Day 20 – Mud, Wind, Rain and Tides

After an idyllic sail yesterday, we set out at 0700 from the Ile de Barques anchorage. We followed the exact path we took into the anchorage to make sure we had deep enough water to get out again. Well, you know the saying… there are three kinds of sailors: those who run aground, those who never leave the dock, and those who are liars. Well, we definitely left the dock and we don’t lie so that means we ran aground. Due to the strong Saint Lawrence current, there had been silting overnight and what was 7 feet of water was now down to 4 feet of water.

Dan’s been called a stick-in-the-mud before, but it was never literal. This morning, we were really stuck in the mud. We lowered the dinghy, Lil’ North, tied her to the bow of True North and tried to rotate her off the shoal. That didn’t work. So we tied Lil’ North to the stern of True north and tried backward. Sandy backed down True North’s diesel engine pretty hard while Dan tugged her astern with all the power the 10 HP outboard of Lil’ North could muster. Thanks to that effort, and some luck, True North became unstuck. Sandy drove her out to the deep channel and Dan met her out there with Lil’ North.

The day was tough, driving into strong Northeast winds and big chop. We descended the Richelieu Rapids, a section of the Saint Lawrence with currents so strong, it creates whirlpools. This pushed us along at 11 knots! We finally made it into Portneuf Marina, about 34 nautical miles up-river from Quebec City. Our welcome there was a major thunderstorm with tornado warnings!

We are now close enough to the ocean to start having tides. Trying to read the Canadian Tidal Current Almanac requires a PhD in rocket science. We’ll stick to websites that tell you when the tide is ebbing, flowing or slack. That’s all we really need to know for now.

Tomorrow, we’re very excited to be heading to Quebec City!


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21 responses to “Day 20 – Mud, Wind, Rain and Tides”

  1. Jean-Charles Piguet Avatar
    Jean-Charles Piguet

    Bien joué ! Il n’y avait pas la possibilité d’attendre que la marée remonte ?
    Une expérience de plus.

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Merci, Jean-Charles. On aurait pu attendre aussi mais on ne se rendait pas encore compte qu’il y’avait de la marée à cet endroit. Les documents disent tous que la marée ne commence qu’à partir de Trous-Rivieres.

  2. Thomas Avatar
    Thomas

    Terrifiant. Ce qui n’est pas précisé, c’est le niveau de tension à bord du bateau quand c’est arrivé, ni le nombdre de gros mots à la minute 🙂

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Salut Thomas, On a réussi à garder le sang froid. Aussi on utilise des casques intercom pour éviter de devoir crier l’un à l’autre pendant les manœuvres, ce qui aide aussi à rester calme. Je portais le mien dans l’annexe et Sandy le sien à bord. Pour les gros mots, je m’en suis envoyé quelques uns à moi-même en silence, mais on s’est abstenu pour le reste :-).

  3. Bernard Avatar
    Bernard

    Ah ! C’est donc à ça que sert le dinghy 😉

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Bateau remorqueur? Cette fois ci, oui !

  4. Judy Avatar
    Judy

    Unbelievable! I’m so impressed with your solutions!

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Necessity is the mother of invention. LD

    2. Didier & Sandrine Avatar
      Didier & Sandrine

      Les emmerdes, que ce soit sur terre comme sur mer, ça vole décidément en escadrille !
      Vous les avez cumulées ! Impressionnant
      Profitez bien de Québec 🙂

      1. dkerpnc Avatar

        Merci, vous deux. Ce n’est pas la première fois mais c’est vrai qu’on était bien coincé cette fois ci. Heureusement ce n’était que de la vase.

  5. Richard Glaser Avatar
    Richard Glaser

    You are no “stick in the mud!” I’m loving this chronicle of your adventures. Thanks for sharing and reminding me how special Montreal is. Save travels.

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks Richard!

  6. Kiran Mehra-Kerpelman Avatar
    Kiran Mehra-Kerpelman

    So well recounted that I felt we were experiencing this with you. I wouldn’t have the adventurous spirit I’m afraid. Bravo!

  7. Carol and Pete Avatar
    Carol and Pete

    Ok Pete my husband ran aground on a sailboat in San Diego CA after he and our son did a test run. He forgot about tides and blamed me the women for the bad luck on board.

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Carol, As it turns out, there was a minor tide change where we ran aground… probably just enough to cause the problem.

      1. Pete Avatar
        Pete

        Well Mission Bay has tides. Being a fresh water navigator my son, an other freshwater sailor, and I had several passes over the same point. When we picked up the experienced saltwater sailor be sailed the same route passed that point and grounded the sailing tin bathtub we were sailing. Yes, I’ve been a stick in the mud. With luck we got free. I blamed it on the extra passenger. Not my lack of tide knowledge. My second mistake.
        Hope Quebec City welcomes you. One of our favorite cities.

        1. dkerpnc Avatar

          Misery loves company, Pete! Québec City has been very welcoming. The people are delightful.

  8. Shep Greenberg Avatar
    Shep Greenberg

    Oh no!

  9. Dad/Charlie. Avatar
    Dad/Charlie.

    A good – probably a bit scary – experience, well-resolved. Chapeau to captain and crew for a comforting resolution.

    Enough of such experiences and may it be your last! Smooth sailing for the rest of your adventure!

  10. Larry Kerpelman Avatar

    Have followed you up to Day 20, now. I am so impressed with the quality and comprehensiveness of the writing as well as all the photos that illustrate your adventure. Good luck (i.e., no more stuck-in-the-mudness); I can’t wait to read what the next 20 days have in store.

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks for the encouragement, Larry. Keeps us motivated to keep on posting!

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