Foggy Lessons

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Herb Payson said “I loved cruising the coast of Maine . For one thing, it helped me conquer my fear of fog. Not that I have learned to feel secure in the fog, but at least I have learned how to grope without panic.

Reading the above, I am reminded of a very foggy day of sailing when we placed yellow ribbon tell tales on the shrouds. That day, the fog was so thick that I couldn’t even see the wind indicator high above us on the foremast.

It is much nicer to simply stay at anchor during a foggy day. Below, at San Miguel and at Drake’s Bay anchorages.

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Welcome 2014

There’s a saying that goes “You can’t change the wind, you can however adjust your sails.”
The circa 1969 photograph above was taken of Mahdee when she was Privateer, cruised and raced by the David Allen family. They’re doing a lovely job of changing the foresail to the gollywobbler to capture more wind.

During 2013, David and I were able to spend some great time coast-wise sailing in late winter from San Francisco to San Diego, visiting the Channel Islands and then returning in summer to the Bay area. We also ventured up into the California Delta in late summer, where we enjoyed almost four months of idyllic anchorages and sloughs where we worked on boat projects while we watched mink, ducks, otters, cranes, egrets, and treasured the peaceful sloughs filled with life all around us.

2013 was a year of both exciting ocean sailing and wonderful calm anchorages. I am reminded of Howard Bloomfield’s observation that “Cruising has two pleasures. One is to go out in wider waters from a sheltered place. The other is to go into a sheltered place from wider waters.”

We are looking forward to an adventure filled year of sailing in 2014.

Happy New Year to all,
Brenda and David (and ship’s cat Beryl)
Schooner Mahdee

Photo by Diane Beeston, courtesy of the San Francisco Yacht Club. All rights reserved.

The End of Summer

It just hit me–Summer is over. Finished. Done. No more. Gone. It all started with our plans for a 2013 summer spent cruising around the California Sacramento river and San Joaquin river deltas usually just called “the Delta.” There are around a thousand miles of navigable waters to explore. Our first exposure to the Delta was the summer of 2010 when we ignored all the advice to stay away from the Delta due to the bugs, heat and dangerously shallow waters. Both Brenda and I loved that visit which was planned to only last three days; we left a month later when food and our various commitments forced us to go. But we vowed to return for another longer visit. Someday.

Little problems like a broken anchor windlass earlier in the summer kept us from heading up into the Delta until August. We figured a short late-summer visit was better than no visit at all and that we would leave the Delta when the weather became “worse” than that of the San Francisco Bay. That finally happened this past week. Of course the recent cold snap weather was everywhere in this part of California, but by closely monitoring the NOAA data, we decided that we would be warmer in San Francisco, so it was time to leave.


Hoods, gloves and scarves have replaced shorts, T’s and sunblock.

As we moved downstream towards San Francisco, we experienced early morning icy, frosty decks aboard Mahdee and chilling winds. But each day was nicer than the last. Despite the cold, however, the realization that Summer was over occurred when we stopped in Antioch and I went to take a shower and realized that this was the first time since Labor Day that we had been able to take an unlimited hot shower. We were back to “civilized sailing.” For months we have either gone swimming, used the solar shower, or had coin operated showers. What a treat, especially since the sail to Antioch had been cold.

Another benefit to departing the Delta when we did is that the weather for leaving was perfect. Normally, one wants the tide going in the direction of travel–an ebb tide leaving the Delta. But, crossing Susuin Bay and San Pablo Bay can be very, very rough because the prevailing winds are head winds while leaving the Delta and they hit the ebb tide head on in the shallow waters and that creates steep breaking waves that make returning to SF Bay a rough and uncomfortable experience.

For our trip, however, there was a North East wind blowing, so we had a strong ebb tide and following wind and seas. Everything in the same direction. We saw a couple of boats heading in the opposite direction and their ride looked miserable. For us, the only downside was that our plan for anchoring at China Camp had to be changed because it was too rough there with breaking waves and a lee shore. Instead, we pressed on to Aquatic Park in downtown San Francisco.


Entering Raccoon Strait from the East.

And so ended our Summer Delta adventure. The only confusion came when sighting all the swimmers in the cold water coming alongside Mahdee to ask where we were coming from and how long we planned to stay. But then I reminded myself that here, swimming in the Bay is not just a Summer sport, it’s year round, and yes, Summer was truly over.


Sunset looking towards the Golden Gate Bridge from Aquatic Park


Hauling up the anchor in front of the San Francisco Maritime Museum at Aquatic Park

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