Back home in Everett

The fishing derby turned out to be quite a hoot.  Not for fishing of course.  In the past 3 years I have not caught a single keeper fish in more than 5 derby’s.  I’m thinking I’m the luck equivalent of bannana’s to fishing. 

First of al, the weather was tough all weekend.  We ended up only fishing one official day and had a pretty darn good go at it.  We were getting fantastic fish marks over off humphrey head, but could not get any good bites.  Oh well, next time.  One day we took a gander when most folks were staying in harbor.  We got out into Guemes channel and there were 4 footers rolling past the Guemes ferry dock at which point we decided to sit the day out.  Steve’s 24 Bay is actually a fantastic boat to fish out of.  Everything is set up well, its well kept, and Steve knows how to make everything work jsut right.  A good sea boat it is not though.  The boat has less than 1/2 inch freeboard though its self draining cockpit and literally is kept afloat by a pair of ping pong ball checkvalves.  Scares the bajeezes out of me but I have to admit that we have fished the heck out of that boat and it just keeps on delivering.  I’m actually kind of fond of it, but given the ping pong flotation system, I’m just as glad to have sat this one out. 

Fishing or not though, this was an exciting weekend, which lasted until Tuesday for me as I waited two extra days for storms to pass.  Crazy Mary showed up on Friday and proceeded to get kicked out of the Village Pizza/Wheelhouse for life.  In the spirit of “what happens in Vegas”, I won’t publish the full details but here’s a few sprinkling of teasers.  Mary gets kicked out by the owner while sitting at my table by the owner, who is a good fishing buddy of my brother in law, who’s also sitting at my table.  While Mary is generally though of as a republican, her antics landed her in the good graces of a well known long time democrat congressman from our state who wound up admonishing the proprieter on her behalf.  I tell you, you can’t buy entertainment like this.  They don’t call her Crazy Mary for nothing.

In addition to Steve Monrad, I met up with Cara and the finch’s and of course CM.  We had our own little mini Tolly get together amongst the derby!

Sunday night found me downloading a new wind meter application for the iphone.  While the harbor was spared the worst of the storm, gusts would occasionally whip up some excitement.  Standing on the bow I measured 22 knots but I think this storm was packing quite a bit more wind speeds outside the harbor.

The marina gave me a GREAT deal on moorage, even for the extra storm days as part of being in the derby.  For once I really have to sing the praises of the Cap Sante Marina for really trying to do the right thing.  Great Job guys.

Anacortes Fishing Derby

Headed up from Everett to the Anacortes fishing derby.  My brother in law Steve and I will be staying on the 48 and fishing from his 24 Bayliner “In Search Of”.  My hour  logs show it was about a little over 7 hour trip up to Anacortes.  Weather is not looking to be the best.  Upon arrival I had a little cross wind docking singlehanded.  Had to make a 2nd pass but had some great help from a couple bystanders.  At which point I checked my reservation and realized I had pulled into the wrong slip.  About this time my buddy Steve Monrad from Anacortes came smiling up the dock and we both had a good laugh.  Took the boat around to the opposite side of the dock and put her into the correct slip.

Magic Harbor?

It’s time to leave Gig Harbor.  Unfortunately, the weather for the next couple days looks to deteriorate so I have made the decision to head back north.  Instead of making it a one day cruise, seven plus hours at that, I thought maybe I’d make a stop along the way.  Candidates were Blake, Eagle harbor, Bell Harbor or Kingston.    I ran up Colvos passage and had a nice run of it.  Thinking that I had never been into Eagle Harbor, I decided to check it out and headed for the public dock.  There was a bit of action as a couple sailboats behind me were getting the 5 blasts from the ferry and I turned and noted that these two crazies were running smack in the middle of the route and not even trying to get out of the way.   Then they turned and were going gangbusters for the public dock.  I was laying a boatlength off of it and singlehanding was busy putting out fenders and lines.  There was quite a bit of room on the dock and I shouted to one of the sailboats that I was going to grab a spot, but he should go ahead and get tied up and not wait for me.  He thanked me and went and tied up.  The other boat then cuts between me and the dock and takes the other spot.  I’d like to say this kind of behavior with sailboats was rare, but its not.  Thankfully the passengers on the 2nd sailboat had a mini mutiny with the captain, ahem…skipper,  and then pulled him back to raft alongside the 1st boat and I was able to moor.

Being all tied up, I took a short stroll around town.  There are a few pubs and a small marine store.  A quaint little harbor.  As I turned back toward the boat, the wind started blowing.  The weather I had hoped would hold off for another day looked to be  making an early showing.  I got back to the boat and decided I’d rather go ahead and head toward home than spend a bouncy night at the public dock. 

My single handed exit went smoothly and before taking final leave from Eagle Harbor I did a short tour around the bay.  A few of the water rat boats I recognized from articles I have followed, but somehow in person it was just different than what had lived in my imagination.  Too bad Dave Berry is no longer around.  You can read more about the plight of the water rates in the below link.

http://liveaboardpreservationsociety.blogspot.com/

The remaining trip was uneventful, though I did find myself navigating out of the harbor via iphone as the GPS took its sweet time aquring a signal.  Note on the chart above that it looks like I took a straight shot out of the bay.

Tollyclub Gig Harbor Mini

 Years ago I thought I knew the Central to South  Sound pretty well.  I’ve made many many  dives in that area during the time that Captain Paul was running the Genie Aye as a dive charter.  There are so many great great spots Sound, Zee’s Reef, Sunrise, KVI, Blake Island (pixie sticks my favorite), Tacoma Narrows bridge, Maplewood and ton of others I’m forgetting.  I’ve spent a lot of time in that area.  So when the tollyclub mini in Gig Harbor rolled around this year, I admit to being pretty excited about it.  The fact is that all my experience in central and south sound were on other peoples boats.  In all the time I’ve owned my own boat, I’ve never ventured further south than Seattle in my own boat!  Lets face it, trips that far south can be a bit of a haul and until going on sabatical this year I just have not had the time. 

So with no small degree of excitement I got underway out of Everett by 10:35.  I can’t believe how nice the weather is.  I had planned on making a stop about half way down to Gig, maybe at Blake or take a tour of the water rats down at Eagle Harbor (check out http://www.donberry.com/harbor2/harbor2.html).  I’ve been intrigued to check out Eagle Harbor first hand since first reading Don Berry’s accounts many years ago when he was alive and living in Eagle Harbor as one of the water rats.  I credit Don Berry for getting me through some late nights on some tough projects.  Thanks Dave.

But I digress.  It may be March but the weather was amazing.  I ran on the flybridge the whole way down.  As soon as I made Vashon island, the junk in the water went from occasional to thick as peanut butter.  It’s been a long while since I’ve seen tide rips so chock full of logs that the only way through is to charge at them, then throw everything into neutral and let your momentum carry you through, hopefully pushing everything out of the way as you go.

I hit a pretty big log, well lets call it a tree, about 40 foot or so back in December so I’m a little gunshy about picking up new dings on the prop, but I made it down to Gig just fine.  I plan to pull the boat out sometime before spring ends and the rush of boats getting into yards gets too out of hand.

I’m a day early for the Gig Tollyclub mini.  I can see Bob’s 26 sitting at the dock, but she’s all closed up.  I decided to put the hook down in the middle of Gig Harbor for some peace and quiet.  It was fantastic.  I used my high power wifi bridge to pull in a signal from somewhere on shore.  It was not a fast connection, but it was fast enough to watch some movies on Netflix.

What part of gale warning don't you understand?

Just a reminder. No matter what you boat looks like. No matter what your experience level. Mother Nature has you beat every time you get too big for your britches.

My tag line has always been to remind me what happens when you let your pride make too many decisions for you. It’s a little tease at myself based on an incident I was part of years ago. I was going to retire the tag line recently, but after my trip yesterday I’m going to let it stand a few more years again.

35 knot winds were forecast, but I thought I could stay well enough protected by strategically choosing a route through the islands. I really wanted to get the boat the 60 miles to home and not worry about her. Instead, I got clobbered in about a 3 mile stretch of open water I figured I could muster around shortly after leaving port yesterday morning. Well, I got around, but got forced to jog into 35 knot windwaves with 20 miles of fetch for way too long and in the full force of the gale. They were too steep to run in the troughs and even at a diagonal I was making precious slow movement in the direction I wanted. First the anchor blew out of its pulpit, luckily before I got into the worst of it and was able to risk a trip to the bow to secure it. In the worst exposure of it all, I could not avoid about 3 big ones and all hell broke loose. The dingy blew out of its choks. I had secured it on the bow and the stern. The bow let loose, but the stern held so it did not leave the boat. Instead it fipped up and over backwards and crashed down from the sundeck into the cockpit upside down. At that point the davit was swinging wildly bouncing off the mast. There was no chance of me leaving the helm to secure it. Actually, there was a good chance of me leaving the helm, just not intentionally. I’m thinking toe rails now around the helm and securing the wheel with grade 8 bolts. If the wheel had broken loose, I would have gone with it.

At that stage I had jogged into the waves and made about a half mile off the point I was trying to round. Safe enough distance. I was timing sets from neutral to full throttle to pick and choose waves and find the smaller paths through them, but it was only a matter of time before I would not be able to avoid another biggun. If that happened I didn’t know what damage the dingy hanging off the stern cockpit was going to cause and didn’t want to find out. I watched for the meanest wave I could find, narrowly avoided the worst of it and then gunned the wheel and the throttles down the trough and came about and got my butt on the back of a wave. I don’t know what about the hull form, the soft chines, moderate keel or what, but this boat rides a lot nicer taking waves from the stern that I would expect. She didn’t get pushed around at all and rode nicely. It was kittens in comparison and I quickly jogged another mile to the protection I was going for.

My prospects for taking any other chances that day were over. I had one more big body to cross and no stomach for it. Things had gone WAY past sane already and I had a dingy handing off the stern and who know what I was going to find inside. A short run down the channel later and I pulled into Friday Harbor. Unfortunately, the harbor marina was exposed to the Northeasterly winds. Not good, so I ducked behind a small island in the harbor outside the marina and put the hook down out of the winds in calm water.

For the next two hours I worked on the dingy. With just about every free line on the boat and the davit crane, I finally figured out how to flip it upright, hoist it up to the sundeck and finally get its bridle back onto it ultimately get her back into her chocks. For what had occured, the damage was not too bad. I only found one gelcoat gouge in the boat, about the size of a dime. The throttle lever control mount for the dingly outboard will need to be removed and out in a vise to straighten. The teak caprail on a two foot section of railing on the sundeck was torn off, but I found the teak and it looked alright. The stainless stantion it screwed to was sheared right off. The plastic dolfin on the dingy motor was destroyed. Otherwise, we came through okay. Honestly I’m surprised by that. The rear window in the cockpit actually survived, can’t figure that out! Even the teak caprail around the cockpit looked okay. I figured it would have some nice carvings.

Next up was peeking into the salon. The 32 inch LCD was still on the wall. The galley looked a hydrogen bomb had been detonated, but my favorite Nespresso maker was still on the counter. The contents under the sink, decided to come out and roam around, but all the glasswear somehow stayed in their own locker and not a single glass was broken. The aft stateroom was not too bad, though every drawer was open and they are the kind that have a small notch and generally lock in place. A captains chair in the salon helm had gone flying but did not break anything and of course a basket with quite a few books and stuff in it look like it was the victim of a bunker buster. An hour of cleanup and the boat looked good, no damage found. The 32 inch tv was not working, but I later found that it had moved a little on its mount and simply pulled the power plug out.

With the boat put back together, I pulled anchor and undertook my next task. Getting the boat next to the dock in 20 knot winds, the marina only had partial protection. Did I mention I was single handing the boat this whole time? Ultimately a good samaritan came out and helped, and it was a big help. Got her in on the 2nd try.

All’s well that ends well. I took the ferry home yesterday. I’ll return to the islands this weekend and try to get her home.

Just remember…in the end its mother nature who decides what is safe and what isn’t. Were only here to make judgemet calls, not decide the outcome. While its nice to know where the edge of the cliff is at, be very very careful when you know you are getting close to the edge. Yesterday I stood on the edge of the cliff and let my toes hang over. A little bit too close for comfort. Lots of things I’d probably change next time, but the most important lesson to avoid having to be an expert in all the little things I’d change is to just stay home.

I mean really…..What part of gale warning didn’t I understand?