Preparing Naiad to sail |
We
woke to a damp, foggy, and windless morning. I watched as Neil
prepared Naiad to head north. He came off his mooring at
08:00, to head for Loch Feochan where he keeps her. They disappeared
into the fog before even clearing the bay.
Julian
picked up the creel he had laid last night. The three crabs inside
were too small to eat, so he let them go, then decided to mend the
creel which had been damaged when catching a large dogfish last
summer. Meanwhile I put on full oilskins before getting in Worm to
row ashore for milk.
After
a late breakfast of porridge with full cream Gigha milk we decided to
head for Islay despite the fog. Mary stayed put until later in the
day when she hoped the visibility would be better.
Julian
raised the reaching sail, and we sailed off the buoy, (with the
engine on in case). Unfortunately I needed the engine in gear to keep
steerage way almost immediately. A single handed yachtsman came off
his mooring ahead of me and the ferry was ready to leave. I went to
full revs to clear the ferry's path while Julian went forward to tack
the reaching sail. We tried using it as we headed north, close in to
the shore, but did not manage to make it fly again.
The
North East coast of Gigha is a wonderful place and was atmospheric in
the fog. We stayed inside the outermost skerries, rounding the north
end in Gigha inside An Dubh-Sgeir. We then edged into West Tarbert
Bay, hoping for a back eddy to help against the tide, which was now
against us. No eddy appeared, so we headed along the bay at just
under 3 knots. The bay itself was well worth the visit, with a lovely
sandy beach at one point, and the mist drifting through some
atmospheric rocks.
We
then put the tiller pilot to work, laying in a course of 248ºT
to take us in a straight line across the foggy Sound to Port Ellen,
Islay. There was nothing to aim at, and over 15nm to go.
Gigha
faded slowly into the greyness, while Jura and Islay were only
occasionally visible. Julian tried flying the reaching sail again,
but it moved us forward at less than a knot, so he took it down
again. When he came back into the cockpit to sit down he managed to
tear the “back” that we use to make the seats comfortable, which
meant another half an hour with needle and thread.
We
cleaned the cockpit sole and took it up to have a look at the bilges.
Robinetta has been pumping more than expected given the flat seas and
no stress on the garboards from the mast. The engine muffler box
seemed to be leaking, so we will need to have a look at that.
A
slight wind came up at about 15:30 so we tried flying the jib, which
filled nicely. When we saw a mixed flock of sea birds, gannets and
guillemots together, I suggested that we might as well try fishing.
Julian got out the mackerel line while I turned the engine off.
Blessed peace! We were going at less than a knot, a perfect speed for
fishing, and all of a sudden blue sky appeared overhead. Bliss.
Julian
ran out the whole line, but unfortunately the end came undone, and
the whole lot went overboard. Hopefully the heavy sinker on the end
took it straight down to the bottom and kept it there, so it will not
damage any wildlife. We headed slowly towards Islay for 15 more
minutes, listening to the sea birds calling all around us and
followed by an inquisitive guillemot, but then the sun disappeared
and the wind faded to nothing. George started wondering which
direction to steer us, so it was back on with the engine, and up to
3.5 knots again.
The
fog lifted enough for us to see Islay properly as we approached to
within 2 miles of the coast. The entrance to Port Ellen is totally
obscured by a set off reefs, and I was very glad of the chart plotter
to help us navigate in. There was quite a strong current at the
entrance to the bay, and however much I told George to steer round
nothing happened. Because of that I took the helm.
Julian
went forward to stow the reaching sail and bring down the jib.
Suddenly the radio started beeping oddly. I snuck down for a look,
and it seemed to be changing channels at random, and would not stay
on 16, where it should. When I came up again Robinetta had turned
herself though 180º and
was heading out of the bay again. Julian called back to the cockpit
to ask what was going on, and when I told him asked if I had power
cycled the radio. NO. He did that and the problem seemed to clear,
then 10 minutes later it was doing it again.
Gig practice at Port Ellen |
We
were glad to get into Port Ellen and tie up on a pontoon at 18:00.
With the engine to look at, and the radio to fix we will probably
stay put tomorrow. Found the showers with some difficulty, cooked
dinner on board for the first time in a while. A walk round the bay
along the village street, followed by a dram of local whisky in the
pub completed a full day.
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