19 Apr 2020, Pondering our Past while in COVID-19 Times, 38 46.494 N/ 076 33.792 W
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We have been self quarantined for 7 weeks while preparing
for our voyage North. Obviously we will have to change our plans.
Meanwhile, we work on little plans, big plans, and multi-year plans
while we work on the boat. There is plenty of time for reminiscing on
our sailing past. Let's spend some words and go back to the 1970's.
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Bob started his sailing experience on a one design
Mobjack as ballast. The sailing experience was one I'll never forget:
sailing is wonderful, racing not so much. In 1977, we bought a 20'
sailboat after trying out some smaller ones. Our pride became the SV
Coriolis. We had less than two days of experience between the two of
us, but our broker, Tom, was a great teacher. We sailed her for five
years with our largest passage from Washington DC to the Chesapeake
(Tangiers Island). Good times were had except when we got caught in a
near gale in the Middle Potomac. We knew we would need a bigger boat
but we would have to wait. So we said good-bye to Coriolis in 1982.
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Years later (1995), we rekindled our love for sailing and
cruising. The ''ocean' was no longer a dirty word. We found the Baltic
Sea yacht, SV Jule III (Laurin 38). Mercy, she was big! We were scared
but she was ours. One weekend, we sailed to Oxford where an older
gentleman helped us tie up. We chatted, talked about our boats, and
then said good night. His boat was a beautiful wooden yawl similar to
the picture to the left. That night he and his wife were with friends
on his boat. When they all left, it was clear that the wife was in ill
health. The next day, as they we about ready to head South, I asked him
how far they we were going to go. With sadness in his face, he said "we
will go until it's time to go back". We believe that she was in her end
game of life. After they left, Ann and I said "that will be us one day".
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Once Jule tamed us, we worked on a long range plan or
'bucket list'. It was consistent with our company (Advanced Research
Corporation), family, and our improving sailing skills. The first item
on the list was a circumnavigation of the Delmarva Peninsula, a trip of
nearly 500 miles. It was our first coastal ocean cruise which started
with our going aground just shy of leaving the Bay. Docking in Ocean
City was a terror with its 3-4 kt current. We managed it with lots of
help from the dock manager. Fifteen minutes after the tie-up, we
noticed a sailboat anchor in the channel. At slack water, he weighed
anchor and calmly went to his slip. Good idea! We got stuck in fog at
the Harbor of Refuge in Cape Henlopen. That forced us to transit the C&D
Canal at night; Thankfully, the rest of the trip was great but
uneventful. Highlights included first grounding, first ocean, first big
current maneuvering, first fog, first night transit, and our first
canal. Not bad.
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Second on the list was the Dry Tortugas, the end of the Key
West archipelago. It was in 2000 when we left the Annapolis area and
entered the ICW at MM 0. We sailed the ICW, did overnight coastal hops,
the dreaded Georgia ICW stretch, and a really nasty overnight stretch
from St. Augustine to Canaveral Inlet where the light and variable
forecast turned to winds gusting to 30 over shallow water. We made it
and stayed at Cape Marina for our Christmas break. It took us 2 months
to leave. The Christmas winds were building and we didn't want to do
the ICW any further as we planned a non-stop transit from Canaveral to
Rodriquez Key. We followed Hawk Channel to Key West where we stayed for
two weeks. Wonderful. The next stop was Garden Key where Fort Jefferson
stands guard. Our two week stay was our initiation to the cruiser's
world. We decided to add a stop to the plan; the Bahamas. We only
planned a side trip to Gun Cay, Grand Bahamas and then back to Florida.
A strong 10 day Norther kept us at Settlement Point for over 12 days.
Two boats decided to brave it but a very angry Gulf Stream sent them
back to us. Twelve boats left with us on the 12th day with only a
gentle 7 ft. swell on the beam. Nice sailing. We experienced our first
heavy weather, first long weather delays, and first passage to the Keys
and first taste of the Bahamas.
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High on the 'List' was a long distance
voyage to Sint Maarten.
for Jule III. We started analyzing weather patterns for the month of
November a year before our intended 2010 departure. If we left too
early, a late hurricane or tropical depression might cause dangerous
conditions. If we left too late, early winter storms may overtake us
before we arrive at St. Maarten. As November neared, we started
monitoring the GRIBs (low bandwidth) digital weather that we can receive
on the high seas. We found a longer term weather window starting on 22
November that had possibilities. Unlike previous windows, 22 Nov looked
better as we approached the date. Final provisioning was completed and
float plan filed as we departed Carolina Beach heading for Simpson Bay
in Sint Maarten. The Gulf Stream days were flat calm but by the 4th day,
the winds were filling from the NE (as predicted); then building and
veering to ENE@15-25 kts from day 7-10. Seas were building to
10-15 ft with a descent period. We shook both reefs out on day 10 and
set anchor in Simpson Bay on the 5 December 2010. We were beside
ourselves. The island was beautiful. Home was on Jule III in Simpson
Bay Lagoon. We visited St. Barths, and St. Kitts, but we always
returned Home. We made many local friends and cruiser friends while at
Home.The way back to the States was downhill, slow, and
relaxing. We spent a month in the BVI; a month in the USVI; ten days in
Culebra; a week in Puerto Rico; 10 days in Luperon; an overnight in
Mayaguana, then through the rest of the Archipelago, and on to Vero. A
trip of a lifetime. Check Voyage 2010 for the Log of 2010.
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Our last bucket list items were Maine and Canada. We had
trips to Maine and Nova Scotia in 2014 and 2016. Both trips had the
port of entry of Shelbourne. From Shelbourne, we traveled up to
Lunenburg. Our last trip to Shelbourne was interesting in that we were
less than 4 hours out from Portland when a thick fog covered the rest of
our trip or at least most of it. During the transit, we saw our one and
only fog bow. It was very calming; not sure why. The fog was lifting
just as we approached McNutt Island at the mouth of Shelbourne Harbour.
The bad news was that is was nightime. Fortunately, we had been in the
Harbour in 2014 so we thought we could navigate the 20 miles up to the
town. Luck would have it that we didn't hit anything. Shelbourne was a
pleasant town as were the people throughout the province. when we
left Nova Scotia, we headed for Maine. The lobster floats were
overwhelming with a big O! We probably entered the Mount Desert area
from the wrong direction but we nearly had a coronary. Adding fog to
the traps was a sight to see. Fortunately, we never ate a 'warp' so
things eventually calmed down. We are striving for a last trip to the
Bay of Fundy. We were to be on our way now but COVID 19 had other
ideas. We will see...we will see.
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30 Apr 2020, Waiting on Weather and Coronaviris, 38 46.524 N/ 076 33.774 W
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