Day 8. We will
finally reach Desolation Sound! However
we have a 6 hour cruise ahead of us under a grey sky and 15-20 knots of wind. As we poked out into the open, the water was
a little lumpy but at least now we will have following seas. It ended up a fairly smooth ride and only got
better further north. We cruised past
Powel River and Lund then up through the inside of the Copeland Islands. Rounding Sarah Point the high peaks
surrounding Desolation should have come into view but the cloud cover was too
thick.
Grace Harbor was our first stop in Desolation. This is truly a beautiful and rugged
place. The water drops off deep just a
few feet from the waterline making passages in tight waterways possible. Stern tying is the norm here. This is a method of anchoring where you drop
your anchor, back up toward shore, then take a line from your boat to
shore. You wrap the line around something
and pull the end back to the boat making a loop. It’s harder than it sounds because your boat
wants to blow down wind while you are trying to tie it off. The great thing about it is your boat doesn’t
swing and you can get the stern of your boat really close to shore due to the
steep drop off in this area.
We have stern tied a few times before but by no means have
it mastered. This time we got the anchor
down, backed to shore but not close enough.
As I got in the dinghy to take the line to shore it became apparent I
would not have enough line to bring it all the way back, so I just tied it
off. The problem with tying it off is
when your ready to leave you have to go back to shore to untie. I came back to the boat, tightened the line
and we seemed to be in place. Julie says
all I do is fiddle with things when I’m on the boat. I can’t seem to just relax, I need to have
everything just the way I want it. Of
course I couldn’t just leave it alone. I
let more anchor rode out so we could get closer to shore then dinged in to grab
the end of the line and pull it back to the boat. I quickly grabbed the end (the boat is loose
now) and tried to pull the line back to the boat. Problem is the friction on the line from trying to pull it around the tree made driving the dinghy while holding the line extremely difficult. I would give it some gas and get yanked all over the place almost running over the line with the outboard several times. It was a real show! I was determined though so I gave it one final goose of the throttle, almost getting yanked out of the dinghy but made it back to the boat. Julie and I laughed for an hour at the sight of me pulling the line. There is an easy solution, all I needed to do is pull a bunch of line while on shore and pile the loose line in the boat. Next time.
First thing Skylar did was jump off the boat into the warm water! We took off for a dingy tour of the harbor and noticed a sign showing a trail to a lake. It was about 1 mile round trip so we took off through the dense forest to see what we could find. It was a beautiful lake but not good for swimming, too many logs and marshland. Locals call it Leech Lake. Ava is turning into a great hiker! There was even a smell waterfall and a bunch of old equipment left behind from logging days.
Fish tacos for dinner and Skylar took a nice long evening kayak paddle. It’s the only thing that settles him down. Since the prospect of warm water that’s all he can talk about, driving us crazy with; dad come swimming, Ava watch this, can I jump off the top of the boat, can I, can I, can I, watch this, watch this, watch this! He has a one-track mind that demands your full attention at all times. You gotta love the energy and excitement though!








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