Friday, June 28, 2013

Back in the Saddle Again and the Passage from Hell



Not much exciting happens during our time in Galesville. We arrive and spend several days at a dock preparing to pull the boat, and then the big day comes when the boat goes in the slings and on jack stands.  She always looks so ungainly swaying in the hoist. 
Going on to the hard (with our fingers crossed)

Burt makes arrangements for yard workers to varnish our companionway steps, touch up a few spots of bottom paint, and replace the zincs.  Here in Galesville we are not allowed to do any work ourselves while the boat is on the hard.  Meanwhile, we get a rental car and take off for Ohio and Wisconsin to visit family and friends.  It’s a pleasant two weeks of shore leave for us.  When we return, it is back to the grindstone.  The boat is launched, and we spend two weeks finishing up our chores.  The deck and cockpit are cleaned and waxed.  Exterior canvas is removed and cleaned of its accumulated mildew. More interior varnish work is completed by Burt while I refinish the boarding ladder. The interior cupboards are all emptied, cleaned, and reorganized, and interior walls and floors get a good scrubbing. We take advantage of the car and do extensive shopping and reprovisioning. After all, a year of laundromats takes its toll on our clothes.  Our monthly dockage and car rental runs out, and that is the signal that it is time to move on.  Boat chores are endless, so it is nice to be forced to stop. All is not misery in Galesville, though.  We meet up with several cruising friends in the area for dinners out and make new friends who are permanently docked in Galesville.

Upon leaving the dock, we make a huge passage of about 1/8 mile to the anchorage at Galesville.  Here we have arranged to meet up with our Australian friends with whom we cruised extensively last summer.  They are on their way south to have their boat pulled in the lower Chesapeake while they head back to Australia for three months. Fortunately, our paths cross, and we enjoy a relaxing dinner with Claire and Andrew on Exuberant.  Talk goes late into the night as we have a lot of catching up to do. The next morning we part ways, they heading south and we heading to Annapolis – who knows if and when we will next meet.

We treat ourselves to four nights on the mooring balls in Annapolis.  It is truly special to be moored off the Naval Academy and the historic harbor.   
Just as our neighbor's boat says, the moorings in Annapolis are serene

We watch traffic come and go; racing fleets head off for evening contests, large yachts come by on their way to docks, and interesting boats tie up on the balls.  One such boat was a wooden pilot boat built in the 1930’s that had been in service on the Columbia River and then in Alaska.  It had been partially restored at the Shannon Boatworks in Bristol, RI and now was on its way home with new owners who intended to complete the restoration.   
A study in contrasts - the wooden pilot boat in the foreground and a mega-yacht behind
We have dinner one night with friends Kathy and Curt who we met in the Bahamas this winter.  Although they have lived aboard their boat for seven years, this was their first year out cruising, and they are an example of Murphy’s Law at work.  It seemed everything was breaking on their boat during the winter, and when they finally arrived in Annapolis this spring it was discovered that they had taken a near lightning strike.  Now they are on the hard having fiberglass repaired and electronics replaced.  During it all, they have maintained an optimistic outlook, and we hope to meet up with them later this summer in New England. We also have an opportunity to meet up with our friend Stan who originally docked just down from us in Sandusky.  He now works for the Annapolis Harbormaster, and, as typical, keeps us in stitches with stories of what he witnesses in the harbor.

But, it has been hot and humid in the Chesapeake, and it is time to head further north.  We have a leisurely motorsail to the north end of the Chesapeake and the peaceful Bohemia River. It marks the entrance on to the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal.  You time your departure for the canal to coincide with favorable tidal currents both in the canal and Delaware Bay – Burt describes it as dealing with simultaneous equations as the timing is so tricky.  Thus we anchor for the night and in the early morning prepare the boat for what will eventually be an ocean passage.  The dinghy, now filthy with Chesapeake growth, is raised to the foredeck and then scrubbed – there goes our clean decks.  We rig jacklines and a radar reflector.  
Burt at work - jacklines, check; radar reflector, check; dinghy on deck, check

At the appointed hour we pull anchor and head to the canal.  Right behind us is s/v Ladyhawk, a boat we met a year ago in the Bahamas.  They are on their way to Nova Scotia, so we will have company and radio conversation for the passage.  At this point, we begin the “Passage from Hell”. It has gotten deathly hot and humid, and what little wind exists comes from our stern, leaving us with no cooling breeze.  When we arrive at Delaware Bay we turn south and finally get a beam breeze which makes things more comfortable, but also brings flies by the gazillions.  We are besieged, and the human versus fly war is instigated while we motor sail down the Bay, maintaining enough speed to keep in a positive current.  At times we see over ten knots, but there is little opportunity to enjoy the ride as we are too busy swatting flies. At dusk, we round Cape May and endure a few hours of uncomfortable waves against current; we’re still swatting those darn flies. We finally put up screens to surround the cockpit, but there is major carnage below decks, and it is hard to sleep while being bitten. Dawn arrives and the captain and first mate are groggy and irritable, as it seems the flies below are multiplying while the cockpit screens are covered with flies hitching a free ride north. As we close in on the entrance to New York Harbor, we pump our holding tanks overboard where it is legal. But, they don’t seem to be pumping correctly, and there is an unpleasant smell.  A look below at the pumps proves that both have suffered membrane failure, and we have managed to spray holding tank contents into the cabinets under the head sinks.  The flies are having a field day, and we are considering scuttling the boat. We pull into Sandy Hook, drop an anchor, and discuss our limited options.  Burt has one spare pump (Who would ever think you would need to carry two spares!) so he replaces one failed pump after cleaning and sanitizing the cabinets. Meanwhile, as I store all my cleaning products in the contaminated cabinets, I remove the contents and clean and sterilize them on deck.  We are filing garbage bags with disgusting stuff from our perspective while the flies feel they have died and gone to heaven with the odorous scent; it appears they have decided to take up permanent residence on our boat.  It is late when we complete the unpleasant tasks; we have a quick dinner and collapse into bed, proving if you are tired enough you can even sleep while the flies bite. Severe thunderstorms are passing nearby and tomorrow we will head through Hell’s Gate on the East River. But, somehow, it seems like we’ve already been through the gates of hell.

The next morning with flies buzzing outside the cockpit and corpses littering the interior, we pull anchor and head into New York Harbor with a favorable current but also with dense fog. There is so much traffic that it is hard to keep track of all the boats with the radar and AIS while we continue to swat flies.  All of a sudden as we are approaching the Verrazano Narrows Bridge we hear a loud horn from behind. We are startled by a huge container ship bearing down on us, and we rapidly move out of the channel.   

A foggy encounter with one of the Big Boys as we go past the Verranzo Narrows Bridge
The fog lightens as we approach the City, and we get views of the Statue of Liberty and lower Manhattan.
The Statue of Liberty with one of the ever present Staten Island ferries

Manhattan skyline as the fog lifts

With four knots of positive current we fly through the East River, enjoying the exhilarating experience of sailing through one of the most impressive cities in the world. By lunchtime we are tied to a free mooring at Port Washington on the western end of Long Island.  Here we will pick up a second pump at a nearby West Marine, and best of all, get rid of our stinky garbage.  With a decent breeze and severe thunderstorms again bearing down on us, the flies decide to leave for shore and the human versus fly war comes to a draw.  Sure, there is clean up to be done, but we no longer smell and can sleep in comfort.