When and If

So we rocked the locks.  Awesome.   Done and dusted.

The most amazing part was that the weather held out for us the WHOLE time as we went through the canal.  Those photos of tank tops, sunscreen, and bandanas?  Yeah they were real, but don’t worry we’re rocking the warm gear now…

When we were finally spit out into the Hudson, we decided that we’d earned a chill day.  After a week of averaging over 50 miles a day, we were actually pretty tired…WATERFORD was the spot.  There was rain in the forecast, so we cranked up the iPads for an afternoon of decompressing….ahhhhhh

The highlight of the stop (and the only thing I shot photos of) was the gorgeous 1939 John Alden designed 63-foot wooden schooner that was docked next to us.  We instantly made friends with Doug, Ron, Bill, and Larry and were graciously hosted by (Captain) Ron for dinner aboard on Saturday night.  This boat is amazing – has been completely restored from the ground up over the past two years.  Check out their Facebook page or this story for photos and info on this massive project.

Much thanks to Ron, Doug, and the crew!  I hope to see them (and the boat with the masts up) down south sometime soon :)

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TOMORROW IS RE-STEP DAY for the mast.  I’m not nervous.  No really!  I’m not.

LOCKTOBERfest / OPTROP’s Guide on how to transit an Erie Canal lock

We’ve now transitted 35 locks of the New York State Canal System, through the Erie Canal from Buffalo to Albany, NY, and frankly we are quite happy to be done with elevation change for a while.Why are we so relieved to be out?  Because going through locks is tiring, tedious and dangerous (more so than we originally thought).  Effectively, your boat (along with a few others) will enter a cement chamber ~300 feet long x ~45 feet wide, with gates at either end that close you in, like a caged wild animal.  And like a caged animal, your sailboat will not happily sit still in the cage, but rather squirm around as the Lockmaster lets the water in or out, and you will try to hold it in place with boat hooks and the slimy, wet ropes that are attached to the cement walls (you’re going to want to watch out for the aqua spiders that hide on them too, too).  During this process, you try not to scrape or slime your boat and also avoid hitting the multi-million dollar power yachts beside you as the water swirls around.  It’s stressful, don’t let my smile fool you.We are happy to say we avoided any collisions or scrapes, but for anyone else planning a similar voyage, here are our 5 top tips for lock success:

5) Have a plan for how your boat can pull up nicely parallel to a very tall (or very short, depending on which way the water is going) cement wall.  Some power boats have bow-thrusters that do this for them very nicely, but we just used our one propellor (and its prop walk) and a very carefully timed slow down, docking technique with boat hooks, fenders and lines. We watched some entertaining docking events go down in locks among crews who had not planned how they were going to get alongside the wall (short story – lots of swearing, some mild boat/wall smashing, maybe some tears).

4) Have the right equipment for protecting your boat.  We used lots of fenders, and a DIY fender board for this.  Having some old lines that you don’t mind getting slimed from the walls are great too, as sometimes there are fixed lines or cables (versus attached at the top but free swinging below) and you can loop a line around these to hold yourself in place.  Just be careful not to get them caught as your boat is going up or down (same for your fenderboard!) or you’ll have a bad time.

3) Have the right equipment for your crew, which for us meant work gloves and boat hooks (or any sturdy long stick used to push off the wall).  The ropes that you grab onto spend most of their lives sitting in swamp water, growing all sorts of new slime forms and just waiting to slip out of your hands.  They’re disgusting, and you definitely don’t want to bite your nails after handling them.

2) Slow down when entering the lock.  There is a finite “runway” to these “landing strips” of cement, and you do not want to slam into the boat in front of you, or the metal gates at the other end.  Also, we’re learning very quickly that a 40 foot boat keeps a lot more momentum than the 27 footer we’re used to, and it’s not easy or safe to try and manually slow these boats down without a cleat (there are lots of rings, but these take an additional couple of seconds to thread a line through).  Although Mark has now nearly mastered our clockwise prop walk, it can be a bit unnerving to see your stern moving towards the boat tied beside you as you back up.

1) Pay careful attention while descending or ascending.  CONSTANT VIGILANCE.  Or you’ll hit your boat against the wall / your boat against someone else’s boat.  Since our boat is shaped like an almond and not like a rectangle (looking at you, house boats of the Erie Canal), we don’t have one nice long flat surface to line up against a wall, but instead will swing as the water swirls around us, unless we are in a constant state of push and pull to keep ourselves straight.

We loved the scenery, people and free docks we’ve encountered along the Erie Canal…but we are very happy to be heading out of our landlocked waterway and onto the Hudson River.

(Alec) Baldwinsville

The whole point of this post is to show this ridiculously good looking sunrise that I photographed while leaving Baldwinsville.  Tagline, “Just coffee, no filter”.

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Sure, there are other cool sights (check out this old aqueduct!), but basically it’s a lot of…canal…and more canal.  They don’t call this “the ditch” for no reason.

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Oh and here’s a shot of the janky set of pilings that we had to tie to in Rome, NY…we wouldn’t fit on the “nice” dock with our 55+ foot mast sticking off either end of the deck…

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Good news is – we’ve basically crossed the halfway point!  As of tonight we are tied up to Lock 16.  Hopefully, if all goes well, We’ll be in the Hudson by this weekend!

Let’s hear it for New York, New York, NEWWWWWW YORRRRRRRRKKKK

Small towns of the Erie Canal – our aquatic road trip of Upstate New York

We have almost been en route for a week now, and since we’ve entered the Erie Canal, our days have been filled with the quiet waterways, beautiful greenery and quaint canalside towns of upstate New York. The leaves are just starting to change, and although the evenings and mornings are chilly, the days heat up to sunscreen weather by lunchtime.

These have been our views for 7-10 hours a day lately:

Occasionally we transit a lock (we have ~35 to do to get all the way down to the Hudson River, more on those to come…), but otherwise we mostly motor along, taking it all in. Although it looks easy enough, it’s a very narrow and shallow channel (7-12 ft deep, and maybe 100 ft wide) and it takes steady concentration to avoid the various logs, shallow spots and curves the canal throws at us.
Each night we end up at a small town and tie up to one of their free docks (sometimes with free water, pump out and power too!). So far we’ve been to Holley, Fairport and Clyde, NY. These towns often have a lot of historical significant with the original Erie Canal (you can read more about that here) and we’ve enjoyed exploring these stops after our long motoring days.

Mark and Tara at the Fairport dock\

Fall flowers in full bloom / bicycle wheels to edge the gardens

We also have loved seeing the old canal barges and tugs that worked for the New York State Canal System, as well as the local boats who make this place their summertime home.


Canal selfie.  Canalfie.

Home sweet home!

First big day in the Canal

(Yesterday) The 26th was our first real day in the canal, and it was filled with “oohs” and “ahhhs”.  We wanted to take this route because we figured it would really take us through small town America, and so far it hasn’t disappointed!  As we motor along, we pass tiny towns, corn fields, apple orchards and small houses dotting the shore.  Every so often we need to call a bridge operator for a lift, but otherwise it’s all about keeping the boat in the middle of the waterway and enjoying the scenery.

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We transited our first two locks in Lockport, and met the kind lock masters there.  John took me up to the gas station up the way in his Subaru to get a 5 gallon can of diesel.  Thanks John!  All in all the locks were pretty easy, but word on the street is they get harder when the water level is rising vs. falling…

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As we motored past Gasport (ironically named) we saw a tiny little “Yacht Club”-slash-marina and asked if they had diesel.  Craig, the operator, responded, “Well, I can get ya some!”.  Sure enough I popped in his truck, we zipped up to the gas station and got another 20 gallons (and a 30 rack of beer).  This top up, plus the jerry can from Lockport and we were at a full tank.  See how easy that is??  Man, people are so friendly!

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Our day ended at Holley, New York – a small town of 1500 people with a little square, diner, grocery store, and pizza joint.  We tied to really nice docks with free power, water, bathrooms, and showers, and had a nice relaxing night.

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“No Diesel For You”

 

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Soooo after de-stepping (day 3) we encountered the infamous Denny Wardell at the entrance to the Erie Canal.  He’s known for a number of things (read some reviews on Active Captain), but most specifically his hot button issue: Destepping masts.  Basically, if you don’t destep with him, he won’t sell you diesel.

We were down to a 1/4 tank, entering the canal and he has a prime spot right there….his only competition across the way was “SOLD OUT FOR THE SEASON”.  So what could we do?

I had a lovely exchange with him on the telephone which went basically like this “NO!  I won’t sell you diesel.  Why would I?  I make $20 bucks off you, while the guys down the way at Rich Marine make $300?  No thanks.  Have fun in the Canal without any fuel.  GOODBYE.”

Thanks Denny.

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Fortunately our luck changed once we got in the canal.  Aside from him, we’ve met some of the nicest people ever.

D(estep)-Day

Today we had to take down the mast…I woke up with mixed emotions – the disappointment that comes with knowing you won’t be sailing for a while, coupled with the urgency to get to work!  Damn there was a lot to do…especially since we had an issue with the roller furling mechanism the day before and we couldn’t drop the headsail.

Mark’s first time up the mast in a bosuns chair :)

ALL IN ALL, the day was a huge success!  Bill and the gang at Rich Marine were super pro and really went the extra mile to help us with the task.  I think we said “thank you” about 40 times…

We were SO eager, we decided to split and make our way towards the canal.  Only one problem…we were running pretty low on diesel…

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Day two: All the way to Buffalo, NY

We knew we had a long day ahead of us, so we were up early to make the ~75 nautical mile trek up to Buffalo from Erie.  Damn that was a good cup of coffee.

Surprisingly we made it!  We were working the engine pretty hard (and felt pretty guilty burning so much fuel), but we kept telling ourselves that it would be worth it to get there…

We made such good time we even decided to make our way up to Rich Marine where we were going to de-step the next day.  This involved transiting a lift bridge, swing bridge, and a lock – NONE of which we’d ever done before (frankly).  Thank god for the handheld VHF :)

Alles friedlich

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Departure Day!

The forecast was looking good, we’d had any number of “going away” parties, we’d made our upgrades and built a smashing mast cradle…it was finally time to go.  September 23rd, 2014.

We had a long downwind motorsail (interrupted by a nice broad reach once we’d banked some time), and arrived at Presque Isle, Erie, PA for a nice sundowner around 6pm.  The voyage up Lake Erie was a quiet one, and the anchorage was empty when we arrived.  Perfect for our first ever anchoring experience on Tara.  It went very well by all accounts, largely due to the fact that we’re packing a 45lb Mantus.  Uh huh.

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Farewell Party!

This afternoon we had a lovely surprise going away party courtesy of the Mentor Harbor Yachting Club “East Beach Party Squad”.

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Seriously, since we’ve been here over the past few weeks, we’ve made a lot of good friends.  The crew here has taken us in with open arms and we couldn’t be more grateful.  We’ve received loads of advice, encouragement, and enthusiasm and are getting started on the right foot (or keel, as it were).

Special thanks to Bob and Heather for organizing!

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