Tag Archives: Single-handed sailing

Another Dylan Winter Video

It’s been too long since I’ve posted anything nautical here. I get caught up so easily in the music I love. It’s appropriate that I go back to Dylan Winter and his trip around England in a 19′ sailboat.  Here he is taking off for another leg of his trip early on what looks to be a chilly morning. Getting underway is always one of the delightful parts of boating. Cutting loose from the land. Getting the boat back into its natural element and original purpose. The anticipation of the adventures to come, and those adventures don’t have to be high winds and heavy seas.  Adventure can come simply and quietly exploring quiet secluded gunkholes and those moments are often the most memorable.

You might notice that as he’s departing the port he’s leaving the red markers to starboard. The Brits don’t use the “red right returning” rule of the U.S. but then again those buggers drive on the wrong side of the road, too.

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Small Boat Blog

Interested in small boat sailing as I am? Here’s a good site I stumbled upon today:

http://bills-log.blogspot.com/

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Filed under boats, Classic Boats, cruising, homemade boats, Microcruising, Minimalist Cruising, Sail, sailboats, sailing, Small boat cruising

Home Made Sea Swing Stove

One of the pieces of gear that I really loved on my Nancy Dawson was the gimbaled Sea Swing stove.

Force+10+SeaCook+Stove

It was great for cooking while bouncing around underway. I always cooked things in my small pressure cooker without the weight. With the cover locked on even if dinner got flung across the cabin you weren’t cleaning up the food all over the bunks and cabin sole. I also used it at anchor and in port when I needed a third burner to supplement my usual stove top.

They go for about a hundred bucks a pop at West Marine.

I recently subscribed to a Yahoo Group called LowCostVoyaging and someone calling themselves Ken V came up with this home made version which is really clever. His post read, “I have a non-gimballed stove in my galley, and needed a stove that would work on passage. I put together a low cost gimballed stove out
of a propane camping stove and a galvanized steel pail. To make the stove, take apart the camp stove and find a way to fit it through a hole in the bottom of the pail, then hang the pail where it can swing. I had no spillage even close hauled into 6 ft breakers.”

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There are few people as resourceful as cruisers on a budget.

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Cruising Chart Tip

Though extremely disappointed by the fact that I haven’t had a single inquiry about the Boston Whaler I have for sale in the last two weeks despite reducing the asking price way below its true value it hasn’t kept me from dreaming about my original premis of this blog One More Good Adventure. That adventure is to sail down to Panama and live in Bocas del Toro until they find my black and bloated corpse on board.

As my expected profit from selling the Whaler shrinks, so does the size of the boats I’m looking at to do the feat shrinks as well. But long voyages in small boats are done all the time. After all, Robert Manry crossed the Atlantic in his 13-1/2 foot Tinkerbelle and really crazy have done it in even smaller craft. And there’s only one long-distance open water passage to do (Great Inagua, Bahamas to Bocas) and I only have to do it once. So, in all this day dreaming I reflect on the trip I made with Nancy Dawson from Fort Lauderdale all the way down to the Rio Dulce in Guatemala and back.

To go anywhere on the water charts are essential. These days, of course there are all kinds of electronic charts and viewers available and while they are great in their own way, what happens if your electric system craps the bed? No matter how good your electronic charts are only a very stupid boater will depend on them alone. You need to have paper charts. Period.

When I was planning my Guatemala adventure I needed to have a set of charts. A set of NOAA charts were going to set me back well over $100 OR I could buy a Xeroxed set for a fraction of the cost. The problem with Xerox charts are that they are just black and white and aren’t colored like the NOAA charts.

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As you can see, land masses are one color and the varying shades of blue represent different water depths. This makes it easy it much easier to read them

Xeroxed charts, on the other hand don’t have this feature. What I did was buy the B&W charts and a set of multi-colored highlighters. I then spent hours going over the charts and highlighting them. I used yellow for the land areas, blue to mark shallow areas and things like coral heads and reefs and pink to show where anchorages were indicated…

Chart 2

The chart above is from Freya Rauscher’s Cruising Guide to Belize and Mexico’s Caribbean Coast (Including Guatemala’s Rio Dulce). You can see how it worked. Not NOAA quality, but good enough. In fact, one advantage of doing this was that I had to spend quite a lot of time pouring over the charts to find all of the things that needed to be located and therefore I got a good feel for how things really were. Probably better than just reading through the more expensive charts.

Another way in which NOAA charts are superior to the Xerox variety is the quality of the paper. The are built for hard use and, in general, will last for years. The Xerox charts are on heavy bond paper but don’t have nearly the endurance potential of the more expensive charts, especially when you consider that all charts are going to get soaked somewhere along the line.

Here’s what I did and what I will do in the future whether using NOAA or Xerox charts…I took them outside and saturated the charts with Thompson’s Water Seal. That’s right, the stuff people use on their wood decks outside their homes. Worked like a charm. When they dry out you can still mark your position with pencil and even erase what you have written on them. During the cruise the charts did get splashed with sea water more than once and it simply beaded up and was easily blotted up with a paper towel.

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Confessions of a Long-Distance Sailor

As I do every afternoon I took my old bitch for a walk. Don’t get wrinkled…I have an 18 year old female dog that I rescued from the puppy prison 17 years ago. She’s only got one speed, slow ahead and I use the time to listen to either an audio book I’ve downloaded from Audible.com or one of the podcasts on FurledSails.com.

Today I started listening to Podcast #69, an interview with Paul Lutus. Paul was a computer nerd who wrote the original Apple Writer program, made scads of money and then, without any prior sailing experience bought a boat and sailed around the world. Naturally he wrote about it, but was unable to get it into print since publishers aren’t keen on sailing books that historically don’t sell well. However, Paul formated his book and it is available FREE online at this location: http://www.arachnoid.com/sailbook/index.html

Don’t get confused when you go to the page because there are two downloads you have to pay for. Scroll down to the NOTES and you will see Download “Confessions” in ZIP form (1.3 MB) for offline reading. I’ve just finished the first chapter and it’s a pretty decent read.

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Gaffers and Smacks

It’s been a couple of weeks since I’ve posted anything of Dylan Winter’s vids of his travels around England in his 19′ sailboat. What I’ve found especially fascinating in his series are the classic and work boats he’s documented. This is his episode 26…

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More Dylan Winter

I’ve moved up on Dylan’s journey around England in his 19′ boat because I didn’t find the posts too interesting since they didn’t show other boats. This one does.

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Another Dylan Winter Episode

This is the sixth posting of Dylan Winter’s single-handed trip around England in a 19′ sailboat but it’s his seventh episode. I thought the sixth was rather boring and there weren’t enough shots of other boats in it. Since one of the themes of this blog is boats and sailing I’ve decided that if there aren’t a lot of boats in Dylan’s scene I’m not going to post it. Hey! My blog, my decision. Anyway, if a YouTube post here sparks your interest I hope you’ll have enough initiative on your own to go to YouTube and check things out.

Anyway, here is this week’s contribution.

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A Good Day’s Sail

This picture has intrigued me for a long time…carina

It’s of a young Hungarian, Aron Meder, sailing around the world in a 19′ boat. It’s not something I would want to do, sailing around the world that is, but the picture tickles my imagination. The wonderful thing about sailing is that if you have enough food, water and desire the whole world is open to you.  Another thing I like about this picture is that it is sort of a kick in the pants to those people who believe that the only way you can go cruising is if you have at least a 40 foot boat to do it. I’m not saying people should try and circumnavigate the globe in an eight foot boat like Kristofer J. “Harley” Harlson intends on doing, or an 11’10” boat as Serge Testa did. But I’m a firm believer in the credo that if you want to go cruising take the boat you have and go.

Ninety nine and forty four one hundredths of a percent of people who dream about going cruising never do because they’ve been brainwashed by the slick commercial boating publications who perpetuate their advertisers propaganda that if you somehow manage to clear the breakwater in anything less than a 40 footer you will instantly die. So they toil away at jobs they basically detest trying to save up enough money to buy that unatainable dream and it’s nearly always impossible to sustain a dream that long.

Sterling Hayden hit the nail on the head in his book Wanderer when he wrote: “‘… men often say ‘I’ve always wanted to sail to the South Seas, but I can’t afford it.’  What these men can’t afford is not to go.  They are enmeshed in the cancerous discipline of ‘security.’  And in the worship of security we fling our lives beneath the wheels of routine–and before we know it our lives are gone.

“What does a man need–really need?  A few pounds of food each day, heat and shelter, six feet to lie down in–and some form of working activity that will yield a sense of accomplishment.  That’s all–in the material sense. And we know it.  But we are brainwashed by our economic system until we end up in a tomb beneath a pyramid of time payments, mortgages, preposterous gadgetry, playthings that divert our attention from the sheer idiocy of the charade.

“The years thunder by.  The dreams of youth grow dim where they lie caked in dust on the shelves of patience.  Before we know it the tomb is sealed.”

We also have to address the definition of “cruising.” Too often people, I think, believe that a “cruise” has to be something of epic proportions. A circumnavigation or at a minimum crossing some vast body of water. That is patently absurd. A three day weekend, like the one coming up this forth of July, can contain a cruise. Someone who packs some food and a tent in their skiff, leaves on Friday, spends a couple of nights out under the stars and is back home Monday night has made a cruise and their souls are better for it.

Another reason I like the photo is because it brings back the memory of one of the best day’s of sailing I ever had. I left Placencia, Belize, heading for the Rio Dulce, Guatemala, in my beloved Nancy Dawson, a Kaiser 26.

I had cleared the Sapodilla Cays in lower Belize and was into the Bay of Honduras in the early afternoon when the trade winds kicked in. Instead of being in the sheltered waters of the Inner Channel, as the call the water between the reef and the mainland of Belize is called, I was now being lifted by ocean swells which were about the size of what you see in the photo above. The sky was blue, the clouds were pure white, the waves were azure and the wind was coming in on the port quarter at about 2o knots.

I put a double reef in the main but kept the genny flying, set Florence, my windvane steering system named for an old girlfriend since they were both French and often a pain in the ass, and delighted in my down-wind ride. My dingy pranced behind like a puppy chasing along in play.

I never knew how fast I was actually sailing. Back then (’92) I couldn’t afford a GPS and I was way out of Loran range. I had a speedometer but who knows how accurate it was? I always felt that if the speedo was clocking along at 5 I was doing well, and I factored in that towing the dinghy slowed me down by probably a knot. But now the speedometer was holding steady at between 6 and 7 knots and as I would surf down the face of the swells the needle would often peg out at 10! Again, I won’t vouch for the veracity of the thing, but the ride was exhilerating. For four hours I froliced along in delight and was actually disappointed when I approached Cabo de Tres Puntas which meant my day was over. I wished I could have gone for days like that.

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Keep Turning Left Part 5

Well, it’s Friday and time for another Dylan Winters episode. I actually thought about skipping this jump of his as it’s not exceptionally interesting except for his observation at the end about a large apartment complex on the water, not unlike how developers have managed to screw up a great deal of the coast line of the eastern US and the Gulf Coast so I opted to include it here.

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