G
Gary Wyngarden
Well we finally closed on our new (to us) Hunter 37.5 last Saturday. The boat was located in Vancouver which left us with a mid-winter 80 mile trip home at a latitude north of Montreal, Canada.We load and store our gear aboard on Saturday for a planned Sunday departure. While sunny on Saturday, there were extensive fog banks on the Strait of Georgia. More are forecast for Saturday night and early Sunday so we delay our departure until late Sunday morning as Wanderlust is not yet equipped with radar.We motor around a number of large freighters in English Bay off Vancouver and set sail in the Strait of Georgia in light northwesterly winds. Wanderlust sails like a dream. In 5-10 knot winds our boat speed is 4.5-6 knots. Even when the true wind drops to 4-5 knots, we are still able to sail at 3.5 knots close hauled.As we sail away from the coast the view off the stern is spectacular. The weather is sunny with temperatures in the mid 40's. The Coast range of British Columbia spreads out with snow capped mountains from 7000 to 10,000 feet. I can't imagine the view would be any better in Alaska, Norway or Patagonia.We sail across the Strait about 25 miles to Silva Bay on Gabriola Island where we spend the night. The next day we need to clear Gabriola Pass where the tidal currents run up to 7 knots. We time our passage for slack water at 1245. Of course everybody wants to go through at slack water, and as we approach we see several tugs towing large log booms (chained together logs in a perimeter penning in other logs on their way to a mill) coming at us from the opposite direction. They ignore our VHF calls, but we get through the narrow part of the pass before they arrive and manage to get past them on the far side of the channel. We end up dodging their log droppings for the next two hours.It's chilly with a head wind for the trip down Trincomali Channel. We let the autohelm take over and keep watch for logs sitting on the bridgedeck under the protection of the spray dodger.Night two is spent at Ganges on Saltspring Island, one of our favorite places. The forecast for the next day includes gale warnings. The morning weather report has southeasterly winds of 30-40 knots in Haro Strait which we need to cross. We decide to stay put for the day. Ganges is not the greatest in a southeaster. The floating breakwater knocks down the breakers, but a strong swell still rolls through the marina. Next to us, the finger a Nauticat 33 is tied to breaks loose from the main dock, and we help them warp over to our finger. Fortunately the winds veer more to the south and the swell diminishes.The forecast the next day is still frisky with 20-30 knot winds forecast but at least below the gale level, and we decide to have a go at it, scoping out a couple of protected anchorages if it gets too rough. We contact Victoria Coast Guard before crossing Haro Strait, and they get a report from a large freighter in the area-- 25-30 knot southeasterly winds with a heavy chop but no large waves.Our entire trip back includes continuous winds on the bow at about 25 knots with gusts to 40 and intermittent rain with temperatures in the low 40's. The chop is 4-6 feet in short intervals and pretty squared off. Though we bury the bow on several occasions, Wanderlust performs like a champ. The increased diplacement compared to our H33.5 was very nice to have.Back in more protected waters the chop levels a bit though the winds are still strong. We clear customs at Friday Harbor without a problem and make it make to Orcas Island, a bit waterlogged but happy to be home.Kathrene Pinkerton writes that "a boat,like a horse or a dog, does not change ownership with the mere payment of money. Ownership must be consummated. Only when the master has taken his craft through storm and fog, through tough times and happy sailing does she become truly his."We've brought her home and she's brought us home. The process has begun. Yee-hah.Gary WyngardenS/V Wanderlust H375