Showing posts with label boating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boating. Show all posts

Monday, September 07, 2015

Rainy Labor Day weekend adventures

Paddling back toward Tybee Island
Rain and storms continue here along the Southeastern seaboard and have played havoc with my plans to enjoy the long Labor Day weekend.  On Friday, which I took off, I planned to paddle around Little Tybee Island, but after paddling about a 1/3 of the way around it, the rumbling began.  Clouds were building in the west and the rumble was becoming louder, so I turned around and paddled back to Tybee Island and my car.  The storm ended up staying inland and although I saw a few bolts of lightning, they were all well to the west.  Driving back home, I got to drive through the storm.  Below are a few photos from this trip: 
My boat on Little Tybee

Marsh seen on Little Tybee

The building storm (to left)

Beach erosion around north end of Little Tybee

Building storm as I paddle back across the channel

The lead boat after the second race
Photo inspired by a Winslow Homer painting
Yesterday afternoon, we decided to see if we could get a couple of short races in before a series of storms moved into the area.   Joe, Duane and I sailed well despite the mishap on the first race.  The wind was shifty and instead of crossing at close-haul, we were on a reach.  If this had been a competitive race, we would have protested as we were closed out at the starting gate by a windward boat who did not give us room (if there is an overlap, they are required to give room).  At the last minute, we had to back off and not only did we hit the pin but because of a strong tide that was pulling the pin from its anchor, our rudder became tangled in the anchor line.  We pulled the rudder off the back of the boat and freed the line.  That was the easy part.  It took Joe and I a good five minutes to reattach the tiller as the water was really choppy, combined with strong shifty winds and a heavy tide.  I am not sure why we didn’t secure the boom.  The boat, without the rudder, continued going in circles (we did several 360s in trying to get the rudder reattached).  Once it was reattached, I stood up just as the boat jibed and was pounded by the boom which hit me beside the head.  I had a headache the rest of the day.  The good news is that even though we were well behind once we were underway, we caught up with the rest of the boats at the leeward mark after a flawless spinnaker run.  In the second race, we easily took second as a series of squalls moved through with pounding rain.  Those on the committee boat decided that was enough and we all headed in, soaking wet.   I wouldn’t have been any wetter if that boom had knocked me out of the boat. 

A kayak trailer?
Two guys heading out for a weekend camping/fishing trip on Little Tybee


Now it’s Labor Day and the rumble of thunder has been heard since early this morning.  I think I’ll spend the day resting, reading some, and maybe taking in a movie or watching some tennis.  I don’t think I’ll try to go back out on the water…

Friday, August 14, 2015

Wednesday evening sail was blessed with a rainbow (and a preceding storm)

A driving rain
We took a chance Wednesday afternoon and sailed over to the Savannah Yacht Club for their evening race that involves all categories of boats.  The forecast had called for 6-8 knot winds which would have given our boat a bit of an advantage.  With the tide running with us, we made the five mile trek in 45 minutes and was there in time for the start of the race.  The only other time I did this, we arrived well after our start time and although we did the course, we were never in the race.  This time, it was only slightly better as we were confused with the course and almost missed a pin…  It was a learning experience.  Tacking in a downpour adds another danger as the foot of the sail held a lot of water and when we heaved over to the new tack much of that water poured down my back as I adjusted the jib. 
Right after I received a shower

Photo by Chris

Joe, at the helm during the rain

But what a time we had!  It took is nearly 1 ½ to run the course.  We had everything from pleasant but slow sailing (what we thought we’d have), squalls that almost knocked the boat down, downpours that totally soaked us, and dead calm in which we watched a mark get further away as the tide swept us upstream from our mark.  Add in a few dozen (or a hundred) porpoises playing in the water, sailing within feet of a boat named “Lightning Rod” during a thunderstorm, an incredible rainbow that followed the storm, and lightning that thankfully stayed mostly a good distance away.  On the downwind leg home, we had a great spinnaker run until we were about a half a mile from the finish and the wind died...  
Chris

The rainbow
After a “happy hour” at the club, another boat from Skidaway towed us back home in the dark.  We kept looking through the cloudy skies for meteors, but were not blessed to see any.  I got home at 10 pm, took a shower and put on dry clothes!  
Waiting for wind (It did return with a vengeance
only to die as we approached the finish line)

Monday, May 25, 2015

Talking about the weather a few other things with some photos added for good measure...

Saturday: trying not to be passed
The weather has been near perfect the past few days.  After already having a week of hot weather (well over 90 degrees F) with high humidity, the highs have only been in the low eighties.  The humid is still high, but not at the 90% range, and the wind has provided a steady breeze.  The trees are most lovely when their tops sway in a 15-20 knot wind.  It is warm enough that the sand gnats are not a problem and windy enough that mosquitoes and other biting flies are grounded.  At night, it cools off and with the moon still in an early stage of waxing, the summer constellations are out.  We have had some purely magical sunsets.  Several days ago, I was leaving the island right after the sunset and while crossing the causeway, the marsh was all golden pink color.  As I was driving and in a hurry (and without a camera), I didn’t have time to find a place to pull over and snap a photo, but it look liked something Pat Conroy would describe.  Last night, while walking the dog, I took a photo of the sunset from my iphone, (which has a pretty nice camera for a phone).
Saturday evening sunset
Dennis adjusting the jib
We just can't quite catch up as we try to steal their air...

I have been sailing almost once a week.  The sail club regularly mixes up teams and boats (there are nine Rhodes 19 boats).  Some of the boats are better than others (especially since about half the boats have newer sails).  It seems that the boats I’ve been on recently have all been ones with older sails that have lost their crispness.  It is a little frustrating when on a beat and you are always tailing a boat that can point higher than you, but there is some satisfaction about giving them a run for their money.   Besides, there is pleasure just being on the water.


Going up...
I am in the second phase of my training as a volunteer fireman.  As I noted a few months ago, I became a basic fireman in February and am now studying and practicing to become a panel operator.  This will allow me to drive and operate the trucks.  Although this position will keep me further away from the fire, it's probably good because my diabetes (with the possibilities of low blood sugars) could make me a liability to others if I was inside a building on fire.  We've not had any major fires since I've been in the department, but last week as the heat was breaking, we had several homes struck by lightning but thankfully none of them caught fire, only experiencing electrical damage.  Here is a photo of me learning to operate our ladder truck.  I still get kicks from heights!


Enjoy a few more photos of Saturday's sail…  In this race I snapped the shots, I wasn't on the helm or jib and we were not flying a spinnaker and my main role was to lean over the windward side to provide stability providing me time to snap a few shots. 
Have a great week!

Thursday, May 02, 2013

A Day on the Cape Fear and Town Creek (A Photo Essay)


Town Creek

Turning a bend, we notice a large dark log floating near the south bank.  We’re still a ways away when it rolls and disappears, leaving a swirl in the black water.  It was an alligator, but I wasn’t quick enough with the camera to catch him.  I’ve seen gators before on Town Creek, but was surprised to see one so early in the year.  According to the boat’s depth finder, the water temperature is on in the low sixties, which I would have thought to be too cool for alligators, but it must not be as we see a half dozen more before the trip is over.  

An alligator going under
It’s the second Monday in April and my father had arranged for my mother to be in daycare so we head out for some fishing, but the winds are too strong to head offshore.  Instead of running out the inlet, he suggests we explore Town Creek.  I enthusiastically agree.  Growing up in this area, I’d paddled all of Town Creek in canoes and kayaks, some 32 miles of it from the upstream headwaters where one has to continually pull over logs to its wide mouth into the Cape Fear River.   It had been one of my favorite creeks to paddle as a teenager.  Today, we’ll only be able to get maybe a quarter of that distance upstream in my father’s boat, but with a 70 horsepower four-stroke engine, it’ll be a pleasant trip. 


View from the helm


We take off from the wildlife ramp the north end of Carolina Beach and race through Snow’s Cut, a channel of the Intracoastal Waterway that links Myrtle Grove Sound to the Cape Fear River and provides a safe passage for boats (and the very occasional barge) down the eastern seaboard.   Of course, there is seldom snow here.  The channel is named from the Army Corp of Engineer project manager who oversaw the project back in the 30s.  

Coming out of Snow’s Cut, the river is wide.  We cut north and soon find ourselves poking around trying to find deep enough water as we make our way to the main shipping channel.  At first, it’s tricky as shoals extend well out into the river (the dredged channel is on the other side of an island, a mile or more by the way the cross flies.  Soon, we’re back in deep water and are able to run wide open.  When we reach the main shipping channel, we head north toward our destination.  In the far distance, the container cranes at the State Ports loom high.   Over the years, they’ve had to continually deepen the channel as ships have become larger and larger.  Now that the Panama Canal is being enlarged, there is now a proposal to build a new port closer to the inlet so that the newer super cargo ships, which can’t turn around in the narrower port upstream, can unload.  It will also require that the river be dug another 15 feet deeper.  Each time it’s been dug deeper, salt water moves further upsteam on high tides.  On Saturday, when I was with my brother, he was telling me how his company had to build a large holding pond for fresh water that would allow them not to draw from the river when the saline content was too high.  Wilmington was built so far upstream so that sailing ships would have a good source of fresh water.  Today, the city draws it water thirty miles further upstream.  Progress always comes with a price.  

At the north end of Campbell Island, we leave the river and head toward the west bank and the mouth of Town Creek.  We soon find ourselves in shallow water and at places have to tilt the motor up and run slowly.  But when we reach the mouth of the creek, the water depth drops significantly and we’re soon running in 20 feet of water.  We head up the creek for a number of miles and the water is at least 12 feet deep, and most times it’s a lot deeper with many holes dropping off to nearly 30 feet.   



Dying cypress

From the settling of the area until the Civil War, rice was raised from the mouth of the creek inland for a few miles and today, we can still see remains of wooden dams that once backed up the water in the side creeks to flood the lowlands.  Such agriculture was labor intensive and done mostly by slaves.  After the Civil War, rice produce disappeared.  The lower part of Town Creek is mostly grassland and home today to gators and snakes.  Dad cuts the motor as we approach a guy fishing, his boat tied off to an old piling.  We wave as we slowly putt by, and then pick up speed.  Town Creek continually curves back on itself and we make one S turn after another. 

NC 133 Bridge

As we approach the 133 bridge, the old rice fields become fewer and there is more cypress, but they are dying.  Salt water often moves up into this part of the river, killing the cypress.  Dad’s concern about going under the bridge, but when I pull the antennae down, there is a good three feet between the boat’s T-top and the bottom of the bridge and the tide is falling.   We have no plans on being upstream six hours from now at high tide.


Osprey Nest

On the other side of the bridge, the creek becomes narrower, but is still deep and curvy.  A few miles from the bridge, we spot and osprey nest in the top of an old cypress.  As we get closer, an osprey stands up in the nest and spreads her wing in a threatening manner.  We continue to approach and she dives off the nest and cries, her talons extended, as she swoops down toward us.  I move under the T-top just in case, but she keeps her distance and begins to climb, flapping her wings and continuing to cry as she circles her nest and we make our way past.  An hour later, as we head back toward the river, she repeats the show. 



Dock at Brunswick County Park
We stop at the Brunswick County Park.  Two women in kayaks are taking out at the park as we approach.  This park wasn’t here when I was paddling these waters and they seemed shocked when I spoke about paddling far upstream.  I get out of the boat for a bit and walk around, looking at the wild azaleas growing on the bank.   Before heading off, my dad digs down in one of his boxes and pulls out a can of sardines and another of Vienna sausages, along with some crackers.  That, along with some fruit in our cooler, is lunch.

One of the many canals dug for rice production


Coming out, we run a little faster as the tide is still falling and we’ve explored enough.  However, we do catch a glimpse of a number of gators taking advantage of the warmth and sun as they slid off the bank and into the water.  We’d only seen the one when we motored upstream.  As expected, the wind has picked up and is blowing hard from the south.  When we get back into the river channel, the wind is blowing against the tide and the waves are building.  We pound our way downriver, being sprayed with water each time the boat crashes through a wave.  As soon as we make the turn into Snow’s Cut, the water calms and we fly through the cut and back to the marina.  
On the Cape Fear