Thursday 9/24
As I was walking down the dock on Tuesday 9/22, I saw another sailboat tied up, and thought to myself ‘hmmm.. I know what kind of boat that is’. As I got closer, and started to notice more detail, I saw that it wasn’t so much the kind of boat I knew, I knew that boat specifically.
Life before Ivy, yes I must admit there was another boat in my past. A Dufour 27 Safari named La Mouette. Several months before buying Ivy, I had been very serious about buying La Mouette; my brother Dave and I had sea trialed her, and I had her hauled out and inspected, only to find an issue with the keel to hull joint, and that was something I did not think I could tackle. Even after buying Ivy, I would at times, wander the few docks over to where La Mouette was moored to look at her. She is a much different concept in design to Ivy; being more a racer, La Mouette has more severe and angular lines, and she has a fin keel and spade rudder, where Ivy has a cutaway forefoot and hung rudder, so La Mouette while a sturdy ride, is going to be bumpy ride compared to Ivy (any of these terms you don’t know, just go with it, it is technical jargon who-ha only a sailor with too much time on his hands could appreciate).

La Mouette
I knocked on the hull and introduced myself to Kyle one of the two owners of La Mouette, and we exchanged stories. It turns out Jon and Kyle on La Mouette are on almost the exact same itinerary as Ivy and I, so we have informally decided to join forces and buddy boat. One other crew on La Mouette is Jon’s father David, who will now be following and monitoring them from shore on his scooter. Jon also keeps a blog which is very entertaining at http://earthletters.blogspot.com .

Jon, David and Kyle, crew of La Mouette
Well I do not know how long I had initially planned to stay in Westport, or if I had ever really got to the point of thinking that far ahead; but a phone conversation to Mickey and Leslie aboard S/V Distant End made things easy to decide. They both offered to come down to Westport to visit me Sunday morning 9/27, and bring along a new RayMarine ST2000 tiller pilot. While I had originally thought to go with the less expensive Simrad unit, I found everywhere across the country they were out of stock; also I have investigating them both a bit, and general consensus is the Simrad may be a slightly better unit, RayMarine is a vastly better company, and any trouble down the way I will have much easier time with RayMarine. So, if I can get the new tiller pilot rigged Sunday afternoon, Monday 9/28 will be my next ETD for Garibaldi. Meanwhile the crew on La Mouette are busy doing some engine maintenance.
Friday 9/25
My brother Steve and his girlfriend Angel came down to visit. It had been a while since I had seen them so it was great to get some face time. We did not do anything of great significance, just hung out, which was perfect because hanging out with Steve is always an adventure unto itself.
Sunday 9/27
It’s so great to have good friends and family who will drive halfway across the state to come visit you! Mickey and Leslie on S/V Distant End, which I buddy boated last summer, came down to Westport today, and with them came the newest member of my crew, a Raymarine ST2000 tiller pilot. Again, as with my visit with Steve and Angel, we did little but enjoy each other’s company. After cruising last year, I wintered over back in Everett moored right next to S/V Distant End, so we three became very close. In this last Washington port I feel like I am wrapping up the ‘getting ready’, and dipping my toes in the ‘I am a sailor bum’ chapter of my life.

Mickey and Leslie from S/V Distant End
The tiller pilot is disturbingly simple to install, so much so that I am untrustful, and it is taking much longer then really needed; but now with just two wires to connect I can’t see anyway I might have screwed it up, so maybe in the end I am just way over thinking things. I am taking Mickey’s advice, and not initially hooking the tiller pilot into my chart plotter/gps/radar network. It is one more thing I would be worried about, and the temptation to just punch the waypoints in, turn on the motor, engage the tiller pilot, and set my alarm clock to wake me when we have arrived would be too great; besides that is not the experience I am looking for at all. Depending on the weather I guess, I will see how well or long that attitude holds up. Ivy, unlike most cruising boats, sports an unfettered view of the heavens and seas from all points in the cockpit, which is a fancy way of saying I have no shelter from wind or seas when I am at the helm.
Another bit of boat enhancement in Westport is a new VHF antenna. My first attempt leaving Neah Bay with Yang Shi was unsuccessful due to my inability to remain in contact with them on the VHF radio. I was using my handheld unit, which is good for about 10-12 miles, as I knew there were issues with my hull mounted radio. Larry diagnosed the issue, and with Lee so incredibly made a present of a new antenna to me when we brought Yang Shi back around to Neah Bay. I soldered up the connector right then and there, but it was a jury rig situation, in case I ran into problems on my way down, but finally here in Westport I had the time to install it proper, and a radio check showed that I am now receiving and transmitting loud and clear on my hull mount radio as well, and this should now give me a range of over 25 miles.
One final adjust to Ivy is not so much an improvement, but a downgrade. I had outfitted Ivy with a complete new wardrobe of sails, and had been using them up until now. These are beautiful sails, and it has really been heart wrenching to have so abused them recently; so I made the decision to take them down and put up the old ones; but Ivy was having none of taking off her pretty, new, full batten Main. At every turn she fought me, until I had to throw the towel in for the night, then next morning before Ivy was fully aware, I was able to sneak out and get the sail down, and put up her old everyday Main. Yes it has some wear around the edges, and I have had to repair a place or two, but it is fine sail, and should serve me and Ivy well enough down the coast.
Sunday 10/4
We left Westport at 6:30pm Thursday10/1. I went out early to commission the tiller pilot (some various maneuvers one has to do to acclimate the tiller pilot). No issue what so ever crossing the bar, and me fiddling with the tiller pilot, and Jon and Kyle putting La Mouette’s engine through some paces, we started our first trip together. Let me say having a tiller pilot is awesome. Aside from about four hours I had the tiller pilot engaged the whole trip, and two of those four hours, I really just took over for something to do. The tiller pilot did initiate an experience I had not previously experienced aboard Ivy, Seasickness. With so much to do, and so many things on my mind when leaving port, I have never really had an opportunity to sit about, or go down below; and with this new freedom I took a sneak down below to grab my sailing gloves. It was only a minute or so, but I guess that’s all it really takes. It lasted until midnight, luckily it wasn’t projectile vomitingly bad, just a slight case that made me hate everything in the world, especially spiteful of anything food related.
We had scheduled this trip based on average speed of 4kts. Ivy I knew could average between 5kts and 5.5kts, but La Mouette’s engine was much older, somewhat smaller and until recently not really well cared for, and none knew how much of improvement it would get with the maintenance done in Westport. After a few hours out, and making great speed we saw a problem. We were going to be hitting all of our obstacles early, the first being the Columbia River bar. Listening to the WX weather radio station we heard that the Columbia bar was estimated to be it’s worst at 4am right when we were crossing (a river bar can extend out to sea several miles, so while we were not crossing the bar with the intent of entering the Columbia, we still were crossing the bar horizontally), with possible ten-foot breakers; so an enroute course correction allowed us the safety of 10 miles, instead of our previously planned 5 miles. Even with this new course we could feel the waves piling up, as we got close.
After comfortably well past the Columbia, we began to see some traffic. After passing one big ship, it seemed to stop for a long time; then a helicopter took off from it, which buzzed us and hit us with it’s spot light, probably unintentionally, and continued on to Astoria. We figured there was probably some medical issue, as the big ship then continued on.
With dawn the sun came out and we settled into a great day of travel. I had awesome cell coverage so I called, or tried to call several people, but one thing I did not have was a lot of battery left on my phone so I had to give up that game after a while. I saw my first Sunfish, and I have to say they are one ugly creature, and stupid as a brick from what I observed. At about 2pm, Ivy found herself under attack by a crazed seal. I have never seen a seal act like this; it appeared to be having a great time darting in and around the stern of my boat, getting very close then disappearing for a moment, resurfacing far off, only to target Ivy again. I think Ivy must have been disturbing the water and fish, and the seal was having an gastronomic orgy. I was very concerned that with all it’s torpedoing here and there it might get hurt on my prop, so I throttled down and put it in neutral and began to explain to the seal it needed to be elsewhere. My hand gestures and various other attempts couldn’t breech the language barrier though, so once the seal got onto an outward-bound trajectory, I put it in gear and gunned it. Fortunately the seal was either full, or bored, or both as it then allowed me to leave.
It was at this time that we had a good estimate as to how fast the two boats were going, so we took a look at our new ETA of Newport, and found we would most likely arrive at 1am Saturday morning. None of us wanted to try crossing a river bar at night, so we came up with a few alternatives, Garibaldi on the end of slack tide going ebb (not so hot), continuing on to Coos Bay (my personal favourite, but I had serious concerns if I could stay awake the sixteen extra hours), or slow down to make Newport at dawn with the beginning of the flood tide. It was eventually decided to slow down for Newport.
Right at Dusk I saw my second whale of the trip. Off my starboard bow about ¼ mile I saw him jump out of the water, probably got half his body out, then surfaced again right as he got abeam of me, and spouted a ‘hello’. I radioed La Mouette to be on the lookout as they were behind and off my starboard quarter. A while later the whale returned and in the last of the day’s light I saw him blow a spout of ‘see ya later’ and he was gone.
As it had been a clear day, and was promising to be a clear night, I bundled up as thick as I could. I felt sort of like Robot Man bundled so thickly I could barely bend my knees and elbows, but even still I ended up chilled to the bone; in the end the cold served as well as coffee could have in keeping me awake. The full moon robbed the skies of most the stars, but the moon was pretty, so I had few complaints.
At about 4am, I was still about 10 miles northwest of the entrance of Newport and time was really starting to drag, and I asked no one in particular, the sky and seas, or all three “How am I going to stay awake?” I know that the whole ‘the Universe abhors a vacuum’ theory has been disproved, but I think someone should look into the theory of ‘the Universe abhors an unanswered question, asked offhandedly by some guy at sea” theory. Soon after uttering this I saw on my radar a huge hit, about ten miles north of me, looking back up north I saw rain and lots of it, along with lightning. I was still trying to kill time, so I decided to dodge the rain by heading due west. Well, I don’t know if this particular squall had my number, or if I was just bad at determining it’s course, because it seemed to just follow me. It soon became apparent that I was going to get wet, but I still had a choice of where I was going to punch through, so I found the smallest bit of the rain blob on my radar and headed straight into it. Upon entering I thought something was odd, there was no rain, then quietly the boat heeled over about twenty five degrees (heel or heel over is sailor talk for tipping over), and then the wind started to howl, and then the rains came. All I could do was try to keep the wind directly in front of me, and give the motor every bit of diesel it would drink. I think the winds were around 35kts, and the rain; cats and dogs X 2, maybe a tad below cows and horses. It was supremely surreal; everything had that Sci-Fi slo-mo effect of running half speed “I t h i n k w e e n t e r e d a w o r m h o l e c a p t a i n”. Well after about twenty minutes which took an hour, I was wet, wind burned, very much awake and alive and through it. I had feared that Ivy’s 35’ aluminum lightning rod of a mast would attract some electrical attention, but the lightning stayed in the skies.
I contacted La Mouette who had very unfairly missed the entire storm except a few drops of rain, and they stated they were heading in to Newport. I think Ivy was even more excited to hear this then I, which is saying something, and she was like a dolphin racing the last miles in to Newport. Ivy and I got to the entrance of the Newport bar just at dawn, just at slack tide, just ahead of La Mouette, and they told me to go on ahead and not wait as they were both well rested, and I might want to get tied up and in the rack as soon as possible.
I started down the entrance, and saw what I thought were two diagonal amber lights blinking at the far end. Remember it had been a while since I got any sleep, and if someone had said “swimming giraffe” at that point I think I might have seen that instead. I knew two amber lights blinking was a bar advisory.. probably the bar closed, and I think my mind jumped to the worst possible nightmare it could find. It was still so dark that I couldn’t make out really how these lights were situated, but I decided to turn back, get out to open water to figure it out. I tried hailing the coast guard but got nothing back, hailed La Mouette who were just approaching the bar entrance, and advised them of what I saw. They agreed to take the lead and get some better eyes with binoculars (.. yep Randy has to get his binoculars in a better, easier to reach locale!). Once we got down a bit, it was lighter, and plain to see these were red navigation lights on the bridge we were to go under, not any type of advisory sign. I decided I would get all embarrassed about that at a later time, and took over lead spot, as I knew kinda where we were going. We made it in, easy as falling down, got tied up, and I slept until 4pm, up just long enough to make some Mac ‘n Cheese, to have the strength for a real power sleep through the night until 5am.
Next stop Coos Bay, don’t know when, still feeling a bit sleep rich, and dumb from it..

Your's truly in Westport
Randy
S/V Ivy