Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Sunshine - Moonlight


It is amazing how quickly the body will adjust to the cruising lifestyle. Our days our entirely dictated by our good friend, the sun. Sunrise is stunning on the ocean, the wind has generally been lightest this time of day and the ocean therefore more peaceful. A few days ago I found myself torn between watching the sun rise above the horizon or watching a pod of dolphins playing in the bow wake as we pushed south at a steady 4 knots. As the giant flaming ball in the sky traverses west, life on the boat is full of music (both stereo and band practice), reading (I think Dana leads with most books read but we are all near if not at double digits), and cooking (baking bread and rolling sushi). As the sun reaches the western horizon we gratefully give it a “Farewell good friend, see you on the other-side” and retire into the cabin.

Night watch has been 2 hours on, 4 hours off, an hour shorter than day watch, however, tonight we will are trying 3 hour night watches. The reasoning is that getting 4 hours of sleep during a 4 hour rest is rather hard, with the warmer weather longer night watches will not be as tough. Anyways, once a new day starts in Asia the theme tends to be reading, eating, reading, and sleeping...in that order. Quality of sleep is completely dependent on wind direction in relation with swell direction and size. We have all seen a healthy boost in beauty sleep once we crossed over the border to Mexico, the wind has been consistently N-NW and swell direction has been a solid NW ranging from 4 to 12 feet. I tend sleep best when wind speed is double wave height and both are from the same direction.

We are now hanging on the hook in Cabo San Lucas, with some cruise ships.

Aloha

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Barriga Llena, Corozone Contento

“Connor--- I need help---”

I could hear Dana's cries from the v-berth as I stood in the galley washing dishes. Though clearly bemoaning something or another, his tone didn't contain the compelling urgency that would accompany a true alarm. I began walking forward toward the v-berth, using steps carefully timed with the swell so as to minimize the effort, when he clarified:

“I can't get my shirt off...”

followed by groans. He came into view and I laughed at the scene. He was lying on port with head aft, as is typical for the forward berth, and had begun to remove his plaid over-shirt from over the chest, as opposed to at the sleeves. Halfway through, the shirt folded back on itself and wrapped his shoulders while his elbows pinned the lower half in such a way as he couldn't loosen either side. I grabbed the colllar and pulled it back while Dana sighed in relief and fell to the mattress. Poor fellow was all tuckered out. Indeed our first day out of Bahia Tortugas had been a long and exciting one...

We left at about 1000 with beautiful, warm weather. We motored out for the first hour or so before we picked up the ocean breeze- 10 to 15 knots from the northeast. Ankle high rollers washed Ardea toward the southeast as we set full sail and killed the engine.

We admired a few passing pods of whales, though they were far off and, while it may seem blasphemous to say so, whale sightings do begin to lose their luster. A close encounter with the great mammals may never diminish in glory, I think because it is so bewildering as an animal to be near to something so large and powerful, that might have its way with us and our vessel without much afterthought, and yet that is so convincingly peaceful. It might be more fascinating to watch a human that's watching a whale than to stare directly at the latter. Our miniscule eyes reflecting the understanding that this big fellow won't use his powers against us; our expressions grateful, unused to relying on the mercy of distant ancestors that stayed in, or perhaps returned to, the sea. Yet no one ever watches a whale with suspicion. Sharks one always regards with suspicion. Rays, too. I'm not too proud to admit that while swimming in the sea I've regarded even some rather small fish, which experience and rational thought assured me were harmless, with constant over-vigilance. Whales, though, are most trustworthy creatures; even the face of the nubile observer will show this. They're huge. Why don't they scare us? But, in any case, distant spouts and the silhouette of massive tail-fins arcing into the gaseous realm do over time begin to warrant only a passing glance.

As we all three sat below discussing the books we were reading and those we had recently finished, Ardea made haste. She had carried us along at nearly eight knots for a couple of hours when, at about 1300, we had a strike on the trolling rig. The same mackerel swimming plug was out again and after logging only 4 or 5 hours in the water total, it had fooled its third sea monster. I had fought the previous two and it was now Dana's turn. And fight he did. It took nearly forty minutes, complete with fish leaping clear out of the sea followed by dives followed by surface runs. At last the wily fellow was at the transom. I leaned out with the gaff and, after missing once and putting a dink in the gelcoat, the fish was hooked through the shoulder and brought on board. It was a gorgeous yellowfin tuna weighing at least twenty pounds and measuring about four feet long.




There was great excitement about. While Dana was fighting, Chittick and I had already begun preparing the side dishes- beans for tacos and sticky rice for sashimi- that we would soon inhale with the freshest meat. With the fish on board, there was a great rush to finish him. It is heartbreaking to watch a fish suffer with a gaff through its back and a hook in its mouth after a long and unsuccessful battle for its life; it's also dangerous to have such a big fish flopping about our small boat while still making way downwind (though we had furled the jib during the battle to slow ourselves down). While I held the gaff with my right hand, Dana took the one inch diameter lead pipe we use as a club and wound up. Our prey had no intention of watching idly as it was beaten to death and as it squirmed under the first of several blows, Dana's marksmanship was a step behind. A first errant pass busted the dominant lure and a second landed squarely across the back of my hand, over the third and fourth metacarpals.

“Yeeeeeoooowwwwwwwwwwww!!!!!”

I yelled in pain, though there wasn't a chance I was going to drop that fish. I passed the gaff to Dana and he lay the final blows to the generous endotherm while apologizing profusely as I danced about the cockpit, yelping and grasping my stricken paw. No stranger to injuries of a mechanical nature, I set about inspecting myself as Dana was busy stinging the tunny's spinal chord- a process by which a wedge is cut above the eye of the beast, much like one were wedging a tree to be felled, where the midpoint of the trunk lay just deeper than the spinal chord. A length of stainless steel leader wire is then inserted down the spinal chord, during which time the very dead fish will flop across the full range of its natural motion. This paralyzes further movement, which reduces the unwanted build-up of the byproducts of neuro-muscular activity, thus providing a more tender and more delicious prize. He then cut the appropriate slits in the flesh, tied the fish by the tail and dragged her behind the boat to bleed out.

Fortunately, it was clear that the bones in my hand had not been broken. I tested the range of motion in my fingers and could tell from the discomfort in my upper forearm that the tendons were somewhat traumatized. An area around the epicenter of the blow became quickly inflamed. I took some ibuprofen and applied a cold-pack and compression sleeve to the wound. Walking around with my paw raised above my heart, I was no less excited about the feast that lay ahead. Needless to say, the clubber will next time also hold the gaff.

We unfurled the jib and re-set the windvane as Dana began the long process of cleaning the tunny. We were still making over seven knots down the coast in a wonderful breeze, the likes of which we had been told of by bright-eyed cruisers of these fortuitous waters. Our incredible speed and a comfortable motion were reason enough for merriment on a warm, sunny afternoon. Now to have such a beautiful catch was an overwhelming treat. We pulled in our other lines, done fishing for a while once again, after only three hours with lures in the water since leaving anchor.



The process of cleaning and processing the tunny took about three hours and all of us at work. It was only our third fish, but, aside from the aforementioned collateral damage, we were operating like a well-oiled machine. The first order of business was to sample a bit. Dana cut thin slices and we each tried a piece without cooking or accoutrement. It was delicious and tasted of the sea in the most endearing way. Rice prepared, we got sheets of seaweed out, cut carrot and made sushi rolls with the raw tuna. Dipped in soy sauce, these were our supper as we continued to process and prepare. Conferring merrily about the fate of each fillet, we sliced a good deal- a third of the meat or more-very thin to be salted. We cut the six or seven large steaks of the finest quality and placed them in two separate bags with marinades for the following two days. The tougher meat we set aside in a separate bag to be made into soup on the third day. The remainder was filleted thin for more sashimi and to be seared for tacos at dinnertime.

Satisfied that none would go to waste, we slowly finished the work. There was a great deal of blood aft of the cockpit and a fair amount in the cockpit itself as well. We cursed our former bucket, which had been thoroughly crushed on the passage to Bahia Tortugas, as we set about cleaning the soon-to-be putrid waste with salt water collected in a small tupperware. By the end, we were all quite exhausted. Dana in particular was worn out entirely from the fight- he had barely been able to lift his gallant foe for the requisite photographs because his arms were so warn out bringing it in.



It was nightfall before our attention had wavered from the catch. By then we were nearly ready to dine on fresh fish tacos, piled high with an ever-improving slaw of cabbage, carrots, celery, avocado, onion, apple-cider vinegar and, this time, a bit of chopped brussel sprouts. We had a massive pot of spiced beans and plenty of rice to boot.

After our meal and a dessert of cupcakes, belly full and heart happy, Dana predicted he would be asleep in under five minutes. Ardea continued to clip along at a speed unbetrayed by her smooth motion in the swell. It would be a comfortable night, a good one for sleeping, which is not always so on a boat at sea. As he came off of watch and began to fix a cocoon in the v-berth, Dana proposed casually:

“I don't want to be woken up tonight for watch.”

“Well you only have one night watch from 0230 to 0430...”

“Yeah but I want to sleep all night. If you guys take my watch, I'll buy your drinks for a night at the bar in Cabo.”

Chittick and I looked at each other briefly, knowingly. This would not be a difficult decision. Dana continued:

“But we're not going to some white man, seven dollar blue blender drink that's three feet tall place. We're going to a local bar.”

Done.

For those who know Dana, it won't come as a surprise. The man is not afraid to open up his wallet for a simple pleasure which he's conceived to be of great immediate importance. His brother would be proud. But now, his duties delegated, his plaid outer-garment laboriously unsheathed, the hulking, sated angler sank deep into the cushions. Just all tuckered out.

Monday, February 27, 2012

A discussion of windvane steering systems

This is a response that I tried to post as a comment following a question about our windvane steering- why we chose this particular type. As with most boat-related topics, I got a little excited and wrote more than the comment box allows. So it has become a post.

I've got some more posts that I will place tomorrow but, for now, suffice to say that we arrived in Cabo San Lucas this morning and, though we're still only about 2/3rds of the way through customs, it's been a blast so far. And wifi from the cabintop... who can complain?





Ramblin from the Frigid North,

The Hydrovane has been very good to us. It steers a great course and has proven to be very adjustable to various conditions. It's drawbacks are few. However, it has trouble steering a course lower than a broad reach if the swell is close together- as a guess I might say a ten foot swell at 12 seconds means an often flogging jib and a lot of exercise for the gybe preventers on the main and mizzen if we're trying to go dead down wind. In those or similar conditions, we often sail a higher course than would be ideal. That said, I imagine that is a symptom of servo-pendulum systems as well because any windvane is a reactionary system. A human sailor can scope out the swell and the breeze before it gets to the boat and keep a much lower course using that anticipation; the vanes have to wait until the wind gets to them and are ignorant of the swell except in how it affects apparent wind.

I don't have direct experience with a servo-pendulum system, but I think they would likely have similar results. It hasn't been a problem for us, but, it's probably worth saying that Ardea is well balanced. It may just be one of the advantages of a ketch rig- again I can't claim to be an expert, as this is the first multi-masted rig that I've had substantial experience with, but we can adjust canvas and as long as we lash the main rudder in the right spot and trim the sails properly, the Hydrovane is great.

About the servo-pendulum systems- they are fantastic. One immediate consideration is that they rely on the main rudder and thus to not provide an auxiliary rudder in the event of a break down. This might matter a lot (especially if you have a fin keel/spade rudder) or it might be a fail-safe against a very low probability event (skeg-hung and, more so, keel-mounted rudders, provide more protection from impact).

Servo-pendulum vanes are great because you can be sure that the vane will always have enough power to steer the boat- it is using the main rudder, obviously designed to steer her, and the pendulum ensures that powerful water pressure will persist until the course is corrected. They're also much cheaper even new and have a much larger used market than the Hydrovane and its kin (all auxiliary rudder windvane systems- Autohelm makes one, Flemming makes one... there are more but I can't think of them now).

To sum it up, because Ardea has a full keel, the need for an auxiliary rudder did not alone outweigh the cost-saving of a servo-pendulum system (Monitor and Aeries are the two I strongly considered, both of which are readily available on the used market and, even well-used, have very good reputations). The kicker for Ardea is her worm-gear steering on the main rudder. I'm happy to send you some pictures of the system if you'd liked, but basically it means that there is a relatively high level of turns for the full range of the rudder (four turns from full starboard to full port) on a relatively small wheel. A lot of folks that have done crossings in Mariner 31s have reported that a servo-pendulum system relying on lines run through blocks to a drum on the wheel have trouble achieving enough rotation on the wheel to effectively adjust course. They will work, but require a significant amount of attention and adjustment. They also mean placing blocks and running lines in your cockpit.

I would confidently go with a used servo-pendulum system, which can be found in the western U.S. fairly easily for about 35% of the cost for a new Hydrovane, on a boat with a larger wheel or different rudder mechanism. With a tiller-steered boat (which I dream of) I feel the servo-pendulum system is even better suited. I would highly recommend finding out the experiences of folks that have owned your type of boat or something similar. The boat design is important to consider. But, in the end, if an opportunity to pick up a solid piece of gear at a really good price comes up, I think that you can probably get most of the more common windvane systems to work with just about any boat.

Sorry to be so long-winded, but I figured if I posted on the comments, it may as well be thorough. These are just the things I found in my limited experience and from the research I did when I was in your shoes. I also bought a book about windvane systems (Amazon or similar will show several that talk about general concepts as well as how to design and build your own system), which helped for sure. Feel free to keep asking questions- you're welcome to contact me via email- cddibble@gmail- as well.

Keep warm,

Connor

Monday, February 20, 2012

A few fathoms beneath the moon.


We left Newport Beach at about 1300 on Tuesday February 14 under partly cloudy skies. It seemed a nice afternoon and we were admittedly excited to get back to sailing. Even the Saturday prior we felt that we had been in port too long, so when our attempt to leave that day ended back at the dock with a continually vexing alternator, we were a bit disappointed. Our spirits had been lifted then by what we saw as a symbolic visit by a great blue heron (the namesake of our vessel), who landed on the dock only a few feet from Ardea shortly after we re-arrived.

Passing the time in glassy seas nearing Newport Beach.

On Monday, while a weak low pressure system tumbled down the coast bringing gale force winds to the greater Los Angeles area, we sat at the dock perplexed. After having given in to the alternator when our attempts to fix it failed, we tried to get a marine electrician to come down and help us out. It was a bit defeating to call in a pro, but we had tried everything in our minds to get juice out of the thing. We joked that it would likely take no time at all for an electrician to find the problem while waiting for a call-back from any of a number of these professionals we had tried to reach. To pass the time, we walked up the road for our second in as many days visit to the local basketball court. It was there we began to muse the problem over again. And it was then that we realized that the issue may have resulted from a combination of faults, instead of just a problem with the alternator's excitation wire, as we had expected and which should have been solved by some re-wiring earlier in the week. Maybe we had fixed that problem, but we still weren't getting proper voltage out of the thing because of another wiring issue. And which wire had we assumed was properly run the whole time? The ground.

Yup. That was it. It was a shitty ground. We put a new span of 8 gauge wire from the alternator ground terminal straight to the battery ground terminal (the battery grounds are paralleled, so we only needed it to hit one of them). Worked fine after that. But now there's a gale warning. So we did some more hanging out, which we're getting markedly better at.

Dana stands on the bow sprit as a dozen
or more dolphins ride the wake for half an
hour or so.
Back to the future. We left Newport Beach. It had been a dear and grand pleasure to see so many friends. We are very fortunate to know some really awesome folks in that area and their hospitality and generosity made for a really great time. But by the time we pushed off on Tuesday, we were ready to get a move on. Mexico beckoned. SoCal is warm and sunny, but not warm and sunny enough.

The first 15 hours or so of the passage were rather dull and annoying. There was not a drop of breeze and we were again forced to motor for long hours. A fairly large westerly swell made for a somewhat uncomfortable passage. We are charging through books though- reading is one of a few activities tolerable at just about any angle of heel. Once though, while I was on watch, a bit of real excitement came suddenly.

I sat reading near the open hatch in the evening hours when at long last the clicking whir of one of our trolling reels sang through the air. I sprang to the after portion of the boat, grabbed the reel and began the fight. A few hard yanks set the hook and I could feel the changes in pressure on the line as the prey alternately dove and surfaced. It was not at all easy- took about twenty minutes or so of good work- but I finally got the line in close enough to realize that what I had was a rather large kelp frond. I had hooked it right at hold-fast end, so it was particularly effective at creating drag while I battled it thinking I was a real angler and wondering how best to go about writing on the experience. Disappointed though exercised, I put the line back out and went back to my business.

Wednesday was a beautiful day, perhaps one of our best yet. We crossed the border at about midnight after Chittick (on watch) was hailed down by a tanker off of San Diego. They picked us up on their radar but couldn't see our running lights and were concerned. This concern dissolved rapidly when they found out we were a 31 foot sailing vessel- they couldn't believe it, since we were so clear on their radar (nice job, radar detector doodad). They were 15 nm or so away from us though, so it was no wonder they couldn't see our running lights. Impressively, they pinpointed our position, course and speed pretty much perfectly and advised Chittick to hold course and speed to cross their path in 2 nm.

Passing Ensenada as the low to the north reconciles
with the high to the southwest above our heads.
I took over watch at 0630 after a damned decent night's sleep and checked the chart. We were about 20 nm west of Encinada- the first potential port-of-entry in Mexico. We strongly considered dipping into Encinada to wait for wind, because we really did not want to continue motoring. The cost of diesel and the long engine hours and the loud noise make it pretty lame most of the time. In fact, we started heading a bit East for just that purpose. The wind started to build out of the south, so I put up the mizzen and the jib and shut down the Perkins at last. Ensinada still seemed like a better idea than slow-tacking a beat down the coast, but when the wind started clocking West, we didn't have trouble kissing the notion of an early stop goodbye. It was a good choice. We rode ahead of a low pressure system in the LA and San Diego area for the majority of the day and had great sailing, making around 6 knots with a comfortable motion. I made a breakfast of eggs-in-a-blanket and home fried potatoes with onions. The day went remarkably quickly.

We sat for a long time in great breeze beneath one of the few areas where the sun actually shined through the clouds. It was grand. I find I have often put pressure on myself to be doing something- reading, baking bread, cooking, trying to absorb something new- much of the time while we're at sea. I have to remind myself that it's perfectly alright to just be sailing. Hell, hand steer for a while, for old times' sake. 

Steering the ocean swell and trimming jib. We've found we
can make a more efficient course than the vane in lots of
conditions. Also, it's just nice to actually sail the boat.
Weather like we had that afternoon made it easy to remember why we were drawn to this particular mode of transportation. We all sat merrily in the cockpit, rapping about something or another for some time. Our pleasant afternoon was very suddenly and very, very loudly interrupted by two quick BOOMs. We thought we were taking cannon fire. It was insane and it was very very loud. But there was nobody in sight as far as the eye could see. After edgily peering about, ready to take cover from whatever onslaught was about to overtake us, we surmised it must have been a jet breaking the sound barrier. We never saw a jet, but we sort of heard one afterward, and it's the only thing that makes a lick of sense.

The low pressure and accompanying high clouds eventually caught up with us around late afternoon. I was back on watch after we spent the afternoon cleaning up the cabin, which had become quite a mess overnight. Dana, during his previous watch, had pulled in our fishing lines and replaced the pink squid lure and silver spinner we had out with a cedar plug and a mackerel colored thrasherbait. About an hour into my watch, we got our first hit. I had been sitting at the nav station reading nothing other than the Cruiser's Guide to Fishing. With expectations more restrained, I moved as quickly as I had during the great kelp battle and went about pulling in a Pacific mackerel (Thrombus japonicus). It was probably 3 pounds, maybe 18 inches long and a nice looking fish. I couldn't help but notice that it went for a lure that looked like it could have been next of kin. We figured out the species using a great identification book given to us by my buddy Nick, who is the reason we ended up with such a great dock set-up in Newport Beach as well. The lure that caught us our first monster was a gift from Nick, too... he's been too good to us.
A Pacific mackerel becomes dinner.

According to the book, this specimen was rather large for a Pacific mackerel and a good though oily fish to eat. So I promptly bludgeoned it on the top of the skull a few times, stabbed it in the brain and filleted it right there on the after deck. Truthfully, I take no joy in the process, and each time I take the life of an animal I am reminded that I mustn’t be wasteful. We got two nice fillets to supplement the frittata that Chittick had been working on in the galley. I tossed the guts and carcass into the water, save for a somewhat meaty portion of the “shoulder” (i.e., the dorsal portion just back of the gills), which I put on the large hook of the cedar plug before sending both trolling lines back out.

Needless to say, the first fish was an exciting experience. But greater battles lay ahead. Dana remarked, since the mackerel was not a large species compared to many that we are equipped to land, “It'll only be a matter of days before we're asking ourselves why in the hell we kept that little fish.” Turns out, it was only a matter of about 45 minutes.

After an unsuccessful battle with something huge, which hooked on the same lure as had the mackerel, I was back to reading the fishing book (now certainly more enthralled with its wisdom). Having lost a fish, I was determined to learn from my mistakes. I had fought it too hard, not let it take enough line. The hook had set well- it was on the line for a while. But it likely ripped out through the flesh of the beast as I tried to manhandle it toward the boat (it never got close enough to see). Only a few minutes after I had settled back to reading, the reel screamed again.

A bonito
It was a pretty long fight. I was slow and patient. I'd take some line in slow and steady but I knew I'd have to let my foe have some back if he went on a run. He did this several times and I let him go and then brought him back. He really fought. It took a lot of effort over at least 20 minutes for me to get him in toward the transom. When he was close, we were overjoyed at the size and beauty of this one. Dana reached over with the gaff hook. He made a light pass to hook the fish only to realize that there was quite a hard head on this fellow. The next flick of the wrist had the gusto need to pierce into the head. I set down the reel while Dana passed the gaff up to me. A 12 pound bonita (Sarda chiliensis). A beautiful fish and good to eat. We cut a few slits and tied a line around his tail and dragged him off the stern for five or ten minutes to bleed him out. By the time I finished filleting him, it was nearly dark and it had been more an hour since he struck the all-star mackerel lure from Nick. We got two huge fillets off of the bonita and now had an abundance. We pulled in the lures. Any more fish in the next 48 hours would be excess for sure.

Dinner was potato and beet frittata along with fried marinated mackerel over rice. It was delicious. We grilled one of the bonita steaks and baked the other, though by the time they were ready we were all duly satiated. Fortunately, we have the inverter wired and have been able to keep the fridge reasonably cold, so bonita can wait for breakfast tomorrow. And lunch. Probably dinner, too.

I sit now well fed with highly anticipated fresh fish, making very good headway down the coast of Mexico. It will be about two days yet before we make it to Bahia Tortugas, but we certainly aren't for want of breeze anymore. In fact, strong and gusty winds mean we're pretty heavily reefed tonight. The slow dissipation of that low pressure system and the advance of a new high will likely mean somewhat heavy breeze for us for the next day or so, but as long as we can maintain a steady course down the coast, that's fine by me.

Friday, February 10, 2012

More light - Less Energy - Adios!


Conserving energy is important once Ardea goes off grid and becomes a self-sufficient, floating community. We currently have two 12 volt batteries that act as both our house bank (cabin lights, running lights, water pumps) and our starter battery (for the engine). The batteries are connected to a isolator switch, allowing us to select one battery at a time, essentially giving us two “battery banks.” In theory we should never have two dead batteries. In practice this isnt always the case and, from Connor's previous post, you know we have had two power-less nights. While we need to check the wiring and potentially buy new batteries we are also working on conserving energy via LED light bulbs.

Ardea was built in 1973, pre- LED. While incandescent bulbs provide a nice light for reading, they draw a large amount of power and provide a relatively low amount of light. For example, the overhead light in the cabin before we switched over to an LED version was a 20 watt bulb...

Connor bought new LEDs and a problem presented itself, we wanted to use the old light fixtures for the new bulbs and they didn't fit. Solution: make an adapter for the new LED bulbs that allowed us to screw them into the old fixture and more importantly use the light switches already in place.

Since we no longer needed our incandescent bulbs we decided to use the base of those bulbs as our adapter and modify the wiring to fit the LEDs.

Step 1: Break our old light bulbs:



Step 2: Solder in two new wires, one ground and one hot:



Step 3: Attach the bayonet style fixture to the new wires:



Step 4: Mix an epoxy with a high fill content to make the unit solid:



Step 5: A much brighter cabin!



Adios USA!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Cetacean sensation

By the end of our stay in Morro Bay we had fallen into a pretty comfortable routine. We were blessed with a short row to shore, as the gracious crew of Diane Susan let us tie up our dinghy on their dock so we didn't have to row to the public dock. Actually, they were more generous than that. After we ran into them again at the grocery store, they let us throw our provisions in the back of their truck so we didn't have to haul it back. And the night before we left, they provided some valuable local insight on the weather and the passage around Point Conception in addition to a tour of their awesome fishing trawler. As always, we were happy to make some friends and the folks in Morro Bay were incredibly warm. We'll certainly miss that place and all the sea otters floating about reminding us that it makes no sense to cut down trees to build tables when we have perfectly good tummies.

We pulled the hook at about 1100 on Thursday February 2nd and motored out to a decent northerly breeze. The forecast was for 10 to 20 knots with gusts to 25 and an 8 to 11 foot swell at 15 seconds off Point Conception. We hoped to be past the point in the late evening when seas were supposed to dissipate. It went swimmingly. The swell was certainly a bit uncomfortable on that stretch with distinct sets coming from the northwest and the west sometimes combining for a bumpy ride. But we had great wind and made around 8 knots for much of the day.

Pelican friend. Reminds us of pal Zac.
That night, our first in Southern California, the wind died and, unbeknownst to us, our batteries followed suit. I tried to start the engine at about 0200 after we'd only made 2 to 3 knots for a couple hours. But no power meant no engine and we had to wait until the solar panels had a chance to give us some juice the next morning before we could get moving. I'm not sure on the exact numbers, but I think we made about 70 nm over the first twelve hours from Morro Bay and then about 20 nm over the next twelve hours. It was a bit annoying, but that's all.

The second day of the passage brought an easterly breeze and we slowly made our way between San Miguel and Santa Cruz islands. The setting among the Channel Islands is quite beautiful and the wildlife was nothing less than stunning. As I took over watch from Chittick at around 0800 we were accompanied by a large pod of dolphins (probably common bottlenose dolphins- Tursiops truncatus).

Bottlenose probably but I am guessing on the marine mammals...

Swarming sea lions
Then, a swarm of seal lions (Zalophus californianus)- literally dozens of them- were following our boat, breaching repeatedly at the top of the swell and diving into the trough. The commotion reminded me of salmon battling their way upstream to spawn, though I'm not sure what their behavior was about. As the morning went on, more dolphins moseyed on by (this time Risso's dolphins- Grampus griseus- I think) and more seals splashed all around Ardea. A pelican landed and swam next to our boat for a few hundred yards as well, staring at us perhaps used to rejoicing as fish guts were strewn from similar vessels. Still no fish for us though.

A pod of Risso's dolphins near San Miguel, Channel Islands.

Perhaps the most fantastic though slightly nerve-wracking wildlife encounter of the passage came just between the two aforementioned islands. I happened to be steering at the time, which is rare as the windvane does the vast majority of the steering, and Dana was just about to go forward to put a reef in the mainsail. Suddenly, maybe about two boat-lengths in front of us, two humpback whales surfaced and spouted. Normally this would be a majestic experience. One might stare in awe at the girth and grace of these creatures or note the intricate patterns of scars and barnacles that lace their bodies. But for us on this occasion, the initial reaction included an Ahab-like scream of “Whaaaaaale!” combined with a steering maneuver like the Titanic trying to avoid that infamous iceberg. Yeah, maybe it was a bit of an over-reaction. But they were so huge and so close that I threw the wheel all the way to port and rounded the boat up. We spent the next several minutes smacking the side of the boat so they might know we were around and trying to spot them before they re-surfaced. I guess we were loud enough though, as we didn't see that pair again.

I'm fascinated by the similarity that can be found in photos of
landscapes from disparate climates or regions. I imagine I'll end up
with lots like this. I'm pretty sure this is Santa Catalina, though.
The following evening went much as the previous had gone. The wind became light and we tried and failed to start the engine due to low batteries. We made better progress than the prior night though, and the slightly better wind meant fewer sounds of flopping sails and crashing blocks. In the morning we sailed a southwest course with about 15 knots of pressure from the east. As we came upon Santa Catalina Island, the wind dropped and we began to motor toward Newport Beach Harbor. We spotted numerous fascinating jelly fish and a group of ocean sunfish flopping around on the surface near a kelp bed. It was otherwise uneventful on a gorgeous SoCal day until we were only about 7 nm from the harbor and ran out of fuel. The engine took a big gulp of air and we ended up having to bleed the system again, this time while underway. It only took about half an hour this time and we putted into Newport Harbor at about 2030 on Saturday February 4th after using up another jerry can of diesel.

Ardea sits now at a pretty swanky dock in Newport Harbor where friends were kind enough to let us rest for a few days. We've got some boat work to take care of here, not least of which is figuring out if user error, wiring or declining batteries is the cause of our power failures over the last 2.5 day passage. But mainly we've got some hanging out to do. Rounding Point Conception was a landmark for us geographically, climatically and mentally all the same. We've already had a blast catching up with old friends of the south coast and I imagine we'll hang here for a few more days as the northerly is supposed to build later in the week.

Our next stop is Bahia de Tortugas, about another 2.5 days' sail from Newport. Quite soon we'll be in warm water, hopefully eating fish tacos. Lots of fish tacos.