Saturday, August 27, 2011

8/3/11 Stayed at lovely Jedidiah


Windrope boys in meadow near Home Bay


We decided to stay a full day at Jedidiah because it is so lovely and well suited for exploration. We went to the island after breakfast and walked over to Home Bay. On the way you pass by some nice forest areas and into a truly wondrous meadow. There are few such places in the Salish Sea, and this meadow is particularly green and large. Home Bay is a really special place, and it is almost nicer because it is too shallow for all but the most shallow drafted boats to use. The old homestead is still there, though failing, and the nearby orchards invoke the nearby past of habitation.
All the boys below homestead at Home Bay
Aeolus in Deep Bay looking NE toward Texada and her eventual destination in Desolation Sound

Thursday, August 25, 2011

8/2/11 Left DeCourcy and anchored at Deep Bay, Jedidiah Island

Our two days at DeCourcy were just perfect, as is typical of time there. Endless play and gorgeous scenery with great weather. Now we were settling into the groove of the trip. We left there at 11:30 am to time the slack water at Gabriola Passage and had a smooth trip through the lovely gap. The forecast was for SE 10-15 and that is what we saw, so up went the sails once outside the pass and we began a perfect broad reach straight across the Strait of Georgia to our destination at Jedidiah.
Underway to Jedidiah in the Strait of Georgia




Wednesday, August 24, 2011

7/31/11 Wallace Island to DeCourcy Island

This morning began with a little bit of water play as I had to dive on the propeller to remove our swim ladder line from it being wrapped around the shaft! Turns out that in our motoring last night to reset the anchor someone, one of the kids, had let loose the non-floating line that is normally kept wrapped neatly out of the way, and it had managed to get sucked down and bound around the shaft. It had been cut or town clean off and my big worry was that we had bent the shaft or ruined the transmission.
It came from the deep!

I heard from some Friday Harbor friends that their round Vancouver Island trip this summer had to be cancelled because near Campbell River they had wrapped a mooring line around their shaft and managed to bend their shaft and destroy their transmission. Of course, their boat is a fin keel with that long expanse of shaft exposed.

7/30/11 Left Friday Harbor and anchored Wallace Island, BC

The grand trip north began at 8:30 am from Friday Harbor with me and my boys and a friend from Bainbridge and his son. The five of us were headed up to Lund, BC on the Sunshine Coast where these friends would depart and Amy and some other friends would join the boys and I for a week in Desolation Sound. Bill, my Bainbridge friend, is a lifelong sailor and I was excited to have him along to coach me on some of the finer points of sail trim. He grew up in a salty family back east and counts Peter Isler as a family friend, so he really knows his sheets from his halyards. His son is a school friend of my older son Elliott and so were were out for a father son trip.
Owen and Aeolus getting ready to depart

The trip began with light winds and so we motored north to Boundary Pass on customs at Bedwell Harbor. After customs, we were able to sail north in a lovely building breeze from the SSW and did about 5 knots in the 10-15 knot wind. Skies were mostly sunny and the temp was around 70.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

A series of posts on nearly three weeks of sailing in the northern Salish Sea

I've just returned from nearly three weeks of sailing in British Columbia and have so many tales to tell and photos to post that I am going to do it as separate posts based on islands and anchorages. In overview, my boys and I were joined by some Bainbridge friends to sail Aeolus from Friday Harbor up through the familiar Gulf Islands across the Strait of Georgia to Lund on the northern Sunshine Coast. Those friends left, and Amy and some other friends came up from the Bay Area and we all spent a week cruising around Desolation Sound. Returning to Lund, I dropped everyone off and sailed Aeolus back to Friday Harbor by myself.
The Windrope boys on top of Jedidiah Island's highest peak

It was a profound and adventurous exploration of the northern Salish Sea, and we are all still walking on water with the memories of it. 

In total the trip was nearly 400 miles and I am happy to report that Aeolus had no mechanical problems of any sort! The weather was hot and sunny, the salt and fresh water swimming was out of this world and the good times with friends were priceless.