• About Me
  • About the Boat
  • About This Site
  • Contact
  • First Time Here? Read this…
Facebook Twitter Google+
Sailing Arcturus
Life is short. Go sailing.
  • About Me
  • About the Boat
  • About This Site
  • Contact
  • First Time Here? Read this…
Blog

Vänersborg to Gothenburg

Becoming Salty November 15, 2022 Leave a Comment
this makes it easier…

August 4th: Depending on whether you are coming or going, Vänersborg marks the beginning or the end of the Trollhätte Canal, the ‘add on’ to the Gota Canal that allows you to complete your journey across the country. For about $100 you can traverse its 43nm miles, complete with just six locks. These are deeper than their Gota Canal counterparts, and they are slightly different in that lock walls have multiple indentations with small bollards protruding to allow you to slip your line around on the way up or down. This mean the crew needed two lines, rather than one, slipping the second one over the bollard as it reached about knee height, and once secured, pulling the first line off. This made going down very quick and I don’t believe we ever saw a lockkeeper, everything seemed to be done remotely. Only once did we need to call Channel 9, the recommended channel, to alert someone to our presence. The canal turns into the Gota River and has a couple of small turn offs in the event you needing a place to stop for the night. We made about 30nm that day, pulling in after dark to Skeppsholmen and took the last spot on a jetty bordering the grounds of a fancy hotel. Needless to say we were savoring the easy ride to Gothenburg the following day.

The Viking: standing sentinel at Lilla Bommens Hamn in Gothernburg

August 5th: It’s only about 11nm and a couple of lifting bridges to get to our destination, and I had booked a berth via the Dockspot app at Lilla Bommens Hamn, a well equipped marina located right in the heart of town. The very impressive 19th century four masted ship Viking dominates the entrance to the harbor, and visitors should beware the boat’s long bowsprit, which will dismast the unwary. From there we pulled in without drama, and I bid my family goodbye for now. In a couple of days I had new guests arriving. And a new adventure to begin.

Blog

Toreboda to Vänersborg

Becoming Salty November 7, 2022 Leave a Comment

Aug. 1st: The journey from Toreboda to Sjötorp was busy. 10nm, 19 locks and a dozen remote controlled bridges. But by now we were going downhill, having passed the highest elevation of the trip (91.8m at Forsvik). And downhill was SO much easier. Slide into the locks at the top, no clambering up inclines required. Run the lines through the loop and keep tension on as the water drops. By now the end of the Gota Canal was in sight and we were all feeling a little giddy. Little did we know that the most testing part of the journey lay just around the corner.

The end of Gota…

     We entered the lock at Sjötorp late in the afternoon. It was a glorious sunny day with a dazzling blue sky as the lockkeeper congratulated us on reaching the end of the road and ceremoniously snipped off the tag from our forestay. Just around the corner we pulled into the harbor which had plenty of space and we tied up and found an excellent lakeside restaurant about ten minutes away, enjoying a good seafood dinner and terrific views of Lake Vänern, which we planned to cross the next day.

August 2nd: It’s 64nm from Sjötorp at the eastern shore of the lake, to Vänersborg on the south west corner. We left bright and early on a windless day and by 1pm had reached the peninsula of Kallandsö, which, as you can see from the graphic below, boasts a maze of channels and harbors to escape bad weather, but more importantly allows you a shortcut to save time rather than going up and around. I had checked the weather forecast and saw a nasty localized weather system would be blowing 25kts directly onto our nose as we exited the peninsula but it was only 25nm and we had plenty of time and daylight.

Gimme Shelter: this place came in handy

     I was wrong. I’m not an experienced lake sailor and although I had read plenty of tales of how uncomfortable motoring into a chop can be, I hadn’t quite expected it to be so bad. I had reefed the main but my boat does not point well at the best of times, and with our repowered Beta Marine engine only giving us 16hp it was slow going. The waves were hitting us about every two seconds, throwing water over the bow and making it very hard to make any headway. Things got better when fell off a little and I was able to get some speed, but all that achieved was allowing me to make 5kts at a 90 degree angle to my destination. To my discredit, I hadn’t fully briefed my family about how lumpy the conditions would be, and they were NOT happy and also a little anxious. After about 90 minutes of persevering I turned the boat around and headed back to the complete shelter of Kallandsö, where we pulled over onto a little jetty two miles up a creek. I opened up a bottle of tempranillo and debriefed the crew about the days’ events. Then I made meatballs and marinara sauce. Suddenly the world seemed a lot better for everyone. I explained that the weather conditions were not going to change for another 3-4 days, and that tomorrow I would put in another reef in the main, swap the headsail out for something smaller and that they should expect uncomfortable conditions for 10-12 hours the following day.

After the passage…the reward

August 2nd:  My bad feelings about the previous day’s events were tempered somewhat when I filled up with diesel at a tiny marina just down the way from our overnight jetty. I fell into conversation with a local Swede on a Hallberg Rassy who had a similar experience to mine and was going to ‘try again today’. We headed out of the shelter of the peninsula about 9am but the wind had not eased, and to make things more uncomfortable we now had thunderstorms to contend with. The ladies stayed below, leaving just Angus and myself to trim and steer. It was a long, hard, wet beat, and to add to the fun the bunt in my reefed main collected a few buckets of rainwater which it would periodically dump on my head. After the third or fourth time I just had to laugh. This was fun! But the boat was in no danger, it was just uncomfortable. In the end my 25nm as the crow flies rounded out to about 54 nautical miles. Ten hours of hard tacking later the wind eased and the sun came peeking out just as we fetched the safe harbor of Vänersborg marina. My daughter had already scoped out the local restaurant scene, and we essentially just tied up and hopped off for a welcome meal and several bottles of wine. The boat was a mess down below, but that could wait till morning.

Blog

Gota Canal 2: Hulta Sluss to Toreboda

Becoming Salty October 31, 2022 Leave a Comment
Mirror mirror: crossing Lake Roxen

Thurs. July 28th: Thursday is a work day for me so I had planned to only spend a couple of hours traveling before pulling in to the marina at Norsholm. They have 20 berths, lying alongside, and a decent café called Kapten Bille’s. As usual there was fast wi-fi and a warm Swedish welcome, so I spent a pleasant evening working and watching the boats go by while ensuring my small business was keeping in the black.

   Fri. July 29th The next morning we crossed Lake Roxen, which is expansive, beautiful, and (on the day we crossed) very flat. We traversed its 14.6nm length in about three hours and were greeted at the other end by our first ‘flight’ of locks, seven in total, which would take us up to the town of Borensberg. We were comparatively lucky because we only had to wait about 15 minutes for the first one to open, and it was a gloriously sunny day and a drama-free traverse through. Each lock took about 15 minutes to negotiate, so two hours later we emerged.

Charming relic: The Gota Hotel at Borenborg

   We then had to pass through four double locks, cross an aqueduct which took us OVER a freeway, past seven remote-controlled bridges and another lock before we stopped for the night at Borensberg. This is a charming riverside town, a little sleepy but very civilized. We pulled up after the lock ahead had closed for the night on a jetty in the shadow of the historic Gota Hotel, a real ‘Vardhus’ relic of the early 20th century canal tourist trade. The hotel had the air of a gently declining dowager, and rather than eat there for the night, we walked into town and found the charming Pizza Napoli restaurant, where four of us enjoyed decent but unmemorable pizzle for $75, before walking home, enjoying the sights a little, and turning in for the night.

   Saturday: July 30th: We started our day with a an uneventful crossing of Lake Boren (7nm) and were greeted at the end by a flight of five locks which would take us up to Motala. This town is the gateway to Lake Vattern, 17nm miles across and with it the highest point of the canal, Forsvik, at 91.8m above sea level. There’s not much to recommend Motala. We stopped at a large jetty just before the last lock before the lake. We walked into town to the Sanny Thai restaurant for a decent enough meal and then turned in.

Boat porn: our neighbor at Toroboda

   Sunday: July 31st: Time was slipping away from me because I had a crew scheduled to arrive in Gothenberg in a few days and because of my earlier brush with Covid I had entered the Gota Canal a little later than planned. So this day was my makeup day, and I planned to cover about 40nm. This was possible only because I was starting at Lake Vättern, going 17nm with no locks, followed by the Karlsborg-Forsvik-Lake Viken-Tatorp-Töreboda leg, another 30nm but with only two locks. With over 30 berths Töreboda has one of the largest marinas in the canal, but given our expected late arrival I wasn’t 100% sure we’d find an open spot. Turns out we arrived just in time, taking the last spot on the left shortly before sundown. There were a couple of excellent bakeries and restaurants nearby, and for a bonus we berthed right in front of a gorgeous wooden Norwegian yacht, which I spent at least 30 minutes ogling. We ate dinner on the boat and enjoyed a few glasses of wine, the mood quickly turning merrier as England’s Lionesses won the Euro 2022 final, beating Germany 2-1. If only the men could follow suit…

Blog

Gota Canal 1: Mem to Hulta Sluss

Becoming Salty October 22, 2022 Leave a Comment

Tues. July 26/Wed. July 27: The Gota Canal guide divides to the canal into three convenient sizes, beginning or ending with a lake. The first section, from the Baltic to Lake Roxen, has 15 locks and 7 bridges.  After entering the system at Mem you’ll find the charming town of Söderkoping 3nm up the canal. There is a well-equipped marina here and a charming waterside scene of shops, bars and restaurants. In high summer expect lots of outdoor drinking, live music and dancing. We enjoyed a lovely waterside meal before casting off the following day for Norsholm, 12nm and 12 locks away. It was in this stretch that we really learned to ‘lock up’ as it is called, and how we became closely acquainted (for better or worse) with the three boats in our ‘convoy’, one Finnish, one German and one Swedish. Right outside Söderkoping are four single locks followed by two doubles, and by the time we had navigated our way through we had learned the ropes, so to speak.

   Once you enter the first lock the helpful young lockkeepers inform you that you will be traveling with this group and to keep up with each other, since it’s more efficient to fill the locks each time they open. So for the first day we shared their space, and vice versa, until we got to Lake Roxen, where the faster boats got ahead of us, never for us to cross paths again.

   The first three bridges are opened via remote control and a CCTV system, and they either hinge upwards, pull backwards, or slide towards or away from you. There is a red and green light system to indicate to boaters ahead of time the bridge is ahead, so you can slow your speed to wait for opening. Every bridge we encountered worked perfectly without fuss or drama.

Good times with the fam…

   Given that the locks do not open until 8am and close at 5pm, there is no point in trying to charge through them all in long 12 hours days. It’s much better to take your time, aim for about six hours of traveling in a day and stop for a nice lunch. And the lockkeepers will tell you if you don’t have enough time to reach the next lock before it closes for the day. They stay connected with each other via walkie-talkie and they also know how many available spaces there are in the nearby marinas. As we cleared the last lock at Norsholm around 4pm, the lockkeeper explained that we could not reach the following lock in time, and that we should spend the night in the ‘staging area’ (a long wooden jetty) which was located a few hundred meters round the next bend. There was a boat behind us, who were told they could not go through, and would have to wait below the lock till morning. This actually worked beautifully, because we were completely we were able to spend a lovely family evening together, in the middle of nowhere, enjoying a spectacular sunset, some chilled white wine and a some Swedish meatballs and new potatoes I prepared on the stove. We all got quite inebriated, as I recall.

Blog

Why The Gota Canal?

Becoming Salty October 12, 2022 Leave a Comment
ON YOUR OWN: overnighting by Hulta Slusss

Since I started sailing in Sweden in 2016 I have been told many times by Swedes and foreigners alike that although the East Coast and Stockholm archipelago are amazing, the West Coast is really the place to go. Or as the saying goes, The West Coast is the Best Coast.

     However, I’m at the stage in my life where I’m not constantly seeking to travel over the horizon and instead prefer to do a deep dive into wherever it is I find myself, which is why it took me six years to finally take the plunge and make my way west.

     Once you exit the Stockholm area and enter the archipelago proper on the eastern reaches of the Baltic Sea, its approximately 500 nautical miles down to the southern tip of the country and then up the west coast to Gothenberg, which is the logical base for any extended exploration of the area. Since I enjoy taking my time and really visiting each place of interest I’m sailing close to, rather than just flying by, I knew that 500 miles would likely take me another summer, so instead, I decided to traverse the country by taking the Göta Canal.

     This marvel of 19th century engineering was constructed mostly by Swedish soldiers digging the canal and linking various lakes from 1810 to 1832. It starts at the town of Mem, which is located up a short inlet from the Baltic, and finishes 102nm and 58 locks later at the town to Sjötorp at the entrance to Lake Vänern.  From there you cross the lake and enter the Trollhätte Canal which you take another 43nm to Gothenberg and from there, to the Kattegat.

     As a small boy I spent two idyllic summers with my father and brother going upriver on the Thames in England on our motor cruiser, and I have loved inland waterways ever since. The idea of gently cruising through a bucolic landscape in high summer through a country I truly love was irresistible. And I was sure that having my kids on board, working the locks together just as I had done with my father half a century ago made for a wonderful symmetry.

     The Arcturus crew from Stockholm to Mem was myself, Michelle K and her son Devin. We had met in the capital on the 19th, a couple of days later than planned due me contracting Covid, and from there sailed and motored down through some of the southern islands of the archipelago, arriving at Mem in the afternoon of July 25th. The next morning we checked in with the canal control office where I was given a flag to certify I had paid to the lockkeepers on the journey ahead, and we went through the first lock. (of which more, later). Three 3nm further down the canal is the town of Söderkoping which has convenient bus and road links to Stockholm. It was there I bade farewell to Michelle and Devin and greeted my family for the adventure ahead.

Point of entry: Mem Sluss, Baltic Sea

     Arcturus is ten feet abeam and 35 feet long, and she was fairly typical in size with the boats me met along the way When boats cross in the canal there is plenty of room both in the middle and either side, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t hug the middle wherever possible. The maximum allowed draft for boats is 2.8m and Arcturus draws only 1.1m with her centerboard up, but it doesn’t pay to be too polite when passing because closer to the banks the canal bed slopes up very quickly and by the time you are five feet away from the edge you can expect to be touching bottom.

     Boat length is limited to 30m but I don’t recall seeing single boat that big. The largest vessels you will likely encounter are the historic white passenger boats that have plying this route since the 19th century. These always have right of way and if you are unlucky enough to meet them coming the other way at a lock, expect for them to have priority.

A steep learning curve

     Entering the canal and its procedures are quickly learned by reading the guidebook, but locking up and down can be a little anxiety-inducing until you have half a dozen under your belt. Each lock has a jetty or staging area on the bank, and in the likely event of the lock gates being closed when you arrive, you pull over and have two crew take lines for the bow and stern. There is typically one jetty on each side of the canal, each big enough for two 30-40 foot boats, allowing four boats at a time to enter the lock.

     When locking up, the water in the lock will be down and the lock walls will loom 15-20 feet above you, necessitating the crew to clamber up an incline from the jetty to the top of the lock wall, keeping the lines tight while you gently guide your boat in. You will need a minimum of four fenders at varying heights both port and starboard, to avoid hitting either the lock walls or a neighboring boat when the sluice gates are opened, because the water flow can be fast and the turbulence can be challenging.

     The lock walls are typically aged 19th century stone, with a series of small bars, topped with iron rings the size of dinner plates, at intervals along the top. The guidebook recommends that you make a large bolon with your bow line and slip it over the iron loop and then bring it down firmly against the bar so it holds firm. The bow line is then run though a block on the bow and back to a cockpit winch. The stern line is simply run from an after cleat to another crew member who stands in line with the stern. As the water comes in – and it comes in fast – the water rises and the bow line will slacken. At that point the skipper should grind in the slack quickly to ensure the bow doesn’t start to get pushed away from the wall and into the neighboring boat. For the stern crew, the pressures are far less and they can simply pull in the slack by hand.

Amygdala bests Prefrontal Cortex

     On our first lock just a few minutes after casting off from Söderkoping, we learned the benefits of following instructions closely. Although we had set the bow line through the block and run it back to the cockpit as recommended, I omitted to instruct my son on affixing bolon round the iron loop and he tried to control the boat’s movement by brute strength alone. Angus is a big strong boy who lifts weights every day…but he really struggled to keep the bow under control, meaning the lockkeeper had to modulate the the speed of the water ingress a little to help us out. One of the other occupants of the lock, a cigar smoking German with a boat out of Kiel named Grissini took exception to our lack of knowledge and, rather than offer constructive advice, decided to make a few snide comments, leading quickly to a bad-tempered exchange between the two of us.

     “Why are you in such a hurry?” I asked him. “Do you have a country to invade?”

     I’m not particularly proud of letting my amygdala overcome my prefrontal cortex in such a way, but it had the desired effect. He backed down and I followed the guidebook more scrupulously for the next locks, which were just a few minutes down the road. By the time we had done half a dozen of them, we were experts (almost).

What Will It Cost?

Pricing depends on size of boat and if you choose low season or high season. but here’s a graphic of what it would cost to take my boat (a 35 footer) through this summer, low season and high season. At current exchange rates, 7990 Swedish Krona is about $734. For the experience, I consider it very good value…

Other useful links:

The official Gota Canal website is very helpful and the English version is completely comprehensible. Click HERE to access.

The Gota Canal Skipper Guide is also invaluable. You can download it HERE

Blog

Saying goodbye…and hello

Becoming Salty October 6, 2022 Leave a Comment

Sat. June 2nd

Bubbly personalities ahoy….

It’s only about 20nm from Furusund to Norrtälje and the day dawned bright and breezy as we cast off for an easy downwind sail as we headed north.

Turning to port to enter the Norrtälje inlet gave us some nice beam reaching action for about ten miles which was a fun way to finish the trip for my guests. Norrtälje has been written about in these pages many times so I won’t go into detail other than it’s a cute little town with a large, centrally-located gasthamn. And it’s an excellent place for guests to embark or disembark since it is well served by bus lines.

Neil, Murielle and Mike

It is also about a $40 Uber ride from Stockholm Arlanda airport. We arrived late in the afternoon and tied up to the usual signature stern buoys. The crew packed, then we popped open some prosecco make aperol spritzes before walking down to the end of the dock to grab a seat at the local restaurant, where we enjoyed an alfresco meal on the terrace while some local geriatric jazzmen serenaded us. My affection for Mike and Murielle multiplied during this crew leg. They were flexible, easy going and handled each early mishap with good humor and patience. I knew I was going to miss them….

Blog

Furusund…. and that very tasty Värdhus

Becoming Salty September 29, 2022 Leave a Comment

Friday, July 1st. We enjoyed a brisk downwind sail out of Sandhamn and north towards Furusund, all three of us happy to finally put our sails up and enjoy the weather. It’s close to a 30nm sail and we were in search of some good grub. Murielle had discovered an acclaimed local spot named the Furusund Värdshus, just across the water from Blidö, which made a convenient waypoint en route to Norrtälje.

Among the geraniums: happy crew

Värdshus is a very interesting word. To my ear the Swedish pronunciation sounds something like ‘verd-shoes’ and it can mean inn, restaurant, B&B, or chop house. There is something evocative and antiquated about the notion of such an establishment. Think of an English costume drama set during the Restoration. An English coaching inn set athwart  a crossroads where protagonists in breeches meet over a roaring fire and enjoy foaming jugs of ale. My imagination may be sailing away from me but that is what I think of. Furusund itself means fairway, so-named because it is located on the main fairway out of Stockholm and into the Baltic, and as such sees a constant stream of passenger and car ferries heading out into the Baltic to Finland, Russia and all points east.  Furusund gasthamn is presided over by a very hardworking Swede who mans a busy gastropub in the harbor, bakes bread and, if you approach the harbor at dinner time, will run out of the kitchen, still wearing an apron and carrying a carving knife, and gesture where you should tie up.

Cold pea soup, with herring, roe…and so much more

And just five minutes down the road lies the Värdshus, a welcoming and thoughtfully laid out hostelry serving innovative and delicious food, complimented by a stimulating and well executed wine list. The setting of the main dining room is beautiful too…floor to ceiling windows give it the feel of a greenhouse, its borders awash in geraniums and hollyhocks, and while you dine, every now and then one window is filled the flank of a passing ferry heading east. Mike, Murielle and myself enjoyed our best meal here, and I liked it so much I came back just a few days later with my next crew.

the view from the fairway
Blog

Sandhamn. Again.

Becoming Salty September 22, 2022 Leave a Comment

The Monte Carlo of the Stockholm archipelago….allegedly

Thursday, June 30th: 11nm almost due south of Paradiset/Idholmen lies Sandhamn (Sand Island). This busy yachting center was always going to be on my itinerary, mainly because it is one of the busiest harbors in the archipelago, complete with fancy hotel and swanky bar, but also because the walk around the island is one of the best in the area. August Strindberg summered here for many years, and it was good enough for him… But also I needed reliable wifi for a work day and I was also in search of an able-bodied young fellow to climb my mast and retrieve my main halyard, which had skied due to a threadbare retrieval line in Blidö when Mike, Mirelle and I set the mizzen following our escape from Grepen Marin. I did not fancy climbing a mast with my foot still so painful, and I certainly was not going to ask my guests to do it. And I was confident I could find someone there to help, since the famed Gotland Runt race was barely a week away and fancy raceboats from across the Baltic’s shores were everywhere, doing some last minute practices and shakedown sails. I quickly found a young German fellow who went up and down in less than three minutes, returning with the halyard and asking no more than a six pack of beer, to which I gratefully added a bottle of rum.

God bless young men in search of a six pack

   The mood on the docks that night was festive, to say the least, with dance music echoing through the slips until the wee small hours. But I had my eargplugs, my halyard and some wine inside me, so all was well with the world.

Blog

Paradise(t) found

Becoming Salty September 15, 2022 Leave a Comment
bows to at Paradiset/Idholmen

Wednesday, June 29th: To many local sailors, the large and beautifully sheltered bay of Djupfladen is known simply as Paradiset. I’m sure you can guess the Swedish translation of this word. This bay is about 450 meters wide and long and served by narrow entrances to both the north and south. It boasts superb bows-to locations throughout the eastern and northeastern shore, and an island in the middle with an integral wooden jetty. The water is clean and warm, heated up by the long Swedish summer days. There is also a seasonal ice cream hut where locals can enjoy the delicacy the seem to prize above all others (apart from pizza, perhaps). Latecomers can also find plenty of anchorage spots in the bay, where depths range from 15-30 feet, although very shallow water can surprise the unwary.

As usual, I do all the talking

As a result this place is usually jammed, and when we visited it was no exception. However, just to the north almost serving as an anteroom for Paradiset proper, is Idholmen, a smaller bay, almost equally as sheltered, where Mike and Murielle were introduced to the delights of bows-to mooring. I put Murielle on the helm while I manned the bow, while we puttered around looking for a choice spot. We had one anxious moment when we ran aground on soft sand doing less than half a knot, but that’s all part of the adventure. Murielle had some misgivings about piloting someone else’s boat directly at a unforgiving piece of granite, but after I assured her of my experience we dropped the stern anchor, guided her in and safely tied up to a couple of trees. Moments later we were drinking chilled white wine amind astounding natural beauty, congratulating ourselves on our good luck. No matter which spot you find yourself in here, you won’t regret it.

Blog

Grisslehamn and Blido

Becoming Salty September 8, 2022 Leave a Comment

Grisslehamn

Murielle, Mike and I finally put the misery of Grepen Marin behind us on Monday, June 27th, motoring down towards Grisslehamn, which is about 19nm SSE. But due to our late start and my taking inadvertently taking a wrong turn because I was so fixated on what work the boat still needed, we didn’t make it into the harbor at Grisslehamn until almost midnight. Fortunately my companions are easy going and flexible, and for them the beauty of the Swedish countryside was still a novelty so there were no complaints or gripes. And after tying up we cracked open some wine, and put on some music while I made dinner, Swedish meatballs and new potatoes, content to final be on our journey. I say finally. It was really a delay of little more than 24 hours for my guests, but for me it felt longer because of the stress of managing both agonizing foot pain and the management at Grepen Marin.

Blidö

Call me soft, but this is WAY better than 30kt headwinds

We all slept well, and Tuesday 28th dawned bright and sunny. Mike is an avid runner and he was able to diagnose my foot pain as plantar fasciitis. It is common among middle aged men and runners in particular and he showed me some simple exercises to mitigate the pain, but recommended I ask my next crew to bring me over some Superfeet brand shoe inserts, and the newest good athletic shoes I owned. I could also have taken a detour to a big town and bought a new pair and tried to some source some orthotic inserts, but I did not want to delay my crew any longer.

Back to Blidö

    Mike and Murielle spent an hour wandering around the tiny town, which is divided into an eastern and western harbor. The eastern side opens into the Baltic and is well served by car ferries from across the Baltic, meaning it’s you see lots of camper vans from Finland, Poland and the Baltic States, for whom the first step is often the campground on the western side, which overlooks our berth. But there is no easy sea access between the two sides unless you are on a dinghy or other low-slung craft. Our next stop was Blidö, some 33nm distant if we took the inside passage, rather than retracing some of our steps northwards to get out into the Baltic proper. But given that this would have meant facing 30kt headwinds with a new crew and an untuned rig AND added another 15 miles to the passage it was a no-brainer to simply fire up the iron jenny and take a gentle ride through the inside route, known as the Vaddö Canal, where the wind was calm, the water flat and the countryside in full bloom. There are only two lifting bridges to negotiate here, and after an uneventful day we found ourself at the waterside town of Graddö at the mouth of the inlet to Norrtalje, from there we turned to port and followed the coastline down to the island of Blidö, whose namesake gasthamn (guest harbor) I have visited several times and always enjoyed…until now.

All alone at Blidö

Turned out it too had changed owners, and while the new trustees were pleasant enough, it was early in the season for them and they had not routed the fresh water supply to the dock nor installed the orange stern buoys after their winter maintenance. On the plus side their excellent restaurant was open, as was their free laundry facilities and wifi. About a mile down the road is a well-stocked ICA supermarket, so after a quiet night on the boat we rose early on Wednesday 29th, did a quick provision stop and cast off for Paradiset, about 11 nautical miles to the south.

Blog

First half bad, second half good.

Becoming Salty September 1, 2022 Leave a Comment

June 21st, 2022. It was about 9pm as I approached Grepen Marin in Oregrund in  my rented Volvo SUV. And I was feeling good. The ambience was classic Swedish summer: empty roads, a long, sunny twilight, the faintest breath of wind in the air. Winding, leafy lanes and clean, crisp air. The prospect of a long, adventurous summer on the water ahead of me.

The start of something…disappointing

   Thanks to the epidemic the last time I was in these parts was August 2019. That’s three years apart from my beloved Arcturus and I couldn’t wait to go sailing on her again. 90 minutes earlier I had picked up the Volvo from the Hertz office at Arlanda Airport and now here I was, barely able to contain my anticipation.

   Until I reached the parking lot of the boatyard and saw my boat was still on the hard. It was Tuesday evening and I had guests arriving from LA on Saturday, and I needed to get a lot of work done in the interim, plus Thursday was an office work day for me.

On the hard…where it shouldn’t be

   I had emailed Grepen Marin half a dozen times since January telling them exact date of my arrival and requesting the boat be launched by then. No answer. But there was nothing unusual in that. I had kept the boat there since 2018 and they were poor communicators, but the work I requested was always done and the boat was always in the water when I arrived. I brushed aside my disappointment, climbed up the ladder and stowed my gear. There was a box of red wine on the cabin sole that I had left there three years previously. After making an inventory of work to be done and unpacking, I downed a glass. It was still very palatable. So I had another, before slipping on my eye mask and turning in for the night.

How VERY un-Swedish

I’d rather not see her bottom right now, thank you.

   About 8am the next morning I found an employee of the yard, Daniel, who looked very sheepish and was quite evasive when I asked him, very gently, why my boat was not in the water and when I could expect her to be launched. He told me, in the round-about way Swedes sometimes do when they are uncomfortable, that the boatyard had changed hands since my last visit, and that he knew nothing of my launch schedule, but that with the Midsummer festival just two days hence (the biggest party day in the Swedish calendar) the earliest they could launch would be ‘next week – maybe’.

   This upped my blood pressure considerably. Turns out the new owner was a man named Robin, and he ‘should be in later today’, but Daniel couldn’t say when. To make matters worse, when I had woken up that morning and put my right foot on the cabin floor I got a searing pain shooting from my heel that made walking – and doing boat work – very challenging.  To make matters worse I thought I had left a pair of hard-soled topsiders onboard but they were nowhere to be seen, only some very flimsy flip flops and water shoes or the hiking boots I had arrived in. To add to my discomfort, the boatyard surface was mainly cinders. It was excruciating simply to fetch water or walk to the bathroom. But  more of that later….

This is Robin, the unapologetic homunculus/troll who ‘runs’ Grepen Marin. Avoid him at all costs….

   Robin did show up later that day and studiously avoided talking to me as he did his rounds of the yard, forcing me to corner him in his office and ask firmly but politely, if he had not received my messages and, more importantly, when the boat could be launched. He denied receiving any emails, a claim I know to be untrue because someone had responded to one just a few days before when I told them my arrival date and time and requested the key code for the showers and kitchen. Worse, he took zero responsibility for his lack of communication and when I asked him for the key to my storage unit behind his office, he claimed he had no idea where it was. Later he came up to me and told me the storage unit was unlocked. I looked inside and saw a bunch of stuff that was NOT mine – sails, lines, shackles, assorted hardware, etc, ON TOP of my belongings. Turns out Robin had sublet my space. Without any discussion with me, and no discount on what I had paid!

   In America of course many of us would start shouting, threaten legal action, promise bad reviews, etc but in rural Sweden that approach simply doesn’t work. I realized that Robin would never cooperate in any way, and that if I were to get my boat into the water and out of that yard, I had to try to appeal to Daniel, who did at least seem embarrassed by the shocking treatment I had received.

Thank you, Daniel

   After a few conversations with Daniel I gleaned the news that when the previous owner, Lennart, had decied to retire there was a power struggle between the two senior workmen, Robin and Daniel, for ownership of the yard, and Robin had won. But they were both power boaters and knew very little of the needs of sailors, who comprised perhaps 25 of their clientele. Worse, they had not had a rigger on the staff for more than six months. So even if I could get the boat in the water and the stick in, I could not get the rig tuned. Every time I saw Daniel in the yard over the next two days I approached him and asked him if he could find the time to launch the boat himself. He finally relented and agreed to come in early Saturday morning, after the previous evening’s midsummer celebrations, on his day off, and launch the boat for me. But he was adamant that he could not put the mast in.

So by Saturday 10am the boat was in the water. Fortunately she floated and the engine started first time. I hastily did some last minute chores before heading off to Arlanda to pick up my guests, Mike and Murielle, local Los Angeles sailors. On the train ride back I told them my tale of woe and they were wonderfully understanding and flexible. You gotta love sailors! So we used Sunday to show them round the charming town of Oregrund and provision. Late Sunday evening I moved the boat to a prime position under the boatyard crane, and when the crew arrived, with a long list of boats they needed to rig, I simply told them I was not moving my boat until they put the mast in.

Getting the stick in at last

   This simple bit of leverage worked, and thankfully while Robin was complaining about my attitude two or three other boaters arrived looking to get their boats in the water. This made him work a little harder and a little faster and by 11am the stick was in. They refused to put in the mizzen, but no biggie, I could do that myself. I tightened the stays as best I could. Took one last look at my storage unit to see if there was anything I needed and left the rest for Robin to deal with. I fired up the engine and left that boatyard, never to return. They still haven’t sent me a bill. And I doubt they ever will.

Blog

And finally…the Inside Passage

Becoming Salty October 25, 2019 Leave a Comment

The passage from Blidö to Norrtälje is so routine it’s not worth mentioning. Suffice it to say Richard, Mark and I spent a bittersweet few hours in glorious sunshine heading down into the Norrtälje inlet after a week together none of us will soon forget. Mark left the following morning and Richard the following day. That almost brought the summer full circle for me. Now I just had to get the boat up to Öregrund and leave her in the capable hands of the folks at Grepen Marin.

But instead of heading out into the Baltic again I thought it might be fun to take the inland waterway instead. Those clever Swedes have built plenty of these canal-like routes over the years, which bisect fields, meadows, wetlands and sometimes small towns, with reliably-timed rotating or lifting bridges where needed to enable both road and waterborne traffic. Plus the weather was gorgeous and the countryside was heaving with midsummer fecundity. It’s an easy 50nm, nicely broken up by Grisslehamn at the 30nm mark, so an easy two-day jaunt. How could I say no?

For a more interactive version of this map, click the link below.

Although I am now an ardent sailor, my boyhood years were spent on the inland waterways of England, specifically the Thames, and I still have a very soft spot for inland routes. They have a peace and beauty all their own, and the subculture of river life – the towns, hostelries and commerce that have sprung up to support it – are just as resonant and fascinating to me as the wilder shores of the sea. They are just a little more…..domesticated.

https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1QnnZzZi_Wn8tbYDHtq_1X5V89yZkGr8A&usp=sharing

Oh, those clever Swedes…

For those who haven’t had the pleasure of visiting this amazing country, the beauty of the place in the summer can be a surprise. For those of us lucky enough to be regulars, it really never does get old…

After a very easy two days, I was back in Oregrund. And not a moment too soon. Once I had tied into my slip and enjoyed a chilled beer, I noticed the a cold front coming in. The following morning dawned cold and blustery, which seemed a symbolic transition from another idyllic summer in Scandinavian waters. The crew at Grepen Marin are busy this time of year, and have no interest in lifting the boat out and letting you winterize it yourself. Instead, Lennart, the head honcho, told me somewhat gruffly to just leave her in the slip and he would ‘get round to it’ in a week or so. And although I make it sound suboptimal, it’s a very easy solution for me. I simply gather my things up, empty and scrub the head, fridge, food lockers, etc, wipe down the surfaces with a vinegar/water mix and pack up my dunnage.

Ready to leave for another year (or three, as it turned out)

There’s many things to look back on at this time, mostly memories of another summer I’ll never forget. But I also look somewhat vainly at myself in the mirror (forgive me my narcissistic moment). I’m always happy at what two months living like a viking does to my body, both in shape and hue. But I always need a good shave too, since you can have too much of a good thing.

Enroute to Stockholm for my flight home. Now that’s a happy face.

As I put the boat away and began the voyage back to Los Angeles in August of 2019 I had no idea of the changes about to sweep the world in the coming months. The global pandemic meant there was no return to Sweden for me in 2020, or 2021 come to that. At time of writing my ticket is booked and my passages planned for summer 2022.

Friends are scheduled to join me and I’m hoping for a year of renewal, not just for me, but for the world at large. The plan is to revisit the Aland Islands, and the Stockholm Archipelago, before heading down to Gotland and from there traversing the Gota canal to Sweden’s famed west coast before putting the boat away in Henan for another year. After that, who knows?

Wherever life on Arcturus takes me, I hope you’ll come along for the ride.

Thanks for your time…and fair winds to you all.

Blog

Show us a proper map?

Becoming Salty October 3, 2019 Leave a Comment
A very broad outline of our travels in the summer of 2019. For a more interactive version, click the link below

https://www.google.com/maps/d/embed?mid=1rXVjOk2Ez_LwaU6reyLECegk1u92bnWO&ehbc=2E312F

Full disclosure: I am not a map-maker. I know there are plenty of clever folks out there using Google Earth, KMZ files and AIS updates to make stunning, hi-res images with step-by-step passage details. Well, I am not one of them. But the above Google Map will give a broad outline of my summer travels. Starting at Oregrund in the upper left of the map, we traveled down to Grisslehamn, across the Mariehamn, then eastwards to Talinn and Helsinki. The Finnish capital was our ‘weather mark’, before we headed back whence we’d come, taking a more northerly route to allow a stop in Turku before heading back to Mariehamn, then across the Baltic to Blido, Nortallje and home to Oregrund. The noforeignland site is useful for sailors but unless you insert a series of detailed waypoints, it’s map function does give the impression of sailing across dry land. Obviously that’s not the case.

Blog

Rodhamn to Blidö

Becoming Salty August 25, 2019 Leave a Comment

Sun. 07/21/19

Dep. 9.33am Arr. 4.44pm. 42.3nm 7 hr. 11mins

For a pdf of this route, click HERE

42.3nm of pure sailing bliss…

Blido is a compact and charming small gasthamn which I have mentioned in these pages before, but the real tale of this passage was the passage itself.

Crossing the Baltic can, in theory be quite daunting given the unpredictability of the conditions, but Sunday July 21 dawned bright and clear and the wind was forecast for 12 knots on the beam. It promised to be a gorgeous day’s sail and so it proved. We hoisted sail barely a quarter of a mile outside Rodhman harbor in Finland and didn’t put them away again until we were 400m from our destination in Sweden. Under cornflower blue skies, with temperatures in the high 60s and a moderate swell, we enjoyed a dream of a passage, averaging just over six knots all day long. The 42 mile passage was eaten up in just over seven hours with Mark mainly at the helm, grinning like a demented fellow at how good the conditions were.

Blidö: an absolute must-visit for archipelago sailors

                  There was not much other traffic out there, just a few cargo ships and the odd ferry on the horizon. It was not until we were well within Swedish waters that we saw any other leisure vessels, and we came into Blido without fuss, tying up on the stern buoy and securing our lines, ravenous for a good meal at the excellent restaurant, Blidohamnkrog https://blidohamnkrog.se/

Seriously good food at the Blidoö Hamnkrog

 just up the hill which doubles as a harbor control. After the more Spartan options in Finland it was clear we were back in a more luxurious part of the world from the exotic cocktails on offer. I don’t remember exactly what we started with but we soon moved on to some ice-cold rosé and pizza while Richard opted for his usual choice of minute steak with béarnaise sauce and fries. Finland is great. But so is Sweden!

Blog

A Day at the Opera…

Becoming Salty August 23, 2019 Leave a Comment

Sat. July 20, 2019: When I visited these waters in 2018 I was lucky enough to strike up a conversation with Christian Juslin, a leading Finnish operatic tenor, through a chance meeting at the harbormaster’s office in Rodhamn, a charming little island just a few hours sail from Mariehamn.

Christian was a very friendly fellow and fascinated at the notion of an Englishman sailing an American boat in Finnish waters, and had come aboard Arcturus and shared some invaluable locations for off-the-grid bows-to anchorages nearby.

Opera Ready? Mark and Richard look the part

         We had stayed in contact on social media and he invited me to meet for a drink when I had visited two weeks previously. I couldn’t make it work then, which worked out gloriously to my favor this time around. Turns out Christian was celebrating his 50th birthday on Saturday out on Rodhamn with friends and family and would I like to attend?

Is the Pope a Catholic?

        

On Friday we decamped to Björkör which was as wonderful as usual, but given its many mentions in these pages I will move on. Suffice it to say Mark and Richard were blown away by its charms. On Saturday we cast off around 10am for the easy 5nm journey to Rodhamn and tied up in its capacious but well sheltered harbor. The harbor master took our payment and directed us to walk ‘just up and over the hill’ where we’d find the party, which started at 2pm.

Sometimes it just all comes together….

         Donning our best summer party clothes the three of us headed up there and were charmed by what we found. A marquee in jaunty red with two long tables, covered in white linen with fine silverware and china. Plenty of wine and Brannvin, the local aquavit, and some excellent food to follow. But most impressive were the people; warm, welcoming Finns of all ages who spoke perfect English and made us feel most at home. Christian even seated me at the head of the table next to his mother and a leading Finnish soprano. What followed was one of the most amazing days of my life. Imagine a perfect summer day with blue skies and a sky dotted with fluffy clouds. The most gorgeous alfresco setting among the granite outcroppings, covered with lichen and heather, with wildflowers dancing in the gentle summer breeze. First came some toasts and drinking songs. Now I’ve heard those songs before, sung at the summer home of a very dear Swedish friend, but when they are sung, at length, with alternating choruses and harmonies from a chorus of full-throated Finnish opera singers, it is a very different beast.

         Then came the speeches. Heartfelt, deeply personal reflections from Christian’s friends and family before the birthday boy himself rose, speaking of the love and support from his family and his early mentors and teachers. All of these words were interspersed with music, arias from operas both classic and obscure, while an electric organ, harnessed to a small gas-powered generator, played along. It was simply sublime. Every now and then Richard and Mark would catch my eye with their jaws agape as if to say: can you believe what we are experiencing?

Yes, it was that kind of day.

Granada, sung by the birthday boy himself

         I’m an emotional fellow at the best of times and I’m also an opera lover. A couple of the arias I heard that day brought tears to my eyes. And as this glorious afternoon reached its conclusion, one of Christian’s boyhood music teachers, a huge bear of a man probably in his mid-70s but with a glint in his eye of a man half his age, gave an unforgettable rendition (in English) of “What A Wonderful World”.

         At that moment, it most certainly it was.

The perfect day ends the perfect way: with a sauna, of course
The sun sets over the archipelago on a day none of us will ever forget

         As the party broke up around 9pm Mark, Richard and I wandered back to the boat, processing and retelling what we had just experienced. We had an 11pm sauna date so after a couple of drinks Mark and I changed and wandered back to the waterfront hut that is probably my favorite sauna in this part of the world. For perhaps half an hour we roasted in there, neither of us saying much, just absorbing how wonderful life can be if you open yourself up to new experiences. Once we went outside to dive into the chilly water and savor the sun setting over the fir trees on the far shore, we got a little more voluble. We were both ready to hit our bunks by then, secure in the knowledge that this was a day neither of us would ever forget.

Blog

Degerby to Mariehamn

Becoming Salty August 22, 2019 Leave a Comment

Wed. 07/17/19

Dep. 9.10am Arr: 2.29pm. 22nm. 5 hours, 19mins

For a pdf of this route, click HERE

Richard back on the helm

The sun was shining as we left Degerby en route to Mariehamn, where we were scheduled to rendezvous with my friend Mark W from Los Angeles. He’s a fine sailor and an even better companion, and I knew he and Richard would hit it off just fine. We hoisted sail soon after leaving port and I was eager to run under jib and jigger in about 14kts of wind, mainly because it requires less maintenance, allowing me to experiment with the Cap Horn windvane. We actually got her working pretty well for about three hours, but then a series of windshifts plus  the wind dropping suddenly to about 4 knots meant we abandoned our efforts and fired up the genny to meet Mark shortly after his ferry arrived from Stockholm at 2.30pm.

The start of something really childish….Mark, Neil and Tricky in Mariehamn

         Mark is well known in my sailing circle for his fondness for florescent green sailing gear. Whether this is because he likes the color or just wants to be seen if he goes overboard I don’t know, but I remarked to Richard that I’d bet him $20 that we’d see on the dock easily because of his garb. And I was right. Mariehamn was hosting a power boat convention and in keeping with their busy schedule, they now had a RIB come out to greet us and guide us to our berth. As we approached there was Mark, – or dear old Wilson as I love to call him after the volleyball that keeps Tom Hanks company in Castaway.

Gravlax, potato salad, green salad…so good to have Tricky in the galley!

After an embrace  we immediately cracked open a few beers and I told him of my adventures so far while he did the same about his recent trip to France, from where he had joined us. We later decamped to the sauna to introduce him to the finer things in life in this part of the world, before Richard made us a stupendous dinner of smoked salmon, potato salad and fresh greens. With beer, wine and good company, it felt like another wonderful beginning.

Rhode Island comes to Äland: a surprise sight at Mariehamn

                  I was also surprised to see another American flagged boat in residence, a large Hanse named Maverick from Rhode Island. I skulked around the dock until the owners came back and was intrigued to learn that the Newport YC had partnered with the Royal Swedish Sailing Association and brought about a dozen boats over from the States the previous winter for a serious season of sailing on both the east and west coasts of Sweden, including a jaunt over to the Aland islands. I guess word of this magical place is spreading….

Blog

Näsby to Degerby

Becoming Salty August 20, 2019 Leave a Comment

Tues. 07/16/19.

Dep. 12.31pm. Arr: 7.03pm. 36nm 6 h 32 min

For a higher resolution image of this route, click HERE

The Only Way Out Is Through: Golden Light at Degerby

If the previous day’s passage had given us intermittent bad weather, the following day was more of the same. It was cold, wet and miserable, with the wind on The nose for the first three hours, followed by late afternoon sunshine with a fresh breeze which made for a glorious final two hours of sailing, the wind dying just as we approached the harbor.

     Richard was feeling under the weather, which left me helming alone in my waterproofs while he hunkered down below in the forepeak. But at least the scenery was beautiful and there was no swell to deal with. The waters here have so many islands that it’s almost like sailing in an inland delta where a thousand rivers converge. En route we didn’t see much traffic – I think most folks stayed in harbor – but there were a couple of local passenger ferries, plus we did get to see the sweet anchorage at Banö On where we spent an idyllic night last year.

Degerby Hamnkontor – or Harbor Master’s office

     By late afternoon the weather finally lifted and as we approached Lotsudden gasthamn on Degerby’s west end the sun had appeared and cast the landscape in that glorious golden glow that can last for hours in these parts. We tied up without incident on an end tie and settled down for dinner. I did walk a little way around the island to capture the scene on the drone, but I quickly abandoned the effort, realizing I had been more than virtuous for the day. Sometimes sailing is like that. The only way out, is through. And when you get there, it’s easier than you feared.

Degerby gasthamn
Blog

Turku to Näsby

Becoming Salty August 18, 2019 Leave a Comment

Monday 7/15/19

Dep. 11.44 Arr. 7.34pm 36nm. 7 hours 49 mins

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Richard arrived from Spain on Sunday afternoon and after a pleasant few hours of catching up and dinner on the terrace of the nearby Nood restaurant, I was more than ready to cast off for Näsby, about 40nm to the west. Richard (who often goes by the nickname ‘Tricky’), came bearing gifts, including a very cool matching set of Henri Lloyd foulies, which will stand me in good stead on future passages.

  • WithNeil&I? Ciggies, G&T and Tricky
  • Does my bum look fat in this? Richard came bearing gifts…

The good weather of the previous two days had disappeared and we faced grey skies, occasional rain and some shifty winds for much of our passage. Richard adapted to helming pretty quickly while I navigated – he was always decent on the tiller when he first joined me back in 2016 and he seemed to have remembered almost everything. The passage was the usual mixture of wind shadows, sudden puffs, dodging rocks and skerries and trying to decide if we had too much sail up, or not enough. In the end we opted for a full main and 140% genoa and I stayed on main trim dumping the wind when necessary. We sailed for perhaps three hours before the finally died and the rain started in earnest.

  Näsby is the island but the harbor is actually called Houtskär, and is beautifully sheltered in a deep inlet, which perhaps explains its popularity. At first blush it looked full, and there were at least a couple of latecomers dropping the hook nearby, but our shallow draft allowed us to find a spot close to the marina office and we squeezed in.

Näsby Gasthamn: a very sheltered and cozy harbor with excellent facilities and helpful staff

  It was apparent that this island is quite a destination for nature-minded Finns, and not all them on sailboats. I was soaking wet and ready for the sauna which was very crowded, with lots of children and adults roasting together in a box-like room. It was a little unnerving walking in but I broke the ice by toasting the crowd with the ice cold beer I had brought with me, and when they heard the English accent they were all eager to chat.

  There is a pretty good café here serving breakfast lunch and dinner and as an added bonus it also has fast wi-fi – although that’s a given in most places with those hi-tech Finns. The service could not have been more friendly and the price was 26 euro for the night’s berth. With Richard replacing me in the galley we enjoyed an excellent meal of chorizo and potatoes, washing it down with a cheeky Spanish tempranillo. So good to have an old friend on board!

John Coltrane kept us company while the rain came down….
Blog

Kasnas to Turku

Becoming Salty August 15, 2019 Leave a Comment

Fri. 7/11/19

Dep 11.03am arr. 8.07pm. 39.5nm. 9 hours 4 mins.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Fri. 12th: This was Grace and Knut’s last full day on the boat and we had a long passage to make. Since I wanted to arrive in good time and enjoy a good dinner with them both before their departure the following day I decided to follow the path of least resistance and motor all the way unless conditions made it impossible.

Up close and personal: closing in on Turku

We left  around 11am and the wind kicked up a couple of hours later as the channel leading to Turku began to gradually close in on us. We were passed by dozens of large ferries en route, Turku being one of the most important maritime hubs in the country. As you approach Turku the bay divides to the west and north east, the latter of which is the mouth to a river which runs through the town. Soon we were passing ferry terminals and landing bays for commercial ships before heading right into the center of  town at tying up in Turku’s main marina, which has room for perhaps 40 vessels bows-to with berths separated by pilings, for about $40 for the night. Fortunately I had booked my spot in advance, which was just as well since it was the last open space remaining. Coming in around 8pm my instructions to the crew were rather drowned out by a thrash metal band performing at moored barge on the other side of the river, but fortunately they quit within an hour.

  • A very special trio: Knut, Grace and yours truly
  • Something you don’t expect to see: Surf Shack on the Turku waterfront
  • Between the pilings: no stern buoy here
How Arcturus crew say goodbye…

   The Turku waterfront is really the heartbeat  of the city in summertime. It is lined with restaurants and bars, all of which were overflowing the locals and visitors. Knut did some research and booked a table for three  at the nearby Bassin restaurant and it proved an excellent choice. We enjoyed some delicious oysters and tostskagen for an appetizer, before they moved on to grilled local whitefish, while I opted for  trout, which was excellent. We shared a Gooseberry posset for dessert and washed it all down with a bottle of white burgundy and another of sauvignon blanc from the Loire. To our delight the restaurant had a nightclub upstsairs where we repaired for gin and tonics and dancing. It was a very special night bidding adieu to a very special crew.

Blog

Hanko to Kasnäs

Becoming Salty August 10, 2019 Leave a Comment

Wed. 7/10/19

Dep 12.18pm, arrive 5.57pm. 24.7nm. 5 hrs. 39 mins.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

But before we leave….coffee

Wednesday dawned bright and sunny with good wind that promised a brisk passage to Kasnäs. By now my initial conservative sail plan had given way to a more confident outlook and with about 10 knots on the beam we hoisted full main, 140% genoa and mizzen for a brisk sail with the wind alternating from a beach reach to close hauled.

That summertime feeling…

Grace and Knut swapped on and off at the helm while I concentrated on navigating. But while the day stayed sunny as the afternoon wore on the wind eased and by 3.30 were were barely moving under a full press of sail, although our tans were certainly progressing nicely. Soon the wind kicked back in however and we enjoyed a brisk sail right to the entrance of of the Kasnä harbor, before we dropped sail and fired up the genny.

Tucked in at Kasnäs

The harbor is divided into outside and inside berths and I tried to find an inside option before discovering all the choice spots were private. No surprise there, I suppose. As the wind continued to rise I was forced to turn the boat around in tight quarter that left my crew – and a couple of the local boatowners – a little nervous, but we made it out without incident and came in on an outside berth with stern buoy. Once we tied up snugly and our heart rates returned to normal we had a look around, noting clean and modern facilities, a nice terraced bar overlooking the marina, laundry, sauna showers and quite a large restaurant – or raventola, as the Finns call it. There were holiday chalets lining the marina area suggesting this was a not just a destination for yachties. We had dinner on the boat and one bottle of wine turned into two. I was eager to turn in because I had a deadline the following day, but Knut and Grace felt differently, and I believe they woke me up around 2am to watch a huge, lustrous Finnish moon rise in the distance. It was quite a moment.

Kallarvinden Cafe (photo: Grace F)

Thurs. 11th: For me the day was consumed with a newspaper deadline but Grace and Knut took the chance to explore. I did take a break at tea time and I was very glad I did. On the advice of the harbor master we took a ten minute walk up the road to the most adorable tea house, nestled in the forest down a quiet lane. The grounds were awash in granite outcroppigs and local wildflowers, and three of us ordered tea. Hibiscus for the crew, green tea for me. The tea came with a tray of freshly-baked focaccia with three toppings, including a spicy aoli and a yummy onion marmalade. Since they had fast wi-fi I stayed to work while the crew headed back to Arcturus. Twenty minutes later the heavens opened and I spent a very enjoyable hour inside the tea shop, sitting in a comfortable chair and listening to the pulsating percussion of a Finnish rainstorm on the corrugated iron roof. It was quite a special moment.

Blog

Jussarö to Hanko

Becoming Salty August 9, 2019 Leave a Comment

Tues 7/9/19:

Dep. 11am. Arrive: 2.37pm 20.5nm. 3 hrs 37 mins.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

The day dawned cloudy but rain free as the last of the previous night’s storm drifted away. Knut and Grace marveled out our rustic mooring, taking plenty of pictures of our bows-to setup before departure. And Grace, an avid yogi and  meditator, made sure to do a couple of inversions in front of the boat to get her blood flowing.

Grace at the helm, en route to Hanko

   Hanko was our destination about 20 miles distant. We cast off about 10am and had good wind but I was initially quite conservative in my sail plan, since I wasn’t sure how broad the preferred channel would be and the wind can be very shifty and unpredictable. We started with a reefed main and jib until we were overtaken by a smaller boat carrying a husband and wife and two toddlers. Both Grace and Knut looked at me quizzically as we were overtaken, so I quickly swapped out the jib for the genoa, shook out the main and we were soon moving along at a brisk 6kts with a good breeze on the beam.

Grace proved very adept on the helm, keeping the telltales flying while Knut trimmed like a champ. Gradually we were joined by about a dozen other boats also heading towards Hanko and as we turned to weather for the last five miles we enjoyed some brisk upwind work not unlike a Wednesday night race back in California.

   Hanko is quite a large marine center, with three harbors adjacent to each other, but the main one, the largest of the three, was clearly the best in terms of available berths and facilities. In addition to easy stern buoy and pontoon berths, the place had excellent modern facilities, a superb restaurant and top-notch sauna. It also seemed like it hosted big regatta events, because there were numerous pennants and advertising collateral posted around, featuring an upcoming regatta sponsored by Mercedes Benz. After the rustic night we had just spent in Jussarö, this was another world. The berth for the night cost 42 euros, which was a little more than I was used to spending but still good value.

Bloomin’ lovely: Hanko harbor

As afternoon gave way to evening the weather brightened and we took the water taxi across to the town for a decent dinner and bottle of wine at an Italian restaurant. After the wine we were not quite ready to head back to the boat – plus it was still bright daylight at 9.45pm, so we went to a Karaoke bar where, apart from a Ukrainian couple, we were the only patrons. After a couple of vodka tonics my karaoke monster was unleashed, and I performed Mac The Knife, Back in the USSR and Bust a Move while Grace did an adorable rendition of These Boots Were Made For Walking. All in all it was a good day’s sailing with some fun bonding for the three of us, but we were all stifling yawns by 11pm and ready to turn in.

Blog

Talinn to Jussarö

Becoming Salty August 6, 2019 Leave a Comment

Monday 7/08/19

Dep. 11.39. Arrive 9.50pm. 47.7nm. 10hr 11 mins

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Because we had pulled in late and tired to the Old Town Marina the night before and because they were still battling jet lag, Knut and Grace were happy to forgo a visit to Old Town Talinn until Monday morning, so we spent a couple of hours sightseeing, enjoying the street performers and visiting the city’s oldest coffee house for some caffeine and pastries.

The cobbled stones and authentic Baltic feel of the Old Town is really a special experience, but we didn’t linger, heading back to the boat to cast off our lines shortly after 11.30. Within a few minutes of leaving the harbor we had plenty of wind and so raised sail, enjoying a lively beam reach in 10-12 knots heading NNW for about 5 hours.

For a while, it was dreamy…

But somewhere in the  middle of the Gulf of Finland the capricious wind decided to ease. We tried hoisting the mizzen, which mitigated the easing wind a little but we were still forced to fire up the engine around 4.30pm. As evening approached so did the first islands of Finland, and the last two hours saw us motoring in a glassy calm between rocks, skerries and forested islands as Knut and Grace marveled at the beauty. Turning up towards towards Jussaro shortly after 9pm we saw a worrying sign: two boats at anchor outside the compact harbor – which could only mean it was full.

No room at the inn? Just cross the road…

But the silver lining was that the shore on the far side – barely 400m from the harbor, looked very promising as a bows-to anchorage. With the skies darkening with imminent rain I outlined the sequence of actions the crew needed to take and took a quick recce to finalize our spot. I then circled back out, put Grace on the helm and made our approach, dropping the stern anchor four boats lengths out in 30 feet of water. I then gave clear instructions from the bow to the helm for the approach, and we tied off to three separate points without incident. Just in time, as the heavens opened and we quickly scurried below for a glass of wine and some music while I made a butternut squash curry with jasmine rice. The only slight fly in the ointment was that in my haste to get out of the rain I had not quite secured the bowlines tightly enough, causing a couple of bumps on the keel. After dinner I bit the bullet  and went topside in the rain to tighten the lines properly, ensuring we all had a peaceful sleep while the rain pitter-pattered on our cabin roof.

Giddy guests inverting…
Blog

Talinn to Helsinki

Becoming Salty August 2, 2019 Leave a Comment

Dep. 9.08am Arr. 5.40pm 46.1nm. 8 hours 32 minutes

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Goodbye from: Kevin leaves the boat in Talinn

Friday July 5th: Kevin packed his belongings quickly and stepped off the boat a little before 9am. He had been an excellent crew mate and he seemed eager to repeat the experience in 2020. I would certainly be happy to have him on Arcturus again.

But time and tide wait for no man so I quickly prepped for departure and headed out into the Gulf of Finland shortly after 9am. The wind was very light so I motored under mainsail alone all day. There was a bit more wind in the middle of the Gulf of Finland but not enough to tempt me. I tied up in Helsinki Marina, which is ideally located in the heart of town, around 5.40pm. The boat was quite a mess after ten days with Kevin and myself so job one was cleaning her up so she could receive visitors. I was scheduled to meet with Knut M and Grace F, another two sailors from my home port, the following day.

American car culture is alive and well in Helsinki, it seemed

Sat. 6th. I was up early scout the neighborhood and spent an interesting hour walking through the waterfront, which was hosting an American classic car convention. There were plenty of classic Buicks, Dodges and more on display and the sense of dislocation was heightened by the fact that the attendees were dressed appropriately in denim, black boots and even a few baseball caps sporting Confederate flags. I was also happy to see a busy farmer’s market selling fresh local produce and a few food stands dotted around. I arranged to meet Grace back at the boat at 11.30am and together we walked into town hunting for supplies, groceries, ceramic knives, dish towels, etc. We found everything we needed (and something we didn’t) at the Stockman department store. It was raining off and on and I opted to buy a ‘cheap’ umbrella. Either through fatigue or not paying attention I shelled out $75 for a garish Marimekko umbrella but by the time I got back to the boat and realized my error I couldn’t be bothered to take it back.

Arcturus in Helsinki Marina

Knut had taken up residence in a waterfront bar right by my boat, sheltering from the driving rain outside. Grace and I met up with him for a quick beer and thence to the boat. We enjoyed an Italian meal at a local restaurant and a bottle of wine before turning in. Grace had the forepeak and Knut and I shared the main cabin.

Sun. 7th: Departed for Talinn about 9am after brief knot tying and fender briefing. Motored the whole way in very light air. Dinner on the boat (meatballs and new potatoes). Followed by drinks and conversation. I didn’t know either of these folks very well but it was soon obvious that we would all get on like a house on fire. The passage to Talinn was uneventful so I won’t dwell on it, as much more interesting passages awaited us.

Blog

Modermagan Bay to Talinn, Estonia

Becoming Salty July 30, 2019 Leave a Comment

Wed. 7/3/19

Dep. 8.40am arrive 6.18pm. 52.3nm. 9 hrs 38 minutes.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Old Town Marina: where everybody knows your name….?

Given that this was longest passage of our trip and that I needed to be reasonably alert for my newspaper deadline the following day, I made the decision that speed was more important than sailing. The wind started off light as we motored out and turned south east towards the Estonian capital of Talinn. It built during the day, as did the swell, but sailing dead downwind is not my favorite option. If the passage were only 25nm rather than 50, and were I not going into a new harbor in a new country where I had no idea of the bureaucracy which awaited me, I would have opted for some deep jibing angles and taken a little longer. But that was not the case. So we motored with a growing swell behind us and made very good time in increasingly sporty conditions.

Cranes in Talinn. After the solitude of our bows-to anchorage the night before, this was quite an adjustment…

As usual Kevin was an absolute champ at the helm, and we were surprised at the number of ferry ships that passed us en route. The Talinn-Helsinki run is clearly a very well traveled route. Shortly after 6pm we pulled in to the big harbor where the cruise ships dock, before turning into the narrow channel to the Old Town Marina where I had booked a berth for two  nights. Facilities were excellent and security seemed at a premium compared to what we had just experienced. Upon arrival you are essentially trapped in the marina behind a tall fence until you call the marina office on the intercom and are given a passcode. You then pay for your berth in the excellently equipped club house, where service was efficient but, by Scandi standards a little stone-faced. We found this to be the case in Talinn, where the long occupation by the Russians seems to have hardened some of the locals.

  • Echoes of the Hanseatic League
  • Renaissance Faire escapee?
  • PIG OUT: Kevins choice for dinner
  • Your starter for ten: Pickled herring, cottage cheese and red onion
  • Joy unconfined: Kevin contemplates the pig knuckle
Talinn Old Town

    Other good features of the marina were an excellent nearby supermarket and a superb liquor store, where I spent $200 on wine, beer and liquor for the hard-drinking company I was expecting later in the trip. We had a quick dinner on the boat before taking a brief look at Old Town and then turning in.

   Thursday brought deadline for me while Kevin explored. Since it was his last night on the boat before heading to Riga for a mini European tour, he kindly bought me dinner in old town at a meat -eaters paradise. We feasted on a huge platter of dead animals, where a glistening pig knuckle took pride of place, topping a supporting cast of meatballs, sausages chicken thighs and sauerkraut. Cue food coma. At least for me.

Blog

Rosala to Modermagan Bay

Becoming Salty July 20, 2019 Leave a Comment

Tuesday 7/2/19

Dep. 11.31am arr 7.41pm. 40nm. 8 hours, 10 minutes.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

We do this because we can: Kevin enjoys the view, bows-to at Modermagan.

You Can’t Always Get What You Want….

Thanks to Messrs Jagger and Richards for that sentiment, which was foremost in my mind after our adventures in Modermagan Bay. I had promised Kevin he would have at least one bows-to experience during his trip on Arcturus and I had scoped out Modermagan Bay as the perfect place to do it. It was a longer stretch (40nm) than usual but it would leave us well placed to fetch Talinn the following day. By now Kevin was used to the boat and I could trust him to helm calmly and efficiently for hours on end. We again had steady winds on our starboard quarter in the 12-14kt range which was perfectly in the Arcturus wheelhouse and made for an enjoyable and drama free sail to our destination. When we arrived it was picturesque enough but we were disappointed to find there were no good granite rocks to tie up to. The only decent area on the north end of the bay was dotted with green buoys, and a passing yachtsman dropping the hook told me this indicated it was a private club. But on the way in I had seen some promising looking rocks that would have provided good shelter from the wind, which had now moved to the north west.

It was also starting to rain a little and the clouds were darkening the skies more by the minute. It was also closing in on dinner time so I determined to attempt a bows-to mooring here and see if we were sufficiently sheltered. And so we were. Working in concert we dropped anchor and secured the line to three points off the bow. Kevin was impressed with my skill and frankly so was I. We hunkered down for dinner and enjoyed our sheltered little spot in a wide bay with nothing but granite rocks, pine forests and gun metal grey water to keep us company. As Mick Jagger so aptly put it, you can’t always get what you want, but sometimes you get what you need.  

Blog

Jurmo to Rosala

Becoming Salty July 16, 2019 Leave a Comment

Monday: 7/1/19

Dep. 11.06am arr: 5.20pm. 31.7nm 6 hours 14 minutes

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

And the lord giveth….after Jurmo, Rosala was just what the doctor ordered

With the wind howling we both had only a fitful sleep in Jurmo. I rose at 4am to fix a particularly clanging halyard and didn’t really sleep much thereafter, thanks mainly to Kevin creeping up silently behind me while I was working and giving me a manic grin as I turned around. There’s a reason his nickname on our race team is cowbell…

The Finns we were docked with showed no inclination to leave early given the conditions, so we followed suit and waited until around 11am, when conditions finally eased and we were able to clear the harbor and hoist sail for Rosala. We thus enjoyed probably the best sailing of Kevin’s stay, with winds blowing 14-16 on the quarter and us enjoying a lively  passage under jib and jigger alone. I left most of the helming to Kevin, preferring to navigate and make braggy videos for fellow sailors at home.

The Vindö 30: a classic Swedish archipelago boat

   The only slight fly in the ointment was that as we approached the Rosala gasthamn (guest harbor) we were feeling a little too confident and decided to tack up the narrow channel. As usual we were quickly put in our place as Arcturus got backwinded by a sudden windshift, meaning I had to fire up the engine in a hurry, jibe around to the wider bay behind us and drop sails before motoring the short distance into the harbor. Lesson learned again, I hope.

   Rosala itself is a picture-perfect spot with berths for perhaps 30 boats, but it was mostly deserted. There was a small but well-provisioned harbor master’s office, decent showers and the hottest sauna I have ever enjoyed. The berth was cheap at 15 euros but the sauna was 20. But 35 euros for that experience was cheap at twice the price. The harbor is nicely sheltered and with the wind dying almost completely, we enjoyed a very full and deep night’s sleep.

Blog

Kökar to Jurmo

Becoming Salty July 14, 2019 Leave a Comment

Sun 6/30

Dep. 11.47. Arr. 6.0225. 3 nm. 6h 15mins.
For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Lovingly tended: the graveyard at the Seafarer’s Chapel in Kökar

The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away.

I often use that old chestnut to provide solace when the day’s sailing was not great or the destination is suboptimal, and that was certainly the case today. When we rose a little after 6.30am the water was like glass. With a 24nm passage ahead of us there was no need to start early, so Kevin and I walked to the Seafarer’s Chapel a couple of miles away to enjoy the peace and reflection of a house of worship and marvel at the well-tended graveyard, with almost every headstone brightened by a posy of local wildflowers. This being Sunday I stuck my head inside the chapel to see if there was a service, but we may have been too late – or too early. But I stayed there in quiet contemplation for a moment or two and was rewarded by the organist playing a couple of lovely ecclesiastical works that I remembered from my childhood but could not name. I sought him out a little later than thanked him for making my day.

Nothing to see here: flat, featureless Jurmö
Kevin with a ‘midsummar’ leftover…

 We departed Kökar a little before noon and motored for just over six hours across a glassy sea to reach Jurmo. The wind was right on the nose so we averaged less than 4kts, and when it did arrive, we discovered the island is  just a speck of land of no great appeal unless you are a birder, because it is an avian sanctuary. The compact harbor can fit perhaps 30 boats and there were perhaps 15 there, mostly Finnish flagged.  The only event that livened up the boring landscape was encountering a herd of alpaca which supply wool for the island’s cottage industry of making soft but warm scarves, mufflers etc. One in particular took a liking to me and tried to hump me. I guess it was my lucky day.

Behind the chalet, the holiday’s complete? an alpaca makes his move…

   With the wind rising we hunkered down on Arcturus for the evening. I made lemon risotto for dinner and caught up with some work with the wind beginning to howl through the rigging.

Twilight at Jurmo
Blog

Björkör to Kökar Sandvik

Becoming Salty July 12, 2019 Leave a Comment

Sat. 6/29. 

Dept  10.19am arrive 4.53pm. 25.4nm. 4 hours 34mins

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Kökar Sandvik: a sheltered harbor with excellent facilities

The day dawned clear and sunny in Björkör and thus far we had seen no sign of Kaj, the diminutive park warden who lives in nearby Degerby and who makes the journey by boat to Björkör most days, weather permitting, to keep an eye on the livestock, mend the fences, trim the grasses and show visitors around the remarkable museum house which captures 19th century Äland life in amazing detail. But just as we were prepping to cast off there he was, with a twinkle in his eye and a lilt in his voice, like Tom Bombadil in The Hobbit. He wished us well and urged us to visit later in the summer, but didn’t seem eager to engage in protracted conversation.

So we cast off at 10.19am in clear and sunny skies with a not a breath of wind for perhaps an hour. But approaching noon it built to 8-10 but it was forecast to rise further, so we hoisted a reefed main and genoa. By 2pm it was clear the winds were going to stay light so we shook out the reef and averaged an easy 5.5kts until we reached Kökar. I’ve mentioned this island in previous posts so I don’t need to go into too much detail other than to say Kevin and I enjoyed an  absolutely sublime sauna right on the water before a dinner of meatballs with boiled new potatoes and a arugola salad and for me, a bottle of white wine.

Arcturus in Kökar Sandvik

   The only slight fly in the ointment was that I earned the ire of one of my neighbors by flying my drone over the harbor in the gathering twilight. I’m still learning how to operate this clever little gizmo but I guess having what sounds like an electronic wasp buzzing through the anchorage for 5 minutes is just too much for some folk. What can I say? Live and let live!

Blog

Mariehamn to Björkör

Becoming Salty July 9, 2019 Leave a Comment

Fri. 6/28/19

Dep 11.16am, arr: 3.18pm. 15.5nm. 4 hours 2 minutes

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Bjorkör: what’s not to lichen?

With my newspaper deadline safely out of the way Kevin and I rose early and grabbed a shower and sauna.

Given the long hours of daylight I’m not a stickler for early rising and departure, but the jet lag was still lingering, making it impossible to stay abed much after 6am. The front that arrived the previous day was still blowing hard down onto our starboard quarter, so we lingered for an hour or two in the hope that conditions would ease a little, but by midmorning it became clear they would not. To our port was an expensive gin palace which I was eager not to allow myself to be blown down onto. So instead of releasing the windward line I had Kevin use it as a warp, keeping it taut and easing the line out through the loop as we backed out. Because of the windage I needed to gun the engine more than I would normally do, which was nerve wracking but probably the right course given that we immediately gained headway.

Less sail than we needed….you never quite know what the conditions will give you
Favorite spot: tied up at Bjorkör

   I had mentioned to Kevin that given the protected nature of many of the waterways and the limited swell it was common practice for Swedish and Finnish sailors to go downwind under jib alone. We tried it for about an hour with my jib and Kevin at the helm to gain experience, moving at a modest 4kts before a much better sailed and trimmed boat  with mainsail up went past us and our racer instincts got the better of us. I swapped out the jib for the 145% genoa and tried to raise the main before realizing the reefing lines were led wrongly. There is always a learning curve when you get back on a boat after almost a year away! But we were sailing on a beautiful boat on a gorgeous day, so there was no point in reproaching ourselves too harshly. The main finally went up correctly, and we enjoyed a good downwind sail, until we approached my favorite island of Björkör, then sailing under genoa alone, jibing our way through a couple of tight passages till we reached that magnificent little spot with its harbor deserted. We tied up at 3.13pm. The sun was shining and our mood was buoyant.

X marks the spot: Where we dock on Bjorkor
No wifi, no sauna, no showers? No worries!
Blog

Grisslehamn to Mariehamn

Becoming Salty July 7, 2019 Leave a Comment

Wed. 6/26/19 – Grisslehamn to Mariehamn (Västerhamn).

Dep. 11.06am. Arr. 10.15pm. 48.6nm. 11 hours 9mins.

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Mariehamn, I’ve been mizzen you: twilight as the ASS Marina

The day dawned much like the last one. Grey and drizzly with not a hint of wind. After breakfast and a little stroll into town where we grabbed the first fika (coffee break) of the trip we cast off our lines about 11am, heading north for a couple of hours to the first opening into the Baltic before turning to starboard and heading towards open water. I had calculated a six hour crossing but that was not factoring in the three hours it took us to reach the channel leading to the sea. We crossed under grey skies and calm seas motoring the whole way. About 6pm the skies cleared and as we entered the Mariehman fairway it was gloriously sunny and clear.

I’ve got my crossing The Baltic face on….
Kevin C doing the honors…
Mariehamn, 11.37pm
In the shadow of a giant: the magnificent Pommern

We tied up in the shadow of the Pommern about 8pm for a total passage of 9 hours. So lovely to be here again. I was still battling jet lag and kept hitting walls of tiredness but at 10pm we walked around the town and oriented ourselves. Kevin was knocked out by the place. Not just the facilities at the ASS Marina (Åland Sailing Society), but being docked in the shadow of the beautiful Pommern, a very impressive, Glasgow-built four-masted tall ship that plied the Cape Horn trade route to Australia in the 19th century before being retired as a museum. Mariehamn has a rich maritime history as a supplier of Cape Horners and that history is on display everywhere you go in this wonderful little town.

Insert off-color joke here…
When you find an ad of your favorite Wildling flogging spectacles, you may be beyond the wall…

Thurs 6/27: I was woken about 4am by a rising wind. The front forecasted was arriving and I was glad this was our lay day. By 9am it was blowing 20+ knots down the channel and so I headed into town to the library to get some work done, stopping off en route at the En Marine store for some shackles and clips and mooring compensators to make docking at harbor easier for my crew. I jammed through some work before heading home.

Blog

Öregund to Grisslehamn

Becoming Salty July 3, 2019 Leave a Comment

Tuesday 6/25/19.

Dep: 4pm. Arr: 7.30pm. 19.5nm. 3h 30 mins

For a higher-resolution map of this route, click HERE:

Kevin getting to grips with the helm

The long summer days at this latitude allow sailors to really pack in a full day. It’s quite routine to put in a 14-hour day from 5am-7pm getting the boat ready for departure – or perhaps to knock off a 70nm passage and still depart and arrive in bright daylight. Our first passage was an easy inside passage from Oregrund to Grisslehamn, but first I had to return the car to Stockholm airport. After yogurt and muesli for breakfast I drove to the airport and dropped off the car before getting a train from the SkyCentral station below the aiport to Uppsala. Five minutes later I was on the express bus to Oregrund for a 3pm arrival at the boatyard. Public transport here is a dream!

An hour later under grey and intermittently drizzly skies, we cast off for Grisslehamn, about 20 miles south, as the base for the following day’s crossing. We motored gently in still water with barely another boat to be seen for an uneventful four hour passage, tying up around 8pm at Grisslehamn Marina och Camping, where the guest dock was less than half full. After an evening meal of meatballs in tomato sauce I did a little work and turned in.

Blog

Back to Öregrund

Becoming Salty June 30, 2019 Leave a Comment

Sun 6/23/19

Öregrund, how I’ve missed you…

I ALWAYS TRY to fly Norwegian Airlines if I can because they are essentially a budget airline with a very modern fleet of Dreamliners. Plus I usually book far enough in advance to secure an exit row seat with plenty of legroom for the 10hour + journey. My rock bottom fare was less than $600 but I had so much excess baggage – a deflated dinghy, dinghy boards, assorted spares, tools, a boarding ladder and about ten pounds of coco coir for the new composting head – that I wound up with three extra bags plus a ‘windsurfer’ extra gear charge. The windsurfer was in fact my dinghy boards but there was no option for that on the Norwegian website! The coco coir was a bit of an adventure too. It had arrived in a ten pound block, but on the advice of Caroline Shearlock of the Boat Galley and a few other wise folks, I decided to cut it up ahead of time into 2.75lb chunks for individual use in the head. Which meant that I had these plastic bags full of what looked like compressed marijuana in my luggage. I made sure to put them right at the top and label them clearly, just in case.

Heavily laden at Arlanda: Tools, Dinghy, Dinghy Boards and, oh yes, clothes

   My flight left Los Angeles on Saturday night and I arrived at Arlanda 1.35pm on Sunday. I had only a fitful sleep on the plane but I was raring to go (as usual) am because it was so exciting to set foot on Swedish soil again. It was a real chore heaving all my luggage on and off the car rental shuttle but as usual the Hertz experience itself was outstanding, with a top-of-the-line Volvo diesel waiting for me which shuttled me off to Stockholm in calm, unfussy luxury. Just a tip for anyone using Arlanda airport: sign up for Hertz Gold membership (no charge) and book the cheapest economy car you can find. They have to give you the cheaper option even though they don’t seem to have any economy car inventory, meaning you will always get upgraded.

   I drove down to Stockholm to meet up with Kevin C, a regular sailor on my Marina del Rey crew, who is a quiet, diligent fellow. Pretty unflappable but very hard working. In short an almost perfect crew mate. We met near the Handelsbanken building on the waterfront and headed off to Grepen Marin in Öregrund, which is about 100 miles north of the Swedish capital.

Oregrund 10.45pm. The view was pretty. My mood, not so much..

   When we arrived about 8.30pm  it was cloudy but still bright daylight, but my good mood vanished when I saw my boat. She was in the water with her mainmast raised, but there was no mizzen, no windlass and no new bow pulpit, despite my clear instructions to the yard’s owner, Lennart, over the winter and spring. They had at least installed a new 14 gallon plastic water tank under the port berth. Their other job was also only half done. They had removed the existing head and sealed up the two thru-hulls, but they had not installed the new one, merely seated and fastened the brackets into which it fitted.

   I was depressed. My timetable called for us to rig the boat for a Tuesday departure and I couldn’t see any way they could fashion the new bow pulpit and install a windlass within that timetable. Plus the boat was FULL of stuff which made her look like a squalid old liveaboard. Kevin stayed stoic but I was very upset. I’ve always found that good food and some wine is a good antidote to downcast spirits, so we made the five minute drive into town for dinner. We sat outside at a local pizzeria and had a decent meal while enjoying a spectacular sunset offset by spotty grey rain clouds over what is always a gorgeous harbor. We then headed back to the boat. The first order of business was to get everything out of the boat onto the dock and arrange a sleeping space for us both. With that done, I assembled the head, which was actually very simple. They had also installed a proper switch for the fan. I spent about an hour breaking up and moistening the coco coir for the head and then put it in the head’s main chamber, then went to bed a little after midnight. At least I felt I had accomplished something!

Mon. 6/24 – Work will lift your spirits

Arcturus almost ready for departure

I think I got about four hours sleep, which was actually much better than my first night aboard in 2018, when I think I got 45 minutes! First order of business was to have some tea for breakfast then head to the Co-Op when it opened at 8am for provisioning. That done, we had some breakfast – muesli and yogurt – and go to work. First we reattached and tightened the lifelines. Then we put on the boom and bent on the mainsail, attached the vang, etc. By 9am the yard crew were drifting in to work and we had them raise the mizzen, attach the stays and tune the rig. On went the mizzen boom and mizzen sail.

The previous owner Andy had bequeathed me a huge pile of useful equipment – electrical wire, heat shrink, assorted hardware, washers, fasteners, etc. etc. which will be very useful should I ever begin extended cruising but which take up a lot of space in the port berth – part of which was now a water tank. It also meant that when I opened the storage areas I had no idea where to find what I needed. But prioritizing the things I really might need regularly I was able to rationalize and organize my space, which helped me slowly regain a sense of control. Lennart showed up and was quite sheepish about not getting all the work done – he said he couldn’t find a windlass, (hard to believe), couldn’t find the bow pulpit – (in my storage locker and in plain sight – or so I thought). It also looked as though he didn’t cover the boat during the winter. And yet I liked him. He seemed honest and amiable and at this stage I was still considering bringing the the boat back there at the end of the summer. He also seemed so apologetic I felt he might do his best to make it up to me next time. I didn’t expect a discount, but I expected him to be extra diligent to carry out the work order. I guess I like to see the best in people!

   By Monday evening the boat was rigged and ready to go. We still had no windlass, and no bow pulpit – which mysteriously seemed to have developed legs and walked away over the winter, so perhaps Lennart wasn’t to blame for that, after all. However, all other systems were go. I made Kevin and myself chicken curry with jasmine rice for dinner and we were on course for our scheduled departure to Grisslehamn. The world seemed a lot brighter!

Öregrund at dusk: how you can you NOT love a place that looks like this…

Blog

Rear buoy docking how to…..

Becoming Salty August 20, 2018 Leave a Comment

August 5th, 2018 The use of the stern webbing reel is ubiquitous in Sweden and Finland, either shackled to a kedge anchor while going bows-to on a remote island, or with a clip attachment to hold your stern steady while going bows-in at a marina (gasthamn). But since it’s always better to show than tell, here’s an example par excellence I witnessed at Grisslehamn on August 5th with a two-man German crew on a gorgeous 1972 Camper & Nicholsons. Enjoy the calm, orderly docking manuever….and the boat.

Blog

Alsvik to Vaxholm

Becoming Salty July 28, 2018 Leave a Comment

Monday July 2nd: After the dubious delights of yesterday’s crossing it was such a pleasure to wake up to the fragrant air of a picture perfect summer’s day in Sweden.

The coffee and muesli tasted especially good to us both after the exertions of the day before, and we slipped our linesd around 8am for an easy motor to Vaxholm, the historic fortress which is considered either the gateway to Stockholm or to the archipelago, depending on which way you are headed. First 90 minutes was gorgeous – good air and flat water meant we could have sailed but we were still fried from our crossing so we kept the motor on and the sails furled, even after we entered the main passenger ferry channel with the wind on our quarter at about 8 kts. Broad reaching under jib alone would have been perfect for the conditions but the channel was quite tight in places and there was a lot of traffic coming from the other direction, including ferries, and neither of us wanted to be jibing continually to avoid them. So after an uneventful 20nm we pulled into the main harbor at Vaxholm around noon. Tied up in gusty winds with help from a couple of harbor assistants and quickly got chatting to a pleasant Irish couple (William and Karen) on Melodrama, a Dehler 38 who recognized Arcturus and knew Andy and Mia from the Arc 1500. J and I were happy to go our separate ways for a few hours, for me that meant hitting the systembolaget for wine and the Co-Op supermarket for provisions. J spent his time over at the fortress scoring some more drone footage. After a quick meal I ambled across the harbor to a local bar to watch Belgium play Japan. I must say it felt SO good to be back in civilization….

Dodging the big boys
Blog

An ass-kicking crossing

Becoming Salty July 26, 2018 Leave a Comment
The calm after the storm

Sunday: July 1st: Sitting in the quiet boatyard at Alsvik on the Swedish side of the Baltic at 10pm as the sun makes its leisurely way to the horizon, the world looks a peaceful and unthreatening place.  What a difference a few hours make!

     This was toughest day’s sailing by far. Leaving Björkör we knew there was a new front forecast to start building around noon so we slipped our lines at 6am and laid a course WSW to our destination of Fejan about 32 miles away. We figured we could average 5 knots, even with a few deviations for shoals, and so we’d be only an hour away by the time the wind came up. As always the best laid plans of mice and men….

Beware of over-confidence, grasshopper…

 We made good early progress under genoa and full main and the conditions stayed calm – mostly in the 6-8kt range. We both wanted to explore the capabilities of the boat’s Cap Horn windvane and felt this was really the first time we had enough open water to use it. We tinkered with Sune (as Andy and Mia had dubbed her) for a few hours and got her to work intermittently but sadly we dallied a little too long. Still, the Swedish coastline looked barely 10nm away when the wind started to build but as can always be the case in sailing, things deteriorated quickly. As we started to get overpowered with gusts to the mid-20s and a growing swell from the north east I pondered my options: send myself up to the bucking foredeck (with no bow pulpit) to swap out the genoa for the 100% jib, or simply drop the main and go jib and jigger. I had wanted to try the fore-and-aft configuration for a while and this seemed like the ideal time. Although the boat immediately got back on her feet beating to weather was a lot of work and I knew there were plenty of inviting harbors further south west, so I decided to run before the wind on jib alone. Unfortunately the wind had other ideas, it both continued to build and move steadily westwards and then to the south, forcing me more and more to the south west while flying along at speeds of 6.5-7kts with the wind on our quarter. With plenty of shallow water approaching this was turning into a very nervous ride for us both. We tried to seek shelter at a place J found on Navionics named Rodlöga, but this turned out to be more trouble than it was worth. It featured a tiny channel facing north east, the direction the wind was now coming from, and led down to a small hamlet with a concrete pier and three feet of water. The idea leaving Arcturus to the tender mercies of a relentless swell and a concrete pier was a non-starter, so we motored back up against the chop and decided to cross west towards Blidö. J was fairly beat and went below at this time, leaving me to either handle the tacking single-handed and beat up to the north end of Blidö, or instead put the boat on a reach to the south end, where we could at least rely on a sheltered channel for the north. Another tiring three hours went by before I looked for an east-west alternative to the prevailing wind and found the sheltered Alsvik Marina, where we pulled into a pontoon berth. Cue beer, bread and cheese and a quick look around. It was now 7pm and our 32 mile, six hour jaunt had turned into an exhausting, 52nm, 13 hour passage in very challenging conditions. But we madeit home safely. We both slept very well that night.

Must get one of these. Stat.

     However the difficulty of what should have been a simple passage taught me a few lessons I was determined to take on board. For all the ease of boarding, I really wanted a bow pulpit to make it safer switching out headsails. I determined that I would have one fabricated, open at the front in the Swedish fashion, from my existing pulpit, over the winter. I also decided that the old saw about reefing as soon as you start to think about it, would be incorporated into my sailing habits immediately. And when it comes to testing out new gear – like the windvane – I vowed never to do it ahead of a big front coming in. All just common sense really, but sometimes you need a kick in the ass to do the obvious thing. I know I did.

Blog

Creepy to the Max…

Becoming Salty July 24, 2018 Leave a Comment

Gothic horror – almost – on Björkör

With the boat sitting serenely at the dock I spent a couple of hours catnapping before cleaning and tidying the boat and grabbing some breakfast (my usual staple of yogurt and granola with honey). James had gone exploring and returned to tell me about a little ‘leprechaun’ he had met named Kaj (pronounced “Kai”). Turned out Kaj was the custodian of the island and lived here alone, five days a week from February to November. Kaj invited us to tour the small museum/house he maintained  which I had spied earlier, just five minutes from the harbor. Turns out it is a perfectly preserved Åland island house from the late 19th century.

     Let me immediately say that this turned out to be a fascinating and macabre experience. Kaj was a small man in his mid-50s clad in thick waterproof work pants and a tank top. He sported the requisite fisherman’s cap and a hearing aid and his personal hygiene left much to be desired. But given the few visitors to his island perhaps he had no need of smelling good. Kaj spoke broken English in a sing-song Scandinavian accent which was almost a parody of itself. His own cabin consisted of a cozy kitchen with wood fire stove, a kitchen table with a logbook on which he recorded every boat which visited the island and pair of amazing sealskin clogs he used in wintertime. He took us over to the perfectly preserved island house just a few steps away and that is where the horror movie vibes began to come thick and fast. The place was faded and spotlessly clean, but looked as though it had just been vacated by a Victorian era Finnish family. The ground floor was dominated by a large living room/kitchen with a woodfire stove complete with pots, pans, grinders and supplies from the era. In the corner were two small bunk beds, clearly for children, while from the ceiling hung a dozen polished antique rifles, ostensibly for shooting seals. But Kaj got a gleam in his eye as he explained that the former patriarch of the house, whose stern portrait hunger over the fireplace, was an angry and irrational man who had been known to hunt ‘strangers and friends’, and who would often take his spyglass (also displayed on a sidetable) to the top of the nearby lookout to see any approaching boats. Unwary visitors were often shot at. This news caused the beginning of some anxiety in me. But there was much more to come.

One of the creepier moments of my life…

     In the parlour next to the main living space was a curiosity room containing some stuffed ducks, preserved eggs and a spinning wheel. In another corner was an antique phonograph and a stack of 78s. Kaj got an odd look in his eye as he began to turn the turntable by hand – and a strange disembodied sound of a 1930s Swedish singer, intoning mournfully at half speed, began to issue from the speaker. I looked at James nervously….this was straight out of modern horror movie. Kaj invited us upstairs where more macabre artifacts awaited. One room had a collection of old jackets and dresses, plus shoes and more sealskin boots from the 19th century. He pointed out a faded dress and encouraged me, (only half jokingly?), to put it on. My eyes flashed to the shoes and wondered if a visitor in years to come might find the LLBean hiking boots I was currently wearing among them, the only remaining artifact of an American sailor who was long forgotten after disappearing on a sailing trip in 2018. Next door to this was a claustrophic room for a small child, containing just an old crib and some strangely stained wallpaper. Was the stain blood? This was getting creepier by the second.

a serial killer’s trophies, perhaps?

     Finally Kaj, with more than hint of mischief in his eyes, encouraged us to take a peek at ‘the secret room’, which opened via a hidden door onto a tiny, narrow passage full of dusty and rusty farm implements. Before I crossed the threshold I made sure there was a window in the room, just so we could escape in the event of the hidden door being slammed behind us. I eyeballed James. He was clearly thinking the same thing. We left hurriedly but we sure to be polite. As I hurried down the mowed grass path back to my boat I already had half a horror movie written in my head. This was not an experience I will soon forget. But I will bring back future guests, so they can experience this Finnish gothic moment and give me their take. For me, the warmth of the sun and my boat’s cozy cabin have rarely been as welcome.

Blog

Kökar Sandvik to Björkör

Becoming Salty July 22, 2018 Leave a Comment
Björkör. 6am. Peace upon earth…

Saturday June 30th: The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Nowhere are those words of scripture more keenly felt than on a sailboat. After an idyllic first few days we had been confronted by a very nasty front and decided to cast off our mooring lines shortly after midnight to ensure we didn’t leave on a Friday. We put a single reef in the main and opted for 100% jib to be conservative. Given the sudden Venturi effect that can cause vicious gusts between islands, we figured it was the sensible choice. Sailing in these parts can be quite anxiety-inducing, so I wasn’t crazy about a passage in the dark, but of course we didn’t have one, since at this time of year the sun goes down about 11pm, lingers just below the horizon for about three hours then rises again – giving us a perpetual twilight in which it is quite easy to see obstacles and adjust accordingly.

      

Kokar Sandvik to Björkör. 24.4nm, 4hrs, 52mins

     Björkör lies almost directly due west of Kökar but as is always the case here, you can’t follow the rhumbline. Avoiding a large patch of skerries and shoals meant tacking back and forth a couple of times under motor with the main up the entire way to ensure arriving before the winds kicked up. We arrived shortly after 5.30am in a dead calm at what was possibly the best landfall of the summer. The island’s south-facing harbor didn’t look promising at first but as it hove more clearly into view we knew we had a real find on our hands. The harbor is perhaps 300m wide with low water from the center across to starboard. But to port is an old wooden jetty, covered in lichen, with nary another boat to spoil the solitude. Just a falu red boat house and an aluminum motorboat for the island’s caretaker (of whom more later). The island is a nature reserve and as we tied we were greeted by the unmistakable sound of bleating goats. Walking to the end of the jetty I found the island to be a mix of marsh and meadow with lichen-covered shore rocks, and as an added bonus for mariners, a clean and capacious vault toilet 90 seconds from the boat. Just down the footpath there is a large observation tower to climb up and view the island. While I explored J got some more terrific drone footage in the still air. In short order I found a large group sauna that looked like it had been there since Victorian times, and just beyond, on the island’s north side, two imposing and well-preserved Victorian houses. It looked like a very promising spot, and one from which we felt we had at least a day’s respite from the winds. Our spirits were great greatly restored. This is sailing, down one day, up the next! Time for a four-hour nap!

Drone footage courtesy JF
Björkör 59˚56.288” N 20˚13.326 E

Blog

Let it Blow…

Becoming Salty July 20, 2018 Leave a Comment
The calm before the storm….

Thursday June 28: I had used the layday of Thursday to catch up on work and get out the latest edition of my newspaper. Engrossed in work for ten hours in the harbor’s kitchen I hadn’t really taken must notice of what the other boats were doing. Which was clearing out en masse. I also hadn’t read the weather forecast…..call it a rookie mistake if you must but I would have stayed in situ even if I’d known a big cold weather system was coming. I had to get my paper to the printers and if it meant kicking our heels in the harbor for a few days then so be it.

Check the forecast, MOFO!

    The wind started to rise about 10pm and six hours later I was awoken by a clanging halyard that I went topsides to fix in just my skivvies. There was a swell from the north driving straight into the harbor. Mooring lines were straining and it felt 15 degrees colder than when I had turned in. There followed a few more hours of restless kip before waking at 7am to a full-on hooley, as the Irish so poetically put it. The skies were grey and full of mischief and the air was frigid. After coffee and bread and jam I checked the mooring lines and then headed for the kitchen where I worked morning and afternoon while keeping a weather eye out for the boat, which was now just one of two remaining in the harbor. The wind continued to build to around 30 knots which had Arcturus ducking and diving at her mooring lines, one of which finally gave up the ghost and snapped. We replaced it with the heaviest line we had and ran two extra spring lines. The boat continued to buck and rock but at least she stayed off the dock. The forecast suggested the winds would ease by midnight, then we would get hit by another another northerly front barely 12 hours later. We had planned to head to the north side of the archipelago for some anchoring out in Lansmansgrund, which Andy and Mia had recommended, but that was out of the question. After some debate and checking Navionics we found a small island due east with a south facing harbor that looked completely sheltered from notherlies. We decided to chance our arm with an overnight sail leaving at 12.01am The ferocity of the winds here made me doubt I will return this summer. The Finnish side of the water – at least the Aland area – is really WILD with much less shelter and seems tremendously exposed to northern winds howling down from the northern Baltic. The anxiety that is always in the back of my mind while sailing was very much front and center on this day, and I began to think longingly of the calm and shelter of the Stockholm archipelago. A front like this really tests your resolution and I at least was out of my comfort zone by a long, long way…..

Blog

Kökar Sandvik

Becoming Salty July 14, 2018 Leave a Comment
Golden Hour at Kokar Sandvik
Banö Ön to Kökar Sandvik: 17.5nm, 4 hours, 55 minutes

Wed. June 27th:  When I told friends I was planning on taking a ten week sailing vacation this year the response was predictable: you’re doing what? For how long? How can possibly leave work for so long? Full disclosure, it’s not completely a vacation. I’ve been publishing my newspaper every week while I’ve been gone, leaving the admin and phones to my trusty assistant in Los Angeles. What this means is that I need to be near good wifi every Thursday, which has constrained my choice of harbors and anchorages a little, but not much. Both Finland and Sweden are blessed with world-class connectivity and it seems every harbor, coffee shop and bar have good free internet. I also bought a cheap surfing package at Arlanda airport with my sim card – about 25GB for $30, so provided I have a couple of bars of signal I can also hotspot off my mobile – not great but okay in a pinch.

     Which brings me to Kokar Sandvik. I read in the Åland crusing guide I had picked up in Mariehamn that this harbor had good wi, hot saunas, and even a café where I could watch the World Cup. Result! The harbor is located a 22nm sail south east of Banö Ön through a series of tight channels which the low-res map above does not really do justice. As soon as we left the sheltered harbor we had all the wind we could handle using our big jib and full main.  With 12kts gusting to about 18 we had to keep dumping the mainsail, which given its old fashioned configuration – no traveler – was quite a chore. But it was a lively day’s sailing under dazzling blue skies where we were frequently just on the edge of being overpowered – and not for the last time I pondered the dilemma of no bow pulpits and erring on the side of a bigger sail plan because of all the lulls. It was however a lively and challenging sail in near-perfect conditions. We almost went the wrong way here and there but we sailed almost the whole way, finally deciding to drop the canvas and motor as we made our final approach to a passage which looked barely 100m wide. As we approached what I thought was the fairway J spied a very large, barely submerged rock jut ahead of us, prompting me to quickly turn around and double check our Navionics. Not a moment too soon! The real entrance was one rock over (so to speak), and the harbor certainly didn’t look promising – just a working wharf abutting an small and ugly port. As so often local knowledge came to our aid, with two Finnish sailboats motoring confidently past us at 5kts, so of course we followed them. The real port was just around the corner to port and turned out to be just the ticket. Big enough for 30 boats and dominated by a large, sloping granite rock that would make a perfect launching ramp for a boat. We clipped onto a stern buoy and J hopped off at the jetty.

The view from the sauna

     The harbor control hut was located at the end of the dock and featured not just good local produce but also handmade artisanal woolen socks made by the asistant’s mother over the winter. Priced at only 15 euros – we had gone into the euro zone – I grabbed three. The nearby café served unremarkable food – the cheapest dish was fish and chips at 8 euros which were clearly frozen before being dunked in hot oil. But the beer was cheap at 6e and they had the football on. Even better, Germany were getting knocked out of the tournament by South Korea…as an Englishman that brought a warm glow to the cockles of my heart.

But enough of old rivalries, Kokar Sandvik also has a campsite and excellent facilities, including three saunas and a well-equipped kitchen where you can prepare your own food and large tables to interact with fellow travelers and perhaps do some work. We met some interesting folks – including one from Poland who had come by bicycle with his teenage son. The place also has good showers, a clean WC and a free washer/dryer. And if you fancy a little hike down the road, the island boasts a wonderful sailors’ chapel where you can ponder the almighty and speak your celestial therapist. But back to the harbor: the excellent sauna costs 20 euros (more than the 15e dock fee) but it was one of the best I’ve ever experienced, very hot, wood fired and steps from the dock. The calm of twilight was enjoyed with a glass or two of white wine and it was idyllic…although things were to change very shortly.

The Seafarer’s Chapel at Kökar. I found this place very moving
Moonrise from the cockpit
Blog

Banö Ön: Paradise Found

Becoming Salty July 10, 2018 Leave a Comment
Feel the fear and do it anyway: Bows to at Banö Ön

Tues. June 26th: Christian Juslin at Rodhamn had recommended a deserted bows-to anchorage just north of the island of  Banö Ön about 20nm to the north east of Rodhamn and we were eager to cast off and check it out.

The day dawned overcast with not much wind, but we persevered with the sails up  for perhaps an hour during the six hour passage, finally giving up due to too much shallow water and too many tight channels. It’s one thing to move slowly, it’s quite another to get backwinded just as you’re tacking out of 8ft of water in a bottleneck. But our disappointment at having to motor evaporated when we arrived at this heavenly anchorage. Banö Ön is a large bay, perhaps one mile deep and three quarters of a mile wide. There was just one other boat in residence, lying at anchor on the other side of the bay. We headed to the north west corner and spied a promising spot. We did a couple of slow drive-bys, decided on our preferred spot and talked through the plan. J had never done a bows-to mooring before so it was important he was clear on the procedure. I also put him on helm since the bowman has the most important job. It went astonishingly smoothly as we motored in at minimum revs, dropped the stern anchor three boat lengths out, put her in neutral two boat lengths out and whispered forward, adding a little reverse perhaps six feet out so the boat came to a stop right in front of a large granite rock, allowing me to step off easily and run the line to an imposing pine tree to windward and a large rock to leeward.

  J can be a brooding fellow at times but his mood was positively giddy as we trimmed the lines. He had clearly been nervous about pointing the boat towards a granite rock, but the ease with which we moored released a mood in him which was half relief and half amazement at the location. While I went for a swim in the cool but still-comfortable water, J scored some more great drone footage, which you can see below. The evening was calm and idyllic and we enjoyed a peaceful dinner in the cockpit before turning in around 11pm. By now we were almost over our jet lag, mooring in a gorgeous spot in the middle of nowhere. Honestly, what’s not to like?

21.3nm. 5hrs., 21 mins
Video courtesy JF
X Marks the spot: our anchorage in Banö Ön
1 2 Next →

Recent Posts

  • Vänersborg to Gothenburg
  • Toreboda to Vänersborg
  • Gota Canal 2: Hulta Sluss to Toreboda
  • Gota Canal 1: Mem to Hulta Sluss
  • Why The Gota Canal?
  • Saying goodbye…and hello
  • Furusund…. and that very tasty Värdhus
  • Sandhamn. Again.
  • Paradise(t) found
  • Grisslehamn and Blido
  • First half bad, second half good.
  • And finally…the Inside Passage
  • Show us a proper map?
  • Rodhamn to Blidö
  • A Day at the Opera…
  • Degerby to Mariehamn
  • Näsby to Degerby
  • Turku to Näsby
  • Kasnas to Turku
  • Hanko to Kasnäs
  • Jussarö to Hanko
  • Talinn to Jussarö
  • Talinn to Helsinki
  • Modermagan Bay to Talinn, Estonia
  • Rosala to Modermagan Bay

Archives

  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • October 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016

Subscribe to my posts



Created by Webfish.
© Copyright 2014. Theme by BloomPixel.