Saturday, December 8, 2007

Ready to leave San Francisco

I'm back in Iqaluit, I have to do another 17 days before I am free of this place. That is, of course, if the weather and customer co-operate and get the last little bit of work done before dec 21st, if not, then I will have to stay until Dec 27th.

I had a bit of a stressful time in San Francisco, the deadline was fast approaching for my return to Port Alberni and the list of things that had to be done to make Prism seaworthy was not getting done fast enough. But on the second to last day I was in San Francisco, the last major project was completed. I can now receive weatherfaxes on my new HF transceiver, and store them on my new computer. In addition to weatherfaxes, my new HF transceiver will emergency transmit if required and after I study and get my ham radio license, I can communicate at sea by e-mail and voice.

So that night I lay in the bunk, realizing that I had no further excuses. It was time to shit or get off the pot, and that's a fact, Jack.

The hull is clean and dry, it doesn't leak a drop from the sea. The main windows have been removed and re-sealed so they won't leak when it rains.
The engine is very nicely broken in, new oil and filters, starts every time.
The main sail track and mast have been cleaned and inspected and the sails all work very well.
The rudder, self steering and both autopilots are working well.
I can get weather and satellite photos daily at sea.
I have the charts, books and GPS working as required.
I've managed by good luck and good planning to have my private life sort of organized.
Peter is on his own, though living with his mother. He just finished his first year of his apprenticeship so he had to attend 6 weeks of school, which he got 82%. He is now the lead hand on a 9 story renovation in Vancouver somewhere, so he seems on his way. He just turned 21 so really what can a father do for his son at that age? If I have to do something, I will, but I think he's ready like I was to see what he can do.
My mom is happy and healthy, what a bonus for a 77 year old, and what a bonus if I got those genes.
But I'm at least 51% ready for this adventure, the boat, my work, my family are all aligned, now just to see if I can do it and if the stars align for my path.

I plan at this time to head out of San Francisco on a course SouthEast. The winds are normally supposed to be blowing off North America towards the South West in January, ie from the Northeast, and that is excellent for a fast passage to the Galapagos. However this is a La Nina year in the eastern Pacific and those winds are not as predictable. If I get bad winds, the route to Hawaii is always safe, fast and predictable in January. So for the first week or so, I'll be going parallel to North America, just 150 miles off. I can always duck into southern California or Mexico if me, the boat or the weather gives me problems. After a week, it's decide to continue south to Galapagos and Chile or turn right and head for the big Island of Hawaii.
So there you have it, Dec 28th I'm taking my old man's boat out beneath the Golden Gate and then I'm taking it where I will.

Sailplan
Depart San Francisco Dec 28th weather permitting.
Looking for a 4 day NW weather window so I can head out 100 miles and turn South east to parallel the coast of North America for 4 days. During this time I will be sailing generally downwind.

My 4 year old Cape Horn windvane has handled Island Prism downwind and beam reach very well over the past 2 years. I have 2 year old sails, in excellent condition, the full batt main has two deep reefs. I have 140% genoa, 95% genoa, tiny jib for the 2 year old Harken Furler at the head and a staysail on it's own inner forestay. I have a storm trysail set on its own mast track. The mast has running backstays set from the cockpit.
My engine is 3 years old, just niceley broken in and working well. I have a belowdecks hydraulic Sitex autopilot.
The boat will steer herself under sail as proved by the successful 7 day passage to San Francisco last spring.
The new engine and autopilot work well together. I don't steer the boat by hand.
I have a 2 year old Furuno Radar and a brand new working Sitex AIS Radar with its own antennae, both have proximity alarms. My watch pattern is to stay awake all night and to take catnaps in the day. At sea I feel apprehensive at night, and have trouble sleeping comfortably. During the day with good visibility, I take catnaps with radar scan every ten minutes, radar and AIS alarms on. All navigation lights work, 2 radar reflectors, and I have a strobe at the masthead. At 100 miles offshore the traffic is less, which stresses me less.

I plan to sail parallel to the coast, 100 miles off, for a week. If me, the boat or the weather causes any problems, I can put into Southern California or Mexico. If all systems are go, I will continue on to the Galapagos Islands. There are no tropical storms on this route.

I am quite confident that the boat is seaworthy for this route at this time of year. I know all the systems on this boat and can fix anyone of them. For the past ten years I have been Flight Engineer with a Sikorsky S61N helicopter in the Canadian Arctic. The background from this successful career has taught me to fix almost anything, almost anywhere in atrocious conditions. Another important lesson I learned in the Arctic is that the helicopter has to be airworthy every day it flies, and I've always made sure of that. That's why I am confident my boat is seaworthy.

Safety Equipment:
New Simrad EPIRB
New 4 man liferaft
New HF transceiver
VHF transceiver
New Sitex AIS Radar
Current flares, radar reflectors, life jackets, safety harnesses, safety lanyards
I will most likely do this solo. My usual crew been unable to commit to the time and I have reservations about unfamiliar crew.

Jim Shortreed.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Pt Alberni to San Francisco

Posted by Bill

May 31, 2007
1645: Bus from Victoria to Pt Alberni.
2330: Put on scopolamine patch #1. Loaded provisions. Later discovered that several boxes were left on the dock, including the ginger ale for my stomach.

June 1, 2007
0622: Departed Pt Alberni with Jim, Bill and Cliff on board.
1122: Arrived Bamfield, had lunch at Cliff's place
1335: Departed Bamfield bound for San Francisco with Jim and Bill on board
1500: Set sails and turned south
1600: Whales about 300 yards off port, 2 flukes, probably gray whales
2245: Fogged in, just as moon was rising, viz down to 100 yards

June 2, 2007
0100: Winds died, started engine. I slept until 0530, still no wind, still fogged in.
0720: Sea lion about 50 yards off.
1812: Calm seas, low swells, light wind. Empty ocean, sky and radar. We are about 70nm off the Oregon coast. 46d 08m N x 125d 48.6m W. Fog finally burned off by mid-afternoon; warm sunny day.
2325: Escorted by a school of critters, maybe porpoises or dolphins. They leave a phosphorescent trail underwater. Also being followed by a flock of birds, robin-sized with pointed wing-tips, lots of chatter. Light of Venus is reflected off the surface of the ocean.

June 3, 2007
0030: Underwater escort arrived again. Hard to see them, but I think they are black and about 3 or 4 feet long.
0755: Sea lion took a look, then disappeared. South wind becoming stronger.
Later: Southeast winds and large chop. Headed out to sea on a SW course. If this storm behaves as we think it will, we'll have about 12 hours of SE winds, followed by 12-24 hours of SW winds, followed by north winds. Stomach very unhappy. Replaced scopolamine patch #1 with patch #2.
A group of seals cruised by, popping heads up to look, and jumping out of the water. Probably the same critters noted earlier.

June 4, 2007
130nm offshore. Winds have veered to southwest as predicted, so tacked back towards land on a SE course. Saw whales spouts in the distance. Stomach somewhat better today.
1922: Ate my first full dinner in a few days; starting to return to normal.

June 5, 2007
Decent sailing. Several whale spouts. Patch #2 fell off, and I didn't bother replacing it.
NW winds, confused seas.

June 6, 2007
Woke up today and looked out at the pitching seas and felt fine.
Heavy NW winds, large swell plus wind waves. Reached speeds of 7.5 knots.
Millions of tiny "sailboats" on the water, varying in size from 1cm to 5cm. So many that they sometimes look like a slick. No idea what they are.
Less than 100nm to Pt Reyes.
A solitary sea bird passed by again today: 4 ft wingspan, brown, narrow wings, glides very gracefully close to the water, down into the troughs and up again, rarely flaps its wings. Albatross?

June 7, 2007
1338: Passed under the Golden Gate Bridge. Brief escort by a small dolphin just before the bridge.
Later: Spent hours on the cell phone trying to check into US Customs. Apparently they weren't interested, so we just tied up at the dock and went for dinner. Walking was a challenge. Dinner was great.
The boat squeaked against the dock all night long, but we both slept through it.

Pictures of the Pt Alberni to San Francisco voyage