sailing yacht kaemara's trips

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Gola Island

We stayed in Portrush overnight where we met Andrew who had just single handed northwards up the west coast and told me that he had had 2 or 3 good days and incessant strong winds such that beafort 5 - 7 was normal. From Portrush we stayed in Sheep Haven for a night on one of the visitors moorings, it poured with rain. Then onwards to Gola which is when I was pleased that I'd installed the chart plotter - I got horribly confused trying to match up what I could see with what was on the chart, complete nightmare, the chart plotter sorted things out nicely. Here we are anchored on the south side hiding from the wind and about to get spooked by what we found on the island.

Atlantic


Finally got the bag back and headed off. We were aiming for Loch Swilly but the forecast started talking about gales so we diverted to Portrush. And ended up motoring for much of the way in a flat calm. This is a parting shot of Islay, demonstrating the 'clouds over land' effect. If I was a better person I'd straighten out the horizon. We were in the Atlantic Ocean now, with strong winds forecast, which is where we were to stay for the next 3 weeks or so.

the American Monument, Islay

west coast of Islay

An british transport policeman was reading through a bulletin of crime reports and when he read about my bag he realised it was in the lost property office, so he phoned me up and the next day we arranged for parcel force to deliver it, one of their 48 hour premium services which ended up taking four days. We killed time pleasantly with walks on the beach.

Bowmore, Islay


This is the view from the round church at the top of the steet. The church is round so that there aren't any corners for the devil to hide in. We went for the distillery tour and learned a lot about the process of whisky making. Also did the tour at Laphroaig where the guide talked more about the social history, no two tours alike.

Port Ellen, Islay

Islay is prounounced 'eyela'. Spent a few days here, crew, Mona, arrived and Neil came along for a tour of the distilleries. I arrived in time for the pub and went to the hotel bar where they had 40 single malts on display and Ian, the barman and whisky expert, on hand to offer guidance. Had an enjoyable evening following his recommendations and it was only when I tried to stand up at the end of the night that I noticed how strong some of this stuff is.

Craighouse, Jura

This turned out to be one of the highlights of the trip. The people were so nice and friendly, went for a walk and nobody drove by without waving. Spent a happy evening in the pub chatting with the people who lived on the island. Stayed on a mooring buoy, currently around 10 of these with another 16 or so in the process of being put in place whilst I was there.

Sound of Jura

went from Loch Aline to Creobh (pronounced croove) which involved a trip through the Sound of Luing which is just nearby the dreaded Corryvreckan, famous for its whirlpools. I was half an hour off the top of the tide going the the Sound of Luing and already seemed to have more than 2 knots of tide and the water starting to boil. Spent a night in Creobh, which is picturesque sort of place (but it rained all the time, so the new camera stayed in its case) and one which I'd happily return to. I stayed in the marina. Going in to strange marinas on your own in a boat can be a bit of a buttock clencher, went in fine but had a pretty little wooden motor boat park up next to me and the wind kicked up and was blowing me on to her so I wasn't so sure about how it would all work out when I left, fortunately the people on board must have been wondering the same thing so they came out and gave me a hand to get away. Picture is taken on a long day's beat down the sound of Jura into a lot of wind. I don't have an anenometer so don't really know how much, but had a reef in and probably would have gone just as fast with two.

ardnamurchan point

Er, this was before the previous post, on the way to Loch Aline.

Monday, July 28, 2008

loch aline

After waiting around for replacement parts, clothes etc to arrive in Arisaig (all 'guaranteed 24 h our delivery' claims are,, small-print off all for places like this) finally pushed off southwards. Arisaig Marine provided a very good service and all of the work which they did on the boat was to a high standard and at a fair price.

This was the start of northerly winds which stayed with us for the duration of the cruise. We had some tough times but not nearly so bad as for the poor sods who were trying to go the other way - we always had the wind behind us.

Headed south from Arisaig and anchored for the night in Loch Aline. This is one of those superb natural harbours which are so sheltered that you can get a big surprise when you leave them - it was quite blowy outside.

off rhum



Had a shakedown cruise around the Small Isles, Andrew and Gill came along. We had a mix of weather, this was the best day, Andrew at the helm.

west coast of ireland

Ok, sorry to those who've looked here before for news on this trip and found nothing - had all the best intentions but... the laptop which I bought for the trip didn't last very long - battery life turned out to be less than 2 hours, I took the sleeper up to Fort William from London and left the bag with the charger in the luggage compartment.. . same bag also had all the charts for Ireland and the nautical almanac and a pilot book and all my clothes and my iPod: bag wasn't there when I got to Fort William. And ScotRail couldn't find it.

Which left me in a bit of a dilemma.

After a few days I decided that the bag wasn't coming back, so I bought a minimal set of charts for Ireland (the imray c charts) and got a generic laptop charger.

Out of curiosity I measured the voltage coming off the laptop charger. It was set for 12v but the output fluctuated wildly and I saw more than 60v coming out of it for a short while. So I decided that wasn't such a quality piece of kit as it claimed to be. There was 12.6v in the boat battery so I plugged the laptop in to that. Didn't quite work - it couldn't make its mind up whether or not it was charging so kept on cycling between 'battery' and 'mains' mode, i.e. the screen went bright then dark every second or so. No good trying to work with that.... Found a charger for a portable radio that claimed a 12v output, put the multi meter on that - 16v... So a nominal 12v outputs 16v. Plugged the computer in to that and it was very happy for about two hours before it suddenly rebooted itself and died. As in went completely dead. So that was the end of my good resolutions for doing some work whilst away and blogging progress.

Met Andrew in Portrush and he was using something called usgrib on his laptop - this gets grib charts for just about anywhere, these are apparently the things used by the met office when they put together the weather forecast for a sea area. Sea areas are vast and they have to give a summary of what is happening there in a few lines. The are conservative, so if a gale is happening anywhere in the area it is likely to get a mention in the forecast. However, there may not be a gale coming to the bit of sea which you intend sailing on, which you can see if you check the grib file. Andrew said this had saved him a lot of time on his trip (he was circumnavigating the British Isles, but going clockwise, opposite direction to us) - he had been able to set off when others had been obliged to wait because of a bad forecast.