This weekend coming up appears to have SNOW in the forecast.
For all you snow people, that’s good. For sailors, that’s not so good.
JoAnne and I and the good ship Adventure set sail tomorrow in the best 48 hour weather window we’ve seen in some time to head as far south as the winds will take us.
We’re aiming for Charleston, SC (with emergency stopping in Winyah Bay if required) and if weather continues to permit, and the waves/wind and boat cooperate, Savannah, GA perhaps. Fifty hours roughly from setting sail is Savannah, which Charleston is about 24.
JoAnne is still not “sure” if she can handle a shift, let alone several, but I’m confident we can do it. We will test it over the next 24 hours and see how we do.
We should have good winds (starting off all wrong at first tomorrow morning) and then turning to give us some Northerlies which ought to take us pretty far south. The speed and movement of the boat will depend on my skills as a sailor and of course the wind and waves. But at this point I’m confident I can do it.
Traveling near by us, on their own ship, Bentana, are Judy and Stephen. We met them about two years ago in New York. They are long time cruisers (about 7 years now) and they are going to Florida as well. They came into the docks here yesterday morning to meet up with us. I don’t really think they intended to travel with us, but it appears since we’re all going the same way, we’re all going at the same time. That’s cool because we can chat on the radio and keep in contact.
I think we will probably decide once we hit the area of Charleston to go on or stop based on how our boat is doing rather than the other boat. We really WANT to go on, and try to get more than a single day of sailing in, but by nature no one is really a “sailor”. You have to learn the skills, you have to learn to live on the water, you have to learn to live on a small vessel going some place perhaps unpredictible and in conditions unknown to you for more than a few hours… and yet, it’s done.
People have sailed for months and months to go around the world, to get to the “New World” and did it with nothing more than a compass and an innate sense of well being (because, you can’t stay on a boat more than a few days at seas, without some kind of “well being” now, can you?) lol
JoAnne doesn’t think she is ready and I know she is, but I also know I AM, but am not ready to do it alone. So, therein lies the problem. If she can’t handle a shift for 2-4 hours, I might as well be alone. But, I can’t do a 24 hour shift without stopping at some point, and I can’t sleep for 15 minutes at a time either. So, it’s complicated.
For all you folks that see your dreams on a boat, and think you can do it – think again. For all of you that have your dreams on a boat, and think you CAN’T do it — think again.
You CAN do it it. All you need is careful planning, careful and critical thinking, knowing your weather, knowing how long you can actually sleep for and knowing your boat.
In all honesty, I’m JUST to the point I’ve gotten to know the boat well enough to do the right things with the sails. I know the weather well, and know what it’s going to be like for 5 hours in the future. I also know my body’s limitations. But, I also have a crew, my sweetheart, whom I worry obsessively over, and care for, and don’t want her injured again, so anything I do (as Captain) makes me rethink five or six times what is right and that is a good thing.
Until it isn’t. In the military, we said “Make a decision or die”. In real life that doesn’t happen to many, but it does happen to those who go to sea. But decisions MUST be tempered with common sense, good judgement and training.
I hope I have all three of those. The next 48 hours will determine the truth.
All my best to everyone for a fantastic New Year. May all your Dreams come True – but, remember, you must plan for them to come true 🙂
Fair Winds all!