Waggoner's June1st Flotilla to Ketchikan

walldog

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 24, 2009
Messages
1,292
Fluid Motion Model
C-302 C
Hull Identification Number
R3136
Vessel Name
Willie's Tug (2014)
MMSI Number
367606080
I have heard from Anne (Casscadia) and Sam Landsman (Retriever). They have visited Ganges, traversed Dodd Narrows to Nanaimo, cross the Strait of Georgia, and are now bobbing peacefully in garden Bay. Quite windy along their path so far, but all have faired well. I started this thread to update those who are interested. If anyone has information on this or the other two flotillas, feel free to post here.

Herb,
 
The following are Anne's accounting of their trip so far to Alaska. I thought others would enjoy reading it. We wish Anne and all the other safe passage.

David


Departure Day is here! I am very delighted to be casting off with new friends, heading north to Alaska.

After checking the oil, the transmission fluid and emptying out the sea strainer yet again of eel grass, it was time to head up to the showers.

Not long after I returned, friends came by to see us off and take a few photos.

I first met them in 2011 at Sucia Island while enjoying the San Juan Islands islands on my C-Dory boat. Nita and Bob have a green 29' Ranger Tug and hosted me to a delicious dinner aboard.

It was not long before Bob invited me to come along on the first Ranger Tug cruise to Desolation Sound, and that was the beginning of a new chapter in my life.

Ten couples and several kids and teens on Ranger Tugs, along with me on the smaller C-Dory, had a wonderful time in this beautiful and peaceful playground of forested islands and coves filled with wonderfully warm ocean water.

Seeing new places to visit by power boat, especially when the entire journey on the sea appeared like a series of postcards, full of summer sunshine, with deep green forests and mountains, tiny inlets and bays, all opened my eyes to a possible new lifestyle. Now that I had boated to Desolation Sound, I wanted to keep exploring further north.

The light-filled home, with lots of books and large nature photographs, became someone else's, and I have begun year 3 aboard a beautiful green Ranger Tug. With so many places to visit along the NW Inside Passage, I hope 3 months will be a down payment on more explorations!

Current artwork is courtesy of grandchildren Colin and Sierra, and Ali and Ashley.

Cascadia carries lots of books, and I enjoy reading inside in the shade after driving many hours on the sunny water.

Today, after a bit of engine overheating on Cascadia, I figured it out and we boated to Ganges Harbor on Saltspring Island for out first night out.

Tomorrow we go to Nanaimo, on Vancouver Island. We will time our passage through Dodd Narrows to go at slack, especially for our newbies.

Anne, loving every minute of this first day, moving northward to Alaska!

Day's Two and Three

This year I have joined with 13 others on 6 boats to travel 750 miles together from Anacortes, WA to Ketchikan, Alaska, over a period of three weeks.

About 700 of those miles are in BC, one of my favorite places to visit. Boaters can travel for hundreds of miles along this coastline, including a maze of islands and peninsulas, and visiting tiny villages to world class cities, such as Vancouver, BC.

The forecast for Tuesday is for more wind until at least Friday, so we will tentatively be setting off at 5 am, trying to catch a bit of a break before the air heats up and the waves increase in size.

If you look at a map of the coast of BC, the body of water between Vancouver Island and the mainland is the Strait of Georgia, a large body of water that often has very strong winds. The winds may begin the morning from the north and in the afternoon change to the south, either of which can pin boats down till the weather changes.

We seem to have high pressure, which apparently means winds from the north. It is very windy now at 10:30 pm and will be challenging to sleep with the boat rocking, the fenders rubbing loudly and the wind gusting.

I wonder what tomorrow will be like?

TUESDAY JUNE 3

The alarm went off at 4:15 am, and although the wind was blowing, it was quieter than at 11:00 pm and 12:00 am, or else I was so sleepy I didn't notice.

Three boats left about 4:45 am and got pounded, but they also were driving faster than our second group. They arrived by 8 am. Apparently they had water over their bows, even the 58' Ocean Alexander. The 28' Cutwater came through it better than the 48' or the 58' it seemed, listening to them.

The sailboat, 37' Nordic Tug, 22' C-Dory and my 29' Ranger Tug left at 6 ish and we arrived about 11:30. The wind had dropped and we went slower, plus took a longer route.

My boat had spray over the windows most of the time for the first 3 hours. When we turned east, we were sideways to the waves, which produces rocking. Nothing was dangerous, but if a person had a mechanical problem and needed to stop in the water it would be tiresome at the least!

The 45' Beneteau sailboat with the 3 fellows from Texas motored today for some reason. That boat, with lots of low weight, or ballast, appeared totally non-plussed with the wind and waves.

Comfortably nestled in a peaceful bay, we are seeing and hearing eagles, relaxing and enjoying another warm day and cool evening.

Tomorrow we may or may not get to Desolation Sound. The winds are forecast to be 20-25 knots, nose on, as boaters say.

Driving straight into waves that may be somewhat large, that may be close together, is tiring and the boats can pound the water, depending on the size and spacing. If that turns out to be the case, we will stay in the very protected Pender Cove.

After we leave here we may not have Wifi as much, naturally as we get more remote.

The 3 docks we have stayed at have only US tourists, currently. We see a few fishermen around and when I hear them in passing they tend to be talking about engine problems with their older boats, and shorter fishing seasons.

I am sitting in a little pub writing and hear a bit of the locals coming in and talking. We are living in alternate universes. I am curious if this will be the norm for this trip.

Undoubtedly we will stop at First Nations spots for fuel once in awhile and it will be even more different.

Cascadia has only burned 50 gallons getting here, thanks to traveling at an average of 6-8 knots. I am getting used to that speed faster than expected!

Anne, listening to eagles in Pender Bay on the mainland of BC.
 
Anne's latest update!

This is a beautiful park, covered with trees and views in the distance of snow capped mountains with snow fields very high up. The wind chill there must be fierce!

The boat ride today was @ 51 miles, and we were going into the wind most of the day, burning quite a bit of fossil fuel and collecting an amazing amount of salt on the boat. There are fewer boats out as we are now away from towns of much size, although our largest boat is in Powell River today and part of tomorrow awaiting a hydraulic fuel hose to arrive and be installed.

After arriving mid afternoon I used a bucket of fresh water which I kept changing and rinsing the windows, then used a squeegee to dry them.

Previously I washed them with morning dew and then dried them with the bright towels, but this time I was determined to have really clean windows. It took 4 passes till satisfactory, but tomorrow there may not be much wind as we wind through the islands so we will keep clean windows.

The best window cleaners I know of are Joe and Ruth who are C-Brats and Tugnuts, and David Baker, although I am sure most boaters have a good system. The views here are so beautiful that it is worth the effort to clean them.

For my non-boater friends who have emailed concerns about constant spray over the windows and wind, no need to worry. This is very different than being on fast-moving crowded freeways. We move quite slowly and have few other boats even in sight. Cascadia is an excellent boat, this is not dangerous weather nor are we going out on the open ocean. The bigger winds did not materialize, so we continue on.

It is enjoyable to be learning more boating knowledge each day, and to have radio communication available, as needed. Learning by doing, including making mistakes, surely is more enjoyable for me than reading manuals.

Another boat and I stopped midday at Lund and purchased fuel. I stayed longer and visited an excellent art studio, watching the owner working on a piece of stone as well as marveled at the work of many other artists.

It always amazes me to watch someone create a beautiful item from rock, wood, wool, or another natural product.

(It also amazes me when someone can diagnose and repair an item on the engine/many systems on our boats!)

I tried again to reach a tech through wifi in Lund to find out more about using my DeLorme InReach, a communication system somewhat like SPOT, yet allows one to send and receive texts as well as leave a trail each day, sent through satellite. Naturally I should have figured it out before leaving, but got stuck part way through and now it is much tougher connecting to clarify the last 2 steps. Getting help requires cell service and/or a callback, neither of which seem to be happening together.

Another lesson to remember...it is not so easy to pick up the phone and wait for a live customer service rep up here, nor to find fast wifi. Not a big deal, just a flashback to a few decades.

Today for the first time I used the heater that warms the cabin from the heat of the engine while running. I have often run the wonderful Webasto overnight, and very early this morning was happy to have warm air on my cold feet as a by-product of this big engine chugging along.

Tomorrow we have three sets of rapids to traverse, so will be departing at 5:30 am in order to pass through them, beginning with the least challenging. We will be going through close to slack, when the water is briefly changing flow from one direction to the other.

This route is the one smaller boats apparently use the most, to limit the travel time in Johnstone Straits going to and returning from areas north of here.

We have all been briefed. Dent Rapids are the last and biggest, so we are focused on being there to pass at the very easiest time.

Another fun day to look forward to while "swinging on the hook," overnight. The depth here is 42 ft. in this protected area and I have 100 ft. of 5/8 chain followed by 50 ft. of line out and we are "holding" as boaters say.

Swinging gently "on the hook," as boaters say.

Anne
 
Thanks all for posting Anne's notes about her trip up to Alaska. It makes interesting reading and of course I'm envious as I really wanted to make this cruise as well, but other things just persisted in getting in my way.

Take care Anne.
 
Yes, I second Barry's comments. I am really enjoying Anne's postings. I'm envious too, and would love to be making the same trip. But it is a gift to have Anne share the experience in such descriptive and entertaining detail. I plan to follow the entire trip through these accounts. Thanks Anne!

Gini
 
The next adventure of Anne's trip to Alaska. What is amazing is she is typing all of this on her iPhone!

David


We are spending three nights at family marinas now, which is enjoyable and interesting.

The marinas are small, and three generations seem to be working at two of them, although here at Port Hardy the grandkids are too young, (4 and 7 months.)

These families work very hard, love the land and sea, and are most hospitable, greeting us at the dock, running a little store, and serving dinner in a small restaurant area here, above the small store.

As the season becomes busier, the families run their small restaurants with a dinner choice of maybe 3 items (last night) and one, tonight. In July and August some host pig roasts, lamb roasts, etc. with boaters bringing potluck dishes.

I am unclear how they pay the bills with a season less than three months long; some apparently work elsewhere during part of the year, and the owners here purchased this land a decade ago, probably after other careers, and are building this up year by year.

Many of the visiting boats, almost all from the US, want to plug into shore power and have hot showers available. So the owners run their own generators to service the docks and the showers. Last evening shore power was $18.00 and a shower was $5.25. Apparently that is typical in these quite remote little 2 pier marinas. In the first two "large" towns we were in on Vancouver Island the shore power was closer to $5.00 and showers $1-$2.00 because of municipal utilities, I imagine.

At the Blind Channel Marina I noticed a sturdy wooden Canadian boat, with herbs growing on the deck, and an older woman preparing what looked like a very thin crepe that she topped very carefully with what looked like it might be ground sausage, berries and an exotic looking cream cheese, I believe. Then she rolled it and topped that with a bit of mint, perhaps... It looked beautiful as well as delicious, like something Michelle, my daughter-in-law, would make.

Tonight, at Port Harvey, the grandparents of the family made custom pizzas that were delicious, and 4 year old Signe danced for us in her pretty purple dress and red dancing slippers, with her strawberry blond curls bobbing happily.

If you look at a map/chart we are a couple of miles east of the often windy Johnstone Straits. We traveled extra miles today again to stay in various channels, so only spent 17 miles in the Straits and tomorrow will also take back waterways into the area called The Broughtons.

Some American boaters spend a good chunk of the summer in this maise of remote water trails, visiting these small marinas and living on their boats. It is almost a rainforest area, so sometimes the weather causes boaters to go back south to the "Sunshine Coast" where it is drier.

Since we are going up north to Alaska, we will spend one more night in this area then once again traverse the Straits to reach Port McNeil on Vancouver Island. There we will fuel up our boats as needed, visit the grocery store and I may purchase several Canadian charts if I find them.

If the electronics would go out on this boat, (which I doubt, because I use 2 separate power sources and 2 different chart programs) I am realizing how challenging it would be to make one's way through all these passages apart from the main route, Johnstone Straits, which is almost always windy, and 15 knots is probably close to normal, either from the NW or SE.

The "back water routes" will be challenging to recall without either electronic charts, which I find very helpful with added information and updates, or paper charts with lots of small scale details like rocks, weeds, etc.

Getting to Alaska on a 29' boat is quite the adventure and now after 6 days often with whitecaps, I am ready to stop after 6-8 hours of driving as well as very willing to travel at a 6 to 8 knot pace when it is choppy.

Goodnight from a peace-filled small marina in BC, and under a dark sky covered with clouds.

Anne Cox
 
Thanks.... I'd like to understand how Anne's postings get transmitted from her iPhone to this thread. Is she somehow sending her iPhone typed messages to David who then copies and pastes them here for us ? I'm intrigued.... 😉
 
baz":2abl9xoh said:
Thanks.... I'd like to understand how Anne's postings get transmitted from her iPhone to this thread. Is she somehow sending her iPhone typed messages to David who then copies and pastes them here for us ? I'm intrigued.... 😉
Simple emails.

Anne has a group of us that she emails updates.

David has chosen (Thanks) to post them here.
 
OK... then Anne has Cell tower communication or a link to someone in her cruising group who does have ability to pass along her postings to your Email accounts. Thanks.... 🙂
 
We are today in Echo Cove. All is well and so far the trip has been spectacular weather and outstanding moorings.

Ronald from The Sharon Lee
 
Anne's Latest!

Today we have enjoyed a slow and gentle water journey through an island world of very deep waterways, with the current depth reading 1140 feet underneath the boat, while I am gazing up steep green hillsides reaching higher and higher.

Awhile later...

The snow covered peaks are on both shores and in the foreground, peeking in and out of the clouds, standing strong and reassuring as Cascadia glides along peacefully at 7 knots, burning only 1.5 gallons an hour thanks to a rising tide and no wind at the moment.

One of the unexpected joys of this trip has been enjoying wonderful music on the sound system thanks to son Brian and friends Bob and Nita of Nellie II. They copied some of my records and thrift store CDs onto the computer and then copied them onto an iPod.

From Enya to Bocelli, Chopin to Copeland, the sounds blend with the tall waterfalls, rinsing away so much mental mishmash.

So far this journey has provided many fun times these first 7 days and required periods of real focus in the winds, busy waterways and around docks. Today is providing peaceful water and weather, and mellow hours of easy enjoyment.

The weather is cool, clouds are catching the mountain tops, with sunshine sometimes direct, sometimes indirect.

Forty-five minutes later and I am so relaxed I just looked up and noticed I am halfway past the turn into yet another channel. At the same time the Cutwater boat up ahead is making a sharp left turn.

This area is so vacant, yet so filled with beauty; so vast, yet so near as just now 3 small porpoises passed close by on the port side.

Quite a bit later the depth is showing 873 feet while we continue along amidst these tall and steep hillsides.

How is it that I experience such a feeling of intimacy in this Temple Wilderness?

After driving 5 hours, our three boats traveling slowly spoke on the marine radio about

stopping at Lacy Falls and taking photos of each other's boats there with the waterfalls in the background. We had just gathered up and were taking photos when suddenly a call came over Channel 68, which our group uses on this trip. The Texan fellows, motoring on the 45' sailboat, were out of fuel. Apparently the gauge is incorrect.

Leader Sam Landsman jumped into action as his trip partner Kevin Monahan confirmed the boaters were ok, asked for and received the exact latitude and longitude and sized up the situation.

Sam, meanwhile, confirmed that Ron was carrying extra yellow jugs of diesel fuel and asked for one to be ready for him as he got into his dinghy and zipped over. Just like that Sam was quickly headed to the sailboat in his speedy dinghy. Soon they were motoring again and Sam quickly returned and climbed aboard his Nordic Tug, problem resolved! How nice this happened today rather than one of the more hectic times!

The two largest boats and the smallest boat had arrived much earlier at Pierre's Marina in Echo Bay and seemed happy to finally see us, several hours later.

Pierre and a few others from his marina as well as folks from other BC marinas and Alaskan ports come south to the Seattle Boat Show at the end of January each year.

Every year at the Boat Show, where I always volunteer with the NW Women in Boating group, I find myself lingering in the area where BC and Alaska ports and marinas have their displays set up.

I still am in disbelief to actually be on this adventure, even after one full week! Every day brings new places to visit, meeting happy people living in these areas, and a wonderful joy as we wander about on these waterways.

We are finally in, and as usual I am tired, yet very mellow. It has warmed up and the low grey clouds of several hours have disappeared.

Perhaps those clouds will return and bring these vessels a well-deserved fresh water shower tonight.

Meanwhile, school is still in session and few boaters are out and about on their treks north. Therefore we do not get to enjoy the weekly Saturday nite pig roast, unfortunately. On the flip side, we had fresh crabs and a fine potluck.

Afterwards Nikki van Schyndel, who lives here in a cabin she built herself, told us stories from the year and a half she and a friend and her cat came to the area to live totally from the land and the sea, and how they almost starved in the beginning, then slowly grew in knowledge and skill, living very happily in this amazing area, a temperate rainforest of incredible beauty.

If interested in learning more, check out her website at becomingwild.com

Tomorrow we plan to leave at 8 am and will be listening to the weather station to check on wind speeds and direction as we leave this tranquil area and cross over to Vancouver Island again. When I wondered why we would not head north on the East side where we are, I learned there are several reasons.

There is no place to provision for the next 4-5 days or so, no place for all 7 boats to fuel up, and finally, there are not very many places to duck out of the wind, apparently.
Boaters heading north usually wait for good weather at Port McNeil or Port Hardy, whether planning to go around Vancouver Island or heading on to Alaska.

Whatever the weather and situation, we will adapt as needed. That is what we do.

Anne Cox
 
Daily, I find myself looking forward to Anne's updates, and feeling vaguely disappointed if there is no news of the day's adventures. But then, the news comes, maybe distilling more than a day when it does. And I relish the reading! Thanks Anne! (if you don't see those responses right away, I know you will at some point).

Gini
 
Anne: Would it be possible for you to draw a course line on a map picture showing us where you've travelled ? I would find that very interesting. Thanks in advance. 🙂
 
Anne starts the Second Week of her grand adventure.

Barry, not sure how Anne would draw on a chart and then scan and email it. You might have to get a map out of your own and identify the places she has been.

David

This morning boats began leaving before 8 am and today's lesson, "How Not to Leave the Dock," was a wake-up call for those in the boat in front of Cascadia and for me!

My friends and I both were ready to leave the dock and apparently decided simultaneously it was time to back up and move out, without checking with each other.

In hindsight 2 cars in a driveway do not both go in reverse at the same time, but there we were, and it was an awkward "getaway" at best.

We were fortunate to have enough room to escape in the end, but we came too close to each other immediately, then again when trying to evade each other. Not how to depart and I am confident we learned a lesson today.

I have wondered how long will it take to acquire competency docking and departing, and wind strength and direction seem to be the regular challenges for me. Today it was new...our preventable error.

After both boats exited the marina, the rest of the 4 hours went very well, with amazingly CALM water across to Port McNeill.

We have been reminded to practice using our radar, and Kevin Monahan, a very experienced captain who has a lifetime of experience in BC boating and Canadian Coast Guard leadership, helped the two captains with the least experience and who needed some extra help. Hooray!

It was so helpful to have Kevin aboard today for awhile.
He asked how I chose the setup I was using and then explained which screens he chooses to watch on the Garmin Chartplotter and why. He uses the Nav Chart and Radar on a split screen, and at different scales. He matches them based on the topography, so the shorelines match, and I noticed that system was easier for me than the radar overlay I had been using previously.

I also changed my chart setup, under "appearance" to the "Head Up" orientation. I had experimented with "North Up" for 7 days, but switched back.

Since I have been using Navionics on the iPad for the past 7 days and that screen is only "North Up" I am now fine with that orientation, which fills in some areas I might miss on "Heads Up."

I was skeptical about having to watch the Garmin screen and all the extra info I want to keep track of, plus adding Navionics, but now am surprised at how I like having all the information so available, including watching screens with a different orientation, and zooming in on one yet not the other.

Tomorrow we be out of the marina before 5 am because we have our longest mileage day, 72, with @ 40 miles that is exposed to the Pacific. We also will be experiencing swells, which I recall being fun when kayaking, and we will possibly have some fog in the morning. We will be traveling as a group tomorrow rather than spread out for a number of miles like we have been. Also, as a group we are reminded to not get too close to another boat, and we may travel several miles off shore if the swells cause breaking waves that might rebound and create "confused" water.

In some areas we will be going through areas of islands rather than a route farther offshore in a large fetch that is a longer route. We have great leadership, our skills and knowledge are increasing and tomorrow is a day I have looked forward to for a very long time!

If you want to look on a map, we are currently at Port McNeill near the northeast top of Vancouver Island. We are planning to go northeast, around Cape Caution and anchor overnight in a protected cove called Fury Cove, where mariners can retreat to and avoid the sometimes very high winds.

The current forecast is ideal for tomorrow, and a retired couple from north of Vancouver are also leaving. They have been boating up and down the coast for 18 summers now, and she seems to recall an amazing number of the places they have moored. They have been "out" as boaters say, for 3 weeks already and tell us we will probably be seeing them in quite a few of the places since they may go to Ketchikan also.

There will be several days with no updates on this grand adventure since for the next few days there are not marinas, let alone marinas with wifi where we are going.

That means no docking challenges for a bit and more practice anchoring out!

Anne Cox
 
I received an update from Anne last evening. Sounds like she has had an incredible trip so far!

Up at 4 am Monday and noticing the Maple Leaf flag slowly flapping on my neighbors' boat...is it going to be windy today?

The air is very moist. This is a 70 mile day with 40 miles of open water, so good weather is critical for us.

Listening to the 4 am weather report I hear about possible gale force winds south of Nanaimo. Finally our area forecast, including Cape Caution comes on and our area sounds very mild, with nothing more than small swells and a possibility of afternoon wind picking up.

Here comes Sam, down the dock "We have a weather forecast as good as it gets!" YEA!

I am a bit damp from the heavy mist while untying, checking and making sure all lines and the 6 fenders are each secure in case winds develop. Damp is fine, and off we go!

Today is THE day to finally round Cape Caution, after my reading a variety of accounts over the years of paddlers and rowers making their long, challenging trips along this exposed coast. I have dreamt of this day many times, (although in my dreams I am paddling.)

Cascadia departs, moving at a steady pace on very flat water. Outside of the cabin, light is beginning to appear so I take a few photos, however the horizon is tilting as I check them at 4:30 am.

I must remember to switch to autopilot as I gyrate trying to get level horizontal shots while leaning out the pilot door. (I love that door!)

HUMPBACK WHALE

As we moved northeast we traveled between a few islands and I noticed spouting, misty signs that can mean whales are near. Then nothing as my eyes were scanning. Finally, looking back I saw movement in the water as the huge tail of a humpback whale appeared then slipped beneath the sea way too soon. That was my first verifiable sighting of a humpback.

I had heard that humpbacks were sometimes in Saratoga Passage off of Everett, WA so hung around there in my C-Dory a few years back when I saw a whale watching boat stopped, but only saw spouting a couple of times.

When kayaking off of the west side of San Juan Island, my experiences were quite different. Orcas swam in groups and it was exciting to watch them coming. Sometimes they came very close to shore and seemed to be near the surface most of the time, hanging out together.

The humpback does not seem to be a groupie or into family so much. Also it was not cruising like the Orcas and dolphins do, with an up and down pattern so we see the Orcas coming, usually.

CAPE CAUTION

Our 9 hour journey was from Port McNeill, heading NE to Cape Caution on our starboard then past Cape Calvert on our port and entering Fitz Hugh Sound, watching for Penrose Marine Park and slowly winding our way into a very peaceful Fury Point.

What an amazing day, with not a drop of spray on the deck, let alone the windows! We finally got into small rollers when we were in the open ocean, but it was amazingly calm, just as the day before when crossing the open water, heading west to Vancouver Island.

The 48' and 58' boats apparently had more issues in the swells, as they did in the waves in the Strait of Georgia. They were moving faster and were far ahead of some of us. Ron in his 28' Cutwater seemed fine, however, and he was one of the first in.

Today I saw very mild swells at Cape Caution, better than in the many imaginary trips I have made there.

"It Was A Very Fine Day!"

TUESDAY

Today we left our little cove early and traveled up Fitz Hugh Sound to another beautiful spot, Codville Lagoon, with Sager Lake nearby.

During the 5 hours of traveling today I counted 5 other boats, 2 of which appeared to be doing some type of research project on the far side of Fitz Hugh Sound.

There are no traffic jams here, even though it it is apparently the main route for boaters going to Alaska. Two large cruise ships are taking the outside (on the ocean) route today, a few miles west of us, while we are traveling on the route most smaller boats use. There are quite a few spots to anchor, but with 7 boats we are using larger anchorages and the smaller ones may be empty.

POWER

I have never boated this far before and since we move every day there are never power needs. I am not sure why but all the other boats are paying for power. I tend to not need as much power, but am running a Norcold freezer along with the refrigerator and listening to music much of the time, as well as running the iPad all the time underway. All systems seem fine with the exception of my autopilot which has a very wide "swing zone" for lack of the right term.

This is a very easy boat to travel on day after day, and by checking the engine mornings and evenings it is reassuring to know things are looking the way they should. The warnings I have seen since moving aboard this boat in April 2013 were for needing to add coolant and to be sure to open the seacock, and they came right on. (Whoever hangs a sign on the steering wheel when opening the seacock is wise!)

Tonight when checking the engine I checked the freezer, which I am carrying in the engine compartment on the shelf behind the engine. It had come unplugged and was at 33 degrees, unfortunately.

I know most Tugnuts carry the freezers in the "basement" area but I did not want to crawl in there and torque my back. Plus, as a liveaboard, I have hanging clothes.

This trip is a good test of what works. I thought the heat from the engine would be too much, but Ronnie suggested I try this. Time will tell.

I do not carry meat, or frozen meals, so hopefully the frozen veggies and lots of baggies of cheese and bread will be ok. It is definitely time to cook up vegetable soup now for the next few days!

Three boats left 90 minutes early today and came across a very large group of dolphins with white bellies. They were on the radio hooting and raving about how fun it was to have over 100 of these dolphins swimming along, playing in the boat wakes, and seeming so happy.

Alas the rest of us missed seeing them and were razzed for sleeping in, even though I left 60 minutes early, as soon as I heard the others on their radios. Maybe another day...

We are stopped today at another beautiful location with an interesting history. Ocean Falls was a busy mill town with over 5,000 residents. Now it is "essentially a ghost town with a big fish hatchery," to quote the Waggoner Guide.

We visited with the couple who run a small restaurant here part of the year and return to their home in Alberta in the winter. This is a great spot to boat to, with an excellent dock, fine tasting water, power, and the restaurant currently has a washer and dryer and shower.

I am beginning to see how people can easily spend a couple of months along the BC coastal waterways, anchoring out part of the time, then coming to one of these fine small marinas with such friendly people. A couple of trawlers from the Seattle area pulled in soon after we did and they tour up here regularly.

Right now the winds are blowing as forecast, 5-15, and everyone is tied up to the dock and seems very happy, looking forward to the group dinner out tonight when we get to meet new folks and get to know each other better.

One member of our flotilla just sold her home in Sante Fe 2 days ago, and is eager for wifi. It is becoming more and more available each year we are told.

It does take a lot of fuel to travel by boat, but for those who enjoy boating in uncrowded spaces and can find a way to make it happen, this vast area is waiting for you.

Beautiful Ocean Falls BC, where I sit surrounded by tall forested mountains on three sides, watching the ripples on the water and hearing raindrops on the Sunbrella Bimini.

Anne
 
Anne's Latest Update:

Wednesday we learned of a widespread area along the Pacific Coast that was under gale warnings, and listened to Environment Canada for updates. We also used the local wifi, which was quite slow, to read updates as they became available.

It was apparent that very strong winds would probably be roiling and churning the ocean waters while we were tucked inside at Ocean Falls where wildflowers run rampant in open spaces. Ocean Falls is a peaceful spot way up at the end of Cousins Inlet, and has water and power and (managed to get new) docks since it once was a vibrant community of 5,000 people until the mill closed. The few locals there that we spoke with are very friendly and love their home in the remote location. Someone there, probably Nearly Normal Norman Brown, as he is called, keeps vases full of fresh wildflowers at the marina office that provides 2 hooked up computers, the restaurant, the gift shop (that is closed,) the top of the marina ramp and generally around the area. The variety of flowers and the vases sharing them strikes me as a sign of people who love this tiny spot in our world!

Thursday morning dawned sunny and calm so we proceeded to Shearwater via Gunboat Passage where our lone sailboat has been the past two days, getting a davit repaired.

The winds were not an issue as we proceeded on, taking the narrow shortcut passage that requires careful navigating to avoid rocks.

It is an excellent experience for me, since I have twice had $$$$$ encounters with rocks in shallow passages on the south end of the Swinomish Channel.

I decided to position myself ahead of Sam and Kevin through those miles and they were perhaps a half mile to a mile behind me, although I was determined to be successful!

As usual I had reviewed the descriptions of the area ahead of time and most importantly zoomed the chartplotter ALL the way in, as Ray and Jocelyn of Nudibranch showed me how to do after the time I ruined my prop south of La Conner in the Swinomish Channel. It was imperative to be very focused on the "Fully Zoomed In" chartplotter, because there are rocks scattered around ready to grab boats on this route to Shearwater.

Also Wednesday a number of us learned that the Navionics app that we had purchased online was not downloaded for the area we will be moving into. That was a bummer, and still is, because with the very slow wifi it is taking a HUGE amount of time to download Navionics given the connection and amount of people (boaters) using it here. Locals in these small areas are polite yet curious why we come to their remote and beautiful spots yet are constantly fumbling with our "gadgets."

I really appreciate having 2 electronic chart programs, with solar, DC and AC energy sources to power them. I cross check where we are heading, and constantly compare charts while tugging along in these passages.

The number of paper charts that are necessary for this long journey is huge, the cost at $20.00 per chart is significant, and the storage issue is challenging on smaller boats. Nevertheless, those with the paper charts along with the electronic charts are better off.

So here I am, still trying to download more of the Navionics program which will be an excellent resource for possible areas to visit in Alaska, along with the Garmin chip(s.)

I had not done my due diligence with the second Garmin chip that I purchased on eBay, and discovered a few days back when I switched out the Garmin chip that guided us to Port Hardy that the second chip I purchased did not cover Ketchikan, but only got us through the northern section of BC.

Much of my time the past couple of days could have been free if I had double-checked the boundaries of the two chartplotter programs! As a result of those errors I am scrambling to find a new Garmin chip that covers the Inside Passage and downloading more of the Navionics to include ALL of the BC coastal and Alaska waterways. I find these Garmin chips extremely useful! Naturally no one stocks such specialized items along this route, so a plan is in the works to hopefully have the Garmin chip waiting in Ketchikan if possible.

I was downloading Navionics last evening till 11:30 pm and up at 5:15 am this morning doing more as a couple of fishing boats headed out. Now I am going to go back to downloading again (if others are not using the wifi connection) on this somewhat foggy and peaceful morning.

Meanwhile, the eagles here are delightful and I have a head shot of one that I want to figure out how to send if we get to a spot with faster broadband. We are asked not to stream or do photos or actions that use more connectivity in these remote areas.

Anne, in beautiful BC!
 
Here is where the flotilla that Anne of Cascadia is on is located right now. The one lead by Sam Landsman

http://share.findmespot.com/shared/face ... d9cAynA1KB

This is Sam's Spot Tracker.

They are at Jackson Narrows Marine Provincial Park, appears to be about Mid-Way between Port Hardy and Prince Rupert.
 
Anne's Latest Update(s)

#1

At 5:05 am I am noticing the 37' trawler that came in and anchored between Cascadia and Verney Falls in Lowe Inlet yesterday is gone. The view has returned!

Time to check the fluids and look around again to make sure everything looks as it should and gear is stowed "just in case."

Flotilla mates start leaving 45 minutes prior to Sam's estimated departure, today as every day. I am not sure why, or if this happens on most flotillas, and wonder if this early bird habit is a lifestyle, or simply eagerness to see what's around the bend?

Our C-Dory, piloted by John, is the second boat needing help with the hydraulic steering, if I understand. He was the first to leave and is hoping for help with that in Prince Rupert.

I do not check that fluid and probably should learn more about it since two of the seven boats have had issues with it.

Today I knew it was going to be challenging to raise the anchor. I positioned the boat yesterday so that it was fairly close to the Verney Falls, directly in the outflow current and in 27 ft of water. I let out 120 ft, 100 of that chain, then pulled in 15 ft. since it was not needed and used the final 5 feet to tie off on the cleat behind the windlass, protecting the windlass.

All of us anchored in the outflow, and it worked beautifully, without needing so much swing space between boats.

So today, when raising the anchor, the water quickly pushed the boat backward, and the boat went sideways in the current. I was hustling back and forth to the engine to get power for the boat to come up to the anchor, stepped on the foot control to get more chain up, then also watched as the boat straightened out, then went back inside and gave the engine more power so it came up over the chain and I would raise it more. Eventually it all worked out and there were no problems!

We are fighting the current this morning in Grenville Channel, burning 2-3 times the normal amount of fuel. At 6.8 knots I am burning 3.4 gallons an hour.

The boats are spread out more than 10 miles after 2 hours and we have quite a few hours ahead of us. At first we we dodging a number of logs, due to experiencing very high (and low) tides, pulling more logs off the shorelines.

If Cascadia were an auto, I would swear she was out of alignment! I am not able to depend on autopilot the way I expected to or perhaps it can not do what I hoped.

Ron, on his 28' Cutwater, programs his autopilot using more steps, continuing on to the GPS button, programming in the final waypoint for the day. His GPS holds straight, until he needs to switch to standby for a log, then it does not go back to the waypoint he had set and he has to go through the setup process all over again, unlike cruise control on an auto.

Enough frustration!

I decide to take a break and throttle up after 4+ slow hours fighting the current. These ponies need to run!

Wow, that was refreshing, similar to pedaling up Highway 20 to the top of the North Cascades Highway in WA, checking everything, zipping up the jacket and letting her rip, zip, just not flip!

It felt great to speed up, even if we only topped out at 18.5 km and continued at 14.5.km. No stiff fingers needing to pump the brakes, just fun to go fast for a change!

Now I caught up with another boat in our flotilla, a number of miles ahead of the very last two, including the motoring sailboat. We are most fortunate as the water here is very calm today.

Up ahead is an a large piece of waterfront land with what looks like an extensive amount of black (coal?) , a large grain silo, a huge series of long and very high (______) that I am guessing are conveyor belts, plus very large chutes that I believe are loading grain into a very long ship. The air around there has been appearing almost as a fog for at least 35 minutes as we have been approaching.

Prince Rupert is "in major competition with Vancouver, the Puget Sound and Southern CA. Canadian Northern owns rail tracks to Memphis TN. Transit time from Asia to heartland US is cut by at least 2 days " according to the Waggoner Guide.

I am curious who all has invested in this development, or if might be government funded. The area here has a large area for deep water port activities, a large bay, and no sign of the congestion we experience around US ports.

I believe grain probably comes here from Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and I wonder if oil might start coming from Alberta?

I am finding I really am missing access to public media especially since I am very curious about natural resources, trade and transportation after 17 days in amazing BC.

Before getting a slip here in Prince Rupert with the others I need to add diesel. The fuel dock here services working boats from the looks of it, and the boats are very large. I waited and floated away in the strong incoming tide then saw a fishing boat come in and disappear in front of a huge older Foss tug. I was surprised there could be room in front of it!

Finally, another large boat left and I came in with the water pushing me away from the dock. This was an interesting set up with fenders tied along the dock, then gaps, and huge rubber fuel lines laying around on the dock, PLUS quite a large step down to reach the dock from where I get off by the pilot door.

The first effort did not work as my foot tangled in the hose as the boat quickly drifted. I pulled myself aboard while the 3 guys sitting nearby on the large Foss tug said nothing.

The second time I had the midship line in my hand, the thruster remote around my neck and was going to stick on that dock! I immediately noticed there were no cleats...rather old rings. I quickly pulled the line through one then went over to the next one and tied it in a V shape back to the boat. The front of the boat drifted way out as I realized I needed to redo the first line. But the aft part of the boat overhung the pier and shot out. I keep that line tied by the pilot door so pulled in the first line and grabbed the stern line while pulling the boat forward.

Finally I had 3 lines tied then was able to re-tie the first line. The boat was now secure!

The 3 fellows still were sitting there as I tried to figure out which giant hose belonged where.

Then a voice hollered out "What kind of fuel do you want?" The 3 Foss fellows had their backs to me as I looked in a 360 degree circle. Again, the same question...

Finally I saw a guy up very high standing there. I said "diesel."

He said "Pump 5."

All these large red rubber hose lines looked like cobras ready to wrap themselves around my feet again and I saw no nozzle.

Then one of the Foss fellows said "There," pointing to the very large and very heavy handle with an usually long nozzle that penetrated deep into the tank. Ah, success!

I squeezed the very heavy duty plate to start the fuel and nothing happened. The fellow up top was still there so I hollered up to him that it was not working. He said it was on.

The same Foss employee said "No, it still registers zero."

So, then the fuel finally began and I was starting and stopping so as not to have it overflow. The longer nozzle helped, and it went better than previous efforts on the trip.

Then I noticed a drop coming out from the vent, then another, and another.

Still some gremlin in the fuel line apparently. I stopped because knew I had enough to get to Ketchikan.

I stopped squeezing the handle but the fuel kept coming. I hollered loudly,

"The diesel won't stop!" The guy on the big tug said "let go and it will."

So I held up the heavy handle over the fuel tank so he could see the fuel poring out and my hand not holding down the lever. He told me to put it back in the tank. I did. Then he hollered to the guy up above. That guy said he turned off the tank. I held the nozzle up again! The Foss fellow hollered back that the fuel is still coming out.

Finally it was dripping, then really slowed, so I held it upside down and pulled the hose over to the area so I could put the nozzle back.

Next, up the long steep ramp past the fellow who was standing there still, paid my bill, and had to squeeze past him to get onto the long steep ramp and down to the boat.

Untie the lines in reverse order, and "hold the center line tight" I told myself as it immediately began moving. Now I happily swung my leg up and got my foot, then both feet in the tiny "porch" as I call it, at the pilot door. As the boat quickly drifted off I thought to myself
"Good job!"

Now I am docked and hoping to find fast wifi!

Anne

Update #2

This is a grand tour, full of sights to see and lessons to learn.

At Shearwater some of us purchased fuel and fortunately no one was waiting or stopped when I was force-feeding diesel into the fuel tank.

For some reason I am having an issue with adding fuel. I noticed it at Cap Sante and it is continuing, with a great deal of gurgling and foam rising whenever I add fuel. It reminds me of a baby having gas or air bubbles and needing to get that taken care of first before continuing!

Something in the fuel tank or line must be causing this, so without X-Ray vision or knowledge of the intestinal system of Cascadia, I am sending an email to Ronnie at Cutwater who always helps me out. Of course the email will only go when we find wifi again!

We left Shearwater at 11:00 am and proceeded past Bella Bella, and New Bella Bella, primarily a Native community that has a hospital and airport nearby as well as a Fisheries and Oceans Station and a Coast Guard Search and Rescue vessel and crew, according to the Waggoner Guide. It sounds like an interesting spot to visit also.

As we proceeded onward towards Rescue Bay, 34 nautical miles away, we traveled along Seaforth Channel. We knew we had a section of water open to the Pacific to face and given the mild conditions would only have mild swells yet still had everything secured, "just in case."

In addition, we traveled along several back channels to avoid the swells, then reached Mathieson Channel and turned into Jackson Passage, and finally anchored at Rescue Bay.

During those 34 nautical miles, in addition to seeing many spots to explore further, and looking unsuccessfully for the humpback whale Sam saw, I got a better sense of fuel burn.

Our different vessels (and pilots) have different preferences for travel speed. Also longer water lines on yachts, just as in kayaks, are apparently a factor in efficiency.

On this boat, the mpg is lower than on the 37 Nordic Tug and the 58 Ocean Alexander. I believe the example on Cascadia for this day, 15 gallons for 34 nautical miles, is an average for about the speed of 8.5 knots. I definitely do better at 6 knots, but with the tides and currents do not have a formula. I simply see on the chartplotter and on the results at the end of the day that I can be under 1 gallon per hour at times. That allows for lots of time scanning for wildlife and enjoying the scenery.

Local conditions are challenging with all the islands and some passages are split with one end having a rising ride while the other a falling tide and some sections seem like it is all uphill!

A NEW DRIZZLY DAY DAWNS

Yes, I am quite wet by the time I have the anchor lifted and get back inside at Rescue Bay.

My friend Richard in the Anacortes Coast Guard Auxiliary told to be careful so that the windlass is not ending up pulling the boat towards the line and anchor, so always stay out watching, at least so far. That is also easier for spreading out the line and anchor chain in the locker underneath the deck. I am sure there will be situations where I need to hustle back and forth, but haven't had to yet.

As we leave Rescue Bay most of us proceed left, into a very short, very shallow section with kelp in the very narrow part of Jackson Passage. It is a bit stressful as I think of the water intake, but all goes well on the falling tide, one hour before low tide.

I asked Kevin, who has worked in the North BC Coast for decades, why we didn't go at high tide. He told me that the rocks are the issue, and we see them completely at this depth. He went on to say he had piloted a 65' Coast Guard boat through there with no problem. That was a new way to look at the passage for me.

Seeing the "enemy" perhaps, rather than simply dodging the kelp.

That is my lesson for my day!

"Local Knowledge" happens to be the name of a book Kevin has published with Fine Edge Press, and we are most fortunate to have him along. He is a human encyclopedia of knowledge about this huge area, having done years of research and managing resources, including natural, human-made and people.

Anne
 
Anne has made it to Ketchikan!

Nineteen days and 750 miles from Anacortes, all seven boats and fourteen boaters have arrived!

The trip from Prince Rupert provided us with new experiences, as did most days.

We left on what apparently is a normal route through Venn Passage if heading north, saving us 12 miles, and requiring very careful navigating through winding and narrow passages that, as usual, were quite shallow in spots, and included rocks.

We saw quite a few fishing boats coming in as we were leaving, so I told myself it was obviously passable, just as we were told!

I have gained a firsthand appreciation of studying ahead and using 2 different navigation programs, plus the importance of having the chartplotter at a very "close-up" setting to watch for the rocks.

We traveled in yet another area that I was surprised we could, and it worked well. The leaders briefed every boat each evening and the cruising guide is also very helpful with specifics.

After exiting the narrow area we continued onward, entering Chatham Sound which was wonderfully peaceful.

Proceeding north, east of Dundas Island our Texans radioed that they just passed whales!

As usual we were spread out miles apart.

Sam's boat was the closer and I was farther west of the two last boats, but I took off anyhow, happy to use the horsepower. After speeding directly east for perhaps a couple of minutes I could see what looked like might be tall splashes, but did not want to slow down and use the binoculars. By the time Cascadia was close enough to see clearly, there were no splashes to be seen, and the others had continued north.

I hope to see photos the fellows got and rumor has it that someone got a great shot.

After that excitement for the slow-traveling boats, one of the faster moving boats called to ask about the border and whether they had crossed it. Apparently there still is a bit of controversy about the exact latitude boundary between BC and Alaska, but we are in Dixon Entrance, and winds and wave heights are what get the focus around here, and gale force winds seem to be blowing often.

We had such minimal swells that we weren't even mentioning them on the radio, even the bigger boats that seem to experience them more.

Quite awhile later our C-Dory radioed to advise there were quite a few fishing boats out, which I unfortunately forgot about until quite awhile later.

We all continued onward, and eventually all the boats crossed the invisible border into Alaska!

The next radio message I recall was on my behalf. Fortunately, Jim, who was ahead, radioed a warning to me that I was approaching what turned out to be gillnetters. I quickly noticed the orange buoy of the one on my starboard but I was not aware of the second one and was on a line to go through rather than around the nets. I owe Jim for that warning since my attention had faltered.

Kevin explained to me later yesterday how important it is to "swing quite wide behind them and to never try to cross the nets."

That was my most important lesson of the day!

We must be very diligent when around purse seiners and gillnetters with their quarter mile nets that are not visible except for buoys at the beginning and the end, and the end ones can get pushed forward sometimes, so give them a wide berth!

I hope to recall this whenever I see a fishing boat with the tall poles. I had never paid much attention to them previously, but now when I see that type boat I want to connect the shape with the need to be watching for nets!

Another event the day we left Prince Rupert was the bear at Foggy Bay, which I did not see, but saw a great photo Ron took.

Foggy Bay is a safe anchorage about half way between Prince Rupert and Ketchikan that serves boaters who travel at slow speeds to overnight, or as a place to wait out the weather or to recover from crossing Dixon Entrance. It is also the only place US Border Control allows boats to stop on their way to Customs in Ketchikan when coming from Prince Rupert.

After Foggy Bay, and after passing Mary Island, we entered Revillagigedo Channel. That name and the travel time both seemed long as I was beginning to think more about what is required when getting to Ketchikan.

For those of us boating there the first time, the "Big Three" might be Customs, moorage and fuel, and just the latter two can be challenging.

Ketchikan has 3 public moorages, and we do not call the single dockmaster for all three until quite nearby. At that time each boat is assigned a slip based on boat size. All slips are permanently assigned so boats are "hot-berthed" which means assigned a slip whose owner is away, and the visiting boat must move if the owner returns early.

So we cannot plan where we will be. Also we are always advised to fuel up before tying up. Now we add in Customs, and it gets complicated. We are not allowed off our boats until the officer visits the boat and inspects us.

The Waggoner Guide spells out the details and Jim's boat and I decide we want to fuel first, if allowed, since the marinas do not have fuel.

We each first must have a marina assignment and be ready to give them the name of the fuel dock.

Here is where trouble begins!

The tide is moving the boat along, I am on the phone (with a terrible connection) trying to get a slip assignment, and another person's call is also coming in at the same time, over mine.There is one person handling multiple calls, with some calling to report they have just left for so many days and those of us arriving, also trying to report our impending arrival and needs, and reception varies. (Remember the tide!)

The fuel docks are south of the public marinas. I hear my friend's assignment with broken reception and he has to ask to have it repeated several times. Finally he gets his and then I am given one.

Jim stops near the first fuel dock and I hurriedly call Customs to give them my slip assignment while circling and then ask if an agent will come to the fuel dock which I name. Hooray! Making progress while avoiding trouble near a fuel dock.

I look up and Jim has reached the dock. I am trying to figure if I dare try to dock in front of him. His wife stands in their cockpit giving clear signals that I need to go around to the other side of the fuel dock, which makes sense.

So I manage to stay away from the fuel dock which is good, but now am too close upstream to the Coast Guard Boathouse. Somehow the boat gets into the turn north of the fuel dock towards the back side but the steering wheel locks up.

"Uh-Oh. That wretched hydraulic topic I should have learned about and been checking the fluid...

Anne! Think!

The forward motion plus current can help, but there are the rocks and it is quite shallow!

THRUSTERS!"

Luckily no boats were on the shallow side and the young man on the dock probably heard the thrusters. With the forward motion and current flowing north that helped, coupled with the thrusters and the full length of the dock Cascadia came close and I tossed my midship line to the young fellow on the dock who grabbed it.

Whew!

Next I tried the steering wheel when tied up and it worked to my amazement and relief.

The fellow brings a very wide nozzle which does not fit. (Recall, I must stay on the boat until cleared by Customs.) I sit on the top cockpit step when he brings a hose from the other side of the dock which fits and I begin fueling, happy to be done with liters and back to gallons.

Meanwhile I am still very relieved to be tied up and not crashing into anything, then remember I need to be careful to stop fueling at the right time. Oops, the pump is not registering, this hose is from another pump. STOP.

The Customs Officer arrives and asks for my passport, boat registration, and some routine questions. Soon he is on his way to the other boat and it seems like the pressure is gone now. I can get off the boat, check the fuel pump on the other side of the dock for when to stop, pay and be on my way! Hooray!

Two giant cruise ships stand tall and still as Cascadia crosses in front, looking for our marina. Signage is nowhere and suddenly the Safeway store appears. How can we be here since we have not passed the other two marinas? Or have we? I proceed a bit farther north, grabbing the guide book again. That had to be it because that was the shopping center.

Turn around, go back to the south entrance. No signs. Where is a sign with the name of the marina? Where is a sign at the end of each long dock?

Now I hear Jim on the radio and he is having similar problems figuring out where to go. Then someone else was calling the dockmaster asking where Dock 5 is and I hear it is the second dock from the south entrance. Then Jim is telling the dockmaster that someone is in his slip.

Three of us all struggling to find where the assigned docks are at the same time and I find Slip 44 on what I surmise is Dock 4, but it can't be, because it is a port tie, and my only request was to put me in a bow-in starboard tie.

So I doubt this can be Dock 4. However, there are no open slip 44's on the dock north or south of this dock. I call in again but the dockmaster is confused because he was trying to sort out the previous call.

I finally decide to pull into an empty slip with a starboard tie and wait. Eventually the dockmaster comes on and he tells me the only place open is 44 with the port tie and he will come and help me.

He does, and I retie the lines 2 more times, then decide it will have to do.

I turn off the engine and radio and am settling in for awhile, with no more driving, no more radio, and plenty of time to sleep!

Anne in Ketchikan

GOING FORWARD

We will celebrate today, Friday evening, and I hope to be much more rested 11 hours from now. At least four travelers will be gone, two by plane and I watched our boaters from the LA area leave at 4:15 am this morning.

Some boats are trading crew and others have family members joining for a week or more.

I plan to stay in Ketchikan and learn more about the area. The library is @ a mile from the marina, and will be a great resource, as will the local Coast Guard Auxiliary.

I look forward to connecting with a couple of local members and gaining some local knowledge of the waters in the area, as well as suggestions of places to safely visit by boat.

If I manage to get to Sitka and Petersburg, I want to stay awhile there also and make connections in person, learning more from the locals, gain some local boating knowledge from Auxiliarists, visit those libraries and perhaps even visit a senior center/ park office.

LOOKING BACK

We received the 2014 Waggoner Guide and 2 large folding charts covering the journey north, guidebooks for British Columbia South, British Columbia North and Alaska early in the year.
In March some of us took a one day class on Diesel engines and had hands-on time with a couple of them.

It was an introduction for me, but I would do better if I took a class on our engine, and that is tricky since Tugnuts use Cummins, Yanmar and Volvo!

We had the option to sign up for three days of classes in March, following the diesel class, and many did. There we received a great deal of information including Customs at the borders, route strategies, navigation details, a detailed overview of where we would be traveling, current updates on using iPads and tablets for weather planning and navigation, preparing our vessel and crew to cruise the Inside Passage, topics such as fishing, crabbing and shrimping, provisioning tips, techniques and information about how to organize an efficient galley, and information about places to visit afterwards in Alaska, including on the way south for those who travel farther north and come south through Juneau. Later in the summer the Anan Bear Sanctuary will be busy with the salmon running, which excites me!

I found all the resources we received gave us time to study and learn at our own pace and prepare as we chose.

When we got underway, much of it was learning by doing.

On Day 1 we entered BC and dealt with Customs then continued on to Ganges, and dealt with docking in the wind immediately.

Going forward we managed to dock and tie up to all types of docks, in a variety of anchorages, had times to practice with radar, traveled in narrow passages with hazards, experienced waves and swells from all sides, tides that were not as predicted, log debris in the water every day, and got off quite early to beat the potential winds a number of days.

Some may say the biggest challenge of our trip was from Nanaimo north across to Pender Island. It was not as tough as the waves two years ago on the Desolation Cruise, but it was tiresome to deal with.

For me, 19 straight days of travel was the toughest. I chose to travel at a slow pace to save on fuel, learning that around 6 km takes much less fuel, but the price is more hours with eyes focused on the driving. We had logs every day and I clipped a couple, but at low speed.

Whales, eagles, a bear, amazing weather most of the time, and now we have arrived in Ketchikan!

We did not have to wait out the weather to cross to Cape Caution or travel across Dixon Entrance. Both sections were quite calm. Our routes and timing, including departures, were adjusted by our leaders for the best weather windows and the days all worked out very well.

However, I saw how wide open those areas are in comparison to our small boats and will listen to the weather carefully and wait patiently as long as is needed when returning south.

I am more tired than I had imagined, and feel an unexpected sense of accomplishment.

This has been an ideal way for me to reach this goal, traveling with leaders and in a group, learning from all.

Anne
June 20, 2014
 
Anne's Latest update from Kethchikan:

Friday, Sam, our leader, came by asking if I needed any help and extending an invite to a BBQ. I quickly said yes to the BBQ, but later wished I had asked for help to move my boat upwind to the open slip on my port, since I was extended far from the wing on the dock and the lines were stretched out a great deal. Why not use the wind?

I called and Sam kindly returned. I backed out, immediately heading downwind since I was sideways to the wind, and struggling to turn into it. Sam kept hollering directions and finally I got back upwind thanks to his directions, the thrusters and throttling up more. Now the wind has me safely pinned to the dock.

Later I headed to what I imagined was a small farewell gathering Friday evening with the group still here along with Mark Bunzel, the leader of the Waggoner Cruises who was flying back up here to Ketchikan.

I was surprised when I walked into the cozy floating cabin on the dock across town at Thomas Basin, seeing all new faces except for Sam.

The local yacht club kindly hosts a BBQ every Friday evening and welcomes whomever comes! I found lots of welcoming members. It was fun to meet locals and especially to chat with the other women there.

The price is $8.00 plus a food contribution and I brought delicious ripe strawberries from CA (that I found at the nearby Safeway.) They were easy to cut up, needed no sugar, and disappeared along with lots of other food, much of it homemade, including fresh fruits and veggies.

The woman running the kitchen was making coffee, greeting everyone coming to the kitchen and kept washing dishes and restocking them as more and more people arrived. She has a greenhouse and I was surprised to learn the variety of food she grows!

Hamburgers, chicken and all the fixings plus plates, silver ware, and a hot grill were provided for us to cook our meat. When the rain showers began I came back inside and sat at a table, meeting more friendly Ketchikan boaters.

Two of the men at the end of the table and one standing are pilots for the constant parade of cruise ships here. As I understand, the ship captains take care of the guests and the professional pilots handle the cruise ships. I sat next to the wife of one who had just retired and she did a great job of introducing me around. She lost her first husband in a fishing accident, and as I experience this weather I better understand how that happens.

I met the CG Auxiliary couple I had emailed previously and learned more about how the wind makes boating here extra challenging. Tom and Barbara kindly drove me back the several miles to the boat, and we shall get together again soon.

Meanwhile, it has been raining and blowing a great deal. It looks like an unending parade of whitecaps marching northward as I look out in the channel.

Currently NOAA is reporting 15-25 mph wind, with gusts 30-40 and rain in Ketchikan. That fits what I am experiencing, here at the outer end of the dock at Bar Harbor, adjacent to the south entrance. Looking outside the marina I'm seeing constant spray on the rocks and large whitecaps pushing from the south for 2 days now. I keep thinking I will see calmer water; the forecast just now reports weather will improve by mid-week.

I have a large map spread out on the table, which I focus on when turning on the weather (which is updated quite often here.) I follow the reports "winds 25-35 mph, with gusts 45, winds 20-30, gusts 40, gale force winds in Hecate Straits, seas 15 feet, etc. This area varies little currently.

Yesterday afternoon I got off the boat to grab a line since I saw the driver was having trouble turning into any slips. I grabbed and luckily he quickly got off and tied one line while grabbing another.

Later a 28' Bertram with long fishing rods was not so lucky, nor was Cascadia. He came turning around the corner, kept turning, trying to back in quickly, hitting my boat on the back port, then swinging and hitting her close to midships again. The wind then pinned him against Cascadia.

Fortunately the fellow on my starboard side jumped off his aluminum fishing boat with a huge spool of net and orange floats to help the white-haired fellow.

Together they wrestled the boat and finally tied her down. Then both quickly retreated out of the wind and rain to their own boats and I haven't seen them since.

Rain is coming inside my cockpit from the bimini and full enclosure here in VERY wet Ketchikan!

Anne
 
Back
Top