Planning continues for Catalina.

by Ray 6. August 2009 12:46
I went and visited the boat today to make sure I was clear on what equipment is in the boat.  For example I wasn't sure if there was refrigeration, there is.  Getting on the boat today really amped up the anticipation!  I looked around, opened all the drawers and cabinets, checked out the control panel and the nav. station. I reviewed the electronics aboard and scoped the cockpit again. Danielle at Seaforth even gave me their packing and checkout lists so I know exactly what will be on the boat and what they'll have checked prior to us getting there.

Damn I love the smell of a boat!  So all looks good on that front.  We're currently scheduled to head out Sunday evening sometime, hopefully before 7. I got the go-ahead from Seaforth to arrive and start loading around 4PM.  With that I don't see why we can't get off the dock by even 6...  We'll see.

Kurt and Sylvia got in last night and Kurt and I started in right away talking about the trip, looking at charts, sharing ideas...  Good stuff.  We're both excited!  We're going to catch a game tomorrow night then probably make a big Costco run on Saturday.

As for the trip itself, everything looks pretty straight forward.  Head out Mission Bay, we'll probably sail west for while before turning north.  That is if the winds keep up for a while, we could actually sail much of the way.  If the wind dies we'll just fire up the engine and plot a straight line to the southern tip of Catalina.  Our only concern is crossing the shipping lanes up near LA.  The boat has a radar reflector but somehow that doesn't give me all the comfort it might...  We'll keep a flashlight in the cockpit, and have the flares nearby just in case. We'll also be extra-diligent in our watch-keeping.

We talked a little bit about the return trip too but somehow that seemed pre-mature...  Although it looks like we'll probably make a quick circumnavigation of the island before pointing south and setting up for our 80 miles reach toward home...

Hopefully I'll get to update before we leave.
Seaman Ray

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Catalina | Mission Bay | planning | sailing

Pimugna - Santa Catalina Island

by Ray 27. July 2009 15:13
West end of Santa Catalina
Roughly 80 miles north-north-west of Point Loma lies an island that's been inhabited since around 7000 BC.  Within 20 miles of one of the great population centers in the United States it's been the playground for the rich and beautiful and Boy Scouts alike :P.  I was last there in 1981 for Boy Scout summer camp at Cherry Cove.  Looks like I'll be getting to play there again soon.  This morning I reserved a Catalina 320 for two weeks from today.  Sam, my father-in-law Kurt and I will be sailing up there, spending a couple of days on a mooring ball, then sail our way back to Mission Bay.

I'm pretty excited as this is as close to blue water sailing as I'll be getting for some time.  Okay, it's not blue water sailing, but it'll probably feel like it to me.  We won't be going further than about 20 miles off shore.  We should get two sunsets, one on the way out and one on the way back.

I'm still working on logistics some but the plan right now is to leave around 7PM and get out of Mission Bay.  Hopefully we'll have a couple hours of wind where we can sail for a little while. I think a sunset off the bow under sail would be a damn fine way to start the trip.  I'm expecting between 12 and 15 hours to Two Harbors.  I'm assuming that at some point after sunset the wind will die and we'll end up motoring most of the way there.  Kurt and I will establish a watch rotation and we'll see what Sam does.  Maybe he'll be beer-boy...

Once in Two Harbors I'm thinking we'll pass the time with books, sleep, some shore excursions, and some beer and wine for a couple of days.

After we're done with all that excitement we'll drop the ball around checkout time, which I guess is around 8AM, and we'll take a nice downwind sail all the way home.  I hope.  Actually we'll probably have to motor some of that since the wind rarely comes up before 10AM in these parts.  I'm also kinda hoping we'll get a hankering for little swim at some point during the day and we'll stop the boat for a mid-ocean dip...

I'm pretty excited right now.  I've got a few more details to hash out but I think we're pretty much a go at this point!  I hope to post more details soon.

Seaman Ray

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logistics | planning | Relaxing | sailing | Catalina

What makes a blue water boat?

by Ray 25. May 2009 16:29

After sailing with my father-in-law in San Francisco a couple weeks ago we took a stroll through the marina to take a look at a friends boat.  As we passed a 36 foot boat I might have made a noob statement such as "That isn't a world cruiser though..."  I think we might have been talking along these lines since my FIL knows about my dream.  His response was to the affect "What, it's not big enough?"  I had a hard time responding intelligibly but mentioned it wasn't a size issue...

I thought about that for a bit and as will happen with thoughts in my head it faded.  Then I was reading the Cruisers Forum today and came across a post from a guy in LA who has somewhat of a similar plan to mine.  He was asking about a specific boat which I know nothing about but he also asked about what makes a blue water boat a Blue Water Boat.  This is a topic I've been studying lately and while I'm certainly no expert I can play one on TV...

A Blue Water Boat in many ways seems to be an ethereal thing.  It has little to do with size, within commonly accepted minimums and maximums which most often is based on crew size and capabilities.  Tania Aebi completed her Circumnavigation in a 26 foot boat.  Couples regularly make similar trips on boats up to 50 feet.  I personally semi-circumnaved (is that even a word?) on a 410 foot haze grey ship, of course that was with 300 of my closest friends.  ;)

Considering input from numberous sources, most certainly to be added to over time, Blue Water Boat has come to mean, at least to me, certain minimums of competing capacities and capabilities.

Length - Probably the least important issue as long as the boat is big enough to support it's crew for the duration of a cruise.  For a world cruise for the little woman, the royal son and the royal daughter I am considering between 42 and 50 feet, with 44 to 46 most likely.  If we end up bigger it will be due to the little woman's comfort requirements...  Or at least the perception there of...

Fuel Capacity - But wait, aren't we talking about SAILING around the world?  In my research I've found that there are times when one can not or should not sail.  There are also times when one will want to run equipment that can only operate while the engine is running - charging batteries, running water makers, charging fridge's etc.  And then of course there are the doldrums.  I've read accounts of folks who chose to sail across the equator and took 34 days to get from Ecuador to Marquesas and I've read accounts of folks who motored through the doldrums, sometimes for several hundred miles, who made the same passage in closer to 20 days.  It often seems to me that most things one considers when planning a world cruise are a compromise.  Now if you are adamant you're going to sail through these conditions and you have the stores onboard to support a 34+ day passage then good on ya.  Otherwise if you want to minimize your passages and prefer to motor for 400 miles likewise good on ya.  Therefore fuel capacity needs to be based on your preferences.  You will need a bare minimum to provide for motoring inside harbors, anchorages and marinas, plus to handle the charging requirements you'll have.  Further you'll need to consider what other charging and battery and equipment decisions you've made as these will have a direct bearing on fuel requirements.  One specific suggestion I read was to have enough fuel on board to motor 800 miles.  If a boat consumes 1 gallon an hour while traveling 5kts that fuel requirement is 160 gallons.  Personally that seems like a lot of fuel...  As I puruse YachtWorld dreaming I generally gravitate to boats sporting 80 to 100 gallons fuel capacity, and given that I'd still probably have up to 20 gallons in gerry cans on deck.

Storage Capacity - This one is a bit easier to handle then fuel.  In my mind there are only a few issues to consider: how many people are on board, how much personal gear will they require, how many spares do you want to carry and finally how will your boat handle the load.  It stands to reason that a 30,000lb boat will handle 5,000lbs of gear easier than a 15,000lb boat.  Spares, like most decisions, are based on one's comfort level and skill level.  No point in carry spares you don't know how to install...  Obviously the more people the more gear.  What I have found in backpacking is that whatever size backpack I take dictates how much gear I take and I'm going to fill it.  Knowing my propensity to take the Boyscout motto to heart I imagine my boat packing will be similar.  An extenuating topic of how many are aboard and what they want to bring is ones ability to pack well...  Basically if you can get everything you want to take on the boat and she's doesn't handle dangerously afterwards then there would seem to be enough storage capacity.  I know in my case I'll also need to consider space for souvenirs.  An interesting point though, perhaps storage capacity is more important than fuel.  I mean people have been circumnavigating since Magellan and many of them didn't use a drop of fuel...  Tania Aebi made her passage from Ecuador to Marquesas without an operational engine.  So what's really important?  I'm leaning towards food, water and toilet paper at the moment...  And a final takeaway from backpacking.  I can fill my backpack to the brim, then strap on all kinds of acourements to the outside and really load that sucker up.  So much so that I can barely make it up a small hill.  Just because you can fit 5000 pounds of gear on a 24 foot boat doesn't mean that it's safe to do so.  Plus what will it take to get the behemoth moving?

Motion on the water -  This seems to be tied in a lot of ways to Storage Capacity in that a boat's sea-handling cababilities can be greatly influenced by the load she's carrying.  I think for me it'll be very important that a boat have a reasonable, smooth?, motion in a sea.  IE She won't slam up and down over waves and swells, nor be thrown about violently by non-extreme gusts.  My guess is this would lead to both vessel and crew fatigue to the point it can become dangerous.  Again an ethereal topic that is difficult to nail down to a few specific features.

Sail Plan - This is a broad topic but basically I'm talking about a boat's ability to gracefully handle a wide range of wind conditions.  While sailing a Catalina 250 in San Diego bay we were cruising along very comfortable in common bay conditions of around 10 kts wind.  Every time we'd get hit by a gust of 15+kts we'd heel over until the leeward rail was kissing water.  Trust me, this didn't make mama very happy.  What was the problem?  Were we over-canvassed? I don't think so.  I am starting to think that the C250 has a very small comfort window, which then means we were over-canvassed I suppose...  Additionally she had no capacity for reefing built in and I hadn't brought any line to put something together, a mistake I no longer make.  I'm starting to believe a blue water boat may be more forgiving in this area.  Handling little gusts more gracefully plus having numerous reef points for when the gusts aren't so little.  Having numerous options on head sails sounds like it would help this flexiblity as well.  Some boats generally accepted as blue water boats have both a forestay and an inner stay that can each fly head sails.  Often with roller furlings on both.  Personally I think this is a great option and really allows a skipper to easily make reefing decisions.  However I've noted many a boat has crossed oceans without this feature.

Efficiency - The less effort one needs to put into taking a sailboat somewhere the safer it is but also the less "stores" one will use.  Obviously, to me, I won't be hand steering for 3000 miles on a passage.  If I do I'll be one grumpy dude.  So self steering would also seem to be a part of a blue water boat.  Apparently there are two options:  Wind vane and auto pilot.  Auto Pilot is a powered device and since it uses a motor I'm guessing the harder it has to work, as in the bigger the seas, the greater the power consumption.  This then has a direct impact on your fuel consumption, or at the very least your electrical consumption and battery charging methods. A wind vane uses the wind across a blade to hold it in a certain position there by steering you for free, as long as there's wind...  Perhaps the best solution here is to have both.  Another efficiency consideration is speed.  This goes hand in hand with Storage.  If a boat can only make 3-4 kts loaded you're going to need to carry more stores...  Catch 22 me thinks...

The final topic I'm going to consider today is Strength - Ah, yes... another overly broad topic.  I'm only going to point out two considerations.  Hull strength and rigging strength.  A boat that circumnavigates is going to take a serious pounding over thousands and thousands of miles no matter how benign the conditions you manage to keep yourself in.  Plus in areas like the Pacific coast of North and Central America there are lots of things in the water to run in to, other areas I'm sure as well...  Whales, logs, abandoned lobster traps etc.  There's lots of stuff out there so the hull will need to be able to take a few bangs and bumps.  Plus going through millions of waves can take it's toll also.  Hull flexing or oil canning will really affect the integrity of a boats hull.  Material, layup thickness, coring, and bulkhead support all go to the strength of the hull.  Thick is good and is probably the biggest reason so many boats made in the 80's are still making long passages.  Rigging strength may be one of the more common reasons an entire class or model of boat is considered not the be Blue Water.  Without rigging of sufficient strength, and therefore the deckplates it attaches to, the mast very well may just come down in the serious conditions one may find offshore.  These two points are where we just choose to go with brute strength.  No amount of seamanship or strategizing is going to add strength to a vessel or her rigging.  Sometimes you just need to say "Make it bigger..."

"Alright mister smarty pants, what boat fits all these criteria???" I'm not certain any boat will meet every criteria, as I said much of this process comes down to compromises.  However I will say that there are a few boats out there that I think would fit my, and my family's, needs on a world cruise.  I've previously mentioned a Peterson 44, I think that is a fine ship!  I think a LaFitte 44 is another fine vessel to take a family over the horizon.  Formosas are also exceptional craft.  If money were no object, and who am I kidding, then I would go out right now and purchase a new Island Packet 460 Center Cockpit.  Ah... Dreaming...

Okay, that's my opinion and I'm guessing there are as many disenters out there as anything.  If you disagree, or even agree, please feel free to comment.  This whole point of all this is for me to learn and to help me make the best decisions I can down the road, or seaway as it were.

Happy Sailing!
Seaman Ray 


 

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Circumnavigation | General | planning

Topics of Study

by Ray 8. December 2008 16:33

As I gear up for the holidays I've been thinking about other topics that one would need to study up on to make a safe offshore passage.

Obviously sailing skills are critical.  But that, I have found is a fairly expansive topic.  One can go sail a 16 foot boat in a lake and know how to sail quite well.  That may not get you across an ocean, it might...  The skills are certainly transferable but it seems like being able to tack, gybe and dock a sail boat is only the very beginning.

Actually the myriad topics have made my head spin at times, so for the most part I've pushed the details of those things off for now.  But I have a running list of skills and knowledge that will eventually have to be mastered in my head.  Some of the things on my list are only subsets of a bigger topic, and sometimes they are the product of tunnel vision and ignorance.

Some of the topics spinning around in my head in no particular order:

We'll need to learn how to anchor.  More than just tossing an anchor over the side and settling on it; decisions have to be made as to which and how many of the various sizes and types of anchors to use for given weather and bottom conditions.   Even before leaving the dock decisions will have to be made on number, type, and size of anchors to carry and how much chain and rope should be attached to each.  We'll need to understand the anchoring conditions and how tides play a factor in a given locale.

Sail types and sizes.  I'm figuring a cruising sailboat will have a roller furler or two on the headsails and a main with 3-5 reef points. So I don't see a lot of thought needed for headsails with the exception of a spinnaker.  The main won't be changed out often but will need to be reefed from time to time.  Knowledge of a boats handling will come into play in making sail configuration decisions.  Some boats need to be reefed before others.  Some sailors reef in certain situations regardless of wind conditions at a given moment, like at night. 

Provisioning.  How much of what can we carry?  What will last for months and what needs to be used faster.  Obviously fresh fruits won't last as long as dry goods but will some flour go bad faster than others?  Are some flours more prone to weevils that others?  Are there dairy products that will last months?  How long can eggs last un-refrigerated?  Can we carry a three months supply of beer and wine?  Will we want to?

Which brings me to drinking while underway.  I've read of many skippers who forbid alchohol while underway.  I've read of just as many who insist on a beer or a glass of wine nightly.  Knowing ones limitation here will be a factor I imagine.  I'm also guessing our vessel will be more like a British Man-o-war than a US Navy ship in that I would predict we'll be of the toasting the sunset variety. 

Cooking.  What will we want to eat and how hard will it be to prepare?  Will we want more elaborate meals if the conditions allow?  Or will we want to just get some sustenance?  When I'm backpacking we have a crude motto when it comes to food.  It'll make a turd...  In other words food has a purpose and taste is secondary to that purpose.  Although we've found ways to add some zest to our carb loading sessions...  I'm guessing we'll be trying for simple to prepare meals, but I can see wanting to splurge sometimes.  Then again maybe we're having three course meals every night.

Fishing.  What type of equipment works well on a sailboat?  I'm a fresh water trout fisherman and have extremely limited experience in salt water.  How many rods, lures, leaders, other tackle etc would we need?  What test would be appropriate?

Weather.  I've heard of Grib Files.  I gather these are weather forcasting data sets.  We'll need to understand them.  We'll need more than one weather predicting tool.  We'll need to understand what the sky and the conditions are telling us.  We'll need to understand the normal prevailing conditions for a given location.  We'll need to know what kind of conditions we can handle and what options we have when it comes to heavy weather.

Navigation.  GPS is all the rage. I have one in each car and I have a hand held for hiking. Still I take Topo maps when I go in the backcountry.  I am certain I'll want charts of the places we go.  Will we want or need a Sextant? I think just from the scientific/fun factor that we'll want a sextant aboard and use it.

Boat maintenance in general.  Everything I've read says to have spares of everything.  But really, what does that mean?  Literally spares of everything?  Spare engine?  spare water maker?  Obviously no, so then what really?  Transmission?  Transmission parts?  I can see needing a major collection of fasteners plus specific hardware for repairing winches, sail rigging, deck fittings, and the like.  Tape to repair a cushion or sail?  Needle and thread to sew a sail back together?  Fiberglass repair?  Resin?  Fiberglass cloth?  My guess is self sufficiency is paramount on a 25 day passage so this topic will get a lot on brain cycles spent on it.

First aide.  You can buy extremely comprehensive first aide kits but if you don't know how to use anything in it then it's not very useful.  Therefore I see all of us needing to either study the topic or maybe even take some first aid classes.  This is one of those topics, among many, that everyone needs to be strong on.  Personally I used to be a certified EMT but if I'm the one sprawled out on the deck after getting clocked during an accidental gybe then I damn sure want another first aid expert onboard!  On top of first aid I think we'd need a good pharmacy aboard too.  Advil is the easy one, but we'll probably want antibiotics, sleep aids, malaria meds, sea sickness meds, stuff to deal with dry, sun burned or wind burned skin.  What else?

These are just a few topics that I'll be spending my nights and lunch time walks thinking about for the next few years.  Truthfully I'm pretty excited to contemplate these concepts.  

In addition to this short list other ideas that will need study are: Electronics, DVD's, music, methods of music playback, gifts for locals, goods for bribes, goods for bartering/trading, sheets or sleeping bags, snack foods, cups or bottles, real china or plastic or corelle, plastic or metal utensils, new boat specific pots and pans or just what's in our kitchen, Books, firearms, swim calls in the middle of the ocean, how many computers, how many external hard drives, carry scuba gear or rent, head lamps or flash lights or both, shoes on board or barefoot, how often to shower, watch standing options, will we get bored, will we fight, will we have space to get away from each other, will we all chip in on the daily stuff that needs doing, will we like other cruisers, will we have to deal with other vessels, will we have pirate encounters, will we get enough sleep underway and on and on...

This stuff is a great way to get lost in ones thoughts as time permits.  Einstein had his thought-experiments, I have my thought-logistic-planning.

Ciao,
Seaman Ray 

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