Archive for the Deliveries Category
Well, when you take a photographer on a delivery you end up with more pictures than normal I guess, right? This is Ben posting from cold and wet Rhode Island… This trip was pretty amazing. It was my first trip in a tad over 4 years. I hadn’t had a chance to do a trip in a tad over 4 years with 2 kids at home now. With this being the last trip south, and having such a short leg this time, timing was perfect to get one last delivery in. I flew down to Myrtle beach on Friday morning which gave me time to provision with Peter, then he Leo and I got to go visit Grandma J for dinner! What and amazing time we had there (Grandma is a camera dodger though, as is Mom!).
We left Myrtle Beach with warm clothes on, but it’s wasn’t nearly as bad as a New England departure. I stood watch with Dad for my first two hours, then Leo for my second two. We motorsailed for the first day, then shut off the motor (unless we needed it for fishing) for the rest of the trip enjoying some nice sailing. The fishing was almost the highlight of the trip though with 5 fish caught, 2 tuna then 3 mahi including our massive ~80lb beast at the end. That was a team effort to catch! Once we got to the Bahamas I only had ~24 hours for playing before I had to fly home. We went to the dive shop immediately to get spears since they’re legal and we’ve never used them. Then we went immediately into the water where Pete got 5 fish and I got a lobster (and one fish that got in the way!). Pete Leo and I then went off to shoot the sunset that night before an amazing dinner on the boat. The boys also joined me on a sunrise shoot (those images will come later as they require a bit more attention when processing) the next morning which was a blast. Then one more snorkel (and another lobster!) in the morning and I was off to the airport. I’ll be back with my family in ~2 short weeks though, which should be amazing.
Enjoy the shots!
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December 20, 2011 Day 4
26 56 N latitude, 79 20 W longitude
474 miles from Myrtle Beach, SC
0 miles to the Bahamas!
Hello Everybody,
We made it! We’re here! But not at Marsh Harbor, rather Green Turtle Cay
and overnight tonight at Manjack Cay. This Abacos area of the Bahamas is a
little like Narragansett Bay–huge, so it’s as if instead of heading into
Newport we tucked into Pt. Judith. I haven’t been ashore yet, but Jake, Ben
and Peter all went in to have a look around and do the final check in with
customs. They all report that the people are incredibly friendly. They
stop what they’re doing to wave. The customs lady gave Jake a hug and
wished him Merry Christmas (of course that might have been because he gave
her some of our Mahi). The water is a little shallow–less than a foot
under the keel is nerve wracking to say the least. We simply proceeded
slowly and backed up a couple of times (without hitting anything), but that
was at low tide. When we moved the boat at high tide we had a whopping 4
feet below the keel.
Last night was nerve wracking, too. We had about 50 miles to go overnight,
coming onto reefs in the dark, with 10-12 hours to go. The guys all think
of that as a great adventure. I’m more conservative, it just makes me
nervous. Jake instructed Pete not to slow down, so when I got up at 2000
with 43 miles to go and we were making 8 knots, that would have put us into
the reefs at 0300-0330 with 4 hours of darkness left. Peter and I discussed
rolling up sail to slow down for 90 minutes before we finally acted on it.
Good thing, because we slowed down to about 4 knots. At that rate we
arrived at the waypoint at exactly 0700 the target time, just 15 minutes
after the sun came up. We navigated in through the reefs, rocks and the
islands and breaking waves. It was everybody on deck as look out, Jake
driving and me hiding out below at the computer with the charts to verify
our course. (I still don’t know exactly what this place looks like.) We had
a very narrow space to motor through with breaking waves coming through with
us. Pete was watching behind for the breaking waves, and there were a few,
while Ben and Leo watched ahead for a clear path. A wave broke just behind
us as we came in, but luckily didn’t impact us. Now the guys are all
talking about the waves they didn’t mention to Jake. Once safely in and
after 2 tries we finally were anchored in 7.5 feet of water at 1015.
After the business of checking in and buying pole spears to hunt for fish
legally, we moved to a more remote anchorage, Manjack Cay. The guys all
took off: Ben shot a lobster, which we just enjoyed as an appetizer. Pete
returned with half a dozen fish for breakfast tomorrow, and Leo missed.
Jake went kayaking, and I took a shower. The hunters snorkled over a wreck
in 4′ of water and are still talking about how much fun they had.
Ben has great photos on his camera, so we’re hoping he’ll put them on the
web site once he gets back home.
All the best from the crew of avalanche, celebrating our arrival,
friendship,hunting skills and the wonders of the Bahamas.
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December 19, 2011 Day 3
27 19 N latitude 77 05 W longitude
428 miles from Myrtle Beach, SC
37 miles from Marsh Harbor, Bahamas
Hello Everybody,
First thing this morning, before anyone else was out of bed, Ben and Leo
caught a 10-12 pound Mahi. Ben reeled it in on the young guys side, so they
were feeling really proud of themselves. Geezers 2, youngsters 1. Then
about 0900 after Ben had gone to bed, he was awakened by the jib car
rattling on deck over his head, which meant the sail was flogging, so he got
out of bed to see why. He discovered that Pete and Leo each had a fish on!
As he climbed on deck he called out that there were 2 fish on, which woke
me. Ben quickly rolled up the sails to slow the boat, then started the
engine as I joined the group on deck. Starting the engine woke Jake, who
joined the rest of us on deck for the excitement. The 2 lines were
seriously crossed, tangled and covered with Sargasso weed. Leo had to hand
his rod off to Ben so he could go down on the back deck to get the lines
straigntened out and allow Pete to reel in a nice little Mahi for the
Geezers, about 8 pounds. Then the work began. It turned out that Leo’s
fish had taken all but about 2 wraps of line around the reel, almost
spooling him. He had been cranking it in, but the fish continued to take
line, so it was a difficult battle. When Ben took the rod most of the line
was still out there. As Ben fought the fish, the fish took some line, Ben
reeled some in, the fish took more, Ben got more in, and still the fish was
along way away. Jake began driving the boat to take the pressure off the
line. It took a while, but helped enough that finally Ben got the fish
close to the boat, only to have the fish see the boat and take off again.
More cranking. As Ben finally got the fish close enough to the boat to
consider gaffing it, Peter jumped down on the back deck with Leo. Leo got
the line in his hand and managed a perfect gaff, but then called to Peter
for help. He couldn’t lift the fish out of the water by himself. And no
wonder! The guys had caught about an 80# bull Mahi. It measured 62″ long
(that’s only 1″ shorter than I am) and 32″ in circumference. When they laid
him across the back deck he filled the whole width. As they filleted him,
1/2 the length of his filet took the entire length of our fish cleaning
table. We got 15 packages of meat, each packaged to feed 3. And we saved
the head for fish water. The entire adventure took over an hour. We got
some good phots of the fish and fishermen, which we will try to post when we
have internet. After adding 3 Mahi to our larder, we thought we would then
go to a catch and release program, but there was so much weed around that
we finally called a moritorium on fishing for the day. So at the end of the
day it”s Geezers 3, proud young pups 2.
Planning our arrival into Marsh Harbor was the other important issue of the
day. The sun rises at 0715 and we can’t head in around the reefs until it
is daylight, so we don’t want to get there too early. We had been making 7
and 8 knots, but as we get closer we need to slow down. We now have about 8
hours until daylight and 27 miles to go. We’ve put a big reef in the main
and had reefed the staysail as well for a bit, which has us sailing at just
under 4 knots. We have to just creep along slowly enough to meet the time
frame, but fast enough to maintain steerage. It’s an ususual problem,
that’s for sure.
All the best from avalanche, looking forward to whatever sunrise brings and
many new adventures in the Bahamas.
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December 18, 2011 Day 2
30 10 N latitude, 77 01 W longitude
255 miles from Myrtle Beach, SC
206 miles to Marsh Harbor, Bahamas
Hello Everybody,
About 0630 this morning Jake and I turned off the engine, and we have been
sailing ever since. The wind has built during the day and at one point
during my watch our SOG was over 10 knots, helped by about a half a knot of
favorable current. The wind is aft so the ride is comfortable, sleeping is
great and the cockpit is comfortable. We haven’t caught any fish today, in
fact we havent’t even had a strike. The reasons are two: we were going too
fast and our lines collected masses of Sargasso weed. We finally just gave
up and
reeled in the lines. You should not, however, feel the least bit sorry for
us. We have had fresh
tuna sashimi for dinner last night and for lunch today. Jake will prepare
more for dinner tonight. It is delicious!
I have learned the details and now can tell you the fishing
contest score: Pete and Jake, aka the geezers or old guys or old men, have
caught 2; Ben and Leo, aka the boys or young pups or thirty-somethings,
have caught 0. Unfortunately Leo has to take credit (or is that blame) for
losing their only hit. He got the fish to the boat, but it got away befoe
he could land it. So the score is Geezers 2, young pups 0, fish 1.
Since I wrote those first paraagraphs the wind has gotten crazy! It
oscillates from 345 to 30 degrees with the wind from 18 to 30 knots. It’s
an adventure to steer, an even greater adventure to make a salad in the
galley as the boat careens from wave to wave. But good! The weather is
warm and the sky is clear. Pete was the only taker for a shower on the back
deck. He is always upbeat and positive, so when he admitted that although
the sea water was lovely and the shower water was hot, it was quite chilly
when the wind hit his wet skin.
Once again I must say goodnight since I have to be up from midnight until
0400.
All the best from the crew of avalanche looking forward to catching fish
again tomorrow, bathing on the back deck, and getting closser to the
Bahamas.
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December 16, 2011 Day 1
32 33 N latitude, 77 59 W longitude
93 miles from Myrtle Beach,SC
351 miles to go to Marsh Harbor, Bahamas
Hello Everybody!
Our goal was to leave the dock this morning as the sun came up, and I guess you could say we did if you believe that sunrise is at 1010.
As we turned from the Myrtle Beach Yacht Club into the Intracoastal Waterway we were greeted by several dolphin, who swam by to bid us farewell. Another mile down the ICW a bald eagle flew over, perhaps the
same one we saw when we arrived a month ago. Our trip out to the ocean was uneventful but very scenic: beautiful golf courses along the waterfront, lots of condominiums, several large plantation-type homes,
marshlands, and shallow bays. We retraced our route in, following the same line on the chart.
Yesterday I was still in Jamestown, Jake was in Minnesota, and Leo was on the boat. I had done the bulk of
the provisioning previously, but needed produce, dairy, bread and some meat. Fortunately, Ben Jacobsen and Peter Vaiciulis, who are sailing with us on this leg, were able to get to Myrtle Beach by noon and willingly
provisioned from my list. They did an outstanding job. They found everything we needed and even had it all unpacked, repackaged and stowed! (I’ll have to ask for help more often. After all, how bad would it
be if there were mistakes, it’s only dinner.)
Unlike the trip around Cape Hatteras when we had 3 knots of foul current, on this leg we’ve had the current with us and are making wonderful SOGs of about 8 knots, even 8.5. We should get to the Gulf Stream within the next hour or so. The water is currently 75.9 degrees and the air is 60. The entire trip to Marsh Harbor is 442 miles,so we should be there on Tuesday.
The fishing contest has begun. I’ve been told that it’s the men against the boys, but we won’t know which is which until we learn who wins. Currently the ‘geezers’ (that would be Jake and Pete) have 2 black fin tuna reeled in by Jake and by Ben. (We’ve already had sashimi beautifully prepared by Peter) There have been other hits and some lost fish, but I don’t have good details, so you’ll have to wait for tomorrow’s update.
Because we are only 5 I am standing watch in the rotation this trip. That means I stand watch 4 hours, sleep 6 and do it again. (Just like everyone else) But right now I’m 45 minutes into my 6 hours of sleep and I have to get up at 0330. So, please excuse me for tonight. I’m going to bed!
All the best from the crew of avalanche looking for warm water, sunny skies, lots of good fishing, and baths on the back deck tomorrow.
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