Jeff -
I just did this trip last May and it was great. We left from Long Island NY in an older Pearson 32 – we had a crew of 4 and we were the only boat out (solo run). It was the first time I went this far offshore for me and the crew. I'll provide my pov on this along with some reccos. I know there will be some varying opinions on this topic so take it all into account. The trip took about 6 days from Montauk Pt, Long Island NY to St George Harbor.
- The boat was an older model Pearson but solid and we had back-up everything 2-3x on all systems. New sails. Make sure you review all your gear and equipment and identify all system vulnerabilities and potential back-up requirements.
- I can't tell if you are doing this trip solo as in sailing solo OR your boat with crew is solo. You should try to get a crew of 3-5 to join you if its solo-crew. It gets exhausting at times with a 24 hour watch and you can count on crew members (including yourself), potentially getting sea-sick and completely taken out of commission / rotations. We had 3 men down for up to the first 3 days. 1 was back after 48 hours. That was an exhausting experience and took time for the entire crew to recover. I was the only one not impacted by sea-sickness and luckily, between the other guys we were able to get thru the night watches. If you're going solo on crew, I would advise some precautions and extra planning — do some short 24-48 test runs first.
- Plan and research the heck out of the trip. We spent the better part of last winter researching and preparing supplies and gathering information. Read a book on Weather forecasting so you understand how to read weather charts and in real-time understand how to read cloud patterns and barometer readings. Its very helpful when offshore.
- Weather — We used passage weather.com for our pre-planning analysis and window of when to leave. Familiarize yourself with weather forecasting and how to read reports. You should figure out a way to get weather forecasts offshore too. You may want to invest in a router service or SSB receiver. We had a receiver but it failed on us — we got lucky on the way there and our forecasts held the entire week based off what we printed off passage weather. Over a 7 day period, expect to hit just about every and all weather situations.
- Communication plan: We used a VHF w/ AIS and rented a satellite phone. If you have a land-buddy, it's a good idea to check in 1x per day via sat phone and provide that person your lat/long, heading and avg speed. Even better, perhaps that person can provide offshore weather reads to you too (we did this on the return and it worked very well).
- Secure everything on the boat (deck and cabin) as if it will roll. It's like working in outer space when on a heal and sliding down 15 foot waves. Keep an eye on everything above deck / rig that has the slightest potential to chafe. Line chaffing is important to monitor — make sure no lines are touching each other. Check you're rigging multiple times per day, including your halyards. Be very careful tying / lashing stuff to the deck and avoid doing so if at all possible. The last place you want to be in breaking swells is on the bow securing an extra tank that is about to break loose.
- Make sure you and crew are harnessed in whenever on deck or in the cockpit…if you fall overboard there is little chance of recovery if there are sizable waves or if its dark.
- Food: I would pack accordingly for whatever types of meals you prefer. In addition though, make sure you have some very-easy to prepare meals such as cans of soup , bread w/PB&J and a large supply of Power Bars. Avoid excess containers and such as best you can. Large bottles of water are best and you pour into a water bottle for individual consumption. Less is more..
- Bring a fishing pole w/ tackle.
- Clothing — it's not that cold out there once you pass the Gulf Stream. Before though , it could be chilly so bring some fleeces / sweatpants and such to stay warm. I found the most useful clothing to be a baiting suite and an under armor running liner T <non-cotton tee short used for running>. Then I would wear a fleece over at night. I had foul weather gear but did not really need it. I would pack a couple of bathing suites and liner Ts.
- I assume you will research all the appropriate safety equipment such as medical supplies, inflatable raft and provisions — so I will not get into that. If you happen to know any doctors personally (i.e. family member, relative, close buddy) , it would be a good idea to bring their cell phone number along in the event there is some type of medical emergency. We had a medial book with us titled something along the lines of "What to do when a Doctor is not available".
- Necessary items: Always wear a pair of sailing gloves when on-deck and recommend such for the crew. You never know when a gust takes a line out that your holding the wrong way...rope-burn on your hands / palms is one of the most painful things that could take you out for a while. One of our guys ripped the skin off his palms for the better part of the trip down because he was not wearing his gloves. Sunglasses, hat and sunscreen -- backups too as you can easily loose these items.
- 24 Hour watches — make sure yourself and/or crew is on watch 24/7. If your solo, then thats a different story. We did 4-hour rotations w/ 2 men of for each at night. During the day, it worked out that we always had 2-3 men up on deck at will. There s a way to calculate against the lights of an oncoming vessel whether or not your on a collision course. Research how its done online — you monitor the degrees on your compass as an angle of approach over time. Its eerie at night when you spot lights from an oncoming vessel and you have no idea if your on a collision course or not — it happened once to us. Try to radio contact any other vessels you come into line of sight with so they know you are there. A couple of cruise liners had no idea we were 15 miles away when we hailed them. If you make contact with another vessel, try to get a weather report from them if you don't have it yourself already.
- Have fun and take lots of pictures….it's an incredible adventure that I only read about for years until I just went out and did it. Glad I did and look forward to hearing back your story.
- Rob