We started June 2017
at anchor off the City Marina in Charleston, South Carolina, waiting
for a wind to take us up to north of Cape Hatteras. We should have
been up here by now, as our insurance did not cover us for damage
caused by named storms south of 35N after the end of May. The
weather, however, was not co-operating with 6 hours of sailable wind
being followed by 18 of light airs. The usual option of day sails
was not available as this coast is entirely made up of barrier
islands. The gaps between them are, for tens of miles, unusable by
anything but small craft and, when there is a usable gap, the channel
into good anchorages is anything from 8 – 15 miles. This meant
that we had the choice of a 200 mile passage to Beaufort, North
Carolina; motoring up the Intra-Coastal Waterway (otherwise known as
the ditch) or staying put. As we were comfortable with access to a
pleasant city with good provisioning we elected for this latter
course, with a close watch on the big weather picture to make sure
that we were not taken by surprise by an early season hurricane. For
several days ahead, Sunday 4th June looked like a good
departure date, with 48 hours of usable wind and this held up to
departure time.
Our planning tool
told us that we could make it up to the Beaufort area in about 30
hours. The tidal currents for the Charleston channel gave a best
departure time of 0900 so we picked up anchor at 0830 and went to the
marina to top up on fuel. Of course, this took twice as long as
planned but we were underway by 0930 and looking forward to making
some serious progress. We cleared the channel at 1100 and headed
East as better winds and currents were expected further offshore. At
first we had, as expected, a light ESE’ly and had to supplement
full sail with engine power but, by 1300 it had increased to a steady
F3 and we progressed under sail alone. By 1700 it was F4, so we put
a reef in the main and continued for the next 22 hours with this and
variable amounts of genoa. By the morning of the 5th, it
was apparent that we would not make our destination in daylight but
there was a near full moon and an anchorage close by that seemed to
have a straight forward entrance, all round protection and good
write-ups for wildlife and scenic value. Our forecast showed that,
although the offshore wind would be increasing by the evening, close
to the coast it would decrease and I suspected that we would have to
motor the last 10 – 20 miles. In fact, it continued to increase to
a F6 SSW’ly. We dropped the main in daylight and continued under
genoa alone towards the lee shore, starting the engine early just to
be on the safe side. The moon was a blessing, as it showed where the
shore break was and we entered Barden Inlet at 22:45 and motored to
the souther end to anchor. Unusually, the anchor did not bite first
or even second time but the 3rd attempt set it well and we
were tidied up well before midnight. A check on the weather
confirmed that we could not expect to sail round the coast to
Norfolk, Virginia, for at least a week and resigned ourselves to an
inshore passage though the ICW.
We thought that we
deserved a rest day and took this on the 6th, setting an
alarm to rise at 07:00 on the 7th. The wind, which we had
expected to be light, was blowing NE’ly 5, accompanied by heavy
rain. A look at the forecast showed that we could expect much of the
same, or worse, for the next 48 hours. As our planned passage would
mean one of us standing at the wheel for 10 hours a day, this was not
a happy prospect and we decided to hunker down and sit it out, just
moving to the north end of the bay to reduce the fetch and make life
more comfortable.
We had a good look
at the weather on the 9th - no strong winds were
forecast. We had the option of going up ‘inside’ on the Intra-Coastal Waterway or outside, past Cape Hatteras., Similar distances
but different strategies. If we went inside, we would probably have
to motor almost all the way, contend with bridges and locks, have
long stretches of close monitoring in narrow channels and would only
be able to travel in daylight, meaning a passage time of 3 – 4
days. Upsides would be seeing some of the country and being able to
stop every night. Going up the outside would reduce the passage time
to 36 – 40 hours and, hopefully, enable us to sail most of the way.
We elected for the outside route and calculated our best departure
time for favourable currents on arrival. Anchor weighed at 1600 and
we proceeded out. Unfortunately, we had to track south for about 15
miles to get round a reef. Naturally, this was into wind but, after
being sat doing nothing for a few days, we enjoyed the challenge of
the beat. The wind died around midnight and the rest of the voyage
was spent either motoring or motor-sailing, arriving in Chesapeake
bay mid-morning on the 11th. Having been, unplanned, over
a week without shopping, a provisioning trip seemed a priority and we
decided to go into a marina, choosing Wormley Creek near Yorktown.
This was affordable, at $40 for the night and very scenic with
possibly the most tranquil setting we have ever paid for. Going up
the narrow channel, we were amazed by an osprey sitting on a nest
watching us pass 10 feet away without stirring. We tied up at 1300
and allowed the afternoon to cool a little before walking the 3 miles
to a supermarket and doing a good shop. Taxied back.
Out again on the
12th, and motored just across the York river to Sarah
creek, where Whatsapp friends were anchored on their yacht Follyfin.
This anchorage was again very scenic, with beautiful homes on the
banks, Osprey nests on every post and even a raccoon paying evening
visits to the mudflats at low water. Unfortunately, it was a fair
way into town, but we managed to coax a Uber driver across the bridge
the following morning and had a day of visiting the local tourist
things. Yorktown is the location of the decisive battle in the War
of Independence so we visited the battlefield and a very good museum.
We had failed to buy milk earlier in the week and had entertainment
trying to find anywhere that sold any. There was a convenience store
only 5 minutes drive away but, like in any American town, nothing in
the centre. Eventually, we bought a large drink of milk from a Ben
and Jerry’s, decanting it into a water bottle for the taxi trip
back. We had left the dinghy at the Yacht Haven marina, paying $10
for the privilege. This seemed a little on the steep side but the
following day we were allowed to use their laundrette, at $2 for wash
and dry, their pool and even borrow a courtesy car for a little
supplementary shop. That afternoon, I had a look at our AIS GPS
aerial, as we have not been transmitting our position for some while.
I was unable to fix it and we arranged to go across to the marina
the following morning for a professional to look at this and a couple
of other issues. The other issues did get sorted, but not the AIS,
despite best efforts and, by the time we had given up on this, it was
too late on Friday to move so we just topped up with water and headed
back to our anchorage.
We headed back out
onto the York river at 1100 on Saturday, expecting to have a gentle
sail up to the next inlet, Mobjack bay. 40 minutes later, a huge
thunderstorm approached. We hastily dropped sail, fired up the radar
and continued by motor in alternate gale force winds and flat calm.
The sky cleared a couple of hours later and we were eventually able
to sail for a few hours to the East River and a few miles up it until
the wind died again, passing some very nice houses on the way,
eventually anchoring clear of the channel at Woodas Creek. This was
a peaceful spot with, again, nice back gardens and private docks to
look at. We decided to have a lazy day on Sunday, watching a golden
eagle ridge soar a line of trees on the bank before catching a
thermal and climbing away. A change of scene on Monday: Up anchor at
07:35 and, after a motor down East River, a 45 mile sail across the
bay and back up the Rappahonnick river to Urbanna, broad reaching
most of the way in a F3 (slow) then beam reaching in F3 -6 as showers
passed us going up the river (exciting). We dropped anchor just
before 18:00 in a small anchorage opposite the town. The bottom is
described as ‘soupy mud’ and it took a second attempt to get the
anchor properly set. We were glad that we had made the effort an
hour later when a huge thunderstorm rolled in. As it approached, a
pair of golden eagles got very excited, soaring round the harbour and
surrounding trees. Ashore in the morning to see the town. Very
picturesque, with lots of history but obviously totally dependent on
tourism – most of the shops only open Thursday to Sunday but we did
find an old fashioned drug store, serving milk shakes and soda
ice-cream floats. Also a supermarket within walking distance of the
dinghy. That afternoon, we were hailed by a local, paddling his
small sailboat back to its mooring and accepted an invitation for a
drink that evening. He turned out to be quite a character: a
politically active liberal living in an area festooned with signs
reading ‘guns save lives’ and having as his summer live-aboard
yacht a 17 ft motor cruiser, which he trails down to Florida.
Soda fountain, Urbana
On Wednesday 21st,
we returned to the drug store for breakfast, sampling the local
‘biscuits’ then provisioned up for our next leg before weighing
anchor and sailing back down the Rapohannock and round to Jacksons
creek to anchor. This was chosen for its access to West Marine, who
had a new radio handset and kedge anchor for us. Unfortunately, the
handset proved incompatible but the anchor, a Fortress, was just the
job. Made of aluminium, it is larger and stronger than our existing
kedge but much lighter.
Once again, we had
been watching the weather forecast and believed that we had a good
window to sail up to New York. We might have to motor down to the
mouth of the Bay but then should be able to sail most of the way up
the coast. The reality was that we managed to sail down to the
bridge but then had to motor for 8 of the following 24 hours. We had
possible boltholes at Ocean City and Delaware bay but made the
decision at Mid-day on the 23rd to continue up to Sandy
Hook, New Jersey. A good following wind took us up the coast and
then, at 0800 on the 24th, a very active cold front passed
giving 40 knot gusts and a wind shift of 90 degrees, so we were now
close reaching with 2 reefs in main and genoa. At 1300, we closed
Sandy Hook and dropped the sails to motor round to Atlantic Highlands
on the New Jersey shore, anchoring in the lee of the breakwater. The plan was to spend one night and then proceed up the Hudson River to a marina at 79th street, which has visitors moorings. We phoned to book one only to discover that they were out of action for the next 2 months. Once again, I had not slept well on the passage and decided to have a
complete rest day on the Sunday only to realise, too late, that we
should have at least done a little provisioning trip. This was
because our next little trip depended on tidal flows and to make it
on Monday would have required us to be away before 0900. And so we
slipped a day which had knock on effects through the next week. We
did shop on Monday and also caught up on some maintenance tasks,
including fitting a new fog horn to replace one lost over a year
before.
On Tuesday, we
heaved up at 10:00 and headed up towards New York City. The wind was
light and variable, so we didn’t even consider sailing - this was a
sight-seeing trip. We motored through the Verrazano Narrows and up
to Governers Island at the foot of Manhattan. Here we bore left, to
continue up the Hudson River getting the best views available of this
amazing city. We continued up as far as the 79th Street
marina. Mooring balls appeared to be in place and we considered
anchoring but internet tales of anchored yachts being struck by
passing tugs dissuaded us. Back down the river for a closer look at
Ellis Island and Statue of Liberty before finding a snug anchorage
behind the latter. Here we had a fine view, not only of the close
attractions, but also of Lower Manhattan which was a fine sight as
the sun set. Later that evening, someone put on a good fireworks
display to welcome us to the Big Apple. Wednesday, we started to
pick up the anchor at 10:00, to make the best of the currents up the
East River, only to find that our chain had made a complete loop
around an old cable. We couldn’t quite work out how this had
happened and were starting some advanced seamanship to extricate
ourselves when an end appeared and we were able to work ourselves
free. Presumably that’s how we got caught in the first place. We
certainly caught the current: most of the way up the east side of
Manhattan we had 3 knots behind us. This increased to over 5 knots
as we passed Hell Gate at the junction of East and Harlem Rivers. As
we negotiated this, there was a tug pushing alongside a huge barge
coming the other way, making about 1 knot over the ground.
Fortunately he was well in control and we had no difficulty keeping
clear. After the spectacular sights of the city, the landscape now
changed to grim industrial, and then rural as we motored along the
north of Long Island, past La Guardia airport and Flushing Meadows to
our destination at Manhasset Bay. Here we found an easy anchorage
just outside the mooring field where we intended to leave Ruby while
we flew back to the U.K. for a few days.
On Thursday, we
dinghied in and caught the train to Penn Station and the subway to
the Museum of Modern Art for one of our occasional days of culture.
Certainly worth the entry fee with some really great works. We spent
most of the day on the 5th floor which contains a vast
collection of art from the late 19th – mid 20th
Century. Stuff we can mostly understand, unlike some more modern
work. Then back in the rush hour, declining the first subway train
and then finding Penn station in chaos as a fault had closed 12
lines. We were lucky to squeeze onto a home-bound train which
combined 3 services. Even luckier to be standing just where a door
opened so we got seats. On return to the dinghy, we found that the
wind had sprung up and, as we had failed to take waterproofs, we got
soaked. Even though it was well past beer O’Clock, the first drink
was a hot one to revive us. Friday, we braved to rail service again,
this time walking to our first stop. The Empire State Building. This
was one of Elsie’s must-do’s and we took the full package,
visiting the 86th and 102nd levels, spending
well over an hour looking over New York. From here, we walked up to
Byant’s Park, pleased to find table and chairs in the shade to eat
a pick nick before our next appointment, a walking tour of Central
Manhattan. This covered Grand Central Staion, the Chrysler Building,
the City Library, Times Square and the Rockefeller Centre. The
guide, after his strange opening remark along the lines of ‘I don’t
know why you are here, I wouldn’t come into Central Manhattan if I
didn’t have to’, turned out to be very knowledgable. With only 3
guests, it was very good and personal. Again, we avoided the subway
system on the way back to Penn Station and got a return train without
delay. Just the 1 mile walk back to the dinghy and a (well
waterproofed) trip back and we were done for the day. Which was
welcome news as our legs were about giving out.
Chrysler Building
Monthly distance:
850 miles.
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