MarieK
Well-Known Member
Today I did!
I took my boat from Ardglass marina (east coast NI) to Ballycastle marina (north coast NI) today as I am going to keep her (10m Rodman) there for the winter. Its a 70 mile trip I have made quite a few times and usually takes 3 hrs. I have been waiting for a weather window for the last month or so and the perfect day just wasnt happening so having watched the forecast for the last few days I saw a small window of opportunity for today when wind and tides would be in my favour.
I got to Ardglass around 11am to be met by a stiff southerly breeze but I knew wind and tide would be in same direction so went for it. Due to last minute organizing I didnt have any crew, not a problem really as I single hand often. Headed out of the harbour and it was quite snotty, rain, mizzle, mist and rather bouncy. My passage plan took me well offshore initially to avoid any lobster pots which would be harder to spot in the conditions. As I turned NE to head up the coast I had the sea on my stbd beam and was able to get up to 18kts with relative comfort, autopilot tracking the route nicely, all gauges looked good, everything singing nicely in harmony, I allowed myself to go and have a pee! I dont know about the rest of you but I really enjoy single hand boating, I am certainly on edge when on my own in less than perfect conditions, I tune into every noise and have to convince myself its not a belt working loose or some such thing! I have the epirb, vhf, handheld gps all within grabbing distance should I need it, im probably much more safety conscious than when im with others and a beer in my hand!
So im about 15 miles into the passage, few degrees off northerly heading, settled into a nice rhythm, tide had started pushing me up the north channel and sea more or less on the stern, moderate sea at this stage with the odd hole to fall into but nothing too bad, I was starting to relax a bit, then.... out of absolutely NO WHERE a wave at least 3 times bigger than the others, slams into the stbd bow of the boat and runs down the length of the boat emptying into the cockpit, bow totally submerged, green water over top of windscreen, a proper scary one! I looked back and the cockpit was under maybe a foot of water, luckily sport fishers like the rodman are designed for "backing down" when fishing so they have lots of drainage and a tuna door meant water ran out virtually instantly. Autopilot got her back on course nicely and I throttled back to about 8 knots just to catch breath, at this stage aft bilge alarm went off which heightened anxiety level, bilge pump kicked in and sorted that out. Chartplotter alarm went off as it had lost fix, GPS receiver must have got whacked but I wasnt going to investigate that one yet! Assortment of scatter cushions lying on the deck and thing generally not where they should be. I ignore all non essential stuff and throttle back up, everything is fine so I continue knowing there will be calmer water soon I can sort things.
The rest of the trip was fairly uneventful, certainly never calm but always manageable. As I neared Ballycastle I knew I had the hard part of the trip over and I allowed myself time to reflect on the boat. Recently I have been looking around at something bigger, something with a bit more luxury, more suited to the type of boating I enjoy now. I had kind of lost interest in the boat but its on days like today when a boat becomes more than the thing you throw money at, spend all your spare time maintaining or unblocking toilets!! Days like today make you realise why you love boating and love your own boat, she gets you home when maybe you are pushing things a little bit and the old adage, "look after your boat and she will look after you" seems very appropriate. There are things I dont like about her, things I would change but when it comes to handling a sea, she is a fine fine boat and I have a hell of a lot of confidence in the quality of build and engineering that has gone into her. She can hang around for a little while longer ;-)
Time for a beer!
I took my boat from Ardglass marina (east coast NI) to Ballycastle marina (north coast NI) today as I am going to keep her (10m Rodman) there for the winter. Its a 70 mile trip I have made quite a few times and usually takes 3 hrs. I have been waiting for a weather window for the last month or so and the perfect day just wasnt happening so having watched the forecast for the last few days I saw a small window of opportunity for today when wind and tides would be in my favour.
I got to Ardglass around 11am to be met by a stiff southerly breeze but I knew wind and tide would be in same direction so went for it. Due to last minute organizing I didnt have any crew, not a problem really as I single hand often. Headed out of the harbour and it was quite snotty, rain, mizzle, mist and rather bouncy. My passage plan took me well offshore initially to avoid any lobster pots which would be harder to spot in the conditions. As I turned NE to head up the coast I had the sea on my stbd beam and was able to get up to 18kts with relative comfort, autopilot tracking the route nicely, all gauges looked good, everything singing nicely in harmony, I allowed myself to go and have a pee! I dont know about the rest of you but I really enjoy single hand boating, I am certainly on edge when on my own in less than perfect conditions, I tune into every noise and have to convince myself its not a belt working loose or some such thing! I have the epirb, vhf, handheld gps all within grabbing distance should I need it, im probably much more safety conscious than when im with others and a beer in my hand!
So im about 15 miles into the passage, few degrees off northerly heading, settled into a nice rhythm, tide had started pushing me up the north channel and sea more or less on the stern, moderate sea at this stage with the odd hole to fall into but nothing too bad, I was starting to relax a bit, then.... out of absolutely NO WHERE a wave at least 3 times bigger than the others, slams into the stbd bow of the boat and runs down the length of the boat emptying into the cockpit, bow totally submerged, green water over top of windscreen, a proper scary one! I looked back and the cockpit was under maybe a foot of water, luckily sport fishers like the rodman are designed for "backing down" when fishing so they have lots of drainage and a tuna door meant water ran out virtually instantly. Autopilot got her back on course nicely and I throttled back to about 8 knots just to catch breath, at this stage aft bilge alarm went off which heightened anxiety level, bilge pump kicked in and sorted that out. Chartplotter alarm went off as it had lost fix, GPS receiver must have got whacked but I wasnt going to investigate that one yet! Assortment of scatter cushions lying on the deck and thing generally not where they should be. I ignore all non essential stuff and throttle back up, everything is fine so I continue knowing there will be calmer water soon I can sort things.
The rest of the trip was fairly uneventful, certainly never calm but always manageable. As I neared Ballycastle I knew I had the hard part of the trip over and I allowed myself time to reflect on the boat. Recently I have been looking around at something bigger, something with a bit more luxury, more suited to the type of boating I enjoy now. I had kind of lost interest in the boat but its on days like today when a boat becomes more than the thing you throw money at, spend all your spare time maintaining or unblocking toilets!! Days like today make you realise why you love boating and love your own boat, she gets you home when maybe you are pushing things a little bit and the old adage, "look after your boat and she will look after you" seems very appropriate. There are things I dont like about her, things I would change but when it comes to handling a sea, she is a fine fine boat and I have a hell of a lot of confidence in the quality of build and engineering that has gone into her. She can hang around for a little while longer ;-)
Time for a beer!