Rethinking Summer Plans

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Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
My instinct is to extend my cruising grounds sequentially as I like to feel the sweep of changing geography as the coastline slides along. That means cruising the Bay of Fundy before Nova Scotia.

One of my goals for the summer is spending 2 – 3 weeks up in the Saint John River system inside the Reversing Falls. The plan has been to sail briskly for St. Andrews and use that as a base to wait for suitable weather for a week around Grand Manan Island and then head for Saint John. I plan to pick up a friend who is based there to accompany me across the heavy fogs and big ship traffic of the bay to Digby and Yarmouth.

I’m beginning to think though that, like a lot of plans hatched in principle and pre-conceptions, this may not be the best approach. The freshwater, inland environs of the rivers should be at its best in late summer when the water is warmest and the vegetation most lush. I would also rather be up in the inland rivers if we get a major hurricane than out along the coast of Nova Scotia. My neighbor who works for a major weather forecasting company thinks we are going to see a hurricane season to match the tornado season we just had.

Capping it off is Barbara’s schedule. The Saint John is her kind of cruising, no waves, warm, fresh water. Her schedule makes joining me in late summer or early fall a lot more practical so I think there is a new Plan A.

Plan A is now to cruise through Maine to Passamaquoddy Bay and Grand Mannan Island. I’ll then jump across the bay to Yarmouth and cruise the southern coast of Nova Scotia until sometime in August. Then Digby and back across the bay to Saint John.

Plan B is to head straight across to Yarmouth from either Portland or Bar Harbor. That would be a grand start for a cruise like this if I find the right crew. If the crew turns out to be someone who wants to see the whole coast of Maine, I’ll probably go with Plan A.
 
Mar 29, 2011
169
Beneteau 361 Charlotte,Vt
Maybe you want to do something completely out of the box, and do what is called the Down East Loop. From Portland head south to NY, then take the Hudson north to Albany. From there you can take the Champlain Canal to Lake Champlain, Sail north to Montreal picking up the St Lowrance and then head East to St Johns and Nova Scotia. The only down side is that you have to drop your mast to get through the Champlain Canal, but the up side is that you get a lot of fresh water sailing, you get to visit Burlington, Montreal, and Quebec City. No fog, and you would be in Nova Scotia at the end of hurricane season.
 
Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
I've done the canals and the Hudson on this boat,



so I've kind of scratched that part of the world off my list. Plus, the fact that I spent all the summers of my youth in the area.

Everything I've heard about the Gulf of St. Lawrence is bad. Swells funneling in against the current, harbors few and far between. I was just trying to convince another E 32 owner to take the southern route to N.S. from Erie PA. It's surprising how little the difference in distance to the end of N.S. is. It's about 3 days longer but you would probably make that up with being able to keep moving in rougher weather. He really wants to see the gulf though. I hope he has a better time than the video of that trip in a 60 foot trawler yacht I saw. They really got beat up.
 
Mar 29, 2011
169
Beneteau 361 Charlotte,Vt
I read a trip report from someone from NJ I believe that did the trip over the course of a summer. They did the Erie canal to the Great Lakes, then hit the St. Lawrence through the 1000 Islands. They said that they would have skipped that part, but over all they had a good trip. They did time things to be able to hit weather windows. I believe it was a 3 month trip over all.
 
Feb 6, 2009
257
Hunter 40 Camano Island
POTL Run, don't walk.!!! ;)


The tough part will be dragging your crew away from his job for 60 days for a long cruise......... I suppose you could xchange crew along the way. (make sure they are all photographers.......;) )

much tougher than any part of the sailing.


Admirals out here are lamenting how cool/cold it will be out here for the Memorial day weekend,

I casually mentioned that the only complaints that will be tolerated have to be delivered on the boat Friday through Monday..........

It has been very quiet since...............

As an aside
2 to 3 months of cruising per year would be a great way to get poor very quickly for me, but I like the idea of falling into warmer water during late summer, and probably would go with that circuit.
 
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