Nice sail yesterday

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BobM

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Jun 10, 2004
3,269
S2 9.2A Winthrop, MA
Well I finally got around to sailing yesterday. As I had posted, no real wind on the fourth, and not much wind to speak of since...excepting the freight train that blew through last Wednesday...I had been thinking about sailing that evening but didn't. My Wife was supposed to go out with some hens and didn't because of the storm. It was a wild one with several microbursts reported. Just shy of tornado weather which is rare for New England. I attached a couple of photos from the local newspaper taken by locals in Winthrop. Wouldn't have been fun to be out in that.

I went out for about four hours yesterday. Started out on a nice close reach, one tack to squeak out past the Deer Island light then a 180 and back. Lazy sail with the wind dying down at the end. Nice and relaxing and boy I needed that. Felt great.

When I was leaving the mooring there was a guy next to me working on a very nice Freedom. Gary Mull vintage 32 I believe. I think he was surprised that I was going out alone. Boy am I glad that I am beyond that point. During the transition I can remember days when I had to grit my teeth to drop the mooring and get out there. Days when I drove to the boat with butterflies in my stomach. In particular a day with rough seas in my mooring fiend when I caught the mooring pendant on my rudder. I was exhausted by the time I had freed it (cut it) and gotten off the boat.

Perseverance has been well rewarded. I know my boat now. I know enough about sailing now to think things through and to avoid putting myself in a bad situation. Equally important is to remain calm when the unexpected does happen. It all allows me to do what I really want to do when I sail...relax. Last night I sailed for four hours and only tacked twice. I did decide to drop the sails a bit early on the return so I could meet my Wife for dinner on time. Then I picked up my mooring perfectly. A looping turn to come upwind...a single burst of throttle...tranny in neutral...locked the wheel...and a casual walk to the bow to grab the pick up stick. I capped off my relaxing sail with an ice cold beer and a few pages of my latest book then made my way home. Reduced my stress and blood pressure far more effectively than any medication ever could.
 

Attachments

Feb 20, 2011
8,060
Island Packet 35 Tucson, AZ/San Carlos, MX
Were those photos taken that last Wednesday? Some ominous sky there.
 

BobT

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Sep 29, 2008
239
Gulfstar 37 North East River, Chesapeake Bay
The good ones are so very good. Makes all the fumbling worth it!
 

BobM

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Jun 10, 2004
3,269
S2 9.2A Winthrop, MA
yes

The photos were from last Wednesday. I have never been caught out in something like that. The closest was working on my boat on the hard and I literally saw a squall line crossing the harbor to me. I buttoned up with me inside but the boat was shaking on the stands so bad I thought that might be a bad idea, so I bailed out of her with buckets of rain coming down and the boat shaking on the stands like a child's toy. I sought refuge in the pizza place the boat was adjacent to.

The closest call I ever had was on a lake with a 16 foot powerboat. I knew a storm was coming, but misjudged how fast. We launched the boat, went to the other side of the lake and saw big trouble headed our way. We turned tail and ran for the ramp. At the ramp there were three other boats trying to get out up this crappy dirt ramp, and me with my Mom's 86 Toyota Corolla with a hitch on it to pull 1500 lbs. As we hooked up the boat the sky opened up Noah-style. It took four guys pushing in the pouring rain to get that Corolla to pluck that boat out of the water.

There is a recent set of posts about a guy hit by 80 mph gusts in the Chesapeake who had to cut his main to survive. More power to him. His Wife was aboard. If my Wife had been aboard I think she would have made me sell our house and move inland, never mind go on the boat again....and we live 30 miles inland now!

During the 4th of July there were some unreal fireworks courtesy of Mother Nature to the north of us. We had eight on board and I am very thankful we had nothing close to us.

It was a very nice sail. It was a good reminder of why I sail. I love my new job, but the last couple of weeks have been more than a bit stressful. The curse of a small company is that it typically takes more risk than it should. If we had spend $300K six months earlier our heart rates and blood pressure would be lower right now.
 

BobM

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Jun 10, 2004
3,269
S2 9.2A Winthrop, MA
The good news is that I talked everyone into buying material from a second supplier as insurance against a future stressful situation...of course then want to wait until mid-Sept before they commit to spend the money...where is my boat?
 
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