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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Delivery of 82’ Superyacht


82' Horizon Superyacht
Cloud 8








Oct 1-7, 2012. I was hired with two other captains I had worked with at Anacortes Yacht Charters to deliver a 82 foot Horizon superyacht from Seattle’s Lake Union to San Diego Harbor. It was a 7-day delivery of over 1,204 miles (124 running hours) underway 24/7 @ the average speed of 10 knots. First day out we experienced gale force winds and got a good pounding at Point Wilson as we entered the Strait of Juan de Fuca.  We decided to drop the hook near Port Townsend and make another attempt the next morning after the winds settled before heading into the Strait and onto the Pacific Ocean.
Underway
All crew watches were four hours on, twice a day.  The seas were rolly down to Northern California, but the yacht had many luxuries to make the trip more tolerable (such as stabilizers, 2 freezers with ice cream, a bathroom, shower, satellite TV, and stereo in each stateroom). It was a great crew (Mike, Jeff and myself) with many stories to share out on the water. We saw Humpback and Pilot whales, porpoises, dolphins, Sunfish, seabirds, and even picked up a couple hitchhikers who stayed with us for four hours through the fog.  We pulled into San Diego on October 7th with all intact, crew and vessel and using over $12,000 in fuel. What a journey!
Salon
Galley








Stateroom
VIP Suite
Engine Room Bling
Setee

Flipper & Friend
Hitchhikers

San Juan Islands Cruise 2012


San Juan Cruise 2012

San Juan Islands
We’re off on our 2-week cruise in the San Juan Islands! After a summer apart, it’s so nice to have the family back together again for our next adventure. The San Juan Islands are comprised of approximately 175 islands located west of the City of Anacortes, our new Washington hometown. The location, beauty, and weather make this a buzzing summer destination. Now that fall has arrived and the kids are back in school, the Islands are less crowded, yet the weather is still perfect.
Lopez Island

James Island

Dock at James Island
We departed Anacortes aboard Sunny 1 on September 13, 2012 to the first of seven planned stops, James Island, a Washington State Marine Park. What a quiet, little getaway only one hour from home! We tied up to the small park float for the night and settled in to sort through our itinerary. Contrary to several publications, we are quickly discovering that there are a lot less buoys than listed. The island is owned by the State and is described in A Cruising Guide to Puget Sound and the San Juan Islands as an “hourglass-shaped island east of Decatur (that) is rustic and delightfully unimproved.” What a peaceful little spot with only a couple of campers and kayakers on shore sharing this tree-covered, nearly private island.

We had many raccoon visitors on deck through the night and noticed in the morning that an unlucky camper’s ice chest was obliterated, its contents strewn all about. Muddy footprints littered Sunny’s decks come morning!

Odlin County Park, Lopez Island  

Dinghy....hey wait a minute
Upright Head, Lopez Island
We departed James Island on Friday, the morning of the 14th, and headed west to Lopez Island, one of the three largest islands in the San Juans. Lopez Island’s gentle hills, farmlands, and quiet atmosphere make it a popular destination for those wanting to get always from the noise of urban life. We are at Odlin County Park, located at the base of Upright Head in Upright Channel. We are mooring for $10 a night and enjoying crabbing, fishing, and much-needed relaxation.  Unwinding is challenging at first, just letting go and allowing yourself to be in the moment as the rolly San Juan water slips beneath the boat and dances to the shore. The Washington State ferries run their route through here and their wake eventually finds its way to us. If it wasn’t for our trusty Rocker Stoppers, this anchorage would be intolerable – instead, it is pleasant most of the time. Rocker Stoppers, also called Mexican Hats, are 18” orange plastic disks strung 3 to a rope 16” apart and hung from both sides of the boat. The disks offer resistance to the water and reduce roll.
Crab Anyone?


Double Trouble



The water here appears blue and the bottom is visible in shallow water. We are moored in 28’. The three of us (Tess, Kathy, and Liz) hop in the dinghy at 6 am, 12 noon, 6pm, and 9pm to go to shore for Tessie’s sake. She has yet to learn how to do her business on a piece of Astroturf like her cousin Matey. 
Solar Charging Station
On one of our visits ashore we discovered a nifty Boy Scout project offered to campers – a small solar electronics charging station! Just as impressive as the project is the fact that it has stayed intact over a long summer of use. 

Next stop, Rosario Resort – hot tub here we come!

Rosario, Orcas Island
Rosario Resort, Orcas Island, September 17-19th  
The Moran Mansion at Rosario

Liz's New Friend
In 1900,  a wealthy Seattle shipbuilder, Robert Moran (who when at 40 years old was given only months to live due to a heart condition) moved up to Orcas Island to live out the remainder of his days. The Moran Mansion at Rosario, completed in 1904, was built by a team of the Moran brothers’ shipbuilders. Throughout the mansion is evidence of this influence with low, mahogany-beamed ceilings, bronze hardware, ship’s lighting, stained glass, and fine joinery. The foundation of the mansion is 16 feet deep into bedrock and the walls are steel-reinforced concrete. Moran purchased large tracts of land on the island. He helped build roads and develop water systems, providing much needed jobs during the Depression. Eventually, he donated 3,600 acres of his grand estate to the people of Washington, an area now known as Moran State Park. Proof of the peaceful paradise that is Rosario is that Moran lived another 40 years to the age of 80!

The Mansion's Outdoor Pool
The marina itself is small, only 40 slips, and the slip fee includes access to the mansion’s spa. We have enjoyed the hot tub both mornings and the newly resurfaced indoor swimming pool.  The Mansion’s happy hour is tasty and we indulged on “Our Famous Fries” with the works (applewood bacon, white cheddar, and green onions) two nights in a row!
'Our Famous Fries', Orcas Happy Hour
We also visited the music room in the mansion’s museum and were treated to a piano and pipe organ concert by resident musician Christopher Peacock.

Cascade Lake
On the Trail
Freshwater Rinse
Happy Dog
Life is Good!
On Tuesday morning, we trekked to Cascade Lake, the lake Moran used to produce hydroelectricity for the mansion. Tess had a refreshing swim and several swallows of the lake’s fresh water!  On our return hike, we picked a bag of blackberries to enjoy at a later time.  What a wonderful stay we have had here, a chance to fill our water tanks and recharge. We awoke to fog this morning and have finally set off to Friday Harbor. However, as we head out into Upright Channel, the fog surrounds us and Tessie is getting an earful of our horn every two minutes. Not a happy dog. Fog is never fun and traveling in the fog in the ferry route was a bit tense. The San Juans are famous for their reefs and spattering of small islands and rocks. There is even a chart of the 13 Most Hit Reefs of the San Juan Islands. Makes you happy to cruise out of the fog and leave it behind you. 

Friday Harbor, San Juan Island, September 19th 
Port of Friday Harbor
Pulled into the Port of Friday Harbor for what is turning out to be another beautiful and sunny afternoon. The weather has been incredible, unusually clear and warm for this time of year. Have been in shorts and wearing sunscreen, for sure. Friday Harbor is the county seat of the San Juans and its biggest population center. The town offers many shops, restaurants, and services and it was the place for laundry at the harbor and reprovisioning at King’s Market. We will have another week without access to anything as soon as we leave for Stuart, Sucia, and Cypress Islands. We dined at the Crabshack, a hopping little outdoor restaurant overlooking the port. The fries couldn’t touch Rosario’s Famous Fries, that’s for sure.

Lopez Island Creamery and Our Trail-Picked Blackberries
Friday Harbor is a great place for just hanging out and home to The Whale Museum, Sea Shepherds, and Washington University’s Friday Harbor Laboratory. Most of the whale watching boats in the San Juans are based in the harbor, as are kayaking outfits and island boat tours. It is a major Washington State Ferry stop and is a U.S. Customs port of entry. 

We are socked in with fog again this morning and are waiting for it to clear to leave by afternoon. Trees continue to lose their leaves all about and you can feel the changing of the season as each night comes earlier, her cloak moist with dew.

Heading to Stuart Island
Reid Harbor, Stuart Island, September 20-23rd 

Prevost Harbor Dock
We departed Friday Harbor on a flood tide and headed to Stuart Island, the farthest west U.S. island before reaching Canada’s Gulf Islands. Stuart Island State Park has two welcoming harbors, Reid and Prevost, neither offering services of any kind (other than pit toilets and a water spigot).  Reid Harbor on the east side of Stuart is our destination for the weekend, arriving on Thursday and staying until Sunday. Reid is a very protected harbor with 2 floats and 14 mooring buoys. One night’s stay is only $12.
River Otters
We left this Friday morning to the predicted overcast, cold weather. We are hunkered down for the weekend. Nice and cozy in the cabin right now, drinking hot beverages and getting caught up on the blog! A family of four river otters entertained us both last night and this morning with their frolic, munching on fish and popping up onto the public float, scurrying about. In the dark of the night, we heard a goat high on the bluff surrounding the harbor and have spotted many deer, harbor seals, Dall’s porpoises, gulls, cormorants, crows, Belted Kingfishers, and many more animals.

Sunny at Reid Harbor

What a beautiful Saturday! The weather is perfect for a long hike (60 degrees!). We walked nearly 6 miles roundtrip to the Turn Point Lighthouse, a difficult hike that led us through the woods and up and down a long, dusty county road, past an old school house, by two pirate’s treasure chests…Pirate’s Treasure Chests?!

Treasure Chests of Stuart Island
World's Most Beautiful Pit Toilet, Turn Point
We delightfully picked through the Treasure Chests of Stuart Island, a roadside chest (filled with t-shirts and postcards) with the courtesy of drinking water and the request to take what we wished with an IOU to send the Benson Family the money. The family has operated the chests for a decade, sending four daughters to college and still going strong. Of course, we had to take our pirate booty! The light station, built in 1893, is now the responsibility of BLM and is in the renovation process, working with the Turn Point Preservation Society (TPPS). 

Crab Crew
Enjoying crabbing while here at Stuart Island, catching over 14 crabs (Dungeness and Red Rock). Tess and Kathy have had their fill! Off to Sucia Island tomorrow morning! Touted as “the crown of the San Juans and the marine park system,” with its many bays and coves, Sucia promises a delightful visit!

Sucia Island
Echo Bay, Sucia Island, September 23-27th 

Beautiful Cliffs of Sucia Island
The seas this morning have been glass-calm. What a beautiful trip! We traveled with the flood, averaging 7.2 knots and sipping fuel. We arrived at Shallow Bay at 12:15pm and witnessed for ourselves why visitors continually rate Sucia #1 as the best island in the San Juans. Sucia is actually 6 islands. 314 acres of the island chain were purchased in 1960 through a joint effort of dozens of Puget Sound yacht clubs. Another 234 acres were acquired by the Washington State Park Service and the National Park Service totaling 568 acres and 6 miles of hiking trails. The magical landscape of Sucia is dramatic, its cliffs and bluffs appearing carved and melted. 
Sunrise in Echo Bay
Sunny 1 at Echo Bay

After investigating Shallow Bay, Fox Cove, Fossil Bay, and Snoring Bay, we have decided to take up a mooring in Echo Bay, the largest area of open water. In the twilight of fall, we are one of only 10 boats in the entire bay. After getting settled, we headed over to Fossil Bay in our dinghy. Kathy trolled along the way as we traveled the passage between South Finger and Sucia. She suddenly hooked onto a hearty lingcod, an estimated 30” that shook the hook as soon as we snapped a picture! The legal season is very short here for lingcod (six weeks from May to mid-June), so we’ll have to return for that one another time…
Ewing Island
We have spent much of the remainder of our day fishing around Ewing Island at an area charted as “fish haven”. No luck but have been treated to a beautiful series of reefs and rocks, which laced all around us.  Crabbing from Sunny today also provided several Red Rock and Dungeness crabs.
It is Monday and we head out in the dinghy again to troll the northeast side of Sucia outside of Echo Bay. We’ll see what we get…
Update: Kathy caught her birthday fish – a 27” Silver Salmon! What a thrill that was for everyone in our little dinghy… Tess and Kathy are enjoying delicious salmon and crab and will for a couple days.
Birthday Salmon!
Instead of heading off to Cypress Island on Wednesday, we have decided to stay another night at Sucia. With Cypress only an hour from home, we will easily visit in the future.

Kayaking in Echo Bay
Our last day at Sucia included kayaking in the bay and more fishing, both fun and exciting in their own right. We headed for home on Thursday morning in what turned out to be pea soup fog. It was a slow trek and we encountered a tug with a tow and a couple of fishing boats. It was great to arrive east of Guemes Island where the fog cleared and home was near. What a terrific trip we had! Beautiful weather, good food, and safe passages, all in the cradle that is our Sunny 1.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

My Berkeley Summer


Dolly's Port Side



Recycled Nature Center Aquarium Cabinet
My Beautiful Assistant

Tessie and I spent our summer in the Berkeley Marina where I worked as a Recreation Activities Leader for the City of Berkeley from June thru August. Prepping for our trip south involved renovating Dolly the Cargo van to Dolly the Camper Van. This is a building project of mine that would last the entire summer. The process included adding insulation, installing counters/cabinets, a functioning kitchen (including plumbing), a settee/bed conversion, and exterior paint job. Thanks out to Wayne for cutting the insulation panels into manageable pieces and Roz and Annette for the use of their Anacortes garage! 

Our Hero Meg
Our trip south to California in Dolly (named so for her impressive rack) included stops in Port Townsend to visit with Corine, Jak, and puppy Piper; Bremerton to visit Carol and her kitties and plant a vegetable garden; and Mt. Shasta to hang out with Meg, our sweet San Felipe friend. 
Back in Berkeley on Scott's Boat
Little Tessa
Tess and I stayed on a sailboat in the marina and had such fun hanging out with Janet and dog Sammy and Clara and Sarah. Many thanks for the loan of household goods from all. It was simply wonderful to see Jolanda and Tod and meet their new baby girl Tessa! Other visits included dinner at Marion's with her and Phoebe; watching the Olympics with Kathy and Carol Beth; hanging with Melissa, Greg, and Mattie; Picante's with Captain Rich; lunch with Rachel; Indus Village with Jim; visiting with Dara, Sasha, and Jake; dinners with Joel; seeing Jon, Karen, and Edgar; and partying with Abby, Karen S., Frances, Sam, Nancy, the AP staff, and Nature  Center staff Patty and Tomas. Whew!
Adventure Playground Crew
Jon Hard at Work
Working with returning staff in Adventure Playground (AP) was a definite highlight of my summer as we welcomed three new staff into the fold.  It was especially rewarding witnessing the two young men I had mentored as kids (Jon and Andrew) develop into excellent trainees. Mama Bird was very proud! 
Getting Ready for Summer
For those unfamiliar with Berkeley's Adventure Playground, it is a City of Berkeley park that opened in 1978 as part of an adventure playground movement sweeping the U.S. in the late 70's. Adventure playgrounds originated in post-World War 2 Europe when it was observed that kids preferred to play in the rubble from the war than in organized playgrounds. Adventure playgrounds reflect the personality of the communities in which they "live". Being set in a marina away from residential neighborhoods has helped keep Berkeley's AP "junkyard" playground style alive (one of only 3 still open in the U.S.) - that, and the unwavering support of the City of Berkeley who understands and appreciates the value of this unique and precious resource. 
Alex, Loren, and Youth Volunteer Joyce Link the Crow's Nest to the Spiral Fort
Loren, Joyce, Playground Kid Marina & Youth Volunteer Evan
Elements of Berkeley's AP include fort building, a climbing net, a zipline, reclaimed boats, gardens, balancing ropes, and a tire swing.  It's a child's paradise and a place where they can do whatever their imagination inspires in them. We teach them how to use real hammers and saws to build forts and small projects and give them buckets of paint to use as they wish. We average over 500 people each weekend day, including many international visitors who plan us into their itinerary. This popularity and reputation are reasons Newsweek ranked us one of the nation’s top ten play spaces for kids.

Loren and Alex Celebrate Moustache Day
Sky
Summer is especially fun in AP, being open 7 days a week! Monday thru Friday we offer activities for the public, everything from bench building, mural painting, and candle making to fishing off the pier, making solar ovens, and playground olympics (including sawing and hammering contests!).  It's a lot of hard, dirty work but it sure is a lot of fun!
Picture Perfect
Building the Golden Gate Bridge
One of my highlights of the summer was teaching tool usage. There's nothing more satisfying then walking a kid through a creative concept and having them be successful. This life skill - the ability to execute a creative thought and the confidence that results from it - is the biggest reward for us 'kid folk'. Having a child exclaim, "I DID it!" after they sink that last nail or cut through a board with that last stroke of the saw really touches your heart. They then take that ability and new confidence out into the world. 
Scott Installing the World's Smallest Sink (Thanks, Jak!)
Obsessed with Squirrels!
Solar Powered Fort

Tess and I had such fun hanging out with our old friends in Antioch (Scott, Lianne, Sumi, and Chrisy). Many thanks to Scott for helping to complete Dolly's transformation. Had a blast hanging out in the Antioch heat eating ice cream, onion dip, and TJ's chips with you, buddy.  Also had some nice visits with my brother Daniel and sisters Robin and Cheryl. 
Fun Visit to Point Isabel (Dog) Park

Super Special Spectacular Sunday Crew
Other wonderful summer memories: Tess and I watching 4th of July fireworks from the top of an AP fort; catching up with old friends at the Lara Family Reunion in Penngrove; hanging out with Clara and Sarah at the kite festival; spending time with my AP peeps having spontaneous fun; my birthday day starting with Corine & Jak at Mama's Royal Cafe, lunch with Aunt Helen, and dinner and hot tub with Patty and Dave; and so many more to make it a terrific season. 
I Love These Crazies (AP Staff)!


Tess and I departed Berkeley on August 25th, stopped over in Mt. Shasta at Meg's, then home to Anacortes to reunite the family once again! It was great to be at our new home just in time to grab the end of summer and set out on a cruise of the San Juan Islands!