I was
determined to get the boat upgrades done, and so worked on the wiring 'til the
wee hours on Tuesday, spending some of the time scrunched in the cockpit
installing wiring for the motor. As a
result, my left shoulder hurt and I got even less sleep than you'd expect, and
I didn't begin packing the boat to go until the day of departure. Every big trip I vow to be packed so as to leave early and well-rested, and every trip I do something like this. And the lights don't even work!
Beatrice Ann, ready to launch.
Leaving Hingham Yacht Club astern.
We
rose about 8am and breakfasted on oatmeal and croissants, coffee and
juice. A leisurely wander found the boat still (or, rather, again) hard
aground, so I relocated the anchor and shortened the rode before we set out by
water taxi for Georges Island and its 19th century Fort Warren.
Water taxi leaving Grape. Our boat is the speck grounded behind the bar in the center distance.
This
time I remembered to bring headlamps so we could explore the fort's darker
corners to our hearts' content. Since
this was our third year visiting as part of a Harbor Islands camping trip, we
didn't feel compelled to see everything, but time in the visitor's center
did remind Stephen of the two Civil War
bounty jumpers imprisoned and executed there--shot by a firing squad while
standing beside their coffins--which sparked a conversation about capital
punishment. Stephen is generally against
it, but had to admit that President Lincoln, also against it, needed to make an
example of them. Stephen is twelve, and
feels these issues pretty deeply.
Lovells Island, seen from inside a watchtower in Fort Warren.
Finished
with Georges after a modest lunch (that snack bar REALLY needs competition!--we
decided to take a different water taxi to Lovells Island. I was interested to see how its camp sites
were arranged and how easy it would be to anchor safely in the event we decided
to visit in the future. This taxi
dropped us there before 2pm, and we spent the next hour and a half
circumnavigating the island. We explored
ruins and wondered about the tumble of granite blocks that lined the outer
beach. We also got ourselves in a bit of
a fix trying to get around a cement foundation that had fallen from the bluff
above to block our progress. In making
our way carefully around these enormous chucks of concrete, we found ourselves
between tangles of reinforcing iron projecting from the concrete and deeper
water than we felt comfortable wading.
Negotiating it without injury, we faced another obstacle: the next water
taxi back to George would be too late to catch a ride on the original taxi back
to Grape. When I realized this in
studying the schedule, a helpful ranger called the taxi company and got an
agreement for the last taxi to drop us at Grape on the way back to their
night-time dock in Hingham. (On that
final trip, we discovered we were not alone: three other couples came to Grape
with us.)
Captain and crew of water taxi that graciously took us home.
Stephen likes to ride up front.
Back
on Grape about 4pm, I was able to get out to the boat--now well afloat on high
tide--and fire up the electric motor for a move to a nearer and more convenient
anchorage. Dropping the hook in about 8
feet of water, I calculated that the boat would still have a foot or two of
water under her at low, but still be in reach of shore.
Low-grade slate that got my attention on Grape. (I shouldn't have told Stephen to smile.)
I
spent the late afternoon exploring the slaty rock that stands vertically on the
western shore, and collect common periwinkle shells for future school use. We ate a dinner of soup and bread while it
was still daylight, then retreated into tents once fully dark.
Stephen loves to read in bed--same as at home.
Morning. Breakfast is cooking.
Stephen
slept late waking to another leisurely
breakfast. We both explored a bit more,
and then began breaking camp about 9:30am for 11am check-out. The campsite was clean by shortly after 11,
and the loading of the boat was fairly smooth owing to better organization than
on earlier trips.
"Buzzing" the dock at Grape as we depart.
We had
discussed possible activities for our last day, and decided to sail. Stephen thought he might like to visit
Nantasket Beach, while I wanted to sail into Boston proper. We decided to try both, and set out for
northward with a fair but light wind.
Stephen sailed us off the anchor, but was happy to return to his
favorite spot on the foredeck once I was back in the cockpit.
Unexpected encounter with a (diesel) side-wheeler under Long Island Bridge.
We
sailed gently under the Long Island bridge and into Dorchester Bay, then past
Spectacle Island to starboard and seeing the beloved Corita gas tank far away
to port. Once past Spectacle, we were in
Boston Harbor proper, sailing past the entrance to the inner harbor, flanked by
Castle Island and Logan International Airport, among shipping great and
small. We had taken a long time to get
this far; it was long after noon and a long sail home, and going into the inner
harbor would have meant tacking out amid shipping large and small--clearly not
an option. So I decided to close the
loop by going outside Long Island (President Roads), down the Nubble Channel,
and back into Hingham Bay via Hull Gut.
It would give us more bang for the buck, and was only a little longer, I
decided, than doubling back.
After
a look and photos, we began working upwind in President Roads in light air,
dodging first an incoming integrated tug-and-barge, then the general cargo
vessel Arctic Blizzard, and later a cruise ship. The Arctic Blizzard, lightly-loaded and
showing much bottom paint and half her bow bulb, made her stately way past
us. Soon after, a smaller motor vessel
with "PILOT" emblazoned on the side zoomed to her starboard side,
looped around, and then came back. I
wondered whether she was picking up a pilot who had gotten the big ship out of
the inner harbor, or was dropping off one who would get her out of Boston
entirely. The big ship remained
stationary, and passing her we discovered she was riding from her starboard
anchor. A metal stair wend down her
side about halfway to the water, and a rope ladder went the rest of the way:
seeming to me a scary climb. She
remained in that position for as long as we could see her.
Fireboat.
Stephen
and his sharp eyes spotted the fireboats first: looking like they were ready
for a parade someone had forgotten to hold, they came out of the inner harbor
with all water guns spraying. A few
minutes later they passed us--water thankfully turned off. What could the fuss have been all about?
Norwegian Dawn.
Later,
as we approached the end of Deer Island and its spacy-looking sewage treatment
plant, a police boat suddenly drew up and told us a cruise ship was coming and
we should stay to the Deer Island side of the channel. After my "ok" sign it jetted away
to warn the next boater. Meanwhile I
turned to look. It's hard to believe I
could miss a big cruise ship speeding toward us, but so it was. Only a few minutes later the Norwegian Dawn
steamed past in a blaze of bright colors and incongruous artwork. Perhaps the fireboats had been a send-off for
her.
Passing Fort Warren.
After
much light, fluky and sometimes non-existent wind and a foul current, we
finally worked past Long Island as the wind shifted again and strengthened a
bit. From then on, my main worry was
getting into Hingham before full dark, since the lights didn't work. We sailed slowly south past Gallops Island
and our old friend Georges, and approached Hull Gut just after 6pm. Hull Gut has some of the strongest tidal
current in the area, but I figured to beat the ebb since the moon was first
quarter and high tide had only been an hour or so ago. But entering the Gut I watched our speed drop
from 3kt to 2 to 1.5 and finally to 1.2kt.
After a tense few minutes more it was clear we'd made it.
Now we
had only to cross Hingham Bay to get to our ramp. But as we approached the entrance to the
harbor the sun set at last and the wind--now mostly foul--began to die away for
good and all. The tide was getting low
enough for it to be risky to ignore the channel. It was time to start the motor.
We
powered along cheerfully for awhile, sails still drawing most of the time,
convincing me we were drawing little current.
We followed the coarse laid into the gps for an earlier trip when I
thought we might come across Cape Cod Bay into Hingham late at night. To my dismay, the battery began to give out,
our speed dropping visibly until we made barely a knot. i got out the paddle, but resisted the idea
of switching to our other battery, which was under my bunk buried under a small
mountain of camping gear. My gps route
wasn't entirely successful either, leading us aground once briefly, then taking
us among moored sailboats some distance from the channel, but between gps and
my floodlight, we found our way.
Finally, though, at 9:30 we touched the ramp, and the adventure was
over.
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