Showing posts with label Segeln. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Segeln. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Sam Black enters Kona Kai


Preface: The story of Kona Kai sailing down from Maine to North Carolina in the fall of 2011 shouldn't be stretched too thin but neither should the story be too short. I will post parts of the story here, not necessarily in chronological order (until the work is done), but to make a start I will publish parts of it before the whole text is written and all the photos are edited. 


Terror of the fish: Bro gearing up.


Kona Kai was not on collision course, but out there, at night on the Atlantic Ocean, the distance of two, three nautical miles seems not that much when it comes to a standoff between her 34 feet of fiberglass and aluminum verse the 1,132 feet of pure steel of the RMS Queen Mary 2. Sailing at night can be deceptive, distances are hard to judge in the darkness, but this was for sure: Kona Kai was going down south along the eastern seaboard, coming out of Buzzards Bay, Long Island abeam. She was on a 209° course heading for Cape Hatteras, while the Cunard Line cruise ship was most probably steaming toward New York Harbor, and these course lines would intersect somewhere. The interesting question was when and where.

The RMS Queen Mary 2, here seen during "port birthday" 2006 in Hamburg, Germany (source: Wikipedia)

Just listening to the ongoing VHF radio communication struck the sailors as awesome. Way ahead of Kona Kai sailed a two masted cutter roughly on the same course, out of sight, but their crew was concerned about an unsolicited meeting with the Queen Mary 2 as well. They had radar on board and could estimate the crossing point, so Kona Kai was absolutely safe.

Majestic is an apt word to describe the impression the cruise ship made with her thousands of lights -  bigger than the Titanic, a city of steel, silently floating by, overtaking Kona Kai on port, and slowly taking off, swallowed in its sheer mass by the darkness of the night. Now, except the four men aboard their boat, there were only about a million stars overhead, constellations leading the way. Hardly slowed down by any waves for the bow to plow through, they made good distance that night, everyone enjoying the magnificent silence on their lonely watches.


Kona Kai Gets Entered


The next morning brought uninvited passengers aboard. Just before noon on October 23rd, 2011, the crew saw them both, swirling around our vessel, not sure if they should dare to enter. One of them finally gave in and favored a safe place on the foredeck over the threatening death by drowning. Just some minutes though, until one sailor came forward slowly to see what was going on and to take a picture of her. The poor soul was so stressed out that the little sparrow went airborne again and took off, probably to her sure death since we were about 50 nautical miles offshore.

Being too afraid of the crew, she took off just a moment after landing - not a wise decision 50 miles offshore.


Not so Sam Black. He landed with a visible impact on the starboard side of the cockpit. Panting and wobbling, plumes fluffed against the wind, the little sparrow could hardly keep his eyes open. "Shy" was obviously not a word in his book, and as far as hunger was concerned, there was no reason to refuse some sesame seeds and cracked peanuts the crew promptly offered. The bird even came onto their palms to grab a bite. Then, after about 15 minutes, the beast kicked back to proper life.

Fattening up after a long flight: Sam appreciates sesame seeds and cracked peanuts.

As soon as Sam was fed and watered, he hopped right down the companionway to explore the innards of his ark. The chart table featured a good lookout position and it was a short way from there to the quarterberth. It was not used for the crew's rest, but to store sails, electronics, pots and pans and everything else the crew didn't want between their feet. Sometimes the waves would rock everything in there back and forth, metal screeching, wood moaning, a life threatening commotion. But a real explorer doesn't flinch from going into the unknown. He respects danger and conquers it. So it was logically consistent that Sam chose this very place to sleep, climbing deep into the darker parts of the berth, where nobody could reach or even see him.

Moving in: Sam inspects the quarterberth - his new sparrow-cave - from the chart table.


The four sailors sat together and knitted their brows and stroked their beards, well, the two of them who had beards, and wondered where this bird might have come from. No bird of this size, they reckoned, would make it that far off shore on its own. Probably he made it over from the Queen Mary 2 the night before and simply tried to keep airborne until he discovered Kona Kai. That's what the sailors concluded and agreed upon. A hitchhiker on the seven seas, jumping ship whenever he felt the urge. Anyway, down there in his very berth Sam slept, safe and sound.

"Shy" is not a word in Sam's text book. Here he pays Rob a visit.


A Kingdom for a Name

The crew were not even sure Sam Black was a sparrow, but a wildlife photographer confirmed this later after seeing these photos and browsing all of her bird books. She was sure that it was a sparrow, but couldn't pinpoint what exact rendition. So she called it a LBJ. LBJ? Yes, was the answer, a Little Brown Job, as birders call them.

LBJs - birders call them Little Brown Jobs. But that's no matching name for this dude, here pulling the author's leg.

Anyway, he looked quite dark, and he was adventurous. So the sailors stirred up some Dark & Stormies, and reminisced about some pirates to find an appropriate name for the bird who entered ship. Blackbeard a.k.a. Edward Teach came to their minds, who lost his head just off the Carolina coast. The name of the Disney figure Capt. Jack Sparrow was mentioned, and there they were, late at night: Sam Black just seemed an appropriate name. And so they went down below and followed the little tweet into their respective berths and into dreamland. Alas, one lonely sailor stood watch at the wheel, watching the North Star and Orion and the Big Dipper and the Small Dipper and all the other wonderful figures up on the firmament, telling their stories for so many centuries.



Gone Fishing

The next morning brought new excitement for Sam and the sailors. Not only did they have the best ship's cook aboard they could imagine. They also got the most ambitious ship's cook they could wish for, so ambitious that he wanted to realize a plan unheard of: for every meal during their travels, he would prepare something different, not serving a single dish twice. Not even for breakfast, no, sir. And so the crew on Kona Kai had one food fest after another for two weeks in a row. The only downside was that Bro spent way too much time preparing meals and hardly ever saw the sun or stood at the wheel.

Hooked! Now comes the hard part - reeling in.

All the sailors loved fish, and there was a big hooraaaaah, when a skipjack tuna caught the hook at the end of the trawling fishing line. Bro fought the fish for quite a while, and because the sailboat was storming forward on a reach, it was hard work to reel the skipjack in. Finally Bro brought him alongside and Rob lifted him aboard with the help of a net.


Landing the catch.

Still hooked on a pink lure.

This one will feed four sailors.

Shimmering in all colors.



Bro thanks Poseidon and kisses the skipjack goodbye!

The fish's skin was shimmering in all colors of the rainbow - blue, yellow, purple - and changing every couple of seconds. This size would feed four hungry sailors, enough for an appetizer and an entree as well. Bro was happy now that he had sacrificed all the ouzo to Poseidon, thanked him, kissed the skipjack goodbye and started cutting fillets on a special fillet table. This is one well equipped chef!

Fillet and release: every chef travels with his knives, but only really well equipped ones bring their own rail fillet table.

After the bloody work of gutting and cutting was done, Bro took a well deserved nap. Sam hopped along, curious as ever and was keen to see more action. But this was a time to rest. Later there was a time to eat.

A well deserved nap - but Sam is always thirsty for more action.

"How about some sushi/sashimi?" joked Janko, hoping that he could outsmart the chef at least once. "Hmm, not only did I bring my wok aboard," quipped Bro. "I also have rice, mirin, wasabi and tobiko, so I could make sticky rice and produce some nice rolls. Let's see what else is available and I'll come up with something." Sure enough we had some sake with our rolls. Arigato, Bro-san! And just to give it yet another twist, the rest of the tuna was broiled and served for dinner Livornese style, with tomatoes, white wine, capers, olives, bay leaves, and garlic. Yum!


Sushi at night - captain's delight!



Are We Sinking?

The next day brought an unpleasant surprise, when one of the sailors routinely checked the bilge for water. Not only was there some, but the bilge was overfilled, water slamming around the floor of the boat. Kona Kai was taking in water! About 150 miles offshore, that was nothing to take easy, and the sailors immediately made sure that their life saving equipment was at the ready. They swarmed out and checked for leaks all along the hull, but nobody could remember that the vessel had hit anything. So what was the reason?

"I hope it is not the rudder," worried Capt. John. "If it is the rudder shaft, we have a serious problem." The rudder shaft is a weak point in every seagoing vessel, since it is almost always fully submerged, and it is a moveable part which has to be absolutely watertight - in cold storms as well as in hot doldrums. One can imagine this is not easy to repair, even in a safe harbor, much less on the open sea.

Capt. John decided to go down into the engine room and to inspect the rudder shaft. But we were not on the Queen Mary 2, and though John is quite slender, he is way taller than 6 feet. The only way of getting himself in was that he folded together like a contortionist. Afterward he needed help getting out - the other sailors had to pull him backward through the hull until he could unfold himself again into the cockpit. [So, if you ever want to get rid of your captain, just persuade him to inspect the rudder house. But I swear we love this one and would never let him get stuck down there.]

As soon as Capt. John disappeared into the vault, Sam showed up, hopped down below and paid close attention to the labors of the captain. Even when we pulled him up again, the curious sparrow decided to further scrutinize the engine room, and the crew waited for more than half an hour before the bird resurfaced and they finally could close the engine room hatch again. Luckily, the water didn't come in along the rudder shaft. So from where did it leak?

Resurfaced from the engine room: Capt. John, fingers bruised and head oiled, studies the engine manual.

The answer was quite simple: The stern of this elegant double ender vessel had a compartment to store gas cans. To avoid the risk of an explosion due to leaking cans, this stowing room has a little vent hole as low as possible, just above the waterline. The crew had packed this compartment with gas cans, diesel canisters, diving gear, hoses, cables, and last but not least the inflatable life saving raft. Two of the sailors were built quite portly, and when the whole crew sat in the cockpit, poor Kona Kai was just too tail-heavy - the vent hole turned into a water hole. And Sam was probably the straw on the camel's back, so the portly sailors blamed it on the sparrow. Relocating some gear toward more forward parts of the boat solved this issue for good and everybody relaxed.



Capt. John and Sam relax over a cup of coffee after the leak is found.



Off to New Horizons


The next morning was more quiet than usual. At times the sailors weren't sure if Sam was still alive, or squished to death in his berth filled with all sorts of boat gear, or if he was aboard at all, since once in a while he took off to the mast top for a farther view. After two and a half days of continuous excitement, the sailors were used to setting their feet most carefully on the ground not to flatten their little companion, but maybe Sam had just taken off to new horizons. He might have spotted another boat far away the crew couldn't see from down below in their cockpit. At least when they cleaned out the boat at their final destination, there was no sign of Sam. That made all the sailors smile, since they deemed him safe and free and on his way. A hitchhiker on the seven seas, jumping ship whenever he felt the urge. Arr, matey, take good care and fare well!

Staring at the sea, Sam will take off shortly to new horizons and other ships he can enter.


For more about the trip see the Map of the Voyage of Kona Kai.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Clutter, Then Declutter!

The easiest thing in the world is to put too much clutter on your boat. That's exactly why I thought of a new mug for the sailor chickens aboard Mistral IV - and came up with a slight variation of the well known British appeal:


Sure enough this is available as mug:

Buy me!
By the way: The best way to declutter your boat is not to put too much crap aboard. If you need inspiration, read this little book by Sam Llewellyn: The Minimum Boat.
If you like to read an example column first: This is why.

Thursday, April 05, 2012

We Are Ready to Roll / Splash / Sail!

Pictures from April 4, 2012. I built a new companionway door for Mistral IV and painted her a boot stripe in seagreen. Now we wait for John Barron's forklift to kick back into action - and the season can start, maybe even this Saturday, just before Easter. On Sunday I will be too busy cooking scallops and lamb.

The transom of Mistral IV
The new boot stripe goes all the way under the transom of Mistral IV. Most aboard is hunky dory, we even got a new john. Last season we replaced the hand rails on deck and she got these wonderful 42 winches. Now the prop still needs attention and the rigging has to be a tuned a tad.

Barron's Boatyard is a fine address on City Island
Barron's Boat Yard is located on the Eastern shore of City Island in the Bronx, New York. Just South of the beautiful historic Pelham Cemetery, John and his son Jason conduct serious marine business here. Affordable, honest and reliable is all you can wish for. If you have a boat and need winter storage, consider giving them a call or check their website, it's worth your pennies.

The ramp of Barron's Boat Yard
The waters between City Island and Hart Island in The Bronx, NY: The towers in the background at the left are Donald Trump's atrocities in New Rochelle in Westchester County, NY. Ugly as hell, they serve as a pretty good landmark for sailors in the Long Island Sound though: They can be seen from as far as Northport.

Nearly full moon over Hart Island
Hart Island is used as New York's potters field. Inmates from Riker's Island come once a week to bury more of the poor and unknown - to add to the 750.000 people being interred here. Before it was the place where New York locked insane people away and let them work there. In the 1960s Hart Island housed several rocket silos.

Speak softly, but carry a big hook.
That's the way the boats get parked for winter storage. Out of the water via travel lift, out of the slings via the hook, onto the cradle 'till spring. Not all in reverse, please! Splash!

Ready to roll

Barron's travel lift parks right in front of Mistral IV, we are considered one of the first boats to go in - we hjad the longest season ever last year, and you know how it goes: Last out, first in! That's the way, a-ha, a-ha, we like it!

Winter project: C&C 30 companionway door

10 boat projects minus 9 boat projects equals 19 boat projects - you know your boat math, right? This winter I built a new companionway door, of mahoganny plywood with a massive mahoganny louver. Like the other wooden parts on Mistral IV, I treated it just with teak oil, only the edges are reinforced with epoxy.

If everything goes well, we'll sail her up to Larchmont on Saturday.
The rigging needs some attention before the splash: the disfunctional lazy jacks (who needs these anyway?) come off, the spinnaker halyard should get fiddled though the mast again and then we need the topping list to be fixed again at the mast top.


Orange collar worker
But before the boat looked this way, I looked that way. Taking a break from sanding the hull.

In the improbably case you want to see more pictures of this beauty (the boat, stupid!), here is an exclusive link to a book I made two years: "Mistral - Under Full Sail" for the 90th birthday of my skipper. And not that you get any funny ideas: He stood next to me sanding the hull (yes, actually sanding his own part), climbs around as if there were no tomorrow and sails his baby at quite a clip!
Make sure you click on "full screen" for the preview.



Friday, October 28, 2011

Map of the Voyage of Kona Kai

A preliminary map of the fall 2011 voyage of Kona Kai from Yarmouth, ME, to Beaufort, NC, Oct 17-27, 2011. Text and photos will follow as soon as they available. Please take your time, click into the map (or open in new window) and zoom in. At the blue markers you'll find valuable and detailed information about the trip.
For more incl. a nice aerial picture of Konai Ka, see ME2NC.
For more details about the whales on Stellwagen Bank in Massachussets Bay, please see the earlier entry Wonderful Whale Watching.


View "Konai Kai" Maine to North Carolina in a larger map

Saturday, October 08, 2011

October!



Kate steering Mistral IV out of LYC - a fine day out on the Long Island Sound, temps around 75, W 5kts, but we made it to Oyster Bay and back.
We know about pain. And we know how to handle it.

Approaching home port after a warm day

Glassy seas: Kate's self portrait at about 6 kts downwind

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

We Want Fish!





My Sowester makes me look a bit like a Gloucester Fisherman, doesn't it?

Bluefish is an abundant and ubiquitous species in the Long Island Sound - except when I am aboard the C&C 30 "Mistral IV". Two cocktail blues was the meager harvest over the course of three days, but at least they were expertly lured, caught, filleted, grilled, prepped and served by Bro.

Originally the trip should lead us from Larchmont, NY, along the Long Island Sound to the Thimble Islands in Connecticut, but unfortunately the weather denied us this pleasure. Seeing nothing bit rain ahead, we cut the trip short to save us from being rained on for two days in a row with no dry time at the end of the trip.

The first day we set out from Larchmont Yacht Club to sail to Zieglers Cove, a hidden gem on the Connecticut shoreline, with public moorings provided by the town of Darien, CT, in this little nook which surrounding land mass land belonged to the king of baking powder William Ziegler. Moderately protected from wind and waves, we nestled between rocks in this mosquito paradise. After a day with SW winds 5-10 kts we met with our friends to raft up with the cat rigged Nonsuch 30 "Aloki" (pic, pic) and the sloop Bénéteau 42 "Allumer" for the combo of Asian chicken and glass noodle salad and German Bratwurst from the grill. Metaxa and Ouzo were moderately consumed and after hours every boat picked her own mooring. There were about a dozen power boats with families around, everybody having a little party - it was labor day weekend after all! I strongly recommend to stay in this bay during the off-season, September and October are wonderful if you want to be on your own here - as we have done it before.

Day two started out pretty windless, just in the early afternoon the wind picked up to about SW 10 kts. We crossed the Long Island Sound to sail to Long Island's North Shore and raft up with our friends in Port Jefferson, NY. The geography offers beautiful anchorages right behind the harbor entry. Shallow and badly charted, the private navigation aids help a lot - DO NOT rely on the latest NOAA charts since they are quite inaccurate here. A lot of dredging was going here on since the last soundings a while ago. But once you are in and were able to avoid the ferries between Bridgeport and Port Jeff, you are in safe and quiet waters.

Again we rafted up with "Aloki" and "Allumer" and after some lamb sausage and octopus salad, Bro served first the grilled bluefish with a dill-mustard sauce, and then a "Germanoid" Sauerbraten with red cabbage and sweet potatoes, accompanied by an American Gewurztraminer and Bitburger Pilsener. Coffee, Rum and cookies put the lid on. Everybody dropped his own anchor afterwards. Unfortunately we didn't see the town of Port Jeff the next morning, because fat grey clouds came close pretty quickly and we decided not to lose more time than necessary before our departure. Ok, next time. Looks interesting enough to make landfall for a cuppa Joe.

Day three meant the end of our original plans to fork through the Thimbles. The National Weather Service predicted two full days of heavy rain ahead, and nobody wanted to face that except Stephen and Barbara on "Allumer", who decided to spent one day at the Brewer's Marina in Westbrook along the Duck Islands Roads, just a tad east of the Thimble Islands. "Aloki" wanted to hunker down in the sand hole at the tip of Oyster bay. The "Bronco Buster" crew on "Mistral IV" decided to return home, facing mostly winds of 15-20, in gusts up to 25 kts SW. So we were in for a choppy trip home, interrupted by some good lunch (pasta with pesto), when we stopped dead in the middle of the sound, took down the jib and heaved-to while boiling up our meal. The selected heave-to setup conveniently carried us a bit upwind, so the next leg was much easier. I just love it when I have space to fall off to my convenience and don't have to pinch to reach my next waypoint.

Body and mind fortified, we made the wise decision to bind the first reef on the mainsail and keep about 20 percent of the jib in, but we were still good for a top speed of about 7 kts upwind (though overground with and incoming tide). Coming home to the LYC showed us once again, how vulnerable the harbor is at SW winds. The boats on the moorings were shaking and rocking and you are well advised to tie your rudder down. The tropical storm Irene, which came through here just a week before, pushed off the protectors of our two mooring lines and nearly chafed one of them through.

But what a bummer - it seemed that the bluefish had their luncheon around the same time as we did, since all our trying to get dinner together were fruitless. But I swear: We'll be back again - and soon! Bluefish beware!


View Sail Labor Day 2011 in a larger map

Monday, August 08, 2011

At The Clearwater's Helm


Capt. Nick was so nice to let me take the tiller for a while.


Yep, that's me at the helm of a gaff rigged sloop up the Hudson River steered towards the George Washington Bridge. The famous Clearwater is 106 feet long and 108 feet high, and it takes some arm grease to raise her sails and keep her on course.

Last Friday we were invited to celebrate Mark Siegel's webcomic Sailor Twain or The Mermaid on The Hudson aboard the Clearwater. It turned out that the people of the famous sloop were following the story What a wonder that all came together on the Hudson. If you don't know the story of the Clearwater yet, her connection with Pete Seeger, and why she was built in the late 1960s as a replica of a 18th century cargo sloop, you should read about it here at Wikipedia or here on the Clearwater web page.


The 10 foot long fisted tiller needs a sure hand to steer.


Pah-lenty more pictures here on Sailor Twain, and even mooore on the Facebook event page.

Thursday, August 04, 2011

Singlehanded



An hour after sunset at anchor at Asharoken Beach near Northport, Long Island, NY

Left the city behind for a night. The heat, the humidity, the chatterbabblebrouhahadidyouseewhatthejonesesdohavepretend. Set sail singlehanded, eastbound and peacefully at anchor now. Ahh, bliss.
More data when you click the markers in the Google map.


View Sailing on "Mistral IV" in a larger map



Mistral IV at her home mooring at the Larchmont Yacht Club, NY


And BTW: These weird zig-zags and circles and such are not because I was drunk or inept - I just tried to recalibrate the autohelm unit aboard. :-) To no avail, I have to admit. Especially with a rare surge in the current the Autohelm goes bonkers and suddenly might decide to hang a 90 degree Louie . So my guess is this apparatus is fine when you just want to go forward to adjust something - but stay close.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

At The Helm


Captain Tom at the helm of Mistral IV, his C&C 30 Mk I, out of Larchmont, NY. Sat., May 21, 2001, 7-10 kts N, partly sunny, about 70 ° F. Staying put and leisurely cruising between Larchmont, Hempstead Harbour, and Rye Playland, we did not catch any fish this day.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Mistral IV cruise to Oyster Bay

Mistral IV, the beloved frog-green C&C 30 Mk I, is back in the waters for about three weeks now and plows through the Western Long Island Sound. Here are some impressions from a leisurely cruise from Larchmont to Oyster Bay.

Upwind...

Entering Oyster Bay, NY, on our C&C 30 Mk I on a pretty calm day. I join Rob, Tom, and John Stanback on the Long Island Sound on a day of weak winds, with no fish caught, but otherwise full of pleasure.

...and downwind - with Spinnaker!

Leaving Oyster Bay, NY, on the Long Island Sound, we head towards Stamford, CT, at weak southerly winds - barely enough to fly the spinnaker of our trusted C&C 30. Still two weeks shy from Memorial Day, there aren't too many other boats in the water yet.

Friday, April 08, 2011

We know what pain is



... but that doesn't keep us from sailing. For the crew of "Mistral IV" the season starts probably next week.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Can't wait anymore!

Hmm, das GPS programmiere ich schon, den Fishfinder ans Arbeiten zu bekommen wird etwas kniffliger. Aber dafür ist der Winter ja gut: Setz Deinen Kram instand und auf geht's im Frühling, raus aufs Salzwasser!
In der Zwischenzeit hilft ein Blick auf ein paar nette Bilder in einem meiner Lieblingsphotojournalismusblogs

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Ready, steady,...

Mistral IV, formerly known as Irish Wake,
Na, wie sieht sie aus? Ok, sieht man vom Grün mal ab. Aber den Unterboden und die Wasserlinie haben wir noch rechtzeitig streichen können, bevor wir morgen das Rad der C&C 30 endlich in die Hand nehmen. Und dann geht's ab durch den Long Island Sound, von der Norwalk Cove Marina in Norwalk, Connecticut, nach Larchmont, New York, in den neuen Heimathafen des Larchmont Yacht Clubs. Warm genug ist es, der Jameson liegt kühl, es wird zwar keine Sonne scheinen, aber Wind gibt es wenigstens.

Zum Glück beherrscht Google noch keine Seenavigation... ;-)
Dafür gibt es ja Spezialsoftware wie den Offshore Navigator (bzw. ChartNavigator Pro) von MapTech, der bei bestehender Onlineverbindung sogar Tiden und Strömungen in den Karten anzeigt. Benutzt werden können die durchweg kostenlosen (sic!) NOAA-Charts. Zum Wetter schreib ich ein anderes Mal...




View "Mistral IV" headed to its new home port in a larger map

Monday, April 07, 2008

Vorfreude




Norwalk Cove Marina, Connecticut. Heute haben wir den Unterboden gestrichen. Nun bleiben nur noch Umtaufen und zu Wasser lassen.
Ältere Bilder und Text hier in einem früheren Beitrag.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Shoppen im Januar


Following an old maritime tradition and Tom's tradition as well, the Irish Wake will be renamed to Mistral IV. As soon as we enter, arrrr matey!

Januar ist eine gute Zeit zum Schiffskauf, vor allem, wenn das Boot noch fahrbereit im Wasser liegt. Über das bisschen Schnee und Eis an Deck können sich nur Waschlappen mokieren. Skipper Tom gönnt sich zum 88. Geburtstag ein neues Segelboot, eine am Ontario Lake gebaute C&C 30 von 1980. Seine C&C 24 war ihm "zu lahm" und er hat jahrelang bereut, seine alte C&C 30 verkauft zu haben. Now we kick back to the fun level. Der Name ist nach alter Tradition auch schon gefunden - sie wird Mistral IV heißen.

Der Racer/Cruiser ist perfekt ausgestattet und verfügt nicht nur über einen Spinnaker und 2 volle Segelsätze, sondern auch über Mylar-Segel. Ein echter Race-Wolf im Cruise-Schafspelz also, der in den letzten 15 Jahren manche Regatta gewonnen hat (wen's interessiert: PHRF-Handicap 184). Derzeit liegt die Irish Wake beim Cedar Point Yacht Club. Noch im Januar wollen wir das Boot in den neuen Heimathafen im berühmten Larchmont Yacht Club, Larchmont, NY, überführen. Mit Tom und Bro mache ich seit letzter Segelsaison den Long Island Sound unsicher. Bisher stand cruisen im Vordergrund, ein angelegentlich gefangener Bluefish oder Striped Bass wurde gerne abends in die Pfanne gehauen. Jetzt sind endlich auch bequemere lange Wochenenden drin. Mehr über die C&C Yachten gibt's beim C&C Photoalbum.

Das untere Foto zeigt "mein anderes" Boot, eine 27-Fuß-Morgan. Mit "meinem anderen Skipper" Captain Bob gehe ich auf der Maccabee von City Island (The Bronx, NY) aus nicht nur cruisen, sondern auch seriös Regatta segeln (individuelles PHRF-Handicap 186, bis zu 177 möglich). Heimathafen ist der Stuyvesant Yacht Club auf City Island, ein äußerst angenehmer, unprätentiöser Platz für Segler. Siehe dazu auch die Seite der Eastchester Bay Yacht Racing Association (Ebyra). Mehr über die Morgan 27 gibt's auf burntclutch.com (whyever that name).


The Maccabee in front of Hart Island, NY (Photo by Tom Nye).

Sunday, July 23, 2006

First Atlantic Sail Race


Meine erste Atlantik-Regatta: So schulbuchmäßig, wie es sich anhört, ist es gar nicht. In Rockport (Wiki), ein paar Autominuten nördlich von Gloucester, Mass. (Wiki), liegt seit 1885 der kleine, völlig unprätentiöse Sandy Bay Yacht Club. Mit Rhodes-19-Jollen sind wir durch die Sandy Bay gezischt, zwischen Hummerfallen und großartiger Aussicht auf Cape Ann.

Strahlendes Wetter, leichte Brise - und ein perfekter Start. Beim Startschuss gehen wir als Erste über die Linie. Mein Skipper Craig ist Ami durch und durch, doch gut herumgekommen. Bei den UN hat er gearbeitet und war in vielen Staaten Afrikas im Einsatz. Zurück in der Heimat gönnt er sich das Vergnügen, sonntags mit anderen um die Wette zu segeln. Aber er bleibt der Outsider. Rockport ist eine kleine Welt. Man kennt sich, ist miteinander verwandt. Das Geschäft verbindet - Rockport wird an Sommerwochenenden geradezu gestürmt von Touristen, die auf der Meile frischen Lobster, Süßkram und "Helmut's Apfelstrudel" konsumieren. Das Hafenbecken bietet "Motif No. 1", ein rot getünchtes Lagerhaus, das aus dem 18. Jahrhundert datiert. Direkt daneben gehen die Lobsterfischer ihrer Arbeit nach.

Auch äußerlich unterscheidet sich Craig von den anderen Clubmitgliedern: Der Rumpf seiner Rhodes ist geflickt - er selbst trägt Baseballkappe und kurze Hosen. Wenn man die Jollen der anderen sieht, meint man auf dem Tennisplatz zu sein, die Boote sind tipptopp, man trägt weiß. Doch der Umgangston ist absolut unprätentiös, als Fremder fühlt man sich willkommen und wird sofort in Gespräche verwickelt.

Der Wind ist nicht sehr stark, also müssen wir beide strategisch geschickt fahren. Das gelingt auf drei von vier Schlägen perfekt, wir können uns an Position zwei halten, obwohl wir noch nie miteinander gesegelt sind.

Außerdem fehlt mir noch das englische Seglervokabular, das schon im Deutschen recht gewöhnungsbedürftig ist. Mit Achterliek, Bullenstander und Cunningham-Kausch kann ich etwas anfangen, aber im Englischen? Außer "shiver me timbers" ist da noch nicht viel. Aber unter Rennbedingungen lernt man schnell.

Im letzten Schlag erwischen wir scheinbar das einzige Windloch in der ganzen Bay. Die gesamte Regatta zieht an uns vorbei, wir laufen schließlich als letzte ein. Wir nehmen's olympisch, dabei sein ist alles. Im Hafen gibt's dann auch entsprechend Schulterklopfen für das merkwürdige Gespann - der Outsider und der Kraut sind die Attraktion des Tages.

Der Sandy Bay Yacht Club liegt geschützt (Google maps) in einem Naturhafen. Das Clubhaus steht auf Stelzen mitten im Hafenbecken. Es ist im landestypischen Stil gebaut, komplett aus Holz, mit silbergrauen Schindlen. Aufgereihte Schaukelstühle auf der Terrasse bieten beste Sicht übers Wasser.


Und weil so nett war, gab's dann abends frischen Lobster - direkt vom Boot im Hafen von Gloucester, versteht sich. Die Kleinstadt auf Cape Ann wurde berühmt durch "The Perfect Storm" von Sebastian Junger. Die schauerliche Verflilmung von Wolfgang Petersen mit George Clooney verstellt den Blick auf das fantastische Buch (DE/US) des Journalisten, der die dramatischen Tage des stärksten bisher gemessen Sturms im Jahre 1991 faktenreich, detailliert und packend dokumentiert. Aber das ist eine andere Geschichte.