Sunday, August 15, 2010 | Author: Jacob
Our primary goals in doing this delivery were to gain some offshore experience while learning from a more experienced skipper. This trip accomplished both of those goals for us, and we are so grateful we had the opportunity to sail onboard Coyote with Steve.


Coyote was a great boat for the trip, stable, sturdy, and very weatherly. In fact our route (sort of under the high) would not have been possible in a boat that didn't go to weather like a freight train. We could easily knock off 6-8kts at 30 degrees or so to the apparent wind, this opened up huge options in routing. It was a great experience to spend some time at sea in a more modern design than Pisces (even though Coyote is from '85, it's a very very different type of boat) and develop a real comparison point for our own thinking about boats.

Steve was a great skipper, and Julia and I both learned quite a bit from him on this (his 4th) trip. We hand-steered probably 80% of the time, and even had several very nice long spinnaker runs (including a memorable one under the Golden Gate to end our trip).


We were very lucky in our weather conditions, as they were quite moderate given the potential this trip has. Further, we had steady winds almost the entire time, while boats even one day ahead of us had to motor for days on end. We called it our own 'private Coyote wind' and it served us very well.


Finally, we were also quite happy to find that all of the coastal cruising we have done left us very well prepared for our first offshore passage. We found that the conditions were well within our comfort zone, and that we were capable of contributing to the running of the boat in a variety of useful ways beyond just standing watch. It was gratifying to see how far our skills and confidence have developed in the past several years, and to see those skills put to use alongside other more experienced sailors.


In the end the trip took 16 days to the hour. During that time we sailed 2300 NM, in order to cover a 2070 NM great-circle distance. We motored for probably about 28 hours total, with the longest single stretch being around 18 hours. We were close-hauled for the majority of the time, but we also had some nice spinnaker reaching conditions as we left the East side of the high. We had squalls almost the entire trip, practically until we were within VHF range of the California coast. We didn't see much sea life, and we didn't see all that much trash. We did see many rainbows, and one moonbow. In the end, we are so glad we chose to do this trip, as it has energized both of us for future offshore sailing, and in particular future offshore racing!


I would highly recommend doing a similar trip to any aspiring cruiser, as you can learn so much from the accomplished group of sailors involved in races like the Pac Cup. Many of these sailors have sailed their entire life, and covered tens of thousands of offshore miles in all conditions.

We've uploaded all our photos to a gallery at: http://svpisces.smugmug.com/Sailing/Pacific-Cup-Delivery-2010/
This gallery may expand over the next month or so as we gather additional photos from the rest of the crew.

Here's a list of some things that I felt worked particularly well onboard Coyote:

Expedition/NavMonPC
:
Coyote had an interesting system of integrated electronics, and while this is something we decided not to bother with on Pisces, it was quite handy (and pretty fun). The two most interesting pieces of this were Expedition and NavMonPC.

Expedition is a pro grade routing software that uses your boat's polars (theoretical speeds at a variety of wind angles and strength) to optimize your route given the weather forecast (via GRIB files). Expedition called our slightly unusual route right off the bat, and it proved to work very well for Coyote.

NavMonPC is a free piece of software written by Paul Elliott from the boat Valis. When integrated with the boat's wind instruments and GPS it keeps a log of wind speed direction, boat speed, and other important data points. With a big crew, it was very helpful to be able to take a look at the history for the last watch and get a real sense of what the wind and boat had been doing, rather than just relying on the 'it's getting sorta more windy I guess' you might get from the watch going off. And, it'll also serve as an AIS display. Very cool.

Bunk Fans:
When we asked the crew from the race what the most valuable piece of personal gear they had was, it was unanimous that personal clip on fans were the MVP. Coyote didn't have the best ventilation (especially going to windward where we needed to button everything up tight), and for the first several days sleeping would have been almost impossible without bunk fans.

Numbering System:
Everyone on the boat had a number (1-5) and a corresponding cubby, complete with water bottle, travel mug, and spork. Having your own kit meant that there was no doubt who had not cleaned their stuff or had left it laying around. Julia also appreciated the de-personalization aspect, and suggested we have longer 'prison-style' numbers, such as: 51798.

Paper Products:
Every meal onboard was served on paper plates/bowls, using paper towels. All of which were discarded over the side (only when appropriately far offshore). While I wouldn't necessarily take this approach with a small crew, with 5 people onboard this was critical to keeping dishes down to a minimum.

Frozen Food:
While Julia ended up cooking almost the whole time (a story for another time), Steve & Connie had a good plan that they used for the trip over. They pre-cooked all their meals, and froze them ahead of time. The galley freezer was then loaded, and they loaded two additional coolers with food & dry ice in the sail locker. Using this technique, items from the coolers were still frozen after over a week, at which point they could be transferred into the galley.

Big Thermos:
In the galley there was a big, catering-style, thermos. The type you self-serve coffee out of at a less-than-fancy coffee shop. If a kettle of water was put in the thermos in the evening, it was still hot in the morning. This allowed people to dispense hot water easily without using the oven everytime. Good for individual cups of coffee, tea, oatmeal, hot chocolate, etc.

Designated 'Wet' Zone:
The v-berth on coyote was covered in a tarp, with line strung for clothes hangers. This was the designated wet-zone, and all foul weather gear and lifejackets were stored here. Crucial in keeping the salt water out of bunks, etc. The only improvement I would make would be to have a zone near the companionway where lifejackets and tethers could be kept. We didn't have any fire-drills, but if we did I think having the lifejackets on the way to the deck would help ensure that no one would come running up without their safety gear.

Anti-bacterial wipes:
As a substitute for a shower, they are actually pretty good. Connie & Steve did some testing beforehand and found a brand without much scent. Once or twice a day coming off watch you could use these to clean up, get salt off, and keep the smells to a minimum. Very helpful.

Overlapping Watches:
The way the watch schedule was structured meant that you came on and relieved one person, and joined someone else whose watch was half over. An hour and a half (or so) later that person left, and a new person joined you. This meant that someone was always relatively fresh, and someone always knew what had been going on with the boat for the last hour or two. Also, it meant that you could look forward to the new person coming on watch as a change of company:)



After some celebratory beers on the dock at the Richmond Yacht Club, we are now in the San Francisco Bay Area, doing a quick visit with friends and family, and in a few days we are headed back to Seattle to rejoin Pisces and get our land-life up and running with school and work.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We are really close now. It's weird to finish a watch and think, 'only one more of those watches for this trip.'

Last night we passed through Gale Alley, whose name is self-explanatory and well-deserved. We had only the smallest taste of what it can offer, but it was certainly a humbling reminder of the power of the sea. We only were seeing mid-20's, with the occasional burst higher, but the seas really stacked up and were a bit confused. Lots of spray, water on deck, cold wind, and dark. We spent the night under double-reefed main and 90% jib, knocking down solid 9's on the speedo.

This morning conditions have eased a bit, although the sea state remains confused. Steve and Julia were chomping at the bit to pile on more sail, so up went the heavy spinnaker. We are really making great time, although the driver has to work pretty hard on the wheel. Being close to home adds another level of excitement.

We can now hear the Coast Guard on VHF channel 16, there are many more birds, and we even saw some kelp floating by this morning. Definitely closing with land.

Most likely this will be the last blog post from onboard. This will probably end up being posted sometime early morning on Wed, and at this clip we should be nearing the Golden Gate by mid-day on Wednesday for a total trip time of right around 16 days. We will definitely write a final 'end-of-trip' post sometime soon, but it'll probably take a little while to get to that. First we have to shower, do a huge amount of laundry, have a drink (or several), eat a bunch of good food, and sleep.

Lat 38 02.558' N, Long 125 32.060' W
Wind: 18 kts NNW
Seas: 2-3 m mixed
Speed: 7 kts
Dist to Go: 142 NM

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Tuesday, August 10, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We are screaming along, starting to daydream about never ending showers, big fresh meals, and full nights of sleep. The sailing continues to be good, and I think we can officially say that we have left the Pacific High in the dust. We flew the spinnaker for about 12 hours yesterday, only dousing it when the wind moved forward in the late evening. Since then we've been flying along under the 135% jib and main, finding that we are still encountering squalls, although they are almost all wind and no rain at this point. Temperature is down, and it looks and feels like Northern California ocean.

Since last week we have sailed 1970 NM, almost all of that distance covered under sail, and most of it upwind. No complaints at all here, we've had great sailing in our own 'private Coyote wind' and conditions have been very moderate for the most part. Boats even a day ahead of us have had to do much more motoring.

Yesterday and today have been shower days, as we still have plenty of water. It's a bit tricky trying to shave and take a shower in the forward head as we beat upwind at 8 kts in 22 kts of wind, but it proved well worth it, with warm water even. Makes a world of difference. Things are still a bit stinky onboard, but we are fighting the good fight.

It's very exciting to start to zoom in on the navigation software, and to start seeing familiar details like the Farallon islands. All signs point to a Wednesday arrival, we are hoping for sometime during the day so that we can enjoy the sail under the gate and down the city front. I'm sure it's going to be an amazing feeling.

Towards the beginning of the trip we would all sleep lightly, then we started to sleep better but still wake easily, then there was a period where we would tend to wake up a half hour before our shifts ready to go, now we are all sleeping heavily and have to be shaken bodily to rouse us for our watches. Two more 12:30-3:30AM shifts for me!

Last night I guess Julia and I were driving a bit crazy, as first Rick then Steve came up to see 'if everything was ok.' Didn't seem too bad to us topside, reaching with full sails in 24 kts of wind, hitting the occasional high 9 and even 10 kts. I guess the crashing and banging down below didn't seem like it was worth it to the off watch. We are seeing the finish line in sight and the temptation to push hard is high.

Having done this trip has really changed our perspective on distances. While in the Sea of Cortez we would feel like a 200 mile trip was a big event and we would plan and watch the weather so carefully. Now a trip like that sounds much easier. All the same, having those experiences first have been a huge help in readying us for this passage.

All is well onboard Coyote and the daytime routine is well underway.

Lat 38 11.921' N, Long 129 08.672' W
Wind: 17kts N
Seas: 2 m N
Speed: 7.2 kts
Dist. to Go: 315 NM

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Monday, August 09, 2010 | Author: Jacob
Today is a momentous day, as we have finally made enough progress north, and we are now heading on a course more or less directly (depends on who is driving at any given time) towards the Golden Gate.

Yesterday we had a great run under the spinnaker, dousing at sunset just to be cautious. Steve set the jib up off a block on the end of the boom which allowed us to keep decent speed through the night, and before dawn he and Rick relaunched the spinnaker. The sailing is absolutely great right now, enough breeze to keep us moving through the water at 8+ kts, light seas. It's also amazing to look at the last few hours of wind speed and direction, it is absolutely rock solid, with almost no shifts at all. It's a bit foggy, but it is not as cold as it has been. All in all we are very happy.

Today Coyote (and Steve) passed the 4000 NM mark for the roundtrip. That's all in the span of about a month! Very impressive, and neither Coyote nor Steve seem phased at all by the fact that they have been at sea for the entire month minus a few days partying in Hawaii.

Already talk has turned to 2012 and Steve & Rick's possible plans. Just to make it clear, Julia and I are highly available for the race portion of this trip (hint hint:). We figure it's a great sign if we can still be underway and have interest in doing something like this again. Often you don't start having fond feelings about things like this until well afterwards when the memory isn't quite so sharp.

Our current goal is to catch up with some of the boats ahead of us. I think we have the advantage in that Steve is crazy enough to still want to fly the spinnaker even though the race is long over. Many of the other boats on the net don't seem to have the energy for it, and we've been slowly picking up miles on people. Steve wants a drag race under the gate.

We got word that the satellite tracking site has been taken off-line. Don't worry, we're still out here.

Lat 38 00.026' N, Long 132 35.255' W
Wind: 13 kts NW
Seas: 1 m NW
Speed: 7 kts
Dist to go: 478 NM

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Sunday, August 08, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We thought for a while that we had broken free from the high, but it apparently is not going to be that easy. Instead the wind continues to gradually become more stable, through many cycles of ups and downs. Last night Julia and I had some amazing sailing, with about 15 kts of wind making 8.5kts through smooth seas, later it died out and the next watch had to motor for a few hours.

During last night's roll call it sounded as if the bigger boats (generally in a position N and E of us) were all in the solid coastal breeze and making great time. You can probably actually see the split in the fleet via the satellite tracker.

Even with the fluky winds we are making decent progress, and Wednesday still seems like a likely arrival date.

Shipping traffic is increasing, and already today we've passed freighters bound to Manzanillo, LA, and Panama. We have AIS onboard which picks up signals broadcast from freighters, this allows us to see all sorts of handy information such as the name of the ship, it's heading, speed, destination, size, and more.

Really not all that much to report, every time the wind comes up we are hopeful that we have finally broken completely free of the high and we can start knocking down the big miles towards home. We're still chipping away.

News report, Steve just called for the spinnaker to go up, should be exciting not to be close-hauled for a bit!

Lat 37 19.779' N, Long 135 48.090' W
Wind: 9kts N
Seas: 1-2 m N
Speed: 6.5kts
Dist to go: 635 NM

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Friday, August 06, 2010 | Author: Jacob
As a quick note on our 'days' for each blog post, it is the number of days that has already elapsed up to this point. We left mid-day on the 26th, so the 27th would be Day 1, etc. Also, I tend to write these blog posts around noon, but they often are not posted until 3AM or so when we have a decent SSB radio connection, which I'm sure helps muddle the waters.

It definitely feels like Northern California waters now. Grey seas and skies, low cloud cover with occasional fog and drizzle. Cold as well, and everyone has dug out their foulies. We are still trying to get out ahead of the high, at which point we should have glorious winds speeding us along to the Golden Gate. In the meantime we continue to tend the autopilot, trying to take advantages of shifts while not killing ourselves resetting every single sail trim control every 15 minutes as the wind wanders 40 degrees and varies in strength. No discernible rhythm to the wind at this point. A lull might be a lift or a header, gusts come before fog, during fog, after fog, or not at all.

We continue to make some mileage, but still trying our best to conserve fuel. We are doing a good job of it, as we've only motored about 12 hours out of the last 50 or so, but we want to be careful as there's a possibility that the winds will die as we get close in to the coast, which would be bad for morale. Drifting within sight of SF...

Julia and I talked this morning and both agree that the heavier weather early in the trip was much more fun, and made the time go by quickly. It was very liberating to be on a boat with such an experienced skipper, it gave us a bit of a sounding board to say 'okay, you're not concerned, so we won't be either.' Already we've got more ideas brewing for the long term dream 'next boat.'

Currently there is a conference under way at the barometer. If we keep tapping it insistently, perhaps it will drop a bit more.

There have been bets placed onboard on arrival date, but the general consensus throughout the boat and fleet is that we will arrive on or before Wednesday the 11th. We'll see, we need to find our wind first.

Lat 36 53.641' N, Long 138 49.367' W
Wind:6 kt NNE
Seas: 1.5 meter N
Speed: 6kt (motorsailing)
Dist to go: 783 NM

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Friday, August 06, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We had a good day of sailing yesterday, but by late evening the wind had dropped and we had to start motorsailing. Really it is more like sailing interspersed with motoring...sail, trim, furl jib, motor,unfurl jib, sail, and repeat indefinitely. It's hard sailing as you have to constantly work to keep the boat moving and moving in the right direction. Unfortunately the GRIBS show the high continuing to move East along with us for at least a few more days. So, we are trying hard to break free. When we do find wind we expect we will have some fast sailing.

In some ways this is the hardest part of the trip yet. We are all over-rested, it feels like we are entering the home stretch, but we are moving so slow...Julia and Steve are convinced that they saw a submarine last night, based upon it showing Amber lights and appearing and disappearing from the AIS (which shows surrounding vessels). In fact, they tried hailing 'submarine near the position of...' on VHF, which probably was hilarious to any other ships in hailing distance. Let's see, Rick dropped a pudding behind the stove, and while trying to reach behind the stove went sliding across the boat during a gust. It's the little things that makes the day go by.

Yesterday we saw a sailboat on the horizon, but no luck getting a VHF response. We thought they might be part of the returning Pacific Cup fleet, but at evening roll call there were no boats that close to us.

We continue to eat well thanks to Julia's heroic efforts in the galley. Pulled pork for dinner and Egg McMuffins this morning for breakfast. Today Steve and I are playing around trying to get the weatherfax working so that we can receive weather forecast charts over the SSB radio. So far so good.

Lat 36 45.353' N, Long 141 17.229' W
Wind: 6 kts NE
Seas: 1 m NE
Speed: 4.5kt (motorsailing)
Dist to Go: 897 NM

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Thursday, August 05, 2010 | Author: Jacob
Try as we might to keep our route in the wind, we seem to have found the Pacific high yesterday. As Don Anderson would say 'Nooooo wind!' The calm seas, and lack of breeze created a bit of a vacation like atmosphere on the boat. Laundry was done in the cockpit, quick rinse off showers had, and we had a steak, corn, coleslaw and brownie feast for dinner.

The downside to the lack of wind is that we've been forced to motor for the past 20 something hours. It's easy, but boring, however the real concern is conserving fuel. The GRIBS from last night were not terribly encouraging, as they showed the high moving east along with us, keeping us out of the wind until perhaps the 7th. However, this morning we have found a good breeze, and while it is taking us a bit further South than we would like, it's great to be making some miles without the engine.

At about 11AM we hit the official halfway mark, 1035 miles made good to SF, 1035 miles to go! Even with the light winds we are hopeful that we have already passed the halfway mark in terms of days. We've sailed 1266 miles to get here, so we will be saving a few hundred on this next 'half.' Also, Expedition seems to think that although the next several days might be a bit slow, once we find the breeze we will start knocking down some big fast days. Steve says Coyote can hit 10kts on a reach, so we are hopeful we will start putting up some 200 mile days as we near SF.

Other than that, nothing much to report. We saw a cargo ship today, some more Albatross, and some Storm Petrels. Everyone seems happy, and we have plenty of good food to see us through.

Lat 36 43.082' N, Long 143 55.987' W
Wind: 8 kts NE
Seas: .5 meter NE
Speed: 6 kts
Dist to Go: 1027 NM

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Tuesday, August 03, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We seem to have found the edge of the high. The big talk on the evening HF radio net last night was when to tack. Essentially you can either go North, or East. You need to go East to get to SF, however, you don't want to have to go North once you get close to the coast, as the conditions can build in that zone. So, last night at 3AM when we had a big wind shift (meaning we were sailing towards Tokyo) Julia and I tacked the boat. Very strange. everything that was high is now low, our left legs feel funny from bearing all our weight while at the helm for the last week, and we have to find a whole new set of brace points and handholds below.

Since last night the winds have been light and fluky, we've motored a bit, tacked back, changed up to the 135% sail, and now we are motoring slowly again. Roughly NE in direction. Unlike some boats we are not super loaded up with fuel, so we are trying to be slow and conserve what we have until we reach the coastal winds. Hopefully we will reach them within a day or so.

It's strange to look at our chart and see that we are essentially in the middle of the ocean, as our little patch of sea that is visible looks pretty much exactly the same as any other patch of sea. There could be a spot of land just over the horizon, but instead we are in one of the most remote parts of the planet.

We have been seeing some Albatross, and lots of rainbows. Squalls persist, but they are losing their punch.

In other exciting news, we ought to reach our halfway point tomorrow if everything continues at this pace.

Lat 36 24.314' N, Long 146 22.508' W
Wind: 8 kts ESE
Seas: 1 meter E
Speed: 5 kts
Dist to go: 1142 NM

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Monday, August 02, 2010 | Author: Jacob
We have now officially been close hauled on starboard tack for 7 straight days (minus a few hours here and there of close reaching). We've found all sorts of fun new leaks on Coyote (don't worry, all above the water line, these are the types that just make things wet and uncomfortable). Last night at about midnight I woke up and we were flying through a squall and Steve was running around in the semi-darkness of the cabin with underwater epoxy in desperation trying to stop leaks around the cabin windows. He's also taking to sleeping in his seaboots as his bunk is wet.

Right now we've gone 994 nm, and over 800 of that has actually been towards SF. Really we're making great time. In a day or two when we tack over we will be heading more directly towards the coast, and I would expect the miles to just start falling away.

I'm really enjoying Steve's sailing style, which is to push quite hard. It can be the middle of the night, black, wet, spray everywhere, squalls everywhere, the boat is heeled over 30 degrees, and someone will say 'do you want me to put a reef in?' and Steve will seem surprised and say something like 'uh, I guess you could, but this sail combo should be good up to 40kts." I guess that's what a lifetime of racing on SF bay does to you. Really though, I like it, it's fun to stay a bit in race mode, and go for a speedy trip.

I think Julia and I were both very well prepared mentally for this trip, and have found the conditions (while not always comfortable or easy) to be well within our expectations for the trip. I think some of the other crew was not so well prepared, and they seem a bit worn down by the constant pounding and upwind work. To them, exiting into the calm of the high would be a welcome respite, whereas to Steve running out of wind sounds miserable.

Not a whole lot of sleep last night, Julia and I took long shifts to try and let the old guys sleep:) So, this will have to remain brief as I'm off watch and looking forward to my bunk. Next big milestone will be our halfway mark!

Lat 34 43.278' N, Long 147 43.897' W
Wind: 17 kts E
Seas: 2.5 meter E
Speed: 7kts
Dist to go: 1235 NM

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Sunday, August 01, 2010 | Author: Jacob
Day 6 is in the books. I guess a bunch happened, although really everything seems structured by the routine of our watches.

Last night was a real pounding wet night. Squalls and more squalls, don't they know we are already at 32 degrees?! The squalls now don't have as much rain, but they do have more wind, we are seeing 30 kt apparent pretty frequently.

This morning we dropped the mainsail to the second reef, and Steve and I repaired a mainsail slide that had broken a few days ago. It was a couple slides above the first reef, and it being broken had caused the slide below it to start tearing free of the fabric. Because of this we hadn't been using the first reef, instead driving like we thought we were in the Volvo ocean race with water sweeping the length of the boat all night. Again, fun driving but not so popular with the off watch. Another instance when my time learning from Joe at Leading Edge Sails proved useful!

Expedition says to tack tomorrow, Commanders weather tells us to keep going until we reach at least 38 degrees, which will be another few days.

Cherry pie for breakfast, Julia informs us that she is driving a course of 370 degrees...which could explain a lot.

Lat 32 16.639' N, Long 148 51.133' W
Wind: 15 kts NE
Seas: 2 meter NE
Speed: 6.5 kt N
Dist to go: 1330 NM

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