Live Free 2 Travel Slow

Cat Harbor, Catalina Island by Sailboat

Knowing our daughter would be back in school late in August, we took a short four day trip to Cat Harbor, Catalina last weekend, soaking up pointers like we do every trip.

Starting early Thursday morning (easier to get a mooring and old-timey sailors didn’t like to depart a harbor on a Friday if they’re going overnight) but still oversleeping by an hour, we took off from Oceanside for a long but uneventful trip to Cat Harbor, Catalina Island, California.  Taking the right at the buoy outside Oceanside, we set Tulum IV on course and stayed on the same heading the same way,,,,for 10.5 hours.  Some folks would sort of be astonished that it takes us 10.5 hours to do 51 miles, until you understand that we can’t go faster than 5.5 – 6 knots, don’t know our RPM’s (cause the gauge doesn’t work) and are not really sure about engine temps.  But, we’re still game to do it,,,,so off we went.  Oceanside to Catalina is a northwest slog for most boats, on a sailboat heading into the winds, it’s a real slog.  Yep, we had wind on the nose the entire day (not much) and didn’t sail at all.

Coming back on Sunday morning, we left really early (first light) and were able to get out into deep water without the short steep swells we had in the past.   This time we took a more direct approach to the swells heading out of Cat Harbor, like directly west, until we could make the southerly bearing in which those swells would mainly be behind us and we could surf them.  However, like the last few trips back from Cat Harbor, the wind was in the wrong direction to even think about sailing, so it was another 10 hour motor to get back to Oceanside.

Here’s some interesting pointers we picked up on this trip, as we learn things every trip:

Dyneema Bridle Attached to mooring line- note equalized and doubled line
Dyneema Bridle Attached to mooring line- note equalized and doubled line
Looking down at Isthmus Cove
4th of July Cove
Cherry Cove

Overall, a great trip with some serious lessons.  10.5 hours getting there and 10 hours to come home.  Once home, our sail cover decided it was dry rotted and made me question the usefulness of our lazy jack system, which is also dry rotting.  Upcoming repairs include the engine start panel, a new water pump, cockpit speakers as they literally had bits and pieces falling on us in the wind, sealing up the lower clamshells in my chain locker with epoxy and fiberglass and deciding to take the lazy jacks down and put on a new sail cover.

You can read about our spring trip to Catalina in the “Reviews of Places We’ve Been” category.

 

 

 

 

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