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Unconquered fears, broken threads

Sand Point, AK, 30-JUL-2022 – We’re back in Sand Point. Jennifer wants to wait here while weather passes.

It is a different Sand Point than a month ago. The marina is empty. Less than 5% of the slips have boats. The transient dock, which is a thousand feet of dock space, has us and another non-fishing vessel and no one else.

It hasn’t been the trip Jennifer had planned. The weather hasn’t cooperated, it is true, but more importantly Jennifer hasn’t been unable to conquer her fears.

It took us only two weeks to get to Sand Point on the way down; Jennifer has left us a month to get pack to Homer. Jennifer makes our plans, she decides where we will go and how long we will stay someplace. She decides the overnight trips and where where we wait out weather. This year her fears have not been put aside, they have conquered her.

The goal was to get down to Samalga Pass where we entered the Aleutians and the push a bit west down the chain. Samalga Pass is 176 nautical miles past Dutch, the terminus of our trip this year.

The weather has been much worse this year. Days of sunshine have been few and far between, but it has been different. What has been different? Many things.

We are older, perhaps it is just age. I find that as I age, the time I have left becomes more precious. For me, I want to be certain I am doing something that I am proud of. Sailing, traveling, writing, and above all, being with Jennifer.

Perhaps it is only aging.

I see it as a combination of things: We were away from Caro Babbo for nine and half months between pulling her out in September 2020 and returning in 2021. We spent only five weeks aboard.

We all define ourselves in many ways. I began to define myself as a sailor, and while Jennifer never did, we defined ourselves as living close to half time aboard a boat. Those threads to that self definition began to fray; there are less of them now.

Jennifer has been reading the Caro Babbo log from 2020 when we sailed from Hawaii and then up the chain. She confided her fears there. She tells me reading it has been a bad thing to do. It compounds the fears she has.

There are also meta fears. Jennifer is feeling shame that she can’t overcome her fears and this is the worst of all.

I see a bunch of things as different this year: – We have spent more time in towns at docks than we have away from them. We are around people and we have been in daily communications with the outside world, something we never do. It means that we haven’t built the world that is the two of us: the micro-culture that is John and Jennifer alone, sailing, visiting new places and being self reliant.

– We don’t live alone anymore in Port Townsend. We live with two women who are having a hard time achieving success in the world. They have each moved in with us while they separately regroup. They are not being successful – I’m sure each will be – but I wonder if that lack of success sets standard of success to be expected. *

– We have been traveling in the company of much bigger boats. Generally, when we meet sailors they are sailing on boats that are not terribly larger than ours, always less than forty feet. Even the large the Amels that we meet, which are over fifty feet, are eighties designs: they have the same proportions we do. Alumni, owned by Hans and Sylvia, and Inook, owned by Laurent, are late 201x boats. The proportions are huge. There are 60 feet and forty-six feet respectively, but sailboats from that time carry the widest part of their beam aft, and they are easily twice as tall above the water line as boats from the 80s; they dwarf their length counterparts.

From ashore in Dora Harbor, Caro Babbo looked like a child’s scale model trailed out behind Alumni.

– For the first time, Jennifer’s fears have rubbed off on me. This never happens. Yesterday I realized it and hope I have broken free. It showed in that I would shy away from sailing, motoring instead.

Jennifer has focused on her fear that something will happen to me when I am working on the deck. [I am tethered to a ¼” dyneema jack line, encased in tubular nylon webbing.]

I don’t know what support Jennifer gets from the outside for these ventures. A very dear friend abraded me once for picking these journeys and forcing Jennifer to go on them, when I neither pick the destinations, nor the schedule.

As a man, the world supports and applauds what we do. My male friends are frankly slack-jawed that such a woman as Jennifer even exists in the world. Do Jennifer’s friends instead see this as foolhardy recklessness at the hands of a man that will bring her to an icy death? –

And death has been coming closer. In 2020, our friend Greg James died when he fell off his boat while preparing to enter a harbor in Australia after single handing from the Marshall Islands.

On this trip, a deckhand told Jennifer and me the harrowing story of being one of two survivors of a fishing boat that went down. He held his captain in his arms as the captain died from hypothermia.

And we learned that a sailing friend lost his crew off his 20-something-foot sailboat off the coast of Greenland some years ago. (There is a fourth incident that escapes me at this moment.)

So, yes, death is closer than it has been.†

Yesterday, we moved from Dolgoi Island to Sand Point. The wind, though predicted to be calm, blew at 10-15 knots all night; Jennifer was terrified that we might drag. She was worried that the bottom might be weeds and that anchor would not reset when the wind or tide changed. We have anchored in winds of 40+ knots on multiple occasions. The anchor holds fine. [Because the pressure of the wind acts upon the area it is pressing against, each time the speed of the wind doubles, the pressure goes four-fold, so 40 knots is 16 times more pressures on Caro Babbo and her anchor tackle than ten knots.] So the fear is unfounded, and that is the problem, dealing with a fear that we know is unfounded. The fear did rub off on me.

Suddenly, as if a shade had been lifted from my eyes, I saw my half-inch nylon anchor rode as a mere thread attaching us to our anchor, when everyone else uses chain – never mind that the nylon line is stronger than the 5/16-inch chain that our peers use, or that chain is nothing but short pieces of single strand wire that has been bent and then welded into a series of loops. As I reminded myself that nylon rode is better than chain (expert opinions notwithstanding), the doubt dissipated, but it had been there, leaving me laying, wide-eyed in the forepeak for some time.

This year we are using a very wonderful and trustworthy anchor drag feature in our Vesper AIS. Should we drag outside a defined radius from where we dropped the anchor, an alarm by the companionway sounds.

In Dolgoi harbor, I set the radius tightly to keep an eye on things. We had many hundreds of yards we could drag safely. The alarm went off at 2:21 am: we had dragged twenty feet while the anchor reset. It was reassuring to see that everything worked as it should, but is was my fault for making such a tight perimeter, Jennifer had trouble sleeping the rest of the night.

The next day, yesterday, was to have been 10-15 knots building through the day. Good sailing weather. We had 65 nautical miles to travel at a planned 5 knots, twelve to thirteen hours. Leaving at 7am, we should be there at 8pm.

Two days earlier we had overcome to suspected problems, each caused by me.

Sailing from Dutch we learned that I had incorrectly preserved (pickled) the water maker – it was refusing to draw water. During the work to fix that, I bumped a switch that disconnects the negative ground wire from the engine.

It took thirty minutes to discover the flipped switch, but when we went to move from Captain’s Harbor to Dolgoi, a slipping fan belt tripped a warning light on starting the engine.** The light went off and I replaced that fan belt in the harbor at Dolgoi Island – engine work in a remote place is always concerning, if something goes wrong… Jennifer volunteered that she would take the dinghy to the entrance of the harbor and using the handheld VHF radio call for help if we became disabled – ignoring that we could sail out. When she told me, I countered we could just call them on the Caro Babbo’s VHF. We’d been hearing vessels calling each other. There is reason for concern and contingencies and reason for fear.

I had two spare fan belts and installed one in a little less than fifteen minutes including locating the spares and getting the tools.

Our sailing has changed on this trip to Dolgoi and other trips. Especially on trips where there really is a reason for arriving by a certain time, generally darkness, we motor when sailing will move us less than our target 5 knots.

We came out of the harbor to complete calm, overcast skies and water that changed back and forth from orderly waves to confused seas. We motored for five hours before the wind came up enough to give us five knots.

Jennifer has voiced her fears for me and herself when I do deck work. Without roller reefing I go to the point of the bow to raise, lower and make head sail changes. It isn’t done much any more on pleasure boats but gives us the proper sail for each condition… it may contribute to why Caro Babbo is a such a fast boat: the right sail. Jennifer’s fears made me shy of going up front, or even on deck, at the beginning of the trip. That has passed as I repeatedly do so and notice everything that makes it safe, including the ability to stand in bow locker, hip deep, if I feel that is the safer place from which to work. BUT, I am often not visible from the cockpit when I am working at the bow.

The deck work was easy and as simple as it gets: easily done.

After four of so hours, the wind died, I dropped the genoa and we continued to Sand Point and a harbor quiet, deserted and empty of the life of sailing vessels waiting for an opening.

Only professionals dock boats as well as Jennifer docks Caro Babbo, and no one docks better. Jennifer docked at the end closest to the harbor entrance, bow out, before we took a walk along the dock where she decided she would rather be tucked in close to the shore in front of a dive/research vessel that would block us from the wind Jennifer expects to arrive Sunday evening. We untied, and re-docked.

Like a political echo chamber, catching Jennifer’s fears gives credence to those fears and amplifies both hers and mine.

While Jennifer lay in bed this morning, I asked her about all of this. She felt ambushed; I suppose she was justified. She listened and we discussed for a bit. She gave me credence for recognizing her fears and then dismissed it all saying, ‘‘But, I’m here.’’ Followed by the non-verbal equivalent of, ‘‘I love you, now shut up.’’

Like so many things the person we love suffers, I can’t take her fears from her and carry them instead.

Jennifer makes these plans for us and does her best to carry them out. Her decision to not move past Dutch is within her role as navigator and prudent mariner.

While lying in bed, she told me she thought it might have been a mistake not to anchor out last night in a nearby anchorage. My reply was that it might have been overly cautious, but it was not a mistake. Mistakes have bad consequences. We are prudent sailors. If we stay in and bad weather does not show up, we have not made a mistake. If we go out and bad weather show up and breaks our boat, then we have made a mistake.

After we re-docked. We went below. I made a movie-watching meal of pigs-in-blankets (hot dog quarters wrapped in baking powder biscuit dough and baked), canned chili con carne, and cole slaw using Cardini’s Caesar dressing – this may all be shock to those who have eaten dinner with us, but when no one sees, I will cook like this – and watched Glazer and Howards’ Jon Larson musical Tick, Tick, Boom – neither Jennifer nor I can recommend it enough. It seems movie musicals are back!

* Though one has made the first concrete successful step. The other has been over the past two years building the difficult platform to starting success.

† In each of these three cases we quickly understand the cause of the death, each was easily recognizable at the time and each would have been prevented with routine safety steps that Jennifer and I take. In the pleasure vessels merely attaching to a jack line would have saved the sailor on Greenland and Greg James, though with Greg, was the being in the water what killed him, or did he have a heart attack or stroke that led to him falling into the water? This fishing boat capsized because she was too top-heavy from ice and overloading. Having said all of this, accidents happen in moments. There have been more than one occasion where I was certain I was clipped in, only to find that I was not.

** It’s difficult to see this as a coincidence. In fact, flipping that switch should have mortally injured the alternator and it did not. Is there some sort of the safety circuit in this alternator? The penultimate owner spared no expense on the things he installed. The light on the engine console flashed for fifteen or more seconds before becoming a bright steady light, then dimming and going out. I need to research this.

Find our location at Carobabbo.com along with blog posts


Heading to Homer

Dutch Harbor, 22-JUL-2022 – We will have been in Dutch for twelve days by the time we leave on Monday, if we do. We’ll start our journey home to Homer.

For a while at least, this will be moving the boat as opposed to cruising. The lows have been rolling, one after another. Jennifer’s planning has become all about where will we wait for the coming low to pass us by. It was gusting to over thirty knots in the snug harbor we are in now earlier this week.

We’re concerned that we will run out of time to be in Homer by the first of September.

If we’re late, we could need to wait two more weeks before Caro Babbo can be pulled from the water.

I want to make my 50th high school reunion. I’ve made every other one. By the next one, the 60th, we will all be beyond our 74-year life expectancy.

Yesterday, I cleaned out the Racor fuel filter. There was a pool of gel in the bottom of the bowl, which is concerning. I wonder whether the fuel addictive I add is old. The container says to replace after two years of opening. Has it been that long? I will buy a new container today.

I also installed a red LED that lights whenever the bilge pump runs. I discovered that it is running every three minutes when the engine is running. I have discovered a leak in the wet exhaust system at an elbow joint just above the bilge. It looks like reseating and reinstalling the clamps should fix it.

It is the leak that I did all that work to fix and now find (most likely) that it has been this and when I reinstalled the hoses, I just reinstalled the leak. We’ll find out, most likely before I put up this post.

A few days ago a German couple on a Guernsey-flagged vessel arrived. They are Hans and Sylvia, very nice, on a custom 60-foot aluminum boat. They are just in from S. Korea. We, of course, know people in common. They are good friends with Anja and Thomas, having spent time with them in Patagonia and Japan. This is no longer a surprise.

It is 8 am, time to wake Jennifer and get these final things done before we leave on Monday.

Sunday is my birthday, BTW. I spent my birthday in 2020 here in Dutch Harbor, and now I will again.
Find out location at Carobabbo.com along with it blog posts

Repeat after me, Cruising is…

Dutch Harbor, AK, 19-JUL-2022 – Writing on a keyboard for the first time this trip. To be honest I prefer dictation, but I do that early in the morning when Jennifer is asleep or when she is away.

It is Tuesday morning. We arrived this past Thursday afternoon, about 5:30 pm. With the sun setting at 11:30 pm, it is difficult to keep track of afternoon versus evening.

Jennifer tucked us into Dutch because she can see a long run of low pressure systems rolling across the Pacific towards us. When we are arrived there were 10 boats here on AIS, by Saturday there were fifty. There are still 45, but we are not certain how many are here because of weather and how many are here because of ‘‘openings,’’ though each fishing boat captain we’ve met has told us the weather looks rough through this weekend. As I’ve written, it is always good to get reassurance from the pros.

On this trip we haven’t been having people over for dinner, but then again, there haven’t been many to ask.

We did finally leave False Pass. Rather than be there a few days as I expected, everything lined up and Jennifer took us out early the next morning on an overnight to Akutan.

At full flood, the water into the False Pass harbor moves at more than six knots. Ignoring the wind that seems to howl in the same direction each time, we simply do not have the horsepower to exit the harbor. We had planned to leave at 11 am. The current and tide move one hour later each day: Jennifer took us out at 9 am the next morning at near slack.

The passage north to the Bering Sea is through an open bay that gives the area its name: False Pass. The bay is an open area of shifting sand bars. Despite what we were told the marked channels were accurate. We had no problem motoring through.

In False Pass, we made friends with Cindy who we believe runs the place. We learned a few things: Trident, one of the major processors, has 250 workers in False Pass. They are able to process one million pounds (about 454,000 Kg) of fish per day. There are two types of tenders that collect fish from the fishing boats: buyer boats and haulers. The buyers generally carry about 250,000 pounds of fish and collect directly from the fishing boats. The haulers generally seem to carry about 650,000 pounds of fish and deliver from the buyer boats to the processing plants. This keeps the fishing boats fishing full time. However, False Pass only does ‘‘gill and gut,’’ where other plants do full products: filets, steaks, etc.

Akutan has 1000 workers.

When I add up the numbers, the amount of fish coming from this part of the world truly startles me.

As we’ve been learning more and more about the industry and its history, we also meet the people fishing. Many are in their sixties and about call it quits. Many have already.

In the 1970s, the money to be made was truly staggering. This was an undeveloped fishery and those who arrived found a very low cost of entry and huge profits. One could buy a fishing boat and pay it off in one year. As we meet these people, we get a handle on the assets they have acquired and like gold rush times, the costs of things here is an indication of how much money is flowing through. In Unalaska, the city that contains Dutch Harbor, a very small house, about 1000 sq ft (100 sq metres) is roughly $400,000. You can fill in the rest.

Years ago there was a change in how licenses for some of the fisheries were handled. Previously, a license had no associated catch with it. To fish, one applied for a license and fished. No license was worth more than any other. This had various side effects including what was called fishing derbies. The season would be some period of time, sometimes just hours and each boat would catch as much as it could. The inherent dangers are obvious regarding weather, etc.

Some fisheries looked at the amount of fish that a licensee caught and assigned that amount to the license: a license now had equity, certain licensees became instant millionaires.

The business has adapted. Licenses can be fully or partially rented, but newcomers can’t arrive expect to make huge sums of money as they once did. However, in a good year a deckhand can work for a three months season and spend the rest of the year windsurfing in Mexico.

The sail from False Pass to Akutan was an overnighter, some time under sail some under power. The next morning were we using the Raymarine autopilot under power. The display started beeping ferociously. The screen displayed some error about not being able to access the wheel drive.

Restarting the device did not fix the problem. We set up the wind vane, but found that it was not accurate enough under power in light airs; we hand steered the remaining nine hours to Akutan.

Akutan Marina is an oddity. It is beautiful, brand new, completely protected from all weather and is free. There are at least two thousand linear feet of dock space for large boats. The entire harbor has been newly cut out from the shore near an old whaling site. It is an expensive-to-build, beautiful site. Alongside the marina is a helipad where personnel from the processing plant are ferried in and out. While Cindy from False Pass suggested we contact her colleagues there, we did not.

Really, we should have invited Cindy onboard for dinner… I’m not sure why we did not. I feel remiss about this.

There was one difference in how we used the autopilot on our way to Akutan: we set it for the most sensitive setting meaning it was constantly adjusting the course and using much more power than usual. In Akutan, I replaced the motor to test whether that might be the problem, it was not.

We were the only vessel in the marina that night. The next morning, the autopilot was working again.

As we approached Dutch, we contacted the harbormaster asking for space on the Discovery Dock where we were last year. It was full and we were guided over to Bobby Storrs International Boat Harbor, which is older and in need of updating. The harbor master we had been speaking with, Vince, was standing at the slip, 13C, waiting to grab our lines.

Appearances, like in any foreign culture, are misleading to those outside it. Vince looks to us like a stoner or perhaps a gang banger. He is instead well traveled, well read and really smart. We met Vince last time we were here and he remembered us, and I remembered him.

Vince introduced us to the other people on the dock; they were about to go out fishing but waited until we were safely tied up. When they returned that gave us a six or seven pound Sockeye/Red salmon. It took Jennifer and me five days to eat it all.

By the next morning I had been on the phone with Raymarine. Joel, the man I deal with for this device – he and I have spoken before* – reckoned that with that much sawing back and forth we tripped the thermal protection circuitry. I want to upgrade from a wheel drive to a ram drive that moves the rudder directly. This upgrade will require an actuator rated for 20 amps rather than 10, so we agreed I would replace the current unit with the larger unit.

So, all together now, what is Cruising? Cruising is waiting for parts in exotic locations.

While I was negotiating with Hodges Marine in New Jersey, who has the best prices, about how much shipping would cost, Vince came by. It is $170 to ship to the local post office, but only $130 to ship to a street address. Vince offered to let us ship to his address. Yesterday (Monday), Vince came by check on the delivery. When I told him the package was being delivered via FedEx and was currently in Anchorage,† he commented, ‘‘Huh. FedEx doesn’t deliver here, I wonder what carrier they will use.’’

There were two sailboats here when we arrived: a 46-foot Hans Christian, and a thirty-something-foot 1970s boat that had been purchased in Seattle and had a bird’s nest in its stern fender. The Hans Christian is owned by a local man who knocked on our hull. Andy introduced himself to us, spent some time on Caro Babbo talking to us and then gave us a driving tour of Unalaska, and Dutch Harbor, and a narrative of his personal history and the history of the area.

Andy arrived, after time in ’nam, in his twenties and took the area and its opportunities by storm. He fished, he homesteaded, built houses, became a single dad, worked for the fish processors and ran a bunch of businesses, and by my guess, made a bunch of money, enough to head off with his love, Danene, for thirteen years sailing the Hans Christian around the world.

Like me, Andy refers to the woman he loves every few minutes or so: We learned their history together. Sometime in the last few years Andy and Danene bought the very well known Norvegian Rat bar and restaurant, which is where Jennifer and I headed after visiting Dan and Danene’s house and Dan’s shop with his 1953 Dodge Power Wagon. The Power Wagon is more than halfway through an off-the-frame restoration. This particular Power Wagon was built as a one-vehicle utility pole installation machine with an auger and a crane. The kind of gadget that’s difficult for many of us to resist.

Dan built the house mostly from scavenged wood, most of that from WWII structures. The major beams are 12 by 12s and 10 by 12s. Remember, the nearest trees are hundreds of miles east of here. The view out the living room window is Dutch Harbor, three or so hundred feet below. Across the road on the other ha;f of the property, the view out the workshop windows is Captain Bay.

I don’t know how I feel about the Norvegian Rat. I like the place very much and adore Danene, but the name conjures up something other than a very well kept, well-run establishment with a great view of the water, polite professional staff and well prepared food.

We asked our server for Danene who came over and told is that Andy had called to tell her we were coming. Danene, standing by our two-top, talked about all the things we had in common, including Dan Verheesan and gave great advice on where to sail, where to hide out from weather (perhaps the most important thing to know in this region) and how to sail from one place to another.
—-
I’ve got to go. FedEx has just told me that they’ve given the package to USPS for the last 1000 miles of the delivery and it won’t be here until Friday afternoon, which means we’ll miss our weather window.

I’ll be in touch.

*I’m stuck in a finger pointing match between three suppliers on why heading data that was previously shared amongst the devices no longer is. (For Geeks, the data doesn’t appear on the NMEA2k, nor RS422, bit it did on both previously.)

† By Wednesday after a few calls to FedEx, I learned the package would travel the last thousand miles (from Anchorage to Dutch) via the USPS. Perhaps the extra $40 would have it gotten here in time. The cost will be extra days on the dock, as many as five (over $100 in dock fees) waiting for the next weather window.

Find out location at Carobabbo.com along with it blog posts

False Pass; It’s all about the weather

False Pass, AK, 10-JUL-2020 — The first interchange we heard on the radio here in False Pass was two vessels negotiating time on the fuel dock. The first apologized to the second for moving towards the dock while the second boat was waiting.

The second boat asked how much fuel the first boat was taking on. The captain replied, ”I’m just topping off the two forward tanks. Two thousand gallons, maybe. ” They continued to politely negotiate while I turned my attention to other things.

Friday, today is Sunday, Jennifer and I left King Cove to start our tour of the south side of an island. The wind was to have been pleasant from the west at 10-15 knots outside, but inside between the islands we expected to motor. The wind, as it does here in Alaska started as a nice breeze coming down through a valley west of King Cove, then quieted to the point of considering motoring, then picked up as we passed a bay, building for the next few hours.

Caro Babbo easily sails faster than her theoretical hull speed. We were quickly sailing between 7.2 and 7.8 knots. Ahead, on AIS, we could see our French friends on Inook, a Boreal 46. To be as close behind them as we were, meant we were going faster than they were. This is always disconcerting.

There is the matter of pride that we should be able to overtake a vessel that large, and the uneasiness that we are.

As the wind built, we heeled past 25 degrees and it was time to reef.

The waves had built and as I stood on the deck I was splashed and eventually slipped and fell down. I finished most of the reefing kneeling, I put in a double reef. We did lose a bit of speed, settling in at 7 knots.

The wind clocked (rotated clockwise when looked at on a compass) to full north. Ninety degrees from where it should be. Our chosen anchorage, East Anchor Cove, would be untenable. But, hope springs eternal: I insisted we sail into the cove only to sail right back out again.

Jennifer considered the next two candidates, neither of which would work, and plotted a course three hours further to Dora Harbor inlet.

The wind faded when we were close into the lee of a cape. I wanted to get there now; it was a longer day than I had planned. We left all the sails up and motorsailed at 6 knots into the inlet.

Jennifer pointed out on the way down from East Anchor Cove that there was now an ocean swell from the south that flowed into our new harbor. Moving deeper into the harbor we became protected from the swell by a line of denticulate rocks the blocked about 10% of the mouth.

After studying the weather, Jennifer concluded we could not continue our planned voyage to Dutch Harbor; we’d need to back track three hours and then head north to False Pass and go to ‘Dutch’ via the Bering Sea.The weather on the way to False Pass would be unpleasant, without I thought she forecasted.

She didn’t mean to intimate that, but I slept poorly.

The anchorage was quiet with only the smallest surge coming in. The wind died overnight, as is common.

We left the anchorage with no sails set. When we hit the southerly swells I put up a double-reefed main to stop the rolling.

There was no appreciable wind the entire two hours to the pass.

We had weighed anchor at 5am to catch the northerly flood to take us to False Pass. We were later than we normally transit such things, but all went smoothly with the expected sharp currents and eddys that divert and spin us. The Raymarine autopilot was quite good at keeping us pointed in the right direction. Where we were actually going, versus pointing was something Jennifer kept a hand on.

Our time in False Pass has been full. It is the busiest commercial harbor we have been in with vessels off loading fish 24-hours a day.

In the yard are easily a hundred refrigerated containers: this is how much fish they process here. The midsize tenders collect about 260,000 pounds of fish from the fishing boats. The largest tenders collect over 600,000 pounds.

(Please forgive this writing. A phone cramps my abilities.)

Because pleasure boats are so rare, everyone speaks with us. People fishing are the nicest people, but I’ve written about this before.

About a mile from the harbor is an old fishing camp, the locals call it, but it was the other dorms and docks for Peter Pan, one of the current large fish processors. It is very apparent that the intended to return the next season and did not.

Everything is intact as is the people just walked out the door.

The dates are confusing. Calendars in the rooms are as late as 2019. A local man who grew up here tells us that the precessing building burnt down in 1982, and that the camp had not be in use since the nineties.

What excites Jennifer and me is the we have seen the remains of similar communities with only pilings remaining. Here all the boardwalks, buildings and docks are still there.

On our way to revisit the site, Cindy who works for Trident intercepted us to ask where we were from and other things, and then warned us about the brown bears that have been wandering about the site. We’d seen scat, but didn’t think it was from brown bears. Turns out it is a mother and two two-year olds.

We took bear spray with us.


False Pass; It’s all about the weather

False Pass, AK, 10-JUL-2020 — The first interchange we heard on the radio here in False Pass was two vessels negotiating time on the fuel dock. The first apologized to the second for moving towards the dock while the second boat was waiting.

The second boat asked how much fuel the first boat was taking on. The captain replied, ”I’m just topping off the two forward tanks. Two thousand gallons, maybe. ” They continued to politely negotiate while I turned my attention to other things.

Friday, today is Sunday, Jennifer and I left King Cove to start our tour of the south side of an island. The wind was to have been pleasant from the west at 10-15 knots outside, but inside between the islands we expected to motor. The wind, as it does here in Alaska started as a nice breeze coming down through a valley west of King Cove, then quieted to the point of considering motoring, then picked up as we passed a bay, building for the next few hours.

Caro Babbo easily sails faster than her theoretical hull speed. We were quickly sailing between 7.2 and 7.8 knots. Ahead, on AIS, we could see our French friends on Inook, a Boreal 46. To be as close behind them as we were, meant we were going faster than they were. This is always disconcerting.

There is the matter of pride that we should be able to overtake a vessel that large, and the uneasiness that we are.

As the wind built, we heeled past 25 degrees and it was time to reef.

The waves had built and as I stood on the deck I was splashed and eventually slipped and fell down. I finished most of the reefing kneeling, I put in a double reef. We did lose a bit of speed, settling in at 7 knots.

The wind clocked (rotated clockwise when looked at on a compass) to full north. Ninety degrees from where it should be. Our chosen anchorage, East Anchor Cove, would be untenable. But, hope springs eternal: I insisted we sail into the cove only to sail right back out again.

Jennifer considered the next two candidates, neither of which would work, and plotted a course three hours further to Dora Harbor inlet.

The wind faded when we were close into the lee of a cape. I wanted to get there now; it was a longer day than I had planned. We left all the sails up and motorsailed at 6 knots into the inlet.

Jennifer pointed out on the way down from East Anchor Cove that there was now an ocean swell from the south that flowed into our new harbor. Moving deeper into the harbor we became protected from the swell by a line of denticulate rocks the blocked about 10% of the mouth.

After studying the weather, Jennifer concluded we could not continue our planned voyage to Dutch Harbor; we’d need to back track three hours and then head north to False Pass and go to ‘Dutch’ via the Bering Sea.The weather on the way to False Pass would be unpleasant, without I thought she forecasted.

She didn’t mean to intimate that, but I slept poorly.

The anchorage was quiet with only the smallest surge coming in. The wind died overnight, as is common.

We left the anchorage with no sails set. When we hit the southerly swells I put up a double-reefed main to stop the rolling.

There was no appreciable wind the entire two hours to the pass.

We had weighed anchor at 5am to catch the northerly flood to take us to False Pass. We were later than we normally transit such things, but all went smoothly with the expected sharp currents and eddys that divert and spin us. The Raymarine autopilot was quite good at keeping us pointed in the right direction. Where we were actually going, versus pointing was something Jennifer kept a hand on.

Our time in False Pass has been full. It is the busiest commercial harbor we have been in with vessels off loading fish 24-hours a day.

In the yard are easily a hundred refrigerated containers: this is how much fish they process here. The midsize tenders collect about 260,000 pounds of fish from the fishing boats. The largest tenders collect over 600,000 pounds.

(Please forgive this writing. A phone cramps my abilities.)

Because pleasure boats are so rare, everyone speaks with us. People fishing are the nicest people, but I’ve written about this before.

About a mile from the harbor is an old fishing camp, the locals call it, but it was the other dorms and docks for Peter Pan, one of the current large fish processors. It is very apparent that the intended to return the next season and did not.

Everything is intact as is the people just walked out the door.

The dates are confusing. Calendars in the rooms are as late as 2019. A local man who grew up here tells us that the precessing building burnt down in 1982, and that the camp had not be in use since the nineties.

What excites Jennifer and me is the we have seen the remains of similar communities with only pilings remaining. Here all the boardwalks, buildings and docks are still there.

On our way to revisit the site, Cindy who works for Trident intercepted us to ask where we were from and other things, and then warned us about the brown bears that have been wandering about the site. We’d seen scat, but didn’t think it was from brown bears. Turns out it is a mother and two two-year olds.

We took bear spray with us.


Gathering of the tribes, night time darkness

Volcano Bay, 55° 13.6’N 162° 1.4’W, 4-JUL-2022 – It’s dark at night now, the sun rises about 6:00 a.m.: a combination of being 2 weeks past the solstice, and 5°, about 300 nautical miles south of Homer.

We spent the last few days in Sandpoint, a town we skipped on our way west 2 years ago. It has fuel, a supermarket, schools and qualifies as a real town, with a police force and city government. The harbor area looks rundown and depressed.

Jennifer had misgivings.

Sand Point is a working harbor very far from anywhere. How distant it is from anything is evidenced by bananas costing $3.99 a pound.

There is no real place to discard things, and surrounding the harbor are acres of storage for fishing gear and fishing vessels.

After we docked, a man came by the boat and introduced himself as Adam. He had visited with us on the Discovery dock in Dutch Harbor 2 years ago. He recognized Caro Babbo.

Adam sat on the dock for a while and spoke with me. He would be a frequent visitor over the 48 hours we were there.

Immediately in front of us on T dock, which we correctly guessed was for transients, was a large fishing boat and in front of it a French-flagged ketch. The boat was metal, and seemed to be the type of vessel that one wants for high latitude sailing, airy and dry on the inside with lots of light, and heavily built.

We commented that it was the second French-flagged vessel we’d seen so far. As we were walking back to Caro Babbo we saw one of those very typically French aluminum boats that we see up here: cutter rigged, built out of aluminum, with a very high aspect ratio mast. Sure enough, she was French flagged.

We waited on the dock for her to come in, and unusually, the deck hand, who looked as much like an old salt as one could imagine, tossed me a line. Vessels that do a lot of docking on their own generally want no help. We never toss a line to anyone when we come into a dock, because they will often times take the initiative and lock the line down when we don’t want them to. I took the line and walked along with the boat as it moved forward along the dock. I asked if the line should be tied down, and the helmsmen by now was standing at the rail and spoke very good English, said that I should tie it down.

A few minutes later we would untie the boat and move it forward to where we hoped, in vain, there was power.

It gets a little confused, either after we tied down the new aluminum boat crewed by Laurent and Bernard, or in the interim after seeing the French boat on the dock, the skipper of the fishing boat Katrina M out of Homer came by to say hello. Chuck is gregarius friendly and sincere. Probably early 50s, been fishing forever.

Chuck offered us use of his shower, TV room if we wanted it and a place to watch videos. On the one hand, it would be difficult to imagine sailors from a sail boat coming on to a fishing boat to hang out watching videos etc, and impossible to imagine sailors on a small sail boat not taking up the opportunity to have a hot shower, which is what we did.

In that short time, couple hours of docking, we met so many people. Chuck’s crew were two men in their 20s, and Jeff in his middle fifties.

Jeff is very well spoken, and talks enough to put one a little on guard as to whether something is not quite right. But everything is right. Jeff is quiet spoken, tremendously interesting, and after talking for a few minutes on his own, begins to ask questions and engages in an easy conversation.

Jeff and Adam would each stop by the boat several times during our stay.

Getting to the fuel dock, which was not designed for small vessels was difficult, so we decided to use the fuel in our jerry cans to refill our tank and then use a cart from the marina to walk those cans over to the gas station, which was run by LFS, a company that runs stores oriented to fishing boats.

Though the fuel pumps are standard gas station pumps, you must pay inside where the clerk asks what the fuel will be used for and adds taxes appropriately. There are constant reminders that we are not in the lower 48.

The image of fishermen in the media is so at odds with the people we meet. They’re are always nicer and more sincere than most people we meet. They are generally will educated and, of course, smart independent business people using technology and working the constantly changing regulations and prices that effect their ability to make money.

While we were waiting for a cart to free up, a man standing next to his pickup truck started a conversation with us. He and Jennifer spoke mostly about the region, the industry and his family history. He mentioned his grandmother, which started he and Jennifer discussing a book based on a local newspaper. He had every issue of that paper.

As he and I spoke, we each had light bulb moment. We had met two years earlier in the harbormaster office in King Cove.

It does feel like coming home.

Edgar talked to us about people we knew in common as had Adam and Jeff.

We also talked about Sand Point. Like Port Charlotte in Haida Gwaii, Sand Point was formed by smaller villages failing: the people would move to the next town. Edgar’s people came from Unga, Jennifer’s favorite island where we anchored one day two years ago and walked the deserted falling down town.

Edgar commented that everyone just walked away leaving everything in their houses as if they would return from work.

The houses, the school and all the buildings just fell in on themselves.

On July third, Jennifer and I left the dock, shortly after the two French boats, to come here to Volcano Bay, one of a number so named.

Of the two volcanoes here, Pavlov and Pavlov’s sister, Pavlov is smoking from two vents. Neither Jennifer nor I have ever seen a smoking volcano.

The people we meet tell us the sailboats are back after COVID, but the numbers are small enough that they can recite the name of every vessel.

We shared our Volcano Bay anchorage with a 75-foot charter vessel and a fishing boat. Like most of the anchorages this year, the winds funneled down the slopes, raising no waves, but testing the anchor.

We are safe, meeting people we know and making new friends.

Jennifer and I are in King Cove as I write this. James the harbormaster remembers us. We discuss his college-age children.

More from our next stop before we make another overnighter.

Find our location at Carobabbo.com along with our blog posts

I love you too, John.

Sitkalidac Strait, Kodiak Alaska, 25-JUN-2020 — I’d never made an actual, conscious decision to convince someone to stay with me. I’d fallen in love before and been in long term relationships but it was never quite as conscious. It was emotions and lust and love and confidence in the world.

But with Jennifer, I was older, over 50. I’d been in love and lost, been in love and destroyed the relationship, been in love and been loved by someone who should have known better, as should have I.

I remember the moment where I made my pitch; it was only a single sentence. It was in the living room of my house. On the wall was, and is painted a red circle, a blue square, and a yellow triangle. They had been there for years overlapping, and somehow incomplete. Two or three years later Jennifer would contribute an oval mirror and the wall would be complete. It is still there now.

I don’t remember what couch we sat on. The couch that is there now I hadn’t yet acquired, the other couch in that room is, in fact, Jennifer’s, so it wasn’t that one. It might have been the love seat.

On my calendar is a date from that year that says that Jennifer broke up with me. So, I expect that the relationship had been at a temporary end and somehow I had gotten her to come over to the house. To pick up something, perhaps.

The pitch was simple, ”We can build something.”

I know I explained a little more, and we discussed getting old together, and I spoke about the reality that at some point in our life together one of us would most likely be taking care of other. And I, probably, since I tell this line to almost everyone, said, ”Every relationship ends in pain. It is the cost of entry. There is only one relationship that will not end up that way and that’s only if you die first.”

We are motoring down the coast of Kodiak Island, slipping through passes between the smaller islands off the coast, and at this moment have the open ocean to the left of us and a Kodiak Island peninsula to the right. Further offshore it is blowing 20 knots, but close to the shore it is often like this: no wind at all, slow langarous, flattened ocean swells slowly rolling. The water is beaten pewter, but the period of the waves does not yield the shapes that we see in all of the native art east of here in the inside passage.

Jennifer and I were talking, marveling really, about how we got here.

We were recounting to each other the trips we’ve made and how far they are outside of how we saw ourselves.

I tell her, though it’s not true, that I promised we would build something together. I didn’t actually promise anything. I said we could build something. I said I promised we would build a life together. Even that’s not true.

But it has come to be the folklore that we build our life together upon.

Alone, neither of us would have done this. I sailed, entirely day sails in Long Island Sound. Jennifer said she didn’t like day sailing anymore and wanted to go places, but so we started.

A start is all it takes, like the start of an oak tree, or a popular, or maple tree. Put the start in the ground and time and the world will take care of the rest.

Tomorrow, at 5:00 in the morning, we’ll start heading southwest across 175 nautical miles of water to Chignik. It’s been a little less then 2 years since we were last there. It’s unlikely that the harbormaster will remember us, but we were just in from Hawaii traveling with the sailing vessel Robusta who was just in from Japan. So it’s possible.

It’s where we met Tim Gervais, and his child. Both of whom became good friends and are close to me.

We’ve been doing day hops, averaging probably 40 miles a day. 175 miles is 5 days at the rate we’ve been going and gets us further down the chain.

This afternoon I will set up the windvane to steer us, rather than using the Raymarine electric autopilot; we’ll return to the magical silence of sailing. The trip should be somewhere around 35 hours, perhaps faster, perhaps slower. We’re on a sailboat, we have a destination not a schedule.

I say, ” I love you, Jennifer.” Jennifer often looks at me quizzically when I say this. Today she responds, ”I love you, too, John. ”
Find out location at Carobabbo.com along with it blog posts


Is that a rocket launch tower up ahead

Greville Cape, Kodiak, AK, 23-JUN-2022 – There is not a breath of wind, the rollers are very low. The hoisted main sail keeps Caro Babbo from rolling as we motor 50 nautical miles to our next stop.

Curiously, on the land ahead, the white tall structure is not a lighthouse but a rocket launch tower. I never knew they existed any place outside of Cape Canaveral Florida. I don’t know what they were designed to launch. I wouldn’t think any sort of military missile because we can see the tower 20 miles away.

We’ve gotten over the ”did it always make that noise?” phase of the journey. Some sounds have changed with maintenance changes I’ve made this year. Other sounds were new last year, the result of the replacement cutlass bearing, straightened propeller shaft and balanced propeller; the improper sounds of seven years of cruising are gone but not forgotten.

Yesterday day was an easy day. We’d anchored the night before in a small harbor on Long Island. The entrance to the inner pool was much shallower than any directions we had received.

We took a slip for a few hours at the St. Paul Marina in Kodiak City and were charged, to our surprise, for a full 24 hours. The answer we’ve discovered is to not call the harbormaster: tie up on the transient dock, shop, and then leave. We get the feeling is this is how it’s done, completely with the harbor master’s knowledge, but to make your presence official the harbormaster must comply with the rules and charge.

After spending some time at McDonald’s for fast Wi-Fi and picking up some heavier gauge wire at the chandlery so that I can install some additional cigarette lighter plugs, we motored across the channel to a larger marina where we met Wade and Sara of Comfort Cruising.

Sara told us she was starved for other cruisers and we talked about cruising things. She gave advice on where to anchor in this area, and I gave her the horrifying news about how poorly an IridiumGO actually works.

She had bought one IridiumGO from an unofficial dealer, figured it couldn’t possibly work this poorly, and then bought an official one from PredictWind, which, of course, worked just as poorly.

Their vessel is a 46-foot Beneteau with 5200 watts of solar panels. Enough to run all of their refrigeration and air conditioning in Hawaii!

We learned that Sara and Wade never go into the inner pool on Long Island, so their directions applied solely to the outer pool. Most sailors don’t venture where Jennifer routinely takes us.

The time together went much too quickly. Jennifer and I made a mad dash back across the channel to the fuel dock before it closed, which had been occupied by the Coast Guard cutter, Mustang, when we came through in the morning.

Caro Babbo’s new wet exhaust system works properly, although the sound of the water rushing through the exhaust hose is a little bit different. However, when I turn off the engine something between a pint and a quart of water finds it way into the bilge. This takes about 15 minutes to a half an hour; this is the problem I was trying to solve.

I need to turn on the engine, turn it off and then stick my head down into the bilge while wearing a headlamp to see if I can figure out where this water is coming from.

We started the trip with about 70 days to cover a little over 2,000 mi, there and back. Jennifer is weighing how hard she wants to push. This would be an average of 30 miles per day. If we were to go offshore and sail directly it’s not very hard, but then we miss everything along the way. Jennifer is considering our options.

At the McDonald’s, I bought airfare for myself for September: Seattle – New York – Atlanta – Seattle. I have a high school reunion I want to get to, friends to see, and further work to do on the Willivee house.

If you are in the New York region, or in Atlanta I would love to see you.

Very unusual for us, we have watched the occasional video in the evening. Most cruisers we know watch dozens of movies during the course of a trip. We watch rarely. We generally read, and I keep saying I’m going to write. I also do maintenance.

I need to do an oil change and install additional 12 volt sockets around the boat.

While I was in Homer I installed an alarm buzzer for the Vesper AIS. In addition to tracking all the vessels with AIS, it has a very good anchor drag feature. The device will notify us through an app, but if the screen is off, or the app is not at the top the alarm does not go off. Basically, it’s useless in that form. However, with the buzzer installed the device is able to sound the alarm whether or not any software is turned on. One must install the sound device and a momentary button to cancel the alarm. It works terrifically well and I am actually sleeping through the night, something I have never done except at a dock.

At anchor I generally wake up once an hour to check our swing. This is life changing.

At the fuel dock, we met Christian, who is Philippine. I mentioned that everyone who worked at McDonald’s was Philippine, Christian commented don’t go to Walmart.

He furthered that everyone at the fishing processing plant is Philippine. He’s been here 12 years, since he is 17, worked his way through the processing plant, and now works at the Petro fuel dock. He is a very valued worker because he does not like to sit in an office and wait for vessels to approach the dock: he does electrical work, welding, painting and everything that’s necessary to maintain the dock.

He was married and had a child at age 17 just before he came alone to join his mother who was already working at the processing plant. He spoke no English when he arrived. He finished high school, now speaks perfect colloquial American English and has brought his wife and now two children here. He views himself as an American success story.

As we motor towards the launch site between an island and Kodiak Island, there is a blue sky overhead and haze all around us. The water undulates like satin cloth.

The color of the top of the undulating waves is a light blue almost white, the reflection of the sky, the sides of the waves are in darker blue and now the tiniest little ripples are visible as the water passes by our boat.

The land, a few days ago, was entirely rocks: hard bare and impressive. Here there are sharp peaks, the taller ones are completely snow covered but lower everything is green. On the land there are grasses close to the water. Parts are evergreen forests with large spaces between the trees: lovely for walking. Other places, which look like they should be moss, are dense shrubbery between shoulder and head high, nearly impossible to make one’s way through.

Tomorrow and Saturday are short little hops, and then Sunday is an overnight. There will be wind and waves Saturday night coming from the southeast. We’ll anchor in a place called Japanese Bay which which is open to the Southeast but has a protuberance of land that forms a well-protected cove. We will anchor in that cove.

We’ve been eating very light on this trip as we both arrived carrying the rewards of living the high life. Living alone like this, we are able to live simply and hopefully return ourselves to the image of ourselves we carry around in our heads.

There has been intermittent and unexpected phone and internet service since arriving in Kodiak. I wonder how long it will last. I prefer to be without. T-Mobile just sent me a text about the benefits of banking with them.
Find out location at Carobabbo.com along with it blog posts



Invisible repairs, Homer friends, There and back in seventy days

Port Chatham, AK, 17-JUN-2020 — Jennifer studies weather and I apologize for being out of touch.

In the two and a half weeks I spent in the Northern Enterprise’s boatyard I completed over 30 tasks, I’m not sure a single one is visible. The invisibility makes me feel as if I accomplished nothing; a lot of the work was physically taxing, and I was unsure whether some of the tasks were successful given I really wouldn’t know until the boat was in the water.

The largest item was replacing the wet exhaust system hoses. Each time we turned off the engine last year, 15 minutes later the bilge pump would kick on and pump perhaps a pint of water out of the bilge.

I decided that there was a leak on the bottom of the exhaust hose that would only leak water after the engine was turned off and the water sat, rather than being pushed out by the exhaust. I replaced the hose from the engine to a right angle coupling in 2016 in Ketchikan. I carried around the guilt of not replacing all of it since then and figured now was the time shed that guilt.

To do so required removing the waste tank, and all of the batteries.

The house batteries were stone dead when I arrived. My guess is that the diaphragm pump had turned on and stayed on though the water in the bilge was frozen. The year before, there was only the impeller pump in the bilge. It jammed on the ice and blew the fuse, rather than drain the batteries.

I charged the batteries for three or four days and then tested with a hygrometer. The house batteries tested little better than water – they were done. The cranking battery tested as brand new.

When I plumbed the waste tank, I plumbed it in such a way that the only way to remove the pipes was to cut them, meaning I needed to replace the plumbing from the toilet to the waste tank when I reinstalled the waste tank. On the advice of a friend, I had put a check valve in that run of pipe, which clogged easily and never worked. So re-plumbing would allow me to remove the check valve.

With the waste tank and batteries removed, I was able to pull out the two sections of wet exhaust hose, one running from the 90° fitting to the muffler, the other from the muffler to the through hull exhaust fitting: about 10 ft total.

It was remarkable the amount of physical effort removing the two pieces of hose and reinstalling them. The hose is quite resistant to bending and, with wire inside, it is completely kink resistant. Good about the kink resistance, bad about the resistance to bending at all.

I wasn’t surprised that I was tired carrying the old batteries down the ladder, and the new batteries back up. I was surprised that my quads weren’t killing me. 200 half knee bends carrying 40 lb in weights 6-days a week, I guess, does have its benefits.

With the muffler and hose in place, it was just a matter of getting Caro Babbo in the water to understand whether I had done it right. Any water I might have wanted to bring to the boat to somehow test the connections required me carrying it by hand 150 yards and then up into the boat. I was fairly sure of my work and had many many other tasks.

A newly discovered task was that the stainless steel water tank or one of the hoses leading from it has a very slow leak. About a quart every 24 hours.

When I tried to remove the water tank I found that I would need to remove an inch and a half valve connected to a through-hull nipple. Try though I might I could not get that valve off. I decided we would live with the small leak and move the repair of that tank to the top of next year’s list.

We have three water tanks on board: the 25-gallon stainless, and two 15-gallon water bladders, together with a water maker I think we’re fine.

I had a bit of a social life this year. I saw our friends Morgan and Douglas, and made friends with Don Keller, his spouse Brenda, and there two young friends Morgan and Ryan.

I spent time with Jennifer’s and my friend Tim Gervais and his wonderful child.

The list of things that was completed goes on forever. The list of things that I did not complete is manageable and while only one required task was still undone when Caro Babbo went into the water, I finished it at the dock.

For our initial shakedown, Jennifer took us over to Seldovia. It’s a town we know well, but we did not run into anyone who remembered us.

Jennifer took us out to dinner at the bar that is across the strip of water from where we tie up to the public dock.

We spent a few hours sitting in front of the public library setting up the IridiumGO and sending everyone who needed to be notified of our new satellite phone number and reminding them of the email address that will come to us via the satellite.

You can find both of these pieces of information on the front page of this website.

Jennifer’s ability to move Caro Babbo underpower has become innate. There is a confidence that shows in how she moves the vessel and a confidence that Caro Babbo will move as she intends it to. To me, this manifests itself most evidently in the amount of time Jennifer will wait while the boat does her bidding. At slow speeds, a vessel does not react quickly because there’s not a lot of water passing over the rudder. Additionally, the arc of a turn as the vessel begins to move will tighten as the force of the water over the rudder increases. I know to be quiet and to wait.

So far, everything we have expected to work on Caro Babbo is working.

Today, Sunday, Jennifer decided we should have a day of rest. I took two days off in the 18 that I was in Homer, and Jennifer worked hard every day she was there.

I have always wanted an enclosure for the cockpit for use when we are at anchor.

In part two of this post, I’ll tell you about the enclosure that Josh Kastelle made for us. It is exactly what I asked for. It does what I wanted it to do. Jennifer and  I are deciding how much ambivalence we have toward it and when we will use it. It changes the experience.

Tomorrow, Monday, we will cover 60 nautical miles to an anchorage, depending on weather, we may stay for a few days.

When we were leaving Homer we saw that our tracking page said we were somewhere between China and Taiwan. We are not.*

Hopefully, by the time you read this, it will have been corrected.

In the next post, I will tell you about the room, more about the repairs and improvements made to Caro Babbo, very few of which are visible, and the improvement in solar panels since I started buying them 10 or 15 years ago.

Jennifer and I are well. We have 70 days to head west and then return to Homer.

Our warm regards to everyone and thank you for being our friends.

P. S. The software to use the IridiumGO is only on phones this year, meaning I am writing on a phone. I also did not replace my broken Bluetooth keyboard. This may effect my writing. Famously, a Japanese author wrote an entire novel on his first generation iPhone. I think the novel was only famous for how it was written, not what was written.


*I emailed PredictWind support, who provided the excellent support they always have. Shockingly, to me, it was actually a bug, which they repaired and changed my level of service on the tracking page to keep all of my tracks forever, instead of the limited time they normally allow. I love these people.

Sent from Iridium Mail & Web.



Continue reading “Invisible repairs, Homer friends, There and back in seventy days”

100 Hard 737 Landings

20º45.87’N 83º 35.47’W 23-MAY-2022 – Reading the Lat and Long, most people will know we’re south of Hawaii, fewer people will know we’re west of Long Island Sound – Looking us up on a map will tell you we’re not many miles from Cuba.

Jennifer and I are together on a Leopard 46 catamaran, Desert Eagle, recently purchased by our friends Jesus and Zoe (pronounced Zoey). Along with an insurance-required delivery captain and a first mate, we’re taking Jesus’ and Zoe’s newly purchased boat home to Key Largo.

Continue reading “100 Hard 737 Landings”