We
left the sanctuary of Millbrook on a fine spring evening for
somewhere else. Within 400 metres I had managed to run aground twice
but a flooding tide (and more attention) had us off and away to
Cawsand where we anchored for a couple of nights, sorting things out
and gearing ourselves up mentally for another summer of wandering.
A
hectic day's sailing to Falmouth followed with decent speeds and
exhilarating sailing which were made to feel pedestrian by several
cats that came by us at double digit speeds....With very strong winds
coming in over the next few days we remained at anchor in the harbour
but headed off eventually for a non stop trip to Ireland. The first
part involved too much motoring but we needed to be clear of Cape
Cornwall, the circular tides and the shipping lanes before we could
drift in comparative peace until the winds came in. The slow trip
across was notable only for the fact that the self-steerer would only
work in strong winds leaving us with hours of hand steering when the
winds fell all to frequently light. But dawn arrived on the last day
and we pulled gratefully into Schull (Skull) Harbour for a couple of
days. It's a big, natural harbour but affords good shelter with
excellent holding. We needed it of course as we sat out another
30knot plus blow.
Over
the next few weeks we worked our way northwards; Valentia, Smerwick,
Cashla and then a triumphant entry, through a stunningly green sea,
into Clifden with the most spectacular accompaniment of leaping
dolphins we have ever had.
Even the local fishing boat crew stopped what they were doing to snap pics and watch several of the mammals exuberantly leap clear of the water by a couple of metres. There is no doubt in our mind that dolphins, detecting a boat in their “patch” will immediately come racing across the gap toward us then play in the bow wave, dive under the boat and seem to relish the chance to interact with us. I have no idea how many times we have seen dolphins over the last 17 years but they never cease to captivate and entertain.
Even the local fishing boat crew stopped what they were doing to snap pics and watch several of the mammals exuberantly leap clear of the water by a couple of metres. There is no doubt in our mind that dolphins, detecting a boat in their “patch” will immediately come racing across the gap toward us then play in the bow wave, dive under the boat and seem to relish the chance to interact with us. I have no idea how many times we have seen dolphins over the last 17 years but they never cease to captivate and entertain.
We spent a week pottering around the Killery area, some days in Little Killery of which we wrote about enthusiastically on our first visit there some years back and then into Ballynakill. Although the two only a few miles apart they are very different with the latter having a feeling of openness and light. The bay we anchored in had reasonable depths – 5-6 metres, excellent holding and great views. The beat out the following day to Inishboffin took a lot of tacks as the channel is narrow, rocks available for chance encounters if you're not paying attention but on a sunny day it all made for a great day's sailing. A quick wander across to Cleggen the following day produced the first (only we hope) failure of the trip. As we turned the engine off after anchoring Bee thought she had pressed one of the buttons out of sequence and started it again to be sure all was ok........ Whilst the engine ran for some reason we now had no electrics at all and thrown by the failure seemingly connected to the engine controls that is where we concentrated our reasoning and fault finding. By the end of the day we'd only established that it was nothing to do with that but seemed to be coming from the Vetus 3 way switch. We went to bed in darkness knowing we'd have to sort it the next day. And eventually we did by checking the connections to the batteries and finding the negative lead connecting starter to house had come off! Just before we had left Millbrook we'd bought a pair of s/h winches from a guy up in Scotland who turned to be a Marine Electrician. We sent him a text asking if he would care to advise us on what he though the problem might be and soon after we sorted it out came his suggestion that it might either be the Vetus or a faulty connection at the battery. We might well get John to undertake sorting out the nightmare that our electrics have become over the years!
Dating from 600Ad I think... |
The
following morning came in still and foggy but we wanted to get a move
on and so motored out of the bay and into more fog. A yacht passed us
as we drifted, tooting its fog horn and minutes later we resorted
again to the engine to make progress. But the fog passed, a breeze of
sorts came in and we sailed slowly northwards. A “PAN PAN” on the
vhf alerted us to a possible issue and the CG reported an overdue
small aircraft. Reports started coming back from yotties that various
bits of wreckage had been seen and then a body. All this just a few
miles north of where we were.
We slid into Loch Ranza for the night, staggered at the number of yots on mooring buoys (we joined them), watched a brigantine from Holland anchor at the head of the lock and then we left early the following day.
We slid into Loch Ranza for the night, staggered at the number of yots on mooring buoys (we joined them), watched a brigantine from Holland anchor at the head of the lock and then we left early the following day.
All
in all we were about a week around Rhu, managing to see Mike and
Eilean, in good spirits despite his illness before saying our
farewells with a promise to drop in on the way back. We'd had a day
or two away when we were in Rhu, managing an exhilarating sail down
to Lamlash on Arran one evening and then motored back the following
day. This time we opted for Rosneath before another early start with
no clear idea of where we might end up. It began easily enough with a
breeze that carried us south under main, genny and tops'l. The wind
began to pick up but nothing to worry about and we carried on. When
we began to get 20 knots I realised we'd still got the top up and we
needed to get it down sharpish. Luckily we were on starb'd tack and
the main blankets it when we drop. Nevertheless it proved to be a
handful, at one point the 5 metre yard hanging horizontally as we
struggled to contain it. All this time the boat kept thundering on, a
line looped over the tiller to keep us straight.
A
lumpy, probably over canvassed, beat along the eastern side of Arran
was endured as the wind direction indicated we'd have a fast sail to
Campbeltown......but no as we cleared the light (just) the
wind fell away if not the seas and we were forced to motor clear of
the ugly patch of water we'd got into. The wind which had been west
of south now came round to north of west giving us another on the
nose flog to Camp. Looking at the tidal charts and the current wind
direction it seemed logical to abandon that course and turn instead
to Sanda which was not only an easier sail but the current would soon
be turning in that direction. With a fading wind we motor sailed the
last 6 or so miles as the current, overfall's and eddies around the
Mull can be interesting. We slid into the anchorage, despite a
counter eddy which wanted us on nearby rocks, safely about 10pm
joining the other boat silently at anchor. By morning they had gone
and as we left we were soon joined by half a dozen more boats making
the journey around. What wind there was was on the nose creating a
wind over tide situation luckily not at its worse as we were still
early in the cycle but off the SW corner the overfall's, standing
waves and general unpleasantness built up as we crashed through at
8k+. The favourable tide we managed to carry all the way to Gigha
although the wind was down 7 or 8 knots. Gigha which is normally
packed with visiting boats had 7 and more spare visitor buoys than
occupied. Perhaps it is still too early.
Across
the sound the following day and into the Sound of Jura, sweeping
tides and whisky distillery's – with the engine on tickover the
speed frequently exceeded 8 or even 9 knots and when the wind picked
up we dumped the engine for the genny and “beat” our way
pleasurable up the sound. Rarely have we managed such tack angles as
the current showed 30 degrees difference between actual and
perceived. As we rounded the top and shaped up to enter West Loch
Tarbet a solitary Swedish yot was heading south through the Sound
under power against the tide. Slowly. No headsail set to make use of
the 15k of favourable wind just a serious amount of fuel to be
consumed. We've witnessed numerous boats intent on getting wherever,
no sails set but engine and auto pilot engaged as they plough into
steep waves. Each to their own of course but...
Finally
we entered what was to be our home for a few days as a stiff NW came
through. We anchored outside the inner harbour as we'd preferred the
outlook to that of the inner when we were last here. Tucked away in a
corner of the inner could be seen a small yacht, the crew returning
in the dinghy as we dropped anchor. A few hours later another visitor
arrived, Silver Shoes out of Rhode Island no less, also bound for the
inner where, it has to be said, the depths are easier to manage at 4
metres or so than the 10-15metres we have beneath us.
The
rain fell, the wind blew and we remained snug and warm, startled from
our sleepy state by the sound of voices....4 guys in kayaks were
drifting around the boat! We'd seen them outside a bothy on the
southern shore of Islay as we'd made our approach to the Sound.
They'd paddled though it and spent the night camped out at a large
house on the shore of Glenbatrick Bay about
half a mile from where we currently are, before
continuing past us and into the inner loch where another bothy awaits
them.
Finally.
For a number of days, perhaps weeks, we could hear a particular
squeaking noise whenever we ran the engine. Although we checked,
listened and tested the tightness of various possible offenders it
remained elusive.... The engine showed no sign of anything untoward
so our searches became a little half hearted. And then we found it.
Turned out to be a squeaky toy belonging to Toots – the vibration
from the engine activates the squeak it seems. Ah the joys.
West
Loch Tarbert
55
57N 005 56W
PICS TO FOLLOW
Hello, one of the 4 kayakers here. Sorry to have startled you! Hannah looked beautiful at anchor in West Loch Tarbert so we had to come and take a closer look. It was nice to chat to you and I was pleased to find your blog and info when we got home.
ReplyDeleteWe had a cosy night in the bothy before a short portage across the tarbert to the east coast the next morning. We continued up the east coast, through the Correvreckan and back down the W coast of Jura.
Have a great summer's cruising and maybe we will bump into you again in some remote anchorage.
Hamish
Hamish, Many thanks for getting in touch - we wondered how you'd all got on, how the bothy night went. We're up in Shetland now and will update soon...ish. We'll certainly look out for you if we come back this way. Safe paddling
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