Timeless Sunsets

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I was recently asked: "You must get to see a lot of sunsets" 

Up until that point, I have taken for granted the fact that I get to see every sunset. I see the ones that light up the sky with a red glow and the ones that fade out into blue obscurity as the night encroaches. Seeing the sun set simply becomes a daily occurrence becuase I pretty much live outside and connected with nature. As the sun begins to go down,I notice it because the sun comes in at a harsh angle, this alerts me to look in its direction and enjoy the splendid display in the sky above me.

Sunsets will never loose their majesticness, but they will lose their count. I honestly have lost count of what day we are, and how many days we have been cruising, as such the number of sunsets I have seen is also lost to me, but the wonder always remains the same. 

This timelessness of the setting sun brings peace to each day as night comes over us and we relax our way to sleep. 

Guessing Water Depth

Water depth is very important, especially when navigating in a sailboat with a keel hanging low below you. Charts take great effor to dictate and describe the depth of the sea floor to us, usually with little numbers that are provided by someone sounding that specific point in recent history. In popular areas, soundings are taken often and charts are peppered with little numbers confirming that you will have enough water under your keel to safely pass over the bottom. In areas that are less popular, there will be less soundings taken and less numbers on your chart.  

In these cases, your guiding feature on the chart will be the depth contour line. This line is drawn to demarcate where a drastic change in depth occurs. It is equivalent to showing you where a ditch would lie in a field. If you find yourself in less popular waters, you may need to rely on these depth contours to safely navigate your way through the waterway.

If your sailing area is even more remote than that, and the waters aren't even charted, you may need to rely on yet another trick to finding your safe passage.: guessing.

This may sound like a really dumb idea, as you are in a remote area and if you guess wrong, you could possibly loose your yacht, but there is some thought that goes into it. 

The ideal would be to anchor the yacht where you are and run ahead in the dinghy to take soundings. These are your own depth measurements where you can see exactly how deep the water is in varous parts of the river. As you move along, you can get a feel for what the bottom is shaped like and that will allow you to navigate the waters much more safely. 

If you are not able to anchor and investigate with your dinghy, for whatever reason, there is a less ideal method that you can use, and that is to guess the water depths based on the shore lines. Waterways do not exist as special areas of the land that are devoted to the passage of water. Waterways are merely areas of the land that dip below sea level or the local water table. The contours of the land will exist regardless of the presence or absence of the water that flows over it. 

If you see flat lands that lead into the water, you can assume that the land continues on that same angle out into the water. This means that it will be shallow near shore as well as far from shore. The water will very slowly and gradually become deeper as it distances itself from the shoreline. On the contrary, if you see a very steep shoreline, you can assume that it is also very deep right up to the shore.  

Flat lands with rivers tend to have rather shallow waterways. Fjords, on the other hand, have a shoreline that could be confused with a cliff! Fjords are cut out by glaciers, and will be exceedingly deep right up to the cliff wall. When I was younger, I visited Milford Sound in New Zealand. I was astonished that the water depth was hundreds of feet deep right up to the cliffs face!  

If you are sailing near a coast or shore, you can always judge the slope and height of the land and imagine the mirror image continueing into the water. If you see a flat shore, it will be flat and shallow. If you see a hill leading to a beach, it will be deep enough as you approach the shore, but will get shallow as you near the land. If you see a mountain popping out of the ocean, you can probably sail right up to the edge of the land without much fear of bumping something with your keel. 

While these are merely guesses as to the depths beneath the waves, the best tool to have should never be overlooked: good charts and a depth sounder. If you can get good charts, they will tell you about the contours of the bottom and allow you to safely navigate your way through the waters. If you can't get good charts, be cautious and take your own soundings before entering a waterway. If you can't get your own soundings, then guess based on the shores edge. 

Sailing Up a River

When you think about sailing, you probably picture a yacht under full sail slicing through the blue sea! The only thing around the yacht is more waves as it chugs along through the water towards an endless destination. This thought might seem romantic, but at some point, the yacht will arrive on a shore and make its way up into a port. Old ports tend to be located up a river, offering them ease of access to the open waters but yet still protected from the fury of the waves during a severe storm.

For those with a powerful diesel motor onboard, these journeys up the river to the port city are no challenge at all. All you need to do in these cases is turn on the motor and power your way up the river until you reach your destination in a timely manner. For those of us who have opted to forgo this luxury, traveling up the river may be a bit more intimidating. 

Rivers have a few standard qualities, and understanding these features will make navigating them all the easier. A river will always flow from the land to the sea. There may be a slight flood as the tide rises, but it will be much weaker than the current as the tide retreats back into the ocean. This preferred direction of rivers is due to the fact that rivers drain runoff from the land into the sea.  

This means that the force of the current is directly correlated to the amount of rainfall that has occurred in that area . If they have been having heavy rains, expect a stronger current pushing against you. If it has been dry lately, expect an easier to at sailing up the river. 

The other challenging thing with rivers is their width. Rivers can be wide, but they can also get very narrow at times. The area of deep water will also be narrower than the width of the river as well, meaning that you will be forced to sail in a relatively narrow space. This can make it difficult to work your way up a river, especially if your are working into the wind. Short tacking against the wind and against the current is equivalent to Sisyphus pushing his boulder up the mountainside forever.  

It may sound like rivers are the worst thing you can encounter on a sailboat, and you may be inclined to think that you need a motor to get to the port town located miles up the river. This thought may seem well founded, knowing all the natural forces are stacked against you, but remember that these old towns were established long before diesel motors existed. All trade that occurred in these old towns was done by sail, and if the town is old enough, by square rigger! 

While it may sound like it is next to impossible to sail up into a river and reach a port town, the truth is it is very doable; you just need patience.  

When sailing up a river, you want to plan on traveling with an incoming tide, after a period of dry days, when the wind is blowing you up the river. This will give you the easiest go at it, as the river will not be flowing too hard, the tide will give you a bit of a push, and the wind will carry you all the way up. 

Winds are another problem with rivers. You might start out with the wind on your stern, but as the river bends and twists, the wind may begin to blow from the wrong direction. Trees that line the river will also make winds light and variable, further adding difficulty to the entire process. Traveling up a river can be tricky at times, and if you find that you are loosing ground, the most prudent action would be to drop anchor and wait for conditions to improve in your favor. 

Arriving at a small port town by sail can be fun and exciting, especially if you had to time it with natural events and work for a few days to finally get there!  

On a side note, an important thing to carry while sailing up a river is cheese. If you get stuck somewhere and have to wait for conditions to improve, cheese may be your best tool to free yourself from your predicament. Sitting in the cockpit waiting for the winds to change or the tide to come back into your favor will drive you crazy! These events take hours to change, and the changes occur very subtly, especially that far up a river. Cheese will work to take your mind off of the situation, help you relax, feed your belly, and keep you happy. As you sit back and relax with cheese in your stomach, you will stop worrying about time and simply enjoy the sights of the river bank as you await better conditions. Once conditions do return to your favor, you can raise anchor and continue on!

Working With Pets

Pets are a big part of your life, even when you are cruising. They are with you while you relax, while you eat, and even while you work! No matter the circumstance, your pet will want to be right by you or on you while you toil away on your latest project.

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While covered head to toe in a tyvek suit, Sammy, my parrot insisted on being with me. She was not happy in her cage alone in the boat, and she was not happy in her cage near me. Sammy insisted on being right on my shoulder while I worked, no matter the circumstance. Since they don't make tyvek suits for birds, I had to be extra careful not to get any bottom paint on her feathers! 

It might be hot, it might be uncomfortable, but your pets will be right there with you. 

Living in the Hook

Most liveablards live in a marina where life resembles land based life, except that you live on a boat. Your spaces are smaller, but you can still indulge in the same expensive activities that are popular on land. Subscriptions, dues, and other costly endevours will easily add up. The money you save by living aboard can easily be spent bat any place found on land, just as easily as if you lived ashore. 

Living on the hook, however, can make you shift your perspective rather drastically. When you are anchored, you have no address to ship your monthly commitments to. Going home also removes you from any commercial enterprise, where you would instead be living in a bubble where money grabbing schemes can't reach you. 

Instead, you live in a fantasy world, where you have all you need on board, and you travel around as you desire. Spending is through out and decisive, as you buy things that you need. You don't have any extra space, so buying extra items would actually be a hinderance as it would take up your valuable space and fill it with clutter. 

Trips ashore are thought out and calculated. They are more of a visit to different lands rather than a shopping trip to "buy what catches your eye."  This leads to a much more frugal life where spending is minimized and thus, need to work is also minimized.

Living on the hook is a great way to disconnect from the world as you know it and enter a new world filled with inner happiness and blissfulness. Once you enter this world, you wonder what took you so long to make the leap!