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Mark Twain said, “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bow lines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”

That’s what I am planning to do this summer in my 1986 28” Pearson sailboat, ALUVA.

In 2006, I sailed on a big sailboat in Lake Michigan for the 1st time. My friend, Ross Chapman was the captain. I was bitten hard by the bug even before he killed the engine and I felt the wind in our sails. By the next July, I had started taking classes, was reading like crazy and looking at boats. In July, I bought a beautiful Pearson the same size and year as Ross’s boat. I sailed Lake Erie every chance I could and soon learned of Georgian Bay(GB), the North Channel(NC), and the Trent-Severn Waterway. Just stir all this up with my love of exploring and readiness for an adventure and a dream is trying to become a reality.

In September, Ross, and my great friend John Hoard, and I sailed the boat across NW Erie, up the Detroit River, across Lake St. Clair, and up the St. Clair River to the town of St. Clair (just south of Port Huron and Lake Huron). Later in the fall, I obtained an 11” inflatable Zodiac with an 8hp Mercury to tow behind ALUVA for those little sidetrip adventures. I like to think we are in the “starting blocks”.

Here’s the working plan. Bounce up the east (Canadian) side of Lake Huron to Tobermory at the tip of the Bruce Peninsula. Enter Georgian Bay and head south along the east coast of Bruce Peninsula (west side of GB). Go as far south as Meaford, then across GB to Hope, Christian and Beckwith Islands. Swing around the south end of Beausoleil Is. Then follow the east side of GB north through thousands of islands primarily by way of the Small Craft Channel and eventually to Killarney and then Little Current where the NC begins. Along the way are places like Hangdog Channel, Honey Harbor, Rodger’s Gut, the Bustards and the Chickens, Frying Pan Island, Go Home Bay, 12 Mile Bay, Snug Harbor, Shawanaga Island, Moon Bay, Beaverstone Bay and Collin’s Inlet, San Souci, Lion’s Head, Wingfield Basin and Parry Sound.

One could spend a lifetime in GB and the NC and never have the same anchorage twice. I hope to do a I week loop in the northern NC and see the Benjamin Islands, Bell Cove, Amendroz Is., Great La Cloche Is., Clapperton Is., Baie Fine, and the Whalesback Channel then return to Little Current.

The last leg will be from Little Current to Mackinac Island, mainly following the NE side of Manitoulin, the largest freshwater island in the world. West Bay, the port of Gore Bay, Bayfield Sound, Meldrum, and Drummond Island will be explored on the way.

The trip may take 6 weeks, divided into 5 parts with different crew. I need at least one person besides myself in order to get into very small anchorages, called gunkholing, not to mention the fact I’d like some company. St Clair to Meaford is a week. Meaford to Little Current will take 12-14 days, a week around the NE NC and then 7-12 days to Mackinac where I plan to store the boat for the winter.

AMBITIOUS! You bet! It may never happen but I am trying to make it a reality.

Captain Dan

Captain Dan

Captain Dan
Really Don, but Kevin(Colin)........

Aluva

Aluva
A magical, mystical, dreamlike state

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Little Detroit

Sow and pigs --Benjamin Islands

Rat Hole Portage

An unexpected stop, after doing an perfect wing and wing (one sail on each side of the boat like an airplane) all the way down Frazer Bay. It was 15-20 miles from Killarney, but from this little bay, we followed the Rat Hole Portage trail (rubber mats) for kayaks and canoes and got to Portage Cove in about (up here it is pronounced aboat) 1/4 mi. From there,  Killarney was aboat 2 mi across the bay, eh? The next morning, it was flat, mirror calm as we cruised along in the morning sun to Little Current and on to Amendroz Island to anchor. Another day with only a swim suit all day. Weather fabulous, despite the forecast. Besides running when I get a chance, I have only worn shoes to go in somewhere, which almost never. I never were shoes on the boat.

Benjamin Islands

The Benjamins were all they were supposed to be. Probably the most famous anchorage (set of islands) in The North Channel. Superb weather, water as clear as air (76 degrees), deserty red, smooth boulders and even hills of smooth rock, and a spectacular, but mostly distant, thunderstorm just to make it even more interesting! Met some interesting people near us who were veteran sailors and joined them on Sunset Rock for, obviously, the windswept sunset. John slept on deck as we had next to no mosquitoes. Surprise. We are in Spanish waiting for John Hoard and a crew change. JD does not want to go home. Remember to click on the photos to enlarge. They are better if they are bigger.