March 25th 1978
Dear AJ & Don,
First, we must tell you how much we enjoyed the time we
spent with you. Thanks so much for all
your hospitality.
We left Little San Salvador a few hours earlier than we
planned. We were doing so much rolling
that sleep was impossible, so we took off about midnight. We had a beautiful downwind sail, arriving
at Norman's at noon the next day.
Norman's soon filled until, by
sunset, we had 35 other boats in the anchorage. We were not sorry to leave the next morning...
We spent 3 days in Nassau restocking and waiting out
another Norther, then left in the company of Nanda II (a 31' Southern Cross)
for Frozen-Alder in the Berry's. We
took off the following morning for Beaufort, the beginning of an exciting 700
mile, six day trip.
The first night was spent dodging cruise ships on a broad
reach through Northwest Providence Channel.
The next 3 days and nights were a very pleasant downwind run doing 5-6
knots in the Gulf Stream. On day 3 (the
second day in the stream), we got a position check form a passing tug which
verified our DR position. On day 4 we
had 5 hours of near calm, just before which our jib halyard shackle let loose,
sending the jib to the deck and the halyard to the masthead.. Jeff winched me up the mast to retrieve it,
fortunately, the wind was light at the time.
As the sun set that evening, the wind died and the rain began and
continued until midnight. Jeff motored
for 5 hours, but was able to set sail again just after 12:00. The lightning display that night was most
impressive and thankfully kept it's distance.
The wind began it's veering act after the rain, so that by
sunset the 5th evening we had winds on the beam (going forward) at 25 - 30 kts
and 40 degree temps! The wind steadily
increased so that by midnight we were down to storm jib alone and making 5
kts. The seas were at least to the
spreaders and the 3/4 moon allowed us to see the Gulf Stream chop that occurs
when the stream and wind are from opposite directions. Every 5th wave or so broke over the boat,
and the wind grew to a steady 40 kts, gusting to 50. Absolutely incredible! We
took 2 hour watches in the cockpit as we'd never sailed in a gale before and
didn't know how the Aries would handle the situation. The Aries proved it's weight in gold, keeping us right on course
-- handling the tiller when I'm sure we would have become exhausted. Besides the wind and breaking seas, the air
temp was cold enough to make things very miserable, so after each taking one
watch, we gave it up and went below to the warmth of the cabin heater --
resigned to look out every 15 minutes to be sure another boat wasn't bearing
down on us. The Aries handled it all
superbly. We did heave to at 4am to get
some sleep, and again "Thora" responded beautifully -- the motion was
greatly reduced and only an occasional wave would bury the boat.
The wind continued at 30 - 35 all the next day dictating
storm jib and trisail. We were able to
point 60 degrees off the wind, but beating in the Gulf Stream is anything but
relaxing. By 9:30 the fifth night we
were abeam Frying Pan Light -- figuring another 18 hours to Beaufort. The wind and chop picked up once again,
however, so that we were now falling off the back side of the Gulf Stream's
flat topped waves. It's terribly nerve
wracking anticipating and then experiencing
the trip up the front of the wave, then the crash through the flat top,
then the fall down the back side...again and again and again... By 4am it was too much and we hove to again
to get an hours sleep.
It was frustrating being so close to Beaufort, but having
to make agonizingly slow time tacking.
By 9am the 6th day, things quieted down to 20-25kts - we continued
beating in the 30 degree temps, staying below as much as possible. Within 20 miles of Beaufort, the wind
slackened so that with the left over chop we were making little to no
progress. We tried to start the engine,
but alas, the battery was dead and attempts to hand crank were fruitless. (We later discovered a bad intake valve
which lowered compression to the point that the hand crank was ineffective.) So, at sunset, we were becalmed 10 miles out
of Beaufort with no motor. We took this
time to compose ourselves and get a little rest. It was actually a rather pleasant respite after two days of gale
and near gale winds; having no wind and
no motor, we slowed down both physically and mentally, content to wait for the
wind.
When the wind came, it was ideal...over the transom and
light, on an incoming tide. At 10pm we
were tuning our course based on the strength of the Beaufort AM radio station
and the relative position of our cheap AM radio. We had no running lights due to the dead battery and were
concerned when we discovered a dredge in the channel. We successfully dodged the dredge twice (he seemed to be
following us and without a VHF and no running lights we had no way of knowing
if he saw us...) only to find that he had moved the channel while we were
away. After an hour of fumbling our way
in (and anchoring in the channel at one point to decide which way one now had
to go to avoid the shoals), we were safely in the harbor. By 2:30am we were swinging safely from our
mooring in front of Beaufort, sharing Oreos and Bahamian rum w/ OJ,
congratulating ourselves on our seamanship -- and feeling VERY good.
Jeff
awoke @ 7am Sunday and went ashore to call customs -- no answer, so we called
the Coast Guard who advised we had 48 hrs to clear -- we later learned it's
really only 24 hours. We then both went
ashore for a much needed bath and to recount our sailing adventures with our
sailing friends. Before noon the same
day, we both had jobs, starting 8am Monday.
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