Sunday, September 5, 2010

Sucia to Port Angeles

We spent our first night out at Shallow Bay at Sucia. Never again! The sunset was great but it was the worst night I have ever spent on the water.

We rocked violently all night.

As we came into Shallow Bay I dropped our crab trap in 45' water just outside of the narrow entrance. It was a slack flood tide and would likely be good crabbing. The next morning as we were leaving the trap was no where to be found. We looked and looked and finally decided that we would have to leave without it.

A lot of people claim that their traps have been stolen; I'm not one of them. I figure that the current swept it down the ocean floor which quickly dropped to 130'. Now I've lost my entire crabbing rig for the SECOND time. Greg says that we aren't spending any more money on crab traps and I'm bummed.

After 10 hrs of very light wind we arrived at Port Angeles - 9 hr 40 min motoring and 20 min of sailing. There was a gale warning and we were rushing to reach Pt Angeles. The gale never arrived.

We had the unexpected pleasure of berthing next to the Hawaiian Chieftain and the Lady Washington. The captain of HC helped us with our lines as I came into the slip. Our top spreader was almost touching the end of one of their yardarms - a bit of a concern if that gale did come along during the night. His crew put their muscle to it and turned the yardarm to give us some clearance. The crew is a very nice bunch of young folks. I'm envious - they jump over 8 feet from the gunnel to the dock. When the HC was at the Blaine marina I watched one of the young women (it wouldn't be right to call her a girl) swing from the deck on a line and drop to the dock as the ship came into its slip. Tarzana of the Ocean.

Captain of the Hawaiian Chieftain
As we were approaching the Pt Angeles docks I grabbed my phone to see if I could rouse anyone at the Yacht Club. I never called. There was a new voice mail: "Hurt, I've got your trap! Call me." My heart jumped! I was thinking that I would have to ask all of my friends that visited Susia to keep an eye out for my trap but now I wouldn't have to.

A salmon fisherman off of Patos Island had snagged my trap line in 200 ft of water. The current had drug it all that way. He thought he had caught a nice salmon and instead hauled in my trap and broke his fishing pole. He was surprised when I told him where I had set it. I asked how much would it cost to repair his pole and he told me $800. I had been so happy to find my trap and now it looked like it was gone again. I offered my trap to him to cover part of his loss. Turned out he was just giving me a hard time. "A hundred bucks. But don't worry. This happens all the time but usually its commercial traps. Where are you?" Again surprise when I said Port Angeles. The good samaritan lives in Sandy Pt. Friends to the rescue and a win/win solution. Our friend Paul Beyer goes to Sandy Pt frequently and will retrive my trap for me and in exchange gets to use it until I return in 10 months or so. For now any crabbing that I do will be with my cheapie crab ring.

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