Thursday, December 4, 2014

To Cabo and back- 2014

10/25/2014-11/18/2014- BAJA HA HA and back on Spirit of Adventure

Stats- Sailed/motored over 2,000 nm in 25 days.   We spent approximately five days at anchorages or at a slip in Cabo thus averaging 100 nm/day over the 20 days we were at sea.   My son Jason and I were the only two to sail both ways and we had Doug as crew for the trip down and Larry as crew for much of the return trip.   Jason described the trip as the best of times and the worst of times.   I totally agree but I will focus mostly on the "best" parts.

BAHA HA HA 2014 START
Pre-trip
Well this year has been a year of sailing for me.   In August of this year my son, Jason, stated that he thought he would like to sail with me in the 2014 Baja Ha Ha.   Read the previous blog about getting the crew together and it will bring you to this picture above.   The rally started on Oct 27 but we left and sailed to San Diego on the 25th.

I can't even explain how I became so engrossed in planning, buying safety equipment, getting all of the Mexican paperwork prepared and trying to cross every "T" and dot every "i".   My wife swears that I was totally absent for more than a month before departure and I would say that it was probably two months.

Sailing to San Diego was a piece of cake with only 81 miles.   We left at around midnight and managed to sail most of the way to San Diego.   Wind was light but the sky and ocean were beautiful.
Sun rise on the way to San Diego
As we slowly sailed south, we just made our self imposed deadline of getting there before dark.

The next morning was composed of Doug and myself motoring our under inflated  inflatable to the Skipper's meeting at West Marine.   Right after the meeting we beat it back to the boat and decided to have the wives (Peggy and Mary) meet us near the boat and drive us back to the afternoon party.   It was fun, but we were all really focused on getting out of there and sailing.

The top picture shows me standing at the bow and cannot even start to show the excitement that filled our boat.   Watch the Youtube video at the bottom of this and it gives you a better idea of our anticipation and relief at starting this trip.   There were a total of 170 boats registered but only about 135 actually started the trip in San Diego.   Some began from Ensenada, Mexico, after getting all of their paper work done there.   Thank God I had all of our paperwork done before leaving Long Beach.

Jason and I instantly became great friends with Doug and thoroughly appreciated his attitude and friendship.   We nick named him "All in Doug".   He was as excited as anyone and he never had to be asked to do anything.  From doing the dishes after meals to wrestling the whisker pole in the dead of night, if something needed to be done, he did it.

Communication was done with the YBtracker that I had purchased before leaving.   We could send text message type communication to our three wives and they could follow our position every six hours on a web based map.   I would highly recommend this device and will use it on all future travels.    Oh yes, there was a time on our return trip that I let the charge on the unit drop and it stopped sending for about 46 hours.   Wives were trying to figure out if we had sunk or if we had just run away with some senoritas but Mary just prayed for our safety and trusted that I was a competent sailor in a competent boat.   They were relieved to finally get our messages again and know that we were fine.

I will not go into a lot of detail except to say, watch the Youtube video when you get a chance.   You will find the link at the end of this.

You can see all of our white dinghies on the beach.
Stop 1- Bahia de Tortuga- 340 nm south of San Diego.    We loved this sleepy little Mexican town that had no paved road but was filled with friendly people who were happy to have our business.   It seems that part of their canning industry had closed down and this group arriving once a year was very welcomed.
They actually had a brand new (Astroturf) baseball field.

The Ha Ha fleet having a beach party potluck.
We were all happy with being delayed here for one extra day to watch tropical storm "Vance" and were not quite as happy to spend another day after that when Vance turned into a hurricane.   Let's just say that we had explored all parts of this town by the time we finally set sail.

Each year the locals play the fleet on a dusty dirt baseball field.   This year, they had just put in a modern, green, beautiful new field.   The game was fun as there could be as many as 15-20 people/team on the field.   Every body (even little kids) got a hit and no one kept score.   Teams come from all over to play on this field now.

Latitude 38 magazine sponsors the Baja Ha Ha every year and this was their 21st year of making this trip.


The weather had been getting slowly warmer as we headed south and it was perfect here in this beautiful bay.

One thing that has to be mentioned is how all of us in the Ha Ha were experiencing the same thing with this trip.  We bonded easily and made friends that we will probably keep the rest of our lives.   Jason and Doug were making friends and everyone loved my two favorite crew members.  

The ariel pictures were taken with a helicopter type radio controlled device with a GoPro camera attached.

During the next leg of the trip, we had some of the best sailing and highest winds.   The winds were from the rear of the boat so sailing was generally very comfortable.    The swell height ("Oh swell") was somewhere over ten feet high at times and at one point when I relieved Doug from his watch, our dinghy rode three consecutive waves up the back of our boat higher than Tor, our monitor wind vane.   As the back of my boat gently lifted, the dinghy (we were pulling the dinghy behind the boat) would stretch out on it's tow rope and get ready to do it again.

Watch system-  There is a lot written about how to do this but we settled into three watches during each night.  First watch became Doug's and was from 9:00PM to midnight.  Then came my watch from midnight to 3 AM and finally Jason's watch from 3AM till 6 AM.   For safety we ran our electronic chart plotter so that we could see exactly where we were and also we ran our radar with a guard zone of four nautical miles.   If any land, boats or ships came within 4 miles of us, an alarm was set off.   I believe and trust this system.

Stop 2- Bahia Santa Maria


Doug lowers the mainsail in preparation for anchoring.
This was a beautiful bay approximately 3/4 of the way to Cabo.   There is no town here and except for this one time a year, the bay is mostly vacant.   Our sponsors had arranged with some locals that lived a short 90 miles away to prepare food and live entertainment for our fleet.   Even with the delay due to hurricane Vance, they were there when our fleet pulled in.   Great food, music and company
Our 2014 fleet members having a great time.

Due to the delay in Bahia de Tortuga we arrived one morning and left the very next morning.   A short, but fun day on the beach.









Our next leg of the trip took us to Cabo San Lucas our final destination south.   It was the shortest of the legs and took us only a day and a half from Bahia Santa Maria.   Here are some pictures of Cabo.




Myself (left), Jason (middle) & Doug (right)




Notice our crazy friends in the background who were helping us make the picture more interesting.   We loved them all.

Enjoy the video of the trip on Youtube at-

http://youtu.be/UYeAkgM9UzQ

Friday, October 17, 2014

Three Men In A Tub

September 19-21, 2014

Shakedown Cruise To Catalina Island

After sending in my registration for the Baha Ha Ha, I listed my need for another crew member or two for the trip south.   My boat is made so that it can assist me with single handing for long distance, but Jason and I wanted to have one other person along to help us with keeping watch, especially at night.

I had a total of six others who wished to join the Spirit of Adventure and from those, I chose Doug.   Doug is a captain & pilot in the commercial airline industry and flies full time for a living.

Jason and I met Doug early in September and went out for a short day sail with him.   Even though his experience was mostly limited to harbor sailing, we instantly liked his personality and I liked the way he took the tiller of my boat and sailed the boat for almost the full time that we were out.   After him seeing the boat and meeting us, I asked him if he was still interested and he said, "I'm all in!"   From the very beginning Doug was so enthusiastic.

We quickly planned a time to go to Catalina for a few days to see if we could all get along together on a 34' boat.   We each planned a meal to make, planned our sleeping arrangements and I decided that our destination would be Little Harbor on the back side of Catalina Island.   I wanted us to practice anchoring and using the dinghy to land in the small surf that usually occurs in Little Harbor.   I also wanted to leave at 4 AM so that Doug and Jason would get a chance to stand watches and experience night sailing.                                                                                                                                                                                            
Entering Cat (Catalina) Harbor
 As we entered Little Harbor, Jason watched the depth gauge and called out the depths as we entered a very rough anchorage with breaking waves in the cove.   We soon decided to go to Cat Harbor and spend our time there.    It was a great choice as I had not been in Cat Harbor for many years.
Doug.   "I am all in for the Cabo trip."
  For a short 10 minute Youtube video, go to this link... http://youtu.be/epi2Ip1PXNI 

Oh yes, you will see that my lil boat has been updated with an offshore life raft in a canister (right behind the mast on deck) and a "dodger" which is green and covers the companion way has windows and keeps the ocean spray from hitting us as we all sit in the cockpit.    Both of those things turned out better than I could have predicted.     Thanks for watching and thank you Jason and Doug for going with me to Cabo.   You are the best crew I could have ever expected.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Jason & Dad - To Two Harbors and back

8/14-8/16/2014

It had been over a year since I had bought Spirit of Adventure and finally a few weeks before this trip, Mary (my wife), Jason (our son) & Robin (Jason's beautiful wife) and I got to go out for a day sail.   Now Robin had been requesting a day sail for quite awhile and I found Jason also very eager to go out sailing.  I don't believe Jason had been sailing for almost twenty years and as a young boy, he didn't really like sailing.  He and his mom would sometimes get sea sick (which is no fun) and with me dragging my family back and forth to Catalina, I think I wore him (and my wife) out.   After this family day sail, Jason told me that he thought he would like to go on the Baha Ha Ha in October of this year.   I was very surprised, but I couldn't be happier.   With Robin's encouragement, we decided to do a shake down cruise to Catalina Island to see if Jason could really live on this small boat for a period of time.   Thus, another adventure began.

As we pulled out of the marina, Jason and I noticed that we had some nice (15-20 knots) wind from the north-west.   As we got the sails up and got on our first tack, we were pretty sure that we could make Catalina Island without changing course.   We would be close hauled, and we might even be able to make Two Harbors if we were lucky.   Jason quickly took the tiller and didn't let go for the next four hours that it took us to get to the island.    After the first dousing of salt water over the bow and over both of us, I offered Jason my foul weather jacket and all of a sudden, I was looking at a real sailor.   He seemed to love the speed of the boat and having control of Spirit with the tiller.   We were really sailing fast (in the 6-7 knot range) and the weather couldn't have been more perfect!
As we neared Two Harbors, we lost wind and had to motor for about the last hour.
We got a perfect mooring on the west side of the bay with some much larger boats.   After dinner we relaxed and talked before taking a shower (w/solar shower) and then going to bed.

The next morning saw a very peaceful bay and we quickly mounted the outboard engine on the inflatable and began to explore.   After breakfast, we went ashore and hiked over to Cat Harbor on the other side of the isthmus.   Jason remember us staying on the other side with my last boat.   Later that afternoon, I wanted to go snorkeling and so with my neat "GoPro" camera Jason dropped me off along the cliffs in some shallow water.   The fish were beautiful and as I snorkeled, Jason stayed in the dinghy and just motored around until I was finished.   It only took a little coaxing for him to decide to put on the mask and snorkel and have his own fun.   That night we enjoyed dinner on the boat and turned in early.   The weather and company couldn't have been better.   It was great getting to know my son again on a one to one basis.  

A real sailor!
The next morning we had to vacate the mooring by 8 AM and so we ate and motored out of the bay on our way back to Long Beach.   We almost had enough wind to sail but decided that we would be going so slow that motoring was the better option.   Jason again manned the tiller the whole way back and after about four hours and fifteen minutes, we tied up at the slip in the marina.    We quickly cleaned up the boat and headed home for a real shower.  

Jason passed the test for the Baha Ha Ha with flying colors.   Three days after our trip, his wife text messaged me and said, "Do you realize that Jason has not stopped talking about your trip since he has been back?"    I was overjoyed!

For the Youtube video of this trip click on this link- 
                             http://youtu.be/Il8T9EW8tlY

Thanks for reading this adventure with my son and me.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Father's Day 2014

June 11-15 2014 (Father's Day)

What a neat week.   Sara (my daughter) and Brenda, her best friend and partner, came out from Colorado Springs for about 4-5 days of sailing.   Sara had grown up sailing and had always been the one to tell me that when I die, she gets the boat.   From her youngest years, she could steer a straight course and never got sea sick.   I was so excited to have her see Spirit of Adventure and for her and Brenda to do what I so love.   It just doesn't get any better than doing what I love with people I love.

The days went fast but some of my fondest memories were watching (and laughing) the girls paddle the inflatable dinghy around backwards and hearing Sara explain, "This way we can see where we are going."   Other fun things were playing games every night.  Brenda got to see where Sara gets her competitive spirit from. 

Just hanging out with these two energizer rabbits was a thrill.   On the last night, as if prearranged, we had a performance on the beach of a group called "Abba".  Yes, you can guess at all of the great ol' songs we heard.   Sailing home came too quickly and as Tor (Monitor wind vane) steered the boat, the girls relaxed on the bow.
GREAT FATHER'S DAY 2014.

PS- I think we were all a bit apprehensive over how we could all live in such close quarters for five days but personally, I think we did just fine.   I got to know Brenda a lot better and I can say that I am growing to love Brenda as a neat part of our family.  I do look forward to sailing with these two again.

Note- For a full ten minute video of our trip go to-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOCYqZrvQRA








Saturday, July 19, 2014

Baha Ha Ha

This last week I finally signed up for the Baha Ha Ha.   After sailing with my son and his beautiful wife Robin, Jason decided that he would do the Baha with me in October.
I have gotten behind on my postings and yet I was soooooo excited about this that I had to share here on my blog.   There is more information here...

http://www.baja-haha.com/

 I'm excited!

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Engine Makeover

When finishing my last trip, I had heard a high pitched whine in my Universal M-25 diesel engine.   After I had rested and cleaned up the boat, I turned my attention to my engine and was shocked to find that the front part of the engine had turned black.  I feared I had roasted my engine and that I was in for some serious repairs.  
YIKES! What have I done now?

Now, I am fairly competent with normal gasoline engines and at one time I had torn our trusty VW engine apart all the way to splitting the case.   I somehow got it all back together and it ran.

With diesel engines, I somehow had lost my confidence and this brings in my new best friend, Hobie.   I called another person who had worked on my boat and was very reasonable and asked him for a reliable diesel mechanic.   He gave me Hobie's name and number and within a few days Hobie was at my boat.

As we talked, Hobie said something that I couldn't believe.  He told me that I had helped students of mine for my whole career and that he was going to help me out and that it wouldn't cost me a lot of money.  Hobie explained that my engine didn't show signs of major damage and that the black was just from the belt that was seriously worn.  The high pitched whine was from a small temperature sensor that could easily be replaced.   He also has had off shore experience and when he found that I wanted to go off shore, he told me he would make me a list of all of the things I should do, not only to the engine, but to my electrical and some other systems in my boat.   He told me how to clean the engine (a product called 4U and water) and he wanted me to not only replace the worn belt but to replace all of the hoses on the engine.  

Within a couple of days, he sent me a detailed list of all I should be thinking about
Looking much better now.
doing before heading out and the names of places and people that would inspect/clean some vital equipment (injectors & heat exchanger) on my engine.   He also told me how to avoid the expensive marine supply prices and go directly to an automotive parts house for some of what I need.  He stressed me doing the work and that if I get into trouble, he would help me whenever I needed it.

What a total blessing it was to find Hobie and even though he has not asked for one cent, I will pay him and thank him for allowing me to have the confidence to learn my engine by doing.   THANK YOU HOBIE!                                       
Whew!
                                              

Monday, May 5, 2014

SOLO 2- Visiting four islands

May 4, 2014
This screen shot shows my actual track around and by the four islands.
Goal for Solo 2- Sail either around or close by the four islands, Catalina, Santa Barbara, San Nicholas & San Clemente Islands.  (Approximately 200 nm)

Well, finally success in finishing what I had started on Solo 1.    Last month when I tried to do this same trip the first time, I failed to make it around even one of the four islands.   I headed back to Long Beach (See Solo 1) to regroup and plan my next attempt.   One thing that Solo 1 had taught me was that even though I hadn't used even one gallon of fuel, I had not gotten very far.   LESSON #1   If I have a good diesel engine and plenty of fuel, I shouldn't waste time bobbing around out in the ocean with no wind.   This time (for the most part) when the wind died, I cranked up the iron jib and headed to my next way point at 4-5 knots speed.   I really only motored about 1/4th-1/5th of the time and enjoyed the speed at which the islands went by.   For example, it took me 24 hours to get just South of Santa Barbara Island on Solo 1 and in only about 22 hours this time I had already passed San Nicholas Island and was on my way to San Clemente Island.
NOAA Wind Report- GRIB files

I had already proven that I could get enough sleep on Solo 1, but I had also learned a LESSON #2- Be an opportunist when it comes to sleep.   On the first trip, I was too excited to sleep the first day and wasted that time without sleep.   This trip, I did catch and hour or two during the day time whenever I could.   It all added together to make my trip much more pleasant.

On Solo 1, I had my solar shower along and did not use it once.   LESSON #3- A clean Captain and crew feels better and can appreciate the beauty of the trip a lot more.  I showered every afternoon and it felt great.

On this trip I was tested in different ways.   I reached destinations (Santa Barbara Island and San Nicholas Island) in the dark.   This was not just an endurance race, I really wanted to see each island and to get video or still pictures of each island.  As you can see (if you watch the video) I had to show you my pictures of my chart plotter/GPS showing the display of me either rounding or sailing by the islands in the dark.   On San Nicholas Island, I really slowed up and   w  a  i  t e  d  for the sun to come up.  Why was I in such a hurry?    I was also tested on the first and second day by sailing in higher winds than I had ever sailed in.   My boat had previously reached 7.7 knots as it's greatest speed with me sailing it.   On this trip, Spirit Of Adventure set a new record of 8.4 knots of speed.   Amazingly scary speed.   Tor (MoniTor wind vane steering) was sailing as the boat speed increased, but when I hit that speed, I took over the tiller and slowed us down a bit.   Yes, I am seldom afraid, but this second night the combination of darkness and high speed frightened me.   Next time I will not be as frightened.   It happened again just as I was nearing the finish line in Long Beach.  High wind and I too much sail up.   I had thought this through and so I told myself, "What a better time to practice than today & now?"   I headed up into the wind and the boat immediately went into irons (with the bow into the wind).   The whole boat went from over 7 knots to ZERO!   I was impressed and actually had my tiller hard over and could let go of everything with the boat "parked".  The process is actually called being "hove to".    From this "parked" position, I could furl the head sail quite easily.   When I pointed the bow off the wind, the boat picked up to a comfortable, easily controlled 4.5 knots.   Easy!

Don't get me wrong.  I did love this trip and was elated at accomplishing my goal.  At one point, I was 65 nm out in the ocean and loved it.  My recent battery addition and re-wire served me well and my system supported all of my night time electronic needs. You will have to watch the video to see the brunette, red head and finally the blond that visited me and stayed with me for awhile.   Oh, Mary (my wife) approved.

My little boat in a big ocean.
My longest runs were the ones I enjoyed the most.   To watch the boat sail along at 5+ knots with only Tor steering was amazing.   I cannot say enough about how great Tor and my Tiller Master do their job.   The peace I feel when doing longer runs is extreme.   I can clean, organize, repair, sleep, cook, read or just relax and watch the ocean.   I am really loving these trips and when I get home, I can appreciate my wife and all that I have been blessed with at home.  My wife really is a saint for letting me do these trips.

Another special thanks to my great sailing buddy, Fred of "Later Gator" fame.   He stayed in communication with me as much as possible and as I was returning, he sailed his boat almost 1/2 way to Catalina to meet me.   I can't thank him enough for being my shore support on these trips.

I know that my daughter & her partner will be joining me for a week in Catalina in early June and  I am already planning another trip in June.   Maybe as far North as Morro Bay.   Mary may drive up and then we will play some wonderful golf while enjoying the boat on mooring in this beautiful area.   This is a maybe right now.

I am just now planning and looking for at least one crew member (Diana, Fred, Mike or ????) for the 2014 Baja Ha Ha (http://www.baja-haha.com/) that sails from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas (Mexico) at the end of October.   It will be a two week trip down there and then I may sail back solo to Long Beach or ?.   Is anyone up for an adventure....?   I want to register for this and they will not register me until I have a crew.   Let me know if this appeals to you.   You can read about this online.


THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES


Please take a look at the 36 minute video of Solo 2 on YouTube.   Just click here here.
                                              http://youtu.be/SU9jtn65XhA


Thursday, April 3, 2014

Halee & Siri in Catalina

March 28-30, 2014

Kind of a spur of the moment trip to Catalina with our granddaughter Halee and Siri, a foreign exchange student from Norway.   Two seventeen year old girls and a grandpa!
We got to the boat on Thursday evening and packed some groceries and figured out the sleeping arrangements.   I got to try out the table that makes into a bed.   It worked great and Halee and Siri got the V-births.

 Friday- We left around 8:30 AM for Avalon, Catalina.   What a neat morning of sailing, seeing dolphin, resting and we arrived just before 3:00 PM, a 6.5 hour crossing.   Wind was light and kept us on a perfect heading for Twin Harbors.   With two newbies to sailing and Catalina, I had planned on Avalon so at around 2:00 PM I began motoring.   We checked in and got a mooring for two nights.   The girls practiced rowing the inflatable and I got a lot of laughs from watching them.   Halee cooked dinner with the help of Siri.    What a beautiful day.
  Saturday- What a beautiful day of relaxing, watching the girls snorkeling and the girls even went para-sailing.    We walked the town of Avalon and the girls finished up their sunburn as they wanted to do.   That evening I pulled out the guitar with harmonica and played the girls a few songs.   Halee and Siri were great at singing along.

Ralph- On Saturday, I was relaxing in the cabin and I heard someone hailing "Spirit" from a dinghy alongside my sailboat.   It was a great young man named Ralph.  Believe it or not, Ralph had another 34' Islander like mine.   I invited him aboard and he enthusiastically looked all over my boat.    His is a few years older than mine but when only 12-14 of these boats were made, this was a neat experience.  I later rowed over to his boat and did the same.   He is a welder and has his boat in Los Alimitos Marina which is very close to where I keep my boat.   We exchanged information and I believe we will become great sailing buddies.
Sunday, we awoke early and left Avalon at around 7:30AM.    We motored out into the channel (25 nm across) and soon found enough wind to sail.   The wind started at about 10-15 knots and increased to gusts over 20 knots.   I soon taught Halee how to measure the swells ("Oh swell") and by the time the morning was over, we had some swells to nine or ten feet.   We were flying and I saw speeds for Spirit of Adventure hit 7.7 knots.   We made a 4.5 hour crossing and arrived around 12:00 in Long Beach.   My other sailing buddy, Fred, who I have written about many times, had wanted to meet us in mid channel but we arrived so quickly, he could only welcome us back home.   Thanks Fred!  

Halee wrote in my ship's log- "The boat was so much fun after initially falling into the floor of the boat (ha, ha) it got a lot better and I had a great time.  Love my grandpa.  I got a nice tan also."
Siri wrote- "I am super grateful for getting the opportunity to go sailing in California!  I had a lot of fun and I will remember the trip for the rest of my  life."
I agree and this grandpa/captain is very blessed to have had two great girls aboard!   If you wish to watch a 14 minute video of our trip, just click on the following link...

http://youtu.be/AxjHL4khVbo









Monday, March 24, 2014

Belize 2014

I hesitate to list this video here as I have tried to keep this blog all about my sailing adventures.   If you check some of my postings, you will see that I love snorkeling and doing underwater video.   Recently, my wife and I got to go to Belize for almost three weeks.   We snorkeled almost every day and loved it.   I think you may enjoy watching this video and I promise to be back out there sailing soon.  
I am already planning my next trip on The Spirit Of Adventure and will take you to Catalina Island on Spring break next.    Anyway, enjoy this video.
Me chasing a pretty large sting ray with my GoPro camera.
Click here to see the Youtube video of our Belize trip.   Enjoy.

http://youtu.be/taV4-A78MeY

Sunday, February 9, 2014

SOLO 1- My First Longer Distance Solo Sail

2/4/2014-  I had been planning on and looking forward to a single handed (solo) trip up to the Channel Islands.   A few weeks had passed and I was just looking for a weather window that would give me three or four days of good weather.   Finally, as I neared my birthday (Feb 7) I thought that I saw a Tuesday-Friday period of nice weather.   Now, I have to put things into perspective.   My daughter in Colorado Springs had showed me her iPhone where the temperature was -7 degrees and they were in a blizzard.   For us here in Southern California when it gets down in the 40's that is winter.

I have said before that everything I have
done to Spirit of Adventure has been to allow me to single hand my boat over longer distances.   The time had come to test both myself and the boat's readiness to do this.

Note- On the day before my departure, as Mary (my wife) and I sat and talked, I asked her if she worried about me leaving on this trip.   She said, "No, not worry, more just a concern.  I would like you to take someone else with you."   I told her that my chances of dying riding my motorcycle on the freeway was probably 100 times more than doing a solo sailing trip.   She agreed.

I want to say here that my 3-4 day trip actually lasted only about 50 hours.   All was well through the first night and I was anxious to get on with day two.   During the end of day one, I checked weather for San Nicholas Island where I would head after rounding Santa Barbara Island.   There were small craft warnings with gusts to 35 knots.   I thought, "Oh, that will be fun and I may have to take in another reef in my mainsail.  I can still do it."   Then just a few minutes later I discovered that one of the reef points on my mainsail had torn the mainsail straight down towards the boom (the thing the mainsail is attached to at the bottom) and had left about a foot long tear.   I thought, "Interesting!  That should not have happened but I can still just leave it reefed and continue to sail on my trip."   Then, I heard a NOTICE TO MARINERS on my radio where the west side of San Clemente Island was closed due to flare testing by the military.  OK!  I could still round the two islands and then round Catalina and head for home.  (All of these things were starting to bug me!)  The last straw (What next?) was my radar began giving me an "Error 7 & 8" message and would no longer work.  I tried re-booting it and the message just repeated again.

Although disappointed, I realized several things.   All of these things combined were telling me to use some common sense and live to fight another day.   I had already had a great adventure on this trip.   I had seen how I could get sleep as my boat sailed itself overnight.   The Monitor Wind Vane steering had worked flawlessly.  Until then, the radar had done it's job and had given me the warning that I needed to be safe.

During the trip back to Long Beach, I did not have the safety of the radar so I would sleep for 30 minutes, wake up, look around and then do that again.   I had my radar reflector up and I had seen when one ship had actually changed it's course to go behind me instead of in front of me.  I knew they could see me and figured that I had a 50/50 chance that they really didn't wish to run over me.   The wind died just before morning and I took over the tiller at around 5 AM.   I had only really had three hours of sleep so I was tired but knew that I could not just drift around in the shipping lanes.

I entered Queen's gate just as the sky brightened and daylight began.   I had sailed somewhere over a hundred miles and had not used one gallon of diesel fuel.   My good friend Fred had kept in touch with me on this trip and had even left his cell phone on all night in case I needed to talk.   Within about ten minutes of me pulling into my slip, he was there greeting me.   Thank you Fred for being a great sailing buddy and a better friend.   I called Mary and let her know I was safe in my slip and then I went to bed (on the boat) and slept for five hours.

I loved this trip!   Please check out the 14 minute video of my trip by clicking the link here-  http://youtu.be/t6e9raRwv14

Monday, February 3, 2014

February 1st Sail with great friends

2/1/2014

Sailing with Chris & Doug

We had invited Chris and Doug sailing on Saturday and little did we know how excited they were over the opportunity.   I had stayed on the boat Friday night and was ready for Mary, Chris & Doug when they arrived around 11:30 AM.   Mary had called me from an overcast Orange, where our home, is and I gladly reported that it was clear and very sunny.   After arrival we sat in the cockpit and enjoyed Subway lunches.

After lunch and with a tour of the boat and life jacket assignments, we headed out into the beautiful, sunny Pacific Ocean.   Chris actually took the tiller as we left the marina and after that Doug took over.   Doug had sailed Sabots when he was younger and still remembered how to use the tiller.   For those who may not know, with a tiller, if you wish to go to starboard, you push the tiller to port.   The opposite is also true if you wish to go to port.

Soon we were cruising along at over 5 knots in about 8-10 knots of wind.    We headed out and sailed generally west toward Catalina for about an hour.   From there we tacked and headed north towards the San Pedro breakwater entrance.   It took us about an hour to go that distance.   The girls had put on sweaters and gloves by then and I finally put on my hooded sweatshirt.   Doug never did put on a sweater or jacket.

We returned to the marina and sat and enjoyed some refreshments in the cockpit.   A perfect ending to a perfect day of sailing.

Please take four minutes & 15 seconds to look at the video and still pictures of this sail by clicking here http://youtu.be/SjYqS_82C0A

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Sailing with the Coffee Club

1/17/2014  Happy New Year

Don't tell everyone, but Southern California is having a heat spell where the temperatures at the beach is in the 80's.   Now my wife attends a coffee club each month and about a dozen retired teachers all get together and talk, drink coffee, talk some more and yes, talk some more.   My wife, Mary had invited a couple of the women for a day sail last Friday.   What a fun experience it was.
Left to right- Mary, Vivian & Vicky

Laughter & enthusiasm shared equally today.

Please watch the five minute Youtube video by clicking here-
http://youtu.be/jTsLvDNP5Ts

We will go out again!