Ubergeekian
Well-Known Member
Also Farsain from Craobh, Porpoise from Balvicar, and Sealife from Easdale.
And the Waverly, a couple of times a year.
Also Farsain from Craobh, Porpoise from Balvicar, and Sealife from Easdale.
I have kayaked through the Grey Dogs in both directions many times. I would not contemplate it in a yacht other than in the most benign conditions. It is in a different league from Corryvreckan.
Quandary: Anyone gone through the Grey Dogs? interested to hear how it was. The CCC instructions are offputting but a lot of their stuff presumes you do everything under sail.
The chap who runs Oban Sea School had taken his first school yacht through. The yacht was a small Colvic sloop at about 29'. Not a powerful vessel but very capable as is the chap who runs the sailing school. If I remember correctly he said that at slack water it wasn't very slack. It was a good few years ago and I recollect that may have checked it out from above on the land first. Obviously he had anchored somewhere to do this and I cant remember if it was East or West side. It was an overnight anchorage. So local knowledge in your area.
http://www.obanseaschool.co.uk/index.html
The chap who runs Oban Sea School had taken his first school yacht through. The yacht was a small Colvic sloop at about 29'. Not a powerful vessel but very capable as is the chap who runs the sailing school. If I remember correctly he said that at slack water it wasn't very slack. It was a good few years ago and I recollect that may have checked it out from above on the land first. Obviously he had anchored somewhere to do this and I cant remember if it was East or West side. It was an overnight anchorage. So local knowledge in your area.
http://www.obanseaschool.co.uk/index.html
Yes there is shelter out of the tide in the Sound of Luing NW of the pier in the bay at the NE corner of Scarba, this is the traditional landing for Scarba. Used quite a lot in summer and only a couple of hundred metres from the E end of the Grey Dogs. The big ribs from Easdale seem to like to play on the standing wave at the north side of the passage.
I've intended to go through on several occasions, but each time I've chickened out at the last minute. I've never been convinced about the standing wave on the east end, it gives the impression that there's a a submerged rock holding the flow up rather than just being where it meets the Sound.
Alisdair
Me Too!
We were going to do it last time we were up their.... but instead went to Cuan Sound on the West going... and came back North of Scarba .... (Whats that called again?? ) which is scary enought thanks very much....
Cuan was excellent... With swmbo pointing out seals whilst I was bricking it!
We were lucky enough to time our visit to that area in 1999 during light winds and so were able to make a full circumnavigation of Jura, including nosing our way well into Loch Tarbert and spending time allowing our boat to be sung in circles by the whirlpools of Corryvreckan. We also nosed downhill into the Bay of Pigs but alas had to leave again after a short stay, such was the schedule. On the day in question it could have been a deserted bay in the Mediterranean - although we didn't dip a toe to spoil the illusion.
What made this all possible with ease for first timers was welcoming aboard for the day local boatman Duncan Phillips, whose knowledge of the waters certainly spurred us to do things that would otherwise have stayed on the 'perhaps not' list or even passed us by.
I don't know if Duncan is still up at Craobh but I will be forever in his debt for what was a real red letter day.
BTW this all got written up in Motor Boats Monthly (sorry - I was on a motorboat as you might have guessed) and I later received a letter from George Orwell's son, who said that he and his dad were lucky to survive the overturning of their dinghy in that area many years back.
As a final thought, having passed through Cuan & Luingto the north of Corryvreckan too, if I were ever to get caught on the outside in deteriorating weather and looking to run for shelter inside the islands, I would be tempted to use Corryvreckan for the passage; I've no doubt it would be seriously unpleasant, but at least it's a straight run and a fair tide should spit you out in one (albeit badly shaken) piece, rather than have to fight cross-tides to steer around the twists, turns and hard-bits of the other two.
As a final thought, having passed through Cuan & Luingto the north of Corryvreckan too, if I were ever to get caught on the outside in deteriorating weather and looking to run for shelter inside the islands, I would be tempted to use Corryvreckan for the passage; I've no doubt it would be seriously unpleasant, but at least it's a straight run and a fair tide should spit you out in one (albeit badly shaken) piece, rather than have to fight cross-tides to steer around the twists, turns and hard-bits of the other two.
As a final thought, having passed through Cuan & Luingto the north of Corryvreckan too, if I were ever to get caught on the outside in deteriorating weather and looking to run for shelter inside the islands, I would be tempted to use Corryvreckan for the passage; I've no doubt it would be seriously unpleasant, but at least it's a straight run and a fair tide should spit you out in one (albeit badly shaken) piece, rather than have to fight cross-tides to steer around the twists, turns and hard-bits of the other two.