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Start Watching for Icebergs

Halifax_Viz

I write these words with extreme caution, but today just very well might be “the” day.  As of late last night the computer had been beaten into submission and Windows was accepting whatever we threw at it, in my case literally.  We left it cooking all night and as of 7:00 this morning all seemed well.  So, if indeed this is the case, we leave Halifax today; a wonderful place but it’s beyond time to get going.

We’ve planned the next stop (note cautious words, carefully chosen) to be at the Isle de la Madeleine in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, a few days from here.  Getting there will be a mater of  running NE up the coast and turning in (N) at Canso where further on we’ll have to lock through to the Gulf. One of the decisions we’re facing concerns the relentless fog.  For the past four or five days the viz has been no more than 100 yds.  We’re hoping that if we loop out into the Atlantic rather than do a straight run we may avoid most of the coastal fog, “hope” being the operative word.

It’s at Isle de la Madeleine where the trip takes a more serious note in that this is where we need to start watching for icebergs.  One web site which we’ll be glued to is: http://www.newfoundlandlabrador.com/Icebergs/IcebergFinder/IcebergFinder.aspx which gives the projected ice coverage for the immediate area.  It’s all of our fervent wishes that all things electrical and mechanical have had their moment of fun as now it’s getting serious.

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Five Out of Five

New Computer New Computer

I’ll keep this short and not so sweet; there‘s a reason five out of five crew members aboard Bagan have MacBooks…. The new computer arrived last night, the one we waited five days for, the one we paid a fortune to get up here and through Customs, the one that’s IBM based and state of the art, the one that runs Vista, not even XP… The very same one that last night crashed and locked us out the 2nd time we went to use it. Clinton has been up around the clock talking with Sandy (on my cell… don’t ask) trying to figure out what file or driver in what program Vista doesn’t like.  Once found they then have to try to get on line and find a better or more reliable driver, usually a third party’s.  Meanwhile I’ll finish writing this on my trusty three year old MacBook, attach a jpeg and upload it to the blog with absolutely no issues.  Five out of five.  No bets as to when we leave the dock.

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Still in Halifax

Halifax Rain 

Halifax Rain

Still in Halifax, which was more or less expected.  When we left Newport we knew that there were still some jobs that needed to be attended to but also knew life would be a bit easier if not less expensive up here.  We’ve been sitting under a very persistent low pressure system which started off as a n’or easter so that gives us more motivation to stay at the dock.  As with Newport it’s rained most everyday since our arrival. What we didn’t expect was that our new computer which we had sent “over night” has taken five days to get here and that another package which we had sent has also been stuck in Customs Turn-Around, not really gaining any traction on getting to us. The silver lining in these clouds are that the folks here at The Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron have been beyond welcoming and incredibly supportive in helping us cut through the bureaucratic Red Tape. 

To add to this, despite my calling Master Card and American Express two weeks prior to departure to advise them of my travels out of the country, due to security reasons, both cards have been shut down, mid purchase… Master Card twice. In the meantime Ullie has been able to shoot the much needed “controlled” crew interviews for the documentary,  Sefton has been working as his audio engineer and Dominique has been using this extra time to spend most of her days on the road getting needed provisions. Clinton’s been keeping his eye on the weather system and by all accounts the wind will swing into the north this morning which should help flatten the seas out and allow us to perhaps leave this evening… yet that would all depend on whether the computer gets here or not.  Ironic situation; finding Mother Nature more dependable than an “Absolutely, Positively Has To Be There Over Night” shipping service.

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Father’s Day in Halifax

 

Halifax

Halifax

Still in Halifax and most probably will be here for the next few days.  We’ve been watching a system develop off-shore and last night it came ashore as a pretty fair n’or easter; driving rain, gusts 35 – 40 kts and all in all a good time to be out of harm’s way.  Thursday night Ulli and Sefton flew in on two separate carriers and both airlines managed to lose their bags.  The bags arrived just yesterday and none were more relived than Ulli (and me) as his was the bag that held all the audio gear.  From what Clinton’s been pulling up on the weather charts it seems this low will be lurking for the next few days with the strongest part of the system coming in this afternoon. We’re going to move Bagan to an inside wall here at the marina, button up and hunker down. This will give me a good and uninterrupted chance to final organize and assemble my edit gear, something I haven’t been able to get to for the last month.  Or… seeing as it’s Father’s Day I just may head back to my bunk, hang a sign on the door that reads “Gone Fishin’” and settle in with a good book.

OK, so no one paid any attention to the sign on my cabin door which read “Gone Fishin’ ”.  In fact, Dominique, Sefton and Clinton cooked me an amazing steak dinner and then then took me out to see “The Taking of Pelham 123”. Far better than fishin’ any day!  Hands down one of the best Father’s Day I’ve ever had!

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Arrived Halifax 14:39 local 6/18…


Four hours outside of Halifax and the weather holds; long, fat swells from the SSE, winds light & variable and not a cloud in the sky. Yesterday, as we made our way past the Bay of Fundy, we felt the influence of its legendary tides. We were approximately 80 miles to the south of the bay and found that the set was so strong it knocked us about five degrees off course. This leg to Halifax was basically a shake-down leg to, as Gerry Driscol used to say on “Intrepid”, “See what we can break.”

Nothing truly broke but we did have two problems. The first being the computer… again. It’s a Dell tower, a few years old and just doesn’t seem to be up to the task of running several high demand programs simultaneously. We have the electronic Nobeltec charts, an Airmar program which via an outside sensor gives us not only wind speed and direction but temp, a barometer, wind chill, apparent wind and satellite availability (Airmar is one of the more amazing marine innovations of the last five years). We’re also running two engine room cameras off of the computer as well as the three internet (land based, wireless card and satellite) access programs. Last night the computer showed us the Blue Screen of Death twice and had to be shut down and rebooted. After the total temper tantrum it threw the day before departure and last’s night TT, we’ve lost all confidence in it. Ted Croy is aboard and has been building computers since he was 12. Alas, the spending isn’t quite over as when we get in Ted is going computer shopping. Personally I’d like to give this Dell the float test but have been talked into keeping it as a backup for the Nobeltec program only.

The other small problem occurred at 5:00 this morning and was operator error. In the three years I’ve owned Bagan I never quite realized that the fuel pickup lines are a few inches off the bottom of the tanks, which only makes sense. These pickup lines think that the tank is empty when there’s actually about 15 gallons showing in the sight gauge. You can guess the outcome. Our immediate fear was that we picked up something in the prop (water temps were 45 degrees at this point and going over the side a real possibility) but quickly realized how we’d miscalculated and simply sucked the tank dry. We’ve three other fuel tanks aboard and 20 minutes later we were underway having been soberly being reminded that complacency is always lurking.

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On Our Way to the Northwest Passage

1245243979_BillyB

Billy Black, taking photos and video, escorted us out past Castle Hill.

I’ve been looking forward to writing this first sentence for 18 months… “0800, slight swells from the south, winds light and variable and on our way to the Northwest Passage.”  Damn. We’re currently 22 hours out of Newport, exited the Cape Cod Canal around 5:00 yesterday evening and Bagan has been performing flawlessly.  The land based pressures and anxieties have been slowly dissipating and while none of us know what lays ahead, the excitement of the project is starting to build again. 

We dropped our dock lines at 10:20 yesterday morning and, taking photographs and video, Billy Black escorted us out past Castle Hill.  (Apart from being a brilliant marine photographer, Billy and his wife Joyce, are two of the best people going; very, very proud to call them friends). The gravity of Billy’s departure wasn’t wasted on any of us. Watching his boat turn and head back to Newport was about as poignant as it gets (little did we know that we’d see him 20 minutes later as he raced out to get shots of  transatlantic competitors ending their race from England to Newport, but it was poignant nonetheless). 

I write this last sentence with fingers crossed; today is going to be a day for doing absolutely nothing but sitting back and enjoying the passing scenery; miles and miles of open, blue and empty Atlantic ocean.  Halifax tomorrow. (Actually… truth be told there is one more point of anxiety; this blog entry will be the first one we upload via satellite. Because the computer crashed a day before departure I’ve never had a chance to test the connection. So, if you’re reading this now… )

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