Ambition

Ambition
Our 2002 Hylas 46

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Catskills to Annapolis

We left Catskill after completing the installation of the boom and reconnecting all the mast wiring. It is interesting that when we have come up the Hudson River it can be done in one day from NYC to Catskills. The same is not true for the opposite direction! Never been able to do it in less than 1 ½ days. A good lesson in tidal currents – hard to believe that more than 100 miles upstream at Albany, the Hudson River has a 5 to 6 foot tide!

We passed a couple of great lighthouses on the river – same style as those on Lake Champlain.























I am always intrigued with the old industrial buildings along the river.





And some of the homes were very spectacular!


Never ending grass cutting 














Great team!! 





We made our planned destination at Newburgh NY and anchored just as the sun set opposite Bannerman Castle Arsenal – Maryse is really not comfortable with the energy of this place!

Bannerman Arsenal ... scary place 
























A quiet overnight except for the freight rains that seem to go by every hour!

Up at 5:30 and underway at 6 – within a couple of hours we passed by West Point Academy, officer training for the Army. A more than impressive facility!
No love lost between Army and Air Force






West Point
West Point
West Point
West Point
















And of course what would the Hudson be with out a bit of commercial traffic – the pictures may not do it justice but this tug is pushing 8 barges at once.

Eight barges at once - WOW
Maryse’s favourite spot – the nuclear power station!     
where is Homer???

The Tappan Zee bridge – the first of many NYC to NJ bridges is under construction – 2 years ago it was barely started when we came up the river. Hope our Champlain bridge will be built as quickly.

New Tappan Zee bridge
















New Tappan Zee bridge
New Tappan Zee bridge







We were fortunate running through NYC on a Saturday – the river traffic was FAR LIGHTER than what we experienced on a weekday.  
Arriving in NYC














I think this ferry has seen its last passengers
Manhattan 

Maybe the two less than Presidential candidates need to focus more on the values this Lady represents 




Arrived at Sandy Hook NJ early afternoon and finished off a bunch of items on the to do list – disassembled the two genoa furlers and gave them a much needed maintenance and greasing  - no more squeaks and grinding – should have done this a LONG time ago. Also installed the gas shock support for the  boom – excellent as now it holds up the boom instead of the topping lift – just checking stuff off my list at a furious pace!

I installed the sails and sure enough on the large genoa  when I tried to furl it, I had installed the line to roll the sail up backwards – ended up wrapping the halyard at the mast head badly enough that Maryse needed to get out of her comfort zone again and winch me up 65 feet off the water to the top of the mast to sort out the mess. All is good – untangled and the furling line corrected – both sails properly installed – officially a sailboat again. Duly noted which genoa rolls in which direction – do not want to make that mistake again.

The weather forecast for Monday afternoon is not good and will stay not good for at least 3 or 4 days. We decided that we would take advantage of the little window of opportunity and make a dash for Delaware Bay. We left Sandy Hook at 11AM Sunday and pointed south. 
Sunset along the New Jersey shore




The wind was only 5 knots so we continued motoring and ran for the rest of the day and the overnight arriving at the mouth of Delaware Bay at sunrise – a run of about 120 miles. Since the weather was still holding we turned the corner and headed north up the bay. 





More Sunset along the New Jersey shore


It is a long 90 miles with LOTS of commercial boats (if you make this trip remember that you MUST monitor VHF 13 to communicate and understand what the tankers are doing).

The Delaware Bay Lighthouses are a little more "industrial" than those on the Hudson!
The overnight forecast called for horrible storms so we reserved a spot at the Chesapeake Marina about 2/3 of the way through the C and D canal. A great spot and we got in at high tide so we had about 8 feet of water – when the tide went out we settled about 1 foot of our keel into the soft mud.  Bed sure felt good after an all nighter.

C and D Canal

The next morning Ambition had a well deserved wash down with fresh water – she was looking a little neglected after all the boots on board for the re-masting  and the one gazillion squashed spiders – we have been infested since Plattsburgh and Maryse is on a mission to kill each and every one of the buggers!  

After the wash down we left the marina and made a short 20 mile run to Sassafras River in Maryland – an absolutely idyllic spot – anchored on the curve of the river all by ourselves – life just doesn’t get better!

Sunset in the Sassafras River 

















This morning we motored in some very heavy rain down the bay towards Annapolis. This gave me a good chance to practice with the radar since visibility was less than ½ a mile – very happy with the radar image now being perfectly aligned with the chart plotter. We are able to pick out the buoys and the huge barges which is a good thing – neither of them are very forgiving!  






After 40 miles we arrived in Rhodes River where will be attending a Seven Seas Cruising Association conference and GAM for the next 3 days. We are anchored well up in the river and it will be only more beautiful when the rain stops and the sun comes out. There are already more than a dozen boats anchored here and I suspect many more to arrive in tomorrow.

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Waterford to Catskills

We left Waterford at 8AM this morning. And passed through the Federal Lock – a long discussion between the state of NY and the the Federal government as to who should pay for it and operate it. Finally the deciding factor is that the Hudson River is tidal at Trop therefore all tidal waters are Federal jurisdiction not state.








Motored by Albany NY  - the state capital – very impressive buildings 




















including the one with the Uhaul truck on the roof!













Some of the homes that we passed along the way have amazingly huge lawns – kind of like painting Mercier bridge – you start at one end and before you finish it is tie to start all over again!


The ride was fast as we had the dropping tide in our favour and we clipped along at 9.0 to 9.25 knots over the bottom even though our speed through the water was only 7.2 knots. Having the tidal flow in your favour is ALWAYS a good thing!!

















The lighthouses on the Hudson River are identical in design to the lighthouse on Valour Island and the one that was on Colchester Reef.

We arrived at Riverview Marina at 1:30 PM and they wanted to get out mast up immediately – OK .. lets get it done! One day ahead of schedule – all is good. It was so hot and sticky but we struggled to do everything correctly to make sure that the mast went back up without breaking or damaging anything. It wasn’t  pretty but the got the job done and by 4PM the mast was vertical and standing by itself. It was crazy to see it when they picked it up by the middle and it was curved by a couple feet at each end!!! Sorry we don’t have any pictures as we were so busy making sure everything was good. No time for pics!

The wiring at the mast base still needs to be connected – Ambition’s rat nest!
















This is not Shelburne so  few extra hands would have been a major help but we got the job done - Maryse was stressed and I was concerned  (that is British for "alarmed" LOL) –  our very dear friends are taking care of more important stuff than worrying about masts – big hugs to Liliane and Guy - we missed sharing this part of the trip with you but hope to see you in Annapolis guys - love you lots!

We finished the day BRUULEEEE!!! A big day indeed to get the mast back up and standing by itself in a couple of hours. Tomorrow we will get the boom back on, connect he VHF antenna and anchor light and then we can push off the dock heading for New York City.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Lake Champlain to Waterford

After all our goodbyes and dinners with family and friends it was time to drop the dock lines and start our next voyage south. We left Plattsburgh City Marina Monday Sept 19th late afternoon, there was only one or two other boats on the lake - it is fun to have it all to yourself sometimes. We anchored in Sled Runner Bay ready for an early start in the morning.
Ugh ... a 5AM alarm clock - the is almost just like work! The anchor was up and were putting along by 6AM - hot coffee and tea in the cockpit as the sun came up - the lake is covered in a light fog. Winds are calm and no waves make it a wonderful ride as the boat is very rolly with the mast down.

Quaker Smith

Towards Willsboro


View through all the tie down straps

Not much of a view towards the stern!
The day turned spectacular on the lake - we passed under the NY version of Champlain Bridge and the monument alongside. This really marks the end of the sailable part of the lake because it starts to get skinny south of here.

Champlain Bridge


Fort Ticonderoga
Further South Fort Ticonderoga 




















We arrived a Whitehall early afternoon so rather than stop there for the night, we pushed on further through lock 11. A couple of pictures of the canal as well as lock 11.










We got to lock 9 about 15 minutes before closing time at 6PM but our VHF calls to the Lockmaster went unanswered. We were hoping to pass through the lock and tie up on the south side as the guide book says it the better of the two. Rather than "portage" Ambition around the lock, we tied up to the north approach wall. A super quiet night and very scenic. When we got up in the morning we could not even see the bow of the boat due to the morning fog.










We were blessed with some fantastic displays of nature in the fog as well as what spiders on speed can accomplish in one overnight!










Well at least nothing will fall overboard! The spiders have made sure to tie everything down in every possible direction!




Speaking of spiders - take a look at this monster! Just to put him in perspective ..... he is on a piece of 2 X 10!!!! He covered way more than a third of the plank!!! Maryse was so very grateful of me pointing this out to her right after breakfast!

The got strong enough to burn the fog away by 8:30 and we headed into lock 9. We mentioned to the lock master that we had wanted to spend the night on the south side but just missed him last night. He responded that perhaps it was good fortune for us as they have been visited recently by a black bear on the south side - the trees have had the back clawed off .... OMG!!! And I thought the monster spider was a threat!

The rest of the locks all the way through lock 1 to Waterford was uneventful and beautiful. We are so fortunate for the great late summer weather we are enjoying.






Now  you can appreciate when we said it was calm ... IT WAS CALM ...not even a ripple in the water made these two photographs really beautiful. Almost mirror images in the water.

Here is the technique we use in the locks - tie a dock line from the mid cleat around the post or wire imbedded in the wall. Then just use the boat hooks to push the boat off the wall - I do cheat sometimes and use the bow thruster to move the bow where I want it! The fender boards save the fender covers from getting all dirty from the lock walls. Remember your work gloves to push off the wall sometimes :-)




Once empty - this is what a typical lock looks like - we drop down in this case about 16 or 18 feet. We didn't have to share a lock once on this trip. It is rather impressive when you think that each cycle of flooding and emptying a lock consumes about 1 million gallons of water! Ambition thanks you!