Big trip to Canada. Day 25

Sunday August 5th:

Left Clam Bay on a nice sun shiny morning. No wind and not very far to go. Today destination was Montegue Harbor, only about 15 miles to the south. We’ve been told by a number of friends that this is a pretty nice place to stop. Fairly busy/popular, but well worth it.

They did not lie.

We pulled in to a fairly crowded anchorage(by our standards anyway), but it was not really all that bad. And actually filled up alot more later in the afternoon.

The picture below was taken from the Provencial Park dock:

Oh and here is the dinghy dock, in case your curious:

We did a little bit of hiking around the trails on the island. I believe I read a sign on shore that said this was one of or the first Canadian marine park. So there were a lot of trails, campsites and beaches to check out.

To be perfectly honest, at this point in the vacation I was starting to get a little bummed out. Not because I wanted to get back to Seattle and back to to work, but just the oppisite. I did not want to get back to Seattle and back to work. Sailing about all day and exploring ashore suites me quite well. As does staying up late and getting up when I want and doing nothing or everything during the day with no rush to do either is a very awesome way to live.

On one of our trips ashore I spotted a boat of a couple we met a few weeks back in Roscoe Bay. We had met them on our neighbors boat and had drinks with them. So we invited them over for dinner and a few cocktails that evening.

Today would be our last day in Canada. Tomorrow we head back in the the Good ole US of A.

And as usual the MAP is here.

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Big trip to Canada. Day 24

Monday August 4th:

Plans have been changed.

One of the main reasons we wanted to stop in Nanaimo was to go scuba diving on a sunken (on purpose) battleship. The name of the ship is The HMCS SASKATCHEWAN. It was sunk on purpose in 1997 as an artificial reef just outside of the city of Nanaimo. This would have been a very cool Awesome dive, but the wind was blowing 25-30 knots today, and even the dive charters were not going out to the dive site. The waves were just too big. So we decided that if the dive charters were not going, it would probably be a smart thing, not to go ourselves.

We found this out at about 11am. So we wandered around town, trying to figure out what we wanted to do for the rest of the day. I just happened to check the tide/current tables at the marina information booth and saw that slack tide was in a little over an hour from now. In order to head south we had to go through one last narrows, Dodd Narrows.  And it just so happens that the narrows were just under an hour away from where we were. Soooooo, We hauled ass down to the docks, jumped in the dinghy and made a mad dash to the boat. Hauled up the anchor and headed south. We decided that we’d rather be anchored out in some small out of the way anchorage than hang out in town for another day.

Luckily for us, the wind that kept us from scuba diving was blowing out of the north and we were headed south. So we had a fast down wind run to Dodd Narrows………

As we were sailing along, Tawn pulled up a floor board to check things out. And noticed that there was a huge amount of water pouring in from around the prop shaft.

SHIT! Is putting it mildly.

We had to make a decision, and make it fast. Tawn took the helm and I grabbed my toolbag and flashlight and went headfirst into the bilge to see what was going on. The plan was for Tawn to sail the boat towards Dodd’s Narrows so we could make the tide if I could fix the problem before we got there. If not, we would turn around and get out butts back to Nanaimo and get the problem checked out.

Luckily as soon as I turned on the flashlight I knew what the issue was. It’s hard to describe, but basically, there is a metal collar that is fitted around the prop shaft and is pushed up against rubber boot. Much like a shock absorber boot. The prop shaft goes out from the engine through the bilge to the outside water to spin the propeller. Since it has to spin, you cannot make this a water tight seal. So water flows in from the outside into this rubber boot. The metal collar pushes up against the boot and is held there by two set screws. Those screws had worked their way loose and the boot pushed the collar back just enough to allow it to leak like crazy.

So as Tawn was steering us towards the Narrows, I pushed it back into it’s proper place and tightened the screws…problem solved. Vacation still on.

We actually ended up getting to the Narrows a little bit early. So we hung out for a bit and waited for the tide to turn in our favor and cruised through.

Since we had left in such a rush we really did’nt have any particular destination in mind, so we pulled out the charts and decided to go to Montegue Harbor which is located at the south end of the Gulf Islands. Dodd Narrows in at the north end.

However, our alternator had other plans.

As soon as we exited the narrows, the wind completely died, since it was out of the north and now completly blocked by the islands we had just squeezed between. So we fired up the motor. Since we had already had a few issue with the alternator, we were more than a little bit paranoid about it. So after starting the engine, Tawn checked the regulator to make sure the alternator was working correct.

It was not.

Hooray!!!

I spent the next 4 hours tracing every frackin wire coming from and going to that alternator. I knew that regulator had to be good. I knew that the alternator had to be good. Both were brand frackin new. So it was down to wiring. When I tell you it was the last, LAST absolute wire I had to check, I am not lieing or embellishing. I ran, tested or replaced every wire that went between the alternator and regulator. They all checked out just fine. I had one more to go.

I had actually tested this one earlier and it passed. I tested it agian and it failed!? I then replaced it and WAh-fucken-hooo! it worked. One stupid ass $1.39 inline fuse holder was the reason I was upside down in the engine compartment/bilge for the last 4 hours.

Give me those damn killer hornets anyday.

Since the wind was none exsistant, Tawn had spent the whole time keeping Palarran off the rocks and tweaking the sails doing some awesome light wind sailing, and dealing with currents. We did’nt make it very far in those four hours, less than 2 or 3 miles. So we decided to pull into the nearest bay, Clam Bay, for the rest of the day and spend the night.

Clam Bay was big and open, but fairly well protected. We picked a spot on the north end of it and dropped the hook.

The bay is on the east side of two islands (Thetis Is. & Kuper Is.) These two islands are divided by a very narrow, very shallow water way called “The Cut”. On the other side of The Cut is Telegraph Harbor. The Cut is actually pretty wide, but there is a very narrow section through the middle of it that you could get a dinghy through or very small motor boat. The picture below was taken as we were just getting to the Telegraph Harbor end of the cut in the Dinghy, looking west.

Once on the other side, we stopped and got some ice cream and beer. We did’nt do much else in Clam Bay. In fact we just lounged around the boat once we got back.

Map of trip

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Big trip to Canada. Day 23

Sunday August 3rd:

Today was AWESOME!!

We woke up to a sun shiny day. We pulled the anchor and headed out of Secret Cove around 7:30am or so. There was no wind so we decided to motor through Welcome Passage  and once past Pirate Rock and had b-fast we would raise some sail and head towards Nanimo on the other side of the Straights of Georgia.

As I mentioned before, the day started off nice and only got better. As we motored past Pirate Rock and started hoisting the mainsail and foresail, the wind picked up to about 8-10 knotsout of a clear blue sky to the north, we took that as a good omen and hoisted our third sail the Yankee (The Donger).  As the day wore on, the wind kept increasing to about 20 knots. But since the wind only started at about the same time we did, the waves had not had the chance to build. So we were abolutly hauling ass across the Straights on a broad reach.

As the wind picked up a little more and gusting even higher, we decided to drop the Yankee sail. By now we had 3 – 4 foot waves and were doing a very little bit of surfing down some of the bigger ones. Unless you sail, there is no way to describe how fun this is, the whole thing. Wind, waves, weather, the unknown…It’s just awesome.

We took the next two videos about 3/4 of the way across the Straights of Georgia. They of course in no way show just how fast we were going, or how the boat would surf down the waves. Or how hard the wind was blowing. But trust me….it as absolutly a blast!! Probably my best day sailing to date.

Look out! Cappy CB at the helm!

What we thought would be a 4 hour trip over, only ended up taking us a little over 2 hours. We were in Nanimo and anchored just after lunchtime.

Of course, all that wind on the way over meant that there would be wind in the anchorage as well. And it did make for a few anchoring “discussions” between me and Tawn :P , but before long we were settled in and checking out the town and the historical island before too long.

One other thing we wanted to check out while we were here was a bar called the Dinghy Dock, which turned out to be a very cool little place. Really the only way to get to it is by dinghy or small boat.

Two bars in two days!! Holy crap, we are out of control!!

We did a little hiking in the state park island here and checked out downtown a little as well. The picture below was taken from the island looking back across the bay the boat was anchored in to downtown Nanimo.

Of course it was back to the Dinghy Dock for a few cocktails to close the place down.

The big plan for tommorow is to get directions to a sunken battleship and go scuba diving on it tommorow.

Map of the trip

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Big trip to Canada. Day 22

Saturday August 2nd:

So with the altenator fixed, and a cooler restocked with fresh veggies and beer, we left Westview Marina headed south towards Secret Cove about 20 miles away. The day started out nice and just got nicer as we went. As soon as we rounded Grief Point we put up the Spinnaker and had a nice mellow downwind run for about 6 hours.

About the only WTF moment we had was about halfway there we were sailing along and all of a sudden we feel/hear this gigantic BOOM BOOM BA-BOOM!! For some reason to me it sounded/felt like it was coming from over my head at the top of the mast. And as I was looking up, out of the corner of my eye I caught a glimpse of something launching out of the water right beside the boat! Just then a HUGE log, about 30 feet long and a foot or more around slides up the side of the boat and out of the water about 3 feet and splashes down and floats away…..!!

Up until then, we had seen a random log or two floating about and sailing around up here in the Pacific Northwest you always in the back of your mind keep an eye out for deadheads and floating logs. But this was the first time we had hit one this big. We hit it right in the middle of the log and it rolled down our keel to the middle of the boat and then slid/floated up.

Tawn ran below and started pulling up floorboards to make sure we did not get a hole poked in our bottom. No harm, no foul. But we kept an extra close lookout for the rest of the trip.

We got to Secret Cove about 3pm and found a spot to anchor and did a little dinghy exploring, and much to our surprise we found a pub!

It sucked but it was the first bar we had been to in a couple weeks. So we had to stay for at least one drink. Oh and it was not really a surprise to find this pub. We knew it was here and wanted to check it out becuase it was named “The Jolly Roger Pub”. Which made it’s suckyness even that much more hurtful.

 Map of the trip

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