We turned left as soon as we reached the first buoy after the end of the seawall and put up the genoa as well. This was before noon but the wind was too weak and too far behind us, to move the boat with any speed, so we motor sailed, mostly motored, until about 1:30. I even had taken down the mainsail. I had not realized how much of the first 109 mile long part of this passage, was more easterly than northerly and so the projected five to ten knots of west wind was behind us. Then came wind, much stronger than projected and a gift to us. I was able to get up half the mainsail, with double reef in it, and continued with the genoa. The wind built behind us and we were screaming along at seven to eight knots with peaks at 8.9. And with the wind about 120 to 150 degrees from our bow, we rolled a lot from side to side, most unpleasant. Lene felt a bit nauseous though she did not lose her food. We had a delicious cold dinner -- no cooking with the rolling. It was warm and sunny by day and reasonably warm at night, with no rain. But during the night we got some slow speeds, less than four knots and even though I did not put up the genoa again until near daybreak, it was this night part, as well as the first few hours, where we lost time
It is hard to get good pictures of a night passage so at least I have the long awaited dawn.
Masonboro Inlet is easy, wide, well marked and flanked with seawalls. Once in, it is easy to get to the anchorage area and we dropped at 1:30, only 90 minutes "late" compared to our projected schedule that would have averaged 6.5 knots. Nice homes line the bay side of the barrier island.
We put out a lot of chain because there is lots of room and 20 knots were predicted for this evening. But by 4 pm it was howling at up to 40. We visited Wrightsville and made the reciprocal of this same ocean passage, to Charleston on our way south last fall and hence felt no need to lower and raise the dink to stretch our legs in Wrightsville. Tomorrow: Beaufort NC, about 80 miles and if the forecast comes true, a beam reach or close reach from the port side, with five to fifteen knots.
I tried to take a photo of the pod of dolphins playing under and around our bow, taking the Ipad up there, but they are way faster than ILENE at eight knots. I took maybe 50 shots and only one, a video of less than one second, caught a dolphin. These were not the slow graceful swimmers in the ICW but racers amidst the big ocean waves. I couldn't get the video into this post but it is on Facebook. I did manage to neither fall off the boat nor drop the camera.
Ilene is a true member of this crew and a solid citizen on overnight passages. She grumbles a bit and still relies on me, and I have to admit I like the second part of that. She is even taking an interest in the charts, tides and weather. I couldn't make this trip without her, physically, mentally or emotionally. We have some chores that each of us do most of, but both of us do many of the chores. She said she liked our 25.5 hours together.
On our honeymoon on the old ILENE, in August 2002, we spent a pretty terrible 36 hours in a nor'easter off the coast of Maine The boat got beat up (torn sail, water inside through the dorades, compass light out) and we got beat up too. After a good night's sleep Lene asked, "Where do we go next?" I replied "God, I married the right woman!" And that has become truer with each passing year.
Reminds me of an ICW passage in 1995 on a 38' sailboat. Four of us were bringing the boat to Buzzards Bay for the owner, and the agreement was that we would not sail in the open ocean. So we followed ICW and the Waccamaw River between Charleston and Wrightsville Beach, all under power, and no Frying Pan to deal with. The first night we moored off Georgetown, SC. The next day, as we passed behind Myrtle Beach, I could smell the hamburgers from the amusement center. At sunset at Wrightsville Beach, we had a downpour, and I got a kick out of one the other guys, who quite unabashedly took an au naturel shower on the foredeck in the anchorage. On a nearby sailboat, a Schipperke dog (Wikipedia says these are sometimes referred to as "the little black devil" and describes these as "formidable barkers") yapped at us continually, apparently enjoying the sight of a 70-somehting naked man.
ReplyDeleteLove the history, sprinkled with political commentary, mixed with sailing stories! Missing our boat buds that "get" why we do it! Ya'll still have a long way to go. I'm in eastern NC a few hours from Beaufort-checking on the moms. Earl's working in the north country. Safe travels!
ReplyDeleteKathy and Earl
s/v Seeker