Deep Point to Midway Marina

Moorglade's Voyage
Ted Wilson
Sat 19 May 2012 01:14
Our position is 36:21.055N
075:56.887W
We left Deep point, an anchorage forced upon us by
inclement weather, with the intension of anchoring behind Camden Point or in
Broad creek. However the weather again influenced our decision, neither
anchorage would have been comfortable, so Travis fixed us up with two
berths (slips) at the very popular Coinjock Marina, well know for it's
restaurant, only to be called back later to be told that they did not have room
for us, so she made a reservation with Midway Marina on the other side of the
cut. We knew the weather was not on our side, but it is hard to understand
that a passage that is not an ocean passage could be so austere. First the
Alligator River is wide and shallow with the ICW channel well marked down the
centre. The journey was starting to drag by the time we reached the Alligator
River Bridge The deck log reports that the engine was running quite hard to
maintain our planned speed against an increasingly strong head wind and that the
weather was unpleasant and the sea choppy. After the Alligator River we had to
cross the Albemarle Sound, which is a twenty mile wide expanse of water which
appears to be an estuary, but many miles to the East are the outer banks of
Carolina. Kittyhawk is out there somewhere where the Wright Bros first achieved
powered light. The effect of the outer banks is that the water is barely saline,
the current is more influenced by the wind than the moon and the ocean swells
have no effect. One is therefore inclined to treat a trip across the
sound as a piece of ............. However it was hard work. The waves were
steep and short, so Moorglade under power, ploughing straight into the wind,
hobby horsed over the waves, burying her bow into the third or
fourth, sending a torrent of green (actually brown) water cascading
down the deck and the log and sog down to a couple of knots. Attempts to
change engine revs or angle to the waves to change the periodicity made little
difference, we were in for a long slog. John took Another Adventure off to port
and set the headsail to increase speed, which it did, but the extra distance
travelled proved too much of a penalty and when we came together again Moorglade
was ahead. I think the problem for me was that I did not expect it to be that
hard, I was not ready for it, and the days of easy motor sailing through Florida
in the sunshine had misled me about the ICW. I know about the English Channel
and Biscay even the Atlantic but Albemarle Sound! After the sound a few
twists and turns round the marks and we were at the Marina. John with his crew
of two docked first, while I prepared my fenders and warps, to be helped by the
Another Adventure crew when I came alongside. we felt we had earned our beer and
meal that evening but it was a case of so near and yet so far because over the
cut was a restaurant praised by the guides but on our side of the cut
they had cocked up their application for a drinks licence so, no drinks at the
bar, or with the meal, that we opted for after happy hour aboard A A. The food
was not great either. Oh well tomorrow would be better.
![]() ![]() Early morning in the Alligator River, before the
wind got
up. Moorglade
clears the Alligator River swing
Bridge
Thanks to Chris Woolcott from New
Zealand sailing aboard Another adventure for many of the
pictures in the blog over the next few days.
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