Just about the time we made the turn into Carquinez Strait the wind picked up quite a bit and started acting against the river's current causing some chop and spray. The thing with the strait is that two rivers are funneled through the narrowest section of the of the canyon and, with the high walls here, the wind was funneled and accelerated, right on our nose. So by the time we were abeam of Glencove and in sight of the bridge, I was at full throttle riding with the current against a 25 knot wind. There were some three to four foot waves that made the ride fun. As we passed under the Vallejo bridge and then by Mare Island the wind shifted around to come from the northwest instead of due west and settled down to around 15 knots, so we set the sails, secured the motor and ghosted onto a sunny San Pablo Bay.
This was sailing. There was the sun and a good breeze and we were on a broad reach cruising along at 6.5 knots over ground.
“I don't think we need it yet, I've got it good.” I replied.
At the time the boat was healed over about 25 degrees and the wind had changed points just as we had so that even though we were sailing due south we were still on a close reach and I was fighting the tiller hard against a severe weather helm.
As I looked at the main and suddenly realized there were no reef points in it a thought occurred to me, and I asked “Are we set up for reefing?” . Captain Cliff got a puzzled and thoughtful look on his face and didn't reply right away.
I used our little wind meter and got a reading of 18-22 knots just as we passed by a small island
Now we were approaching the bridge and a lot of commercial traffic was joining us, with their wakes. The fetch was lengthening as the bay widened and the wind had shifted by now to be coming from west by southwest and the waves increased in size considerably. Then the rain started. With the bow plunging and the heavy
There were extra grommets 1.5 feet up on the clew and the leach so he had me head the boat as he loosed the halyard, re-hooked the clew in the higher spot, reattached the outhaul and pulled it in tight. Then he raised and tightened the halyard and laced up the tail end of the foot with the end of the outhaul. After he raised it back up I got us onto a course for Angel Island. I had to tack back and forth some to make it as the wind was coming almost from the island sometimes.
This was some of the most fantastic sailing I have ever done and the grin on both our faces said it all to me. I was sailing fast and hard in the rain with winds gusting to 40 knots but staying near 30 most of the time on a choppy bay with about a hundred or so other boats all heeled over hard. Riding on the side of the pilot house and steering with my line was way better than trying to stand in a very small cockpit leaning down slightly to hold a very short tiller. Every time we came about I had to re-rig my steering line but that wasn't hard. As we cruised into the lee of
At a suitable spot the Captain ordered me to come about while he brought in the jib. We were being buffeted by occasional gusts that rolled down off of Angel Island or poked their way around the point and one almost knocked us down while Cliff was on the foredeck securing the flapping headsail. I had trouble keeping us headed into wind as each gust seemed to come from a different direction. As a consequence I was riding with the main sheet eased considerably and was sailing in circles and figure eights trying to prevent a gust from catching us off guard.
As soon as the Captain had the jib secured he made the anchor ready and had me steer in closer to the island towards a sort of cove just south of what looked like an old hotel. At about a hundred yards from the shoreline I steered due north up the shore directly into the wind. As soon as the breeze halted our forward progress the Captain dropped the anchor and I steered us backwards as he let out generous scope and then snubbed us. As we swung around I could feel that we hooked good. He let out a little more and tied off the nylon rode to the samson post while I dowsed the main.
In the lee it was almost like night and day. The rain still fell intermittently and the wind still
We talked a lot about the day's sailing and were both pleasantly surprised that we were not all that frazzled even after sailing in pretty extreme conditions in an unfamiliar boat that turned out to be rather harder to sail than any boat we had sailed up to that point. We had mostly lake sailing experience between us, only a little real open water experience under sail. But we both had a good bit of open water time at the helm of some pretty big power boats when we were commercial fishing in Bristol bay in Alaska, sometimes in gale conditions. I also had four years Navy time too (but on submarines, so it doesn't count). We had both sailed in gale conditions on lakes in Alaska, just not together. Lake sailing in extreme weather conditions keeps you on your toes because you are always on a lee shore and, at least on the lakes around where we lived, there was almost always a shoal draft condition any time you needed to claw off a shoreline.
What we had just done was really no more stressful than the gale that had hit me hard and suddenly as I was adrift with no motor and only a reefed jib up on a Siren17 while on my honeymoon on Paxson Lake in Alaska. My new wife, on her third time ever sailing, and I were forced to throw out the anchor and stop ourselves about 150 feet from the lee shore in a little cove that was open to the full force of the storm that lasted about two hours.
The City By The Bay looked inviting across the bay from us. As darkness fell and the lights from the city came on we could see a silhouette of Alcatraz Island.
Part three, To The City, to come.