The Delta Part II

Oh, what fun…

It was a (not unexpected) 2 am “move the boat in the pitch blackness” exit from that anchorage. Must say that I cannot believe the anchorage is actually included in a cruising guide. I’ll have to track down the cruiser who showed me the guide and get the author name/info to share that this is no longer a reasonable anchorage to use. It probably was…maybe 10 years ago before some of the slough silted in and directed quite a bit of currents through the anchorage location. I guess I need to get myself over to the cruising wiki and put in some info, huh?

Well, I was (as usual) doing my night-long anchor watch since I can’t sleep when I’m worried about our holding. Looking at the gps track on the little Nokia N810 screen and taking a quick look around outside every few minutes, I could see that the stern anchor was way off to our starboard side and thus the outgoing tide was pushing us sideways towards the shallow edge of the slough. What I couldn’t see (without going outside to the foredeck and it was cold and windy so I didn’t go there) is that the bow anchor was also having the same problems from the same direction. Then, the bow anchor seems to have dragged off its shallow muddy bar into the deeper area where the boat lay at anchor. That shifted the entire boat aft about 30 ft and to port about 15 feet which showed up on the GPS immediately and put us within about 8 ft of the edge of the slough behind us–when I looked outside, I knew we were grounded since I’d done lead-line soundings (from the dingy) all around the boat earlier in the evening. Durn.

I started the engine, woke up David and told him we’re grounded, and headed outside to figure it out and try and get us off the ground behind us before we ended up further aground. Thinking: Shoulda just anchored in the major portion of the slough itself (used by boaters coming and going and well, that’s bad form to anchor in what is essentially a channel) instead of trying to use this tuck-away spot which clearly had as much (or more) current going through it as any other portion of this slough. This is NOT an anchorage!

We ended up, within a few short minutes, motoring off the mud bar that had been to our port side which we were pushed upon by the ebb tide currents (thank goodness for a stout strong engine and soft fluffy mud), miraculously turned the boat in the too-tight anchorage, her bow sweeping over the other mud bar (to starboard) and motoring into the main channel’s eddy swirl by the cut between two sloughs. Within 10 minutes we’d selected a spot in the middle of the channel about a quarter mile away and dropped a single anchor, counting on the strong currents to keep us parallel to the shorelines in the narrow area until daylight in 3-1/2 hours. We were able to quickly haul in our main anchor (a 105 lb CQR that I’d wondered how we were going to get off that shallow mud bar) but decided it best to leave behind our stern anchor and rode to be retrieved in the daylight.

While the un-grounding and re-anchoring was very quick and we didn’t seem to damage anything (need to dive on the boat in clearer waters) nor lose anything but sleep, several things conspired to make this experience vexing for me:

On the way out the door, I’d not turned on the back light for the depth sounder (mounted inside but viewable from the helm) so I couldn’t see our actual depth (duhh!);

I’d not taken the hand-held GPS outside with me to see our actual position in the dark (another duhh!);

Our compass (in cockpit binnacle) is unlit and I couldn’t see it w/o a flashlight;

We don’t have a rudder angle indicator and I couldn’t see my marking of “king spoke” on the wheel hub in the dark. There was no marlin wrapped around the king spoke–I’d started varnishing the wheel the previous day so no physical landmarks on the smooth shiny wheel. Because it takes so many turns lock-to-lock, and one can lose count of the turns, I usually open the lid of the steering box anyway and take a look at the worm gear to figure out rudder position when working quickly in tight quarters.

To see the compass and inside the steering box at night, I typically have a little led flashlight in my pocket. I was in my sleep shirt with a life jacket hastily thrown over it. No little led flashlight (another duhh!).

I had brought ouside with me a bright Milwaukee V28 flashlight (basically a spotlight but not quite) to use to view the worm gear and my surroundings but it immediately blinded me if I used it so I’d not have night vision for maybe 30 seconds afterwards.

Finally, vexing and inhibiting my ability to see anything: My very long hair. Usually tied back with a band, braid, or scarf, here I was hatless and the high wind whipped my hair into my face almost constantly. I was thankful of the wind as it was blowing us away from the shoal of the slough and away from the bar we were being pushed upon by the current. But even so–I couldn’t see a thing for all that hair.

We won’t even get into the issue of my less-than-stellar night vision which was even more hampered by having spent the previous day outside in the bright sun only shielded by a hat–no sunglasses.

Luckily, David has excellent night vision and, as a former Navy pilot, is used to protecting his night vision with sunglasses during the day and by not looking at bright lights at night. Unluckily, I’m the one with much more familiarity with our boat’s performance in tight quarters so I couldn’t just hand over the helm to him.

I finally resorted to shining my bright flashlight on a bit of reflective paint on an (uncharted) channel marker in the middle of the anchorage area. With verbal directions from David, and this guiding star, we quickly exited the anchorage. But, as soon as I could no longer gauge distance by seeing the little bit of reflection, I was hopelessly disoriented. David directed my actions–and his directions made no sense to me since I though we were in an entirely different place than we were and couldn’t see that we were being swept by the currents into the cut between two sloughs…but I followed his directions to get us away from the eddy and the heavy currents pulling us sideways. Once my night vision returned in about 2 minutes (after exiting the anchorage no more flashing the V28 to see both the channel marker and the worm gear position/rudder angle), I could see the sides of the slough, hubby could go to the foredeck and we could use our usual hand signals to anchor in the channel.

In the morning, David rowed over to retrieve the stern anchor (a 30-ish lb Norhill that we purchased for the purpose of kedging) which was easy to find because of the two fenders attached to the rhode. He had quite a time (in the dingy) getting it out of the mud bar that we’d dragged it into while turning the boat out of the anchorage. He used a rolling hitch with the dingy painter to eventually free it.

After having breakfast, we motored an hour or so over to a nearby “slough to nowhere”, the Montezuma, which has no through traffic, re-anchored, and enjoyed a windy but sunny day of doing..not much. We’re there now, rather wind-bound for a bit and finding no reason to move elsewhere other than the lack of cel phone signal. My Internet connection is via a tether to my cel. We hoisted the 1.9Ghz antenna up a flag halyard and it seems that I now have an iffy connection so I thought I’d post this update.

On our list of things to do: install light in binnacle. On my personal list of things to do before going outside at night–take my regular jacket with flashlight, turn on the depth sounder light, and tie back my hair! Also on my list–use sunglasses during the day to protect my night vision and do not use the V28 as a flashlight unless I really want to be blind in the night. We both agreed that we’d stick with our own impressions of anchorages–not what the cruising guides say.

Well, I’m running the Honda EU2000, doing a load of laundry (we got amazingly muddy from retrieving the stern anchor and washing the dingy afterwards) and catching up on my web surfing.

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