Tuesday, September 14, 2010

A Calm Day in Keyport Harbor/Raritan Bay

Saturday was a very calm day, Before I left home I checked the winds and they were down to around 5 knots. When I arrived at the boat yard the wind was non-existent. It was a very high tide, most likely still being effected by the new moon earlier in the week. When I arrived at the ramp there were boats (dinghies) were there usually isn't. One was along side of the yards mooring dock and must have gotten pinned under the walkway when the tide came in and flipped over. It had an outboard on it, so when the owner came to try to get it, it was difficult to deal with. The other was a dingy that had been too low on the ramp and had taken on water from the high tide. No my dinghy was fine as I keep mine about about 15 feet above the water in the boat yard. Yes I have to buggy lug it down to the water, but it is a lot safer up on high ground than by the water.

I went out to Lil Provo and checked her out to see how things were over the past few days. All was fine as usual. The only problem was no wind. I didn't even make an attempt to go out with motor as what was the point without wind. I decided to clean her up a little and do some fishing at the same time. I put out two lines. One with spearing and one with blood worms. As I sat basking in the sun and watching my lines, I watch all the fishermen lined up on shore and not catching a darn thing. Well, neither was I. I didn't even have one hit! After sitting there for hours waiting on the wind, I decided to call it a day and head back home.

The following video was done last week while sitting on the mooring. It is just a camcorder sitting there with no special image in mind. Something to sit back to.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Back in the water - 9/7/2010

Tuesday morning Lil Provo was placed back in the water.  The threat of storms was passed, as well as the holiday weekend.  The tides for the weekend did not provide enough water for the boat yard to get the boats back in the water during normal working hours.  With a High tide at 5 or 6 am, they only had a window of a few hours each day to put the sailboats back in the water.  You have to remember that every boat they put in has to be towed out to their mooring and hooked up. So it isn't a constant flow of boats going into the water. They only average about 4 per hour. 
They placed my boat on the wrong mooring and I got there early enough to give them a hand changing the location.  After I had her on her mooring, I proceeded to sew a seam in the mainsail that had come loose.  This was my first time sewing a sail and they are some tough fabric.  Dacron sails are tough to push a needle through.  After repairing the four foot seam, I dropped the mooring line and headed for open water.  I ran on motor for a while until I was well into the bay.  Then both sails were raised and we healed over and were zipping along.  After an hour or two, I headed back to the mooring where I tried my luck fishing.

Memorial Day Weekend

The memorial day weekend this year started with a surprise.  We were blessed with a hurricane skirting along the New Jersey coast line.  Many friends asked me what are you going to do with your boat if the hurricane hits us.  I said I have insurance and I have faith in the guy that runs the place I keep my boat.  Many were surprised at this statement, but it was the truth.  We were to possibly get hit by hurricane Earl on Friday. We ended up very lucky with it skirting along the coast.  It created havoc with the waves and winds, but did not cause any real damage.
On Saturday I was hoping to have some fun sailing the remains of hurricane Earl.  I packed up my truck and headed down to Keyport. When I entered Keyport I tried to look out on the water to see if I could see my boat.  They mooring field was pretty empty and many pulled or moved their boat due to the pending storm.   As I turned the corner to head to the boat yard, I saw all these masts sticking up from the boatyard and immediately knew they had pulled all the boats out of the water.  The yard was packed!  There was barely room to park or even turn around.  I immediately looked out on the water to confirm that Lil Provo was on land and not sitting on her mooring.  She wasn't there.  Now I had to try to find her among this yard of boats.  I glanced around and saw and immediately spotter her sitting on her trailer.  Well there wasn't much to do now except head back home and hope they would get her in the water ASAP.
On Sunday morning I picked up my first mate and brought him down to the yard with me.  When we arrived, the lot was emptier than Saturday, which means they started placing boats back in the water.  However, Lil Provo was still sitting on her trailer.  We hung out in the boat yard for a couple hours seeing how much growth we had on the bottom of the boat and just  looking around at the other boats.  After a while we packed it in and headed home.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Hurricane Earl

Today Hurricane Earl is suppose to pass along the New Jersey Coast. Many ask, what are you going to do about your boat in the water. Well, I have a very good marina taking care of my boat and if the weather is too dangerous, they will pull the boat out of the water without notifying me.  Last October we had a couple bad storms due to come in.  I drove down the shore to check on the boat and was surprised, it wasn't there.  Talk about freaking out!  I scanned the shore and finally asked one of the workers where my boat was and he said right over there next to your truck.  I turned around and there she was sitting in the lot.  They explained how they pull them out if a bad storm is coming.  I was worried that day, but after that, I worry no more.  It worries me more that the cleat or chain may someday break and let Lil Provo drift away. 

Tomorrow I will venture down to the marina to check on her.  If I can get the dinghy out to her, I will even go out for a while.  I have five days off and plan on spending much of that sailing.  I will advise what happened this weekend in my next entry.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Great weekend

This past weekend I was out on Lil Provo for two days.  Sunday was a nice day and it was my first mates first day to take the helm.  I wanted to give him a chance to learn more about sailing the boat.  We headed for the Verrazanno Bridge in New York with a light wind.  I tried to teach him how to find the best direction with the wind.  After a while he caught on and off we were, cruising about three knots.  We made it into the NY waters and turned around to head back.  I was trolling a bucktail behind the boat as we sailed back from New York and suddenly the pole bent in half.  I grabbed the pole and felt a heavy load on the pole, but it felt like dead weight.  As I pulled it a little more I felt the fish on the other end shaking it's head.  The first mate (Blue) grabbed the net and was ready for whatever I brought back to the boat.  As it got closer I saw something, I thought is was a large ray.  As I got it closer I could see that it was a nice size Flounder (Fluke here in NJ). Blue netted it up and brought it into the cockpit where I placed it in a bucket to take home and clean. It was 19-1/2" and weighed almost 3-1/2 pounds.  This totally amazed me as Fluke feed on the bottom and will come off the bottom a little ways to get something, but to catch one trolling totally amazed me.  

On Monday, my wife and I went out for a sail.  We started around 11:00am and there was no wind, so we traveled by motor to Staten Island and found some wind there.  I had to keep the bimini up due to the sun and heat. We were miles from shore and the sea was very calm, it was a nice mellow sail. The bimini does a great job of hiding you from the heat. We sailed for a few hours and headed back to the harbor. 
Labor weekend is coming.  We expect to be sailing a lot, provide hurricane Earl leaves us alone.

Monday, August 16, 2010

This past Saturday was one of the better sailing days this season. All my friends were busy in fishing tornaments and I went out by myself. It was a blast! We headed for New York City and were sailing around six knots and healed over to my port side. I eventually let the main out some to stop healing over as much as I was because I needed to be cautious. I had my life line on, but falling out of the boat isn't fun no mater when it happens, let along having a line hooked to you and dragiing you along the side of the boat. There was a time when I had to put the camera away as I wanted to be cautious about getting it wet. Eventually, I did let the mainsail out which let me sit more upright and not worry about taking water into the cockpit. I did stop during the day and tried to catch some fish. It was so rough I couldn't even fish, plus the drift was running about 1.7 mph. Not too good for fishing. I had to give up as Lil Provo was rocking so much she was going from strboard gunnel to port gunnel. So I decided to get moving once again before the possibility of getting sick came into play. I eventually ran for cover into Keyport Harbor and tried to fish there, but still the drift was too fast and the sea was still rough. I brought Lil Provo back to her mooring and called it a day.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

SUMMER FLYING BY

Miles from shore and only moving at 1.5 knots on a sweltering day isn't fun. Sure it is great to get out and sail, but this isn't what I call sailing.
I haven't been posting regularly as most of my free time has been out on Lil Provo. I just got in and thought I should at least add to the blog. Now is the time to use all the free time available for sailing. That is exactly what we have been doing. That is besides fishing.

Most of the days have been like this, calm and no wind. I have burned more than twice the total amount of fuel used last year and we still have almost three months left. If it wasn't calm, it was the opposite, waves and wind so bad you had to reef your sales or run with one. Plus the first mate is already in his life jacket and holding a mooring bouy. He was in the cabin when it went from bad to worse and came out to white caps and strong wind. If it weren't for the bimini top this year, we really would have had some dreaded days.






We made through some bad days, but still had enough good ones to make you feel like it was still worth it to try. I can't tell you how many days you go out and chase the wind, only to give up and go back to you mooring. But when you try to grab your mooring line, it gets so windy it becomes a challenge blowing you away from the buoy.



I usually don't spend much time in the cabin, but the sun has forced me in there many times this season. With the front hatch open it is very comfortable with a nice breeze blowing through. Sitting directly under the front hatch is close to air conditioning.



I even fished and caught some fluke today. They were under the 18" limit and had to be returned to fight again another day. The Bluefish have really been biting this year. I had days when I could have filled the cockpit with them. Just this past weekend I had something on the line that I couldn't stop. I even tried to chase it so I would keep losing line, but whatever took the hook did not want to stop. I figure it was a shark, but others said it could be a giant stripper. That day I was using full squid for bait and it was working well. I was catching fish this day when I usually don't.


We'll add more over the next few days.