“Sailing
around the notorious Cape Hatteras? Beware storms and huge seas!
It's a monster.”
That's
the general impression we'd received about making the trip south
departing from the Chesapeake and sailing around Cape Hatteras. Even
our boat insurance stipulates no coverage for any named storm damage
if you are south of 35°N between 1 June and 1 November.
Any
passage where there is a strong current passing close to a shallow
cape with sharp drop off has the potential for throwing up
challenging conditions when you have a wind against current
situation. The Gulf Stream flows north not far off the Cape which is
only 100 miles south east of Norfolk. We left with a forecast of 20
knots north falling to 15 knots NE at the Cape and found much less
wind, bit we did find the south counter current riding the 20m
contour line. I think we had to motor as much as we were able to
sail all the way to Cape Look Out which was 70nms further. The plan
was to anchor in the protected lagoon behind Cape Look Out while a
small low bringing southerly winds came off the coast and then
continue the last 200nm to Charleston with northerlies following
the front.
The
problem with November is the weather is colder and the sun goes down
at 5pm. We arrived in the dark, navigated into the lagoon with the
electronic chart, cached Google Earth imagery and the red flashing
light. No matter how much information you have it's always a tense
time especially with strong winds on the nose, shallows somewhere to
our left and to our right and seven boats already in the anchorage.
In the dark the distance to an anchor light is tough to judge but we
did it, dropped the anchor with plenty of scope (because we could)
and had dinner. Total time for the first leg was 35 hours for 200nm.
We
awoke to calm conditions; perfect for unwrapping the head sail and
doing a quick fix on the bolt rope of the head sail which had come
unstitched at the base. Without the time and conditions to drop the
sail and machine stitch David held the sail and I put in holding
stitches as fast as I could. The sail had been wrapped for less than
10 minutes before the first gust of frontal wind struck. And then
it rained for the rest of the day. David took off the starboard main
winch and serviced it. It had developed a nasty groan on the way
here.
At
dawn the next day, rested, a new, favourable weather forecast in hand
we lifted anchor and headed out to Charleston.
Where
our trip to Cape Look Out was one of light winds, the sail to
Charleston was a downwind blast. In a 25 knot tail wind we surfed
down one wave at 17.6 knots. In fact we took only 27 hours to cover
the distance. Hello Charleston.
Hello David and Jacqui, welcome to my hometown...but of course I am not there. however I am not as far away as one would expect....Annie is in Brunswick GA, (if you are heading south it is a perfect marina for Jackster) while I am working on a project in Athens Georgia. Let me know if you will stop in Brunswick and I will come visit. Regards, John
ReplyDeleteP.S. we met in Chagaramaus Trinidad....
Hello John, We love Charleston and we remember you well. Our current plan (this morning's plan) is to leave this afternoon and head to the Bahamas. At the moment, we don't anticipate another stop in the US but this could change. If we do, we will certainly contact you. Do you have cruising plans for the season?
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