Sunday, August 14, 2016

Leg 12 - Saturday, August 13, 2016

We awoke early to get underway by 0700 and dropped lines and left right on time.  The current in the Canal was slack and the water was as flat as glass as we motored out of Sandwich Marina and into Cape Cod Bay.  
As we turned north toward Boston we could see a haze on the horizon, but the waves and wind were not a problem.
The haze became thicker and thicker until we realized that we needed to warm up the radar because we were in for a foggy ride up the coast.  The fog got so thick we could not see boats that were within 1/8 of a mile away on the radar.  But, using the radar we were able to avoid any problems.  We slowed our speed and blew our horn for a prolonged blast every 2 minutes which is required in restricted visibility.
As we motored through the dense fog Jeff Jackel spotted 4 dolphins diving around the side of the boat.  Rich grabbed his phone and took some shots of them.



They played with us for a while and then disappeared into the fog.
We picked our way through the fog with the aid of the radar and a good lookout from all of us.
Just after Duxbury (in the Marshfield area) we began to see the shoreline and the fog started to lift.  We could make out Brandt Rock and the Green Harbor entrance.
The wind was from the Northeast and was causing waves on our starboard bow which made the ride uncomfortable due to the constant rocking of the boat.   This was similar to yesterday in Block Island Sound.  We spent another day picking up things that went flying across the boat to the floor.
This continued as we progressed north toward Minot Light.  As we rounded Minot the seas were now on the beam which made the rolling of the boat even worse and several times it felt like we would roll right over.  But, Dalliance has a heavy keel and kept us from going too far over.  
As entered Nantasket Roads and past Boston Light, the waves subsided and we had a comfortable ride to Hull Gut.  The current in the Gut was strong and against us, but Jeff Jackel steered close to shore on the point where the current is less and we zipped right through with a minimum of delay.
The trip to the Fore River Bridge was very smooth and flat.  Hingham Bay was calm and the winds were not as high as outside.
We arrived at the Fore River Bridge to find a barge being set up to raise the new span in place for the new bridge on Monday.  The Weymouth Marine Patrol warned us to go very slow past the barge and we moved at steerage speed under the bridge.
We turned up the channel and arrived at the Metropolitan Yacht Club at 1345.



We were met by my wife, Fran, and Mindy Jackel who were waiting for us on the dock.  Eleanor Terry was on her way to the Yacht Club, but had thought were we due to land around 2pm.
We tied up and tried to make Dalliance as secure as possible on the short finger pier in my slip. Dalliance is 35+ long and the finger pier is only 22', so it made the tie up difficult to ensure she would be safe and not damage other boats or herself.
Jeff and Mindy Jackel had to leave.  So, we said our good-byes to them and I thanked Jeff for his diligent and expert work to help get us to the dock.
Fran had brought a bottle of wine to celebrate our arrival, so Rich and Eleanor and Fran and I sat in the cabin and chatted for a while and finished off the wine, several drinks of Dewar's Scotch, and the Twizzlers.  Stew Hamel, a sailing friend, stopped by to check out the boat and we all talked about the trip and sailing.
It had been a long, and sometimes difficult passage, but overall it was a great experience and Jeff, Rich and myself had a good time facing the challenges together.


Friday, August 12, 2016

Leg 11 - Friday, August 12, 2016

This morning was another early day.  In order to have the currents with us across the race, across Block Island Sound  and up Buzzard's Bay, as well as through the Cape Cod Canal, we needed to leave the dock at 0700.  Which we did.
Our heading was due East and the winds and waves were coming from the Northeast, so the trip was faced with oncoming seas.  The heavy seas (4 to 6 foot waves) were causing us to work hard to keep the boat on course.  It was a diificult day at the wheel as well as picking up all the things that fell on the floor.
Just off New London, CT, we saw the Coast Guard tall ship, "The Eagle" at anchor.


This is an awsome site and the cadets who sail on this boat must learn a lot about sailing.
We expected the seas to become calmer as we turned toward Buzzard's Bay, but instead they got worse.  The seas became higher and steeper.  At one time we surfed down the back of a wave at 11.3 knots.  We were really flying!
We entered the Cape Cod Canal around 1600 and proceeded to Sandwich Marina at the East end of the canal.
After docking we ate dinner at the Pilot House restaurant and went to bed early, exhausted from the long day.
On Saturday we will leave early for Boston which will be our fourteenth day at sea.  It is expected to be a 7 hour trip.  We hope to be arriving at the Metropolitan Yacht Club around 2 or 3 in the afternoon.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Leg 10 - Thursday, August 11, 2016

We now have a operational boat with an alternator and charged batteries.  We got up at 0630 (it was really 0625) to get underway by 0700.  We said good bye to Jay (a trawler owner we met) and headed out the channel expecting to arrive in Stonington around 1800.
The ttip was very pleasent, with calm seas and the wind just off the starboard quarter.  Although the mainland of Connecticutt had thunderstorm and tornado warnings, Long Island Sound did not have any rain at all.  
It was a long trek toward Stonington.  Almost 68 miles.  
As we past New London we saw the Eagle Us Coast Guard tall ship at anchor. 


Around 1400 we started calling marinas in the Stonongton area to book a slip for the night without success. No one had any transient slips available.
Rich Terry kept calling marina after marina in a widening circle to see if
he could find a slip.  He found an available slip at the Noank Shipyard which is just before to reaching Stonington.
We arrived at the Noank Shipyard and found it to be a great place to stop over.
We checked in, put in 75 gals of diesel fuel and decided to go to Costello's Clam Shack for a fish dinner.  This is your typical, order from window A and pick up a window B and then sit at picnic tables to eat.  The food wss great!
We took showers and went bed early to leave by 7 am tomorrow heading to Samdwich Marina at the other end of the Cape Cod Canal.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Layover - Wednesday, Augist 10,2017

We were able to sleep in until 7:30 and the went to a bagel shop for breakfast while waiting for West Marine to open at 0900.  The bagels wrre "New York style", chewey and good. 
When West Marine opened we were right at the door waiting for them.
The bad news was they did not have any stock of alternators of even parts for the chargimg system.  The good news was that the manager of the store, Jan, was very helpful and provided us with names of other places I might be able to find the parts.  However, after numerous phone calls none had the parts we needed.  We finally left the store discouraged and trying to think of ways we could limp back to Boston without an alternator.
As we were just turning the corner out of their parking lot Jan came running out of the store yelling to us with a man following her.  The man was Ralph Covington the owner of "The Boat Doctors" who had been shopping in West Marine.  When Jan told him of our plight, he said he could help,
Ralph, said he would take our alternator to Bronx Igniton for repair and have it back to us in the afternoon.  I went back to the boat to remove the alternator.  Ralph picked up the alternator and we waited for him to call while we cleaned up the boat.
Ralph called around 1230 to tell me that they had a new alternator for us, but they nedeed time to modify it for me.  He said he'd be back with the new alternator around 1500.
We worked on several small projets while we waited.
Ralph arrived with the alternator about 1600 and I immediaty installed it on the boat   After some intial testing we were satistisfied that it was working well.
We went to dinner at local pub called "Brennan's" to celebrate and talk about our scheduled return trip.  Tomorrow will be a long drive to Stonington, CT, about 70 miles up the Sound behind Fisher's Island.



Leg 9 - Tuesday, August 9, 2016

We got up at 0600 to leave early to get the currents in Verrazano Narrows, the Battery and Hell Gate in New York City about 40 miles away.  We need to enter Hell Gate after 1100 to catch a favorable current.  We expect to reach it around 1230 or 1300 which should be just after maximum current.
The trip past Sandy Hook, NJ, toward the Narrows was very uneventful except for a close encounter with a container ship entering NY Harbor.  We were too close in my mind.  He is big and we are small.  We were about 200 yards away from him for a while.
We entered New York Harbor and as we past the Statue of Liberty we paused and took some pictures to prove it.



We the turned up the East River toward Hell Gate.
The views if the city were awesome.


That is the Hudson River on the left and the East River to the right.


The Empire State Building looms in the distance.  The Chrysler Buulding came next.


Followed by the United Nations.


We entered Hell Gate at 1250 and the current was pushing us along at 12.5 knots.  It was quite a ride!  I don't think the currents in Hell Gate are as difficult to maneuver as in Wood's Hole.


We progressed up into Long Island Sound heading toward Bridgeport, CT.
Just off of Stamford, CT, the propeller shaft seal began to leak and splashed sea water in the engine compartment shorting out the alternator and killing the batteries. 
We pulled into the Seaview House Marina in East Stamford for repairs.  We were able to get the engine started later in the evening by using the genset to charge the batteries.  But, need to wait until West Marine opens in the morning to get a new alternator.



Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Leg 8 - Monday, August 8, 2016

This was an easy day.  We slept in until 7:30 and then heated water for coffee in the microwave, unplugged the power and headed out of the harbor.  
The trip to Manasquan River Inlet was very uneventful.  The water was calm and the wind was from our starboad side, so we made grest progress.  Most of the way we were able to make 7.5 to 8 knots  and the course was fairly straight.
We arrived at Manasquam Inlet at 3:15 and proceeded to Hoffman's Marina to tie up for the night.


After we plugged in our power cord the air conditioner stopped working with a "Low AC" fault.  I was able to figure out from Google that the problem was with the shore power.  We swapped our power cord into several different outlets until we foind one that maintained 110V under load and did not create the fault.
After we got settled, Rich and Jeff J went to the grocery store to pick up some items that we needed to replenish.
We cleaned up and walked to the restaurant named "Waypoint 622" and had a great dinner.  Jeff J's cousin, Joan, and her husband, David, drove to the marina to join us for desert.  We walked to the marina and showed them the boat and described our journey to date.  They left so we could go to bed in order to get up at 0600 to get underway to New York City.
















Monday, August 8, 2016

Leg 7 - Sunday, August 7, 2016

Dropped lines at Delaware City Marina and headed out of the creek at 0615 heading toward Cape May or further if we feel up to it. We left early to catch a favorable current in the Delaware River towards Cape May.  We caught the current and were making over 11 knots for the first few hours of the trip.  For a boat that does a top speed of 7.5 knots, it felt like we were on a rocketship.
About half-way down the Delaware we approached Miah Maul Light and turned to head directly toward the inlet at the Cape May Canal.  As we changed course we began to be bitten by a swarm of green head flies.  There were hundreds of them!  We had 2 fly swatters aboard, one stayed in the cabin and the other went to the bridge.  The attack and massacre of flies was relentless.  They just kept coming.  We littered the cabin floor and bridge deck with fly carcasses. They bit our ankles and legs for almost 5 hours causing a lot of sailor talk and jumping around.  We learned the secret of the "old one-two".  First you swat them, then step on them.  If you didn't finish them off, many would lay there for a second and then take off to bite again.  
As we approached the Cape May Canal the Ferry to Lewes, DE, was pulling out.  I thought about my brother-in-law, Lee Mills, who we had planned to visit, in Lewes, but we had to by-pass due to the schedules of the crew.
We entered the canal and proceeded toward Cape May and the Atlantic Ocean.  
Rich Terry had met a young man, Sean Polk, at the Bristol Yachts Rendevous earlier this year who was sailing his Bristol 35 to Key West and was currently anchored just outside the channel near the Coast Guard Station at Cape May.  As we appraoched his position we spotted him in his dinghy and taking pictures of our approach.


We chatted with him for few mimutes and wished him a safe journey and he wished us the same as motored off down the canal.
We exited the canal and turned Northeast toward Ocean City, still battling the flies.
We decided that we could press on to Atlantic City which was only an hour past Ocean City, but it will give us shorter day on Monday to Manasquan Inlet.
We arrived at Atlantic City, NJ, at 1800, after an 11.75 hour day.  The good news is that are now over half-way to Boston.
There are to marinas listed in Atlantic City.  One is the Farley State Marina at the Golden Nugget Casino, which has 640 slips and each dock looks like it was a mile long.  


On the opposite side of the inlet is Kammerman Marina that is a much smaller and is just inside the inlet, and has a fuel dock.  So, we decided to fuel up and spend the night at this marina.  The couple who owned the marina were very nice amd made us feel welcome.  The wife runs the marina during the day and the husband is a Sargent with Atlantic City PD.  We fueled up with 61 gallons of diesel and then moved to our slip.  
As we came into our slip the marina attendant and the owner of a 49' motor yacht next to helped us dock.  The owner of the motor yacht named Rene' was from Ontario, Canada.  He and his wife had been cruising simce April and were heading back to Canada.  We will be traveling the same route through New York City, but they will be heading up the Hudson River toward Canada when we go up the East River toward Long Island Sound.
The owner if the marina recommended a restaurant for dinner that was about a half-mile walk, so we decided to walk over to the restaurant.  It was called the "Back Bay Ale House", so we thought it appropriate being from Boston.


We ate dinner at the bar because the restaurant had a one hour wait.  Food was good and the ladies behind the bar were generous with our brinks.
We walked back to the boat as the sun set behind the downtown casinos.