At Sea 42:30N 69:47W

Millybrown
Mark Hillmann
Tue 4 Nov 2008 03:10
We left Saquatucket at dawn.  It was 10 miles south, round the thin group of islands called Monomoy that end in Monomoy Point, the southern tip of Cape Cod.  There should be ways through the islands but the channels don't meet. 
 
It was a good breeze, but from the south, so we tacked down with main and staysail up.  We were going nicely, but I was impatient, so the engine stayed on and we motor sailed down to the point. Charging the battery, I told myself.
 
Inside Cape Cod everything is shallow.  You sail round in 9 metres of water, then it drops to 5 and you want deep water of 9 again.  The inside channel saved a good distance but the shallows are 2.1m plus tide at 0.3 less our depth of 1.7 gives 0.7 metres clearance. 
 
When we got there, the tide was running with us, but the wind against us kicked up a steep sea.  How accurate are the charts?  Do the banks move?  The echo sounder never showed it quite that shallow and we got through.  Was the engine really on to use reverse if we grounded?
 
Round the point and on to a run, staysail boomed out, genoa settled quietly behind the main, tide with us.  No need for the engine now.  Within an hour we were out into proper deep water.  200 metres is too deep for the bloody lobster pots. 
 
It really felt like going out to sea, the birds changed from timid fat ducks, surf scoters and white winged scoters to the elegant greater shearwaters.  They fly round us, a gliding flight with little wing flapping and sometimes settle nearby. 
 
The scoters muddled me for a while, two breeds and two sexes gave four different sets of markings, all too far away to identify clearly.  They paddled away whenever we came near, staying out of gunshot range?
 
The deep water and fair wind have persuaded me not to stop, so we are heading straight up to Portland.  If the wind holds we will be there before dark tomorrow.  At sea for the election, but I will find some of the local radio stations and listen to them argue.  You get very different views when you ask people here, Republicans complaining of media bias, but I have yet to meet an American girl or woman who likes Palin.  Perhaps Maine and Massachusetts are not really representative. 
 
I am quite looking forward to a night sail, but ate all the biscuits today.  I usually eat biscuits when sailing at night, to keep my energy up, or just due to greed?  Never mind, there is plenty of bread and jam.  Three nights running I was in places without shops and ran out of bread and milk.  Lorna had provided bread-mix flour, so I made some buns; would you be amazed if I report that they were very good? 
 
Both the porridge oats and the marvel dried milk had gone off.  I will get more porridge, that packet had come all the way from England.  A new packet of marvel proved OK, so I could eat cereal again.  Small crisis averted.  I got bread and milk in Falmouth, so I have enough to get to Maine. 
 
Even my tins look finely judged to keep me alive until I fly home in a week's time.  Four or five days of tidying up and minor repairs, but apart from the towed watermaker which never did work, nothing much has failed.  Oh yes, the computer, but an installation disk may get that going.  This back-up machine may not do photos, but otherwise seems OK.  You can have photos once I get back to wi-fi.  
 
The rig, sails, engine, instruments, heating, they are all working.  The spray hood still keeps the spray out, I recommend the slide-in luff attachment mounted on curved hardwood on the deck.  Its predecessor with press studs and flaps kept rain out, but not solid waves.  
 
The windows have stopped leaking since I sealed the hatch garage drains and the mast has a dodger cut and laced around it inside the cabin.  The leaks down it now only appear on the floor.
 
Here we are sliding down wind with three sails up, the staysail still poled out and the towed generator giving enough to keep the lights (all LEDs except the mast head tricolour) computer and heating all going.  Not a New England wind at all, to have held in the same direction for 11 hours.