wrightsville I spliced twin backstays from Dynes Dux, the synthetic rigging that Colligo Marine is supplying us for the entire boat. It was all we had time to do, and I thought it a good idea before heading offshore. The splicing was surprisingly easy and rather entertaining, and after 1 hour up the mast trying to figure out how to modify what was once a single backstay into two, we had a sturdier mast and a more confident skipper.
With the seawater intake seacock shut, we set sail outside the inlet and headed south towards Fernandina Beach, 300 miles away. We'd save nearly 500 ICW miles and let Arcturus stretch her legs, for she loves to sail. By sunset, the northerly wind had built enough that we were reduced to jib and mizzen, surfing down wave crests and having a hell of a ride. It was just Mia and I, and with no autopilot, we hand-steered for three on / three off for the entirety of the trip. This was challenging in large following seas. You became a prisoner to the helm, not even able to trim sails efficiently without calling the other up from their berth, so it became sail, eat, sleep for the next three days.

Incredibly, with only a 24-foot waterline, we reeled off 160 nautical miles in the first 24 hours, averaging a speed faster than our boat is theoretically supposed to go. The good sailing wouldn't last though, and far too quickly a low pressure system was upon us, and we were in the middle of our first storm at sea in Arcturus. And of course, it was at night.

The wind and seas built and built, until finally we were making 8 knots under a scrap of jib, with lightening all around and rain coming down in sheets. Mia had just woken me up to hand the mizzen and reef the jib, and it was just in time. The storm only lasted a few hours, but managed to shake up the sea fairly quickly. Strangely, when it passed, it took all the wind with it, and we sat becalmed for the next 12 hours in a wretched sea that was coming from all directions. I layed down in the cockpit on my watch, with no sails up, drifting without a trace of wind, and had to hang on to the  coaming so as not to get thrown off the seat. Mia actually did fly out of bed, for we don't have lee cloths yet and it was a rather violent motion.

The next morning dawned clear and the NW breeze finally arrived with the sunshine. We took showers in the ocean, hung out our foulies to dry, and set full sail, close-hauled in a gentle wind that quickly flattened the sea from the storm. We made Fernandina after another 24 hours, taking just under 3 days to get there, our good average destroyed by the 12 hour calm. We did manage to sail all the way in the inlet for fear that the engine wouldn't take us in safely. We anchored for the day, now two full days ahead of our most optimistic schedule, ate an enormous breakfast and slept.

The rest of the ICW trip was uneventful. Arcturus seemed to thank us for the wonderful sail, for after one more filter change, the engine didn't cough one time in the next 5 days. It still took 100 pumps per hour on the bilge, but at least we were moving. We tied up in Pompano and immediately went ashore to "Checkers," the surprisingly authentic German restaurant that I'd become a regular at last year and devoured 2 litres of beer and a 2lb. pork leg each.

Now the boat sits again, awaiting our return from the Caribbean, where we have so many memories from the summertime. St. Lucia has proved less touristy that originally thought, at least if you get off the beaten path. We're headed to St. Martin on Sunday to do another Broadreach trip, this time dive-focused and with college kids. Three weeks sailing and diving in the Leeward islands shouldn't be too bad. We return to Florida in the end of January, with the hopes that our boat - newly rigged with synthetics by then - will appear in the Miami Boat Show, representing Colligo. Good times.

Celestial Navigation Workshop: Sept. 19-20

I'll be offering a celestial navigation workshop on the weekend of September 19-20 at Sarles Boatyard and Marina in Annapolis, MD. Check out the details:
 
September 19 & 20, 8am - 5pm (both days)
$300.00 per person.
 
The workshop will include all materials needed for the course, including a Nautical almanac, sight reduction tables, plotting sheets/tools and a few sextants to practice with. If you'd like to bring your own sextants or materials, please feel free. It also includes a BBQ dinner with beer and soft drinks on Saturday night at the marina. You can pack a lunch or stop by a restaurant in town, of which there are plenty.
 
We'll be discussing celestial theory and a bit of my philosophy of why I think it's still relevant in an electronic age in the mornings, and heading out on the Bay around noon to take some practice sights. The southern horizon is clear on the Bay around this time, so we'll take some practice sights of the sun and spend the afternoons learning how to reduce them and get a position. We'll be sailing on either 'Sojourner,' my father's Wauquiez Hood 38, or 'Arcturus,' my '66 Allied Seabreeze. Check out the boats on http://www.fathersonsailing.com/. I'll be posting more details about the course here in the near future.
 
I just returned from the Caribbean last week, where I captained a 39-day sail-training & leadership expedition for teenagers from St. Martin to Trinidad. The program was a huge success, and we returned with lots of stories and some great memories. I'll be posting about the trip in the next few days/weeks on my blog. Check out http://www.gobroadreach.com/ and look for the ARC of the Caribbean program. 
If you'd like to sign up for the workshop, email me at andy@fathersonsailing.com to save your spot, or call 484-269-3358 to speak with me personally about the program. The workshop will be limited to 8 people, and we require a $50 deposit to hold your spot (balance payable at the course). Hope to see you there!
 
-Andy, Father & Son Sailing

The temperature outside is 26 degrees Fahrenheit, and the two electric heaters in the cabin are struggling to keep it reasonable inside. I have four shirts on, three of which are of the 'thermal' variety. Mia is sound asleep next to me on the settee, and it's only 7:56pm. 

Today has got to be the coldest day I've yet experienced in Annapolis, a reminder of why I have been in another part of the world this time of year for the past two years. Yes, Sweden last year was freezing cold as well, but I wasn't on a sailboat. That cozy apartment in Uppsala sounds absolutely incredible right now.

Christmas this year will finally feel like Christmas again. I almost forget what that is like. I remember two years ago talking to Kate, Ash and Blake on the phone while they were celebrating Christmas Eve up at Mommom and Pappap's house - it was already Christmas Day in New Zealand, and my friends and I were walking up to the hot springs in Lake Taupo, in board shorts and t-shirts. I was enjoying the "holiday" with an American guy, two Brits, two German girls and a Belgian guy, sitting in naturally scalding water at the edge of a river so clean and clear you could drink out of it. I say "holiday" because it just didn't feel like Christmas. That evening we ate pasta and drank wine