All Hauled Out

Hauling out, that annual or biannual, or in our case triannual, ritual, is a taxing business, and I’m feeling pretty overtaxed even though we’re done with it finally. Turns out that while it can be a pretty demanding event for anyone, when it’s your home going up on blocks, it’s even more stressful.

I had planned to put together more updates, chronicle things as they happened, but all those grand ambitions went away the first day. So, yet again, this is a true late entry, framed in the rosy afterglow of a relatively successful event, unable to strictly convey the tension and anxiety I was wracked with during our three days on the hard.

The tension all started the morning of the day before our scheduled lift time, when we planned to sail up to Port Townsend and spend the night in order to be sure of being on time. Reviewing the tide tables one last time, I realized that I had misread them when planning the trip, and had scheduled our afternoon departure exactly opposite the most desirable currents. We hastily prepared the cabin and threw off the docklines to get out on the ebb, and had a pretty decent northward sail ahead of southerly winds the whole way up.

We spent the night on a mooring at my parent’s house in Port Hadlock, and the southerly built up to a brisk 25-30 knots by the time we had to leave for the boat yard in the morning. My friend Maxx, there along with my parents to help with all the work, and I unfurled a postage-stamp worth of genoa and took off northward like a rocket. Making things even more interesting, an ammunition ship was coming in to moor at Naval Magazine Indian Island, right between us and the Boat Haven in Port Townsend, at the same time. Quite apart from the strictures placed upon small craft such as ours by Rule 18(b) of the COLREGs, one simply finds oneself inclined to give ammunition ships a wide berth.

The wind also gave rise to speculation that the hoist might not happen as planned; as we pulled into the work pier the gentleman tied up ahead of us took our lines and informed us that he had been delayed almost two hours already. The thought of several tons of boat being blown around in the slings was not comforting. But when I checked in at the yard office after lunch, they were ready to go… I found myself motoring into the U-shaped slip almost an hour earlier than scheduled.

Fin keel, smooth and painted
That's not so bad!

I never get any good pictures of our haul-outs because I am always the one stuck on deck when we come out of the water. This year the position was particularly nerve-wracking. Not only had it been three years in salt water on a single coat of paint, but in February, we had dinged a rock in Montague Harbour with what felt like a pretty solid whack, and my visions of what the soft lead keel might look like after that affair had grown increasingly horrific with each repetition of the event in my mind. I went so far as to schedule an extra buffer day in the yard in case significant repair work was necessary. While the boat was in the water, there was no way to tell what the bottom edge of the fin looked like. As it was being hoisted out, then, my only clues from on deck came from watching the faces of friends and bystanders on the ground below. They looked pretty sober, I thought… not a good sign.

I hopped off when the bow stopped jerking around, and turned around to get a good look… and saw nothing more than a few dings and some cracked epoxy. The keel was hardly damaged at all. Even more remarkably, the hull was surprisingly clean but for a conga line of barnacles along the bottom of the rudder and around the prop shaft. Most everything came off at the business end of the pressure washer, but the paint stayed put… particularly gratifying since I had ordered another gallon of the stuff for this year’s coat (Pettit Unepoxy Plus, inexpensive and apparently quite effective the waters of the Salish Sea).

Everything else went similarly according to plan. The painting was fast and easy, there was plenty of time to wax and buff the rest of the hull, the rudder stuffing got re-packed, the engine painted, and the various gouges in the keel epoxied and faired, all in the first two days. The last day, with our afternoon splash time, was mostly a lot of waiting around for paint to dry.

Maxx fiddling with the prop
Say, he isn't loosening that nut, is he?

The disappointments were mostly secondary; at some point during the past three years, the prop shaft zinc was apparently thrown off, and the shaft, strut, and prop all had some degree of corrosion which had to be taken off. We sprayed the works with a zinc-based paint this time around, which our boatyard neighbor assured us was good stuff and had the added effect of making the whole assembly look solid and new. I also took some of the spare time we had to go up the mast and take a look at our malfunctioning radome, but even after tightening every connector in sight and blasting them with contact cleaner, it remained malfunctioning.

Zinc paint on the prop
Maybe the paint will hold it all together

The rudder shaft re-packing also didn’t turn out entirely well. When we went back in the water, it was perfectly dry and looked good, but once underway with the stern squatting down, it started dripping again. At least it should be dry while we’re at dock or anchor now. I’ll have to weight the bow down and give it another try with the boat in the water, though.

On the whole, though, I came out of it all pretty pleased. It was more difficult than the last time around simply because it was hard to look at our home all torn apart in mid-project and propped up on stilts (fortunately, we could stay at my parent’s place, and didn’t have to try to cope with living aboard while out of the water… I’m not sure either we or it would have survived that experience). It’s hard to explain, but it’s extraordinarily important for everything aboard to be secured and organized. That has, for me, taken on an even more important mental component while living aboard… it’s hard to move around or get anything done if that’s not the case, and so I find myself a little out of sorts when it starts getting messy and disorganized, as inevitably happens during projects of this sort. It was a tremendous relief to have time on the last day to get aboard and clean and stow everything, and I had great satisfaction sailing back to Seattle (motoring, actually; we weren’t so lucky with the wind on our return trip, and chugged along over glassy seas nearly the whole way back… with an extra half knot or so of speed with our clean bottom and prop!) in a boat that both looked and felt like a boat should.

Though satisfied, I’m also pretty tired… I feel all hauled out myself right now. But every time I look at our newly shiny hull and clean bottom, ready for a summer of sailing, it’s worth it all over again.

On the water again
On the water again

Ninety percent of something is everything

Lately it seems that this has been a blog less about cruising than about all the reasons we’re not cruising. But then I’m told that ninety percent of cruising is spent at anchor or tied up, so maybe we’re right on the mark.

I just helped our neighbors shove off for points north for the long holiday weekend. Reversing out of our southward facing slips into a brisk southerly can be a drag; prop walk tends to push your stern in exactly the wrong direction, so you are facing shore instead of sea, but you have little choice but to apply more power and suffer more yaw just to clear the slip. Then once you’re out in the narrow space between the docks, you have to come to a halt to power the bow around, but while you’re sitting there the wind is trying to shove you down on all the other boats in south-facing slips. Add a dinghy on a towline into the mix and it’s an invigorating start to any sailing adventure.

So while I keenly felt the anxiety and tension they were going through getting clear of the slip this morning, I also could imagine the relief and sense of accomplishment they probably felt once they escaped the breakwater and could raise sail for a nice downhill ride all the way to Port Townsend. Why weren’t we out doing the same?

Since we’ve been back on the boat full time it’s pretty much been full-time work. It’s amazing how much more you can get done when you are in one place all the time, and with strong Internet and a city full of enabling mechanisms, we’ve become gluttons for getting stuff done. Even the boat itself has benefited; new vents installed, a good scrubbing of the foredeck and anchor locker, inspection and cleaning of the steering gear, and a lot of shopping to prepare for our imminent haul-out.

Originally scheduled for last December, then hoped for in March, then delayed again, and again, and again, we finally have a date set next week to get Insegrevious up on the hard and get her fixed up, painted up, and shined up. At least we hope. Ninety percent of the work is making sure she’s safe to go back in the water. Re-packing the rudder shaft seal and fixing any damage to the keel from a close encounter with a rock earlier this year, both things we’ve never done before, will be the make or break moments of the event.

My tentative plans for the year had been to get everything fixed up and to get out of town early, taking a couple of months and going north up as far as Desolation and poking around there until it got too crowded. Between work and delays with getting the boat out, those all fell by the wayside, and I have been slow to adjust. Ninety percent of cruising is adjusting to changing circumstances. So, we may be around town during the spring and early summer, and hopefully get our two or so months of escape in during the late summer and fall. Subject to changing circumstances, of course.

That doesn’t mean we won’t be out sailing, though; assuming the boat lives through the haul-out, we’ll be moseying up and down the Sound for June and some part of July, staying close to Seattle so Mandy can meet her various work obligations. We’ll have to lug a portable generator along to keep all our various computers going so I can work too, even if we’re not on shorepower. It wasn’t the early summer I had originally conceived, so I’m still not sure whether to be excited or bummed about it. But ninety percent of cruising is adjusting expectations and enjoying what you find, not what you were looking for.

More time out on the water should mean more, and more meaningful, blog entries, at least. That should start next week, when we make our trek up to Port Townsend for our long overdue haul-out.

Irreducible Minimums

“Oh, great,” you say. “Here he goes again about risk and checklists and aviation or something. BOOORRRIIING!”

Well, fear not, my friends. I’m not going to talk about that tedious old crap. I’m going to talk about another kind of crap altogether, fresh, exciting crap that you will be happy to learn about: our stuff.

It’s no accident that the phrases “I have a bunch of crap” and “I have a bunch of stuff” are more or less synonymous in English, I have decided. Most stuff is crap, and can safely be disposed of despite our more noble attachments to it. This is a simple fact you learn once you move from a 1400 square foot house to a 33′ sailboat, and it’s almost universally described among those who take the plunge as a sort of liberating experience. My wife certainly sees it that way and I suppose, intellectually at least, I can understand that. The modern tendency of people being owned by their stuff rather than vice versa has been broadly commented on; moving onto a boat is a sure way to short-circuit that unhappy state of affairs, because you just don’t have the room for it (the fact that you will soon end up being owned by your boat is another topic entirely).

The thing is, I’ve never felt owned by my stuff. I have always been pretty happy with an accumulation of goods that could more or less fit comfortably in the back of my pickup truck. Apart from a few random and relatively small items I have spent considerable money on and find routinely useful, I just don’t feel much need for stuff. While living in a house, it’s true that I accumulated a great deal more items than that, but I had little emotional attachment to them and didn’t have much trouble ditching them when the time came to do so.

After a long winter of house-sitting, splitting our time between the house and the boat, we’re finally consolidating almost all our various crap back in one place: aboard. And despite the fact that it mostly all came from here in the first place, we’re having a heck of a time getting all back in comfortably. Unlike when we moved aboard in the first place, however, our space issues now are not really caused by any unhealthy and unwarranted attachment to a surfeit of unnecessary crap. This time, rather, we are confronting a simple irreducible minimum of stuff.

It’s certainly true that necessity is the mother of compromise and most of us can get by with a lot less than what we think of as “necessary” but I don’t think I am going out on a limb when I find it necessary to keep around enough clothes for a week, food, office supplies and tools, and the other various items that we are now finding it a challenge to stow neatly and securely. It was easy, the first time around, to look at some object or other and say, “Pitch it; I haven’t used it in years.” Now, I look at what is left, and as I consider each separate thing, I am either looking at something I use almost every day, or which prudence and common standards of seamanship demand remain aboard.

I think this is the point at which most people decide they simply need another three feet of boat. One wag suggested we just put the stuff in the basement, and I won’t pretend I haven’t considered building some sort of floating filing cabinet that could be towed along behind if necessary. Driven to such desperation, those 36 footers start looking pretty good.

I’m determined to weather the crisis, however, if for no other reason than we simply can’t afford anything larger right now. I have every confidence that, given a few weeks of patient, persistent re-arranging and Tetris-like maneuvering, pretty much everything will fit. Then, I won’t even want a bigger boat… I’d just have to start the organizing all over again from scratch.

The Spring Fancy

It’s spring, and the light green sprouts on the hillside above the marina make it look as if Bob Ross has taken his great celestial brush and begun the annual creation of his legions of happy little trees. The sun is out, warmth begins to seep into the cabin from outside rather than leaking out of the inside, and all manner of birds and harbor creatures are re-appearing. It’s spring, and in times like these, a young man’s fancy turns to… boat maintenance.

Strange, and perhaps unromantic, you may protest. True, but who among us can govern our hearts when what they really yearn for is the feel of a good solid wrench to wrap the palm around, the silky bristles of a scrub brush, or the luxurious softness of a chamois cloth infused with polish? I see here today that I am not alone in feeling the call, the dock being alive with other boaters on a similar mission, queues at the water spigots, scrub brushes held at port arms.

Scrubbing the deck and cleaning the bright work is the most straightforward and perhaps least risky part of the urge, however. In maintenance, as with romance, there is ample opportunity for broken hearts, and they are most likely to crack when the engine cover is removed after a winter’s disuse or the bilge revealed in all its putridity for the first time.

In my case, it’s the engine. The hatch has been off most of the winter but it’s tucked away back next to the quarter berth, which, in another of the immutable laws of the sea, has filled up with the detritus that might more properly have been consigned to a cockpit locker except that it was always raining when we wanted to put it there. So the engine has been out of sight and largely out of mind, until today, when I find it looking sickly and rusty, despite a considerable amount of exercise in February.

The problem, as is so often the case when it comes to maintenance, is that it wasn’t maintained early enough. Normally the engine compartment stays quite dry over the winter, but this year, a leaking rudder shaft has ensured a steady trickle of water down below the engine pan on its way to the bilge. The shaft packing won’t get changed out until we haul out (sometime next month, if I ever get it scheduled), so there is nothing for it but to let it trickle. Last summer I noticed that the engine needed a fresh coat of paint, but I was either busy or out having fun or not feeling like living in a cloud of paint fumes, so I put it off, reasoning that it wasn’t likely to see much use until spring anyway.

Of course, it’s the dis-use that kills boats generally, not the use, and now I have a lot of detailed scrubbing to do before I can paint it.

Fortunately, it’s a slight enough obstacle that it hasn’t cooled my recent maintenance ardor, but I’m thinking now that it might be best today if I don’t also look in the bilge. Spring fancies can soon enough turn to summer doldrums. I don’t want to kill a good thing while it’s going.

All is well

Pretty well, anyway. I just wanted to post a quick update on the sailboat that ran aground yesterday up here in Port Hadlock. As of this morning, it’s back afloat again, a little battered, but still above water. It looked like the rig was a little torn up… I think I saw a spreader hanging loose and one of the halyards looked to be pressed into service as a temporary stay, but apart from that nothing major looked amiss.

The engine, however, apparently didn’t survive completely intact. The owner, in a lovely little wooden skiff, ended up towing the boat under oar-power alone back to safer moorings further north. At least it was a nice morning for it. I felt bad, again, that I didn’t have some way to get out there and lend a hand. I am sure someone to spell him at the sweeps would not have gone amiss.

Towing a sailboat under oar-power on a calm morning
Row, row, row your boat

Considering the wind and the wave action at the shoreline, however, I think a long row after a hard night was probably a pretty good outcome. A few meters further east and the boat would have been into the rocks; had it landed broadside or not stuck the keel down into the sand so firmly, it might have rolled and bashed the rig on the seawall further up the beach. It always amazes me what boats can survive in contrast to what might happen to them instead. It’s an expensive hobby but a pretty safe one, all told.

Spring Storms, Round Two

Not quite a week after the last severe windstorm blew through the Pacific Northwest, causing havoc and creating controversy north of the border, it looks like we are in for round two starting this afternoon. Unlike last week’s storm, the winds today are from the north, giving Mandy and me a front row seat to the carnage. The first casualty: a twenty-something footer washed up on the beach just down from where we have been house-sitting this winter.

Last week, I watched from the same place through binoculars as a small yellow sailboat receded gradually further into the waves blasting up toward Port Townsend. The yellow hull became smaller and smaller until it eventually smashed into the breakwater outside the Port Townsend Boat Haven. A few hours later it was gone, the fate still unknown to me.

It is hitting a little closer to home today. The sailboat down the beach was solidly ashore when we got here and the tide is still going out. I feel a bit churlish sitting here watching the waves pound the hull and rudder into the shore; a couple years ago, but for a rising tide and the intervention of some brave neighbors, we might have lost our own boat in a similar situation. Karma seems to dictate I pay that good fortune forward, but unfortunately there is little to be done at this point. We don’t have another boat available to go out and try to pull or kedge the wreck off, even if it were possible considering how high and dry it is, or were it wise to do so considering the unknown amount of damage the hull has suffered in however long it has been there. The owner probably wouldn’t offer much thanks were we to pull it off only to accidentally sink it in deeper water.

So, keeping an eye on it, as the bald eagle hovering overhead in the blast seems to be doing, is all we can do at the moment. There are what look to be current state registration tabs at the bow but no numbers; some other neighbors are down at the stern now, presumably getting the name off the transom. Hopefully someone in the fairly tight-knit boating community here in Port Townsend knows the owner.

Places you sail past: Bloedel Reserve

Insert your boat here

One of the positive aspects of being more landlocked this winter than we had planned has been the opportunity to visit some places that have, by dint of coastal geography, been places that we have generally found ourselves sailing past rather than stopping at and visiting. Whether their appeal simply hasn’t been obvious from the water or there aren’t suitable anchorages in the vicinity, it turns out there are a lot of parts of the Puget Sound shoreline that deserve greater attention than the simple glance from on deck that most passing boaters afford them.

One of those places is the Bloedel Reserve. Located on Bainbridge Island along the shore of Port Madison, the former private home and estate of Prentice and Virginia Bloedel is now a lovely park and museum open to the public. You’ve probably gazed on its idyllic grounds many times on your way to or from Agate Pass, but perhaps, like us, you didn’t realize what it was you were passing by. If that’s the case, it’s time to rectify the oversight: Bloedel Reserve is worth a closer look.

I forget the rules for forest paths in Region A... is it white, right, returning?

The Reserve is 150 acre combination of pristine nature, carefully manicured garden, and stately man-made structure. A planned walking tour from the gatehouse (vehicle traffic is heavily restricted, so plan to walk, about two miles if you stick to the recommended paths) will take you through grassy fields, past duck-filled ponds, into an elegant turn-of-the-century chateau now used as a visitor center. From the visitor center, a turn past a waterfall takes you into the Japanese garden, and then into a moss garden. All along the way you are assailed with what I can only imagine, based on the looks on my wife’s face, are a cornucopia of botanical delights. It’s all just weeds to me… but I did notice that the rhodies were blooming, an early-season treat for those who put stock in such things.

Tree sweeping a pond
New Beaufort Scale: When tree brushes water into ripples, it's Force One

The entire Reserve radiates tranquility. Were it warmer out, I could have laid down on a bench and gone right to sleep, and I imagine that some people do. It’s a bit like sailing in out of the way places… just the wind, nature, and you. It’s a different sort of nature, though, a softer sort, with more (but quieter) noises, and a sense of life in progress all around you.

We were lucky with our timing. In order to preserve that pervasive sense of quiet calm, the Reserve limits the number of simultaneous visitors. During the tourist season, reservations are recommended, which can be made online at the Reserve’s website.

Timing is one thing, accessibility another. You’ve been sailing past the place all these years for a reason, right? The closest anchorage is inner Port Madison, but you would have quite a hike even assuming you could find a good spot to dinghy ashore on the north shore there. As close as it is to Agate Pass, one could anchor in Poulsbo and catch a bus to Bainbridge Island fairly handily, but that would necessitate a transfer at some point. The best bet is to moor in Eagle Harbor and catching the number 94 bus (see the Kitsap Transit website for more information) from Winslow, which runs right past the Reserve.

And then next time you sail past you can point to the solid white chateau on the hill and say, “Hey! I’ve been there.”

From near-death to jail

I have often wondered, in passing, what happens if you wreck and are rescued in a foreign country before clearing customs. Now I know: you get arrested.

This story has already been making the rounds on nautical websites here in the Pacific Northwest, on Three Sheets among others. So far, though, all that has been covered has been the fantastic survival story of Keith Carver, a 56 year old American sailor from Tucson who was shipwrecked on the coast (sort of; we’ll get to that in a minute) of Vancouver Island a week ago and rescued by chance by a passing helicopter ferrying a physician between remote communities on the West Coast. Carver survived the five days since he had come ashore by eating lichen.

How he came to be washed ashore near the northern tip of the island in the first place is as fascinating as his survival thereafter. With a friend, Carver had come to Washington in mid-February to purchase a 40 foot cement sailboat, intent on sailing it down the coast to Mexico. The plan itself gives an indication of the likely outcome to those familiar with weather along the northwest coast in the winter. And indeed, after a few days clear sailing out the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the pair were caught off-shore in a storm they claim blew them well up into Canadian waters. During the course of the storm, Carver’s friend broke his arm, and they put in at Tahsis to get him medical attention. A good samaritan drove the friend to Campbell River for help. Carver, apparently not having had enough, put back out on his own, only to run into another storm system a day later, which seems to have pushed him even further north.

His vessel disintegrating around him, he decided to make for Port Alice, but never got there… 20 kilometres from the village, he abandoned his boat and barely made it ashore, with no communications or survival equipment. He planned to walk in the rest of the way, no great feat across 20 klicks of Arizona desert, perhaps, but near madness to anyone looking at a topographic map of the area and familiar with the dense, swampy forests of the region.

Only good luck and sharp eyes of helicopter pilot Wayne Goodrich saved Carver, who ended up in the hospital at Port McNeill, from which he was released today, and promptly arrested by the RCMP on suspicion of entering the country illegally.

Well, no kidding.

“We have reason to question his admissibility and that’s why we’ve detained him. It’s got nothing to do with him being shipwrecked,” says Corporal Derek Lagan, which is a bit like saying “We arrested the guy for shooting the victim. It’s got nothing to do with him pulling the trigger.”

As I said, I have sometimes wondered idly what might happen if one were forced off-course or wrecked or otherwise found oneself in need of assistance before formally clearing in to the country… speculation encouraged by a particularly annoying evening spent dealing with US Customs merely for being a couple hours late due to mechanical difficulties. I shudder to think what might happen if we had been adrift, or god forbid, put ashore, anywhere other than a designated port of entry during regulation hours.

Despite that experience, however, I suspect that rescued sailors generally receive a more amicable welcome than Carver, and there is probably some contingency for clearing in even if you hadn’t intended to enter but were compelled by emergency or force of nature. I suspect that in this case, the RCMP finds something fishy in Carver’s story or background, because when I first heard it, I thought it was a little fishy, too.

Now, I don’t want to discount the sorts of strange things that the ocean can do or the seemingly odd decisions that any of us might make under stress or in exigent circumstances. But having covered some of the same ground this past summer, a few things seemed odd right off the bat.

Tahsis, for instance, is not someplace that one simply stops off if they happen to find themselves in need of assistance off the coast of Vancouver Island. Tahsis lies at the head of a substantially long fjord; you have to work at getting to Tahsis, and either of the two ways you might get there require passing other settlements or manned Canadian Coast Guard light stations along the way. If you had injured crew, you could get them help hours sooner ducking in at Esperanza (itself a long way from the coast) or the Nootka Light right on the coast.

Carver also managed to get a long way north for someone trying to get to Mexico. We had to work pretty hard last summer to cover that same territory, going the opposite direction. No doubt the wind was behind him, but he still had to have been making pretty good time to go all that distance. And why not run back in to closer ports once it all started? A day’s sail south from Tahsis has you closer to Tofino and other sheltered anchorages in Clayoquot Sound… if you’re getting hammered and pushed off course why wouldn’t you duck in there, or even back to Tahsis, a familiar port, instead of heading for Port Alice? At the very least, you might heave to and at least try not to get blown that much further from where you were headed originally. (Edit 07MAR10: More intrepid investigators than myself have dredged up weather records for the period in question and, in the words of this Seattle PI article, found “…nearly ideal sailing conditions on the day he claimed he was shipwrecked.” Of course, one man’s ideal sailing conditions are another man’s small craft advisory; still, it casts more doubt on the idea that he was blown uncontrollably so far north)

Speaking of which, Port Alice is up a lengthy fjord itself, past another Coast Guard light station, and a much closer village at Winter Harbour. Carver may have been shipwrecked, but contrary to the headlines, it wasn’t exactly “on the coast.” (Edit: I see now in the second article that other sources are saying he was found some 30 klicks from Kyuquot, which is on the coast; it’s unclear how this reconciles with Carver’s statement that he was within 20K of Port Alice)

I don’t wish to be too judgmental, or suggest that anything untoward was happening. All those decisions, individually, can be explained away through desperation, other difficulties left un-detailed in the news articles, inexperience, or excessive stress and fatigue. I’ve made enough terrible decisions myself to not be too quick to condemn those made by others. It’s very different when you are out there in the middle of it, after all.

What I will say is that I can see how all those things taken together might rouse some suspicions in the mind of your average Mounty, however, perhaps sufficient to justify holding Mr. Carver on some readily available immigration charges long enough to dig a little deeper into his and his friend’s journey. At least, I like to think that is the motivation, even as I hope that Carver himself is no more than he appears, an unlucky sailor who ran into a string of difficult circumstances and escaped by the skin of his teeth.

Either way, I am anxious to hear the rest of the story on this episode. I’m sure it will be equally fascinating. And I hope I am not shipwrecked before clearing Customs anytime soon!

What’s your coverage?

There are certainly ranges of coverage available in marine insurance today and I am frequently surprised at what clauses are available and at what cost. Family medical, hurricane haul-out coverage, fuel-spill liability, dock contracts, fishing equipment coverage… you name it, there seems to be a clause covering just about every eventuality, no matter how remote, and often at surprisingly reasonable prices (at least, as reasonable as anything else having to do with boats).

But where, oh where, can you get coverage against lawsuits over the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases (NSFW)?

I know that I’ll be reviewing our policy with a magnifying glass after that shocking wake-up call. What’s your coverage?

The Great Tsunami of 2010

Actually, it’s early in the year to make a proclamation of that sort, so I may be tempting fate a bit… there could certainly be an actual Great Tsunami at some point later in the year in which case I’ll probably regret my sarcasm here. Let’s hope not, for reasons other than the potential wounding of my pride that might occur.

As you can see, our tsunami experience here in the Pacific Northwest wasn’t all that great, a state of affairs apparently shared around most of the Pacific Rim. Nine foot waves in Japan? Didn’t happen. Flooding in Hawaii? Not that anyone could tell (despite CNN’s somewhat breathless live coverage).

The great waves break on shore
Tsunami!

We got the National Weather Service Tsunami Alert fairly early in the day and quickly looked up the predicted impact at the place we are housesitting near Port Townsend: 1/4′ wave. Port Angeles was to have it even worse: a half-foot monster wall of water impacting at around 1544 local time.

Hawaii was to be hit an hour before us, so we watched CNN anxiously for some idea what to expect. As it happened, what we saw there was a pretty good predictor for what we would experience here: some minor tidal anomalies, nothing you would notice if you weren’t already looking for it.

We had to look pretty hard, but we think we may actually have seen some evidence of the surge when it came in. The wind was blowing pretty hard out of the south yesterday, and the bay here is well-sheltered from southerly winds. Consequently, the water out front was pretty well dead flat for most of the morning, with occasional wind ruffles, even as two or three foot breakers crashed in up around Port Townsend itself. But at about 1550, we saw a weird back-pattern of interference in the otherwise calm water… the cross-hatch you may just be able to make out in the photo above. Those tiny, one or two inch waves refracted off the shoreline are what we believe the great wall of water sent blasting north from the Chilean coast amounted to when it got here to Washington.

As underwhelming as the event was, it still struck me as pretty amazing. Small though they may be, any evidence whatsoever of a climactic event that happened closer to the Antarctic than to us is pretty incredible. Of course, we can’t prove that was what those are, but there was nothing else out there yesterday which might have generated them, and it was certainly not a phenomena of the wind.

Although I have enjoyed making fun of the predictions and the outcomes from the tsunami all around the North Pacific, I believe that the various prediction centers certainly did the right thing, and the degree of response to the threat was appropriate. The evacuations were prudent and seemed to go smoothly, and I sincerely hope that the lack of any dramatic outcome does not lull anyone into a false sense of security. Rather, it seemed to me that this served as a valuable exercise of the warning systems and a validation of the plans and procedures that have been put into place to deal with the potential for real disaster from these natural phenomena. I know that I will have no hesitation in running for the hills (or heading for deep water, should I be on the boat and in a position to do so) if one of these alerts were triggered again.