Friday, June 13, 2008

adventures abound

Shearwater, the place we were towed to and can keep us (hostage) for as long as they choose, is an odd little place. It isn't exactly a town, but kind of a marina village. I think I've seen most of the locals at least twice already, and many of them even more. Everyone else seems to be sailors or power-boat yachters. It is sort of like Northern Exposure, but with fewer moose and more Bald Eagles, and transient boaters.

The B&B we are at is run by a British woman, and the place has certain British flare, and an odd culture mix eclecticism.

Slowly, things are looking up. Just to feel better about something this afternoon, I cleaned off the pilot berth (the highest point the water had come) and laid all the wet things out around the boat, and cleaned scrubbed the berth. It is the only clean part of the boat right now. Everything is covered in silt and dirt and salt, or still sitting in salt water. The frustrating thing is that we can't run our freshwater while we are on the blocks, so nothing can be cleaned with fresh water until we are back in the water. And, water here is not potable, so we can't refill after we do use what we've got. I don't even know where the nearest potable water is at. (Our B&B runs off a rainwater system and set a jug of drinking water out the door today while I was napping.)

We can't even empty our full bilge in the yard, so the water on the boat has to stay there until we get put back in the drink. The floorboards are swollen and grossly dirty, but nothing can be done for them at this time but listen to the squishing water under them when they are walked on.

All of our clothes are wet, except the single set we had in a dry-bag, but it seems of little use to wash and dry the rest yet when the locker they were stowed in will be cut apart when the fiberglass work begins, and there is no other dry place to put them yet. Our lodging is too far away to take them to in the meantime. We stuffed them all into plastic bags so the rest of the boat can dry out around them. If they mildew, their next stop is the laundromat anyway. Today was spent trying to empty filled storage containers of water to prohibit further rust on tools, and other small feel-good tasks.

We seemed to have lost our Dewalt drill, possibly overboard, since it was out on deck before we even grounded, trying to drill the pin out for the transmission level so we could cotter-pin a new one in place. It was out on deck, and since it was dark, it may have just been lost in the heeling-over during the night. Oh well. Other electronics are shot, as well, like the Dremel and multi-meter. Most of the stuff will dry and be fine, however. Everything else is going on the list for the insurance adjuster. I have no idea what will be covered at this time, however.

Still it seems a little surreal. I can't believe we sunk our boat. It seemed inevitable that a trip this size would have adventure of some kind, yet I was continually surprised that things could continue to escalate in the way they did. I always thought that if you sunk a boat, you must have hit something and sunk it, not hit something, waited 4 hours or so, then punctured the boat as it tipped onto a rock, then waited another few hours before you knew you punctured it, then sunk it by the water rising above you with the tide and not you "sinking" down into it. I hadn't realized how good it is to sink a boat by having the water rise above it until we were being towed over water hundreds of fathoms deep back to Shearwater and realized that if the borrowed pump quit during the trip, the boat would be unrecoverably sunk. At one point, from Grant's boat, I thought Insegrevious was getting lower and lower into the water. Grant, however, assured me it was because the Coasties were towing faster then the boat's hull speed and that was the reason it was lowering. We pulled up alongside it and I could see that it wasn't so bad after all. In fact, the Coasties said it would be a 4-hour tow, but once we hit open water they picked up speed (and worry) and kicked it up, so I'm sure we arrive in less than 3 hours.

Yet, there is much to be thankful for. Scott and I both kept our heads throughout, and stayed calm, and, with help, got things taken care of. He may say he didn't learn anything, but I learned lots and lots, and I think he probably did, too. And I don't feel too bad about it, either. Stuff like this happens. You don't know if it will happen in your first big trip out, or after 40 of trips, but it does happen. This time is was to us.

I was surprised today when he told David that we'd still make it to Alaska. His optimism sneaks up on me sometimes. At this point, I'd thought it would be a trip to central British Columbia. But if we can still make it to Alaska, well, then that's a good thing!

Oh, and I haven't mentioned yet that I've seen 5 Orca Whales. The first one scared the crap out of me. I was at the helm, under motor and auto-pilot, crossing Queen Charlotte Sound. I'd been watching for ever-present dead-heads, when suddenly there was one directly in front of me, about 50-60 feet directly in from of the bow. I ran to disengage the auto-pilot. We were in heavy swells, so everything was in sight, then out of sight again, but I couldn't spot the huge log I'd just seen until it resurfaced, and blew water straight up through her blow-hole, now about 30 yards so starboard. Scott was resting in the companionway when I shook him violently and scream-whispered, "A whale! A whale! A whale! To starboard!" He wasn't thrilled with the awakening I'd just given him. But I had fun watching the whale for another hour or so. We saw one more that day, then two the next day, then another the following day.

Very cool.

4 comments:

Ed said...

Hello

Ed said...

You both are experiencing a truly real adventure which most others don't have the opportunity, or if they did wouldn't or couldn't rise to the challenge.

Whether its the beauty of a surfacing orca or the frustration of a damaged hull, you both are living it. It's good for the soul and changes you for the better.

We're glad you are safe so that you can continue your trip.

Linda Graebel said...

Scott & Mandy,
I'd be glad to drive to Port Hardy and take the ferry to bring supplies or just help out. I might just bring a fishing pole too! Let me know if you think you'll be there long enough for me to get there to help. (Linda's writing this because Scott had a little trouble with technology when he wrote it earlier) Linda says "Scott would really like the adventure and the fishing (I think he's already a little bored at home), so don't hesitate to let him come and help if there's anyway he can." Take care, love Mom & Scott

ladron said...

Well... what can I say that others haven't already? Yes, Scott is being too hard on himself (especially initially). I guess my two cents is that the Old Salts seldom tell tales of the adventure where the sun always shone and fair winds carried them speedily (or leisurely) to their destination at their whim. No, experience comes in part from getting through adversity with a little luck and some knowledge and living to tell about it, and also from learning when to listen and when not to listen to that little voice that tells you that whatever you are doing is what you know to be wrong. Scott, you are the most intelligent and widely capable man I know and, given the choice, I would always want you on my boat during a perilous moment. (Unless you are puking, in which case I would not hold a puke bucket for you. Sorry.) So I hope you two do continue North because I know you can do it and there are undoubtedly more great times to be had.

On the home front, the place is still standing and Miss Rosie is doing fine, though I know she misses you. She and I have developed somewhat of an understanding... I let her bunk with me and Baci and she doesn't try to get me up at all ungodly hours of the morning (mostly). This is quite a concession on my part given that I am pinned between a 50lb. dog and a cat that is far larger than she would appear... all on a twin bed. Initially it took her some time to acclimate to the notion that I am not going to attend to her every whim like some Jewish mother (or you), but that if she lets me know what she needs without nagging then I don't mind doing stuff. So things are good.

Anyhoo... let me know if there is anything I can do from home or around the house.

Cheers,

don