Tutak goes North
Not to be outdone by Alan and his merry band, Tutak has invited me to come along for a summer cruise "Up North, like".
The
 little Fisher hopes to coast hop up the East Coast sampling the 
delights of rocky drying harbours and mining inlets before either 
turning left for the Cally Canal, time permitting, or just keeping on 
and going for Shetland and the longest day.
The basic plan is to circumnavigate Bonny
 Scotland but it is not laid in stone and if I spend too much time in 
the pub or get waylaid at "RockNess" (Scotland's answer to Glastonbury) I
 might have to return next year and finish it off.
I have 
allotted 100 days for my summer cruise this year as I always seem to run
 out of time.  Tutak will be spruced up on the way, got to have 
something to do.  Anyway the new radios, charts and pilots have severely
 dented my polish budget, every budget actually.  Fortunately I blagged a
 liferaft of someone who isn't sailing this year.
I have been 
busy
 road testing my pilot chair: it swivels, tilts, slides, reclines, has 
adjustable lumbar support, seat belt, head rest, adjustable arm rests, 
wet weather cover, adjustable suspension.  In fact the same company make
 seats for one of the lifeboats.  I left out the heated seat and back 
but I might get that sorted as the pads can be retro fitted.  I 
sometimes feel there is a little draught around the small of my back, 
how old I am getting these days.  Sleep in it you can but I do need to 
set my alarms when at sea.  Depending on where I am I allow between 4 
and 10 minutes shut eye.  Indeed it was a little difficult to fit it 
into Tutak's tiny wheelhouse but in it is and I am very pleased.  You 
may often walk down the path and see me snoozing, hiding up from the boy
 "Jack", granddad, granddad, where are you, grrrr.
I
 hear Alan and crew had a rough crossing and sick was everywhere.  I 
remember journey bringing Tutak back from the West Country and wondering
 if I had bought the right boat, so sick the tubby thing made me and the
 crew.  We get on all right now as long as I keep my belly full, just 
like this fat little Eskimo, which is where the name comes from.  
Ahhhhh. 
  
Tutak leaves North
The day 
came and lines were cast aside for a few months.  Tears were shed and I 
was off, first stop - French Marine of Brightlingsea for some engine 
anodes.  I wasn't feeling too enthusiastic with a sore throat and runny 
nose so I made do with the genoa.  Dave and Maz were seen near St Peters
 as I sorted the last of the stores.  Anchoring
 of the Stone at Mersea I  took the dinghy to the hard in Brightlingsea 
and hobbled to the engine  shop.  With three anodes in my pocket the 
outboard was fired up again  and the damp journey (wind over tide) made 
back to Tutak.

Rather sweet is the octagonal (or is it hex) residence of the  Brightlingsea harbour master.

The all tide landing saves a squelchy walk up the hard.

Bateman's Tower overlooking the entrance to Brightlingsea creek.
Sailing
 out the anchor I took the last of the tide inshore by Colne point and 
past Clacton.  By the radar tower the tide had turned and the iron 
topsail was used to help the dying wind.  Took the tide via the short 
cut into the Walton Backwaters and found a pleasant anchorage in the 
Dardanelles, such a wonderful name don't you think.  Do I recognise the 
name from one of Ransome's books?
The reason for choosing this 
pleasant spot is because when the tide ebbs it leaves a bank cutting off
 the entrance to the pool and leaves it nice and quiet with no swell to 
disturb my slumber.  The next day was a bit of a rushed start as I had 
forgotten to set the wake up alarm.  No breakfast for me, up with the 
anchor and out of my private pool before the tide cut me off from the 
outside world again.  I took the same short cut that I used on the way 
in.  I think it caused some consternation to the other boaters, I guess 
they don't see many yachts avoiding the buoyed channel.  Perhaps they 
thought I had gone the wrong way.  Trinity House's ship Galitea was 
towing in a lightship as I approached the Harwich deep water channel. 
 
Being
 a nice sunny day I managed to snap the old Landguard Fort.  Been around
 a long time by all accounts but I certainly remember some Hitler war 
gun emplacements from my childhood exploring days.

Once
 across the bumpy channel, not too busy for once, it was time to play 
lobster pot avoidance.  I must confess to having a bee in my bonnet 
about poorly marked pots and gear.  This years positions for the buoy 
marking the Deben and Ore entrances had just been broadcast by the 
Coastguard which was rather fortunate.  I plotted the positions on the 
paper charts as well as the chartplotter for good measure.  The Deben 
entrance is rather nice this year with no bits to make you need a stiff 
drink after. 
 
So
 relaxed was the way in that Bawdsey manor managed to find its way into 
the viewfinder too.  I do believe this was taken over by the war 
department, was it something to do with RADAR as there used to be a 
large mast here a few years ago?
Up the Deben I beached the boat 
near a place called the Rocks where the bottom was scraped and washed.  
Only the port side, the other side will have to wait as the changing 
wind had made the anchorage uncomfortable.  I made my way down river and
 dropped the hook just upstream of the mooring at Felixstowe Ferry ready
 for leaving the river the next day.Once out of the way of the knolls on the bar the turn was made northwards towards Orford Haven.  The pots are better marked round here and the route
 was not too stressful.  Around Boathouse point there is one of many 
Martello towers with some adjacent rather colourful residences.
 
There
 is no beach here, the rocks line the steep to shore, I was going to 
investigate but there were folk fishing.  Another couple of miles and 
the entrance to the Ore was visible with the red and white Haven buoy 
just where it should have been.  From this buoy the next one to find is 
the red Oxley.  In the waves and white water of the bar this is 
sometimes awkward to see but I spied it eventually and started to head 
for it.  Things didn't seem right thought the bearing was wrong, I 
re-scanned and yes there it was and a very quick course change made us 
safe.  What I was aiming for was a red fisherman's shelter on the beach!
 
Once
 on the right course the green Weir buoy was easier to find because it 
is the last one in the pattern and with the first two sorted....  
everything should be fine just fine.  I was trying to stay in line 
between the two buoys but the tide was taking me south at a fair lick.  
The depth was not good and the tops of the shingle knolls were only a 
few metres away, time for another sharp course alteration.  With that 
sorted and the Weir buoy passed the next thing is to avoid the shoal 
patches in the middle of the channel by the point.  The tide was 
hurtling in and the temptation is to slow down but this reduces your 
steerage way just when you need it most with the swirling waters over 
topping the bar.  It's a toss up, slow down and give yourself more time 
or keep the revs on  and wait to be spat out on the other side.  I 
bottled out and cut the engine to tick-over but Tutak was still doing 
9.4 knots, flippin 'eck.  We managed to negotiate the troublesome bits 
and once in between the solid river banks things calmed down a bit, 
still fast, but OK.
I took the left branch round Havergate Island
 and dropped the hook in Abraham's bosom, rather appropriate me thinks. 
 Stiff drinks all round then.  The next couple of days had me taking the
 dinghy back down to the bar at low water.  What a special place, 
beautiful on a calm day but a veritable maelstrom in a storm.  I took 
the opportunity of the clean shingle beaches to spruce up the tender, 
dirty and barnacled she was.  Tutak's teak bulwarks were also a mess and
 green to boot, I managed to get half of one side scrubbed and oiled.  
Mike Carruthers, Tutak II's original owner never used varnish, always 
scrubbed and oiled so I keep up his tradition.  Anyway, varnish wouldn't
 last very long with what I make the old boat do.
A new day 
dawned and I was keen the take the South winds to the north and make for
 Great Yarmouth.  I would need the engine to make against the flood in 
the river so I started it up and immediately something sounded not 
right.  There was a strange but muted whine or hum but where was it 
coming from.  Checking the gauges found the battery monitor not showing 
many amps charge and lifting the floor of the wheelhouse it became 
evident that the noise was emanating from the alternator.  I stopped the
 engine and got the meter out and did some checks, which showed 
problems, off with the alternator for a more serious look.  It was not 
something that I was going to be able to fix.  What to do, carry on and 
try to have it fixed or run for home where I know I can get things done 
easily.  Only a long day sail back to Tollesbury so off we set with the 
alternator on the cabin floor and three quarters of a battery to get me 
back.  I sailed as far as I could to the bar and used the motor to the 
bar itself.  Once out it was a fetch to Harwich and the Naze Tower and 
once round the corner the sheets were eased a little for the last bit 
past Clacton and Mersea Island and home waters.  Made the berth, just, 
at a lovely 04.30 which was a little late on the tide.  Tutak looked 
abandoned as I didn't even bother to tie up as the tide had already 
gone.
I spent some time in the sailing club the following day 
explaining my presence and having the Michael extracted.  I managed to 
sooth this experience with copious quantities of ale, having not imbibed
 for a week, apart from the hard stuff of course.
Monday the 23rd
 had me running round to the repair man who will check and replace the 
diode pack and order me a new alternator too.  I think a spare is a good
 idea as with no electric there is no TV, no internet, oh and the engine
 won't start either!
Stay tune for Tutak's next departure. 
Tutak goes North part 3
So
 where was I?  Ah yes the Ore, I was going to Iken Cliffs to do some 
more cleaning but time is passing but I did manage to reset my 100 days 
to zero when I left again.  This time with a spare alternator as well as
 having the old one fixed up.  So I ended up anchoring at the back of 
the spit that separates the sea from the river.  Whatever went on here, 
those look like serious shelters and the Pagodas, weren't they something
 to do with the A bomb testing.
The lighthouse looks quite quaint here but on a stormy night it looks less so from the other side believe me.
The lovely village of Orford with its Keep and Church Tower. 
The
 colourful houses of Aldeburgh at the far end of the spit, with the wind
 starting to pick up.  We were due to have 5-6s from behind, wicked.  So
 we left the Ore and were going to stop at Great Yarmouth but so well 
was the boat going that we decided to carry on for Wells next the Sea.  
So having left a 0745 we entered the tortuous Wells channel at 0400 the 
next morning some 21 hours later.  What a sail, when the wind hit 28 
knots and the genoa pole exploded into matchsticks, brilliant.
 
Tutak goes North Part 4
As we hurtled up the coast one of Rex's blessed golf balls landed amidst all the white horses.

And these cranes at Great Yarmouth's new outer harbour, synchronised lifting perhaps.
The
 familiar Wells harbour was a welcome site let me tell you.  The wind 
might have been behind but once we turned the corner to do the North 
Norfolk coast bit it was on the nose, lots of it.  Still being night you
 couldn't see the waves, they were only little if you sailed on the 
beach.
Never
 have I seen so many buoys marking a channel.  Wind farm work boats use 
the outer Wells harbour now and the Commissioners have seen fit to mark 
the channel.  Before you used to go over the bar.  It has moved much 
since my last visit and there wasn't too much water to spare.
Good old Wells' beach huts, quintessentially middle class don't you think.
Sands
 on the bar, miles of sand on the bar, and talking of bars I went ashore
 for a drink and watched the Grand Prix while I was at it.
The 
wind was due to have some north in it so I wasn't keen to linger and get
 stuck in Wells, so off we went the following day for another lovely 
sail.  This time for the seldom visited Wainfleet roads in the Wash 
where one can anchor behind the sandbanks for a night whilst awaiting 
for ones tide.  Bright and early the next day I spyed this big tent.  I 
recognised it as rather similar to the one I took baby Jack to last year
 in Bognor.  I guess they are all much of a muchness and Butlins at 
Skegness was not going to be too different.
And
 then onwards forever onward to the Humber.  I hadn't made up my mind 
what to do, Grimsby is a locked harbour and that restricts timings.  In 
the end I decided to anchor behind Spurn Point after passing this little
 remnant from the Hitler war and perhaps before.
I
 anchored near the pilot station on a shelf out of the rushing tides of 
the great Humber.  A survey vessel joined me for the night and we both 
set off together in the morning.
I don't know where he was bound but for me it was Flamborough Head.
The
 last time I tried to round this little beasty I had to turn back, 
refuel and try again only a little differently this time.  Tidal timing 
can be critical to deal with this foe, especially when the weather isn't
 with you.
The
 lighthouse atop the chalky honeycombed cliffs.  I was going to stop 
here for the night at the North Landing but I bottled out as the wind 
was gusting badly off the tops.  I am now residing in the bay of Filey 
and rolling badly in the scend.  I reckon I will have to put the kedge 
out to keep me into the small swell.  Swell, it is barely a ripple but 
old Tutak likes to rock and roll.  
 
Tutak in Scotland - 6
I sit here with little to do as I cross the Firth of Forth.  I crack on to reach the Shetlands if the weather lets me.  Then the journey back can be more relaxed and I can spend a bit more time visiting places.  I must say I was very impressed with Amble and the working harbour of Eyemouth was brilliant.  The entrance after a night sail was rather daunting for me used to mud, sand and depths of a metre or so.  To have sixty metres and then a rock ready to rip the bottom of your boat doesn’t sit too well with me.  
I
 was going to anchor in the bay next door but the swell, which seemed to
 get bigger nearer the shore, was driving me on so I bottled out and 
headed for the harbour.  When I 
say harbour what I really mean is a reef and rock strewn bay where some 
gallant chap decided might be a good place to park his boat.  The entrance leads you close past the cliff base with, and I kid you not, a rock called the “Luff Hard Rock”.  This
 will hopefully ensure you don’t tangle with the Hinker or Hurkar reefs a
 few metres away and believe me you would not want to tangle with that 
pair.  Next and right on the leading line is the Inner Buss.  You
 will not get him mixed up with his bigger brother the Outer Buss Craig,
 never the less the sea will brake menacingly over it in the right 
(wrong) conditions.
There
 is an anchorage in here just before you actually enter the harbour 
proper but I for one could not face it being so close to the reefs and 
rocks, not to mention the beach and the cliffs.  So
 onward into the haven and you pass between the breakwaters and the 
distance between the two is only 20 metres so don’t meet a big fishing 
boat coming out cause there aint much room.  They call this the “canyon” for some reason.  Once
 through the shelter is immediate, the high cliffs and ramparts kill the
 wind instantly and any swell that dared follow you in has dispersed on 
the surge beach.  I tied up the old girl to a vessel moored alongside the east quay and scampered up the ladder to have a reccy.  I was keen to see it there was any space in the inner leg where they have a pontoon.  I don’t mind walls but I was tired and didn’t fancy staying up till the tide left us to settle in the mud.  Fortunately
 a yacht from the Royal Northumberland was just leaving so I nicked his 
slot, right in front of a Fisher 34 and 25 rafted up.  I
 left them bow to bow to get to know each other and slept the sleep of a
 thankful sailor, after, of course a rather large medicinal dose of Jura
 (a fine whiskey) to calm the nerves unsettled by the entry.

 
Luff Hard on the Left and Buss Craig on the right and the submerged minor Buss in the middle!
Close up of Luff Hard Rock!
Entrance locally called the Canyon.
I spied what I thought was a Ferro Cement Fisher.
This one is named "Spirit of Barclaycard" or something.
The local maritime museum opposite my berth.  I was worried when the gun ports opened in the morning.
The next day had me out and about making ready for the few hours crossing the Firth.  Bearing in mind that Eyemouth is a working harbour it is never the less quite clean.  It is a Trust Harbour and belongs to the town, may it stay that way.  They also seem to like having visiting yachts, unusual this as not all working harbours mix with leisure very well.  To get to the point, as I was singling up I noticed my propeller.  It is an odd thing to see when the tide is in at Tollesbury, in fact, I don’t think it has ever happened before.  Anyway the reefs and rocks didn’t seem quite as bad in the daylight after a good sleep.

 
I made my way out and past St. Abb’s Head and out into the Firth of Forth, spying in the distance “Bass Rock”.  Past the Ilse of May in the low cloud and by now the swell was getting the better of me and I decided to run for some shelter.  Figuring the Tay would be the best bet I altered course and with the swell now behind things calmed down.  I don’t like 22 knots on the nose with a 2 metre swell, oh no.  A few hours later and here I am between the road and rail bridges of the river Tay, Dundee they locals call it, I call it bliss.  With the hook down and buoyed I shall sleep tonight.
It
 was not a day for taking pictures, the front got lower and lower and 
eventually by about nine in the evening the sun came out to stretch his 
legs before saying goodnight.
Just enough time to snap the Tay Rail Bridge and a rather nice merchant's house.
Stonehaven tomorrow perhaps if the wind serves, it is supposed to come round to the SW sometime soon!
 
 
Tutak in Scotland 7
Well
 what a nice interlude was had between the bridges but the north forever
 calls so we set forth again in the morning bound for Ratray head.  The 
wind still hadn't gone into the SW like it was supposed to for the last 
two days so a moderate easterly was out lot.  We motor sailed past the 
castle. 
The
 Tay tides run on the ebb and there were some remarkable overfalls or 
standing waves on the way out of the estuary.  Enough to use the full 
travel on the suspension seat and the seat belt came in handy too.  But 
punch out we did, eventually, and we took our tide up the coast.  With 
the tide turned against us later in the day we put into Stonehaven to 
wait for the change.  About a three hour stopover and an hours sleep and
 a two hour chat with the harbour master.  The harbour was full of 
dinghies and sea kayaks and the sea scouts with there heavy pulling 
boats, girls too!
Next
 planned stop was an anchorage just behind Peterhead's north head and it
 took a while to get round to it as the tide was against us again.  I 
didn't fancy it, last time I saw water like that was when I was into 
white water kayaking.  Peterhead it was then but on turning into the 
south-easterly swell with the 3 knots of tide going into it, oh my.  Off
 with the auto pilot and I stood at the wheel picking my way through, up
 and over the rather large and steep waves.  So that's what it means 
when the pilot book warns of dangerous overfalls even with a moderate 
wind against tide.  I got permission from Peterhead radio to enter the 
harbour and never has an entrance been so inviting.  I promise I will 
never complain about the Wallet again. 

 
Peterhead
 was once just a bay and they built some massive breakwaters and made it
 into a large harbour.  There is a marina in the SW corner and once 
inside the secondary moles perfect peace is to be found.  I fell asleep 
for three hours before leaving to catch the next fair tide to take on 
Ratray head.
Imposing
 isn't it!  I was expecting towering cliffs not realising that some 
parts of Scotland look more like Essex.  It's the reef extending 
seawards that is the menace together with the change in direction of the
 coastline.  Even though is was slackish and fairly benign I still gave 
it a healthy clearance.  A couple of more corners and Fraserburgh was in
 view. 
With
 its imposing lighthouse.  Around the next head and the swell from the 
SE turned into a swell from the West as we were now on the top with a 
few miles of fetch from the Inverness side.  Of course the wind had now 
gone SW which made it a beat again and it was lively round the endless 
headlands.  I was aiming for Buckie to see Chriss who was doing a bit of
 fishing on the Spey but enough's enough and Whitehills will do me just 
fine.   So after 33 hours and 128 miles we crossed the threshold of 
Whitehills harbour and were met by Bertie (HM) and shown to a peaceful 
berth.
Dog tired I showered and got ready for a night on the 
town, feasting at the Cutty on Angus beef before retiring to the 
Seafield Arms and their second Thursday of the month folk and 
traditional music night.  Guinness and Speyside  scotch  were copiously 
quaffed before bedtime.  I slept well.
Next
 morning Chris turns up and we have a gut buster Scottish breakfast with
 lashings of black pudding before I have to think about the next low 
coming over and whether I can make it to Wick before it does. 
 
 
Tutak goes north - sea area "Fair Isle".
Doesn't the sun ever set round here, apparently not much.  Well we left 
Whitehills with a tank full of fuel.  I had thought about drying out 
alongside their wall to scrub off the starboard side but the weather 
seemed fair so off we went towards Wick.
The entrance is tight in Whitehills but it is very secure because of it.
Looking back to the lifeboat shed, but  don't the levels look all wrong on this one, they are the same, believe me.
In
 the Moray Firth there is the Beatrice Oil Field, they are playing 
around with this one I think, pumping water into the wells to force the 
remaining oil out.  There was a new rig on sight too.
Production Platform, Beatrice Oil Field, Morray Firth.
Jacky Platform with supply ship being unloaded.
I think it is doing something to a well head as the yellow thing is in the sea, bit difficult to tell.
Passing
 the oil fields off the north coast I spied a little "geo" or a slit in 
the cliffs where boats moor.  They call it Lybster and  a merry time was
 had finding the place as the Lat/Long were wrong in the pilot book!  
Never take anything for granted.  I weedled my in, the entrance in 
narrow, with rocks on the starboard side and a 180 at the bottom or you 
hit the surge wall.  Of course I was in a fisherman's berth and had to 
move but the Caithness boys are polite and chatty and sound like Ulster 
men, to be sure.  They gave me a lift up the cliff to the village but 
there was no-one at home to take my dues so I wandered back down the 
decline to the harbour.
Lybster,
 what a nice place and the folk are nice too, they have an accent like 
Ulstermen but they would say it the other way round of course.  I think 
we are in Caithness. 
Up at seven to catch the tide for the Firth,
 Pentland that is, most important to get the tides right with this one. 
 Used a lot of fuel for some reason, maybe it was a cold night and the 
heater came on!  Managed to sail for a few hours but it is quite 
important to arrive at a certain point when the tide does not cause too 
much turbulence even though it's neaps.  Having met the overfalls off 
Peterhead I did not want to meet the ones in the Pentland, thank you.
I
 managed to gain an hour and get to the turning point off the Pentland 
Skerries well before they became obnoxious so that was a result.  The 
sea turned from black to aquamarine, pretty though it was it didn't feel
 right.  Millions of cubic metres of water were moving where there was 
not room for it to move and it shifted in a mysterious manner.  An hour 
or two later the island of Copinsay lifted itself out of the sea and 
showed me its lighthouse.
The lighthouse is in the middle of this shot, just to be seen.
The image agreed with the one on the plotter so on we carried, past Copinsay and its Horse.
The overfalls off Mull Head were not playing today.
But I still gave the old brute a good offing, just in case.
Round into the Sound of Deer.
Round the Mull Head and past the conspicuous Monument, Deer Sound.
Don't you just love the funny bits on the cliffs. 
Twas
 a relief, to be honest, to get here in one piece and a large dram was 
called for as we made ready for the easterly gale that was due to arrive
 in a few hours time.  The anchorage needs to be quite good as the wind 
was due to veer severe gale 9 later.  Forty metres of chain out in 8 
metres of water, well dug in, with another 20 metres in reserve.   The 
other two anchors are made ready too, just in case!  Oh, and don't 
forget to buoy the anchors 'cause of all the old fish farm stuff on the 
bottom.  If I survive it will be Shetland next time, God willing.
Hopefully
 the tail of the front will enable me to catch the westerlies to the 
Shetlands in time for mid summer, assuming there are any spaces left! 
 
 
Tutak in the Shetlands
The wind blew for a couple of days and I kept my head down in Deer 
Sound.  I did try to get ashore for a look around but the landings were 
rock or a beach that meant wading for half a mile.
Off to the 
North West now to a place they call Pierowall and low and behold there 
is a pier just like a wall.  The day was misty with sunny intervals, not
 a day for the camera.  The tides were coming up for springs so careful 
attention was given to the tidal stream atlas and I sailed along at a 
couple of knots in a light breeze.  The tide was doing all the work as 
the ground speed was 4.5 knots.  Then in the distance the water seemed 
humped up and had a few breaking waves on the top.  What on earth is 
that I wondered, the ground speed had now risen to 10.8 knots.  The tide
 was hurtling through some narrows, huh, narrows, it's two miles wide 
here.  I wonder it there is a laundrette in Pierowall?  It wasn't too 
bad, the waves were fairly well spaced for a wicked roller coaster ride.
Pierowall
 is on the island of Westray and has a few pontoons to tie up to.  The 
shower is on the pier in the ferry waiting room.  Had a nice wee chat 
with the harbour master and might go back there on the way back from 
Shetland.
Next day was a hard motorsail beat to North Ronaldsay 
where I had intended to lay to anchor or pick up a visitor mooring.  It 
makes the jump to Fair Isle a bit shorter.  The engine was working hard 
against the swell at 2500rpm but below max revs at 3000.  I had the 
heater going as it was a bit chilly and I smelt smoke or something.  I 
ignored it thinking it was the heater firing up but it got worse  and 
then I saw the temperature gauge was off the scale.  Oops, off with the 
engine and start tacking.  I spied the mooring all alone in a windswept 
bay and it took me three goes to pick it up under sail.  Of course the 
wind had piped up to 18 knots now and in the process I lost my lovely 
bronze ended boat hook.  Drink, Feck as father Jack says.
For 
whatever reason, and I still don't know, the cooling water stopped.  The
 filter was clean and I changed the impeller just in case but nothing 
seemed to be amiss.  I had melted the waterlock and the short length of 
exhaust hose that joins it to the engine.  I just bypassed this and 
connected the outlet from the waterlock to the engine.  It's a bit loud 
and crackly but hey, it get me out of a hole.
I went ashore in 
the dinghy in the force 5 to see if I could recover the boat hook at the
 other end of the bay but no, I reckon that is in Norway now.  The tide 
had turned and it was letting a rather nasty swell into the bay and 
Tutak was rolling like a good 'un.  Getting back on board was 
interesting and required some exact timing.  I put another line onto the
 buoy but by now the waves had started to break and water was coming 
over the side.  Time to test the engine and get the hell out of here.
With
 the wind puffing from the SW I needed some shelter so I eased out of 
the bay and across the North Ronaldsay Sound into a lovely anchorage on 
Sanday called Otterswick.  Wick means bay apparently.  The engine was ok
 and everything seemed fine and after a good sleep so was I.
Next
 day had me swatting tides again and I somehow managed to make a mess of
 it because as soon as I stuck my nose out of the bay I was into the 
tide and away at a rate of knots.  It is just not possible to go against
 it and in the distance the water looked dreadful.  The next thing is 
that the auto pilot goes on strike and it tells me that there has been a
 "drive failure".  I really needed to hand steer the boat through the 
maelstrom that was ahead of me.  I shut the wheelhouse door and at first
 the waves were just big but minutes later they were not only big but 
breaking and coming from two directions.  Tutak was getting rolled 
rather badly on the occasions when I didn't know which wave to steer 
for.   I was taking a lot of water in the cockpit but luckily none was 
coming over the bow, just.  I was lucky  I think, if it had been a 
normal yacht it would have swept the deck and may have even swamped it, 
but Tutak's bow was designed to take that stuff, unlike me.  There was 
another race off Dennis Head and I was keen to clear that and get some 
sail up.  Imagine if the engine had died in that little lot.
I 
trimmed the boat to steer herself more or less in the right direction 
for Fair Isle whilst I tried to sort out the auto pilot.  It's no good 
without that, I can't steer for a thousand miles, no way, I just sit in 
my comfy chair and let the machines work.  Of course this mean taking 
the wheel off so the tiller had to be put to use for a change.  Turned 
out to be a failed connection in the back of the drive motor.  All fixed
 and back on course, turned out to be a bit of a hectic start to the 
day, let's hope it gets better.
That's
 Fair Isle in the distance and there is a bit of shipping but not proper
 lanes, just suggested courses.  It was such a nice day with a good 
breeze that by the time the island was abeam I just carried on for the 
Shetlands.
A
 few hours later had the saw teeth of Sumburgh Head abeam and the 
anchorage of Grutness Voe about a mile up the coast.  The book says give
 this gentleman a wide berth to avoid the race.  I gave it three miles 
and I was still unhappy.
Grutness
 Voe at sunset overlooking the airport at Sumburgh.  The eight o'clock 
to Edinburgh woke me up in the morning in time to set off for Lerwick.
The island of Bressay gives Lerwick shelter and this is the Light guiding you into the South Harbour.
The Navy were there to with two of their training vessels.  They were off to Stavanger in the morning.
Of course I arrived on carnival day and a lot of the locals had dressed up, at least I hoped they had.
There
 are trees in the Shetlands, don't let anyone tell you different.  They 
have school trips to come and see these from the outer islands.  "Look 
children this is a tree".
A
 good time was had in the Lerwick Boat Club and at one in the morning I 
was eating a kebab after rather a lot of whiskey.  The seagulls were 
having a rest on the Victoria Pier too.
They only give a weather 
forecast for 12 hours here with an outlook for the next twelve hours.  
Things can change rather quickly and apparently I brought the best sunny
 weather they have had in weeks, but it's gone this morning.  Loads of 
boats from Scandinavia here and coach parties, packs of bikers.  I will 
have to vacate my pontoon soon so that the cruise ship's tenders can 
come alongside to disembark. 
 
Tutak still in the Shetlands
Due
 to the melting of the exhaust I thought perhaps it might be good to 
order some new bits just in case it happens again.  Couple of days the 
man said.  Of course I wanted something that had to come from Holland so
 it will take a week but I didn't find that out until four days later.  I
 could have gone round the islands and had a looksee and come back but 
it's a bit late to do that now.
I moored alongside the cruise 
ship tender pontoons as there were not cruise ships in at the time but 
it was a bit tall and my fenders wouldn't work.  All right for the bloke 
next door, so I moved to the small boat dock and then had a big cat come
 and cuddle up.
Well I made it here for the longest day, it was a bit overcast but you can still see how light it is.
Went
 to the Shetland museum and had a good look round.  The boat section had
 some fine examples of their craft.  This one is a Shetland Model.
I even managed to see this one sailing and a fine sight it made too.
Things
 got a bit messy when the boats from the Bergen to Shetland Race came 
in.  A good time was had by all and my head is still a little sore to be
 honest.  Boy those guys can drink.
They
 race back again tomorrow and the vans with the bonded stores arrived 
this morning.  The seals were broken by lunchtime but I don't think the 
customs were that worried, they hadn't got the staff to take on 200 
Vikings in their cups.  Still, whiskey for £4 a litre, can't be bad.
Some
 boats are off to the Faeroes, some to Orkney, others will follow the 
race back to Bergen.  There are some serious bits of kit here and Tutak 
is the smallest boat by far.
Of course I spent some time upside 
down in someone's engine compartment mending their auto pilot and didn't
 by a drink all day and night and got supper too.
Itching to get 
off as it is a bit busy for a Tollesbury boy but the tall ships come in 
next week with the cruise ships too so I might see a bit more before the
 bits arrive. 
 
Shetlands - Muckle Flugga and the Out Stack
Well the bits for the exhaust arrived and I rushed off to pick them up 
and by late afternoon I was on my way again.  This time headed for the 
Out Skerries, three islands almost land locking a harbour in the middle.
  One of the uninhabited islands was up for sale a while back.
Of course there is a lighthouse and the sun is reflecting of the reflector, it's not actually on as it is still too light.
After
 a restful night I headed north again bound for Bala Sound but not 
before I was disturbed by the inter island morning flight.  I was 
anchored at the end of the grass strip runway and talk about short take 
off and landing!
Bala
 was a massive place in the herring times and the remains of the many 
quays can be seen.  This was just a sleeping place before the next jump 
to Harold's Wick where Tutak could have a rest whilst I went ashore.
The reason for this stop in the very north of the isles?
Remarkable
 stuff they have here, local boats and ones from Norway.  They used to 
import them from Norway as flat packs and we thought Ikea was modern!
Sadly
 a fishing boat was found near here with the engine running but the 
fisherman was not aboard.  Opinion has it that he launched his creel and
 went over with it, caught in the line.  Rather rolly and unpredictable.
  The coastguard asked us to keep an eye open for a body and there were 
quite a few boats looking.
These are the overfalls or Roost 
(race).  Today was very calm and benign and still it was here.  You 
don't come this far inshore on a bad day.
And
 here in the distance is the reason for the trip, to round the most 
northerly point of the British Isles before it becomes Scotland.  Muckle
 Flugga and the Out Stack.
And
 here we have it,  the Out Stack well and truly rounded.  Apparently Mrs
 Franklin came here looking for word of her husband from the whaling 
ships out of Shetland.  Why she went to the Out Stack I don't know 
unless she was looking for the ships.

How did they manage to build a lighthouse here I wonder.  It is nice today but days like this are few and far between normally.
Well it's downhill from now on and Sullom Voe is next.
The
 Ramna Stacks at the North West end of Sullom Voe.  Tide runs funny with
 this little lot.  I was headed for an abandoned fishing camp.  The 
boats used to pull up on the beach and rest up and resupply.  An eerie 
place, you could still feel the inhabitants going about their business.
Off
 again around the western side of the islands and feeling the Atlantic 
swell.  Out past the VE Skerries to avoid the races inshore and nearly 
out as far as Foula.  After a very long day we make it into Skelda Voe. 
 There is a small marina here, mainly for local boats but they do have a
 few places.  £10 per craft - for a week, but I anchored anyway.  This 
little tyke was checking me out.
The next stop will be either be Fair Isle or back to Orkney.   
 
Return to Orkney
So off we set south past Fair Isle, that will have to wait for another 
time as the weather was good for Orkney and in particular, Pierowall.  I
 have already visited and wanted to return.  The harbour and facilities 
have been improved with millions of euros.
Instead
 of flat sides to the extension they decided to have curved sections, 
presumably to act as a wave break.  You can get much swell in the bay in
 a storm from the NE. 
I actually found one of the famous white 
sand beaches right here in the bay and used it as a short cut back to 
the boat after finding a shop.  The road had started to melt, such was 
the uncharacteristic heat.  It wasn't that warm but the locals thought 
it was and were all indoors.  I reckon they use low melting point tar 
for the roads up here.
After
 a pleasant rest and looksee it was time for the off again, this time 
north up through the narrow passage between Westray and Papa Westray.  
The Papa Sound has overfalls but if you get the timing right (and I was 
determined to this time) they are not too bad.  I was so confident this 
time that I actually managed to get the camera out and here they are.  I
 guess we were tossed about for around ten minutes before being spat out
 on the other side in relatively good order. 
I
 guess they don't look much but these wee beasties were 2 metres high 
and had curling tops, but hey I have already survived much, much worse 
and I have the laundry bill to prove it. 
Anti clockwise round the
 top and down the west side of Westray, across the Sound, passing yet 
another significant light.  This one looked like it had been built out 
of Lego, not the light but the cliff.
Noup Head was the name of this one and lots of puffins live on the headland. 
Further
 down the coast came this memorial named after Kitchener.  There is a 
Military wreck just off the coast here and perhaps he went down with the
 ship, or maybe it's another Kitchener.  More googling to do me thinks.
Light was dimming now and I was blessed with a North Atlantic sunset, truly magnificent.
I
 was coming up for the Sound of Hoy, a place you don't want to arrive in
 at the wrong time.  I had been dawdling for some time now, pacing 
myself to arrive very near slack water.  When I say slack I mean 
slackish as the tide turns from 6 knots one way to 6 knots the other in 
less than the time it takes for me to cover the six miles.  In the end I
 was too late and had to open the throttle to max to make it in at all. 
 Rather tired I dropped the hook off Stromness and would sort out the 
mess in the morning. 
Stromness
 is only a wee village but its prominence comes from the ferry terminal 
from Scotland.  It has a supermarket and a filling station that sells 
red gas.  I also managed to get the Orkney flag at the rope shop.  The 
local butchers sold Chorizo and they actually made it on the premises. 
Bit runny for my liking but all the same it went down well. 
Several
 times a day the Hamna Voe RoRo turned up and the place livened up for a
 while before returning to its sleepy self.  Just to the right of the 
picture is Hoy, the island across the sound. 
Hoy
 is big and quite a few metres high and I was to have some fun with him 
in a day or two. I enjoyed my stay in Stromness and had my first 
lobster.  Island drifter  purchased three lobsters and a big crab from a
 local boat and with the help of Utube managed to cook 'em up real good 
and I would like to thank them for a wonderful experience. 
Most 
people were holed up in Stromness waiting for the SW sixes and sevens to
 blow through.  This was a good wind for me I thought as the wind would 
be firm but off shore for the north coast of Scotland towards Cape 
Wrath.  Yeah, right.
So I set off and timed the race in Hoy Sound just right and tipped my hat to Hoy's old man on the way out.
Don't you think that he bears a striking resemblance to Bart Simpson? 
That
 was the last picture I took for some time as things were to become a 
little hectic for the remainder of the day but more of that later. 
 
 
Across the top.
I didn't bother with the mizzen and had a few rolls on the genoa with a 
full main.  I reckoned that would be enough for the forecast winds.  A 
mile of so past Hoy and in its lee we were creaming along in 24 knots of
 wind.  There was the odd gust which made her round up and these started
 to become more frequent.  Then the wind speed alarm started to go off, 
just the odd beep at first.  This is set for 34 knots and things were 
starting to liven up.  Then the alarm went off and stayed going off, 
Tutak bravely held up for as long as she could but then said "bugger 
this" and dipped her cabin windows in the water.  This happens at about 
45 degrees on the compass inclinometer and it has never happened before.
  We were into new territory here and water was leaking in through the 
seals on the opening windows and the cockpit was rather full of water.  
There was nothing I could do about it as I was hanging on for dear life.
  Trouble was that she wasn't coming back up, you would have thought 
that once the wind had tilted the boat then it would skid off the 
slanted sails.  It might have done it the wind had been horizontal but 
this wind was coming from above, off the top of Hoy and curling straight
 down having been accelerated over the top.  She did come up, eventually
 and the wind topped out at 36 knots.  I made best speed away from the 
island and its lee, preferring the open sea any day.
I wasn't 
feeling so good and the wave action was making me feel a bit queasy.  
Normally if I eat something I am OK but not this time.  I had frightened
 myself sick and hugged my favourite bucket for an hour or so.  After 
several hours of constant 28 knots on a broad reach surfing down the 
waves I was still miles off the north coast of Scotland and wasn't that 
keen to get too close either.  Just in case there were more 
down-draughts of the mountains.  The autopilot couldn't keep a good 
course in these rather extreme conditions and it was down to me.  I 
found this rather hard work as I rarely do any steering at all.  I had 
another session with my favourite bucket but as the day wore on and I 
hadn't died yet my confidence was starting to return.  As we got further
 west the waves did even out a bit which allowed the autopilot to take 
over for a spell.  In one of these periods of rest-bite I played with 
the video function on the camera to see if I could capture the essence 
of the sail.
As
 we neared our destination the wind actually dropped below 26 knots, a 
positive zephyr compared to earlier.  Loch Eriboll was our destination 
that day, make it we did and thankful I was.
 
Loch Eriboll and the Cape.
After a day like today you can imagine I was rather pleased to see the Whiten Head which guards the entrance to Loch Eribloll.
This
 Loch is a stopping point before or after the Cape.  It is a long way 
from anywhere and quite remote.  The tides have to be worked round these
 parts as it is very lumpy off the Cape in anything of a wind over tide 
even in moderate conditions. 
Sea
 caves further in and I wished I had brought the kayak with me again.  
It would be wonderful to spend a day or three exploring places like 
this.
The best anchorage for the wind and conditions was going to
 be the south Ard Neakie where an isthmus joins what would have been and
 island to the shore.  On the island is a limekiln, behind which is the 
quarry and in front is the loading pier.  I guess it was fired by 
charcoal from the wooded hills nearby.
 A trip ashore found me looking down the top of the kiln. 
And then up the bottom. 
It
 occurred to me that there are two different types of arches on the 
kiln, perhaps from two periods with the flat arch being a later 
addition.  There does appear to be a join and different stone where one 
would expect it this were so but....  And what did the locals want with 
industrial quantities of quicklime? 
By midday two other boats had joined me having made the Cape from the South.
As I investigated further and found a gaggle of old Listers that were once in a shed, the roof and walls having long gone. 
What I would have done to get this back to Tollesbury. 
I
 suppose I could have cut some trees down and rolled it onto the jetty 
and waited for the tide but it is still a fair old lump.  Hey ho. 
Soon
 it was time for the Cape, for some reason it instils fear and dread 
into mariners and I was no exception.  I made a good offing of about 
five miles and when I found the conditions to be not too bad I cut 
inshore a mile or so and eventually rounded about a mile and a half of 
the West corner.
You
 can just see the light and the ship underneath it.  This was from the 
north.  Don't forget you can click on the picture to enlarge it and then
 some if you click again.  I hit the back button to return to the blog 
page. 
Choppy but the seas not as big on the west side with the tide now in my favour to smooth the water a bit. 
The landscape was so different on the West coast.
The entrance to the maze of islets and fiord like inlets with odd looking volcanoes in the middle distance. 
And as the sun began to set the pink glow spread all around. 
It
 was my intention to make for Inlochbervie but with a nice wind I headed
 further south for the landlocked fiords of Loch a' Chadh-fi, where Cape
 Adventure has its set up.  English Rose VI, the big ocean ketch was out
 of the water.
Wow, nice boat and we had made the Cape. 
 
Portree and beyond.
I awoke early the next morning for some reason.  I felt all right so I 
tested the legs and they seemed to work too.  A slug of caffeine with a 
large tot of whiskey (well I am in Scotland) and we were away.  There 
were some magnificent cloud formations over the tops of the big hills 
and the sun rose and rose again after each peak as we went into its 
shadow.
Once back out into the open sea we passed by the usual plethora of lights, this one being Stoerhead.
Followed by the Rhubha R`e'dh Light.  I think we're now talking the Gaelic here and I've done my best with the accenty things.
Again
  it was my intention to make for Loch Ewe.  Having been before I was 
keen to see it again and explore a bit but the wind was once again keen 
to have me south.  So Loch Gairloch it was and the next one down almost.
  The wind sent us to Flowerdale where I was going to anchor but a large
 ship had its generator going.  It was not going to be a quiet night so I
 made for Loch Kerry a mile or so away and dropped the hook there 
instead.
Flowerdale
 from the anchorage in Loch Kerry, you can see the offending ship.  I 
took the dinghy to shore in Flowerdale to have a look round and possibly
 arrange to get some diesel.  The day after was the Saturday and the 
Harbour Master was taking his yacht racing so no chance of any fuel that
 day or the next.  Nay bother I said in me best Scottish accent.  I'm 
almost taken as a local now my red beard is a foot long.  I'll be taking
 to my kilt soon!  Had a problem with the dinghy on the way back to the 
boat and almost capsized it.  I have the habit of winding the outboard 
to full throttle and sitting forward and getting it on the plane.  
Steering is done by gentle leaning or heavy leaning on one corner of the
 transom for sharp turns.  We were doing just fine and about 10 knots 
when the bow just fell into the water and I just managed to get aft 
before  too much water came in and we sank.  Two pesky dolphins 
(Flippin' and 'Eck are their names) were playing under the boat and 
upsetting the hydrodynamics somewhat.  Gave me a turn I'll tell you.  
They followed me back to Tutak (who I swear was chuckling) but got bored
 as my speed had slowed.
Off
 again the next day after a quiet night and Flippin' and 'Eck saw us out
 of the Loch before returning to bother someone else.  Rona was the next
 light for us to see, on an island of the same name.
The
 echo sounder went on the blink here as it doesn't like it when it gets 
deep.  Anything approaching 100 metres and it shuts its eyes, bit like 
me really.  The only disconcerting thing is it comes up with random 
numbers occasionally and sometimes it say things like 2.3 metres and 
shelving.  This causes some panic as I double check the chart and the 
plotter just to make sure.  This is also a submarine exercise area and 
it is prudent to listen to the "sub facts and gun facts" on the wireless
 in the morning.
I had decided to have a look at Portree as I had
 run out of beer and crisps and it looked a likely place for restocking.
  No diesel though as it comes by can from the depot and it was shut for
 the weekend.  I rate Portree, almost as pretty as Tobermory and a damn 
sight less crowded and far less pretentious.
Looking back I 
spotted a large pod of dolphins this time off Rassay and they were 
mobbing old Tutak on every side.   I spent an hour trying to get a good 
photo and only partly succeeding.  I completely forgot about the video 
function on the camera.
The
 entrance to Portree's harbour is between some pretty high bits of land 
and just before this cleft the internet said it was on.  Great, there is
 a "3" hotspot in the middle of the Sound of Rassay just outside 
Portree.  I managed to download some emails but that was it before we 
lost the signal.  I have been out of range since Orkney.
Portree from the visitor's moorings, paid for by honesty box at the lifeboat station and only £10
A view of the harbour from the main street over the roof tops.
The next time will tell of the water covering the cabin sole and me in the deepest part of the loch at 129 metres! 
 
Portree to Oban
Portree, yes nice place Portree and a lot of other people thought so to 
after the C Columbus turned up.  I left just in time, bound across the 
sound for Rassay.
I
 was supposed to be meeting a fellow from the Navitron renewables forum 
at his croft on Rassay.  He powers it by micro hydro turbines and a wind
 turbine.  He is experimenting with other things to like pigs and stuff.
  Half way across the sound I glanced below to check the barometer only 
to see the cabin sole was under water.  Oh dearey dearey me I thought to
 myself, 350 feet under us and not a fine shelving beach in 20 miles.  
It is going to cost a fortune to salvage this one.  Turning on both 
pumps I checked the salinity of the offending wet stuff - fresh, that's 
OK then I definitely only have 50 gallons of that.  I had of course just
 filled up and the commercial hose only just fitted the filler and was 
rather powerful.  Not really designed for filling up yachty tanks and 
mine is a bag made by Air Cushion of Southampton.  I had managed to un 
seal the seams, stitching was fine. 
Anyway I had a lovely day on 
Rassay looking at the Lister Startomatic and the hydro site.  He keeps 
himself very busy by working week on week off for CalMac on the local 
ferry, running the croft, sheep, pigs, chickens etc and keeps a rather 
good blog going called http://lifeattheendoftheroad.wordpress.com/
in case you can't sleep one night.
Spent
 the night in a safe anchorage about a mile away in a geo, a cleft 
between the cliffs. Getting in was a bit tight as the chartplotter did 
not agree with my eyeballs and guess who won?  Next day it was off to 
the Skye boat centre to find an engineer to cure my leaky injectors that
 were starting to cause a stink.
On the way I passed the conning tower of a Sub.
The
 I spied another one and I reckon they are engine houses and food stores
 for the fish farms for the more open stretches of water. 
Then it was the Dam Busters and a C130 or derivative as it came low following the course of the sound.
The
 Skye Boat Centre was where it was supposed to be which was a relief and
 the dilapidated pontoon may have seen military service somewhere.  The 
engineer came down and I explained the problem and that I didn't have 
spanners large enough, we are talking of 1&1/2"and 2" here and not 
even I carry those on board.  He went off and came back with a bucket 
full of all the large spanners he could find.  It was obvious that he 
was not confident with the job so I showed him what to do and I got the 
job done and he learnt something and we had a good chat.  No money 
changed hands and that is fine by me.  You do have to be rather self 
sufficient up here and I wish I had spent more time planning for 
breakdowns.
By now the tide was high enough for me to take the 
channel out of this otherwise dead end.  I think we got down to 1.2 
metres under the keel and it was rock underneath.  I still can't get my 
head round it and wished I had a steel bottom.  By evening the Skye 
Bridge hove into view and some folk still bemoan its building, and I for
 one don't blame them.
I anchored just behind the bridge and had a pleasant sleep but not before the fantastic light enabled me to catch these two. 
I rather like this one and I spent too long looking at the sky that night but it was rather splendid. 
Next
 morning I hauled up the anchor and went to the landing pontoon at Kyle 
to sort out some fuel and see if I could find some water containers for 
the use of.  The hardware store thought they had some but no, sold out. 
 Fuel was arranged for the afternoon at 13oohrs.  Fuel can be a problem,
 many places are commercial and not open at weekends.  Other places the 
minimum tanker delivery is 500l or by container which can be a fag 
hauling those around.
This one looked promising I thought as I 
hauled myself up the 20ft ladder to the top.  Once secure I went back 
aboard and changed into dirty clothes as I had a feeling......
Donald,
 the relief HM, did his best and turned the pressure down and put a thin
 nozzle on the hose for me but even he couldn't stop the drips (DRIPS) 
as the hose was lowered down to the deck.  That was before I had pulled 
the trigger on the nozzle.  I had three 25l cans to fill up first and 
then about 100l to fill the main tank.  The nozzle was a bit sticky and 
didn't shut off straight away so that was 2 litres of diesel all over me
 and the cockpit.  The pressure once I had opened the valve again made 
the fuel hit the bottom of the can and it came straight back out over me
 and the cockpit again.  Feathering the trigger gently had the job done 
and we were all set for a few more miles apart from me reeking of 
diesel. 
There is a NATO pier at Kyle and this little thing just 
came and landed somewhere and then it just disappeared, perhaps they 
rolled it into a shed or something.
I
 drifted down the loch on the little wind as I cleaned the boat and 
myself before having a proper dip and a walk ashore as I waited for the 
tide in the narrows.  I found some amazing flora clinging onto rock and 
some vivid colours. 
I
 met the Glenelg Ferry going through the narrows.  I had thought this 
was now a museum what with the bridge but no, the cheeky monkey came 
straight for me and I had to fire up the motor and get out of his way.

That
 night I dropped the hook near Armadale Bay, I say near because the bay 
was full of mooring and it was getting dark and I was tired so I confess
 I chucked a heap of chain over the side and went to bed having set all 
the alarms.  Those being, deep water, shallow water, if I move more that
 60 yards from charted position.  I didn't and we set off to find 
Ardnamuchan Point made famous by the shipping forecast. 
Ardnamurchan
 Light in all its glory, I don't know what the wind turbine is doing 
there, it is not a big one. Once round the point we made for Tobermory 
and the Training Ship Pelican of London was doing the same thing. 
I
 took a look round the congested harbour and headed out.  Quaint it may 
be but it has been ruined by too many moorings and not for me.  I took 
the high water channel out as it saved a bit and I was now keen to get 
to Salen and some peace.  I spent the next day in Salen bay and quiet 
and peaceful it was too. 
Off we went now heading for Oban after 
much dithering.  It was now so busy with yachts, it seems like 
Ardnamurchan Point is a barrier preventing most of the boats going 
north.  It feels more like the south coast now and one has to keep ones
 eyes peeled.  The route led through a gap between a point and a reef 
further out.  Plenty of water and everyone else seemed to be doing it.  I
 kept a bit off the shore as there were some tidal swirls going on and I
 didn't want to make a hash of things.  One also has to keep an eye open
 for the ferry traffic out of Oban as they use this route and hurtle 
about.  So right in the middle of negotiating this and not checking for 
ferries, I hear this noise, a deep booming noise and I think something 
is happening to the engine or prop shaft.  It gets louder and I can feel
 the vibration now and for some reason I look behind.  I wish I had done
 this earlier because overtaking me not a hundred yards away is the 
Caladonian Macbrayne "Clansman" doing, according to the AIS, 15.4 knots.
This is the Isle of Mull but it is the same size and this one is 1/4 mile away. 
He
 didn't have room to give me any more space because of the reef and I 
couldn't get out of the way because of the rocks off the point.  I 
turned into his wake as soon as he had passed and rode the waves.
On
 entering the north channel in Oban Bay the same problem occurs but this
 time the width is even smaller and very twisty, I made sure I was the 
only one this time.
I
 borrowed a mooring for a few hours and resupplied and managed to find a
 couple of 25l water containers.  I did consider stopping in the bay for
 the night but no one seemed to obey the 5 knot speed limit so the wash 
from all the traffic set old Tutak a rocking.  Off we went to find a 
quite spot to drop the hook.  We ended up in Sawmill bay in Loch Creran 
not too far away.  I stopped the next day and did some more teak 
scrubbing and cleaning.  Isn't it amazing how dirty boats get even when 
surrounded by water. 
I also made up this camera mount for Blad  
who wants me to video all the heart stopping bits.  Well here it is 
dude, fully adjustable, and no the camera is not on it as I am using it 
to take this picture.  I did consider using the phone and fiddling about
 with blue teeth or something but I'm not really up on that yet.
 
Caledonian Canal 
Forgive me for the break in transmission.  I have had a holiday in the 
Canal and my beloved had all my attention, and rightly so.
By the
 time the excitement of the Corran narrows had passed dusk had appeared 
between the big hills as I approached Fort William.  I went close 
inshore near the railway station and considered anchoring.  Book said it
 was uncomfortable with much traffic, not at this time of night with no 
wind to speak off.  I would consider it next time perhaps as it is close
 to the shops and town.  Next option was the waiting pontoon outside the
 canal sea lock but this was crowded with local children and I didn't 
fancy trying to communicate.  In the end I dropped the hook on the other
 side opposite the jetty and quay of the pulp mill where the tide is a 
problem, depends how much chain you put out.  I had a lovely night.
The
 next morning T was due to arrive and I called the sea lock for entry.  
No sooner was in when the process of processing began.  My lines were 
taken and we locked efficiently and into the basin whereupon I was 
divested of huge sums of money for the privilege of 8 days in the canal.
  I said I was awaiting crew but that did not stop my ascent as they 
were keen to have no dawdlers in the lower basin.  I stamped my feet and
 said I am not ready to mount the staircase until the afternoon locking 
and that was that.  T arrived and we went shopping and got to know each 
other again after a long absence.  Steam trains crossed the bridge and 
we had a good gleg at the ways of roping up the locks.  If I were still a
 smoker I would have had three on the go at this point.  I have never 
done top roped locks, let alone a staircase of them but the staff and 
other crews are very helpful and are used to novices.
It
 takes hours to make it to the top with a few boats in the chambers as 
they can't open the sluices too quickly but it was a hot sunny day so 
what did I care.  Once in the bottom chamber we got off and just walked 
the boat through the rest and re-embarked at the top for a berth.
We
 had a look round Fort William and the next day took the train to 
Malaig.  This is an expensive steam train for the tourists but you can 
arrive at the same time see and smell and then get the normal diesel 
railcar for a third the price.  The driver even stops at the world 
famous Harry Potter Bridge and invites you into the cab so you can take a
 picture through the open window.  I should point out that technically 
it is a viaduct and not a bridge.
Malaig
 is a bustling fishing and ferry port but the books said there was a 
pontoon section for visiting yachts now, where you used to be able to 
anchor.  That's why I didn't visit by sea but as it was due to open in 
July.......  I think they have remodelled and are going for an Olympic 
diving venue instead.
Walking
 past the working yards by the harbour I came across this vessel having 
some planks replaced.  How they have updated the old hull to keep pace 
with modern fishing, whatever it now does, creels perhaps?
The
 seagulls were rather noisy whilst waiting for the train back.  I 
located on source where the young were rather camouflaged in the track 
ballast between the lines whilst awaiting the parental food delivery.
I
 won't say too much about the canal except to say that I was rather 
delighted with it.  I was not too busy, the staff were attentive and 
polite and the scenery was just stunning in its variation.  See it if 
you can, we had sunny weather which helped, bit miserable in the rain 
and mist perhaps.
This
 craft was attached very well with a mooring and an anchor and a rope 
ashore, maybe because of the windage of the foliage.  Location - by the 
well of the seven heads.  A bit further on is the harbour in Loch Ness 
where there is a pay and display machine for boats.  Just outside are these delightful old boat houses.
From
 Loch Ness we continued to drop down towards Inverness where we stopped 
and did the town for a few days and restocked my food and drink locker.
This liveaboard is called Loch Ness and I thought of Fran and Pete.
Such
 was my delight I actually overstayed the 8 day license by three days 
and could have spent a lot longer there really. You don't have to pay to
 stop at most places and there are good facilities everywhere on the 
canal sections which actually makes it reasonable value.
Locking 
out of the Clachnaharry Sea Lock with the rail bridge and the Works lock
 can take a couple of hours but you need to time it right so as the tide
 is not against you as it runs hard under the Kessock Bridge.
The
 white house is the lock keeper's cottage with rather nice facilities 
too.  Extensive shoal areas abound so pay careful attention to the chart
 and watch the tide as you approach the entrance moles.  The Kessock 
bridge has less clearance that the canal but not enough to bother 
Tutak's 11 metres.
There
 are supposed to be a load of dolphins round these parts but I only saw 
one as I approached Fort George.  I guess this was a bit rough way back 
with all the forts along the Great Glen.
Wind over tide and on 
the nose had old Tutak nodding her head and smacking the waves good and 
hard sending sheets of spray over the roof and making pretty rainbows as
 we clawed to windward under main and genoa.  17 - 22 knots was not the 
gentle reintroduction to the sea I had hoped for and I muttered about 
getting a narrow boat.  We bashed along the South coast of the Moray 
Firth until I had had enough and dropped the hook in Burghead bay and 
had a feast of sprouted beans and salad with a rather nice dressing of 
some decent olive oil and balsamic vinegar from Moderna.
The 
following morning the wind had veered somewhat and the sailing a little 
less boisterous which was good.  After passing the Covesea Light I had 
thought to anchor in the Sandend bay but as there were people surfing I 
thought better of it and continued onto Whitehills.
Now
 this is where I set off north for the Orkneys some weeks earlier and my
 outward track had now crossed the homeward track.  A dram was drunk to 
celebrate the circumnavigation of Scotland via the Out Stack and the 
Great Glen.  As I entered the harbour, Bertie the HM and some Dutch Folk
 I had last seen some time ago were on the pontoon to take my lines.  
This was fortuitous as I had managed to get a large piece of fishing net
 around the prop from somewhere which made stopping problematic.
I shall adjourn here whilst I await some favourable winds for Ratray Head and the South.  
After a couple of days and a load of washing I sadly left Whitehills and
 the lovely Spey Whiskeys and set off for the Head of Ratray and beyond.
  Hazy sun and a fair wind were with us but as we turned around Ratray 
the fog rolled in.  Peterhead is just round the corner and it is used by
 rig supply vessels, quite busy as was I in computing the AIS plots to 
see if they were going to miss me.  The tide remained fair so onward 
past Peterhead and Stonehaven, still with less than 300 metres vis.  In 
the end I had to stop in Bervie bay where I could hear waves breaking 
and kids hollering on the beach but could see nothing.
Morning broke and I was where I thought I was and it was not a place
 to have got things wrong especially with the onshore wind.  Onshore 
winds are a problem on this coast as there is no shelter and a lot of 
the harbours are drying.  The only option is to head offshore, it was an
 option I did consider but the wind moderated in the evening so I took a
 chance after 81nm.  As soon as we got offshore again the fog enveloped 
us and stayed with us until we reached the south side of the Firth of 
Forth.  I was aiming for Lindisfarne but Eyemouth seemed a better bet as
 the light faded.  Only 65nm today, not much help from the tide crossing
 the Firth.  An early start from Eyemouth had us off the Tyne entrance 
by the evening and I chose to anchor in the entrance between the moles 
on the north side.  Free innit, and busy it was with lots of shipping 
and movements.
This
 jackleg barge arrived soon after a rig was towed out and the ship 
"Sinbad" came out of one of the dry docks.  The welcome from Tynemouth 
was ecstatic as depicted by this picture.
 
In
 actual fact I had a pleasant time there for a few days entertaining the
 passing fishermen who were bemused at a yacht in there midst.  Much tea
 was drunk, I didn't think hard stuff was in order.
 
I took the opportunity to go upriver to Newcastle to see the 
blinking bridges or whatever they are called.  On the way I passed the 
old ship yards and sadly Swan Hunter was cutting up old rigs.
There
 is a pontoon just before the bridge but as it was the weekend I decided
 not to stay overnight but it was good to get there and looksee.
 
Shepherds
 is the new business here and is vast, working for the oil and gas 
offshore.  This large crane even had a crane on a crane which took my 
fancy.
 
In the end it was time to leave but I could have spent a month there
 with the industrial archaeology just surviving.  Soon it will be gone 
and it will survive only in a dusty archive.
We were due to have some 6s and 7s offshore which is good, no waves 
and a thundering sail.  It was different when we got out there, less 
than 10 knots and then it was behind so the engine was on all day.  The 
forecast was for rough sea and I couldn't understand why as the wind was
 almost offshore.  Sadly I didn't have the full picture and the swell 
just kept on getting bigger all day.  Moderately sized ships were 
slowing down to 2 knots heading into the waves, showing the bottom of 
their bulbous bows.  I was having a great time until it dawned on me 
that I was going to have to stop sometime.  I had planned on Whitby but 
the entrance it in the north, the direction of the monster swell, it had
 reached 4 metres by now, technically it was rough.  A call on the VHF 
to the harbour master in Whitby said it all, the lifeboat was out 
sorting some unfortunate in the outer harbour and he advised not to 
attempt an entry muttering something about swell.
Scarborough has a south entrance but was a further 20 odd nm by 
which time the light was going and the tide had turned, steepening the 
waves.  Up until then the waves have been high but long, now they were 
high and getting steeper by the hour.  In the end I was concerned that 
the plank bowsprit was going to break as it spent too much time dug in 
the troughs.  I worry too much and I entered Scarborough to a plethora 
of arc lights and TV cameras, they were filming and scene for something,
 Emerdale perhaps.  Anyway I couldn't see where I was going but that was
 irrelevant as I didn't know where I was going anyway.  The HM called me
 and gave me a vacant finger, if he had said otherwise I would have 
given one myself, bushed I was.
The
 entrance looking outward, arc lights blazed from both sides, pooling in
 the centre of the entrance.  This little pirate ship has made someone a
 fortune I reckon, it plied its trade from dawn till dusk.  They have 
one in Bridlington too.
 
Scarborough
 is a useful haven, very useful but it is not for me, too many kiss me 
quick hats.  As soon as I had recovered enough I was off for Spurn Head,
 tides and the lightless evenings (compared to Shetland) meant that 
night sailing was becoming inevitable.  With all the creels around the 
coast it is not a welcome choice.
 
This tanker was north of the Humber for some reason, I saw it for 
most of the day anchored, so vast it is.  When I get to within a mile or
 so plumes  of smoke erupt as he fires up the engine and hauls his 
anchor.  Wide isn't it.
Luckily
 it takes him a while to get some way on so I was out of his way pretty 
damn soon.  Night fell and I was fighting the tide into the Humber but 
by going really close inshore you can mitigate the force.  Humber VTS 
gave me a call and wanted to know what a small boat was doing a night 
against the tide.  I said I was ready for my bed and that was behind 
Spurn Head thank you.  He laughed at my reply to his " how many persons 
on board".
 
I was keen to have a closer look at the Tetney Monopile Moorings.  
The Ultra Large Crude Carriers tie up to these things to off load their 
cargo of crude.  I thought they were attached to the sea bed like a 
piled jetty or something but no the are a buoy and tilt when the ship is
 attached by an rather large umbilical.  The mooring is just that, pipes
 are craned out of the water and fixed midships to trans-ship the oil.  
Large pipes they are.
I
 saves all that hassle of tying up a large ship in a port somewhere.  
One tug is permanently wired onto the stern and one other is in 
attendance.  I don't think they allow it to swing with the tide as this 
would put too much stress on the pipeline perhaps.
 
The Donna Knook firing range was hot this morning so I had to go 
right round which is a pain but the noise of the jets coming in for 
their bomb run is not good even at 2 miles let alone overhead.  The 
windfarm boats with their speed are sometimes allowed to transit between
 runs but I am not fast enough.  A pleasant enough time was had crossing
 the Wash outer bits and the flats off the North Norfolk coast but as 
the Blakeney fairway buoy gets within range the wind pipes up on the 
tide.  Now 24 knots and kicking up an unpleasant steep sea making it 
difficult to pick up the buoy, especially as it had been moved!  I 
managed to pick out a green buoy and hoped it was the first one after 
the safewater mark.  It was and I allowed a fishing boat to overtake me 
and lead me in if only I could keep up with it.  He was surfing better 
than I was able and raced ahead.
Blakeney moorings had bred like rabbits since I was there thirty 
years ago.  Where one could anchor was a raft of boats and no space at 
all.  This meant that I had to pick up a mooring and I managed to find 
one that looked heavy enough to take Tutak with Blakeney's fearsome 
tide.  Speaking to Stratton Marine the next day whilst shopping for 
supplies it appeared I had chosen right and the mooring was heavy and 
not being used.  The reason for this was one of the legs of the mooring 
was missing, I made my way back moderately quickly and stayed alert 
whilst the tide did its thing.
We had a lovely sunset and the noise of the funfair was lost on the wind as peace reigned once more over the Blakeney Pit.
  
 The tides do funny things at Blakeney because of the bar.  They don't 
come in like normal God fearing tides, oh no, they wait until the last 
moment and then flood with such a pace you are knocked off your feet in 
the current.  That is if you are walking in the almost dry channel 
towing the dinghy with the beer and food, wondering how you managed to 
get the tide so wrong.  We had sufficient depth at last, after walking 
3/4 of a mile, to start the outboard.  Thank goodness, it was beginning 
to feel like a desert with all that sand about.  Rapid progress was made
 back to Tutak and I was looking forward to another beer having been 
waylayed at the pub trying to consume enough Guinness to last me to the 
boat.  I always turn the fuel off just before I get to the boat to run 
the carburettor out of fuel.  Stops a lot of that lacquer building up in 
the float bowl.  With the humugous tide it ran out a few feet short and 
before I could turn the fuel back on and restart the engine I was 100m 
down tide.  It didn't start anyway so I broke out the oars and a cartoon
 situation developed with me trying to row against a 2knot tide and only
 just making headway.  I kind man in a rib took pity on me and gave me a
 tow.
I spent the next day, Sunday, doing chores and enjoying the splendid
 weather.  I did not want to turn up at Great Yarmouth at the weekend in
 case there was no room.  As it happens I needn't have worried. Charlie 
Ward's barge "Juno" is still here.  He makes the Norfolk Oysters and 
Smugglers if I remember rightly or maybe not.
This sunburst tells of the day we had.
Up
 with the sun in the morning and out over the bar about two hours before 
high water and away with the tide to the east.  Being springs we romped 
along making Cromer Light just after eight.
 
I
 was astonished by the beauty of the Norfolk cliffs, sculpted by the 
weather and sea, resplendent in their summer foliage, then I realised I 
had my rarely worn polarised sunshades on and things went back to normal
 once I had taken them off.
 
The last time I saw the Trinity House Patricia was off the coast 
between Spurn Head and Bridlington and here she was again, sitting 
around doing nothing.
How I quite managed to get three boats in the picture I will never know.
They
 have been trying with artificial reefs along this coast in an effort to
 mitigate the erosion.  At Sea Palling there is a gap in the reef 
marked with east and west cardinals just so you know it is clear.  I 
went in and I reckon it would be an acceptable stop to wait out for a 
tide and a bit of sleep.  Far better than anchoring off the beach with 
the swell.  I might give it a go next year.
 
Such was the progress that I thought we might make Yarmouth on this 
tide.  A few computations and a  'phone call to the HM to see if there 
was space and what the ebb tide was likely to be we closed the coast.  
As always the wind bends once the coastline does its thing and we were 
headed, managing to just keep the main until the entrance.  The cranes in
 the outer harbour were gone, replaced by wind farm vessels and their 
Airfix kit turbines.
The
 inner harbour with miles of quayside seems to go on forever, especially
 with a spring ebb.  Quite large ships make their way in here.
 
Eventually Tiny Tutak made it to the Town Hall Quay in the midst of the town centre of good old Yarmouth.
I did manage to clean off most of the starboard side and there were some
 fine specimens, large too.  Some folk from Tollesbury were supposed to 
be around this week so  I dropped down to my favourite anchorage in 
Harwich Harbour under the old HMS Ganges.  We were treated to a 
spectacular sunset.  Check out the plating detail on the Stena Ferry.
 The CSCL Zebbrugge ultra large came in to unload some boxes, I am 
fascinated by this and can spend hours watching them being unloaded.  
So here we go the last day and up to catch the last of the ebb out of 
Harwich Haven down to the Naze tower and into the Wallet for the Colne 
Bar and the River Blackwater.  It was a Friday and the high water time 
of 1600 ensured that I would be in good time for the bar opening at the 
Sailing Club.  Bunting draped the bits of timber I call home.
As I got closer and was recognised out came the cake and beer, nothing else was required.
Two thousand one hundred and forty two nautical miles and I counted 
wrong and it was only 98 days.  Perhaps  I will add it onto next year's 
allotment.
50 nights at anchor.
5 alongside a quay.
5 on a buoy.
18 alongside a pontoon in a harbour or canal.
19 in a proper marina.
20 scheduled days off for sightseeing and another 19 days for weather, waiting for visitors or parts.
Fuel for the engine and heating amounted to nearly £900, more than I 
had hoped for but hey.  When you are on your own and you have to make a 
tidal gate or stay out for another tide the engine wins.  Fuel was not a
 problem as long as you were prepared to fill up on commercial fuel 
berths.  Tukak's 200 litre tank meant I could motor for 100 hours before
 I needed the 65 litre reserve I kept in cans.
It can be a bit remote in places and I did just about manage to coble 
things together when things went wrong or broke.  I will pay more 
attention to spares next time.
Most of the sailing was done in the daylight even when it was late in 
the day due to the latitude and season.  The highest latitude was around
 60deg 51.7m N when rounding the Out Stack, the most northerly point of 
the British Isles.  I only did a couple of 100 mile sections and they 
could easily have been broken up but the weather was good and the tide 
fair so why stop?
Would I like to do it again?  Do you really need to ask?   
 
What can I say except Bloody Brilliant!
ReplyDeleteI came over from Fran's. That was an amazing trip. We boat in British Columbia and are spoiled with our sheltered waters (most of the time). I would be really out of my element with some of those really large seas. Thanks for taking me along the easy way. - Margy
ReplyDeleteThanks peeps,
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed most of it. Sometimes scared but mostly ok. Would love to do it again as I just passed most of the places.
billy