Lost & Found

Seems like everybody keeping a sail blog does a “numbers” post. You know, miles traveled, money spent, Islands conquered (We totally beat the Maraschky’s)…….

I’m not gonna do one, mainly due to the fact that our chart plotter took a slow shit on us and while it did get replaced under warranty, part of the process to try and fix it involved resetting it back to factory default settings. Unfortunately for me, I forgot to make a back up of my trip log, so I only have a rough guesstimate as to how many miles we have traveled. So doing a numbers post stings a little. I’m not gonna lie, I’m a little pissed about that.

So instead of a numbers post, I’m gonna do a what we have lost and found post.

Since the lost column is longer, I’ll start there.

1) The Plastic cover from our Auto Pilot control box. Lost in Poulsbo. Second day out. Huge gust of wind blew it right out of the cockpit.
2) A white fender. Lost in the Straight of Georgia. Swept overboard.
3) My favorite lock blade knife. Flipped overboard at anchor in Shallow bay on Thurlow Island just before we got to the Broughtons.
4) Fishing reel. Tawn was doing some stunt fishing and the thing popped off the rod and went overboard. Kevin loaned us a spare he had on Andante
5) Seat cushion/flotation device. Went overboard somewhere between San Francisco Bay and Monterey. We don’t really know. It’s just gone.
6) A 7/16 inch socket. Tawn dropped it off the dock here in San Diego. I’ll never forgive her for that.
7) One pair of rusty pliers. I dropped them off the same dock the next day. I now forgive Tawn for dropping the socket.

Now for the plus column. As sad as it is.

1) An odd/old foam spool. Found it on a beach (Shed #4) on the outside of Vancouver Island. I use it for a fishing handline.
2) A fishing reel. We found that we did not return this to Kev at the end of the summer. Thanks Kev!!
3) A sombrero. Found floating it in the water about 3 miles from the coast of Catalina Island.

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Ole`

I’ve been told that showing up in Mexico with your own (free range) sombrero is a massive sign of respect and marks you as a seasoned traveler. Not just some sun burnt, gringo tourist. So we totally got that going for us.

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12 beers the hard way

These little stories are my favorites to tell.

This took place a few weeks ago, at our second anchorage (Coches Preites) on Santa Cruz island. Great anchorage, with an awesome beach. On our second day there the wind shifted a little to the west and picked up quite a bit. Putting us on a lee shore. I was not feeling good about it, so we hauled up the anchor and moved to the next anchorage over (Alberts Anchorage). It was only about 1/2 mile away, just around the corner and dead calm.

Perfect.

There was only one other boat in the anchorage, so plenty of room. They were tucked way up in against the shore, so we stayed out a little ways. Plenty of swing room for both boats.

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Perfect…

About an hour before the sun sets, another boat pulls into the anchorage. There was tons of room outside of where we were anchored. Tons of room. Absolutely no reason to drop the hook anywhere near us or the other boat.

As we sat there in the cockpit watching them anchor in a respectable spot, and silently judging their every move (as was our right, being already anchored), Tawn comments that she thinks it was a charter boat (this turns out to be true). For what ever reason, they did not like there first choice of spots. So they hauled up the anchor and chose another spot. Which by the way, was not a respectable chioce.

Before I tell you where they decided to anchor, let me first say that we were perfect situated behind the other boat in the bay. Close enough to leave a ton of room for anyone else coming in and yet far enough away that we were not to close to them.

As you can imagine, the new boat dropped their hook right between us and the other boat. Doing this put them uncomfortably close to both us and the other boat. While it was a very diplomatic move, not making one of us to feel singled out and picked on, he still chose to anchor exactly in the worst spot.

The sun sets. The wind picks up. I could flick beer bottle caps into their cockpit. They pulled anchor again and reset. Anchoring so close to the other boat, they almost hit them! They let out so much anchor rode that when the wind blew them back on their rode they were still a little to close for comfort, but what can you do. It as better than before.

Fuck it, go to below and watch a movie.

1am. I go up on deck to check things out. The wind had died to a dead calm. I notice that they have set a stern anchor. Go back to bed.

8am. Tawn is already up and wakes me up with a soothing, “uh CB, the dumbass charter boat is dragging us out to sea”. No time for a morning coffee or a constitutional. Right to work.

Me and Tawn are out in the cockpit giving this guy the “What the fuck, Mate?” look. As he is powering out of the anchorage, dragging his stern anchor, which has snagged our anchor chain and is dragging us along (slowly) with him.

He powers down, looks at us and says…..”What should I do?”.

I thought the answer to that question was fairly obvious, but apparently he did not. So I offered up a helpful, “Untangle your fucking anchor from ours, and have a nice day”?

He then proceeds to sheepishly cut his anchor line, ties an old life vest to it and takes off. Leaves. Gives us a “sorry, dude” wave and he is gone.

We spent the next hour and a half hauling up his anchor, which was completely tangled up with our anchor, untangling the whole mess and reset our anchor so we could get back to chilling. I still had the morning constitutional queued up. This was a very busy morning.

When we finally got his anchor up. I was hoping it would be a nice new Fortress stern anchor. We needed one, and I was fully prepared to claim salvage rights on it. But it was a small piece of shit. Barely big enough for our dinghy.

I was almost tempted to toss it overboard when at the last moment, randomly, I remembered we were out of beer and wine. I imaged those charter companies would require a security deposit on lost/damaged gear. A plan was forming. I loaded the little anchor into the dinghy and headed over to the next anchorage in hopes that is where they ran off to.

It was.

I pulled up to their boat. I watched them act like they were not watching me coming. They knew who I was.

As I pulled along side, I held up the anchor and gave them my biggest shit eating grin. They turned out to be nice guys, fully apologetic. Offered me a beer for my troubles.

I smiled…..

They offered six beers.

Still smiling….

Up comes a bag with twelve beers in it. I mentioned my wife really likes red wine.

Clink, clunk…in the bag that goes.

No harm, no foul. Bag of booze makes it all good. Just another day on the high seas.

Posted in Adventures, Tales | 6 Comments

Homemade KIMCHI!!!

We ended up staying in Monterey a few days longer than we had planned. Originally we were only gonna stay for 3 days, but it ended up being 5. I love when a plan falls apart.

We really liked Monterey, met a couple other boats headed south.

We had dinner on one of those boats, a 43′ Hans Christian named Calypso. She (the owner, no the boat) made an awesome Taco dinner. As we were sitting there eating dinner, Tawn, noticed two big tupperware containers full of homemade Kimchi!! It was awesome. I LOVE Kimchi, by the way. Tawn does not love that I love Kimchi…..if you know what I mean.

They took off the next day headed for Morro Bay, we left for San Luis Obispo (SLO). But we made plans to meet up somewhere in the Channel Islands, or San Diego and much to Tawn’s displeasure, she is going to give me a lesson and her recipe for her Kimchi! Oh gawd, I’m gonna be Kimchi RICH!!

The distance between Monterey and SLO was about 120 miles, it took us about 26 hours to cover that distance. We sailed about 90 of those miles and motored the rest.

We did 3 hours shifts, so by 5am we were a little slap happy. The winds cranked up to around 25 knots around 11pm and stayed there till about 3am. We were hauling ass downwind, but the seas got a little ugly around Point Bouchon. But not too bad. No LT. Dan moments. Well maybe one small one around 3am, when we had to gybe. :)

Originally, we were gonna just drop the anchor in SLO bay, sleep all day and get up and head off that night so we could round Point Conception in the wee hours of the morning. But after our naps, we woke up to a beautiful day. Beaches everywhere and a band playing on shore.

Nope, fuck it. We’re staying. Again, plans falling apart….I love it.

There is no marina here, so we thought we had to land the dinghy on shore, but I was not looking forward to that. One, there was the surf to contend with. And two, I did not really want to leave my dinghy sitting on the beach with 100 random people hanging out and lining up to take it for a joy ride around the bay while we were in town.

As we were puttering around trying to figure out what to do about it. Tawn spots a sign and a few other dinghies stern tied to floats and bow tied to a ladder on one of the piers. I’ll not try to describe it any further, just look at the pictures.

Luckily, the swell was not too bad.

Spiderman, spiderman, she can do what ever a spider can.

SLO has been freaking awesome. Warm enough that we went swimming off the boat at anchor and watched a movie in the cockpit last night(NO BLANKETS).

This last picture really does not have much to do with anything other than, you just don’t see this sort of sign very often.

There are so many jokes here…..where to begin.

Posted in Adventures | 4 Comments

Thar be meat!

Back near the beginning of August we were rafted up with Andante, and Hello World in Effingham Bay in Barkley Sound. In fact, it was our last anchorage together. We had been hanging out and exploring the east coast and top of Vancouver Island with Kevin on Andante all summer. Jason & Christy on Hello World met up with us and all three boats traveled down the west coast together for the month of July.

We were all hanging out on Hello World eating dinner, having a few drinks when Jason and Christy bring out this heavy “going away” gift bag. It had all sorts of good stuff in it.

Good stuff by Hello World standards that is. A 3 plus year old bag of Turkey Jerky, a book they didn’t want anymore, a broken bocce ball set (I was the one that broke it, but that is not really a important) and the best bit, a treasure map to an Italian deli in San Francisco (and some cash to splurge on delicious salami once we found it).

Actual treasure map, people! It’s out of focus you cannot steal mah treasure.

The map and clues were fairly accurate, but they could not recall the name of the deli. So we had to rely on their clues to find the place. We found a deli and got some awesomely delicious hard salami and equally delicious sandwiches and a cannoli. Took that all down to the water front and had a killer lunch.

Look, it’s Tawn at a deli!

The name of the place they were guiding us to is Molinari’s.

We did not go there. We ended up going to some place three blocks down the street.

Turns out Christi’s talent for writing poems and treasure map instructions are awesome, but her ability to judge distance is just as shitty as Jason’s. [Pro tip: If Jason tells you something is X distance away, subtract alot from what he tells you. Then disregard the answer you come up with and measure it your self]

Her instuctions indicated the deli was blocks away from a restaurant called the Stinking Rose, when in fact it was less than a block away. We actually found the right place a few days later when we were hanging out with some friends of our that live in San Francisco.

Either way, thanks for awesome treasure map guys and turns out the salami we got from the wrong place was actually made by the other place anyway. It’s all good!

Posted in Adventures | 3 Comments