Treacherous Catalina channel crossing
Treacherous Catalina channel crossing
This relates to The Perfect Storm. Had a great turkey day in Catalina after a smooth, fast 16 knot crossing over in light air and swell in my 90 horse 26x. Saw one other 26m(blue) there with a 60 hors Yamaha. Woke up Saturday to stiff breeze, heard weather forecast of 20 knot breezes increasing to 40 later on, decide to head for home.
My intuition told me to leave the ballast tank full, and I'm glad I did! The first five miles protected by the southern lee of the island , I'm doing a smooth 14 knots, then-- all hull broke loose! Conditions deteriorate to a strong 25 knot west gale producing 3-4 foot chop and 6-7 foot swell beating on my beam as well. My dodger/connector bimini help but I am soon drenched from this sideways assault. Wife and kid go underneath but soon return up top-- they rather be a little wet(they are fairly protected in top starboard cockpit seat) than seasick. The only thing positive was that the sun was out.
Although it was holding a steady course, I finally relieved the auto pilot and slowed down from 12 to 9 knots-- this did the trick as I obviously was able to anticipate swells better and "kept us dry" the rest of the way.
2 hours and 45 minutes we were back from definitely the scariest ride I've had to date in my Mack.
Most of the worry came from having my family aboard and uncomfortable, but I must say the boat handled like a champ. I had a slight amount of c/b down, and and the boat tracked and broke through swells and chop admirably. Main worries centerd on something breaking (steering) or engine cutting out-- you never know.
20 minutes after we arrived at Cabrillo launch, the 26m showed up! He also said it was roughest he'd seen, and had 5 other people on board with no cockpit protection! I did not see any other trailerable make the crossing.
Rolf
My intuition told me to leave the ballast tank full, and I'm glad I did! The first five miles protected by the southern lee of the island , I'm doing a smooth 14 knots, then-- all hull broke loose! Conditions deteriorate to a strong 25 knot west gale producing 3-4 foot chop and 6-7 foot swell beating on my beam as well. My dodger/connector bimini help but I am soon drenched from this sideways assault. Wife and kid go underneath but soon return up top-- they rather be a little wet(they are fairly protected in top starboard cockpit seat) than seasick. The only thing positive was that the sun was out.
Although it was holding a steady course, I finally relieved the auto pilot and slowed down from 12 to 9 knots-- this did the trick as I obviously was able to anticipate swells better and "kept us dry" the rest of the way.
2 hours and 45 minutes we were back from definitely the scariest ride I've had to date in my Mack.
Most of the worry came from having my family aboard and uncomfortable, but I must say the boat handled like a champ. I had a slight amount of c/b down, and and the boat tracked and broke through swells and chop admirably. Main worries centerd on something breaking (steering) or engine cutting out-- you never know.
20 minutes after we arrived at Cabrillo launch, the 26m showed up! He also said it was roughest he'd seen, and had 5 other people on board with no cockpit protection! I did not see any other trailerable make the crossing.
Rolf
- Gerald Gordon
- First Officer
- Posts: 284
- Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2004 9:58 pm
- Location: O'ahu, Hawai'i
- Bobby T.-26X #4767
- Captain
- Posts: 906
- Joined: Mon Jan 05, 2004 10:48 am
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Oceanside Harbor, CA
-
LOUIS B HOLUB
- Admiral
- Posts: 1315
- Joined: Wed Oct 19, 2005 7:40 am
- Location: 1999 Mac-X, Nissan 50 HP, Kemah, TX, "Holub Boat"
Bob,
I've had the dodger and bimini for a couple of years now- got them made by www.harborcustomcanvas.com here in Long Beach. First rate people and first rate work -- check them out. I may upgrade it to a full enclosure! The 90 horse is the best-- pushed my ballasted, loaded down boat straight through the wind swell and chop.
I listened to the weather radio, but next time I'm suspicious I'm going to talk to harbor master-- maybe wait it out or send family home on the Catalina Express!
I keep replaying the journey over in my mind and you know what??
I kind of enjoyed it! I may be developing an appetite for "heavy water boating"!
Rolf
I've had the dodger and bimini for a couple of years now- got them made by www.harborcustomcanvas.com here in Long Beach. First rate people and first rate work -- check them out. I may upgrade it to a full enclosure! The 90 horse is the best-- pushed my ballasted, loaded down boat straight through the wind swell and chop.
I listened to the weather radio, but next time I'm suspicious I'm going to talk to harbor master-- maybe wait it out or send family home on the Catalina Express!
I keep replaying the journey over in my mind and you know what??
I kind of enjoyed it! I may be developing an appetite for "heavy water boating"!
Rolf
- Bobby T.-26X #4767
- Captain
- Posts: 906
- Joined: Mon Jan 05, 2004 10:48 am
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Oceanside Harbor, CA
-
waternwaves
- Admiral
- Posts: 1499
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 8:18 pm
- Location: X less in North Puget Sound -have to sail other boats for a while
- delevi
- Admiral
- Posts: 2184
- Joined: Fri May 06, 2005 1:03 am
- Location: San Francisco Catalina 380, former 26M owner
- Contact:
Should have tried sailing back with reefed main and partially furled jib. The boat typically handles better under sail than under power in heavy winds, provided you reef, maximize sail twist, flaten the sail as much as possible and spill air during gusts. 35 knts wind is extreme but I have sailed in such conditions (twice.) Hard work, a bit scary, but fun. Of course, you wouldn't make the same speed that you did under power with your 90. I'm a bit jealous too. I have the e-tec 50, which I am very happy with, but if I could do it over again, I would get a 90 or at least a 70. Trouble is, in moderate to heavy chop, there is so much splash that yuou can't go past 8-9 knots anyway. Can certainly understand you not wanting to take any chances with the family on board.
By the way... does the dodger get in the way of the boom and/or traveler? I noticed that you have an X, so you may not have a traveler. I'm not sure if the main sheet position is different on the
vs the
, as well as the travaler issue.
Fair Winds,
By the way... does the dodger get in the way of the boom and/or traveler? I noticed that you have an X, so you may not have a traveler. I'm not sure if the main sheet position is different on the
Fair Winds,
- TonyHouk
- First Officer
- Posts: 274
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2004 3:36 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: My New Hometown, Fort Mill, S.c. "98 X with a '95 Evinrude 115
Smart Rails are the way to go.
Hey All,
I have the video of the Smart rails in action. I know for sure that you would not have been soaked with them installed on your boat. If you would like me to email them to you just send me your email address. They are expensive but they are worth it!!!!!!!! I will see about putting them on the net somewhere. Happy motorsailing, Tony
I have the video of the Smart rails in action. I know for sure that you would not have been soaked with them installed on your boat. If you would like me to email them to you just send me your email address. They are expensive but they are worth it!!!!!!!! I will see about putting them on the net somewhere. Happy motorsailing, Tony
Mike I was actually going to go over there then, but Christmas and family have caught up with me. I have my girl's 5 year birthday scheduled for that weekend now. Slight chance I may head over betrween Christmas and New Year's, but most likely next trip will be in Jan or Feb. BTW, do Avalon in the Winter-- its practically deserted, nice warm restaurants and the casino theater at night to stay warm! I'll keep you posted.
Rolf
Rolf
- Mark Karagianis
- Engineer
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:29 pm
- Location: Still trailering from Northridge, CA to MDR. 2005 M Suzuki DF50 "Definite Addiction"


