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#1
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Departed Saturday, 0900 Bay Head, NJ, arrived Monday 1530 Sag Harbor, NY.
After the canal and rivers and bridges, got into the Atlantic at 1000. Debated the offshore or LIS route, and chose LIS based on iffy forecasted conditions. Had a beautiful sail up the NJ coast Saturday and into Raritan Bay. In squally conditions with the ebb making progress difficult, we entered Fresh Kills harbor on Staten Island. This is a hidden gem of a safe harbor just outside the Narrows. Just stay in the channel on the way in as it shoals from 10' to 3' in a heartbeat and is poorly bouyed. A friendly local club (Richmond County YC) gave us a mooring for the night and capt and crew (younger brother) had a steak dinner and a good rest. Up at sunup and into the bay to make the last hour of the ebb current at the Narrows. Overcast and rainy, there were no other pleasure boats out and we had the harbor to ourselves as the work boats were idly anchored. Pretty odd to see NY so still. Got the current our way at the bottom of Governor's island and rode it up the East River through Hell Gate and into the sound lickety split. We had the current for the first part of the sound, although the wind was on the nose. A million boats were out in Boobs' neighborhood, but we did not stop in to gawk at Alien's ladder and thimbles as we were already behind. A little further on the crew notices a large amount of diesel fuel in the pan below the diesel. Worried like ****, we pulled into Manhasset bay as the cruising guide says all sorts of services are available. Well, it was pretty slim pickins. We filled up on fuel, because we are basically a slow powerboat with our schedule and the wind on the nose. Filled up and went to work on the engine. We noticed that the fuel was spurting from the secondary filter bleed screw, and after tightening it down the leak (and my panic) stopped. Must have left if too loose after replacing the filter. Anyway, after a 2 hour stop we were back into the sound and motoring. Several hours later the wind turns somewhat fair and we give the motor a rest and have a beautiful sail until a nasty thunderstorm crept up on me. Crew was asleep at the time and I was enjoying a peaceful sail until the sun behind me went out. I turned to see the sky one giant black cloud rolling on top with long fingers reaching down below it. Lightening was flashing out of it. I turned on NOAA and they were all a flutter about marine warnings and flash floods. So we turned into Oyster Bay to wait it out and made it in on its fresh winds with the engine ticking just in case and a reef in each sail, doing 8-9 kn. Just as the real rain starts we grabbed a mooring at the Oyster Bay yacht club, but wouldn't you know it the mooring's boat came back and in the maelstrom screamed at us to leave. So we moved over one mooring. Some people are just too uncool. Waited a couple of hours to let the storm blow over and have dinner, before taking off again at 2000 to make way up the sound. Not another boat was out and we had a beautiful moon filled night with 15-20 kn of fair wind making good time direct for the eastern end. Saw a couple tows but no one else until sunrise when the wind fell and shifted East. Eventually we turned the motor on to make Plum Gut before the current got too bad and motorsailed into Gardiners Bay on a beautiful day. Ghosted down to Sag Harbor and picked up our mooring at the boat's new home inside the breakwater with the wife waiting on the dock. Looking forward to exploring these waters. Sk |
#2
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Great post. What kind of boat?
Mike "SkitchNYC" wrote in message ... Departed Saturday, 0900 Bay Head, NJ, arrived Monday 1530 Sag Harbor, NY. After the canal and rivers and bridges, got into the Atlantic at 1000. Debated the offshore or LIS route, and chose LIS based on iffy forecasted conditions. Had a beautiful sail up the NJ coast Saturday and into Raritan Bay. In squally conditions with the ebb making progress difficult, we entered Fresh Kills harbor on Staten Island. This is a hidden gem of a safe harbor just outside the Narrows. Just stay in the channel on the way in as it shoals from 10' to 3' in a heartbeat and is poorly bouyed. A friendly local club (Richmond County YC) gave us a mooring for the night and capt and crew (younger brother) had a steak dinner and a good rest. Up at sunup and into the bay to make the last hour of the ebb current at the Narrows. Overcast and rainy, there were no other pleasure boats out and we had the harbor to ourselves as the work boats were idly anchored. Pretty odd to see NY so still. Got the current our way at the bottom of Governor's island and rode it up the East River through Hell Gate and into the sound lickety split. We had the current for the first part of the sound, although the wind was on the nose. A million boats were out in Boobs' neighborhood, but we did not stop in to gawk at Alien's ladder and thimbles as we were already behind. A little further on the crew notices a large amount of diesel fuel in the pan below the diesel. Worried like ****, we pulled into Manhasset bay as the cruising guide says all sorts of services are available. Well, it was pretty slim pickins. We filled up on fuel, because we are basically a slow powerboat with our schedule and the wind on the nose. Filled up and went to work on the engine. We noticed that the fuel was spurting from the secondary filter bleed screw, and after tightening it down the leak (and my panic) stopped. Must have left if too loose after replacing the filter. Anyway, after a 2 hour stop we were back into the sound and motoring. Several hours later the wind turns somewhat fair and we give the motor a rest and have a beautiful sail until a nasty thunderstorm crept up on me. Crew was asleep at the time and I was enjoying a peaceful sail until the sun behind me went out. I turned to see the sky one giant black cloud rolling on top with long fingers reaching down below it. Lightening was flashing out of it. I turned on NOAA and they were all a flutter about marine warnings and flash floods. So we turned into Oyster Bay to wait it out and made it in on its fresh winds with the engine ticking just in case and a reef in each sail, doing 8-9 kn. Just as the real rain starts we grabbed a mooring at the Oyster Bay yacht club, but wouldn't you know it the mooring's boat came back and in the maelstrom screamed at us to leave. So we moved over one mooring. Some people are just too uncool. Waited a couple of hours to let the storm blow over and have dinner, before taking off again at 2000 to make way up the sound. Not another boat was out and we had a beautiful moon filled night with 15-20 kn of fair wind making good time direct for the eastern end. Saw a couple tows but no one else until sunrise when the wind fell and shifted East. Eventually we turned the motor on to make Plum Gut before the current got too bad and motorsailed into Gardiners Bay on a beautiful day. Ghosted down to Sag Harbor and picked up our mooring at the boat's new home inside the breakwater with the wife waiting on the dock. Looking forward to exploring these waters. Sk |
#3
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Great post. What kind of boat?
Island Packet 31 Thought I saw a 31 in NY harbor a few days ago called Serindipity. RB |
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