C&C Owners,
Below is an email I sent to friends and sailors about my recent single
handed trip from Hood River, Oregon to Olympia, Washington. As the crow
flies it is less than 200 miles, but on the water it is up around 550
nautical miles. Read below and see the link to my custom lee clothes on the
starboard settee.
Cheers,
Kevin

Sailors and Friends,
Last week I successfully delivered our boat from Hood River, Oregon to
Olympia, Washington. And as Lisa said, "The only thing that got hurt was
your lip." (It split from sunburn and salt spray.)
The 550 or so single handed miles by myself on 'Osprey' was quite a bit
work, but went very well. The leg from the Columbia Bar to Neah Bay was my
first solo offshore sail and was completed with no drama. Here were the
legs:

0. Hood River to Ilwaco, Washington - ~165miles, done Memorial Day Weekend


   1. Ilwaco, Wa(Columbia River Bar) to Neah Bay, Wa - 187 nautical miles /
   ~36hrs, June 2nd,3rd
   2. Neah Bay to Sequim, Wa - 75 miles / ~11 hrs.  June 4th (very quick
   with tail wind and flood tide)
   3. Sequim, Wa to Bainbridge/Blake Island - 70 nautical miles / 12hrs
   June 5th
   4. Blake Island to Olymipia, Wa - 45 nautical miles, 10hrs June 6th


   - Bus / Uber to home at 11pm June 6th and at work Friday 6/7.


Here's what worked or otherwise:

   - *My wife*- Lisa took care of the boys without complaint during last
   weekend and the better part of last week. Getting permission to sail alone,
   15-20 miles offshore into the Pacific, on a small sailboat, for round the
   clock sailing for the better part of two days, is not something most people
   do every day. She has faith in my skills as a sailor, the safety of our
   boat, and a reasonable tolerance for risk. Nothing is possible without her.
   - *My project team- *Filled in for me when I was gone for 4 days last
   week. Given the stage in construction on our building and project dynamics,
   it was important someone or multiple people be on site while I was gone.
   Allen and Michael pitched in and it was appreciated.
   - *Columbia River Bar -* I crossed at slack tide at the start of an ebb.
   I actually began my crossing early so to be sure I was safely over the bar
   before the ebb gained momentum. It was a little bumpy, but not dramatic.
   - *Tow Lanes - *A somewhat common strategy, when not racing and heading
   up to Cape Flattery, is to take the commercial tow lanes. This in order to
   reduce the risk of snagging a crab pot. I followed this strategy and went
   out from the bar to the summer tow lanes, ~15 miles offshore. I saw very
   few crab pots the whole trip, but did see ~4 and they made me nervous each
   time.
   - *'Osprey' C&C 30-2 *Though our boat is tender, she has great qualities
   otherwise and is an extremely well designed boat. She carries generous sail
   for her vintage, is relatively light, and has somewhat efficient foils.
   Despite the constant 15-20 knots of wind close hauled, she does not creak
   or flex audibly like other boats I have been on. The molded head liner is
   silent. Our little Yanmar Diesel operated flawlessly at a constant 2800
   rpms (3400 continuous rated) for days on end. I change fuel filters, belts,
   and impellers religiously and that seems to do the trick. The Yanmar is
   dead simple and has never let us down. 'Osprey' is an excellent boat, but a
   few more feet would add some speed and accommodate the boys a bit more
   nicely :)
   - *AIS Vesper XB 8000 *- I bought and installed this AIS transceiver
   just before heading offshore. Having an AIS transceiver was a game changer
   over our previous trip,  when we double handed up the coast. In the ~200
   miles up the coast. I did not see anyone that I could not also see on AIS,
   including pleasure craft.  Also Lisa and Dan were able to track me all the
   way up the coast. The AIS repeated seamlessly on the tablet and phone(s) I
   use for navigation and redundancy and the unit is hardwired to an alarm
   buzzer at the nav station with a mute button. It also sends alarms on my
   phone and tablet.  The Vesper app works very well, was intuitive,
   information rich and overall greatly exceeded my expectations. I would
   highly recommend this product and I am extremely happy with the purchase.
   (We do have a small Garmin GIS on board, but we do not use it for
   navigation specifically. We do not have a hardwired chartplotter or MFD.)
   - *Scopolamine Patch - *I can get sea sick if I am not extremely
   disciplined about going below decks or in rough seas. Our boat is on the
   smaller side and is pretty tender. Furthermore, the wind a steady 15-20
   knts and seas (though not directly on the nose) permitted only close hauled
   motor sailing. Predictably this meant a fair amount of slamming, water on
   the decks, and spray in the cockpit. Not 'green water', but a very lively
   motion for sure. I got sick 3 times, each time when coming back up on deck
   from below. Much of the rest of the time I did feel somewhat crummy, but I
   have been there before so I was not concerned.
   - *Watch Schedule - *The first half day I was getting comfortable with
   shipping traffic, my course, sail trim, and confidence in the AIS. I took a
   few cat naps in the cockpit late in the day, but eventually gained
   confidence to spend 20-30 minutes below at night. I had the AIS traffic and
   chartplotter in my hand when below and set up redundant alarms so there was
   no way I could sleep through one. This worked well and therefore I was not
   completely 'wrecked' when I pulled into Neah Bay. I slept for about 6 hrs
   before hitting the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

All in all, the delivery was an ambitious itinerary and I was happy to
complete it. Going offshore by myself was a bit of a test to see if solo
offshore racing is in my future, and I would definitively say, maybe. I
wanted to see if carrying up the coast single handed was something I could
do and something I wanted to do more of. The first answer is definitely
yes, the second is maybe, trending to probably.

Thanks to everybody for listening and those who followed along on my way up
the coast. Now our boat is poised for tide pools exploring and a great
summer of family cruising in South Sound on weekends. I am feeling very
fortunate. Here is a link to a few snap shots and my 20 minute / $2.00 lee
cloths which you may appreciate. https://photos.app.goo.gl/MwD6ppBJZ6sgXz9ZA

Best,
Kevin
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