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Thursday, August 27, 2015

Port Townsend, Washington


Thursday August 27, 2015

At 09:00 we pull up a clean anchor and depart the bustling port of Friday Harbor.  We are heading out to the east side of Lopez Island, not the most direct route or the favorite route by the number of people peeling off along the way.  It is a very calm day.  As we navigate the dog leg through Lopez Pass, Rosario Strait is laying down flat.  Our intial destination is Aleck Bay at the southern tip of Lopez Island.  With the predicted approaching foul weather we opt to cross the Strait of Juan de Fuca now and not chance a bumpy ride tomorrow.  We get into Port Townsend at 14:30, back in for a starboard tie in B77.  Engine hours 5.7, nautical miles 43.3. 


LEAVING FRIDAY HARBOR


THROUGH LOPEZ PASSAGE


THE CALM OF JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT


CROSSING JUAN DE FUCA STRAIT


THE OLYMPIC PENNINSULA



BOAT HAVEN MARINA, PORT TOWNSEND

This is where we plan to sit for the next week.   After a few issues get taken care of we will wait for the right weather window to take the boat back down the coast.

Trip totals

  • Engine hours 183
  • Nautical miles 1157.2
  • Fuel used 219.6 gallons
  • Watermaker hours 101, averaging 18.5 gal/hr = 1,868.5 gallons made.


August 30, 2015

Yesterday the storm hit Port Townsend.  We had winds from the SE up to 45 knots.   Most of the day we’re seeing 30.  By the evening it had calmed down to 20.  We checked our six dock lines periodically.  We drove into town and watched the Washington State Ferries having some difficulty docking.  The boats at Point Hudson Marina were taking quite a pounding, but not as bad as the ones anchored in the bay.  The ones that did not hunker down in time took most of the damages.  We have seen three boats towed in, one covered in kelp, one barely afloat with air bags, and the one pictured below that was crushed by the ferry landing.   Today the weather is good.  Brad changed the oil and we installed the monitor wind vane for the trip down the coast.

 

STORM SURGE


CALM AFTER THE STORM


ONE OF THE STORM CASUALTIES