Coastal Cruising Parte Dos

by Ray 27. April 2009 14:39

So there I am looking at the horizon, left arm wrapped around a Lewmar 44 winch, feet stretched across the cockpit steading me againt the starboard lazarette, having just a grand time!  It is bit cold though...  Sadly I'm not headed anywhere too interesting and if I turn around I can see La Jolla a few miles away, but I'm still having a damn fine time!

Yesterday we wrapped up our ASA-103 class by starting the day with a written test that we all did rather well on.  Then it was time to cast off the dock lines and head out the mouth of the bay again.  Sunday wasn't nearly as rough or windy as Saturday but the wind we had was surely 10 degrees cooler than the day before!  I had all my clothes on, but for rain pants, by the time we were exiting the yacht harbor, as did most every one else.

With the only real hurdle we had left behind us we all just enjoyed a wonderful day on the ocean in a 32 foot sail boat.  Basically day two for us was sailing.  Some tacking, some gybing, some sail trimming, and just a bit of navigation.

After the written test Dennis gave us some basic pointers in navigation and chart reading, again just great info!  The sailing was fun, not too challenging, even if a bit cold.  We cruised down to Point Loma, skirting the kelp beds to the east.  Then we turned north and cruised up past La Jolla before heading back in to Mission Bay. In that time we were able to start to feel how to make the boat work with the swells and the wind.  

As a swell would pass under us the rudder would be pushed this way and that, the bow would swing around and we'd heel and straighten.  You could fight it or you could work with it to keep the boat both on course and trimmed properly to make the most of the wind.  It wasn't easy, certainly not at first, but over time each of us could smoothly rise up and down.  Obviously more practice is needed and we only had swells from a few directions.  Regardless, we began to understand that skippering a sailboat on the ocean is less about compass, knot meter, and tell tales and more about the feel of the boat and the ocean through your feet, hands and butt.

We turned on the knot meter and depth gauge and it was an odd thing, at least for me.  I felt compelled to watch the knot meter and try to make it show me as big a number as I could.  This, then, felt more like driving down the freeway trying to get to where ever I may be headed as soon as possible.  I realized as I was doing this that this was NOT why I came out here to sail.  I want to sail to NOT be in the rat race, to not be in any race other than human.  Sailing is to be my disconnect, so judging myself based on numbers on an LCD display just felt plain wrong.  So I looked away, I looked for sea lions and other animals.  I watched the sails and the horizon and my crewmates as I glanced at the compass to help me stay in the wind.  This felt much more right.  I'll need to remember this lesson in the future.

I now have the ASA-103, Basic Coastal Cruising certification which means I can now leave the bays and head out in the ocean and I can do this on bigger boats, up to 35 feet.  Also If I take a one hour course to get checked out on the 42 footer I can take that boat out as well.  These boats cost more to rent but they can also hold more people comfortably.

I don't have a plan for taking one of these sweet rides out yet, but I'll be working on that over the next few weeks.  My next sail will likely be in San Francisco bay with my father in law.  I'm really looking forward to that sail because I'm betting the conditions will be more challenging than most anything I've sailed in yet.  Now before I get accused of being a dare devil only wanting to sail in tough, read crappy, conditions, understand that I only want to sail in tough conditions to learn and be comfortable in them.  My dream sail is certainly a smooth warm day with 10 to 15 knots of wind.  But I don't want to crawl into the corner and cry if the fan does get hit with something...

With completeing this cert I have taken one more small step towards a bigger goal and taken another step into a bigger world.

Ciao,
Seaman Ray 

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Mission Bay | sailing

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