“Did you know they dubbed us the King and Queen of Slow? And
featured our blog on their site?”
“I haven’t gotten to that email yet,” he said.
“I rest my case. To us, those videos are regular speed.”
“The King of Slow, huh? If my racing friends find out, I’ll
never hear the end of it.”
**Edit, much later: Off Center Harbor filmed this video interview of us, about going slow, small and simple up the Inside Passage.
**Edit, much later: Off Center Harbor filmed this video interview of us, about going slow, small and simple up the Inside Passage.
We’re home. You know
you’re out of the wilderness when, aboard your single-engine, small quiet
cruising boat, you are “outraced” at harbor entrances by large, tsunami-generating
gin palaces seeking the last remaining whatever in the harbor before you get to
it.
Ugh, gack, giant, surfable wakes. Makes small boat cruisers mildly homicidal. |
Bet you thought I meant the OTHER ancient, traditional gesture. At least this one got a few laughs. |
We met our old friend Roly Brown, with his wife
Marian, aboard Tropic Isle just south of Shearwater, and as we held the two
boats together while floating around, we had a nice gam for a few minutes.
Tropic Isle with Roly and Marian. |
So, the remaining voyage details: we left Shearwater and made tracks to revisit Green Island Anchorage off Fitzhugh Sound, one of our favorite spots.
Here comes the fog! |
Although there were three other boats at anchor in the main cove, our narrow little side slough was free and we spent a peaceful night. Even after a stay in a small remote marina these days, I find myself aching to get back to anchor. We also realize the value of cruising out of season, because back in May, except for tugs with barges, there wasn’t another boat to be seen for days—maybe the weather’s not as good then, but you sure find the solitude a lot easier. Shhh, don’t tell anyone.
At breakfast, watching Jim dip a Pop Tart in his coffee:
Me: “I wish I had something easy like that.”
“You could learn to like them.”
“They taste like gourmet cardboard.”
“A bite here, a bite there, I think you'd like them if you tried.”
“You mean, that’s the same Pop Tart you had a few days ago?”
“No, but they actually taste amazingly good when they're stale.”
This from a man who
won’t eat bread that’s more than a few days old.
Since the next day was the best forecast of the coming week,
we decided to go for it, and rounded Cape Caution, where swells from the Pacific
gave way to a chop that wasn’t pleasant but was a lot better than the wind that
was coming.
And the fog, oh my.
Jim has never actually seen Cape Caution in all the times he’s rounded it. I
saw it once, about 17 years ago.
Jim: “This fog looks like we’re in a bell jar.”
Me: “So, we’re in like, a little maritime terrarium?”
Later: “Lotta logs out here in this fog, you gotta keep a
sharp eye out. Where do you suppose they’re all coming from?”
“Trees?”
The multitudes of rhinoceros auklets (a small seabird with a
punk-rock look) flying, landing, diving and just hangin’ with their homies in
the fog was a pleasure to watch.
Rhinoceros auklet. Credit: Planet of Birds. |
And then the fog cleared as we entered Queen Charlotte Strait. Off McEwan Rock a whale surfaced less than 100 feet from us; the seas calmed, the wind went aft, and for a short time it was an easy-weather day.
When you see a couple hundred excited birds of several
species circling low over the water, (we call this a bird-nado) watch, because
something interesting’s bound to happen. Sure enough, there were whales
feeding. Five more whale sightings, we think all humpbacks, brought this day’s
total to six. Then the tide changed, the wind increased and the seas stood up—this
was Queen Charlotte Strait after all, whose tides can run at four-plus knots
and which funnels daily gales into Johnstone Strait, so as the seas rose we decided
to bail out at Blunden Harbor on the mainland side instead of going to a nice-looking
spot in the Pearse Islands near Alert Bay to anchor. Glad we did, because just
as we entered lovely snug Blunden and dropped the hook, it began to blow pretty
hard, maybe 30 knots. And even with cutting the journey short, it was still a
74-mile day, which for a small boat is pretty good.
We don’t have an
anemometer, so we just estimate the wind speed, and the way it works is: as
soon as we notice ourselves getting uncomfortable and starting to worry a bit,
it’s time for Plan B. The threshold for concern is a little lower on Raven than
it was for Sockdolager, but Raven still took some pretty impressive seas with
aplomb on this voyage. Sockdolager, by the way, has been renamed “Ouzel” (a
nifty water bird) and was in these same waters with her new owner, preparing
for a solo offshore sail down the west coast of Vancouver Island. Go Chris! We
didn’t have cell signals and couldn’t arrange a rendezvous, but look forward to
meeting up with Chris and Lisa soon.
There were a lot of interesting clouds before the front came through. Claydon Harbor, Broughtons. |
Johnstone Strait’s
forecast wasn’t sounding like much fun, and because we’d heard there was a
fishing opener happening soon, we detoured into the Broughton Islands’ watery
maze to a nice bay called Claydon Harbor.
Ruins in Claydon Harbor. |
The cruising guide urges you to anchor in a small arm in its north corner, and sure enough that’s where at least six boats had crammed together, leaving the entire western bay free for our anchoring pleasure. There was a thunderstorm in the night, an occurrence so unusual in these parts that seeing the lightning flash through my eyelids, I recall thinking sleepily, we must tape over whatever instrument light bulb is malfunctioning, it’s really annoying! Then the thunder boomed. Oh wow. But the wind behaved and a good night’s sleep was had by all.
With all the rain that falls (this is a rainforest) Nature takes manmade structures back pretty fast. |
Later, underway, a look at the chart: “Oooh, there’s Mistake
Island!”
“Are you sure that’s right?”
The beautiful Broughtons. |
Gale warnings continued in Johnstone Strait, so Raven wandered up and down channels in easy weather through the Broughtons, to the very hospitable and tiny Kwatsi Bay Marina (we wanted to try one more remote marina) which is truly in the middle of nowhere. The owners and some cruisers who’ve been coming there for decades held their regular BYOB happy hour with snacks on a covered dock—very pleasant. The marina’s for sale, in case you’re interested…
Exiting the Broughtons, you see ranges posted here and
there, beacons for keeping you on course. As we passed one, Jim pointed: You
see that? You could put a floating home right there.”
“But that’d be a lousy place for a floating home, it’s
exposed…”
Yeah, but then you’d have a home on the range.”
*Groan*
Home on the range, nyuk, nyuk. |
Expecting favorable
currents back in Johnstone Strait the next day, we were
surprised that it was adverse, until POW! Near Helmcken Island, we got 9 to 12
knots of boat speed for the next ten miles, woot!
Dall’s porpoises frolicked in the current and some standing
waves off Tyee Point and weren’t the least bit interested in the King and Queen
of Slow’s bow wave. Raven’s economical 20-hp Yanmar pushes her at 5.5 to 6
knots, so in these currents we almost needed seat belts as the shoreline flew
past. There was a 6+ knot current in some places, with boils and whirlpools
that required careful hand-steering.
Small whirlpool close up, Johnstone Strait. |
We try to avoid whirlpools whenever possible. Okay, that’s a
bizarre thing to say, but when you hit a small one, it knocks you
off course, and when you hit a big one it causes your boat to lean over as you
sway off course. The harder the flow and the bigger the whirlpool, the further
you lean over when it grips your boat. Here are some whirlpool photos. They
don’t look like a big deal, but they are.
Small-ish whirlpool. |
Medium whirlpool. |
Big, herkin' whirlpool. |
In places where whirlpools and boils are truly dangerous, large ships
have sunk, so in the backs of our minds was some worry about the turbulence at
the fearsome Seymour Narrows down the way, where currents can get to 16+ knots
at spring tides, and 19 knots is not unheard of. In fact, it's one of the most turbulent bodies of navigable water in the world. Here’s a video of a big boat bucking a 10-knot ebb in
Seymour Narrows. Remember when watching this that currents can get to nearly twice this speed!
We were a little nervous, because coming up was a big spring
tide. The cruising guide said to plan your transit of Seymour for times when
there isn’t a spring tide, and the tide table said currents in the Narrows were
14 to 15 knots that week, (plus, one of the cruisers at Kwatsi Bay said he’d
once missed the tide and took his little 10-knot powerboat through at 23 knots,
something he said he never wanted to do again,) so timing the passage for slack
water, however little time it might last, would be crucial.
The amount of smoke filling the air was also startling.
Whole mountains dissolved into what we realized wasn’t mist, but smoke from
dozens of wildfires burning in BC.
The mountains disappeared behind curtains of smoke that were thicker the higher in altitude they went. |
This was August 12, and we would have red-orb sunsets through dense smoke and would not see blue sky again until August 27.
Smoke makes for spectacular sunsets. Granite Bay, off Discovery Passage. |
We anchored in Granite Bay, a bomb-proof little cove off Kanish Bay next to Discovery Passage, and plotted out our transit of Seymour Narrows. The best thing is to approach it on the last of an adverse current, which we did next morning, in order to be ready to take advantage of the favorable current when the tide turned. In this part of Canada, the ebb runs north and the flood runs south—very confusing. There was a strong ebb to fight at first, 4 knots out in the middle of Discovery Passage, so the only way we could make any headway toward the Narrows was to sneak down the side of the channel about 50-100 feet off the shoreline, avoiding rocks. There was even a one knot counter-current in some places! A wide bay called Brown Cove, just up from Seymour Narrows, is a good place to wait for slack tide, and we decided to go there.
Me, at 9:00 am: “The cruising guide says southbound boats should arrive half
an hour ahead of slack tide when it’s as strong as this. Slack is at 1:15 pm. So
we should arrive at a quarter to one, what do you think?”
Jim: “How about eight?”
“Huh?”
Blank stare at horizon.
Me: “Um, Sweetie, didn’t you get enough sleep last night?”
“Oh,” he said, covering his gaffe, “I was thinking we could
time travel.”
“I get it. You’ve been reading too much sci-fi, haven’t you.”
We took two-hour watches at the helm. That felt just about right when navigating through narrow waters. |
One thing about being in wilderness in the e-book era: you get to read a lot of books. I have no idea how many we read, but Jim finished and went well beyond the entire Lawrence Block series of seventeen books and I lost track of the number I enjoyed, including two long tomes by David Foster Wallace (Consider the Lobster and A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again) and a thousand-page Michener epistle called “Alaska,” (which we both read) among who knows how many other books. Our friends John and Lisa gave us a copy of Passage to Juneau by Jonathan Raban at the dock as a parting gift in May; that is the fourth copy of this book I have owned, having lent out the other three to people who loved it so much they never returned them, and it’s just as good after multiple reads as it was the first time.
It’s kind of cool being able to read an online book review
when you get the rare one or two bars of cell signal in the middle of a place like Frederick
Sound, with not a shred of civilization in sight, and then saying, “I want to
read that book,” and then buying and downloading it right there before the cell
signal disappears. This is the happiest marriage of two unusual qualities: phone-free
wilderness, where you reclaim your once-fractured attention span, and the odd
brief cell signal, which allows you to download more books. Yessss! The bridesmaids at this wedding are
the two solar panels that let us recharge our ebook habit without having to run
the engine. (Oh, and also turning the fridge down to nuclear winter to keep the
fish frozen that Jim caught.)
The challenge, now that we’re home, will be to continue to
hang on to this reclaimed attention span.
Facing a fearsome
narrows is a good time to take a brief break and tell you something we
forgot to mention in the last blog post: Another bear story! During our stay In
Dodge Cove on Digby Island near Prince Rupert, we went for a hike, which we described
in the previous post. What we didn’t tell you about was the sign at the trail
entrance: CAUTION, it said, A GRIZZLY BEAR has been seen on Digby Island near
Point Elizabeth. It appears to be HANGING OUT IN THAT AREA.
Jim said, “Where’s Point Elizabeth?”
“I dunno, but this is a big island, it has to be in some
remote part, right?”
“Yeah, it couldn’t be around here, these folks would haze it
until it went away.”
“Yeah. It’s probably on the Hecate Strait side, I mean
there’s a city right over there,” I pointed to Prince Rupert’s shipping docks.
“Bears avoid stuff like that.”
“Yeah. Let’s keep going.”
There must have been four or five varieties of juicy, sweet ripe
berries along the trail network, and during our two-hour hike we gorged
ourselves until our fingers were red and purple and berry juice was running
down our chins and we smelled like a couple of berry tarts. “Let’s walk out to
the point over there,” we said, and found the trail ended in a tall pier across
the harbor from where Raven was docked. Oops, dead end, retrace steps, walk the
path again, back to town, we’re sitting on the porch drinking homemade wine
with the two fishermen who asked, “So did you see the bear?”
“No, it’s out at Point Elizabeth, right?”
“Yeah…?” Raised eyebrows.
“Um, where’s Point Elizabeth?”
“Right there,” they pointed at the pier we’d just been on.
*Gulp*
Just kidding. We met only friendly bears. Actually, we didn't meet any up close. Except by dinghy. That was close. |
Back to some drama at
Seymour Narrows. Just as we rounded Separation Point a small humpback whale
dived and showed its tail. Wow! In the past we’ve seen orcas but never
humpbacks here. This trip we saw no orcas in these waters. As soon as the right time arrived
to get going from Brown Cove toward the Narrows, two tugs and barges appeared,
going very slow and pretty much filling up the channel. We waited until they passed, then
fell in line well behind the second barge, which was stuffed full of logs hanging
thirty feet off each side and piled high.
Its tug seemed tiny in comparison, and I got a bad feeling,
so we dropped back, figuring missing slack tide was probably safer than
tangling with this barge, which was also far to port, on the wrong side of the
channel. We stayed on the starboard side. Then suddenly, the barge turned
sideways in the current; the tug struggled to straighten it out, and succeeded
after ten minutes, but then the barge turned sideways again; the tug
disappeared behind it and the barge was seized by some stray powerful whirlpool
because it shot sideways from east to west across Seymour Narrows like a
horizontal guillotine, completely out of control. And this was near slack tide!
The log barge gets sideways to its tug, a dangerous situation. |
Completely sideways and with the tug disappeared behind it, the log barge shoots across Seymour Narrows at high speed. |
We couldn’t see the tug, which was no doubt struggling.
Whirlpools and boils swirled ominously everywhere, but there was nothing we
could do; though we wanted to go faster, we had to creep along at two-plus
knots, keeping bare steerageway in order to stay away from this barge, which
had unintentionally commandeered the entire narrows less than a mile ahead of us. Fast boats could pass, but slower boats; no. Finally the
barge drifted slower and was pulled out of the main channel, but now we could
see that the tug was being pulled sideways by the barge, leaning way over as it struggled
with the tow lines. This is how tugs capsize, and it looked very close.
Thankfully and with the aid of a second tug, the little tug slowly came
upright. But if we had proceeded at normal speed through Seymour Narrows, it
would have been a close call with that barge; we would’ve been right in its
path when it shot across the channel.
Whew! Onward. A stop
in some very tight quarters at a marina in Campbell River; we wanted to see this
town because we’d never been there before, and it’s worth it. After a pub stop
at Dockside Fish & Chips (excellent) we were off early next morning to
catch a salmon off Cape Mudge. But with 35 to 40 fizzboats all trolling in a
small area, it felt chaotic and maybe time to give the salmon a break, so we
moved on without catching anything, anchoring in Mud Bay south of Comox. Skies
were still smoky but a little less so.
Smoky sunrise, 7:00 am. On our way to fish off Cape Mudge. |
Smoke particles were drawn up into the atmosphere, as high as seven miles. |
A wreck next to an oyster farm at Mud Bay. |
Off Qualicum Beach next day there were two humpback whales,
one large and one small. The large one enthusiastically slapped its tail for at
least ten minutes. Perhaps it was a mother and calf, with the mother slapping
the water to let the calf know where she was—there were a lot of fishing boats
trolling where they were feeding, and their engine noises may have bothered her.
While passing outside of the Canadian Navy’s restricted area
off the Winchelsea Islands, we were treated to an example of their superb
courtesy and humor, in comparison to the sometimes huffy, officious responses we’ve
witnessed from the American Navy. In an authentic you-get-more-flies-with-honey
approach, a Canadian Navy radio operator, talking above the audible noise of a military
helicopter towing sonar in the water looking for submarines, said to a boat
that wandered into active training operations, “Sir, you are in an active
torpedo range. A healthier course would be to make a sharp turn to starboard.” Healthier. Of course it is!
At Nanaimo we anchored and made a beeline for our beloved Dinghy Dock
Pub. This one is a strong contender for first place in the World’s Longest Pub
Crawl.
Dinghy Dock Pub, a fave. |
Next morning, Dodd Narrows,
far smaller and less fearsome than Seymour, but still plenty wide enough
for small cruising boats going in both directions, was like a freeway at rush
hour with no lanes.
Just a few of the boats headed for Dodd Narrows. Yikes! |
SECURITE SECURITE, THIS IS THE… UH, POWERBOAT… UH, WE’RE IN
DODD NARROWS…
SECURITE, SECURITE, THIS IS THE 42 FOOT TRAWLER SUN CHASER
(we had seen this boat; its swim ladder blocked part of the U and we thought it
said “Sin Chaser,” which we liked much better) WE ARE SECOND IN LINE, SOUTHBOUND,
REPEAT SOUTHBOUND, RIGHT BEHIND THE, UH, POWERBOAT… ANY CONCERNED TRAFFIC COME
BACK ON CHANNEL 16.
…WE ARE THIRD IN LINE, REPEAT, THIRD, ANY CONCERNED TRAFFIC…
FOURTH, FIFTH, etc. All the way to seven or eight or nine boats in line calling
in, clogging the airwaves, asking for concerned traffic. Yeesh. The radio
sounded like check-in time at nautical summer camp, this session being Maritime
Correctness on Caffeine meets Trivial Pursuit. All you need is to follow the
lead boat, and maybe call if you’re last in line to give the other side an idea
of how long the line is.
SECURITE SECURITE, SECURITE, THIS IS THE TWENTY FIVE FOOT
SAILING VESSEL BEEP-BEEP, BEEP-BEEP, BEEP-BEEP. (I swear to god, someone whose
boat was really named Beep-Beep said this that day.) WE ARE SIXTH IN LINE
BETWEEN (names boats) TRANSITING DODD NARROWS SOUTHBOUND. ANY CONCERNED TRAFFIC
COME BACK ON CHANNEL 16.
“Well,” I said, “I’m concerned about climate change.”
“I wonder what it would be like if someone named their boat
‘Traffic’?”
“What if I did a meep-meep Roadrunner schtick in reply to
that guy?”
“Nah, better not.”
“Meep-meep!”
Raven enters Ladysmith Harbour to stay on a guest mooring. |
At Ladysmith we stopped for a nice visit with our friends
Marty and Mae, and they arranged for us to stay on a guest mooring (Thanks
Wilf!) M&M had just bought a magnificent schooner and were sorting things
out as they moved aboard. It’s currently named Phillip William, but they will
soon change the name to Wind Gypsy.
The 42' LOD Brandlmeyer schooner Wind Gypsy. |
Oh my, what gorgeousness in every detail of this boat! We
are very happy for them.
Marty steers Wind Gypsy. |
They took us for a sail, and I got all nostalgic for sailing boats of this size and rig (I used to own a schooner way back).
A nice reach, one of a schooner's favorite points of sail. |
We were deck crew, helmspeople, and cabin top snoozers in
the sun.
K&J take a snooze on deck. |
And we were cookers of snapper and salmon in garlic butter
topped with toasted almonds and raspberry chipotle sauce.
Oh yeah, behbeh! Salmon (left) and snapper (right) all caught by Jim. Pan-sauteed in garlic butter and topped with toasted almonds and raspberry chipotle sauce. |
And consumers of the finest box wine. And some Bourbon.
Dinner on the ole Raven. |
We were big smilers and laughers who promised not to let too
much time pass before seeing each other again.
Four friends. |
The horse smelled the barn, and we were eager to get home. Once again we were looking for a weather window to cross the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It came two days later, to be followed by 25 knots of wind, so we went for it with a couple of long days and crossed on a glass-smooth sea, back to our beloved Port Townsend. As we entered the narrow channel into Boat Haven, there was Leif, Raven’s designer and builder, with his camera. And at the dock there was a big welcoming committee we hadn’t expected! Oscar, Carol, Leif, Anna, Peter, Denis, Gordon, and a little puppy named Indie. It was a wonderful welcome, with everyone grinning to beat the band. Home is a place, but also a feeling.
Da Gang waiting. Oscar waves us in. |
We are “of a certain
age” (and what’s so “certain” about it we don’t know) where most of us
worry about and freely discuss with our certain age peers our eyesight,
creaking joints, cholesterol, heart health, and the condition of other personal
items you don’t want to hear about. But one thing we are certain about is that
we love where we live. (As if to prove the point about eyesight, Autocorrect
changed ‘we love where we live’ to ‘we Lloyd where we live.’ If anyone knows
how to Lloyd where you live, please inform the makers of Autocorrect.) But I digress.
Although we come from an unhurried town where gentrification
and car culture are slowly oozing their way across its fair acres, you can
still walk miles of trails, some of which lead nowhere in particular except
into the woods, which is precisely the point in an age obsessed with always
going somewhere. It’s the shore-based version of the Slow August philosophy,
which will, I’m certain, one day be pedestaled up there as the Sixth Great
Philosophy of Life. The first five philosophies are: Epicureanism, Stoicism,
Platonism, Aristotelianism, and one more I forget but vaguely recall that it’s
grumpily incompatible with the five W’s, which are: wine, women, welshing,
wasting and woolgathering. Don’t worry, I wasn’t going to go all motivational
moment on you with the other five W’s of life, which are who, what, when, where
and why we’re all so special.
In small towns everywhere you could probably extend that
Slow August feeling into September, well into autumn, and even winter, though
at that point it might be Molasses January. The point is, as the Off Center
Harbor folks say, “Start off slow, then ease up.” When you slow down, you’ll
notice things more; the sense of appreciation seems to increase with a
proportional decrease in life speed. You end up actually spending more time
with yourself as well as with your
friends.
Take it from the King and Queen of Slow, this is the
antidote for a hopped-up, stressed-out world.
Boat Haven fairway, entering for the first time in nearly four months. Good to be home. |
I love the fact that
in our town we can still get a good breakfast at the local pharmacy’s
dining section while gazing across the aisle at shelves full of horehound
candy, Forever Comfy Gel (gel??), Lint Lizards, and a Potato Express. The
latter brings an image of a Lionel train set loaded with Idaho spuds going around
and around, to nowhere. But these are the kinds of things that make you pause
over your eggs and wonder, who spent their life’s energy inventing that? This
is a town where, at the Rose Theatre someone with note cards comes out before
the movie begins and tells behind-the-scenes stories about the making of the
movie you’re about to see, and then you clap for her and she says “Enjoy!” and
the movie starts.
It’s a town that, because it’s that good, you may need to leave every so often in order to feel the
homesickness and remember how much you belong, how much you’re going to
appreciate it when you get home. It’s home, and home goes just as well with
Slow August as away does.
“No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he
comes home and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow.” –Lin Yutang
Start off slow, then ease up. |