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Two Months.

how we hope to spend next week

We left Olympia two months ago today. In some ways it seems like we left E dock yesterday, but the heavy weight of our buckets of memories makes it feel like years ago.

Our friend and crewmember Garth will join us on Friday. If the weather forecast is still clear we will sail due south from Ucluelet towards San Francisco. Our plan is to stick to the inshore route, that is, 10-20 miles off the coast. This area typically has lighter winds although we will have to contend with more shipping traffic and possibly more fog. However should the forecast turn unfavorable we can easily stop in Grays Harbor, Newport, Coos Bay, Crescent City, Eureka.

We’re extremely grateful that we decided to sail down the west coast of Vancouver Island after all; the trip has given the girls and us valuable experience sailing in ocean swells and much greater confidence in sailing together as a family. It’s going to be a whole different ballgame sailing 24/7 for six or seven or eight days straight though without the chance to stretch our legs. I’m thinking it will be like our other long days off the coast have been with lots of naps and much of my time just spent preparing food and cleaning up the aftermath of meals. And hanging on.

For weeks I’ve been quite nervous about our upcoming passage, to the point where I’d be nearly shaking with anxious chills. This is my third trip down this coast and I know how ugly it can get out there. But as the time to depart has come closer I (we) have gotten more and more excited about simply being in California and all the new and old friends we are anxious to meet up with. Weather forecasting has gotten a lot better in the past 10 years and we’ve certainly gotten better at reading it. And after navigating around all these treacherous rocks and islets off Vancouver Island the past few weeks I’m truly looking forward to being out in clear open water for a while.

It’s been becoming more and more of a struggle to stay focused on the present, to savor these last days in the Northwest. At least five times an hour I think of the upcoming trip and what’s on our to-do list before we depart on Saturday and get a little shiver of nervousness and a flutter of excitement about the long glorious hours of sailing ahead and our landfall in an entirely new landscape.

So, today, two months after leaving in Olympia, we pulled back into Ucluelet which is our last Canadian port. We’ll do laundry again, buy some provisions, sew up some leecloths for the girl’s bunks, inspect the rigging, restock our ditch bag, button up down below, and head to the playground in town a few more times. The shakedown is over, now it’s time to sail.

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A little downtime in Barkley Sound

We’ve been having a swell time, just meandering around here in Barkley. This is the farthest south we’ll go on the west coast of Vancouver Island; when we sail out of these protected waters next weekend we’ll be pointing our bow south to California.

These are our last days here in the Pacific Northwest and we are savoring each one. Our agenda has been only to enjoy ourselves and do whatever and go wherever sounds right at the time. It feels rather like a vacation. When the morning fog burns off each day the sky is brilliant blue but with that slightly angled gold-tinged light that tells you summer is waning even though it still is warm. The air, sea and land is so pristine here. Even though Barkley is the busiest place we’ve been on the west coast, nature still rules by a huge margin here. We know we will miss it.

On Effingham Island we scrambled up and down a rough trail through ancient forest to the opposite side from our anchorage. On the beach, we clambered over huge beachball sized pebbles until we found the sea cave. The tide was coming in when we found it but we waded through between waves until we were inside and in awe at the delicate ferns dangling from the rock overhead and took a quick peek deep inside the damp rock. Minutes later we were hustling to wade out again in the rising water so we wouldn’t be trapped inside for the night.

The next day we sailed over to Bamfield where we walked up and down the waterfront boardwalk countless times. To the girls it must have seemed like a lifesize Candyland game: paths lined with pennies, buttons and keys, a tree tunnel with artfully painted mushrooms peeking out from the ferns and salal, a feral cat neighborhood and at the very end of the quaint flower-boxed boardwalk a grocery store serving up the biggest scoops of ice-cream we’d encountered yet.

We also took a field trip to the fantastic Bamfield Marine Sciences Center, a world-class marine biology campus. They have a variety of aquariums and touchpools full of local animals the girls really enjoyed. I think the highlight was coming across some students with a small octopus they were about to return to its local home. Leah was enthralled. As we were walking back from the center I realized that I may as well call our first day of boatschool a success.

After playing on gorgeously sandy Brady’s Beach near Bamfield yesterday morning we sailed back across to the Brokens and plopped our anchor down yesterday evening off quiet Nettle Island. As we were eating dinner the fog crept back in and covered us with a huge thick soft blanket and we were glad to be snug in our absolutely still cove. Even the normally rowdy resident sea lions were sailing around the anchorage on their backs with their flippers in the air barely making a sound.

Around 3 am Michael and I were both awoken by the sound of gravel being hurled at the keel of our boat. That was odd, we thought, and went up on deck to look around. The darkest night air above us was still hazy with fog and what we saw below us was something from another world: there was a brilliant florescent green ring undulating around our boat in a nearly perfect circle. Every once in a while cannons of bright green light would come at it and the ring would split apart and veer off in different swirling directions, including right at our boat. The wavering glowing rivers of green would eventually rejoin and the glowing circle of fish around our boat would form again and again. It was like looking down and watching the northern lights. The bark of the feeding sea lions clued us in to the phosphorescent magic we were witnessing.

We had planned on moving on today to Joe’s Bay a few miles away but we couldn’t seem to lift the anchor. The dinghy is still on the foredeck and we’ve enjoyed a day of just puttering around onboard. Reading books to the girls, coloring, playing with toys, making cookies, baking bread, listening in to VHF conversations, completing a few tinkering jobs, listening to songs played randomly on our ipod.

Enjoying our little vacation before the work of traveling south begins again.


posted via HAM radio (www.winlink.org)

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Community out west

As I type this, Michael is somewhere in the dinghy in the Broken Group in Barkley Sound towing our friends on Madrone (www.tidalpool.org) towards Ucluelet. When they asked if we’d consider giving them a tow out of Effingham Bay we didn’t even think twice and filled up the outboard’s gas tank.

Let me back up a bit. I’d first spotted Madrone, a spritely little Rawson 30 ketch, in Port Hardy. At that point, we’d begun to look at boats and think: “Are they going around?” wondering if we’d spot a boat again on the west coast of the island. I didn’t get the chance to ask the crew of Madrone in person then but did when we saw them again in Bull Harbour. It was there that we found out this intriguing couple was moving from Portland to San Francisco in their boat, and decided to go around Vancouver Island along the way.

We shared another anchorage, and an evening of ceviche and cocktails, near Winter Harbour and buddy boated around Brooks Peninsula. It wasn’t until we came into Hot Springs Cove though that we saw our new friends again. The Madrone crew waved to us as we were setting our hook. We also exchanged waves with another boat, Got ‘d Fever (www.llcruise.blogspot.com) who we’d met in the Bunsbys and shared a wonderful afternoon of tea and cookies with.

That feeling, of coming into an anchorage and seeing familiar boats, of being welcomed into a new place with a familiar wave, is one of my favorite parts about this life. It’s been years since we’ve experienced that special camaraderie that grows among cruisers in a foreign land, or at least a rugged challenging coast off the vacation track and it’s been a treat to find it out here again.

Perhaps it’s the sense of accomplishment that brings us together. It’s also the challenges that we’ve faced out here and getting to know other boats, quickly, means having a familiar voice over the VHF should you need help. Mostly, I think, it’s that anyone willing to live and travel on a small boat for weeks and months on end is just bound to be plain old interesting and I never get tired of meeting the characters out here.

So we make friends quickly and as friends do, we help each other out without question. Anchored in Effingham Bay in the Broken Group, Michael helped Matt on Madrone install their repaired starter motor (which turned out to not be repaired at all). Madrone decided they’d sail their boat to Ucluelet to hopefully get their engine started once and for all but needed a little help getting through the narrow entrance to the bay. No problem. It’s what our community does for each other.

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Video: an afternoon sail on the west coast of Vancouver Island

When we headed out from quiet Queen Cove Tuesday afternoon the wind forecast was for 15-20 knots. As has often happened out here what the forecasters promise doesn’t always hold true and we’ve found ourselves motoring through a gale warning more than once. Not this day. Just a few miles south of Esperanza Inlet the NW wind filled in as promised, filled our spinnaker and we were off. We settled the girls down below with a few DVDs and Michael and I sat in the cockpit with huge grins on our faces just relishing the absolutely perfect sail. It was the kind of afternoon that made all the hard work to get here completely worth it.

We sailed with our spinnaker up all the way past Estevan Point, 30 miles or so. After we were past the point, we took the colorful sail down and we turned to port, now on a beam reach with genoa, main and mizzen all the way to Hot Springs Cove, ready for a good long soak.

 

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Three Days in the Bunsbys

With favorable NW winds in the forecast, we headed south again after relaxing for two days in North Harbour, Quatsino Sound. We had an uneventful rounding of the Brooks Peninsula, which can be a treacherous passage we’ve heard. For us, it was a motorboat ride which sure beat the alternative. The sky cleared as we rounded the cape and we marveled at the untouched miles and miles of green mountains making up the peninsula park.

Our guidebooks all agreed that the little island group, the Bunsbys, tucked underneath the Brooks Peninsula and snuggled up next to the mainland were not to be missed. After weaving in through the many rocks and reefs guarding these forested little jewels we made our way to the fully protected main anchorage, Scow Bay on Big Bunsby.

After setting our anchor in the 60′ deep anchorage, we turned off the motor and listened to: absolutely nothing. Tucked away between the Pacific Ocean and miles and miles of protected forests it was absolutely still. After listening for a while, we could make out the sound of a bald eagle calling out in the distance.

Once the girls were tucked in bed, Michael and I sat out in the cockpit enjoying the last of our Trader Joe’s wine. We watched the sun set over the Brooks mountains. It was a stunning show with the day’s last beams spilling down from low clouds that had settled between the peaks. Orange and yellow and pink and finally blue.

The light was dim and Michael heard a rustling sound on the shoreline just in front of our bow. We both strained our eyes to see what was making the noise and gaped in awe as a huge black shape emerged from the bushes. For the next 15 minutes we watched the enormous black bear stroll along the shore, reaching on his or her hind legs to grab juicy thimbleberries off the highest branches and sniffing amongst the rocks for other morsels.

There are no trails on the Bunsbys, which was just fine by me. We spent hours trolling slowly along in our dinghy exploring hidden lagoons and nooks, marveling at some of the most amazing rock sculptures we’d ever seen. We gazed into crystal clear tide pools teaming with life: hermit crabs, seastars, fluorescent green anemones, small fish, crabs fighting for space in the smallest pools. We explored little pocket beaches, the girls finding favorite seashells and bits of glowing seaglass in the sand. Every now and then we’d spot a sea otter popping their head up out of the water to peek at us, guests in their wilderness.

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