Day 6 – Planning to Lock it Down

Day 6 was spent in Brockville, planning for the next legs of the journey. Shortly we will enter the first of 7 locks along the Saint Lawrence Seaway. These are huge commercial shipping locks that accept pleasure craft between freight ships. Timing travel is tricky given that lock entry wait times can vary from 0 – 4 hours, although we’re hearing from boats further down the seaway that the wait times have been lower than typical.

Down-locking is easier than up-locking because you enter the lock full and it empties fairly gently. With up-locking, you enter the lock empty and it fills, causing tremendous turbulence and it’s hard to control your boat and keep it from banging against the lock walls. Each lock has different rules, protocols and line handling arrangements. We’ll post more on the locking experience in a few days.

Planning takes time, patience and lots of data

The main reason we held a day in Brockville was to give our friends Jon and Cheri a chance to catch up to us. We met Jon and Cheri, a lovely couple, last year in Cobourg aboard their newly acquired Beneteau 48 Oceanis “African Queen IV”. We admired their courage as they were new to sailing, but they decided to sell their house, quit their jobs and live their dream of living aboard and exploring the world for a few years. We also discovered that we had similar plans to do the Down East Circle Route this year, and agreed to connect periodically as we make our way. We’re excited to form a flotilla with them!

Jon, Cheri and Freeway (the cat) aboard African queen IV

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18 responses to “Day 6 – Planning to Lock it Down”

  1. Thomas Avatar
    Thomas

    Hey!
    I see on of of your pics that you use a tablet for the schedule, but use a paper map with tools. Does that mean there is no good/acceptable software solutions to create routes, that could be loaded in the ship gps?

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Bonjour Thomas, En toute honnêteté, il s’agissait d’un montage pour la photo :-). Nous utilisons les cartes en papier pour avoir une vue d’ensemble pour planifier le moyen terme, et en cas de panne électronique. Au jour le jour, nous employons les instruments de bord (GPS intégré avec cartes électroniques, radar, AIS, etc). L’application Navionics est aussi très puissante et offre beaucoup de fonctionnalités sur smartphone ou tablet.

  2. Alex Avatar
    Alex

    Take plenty of pics of the locks! Looks so great so far!!

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks, Alex!

  3. Dawn Shumway Avatar
    Dawn Shumway

    So far you have been visiting some familiar and favorite stops for our cruises around Lake Ontario and 1000 Islands. Now you are entering unfamiliar territory and I can’t wait to read on as your adventure unfolds. Thanks for sharing this with us!!

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks, Dawn!

  4. Judy Avatar
    Judy

    So interesting about the locks! Do a video if you have a chance.
    LJ

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks, Sis!

  5. Moby Avatar
    Moby

    I finally caught up on your blogs. I spent a couple of days in Brockville while waiting to help a friend deliver his newly purschased C&C 38 to Rochester. A nice town with friendly people. Don’t get to excited about the first lock. When Caroline and I went through, we dropped 6 inches! Caroline and I are leaving tomorrow for our one week cruise up to Canada. Sorry we missed you. Have a great time.

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Hi Moby, Yes, the locals call it the “fake” lock. Probably a good training exercise regarding reservations, payments, presentry tie-up, etc. Also Sand gets to try out the XXL t-shirts she bought from the thrift shop as fender cover-covers for the locks. Sorry we missed you two on the water. Enjoy your cruise!

  6. Bob Avatar
    Bob

    Dan and Sandy. We are thoroughly enjoying your blog and photos. Where Charlie and Rose on the African Queen? Did Rose pour the gin overboard?

    We cruised as far as Brockville in the 80’s. The pipes played at sunset. Great town.

    Fair Wiinds!

    Bob
    Grande’ Vitessse

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Hi Bob, Thanks for your note. That was a great movie with Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn. I don’t think she poured the gin overboard in this case. Maybe she drank some though :-). Fair winds, Dan

  7. Laku Avatar
    Laku

    Sounds like a different kinda situation than lock 33 :).

    Great to follow your journey and bon voyage.

  8. Donna Lo Dolce Avatar
    Donna Lo Dolce

    Nice to hear your friends have caught up with you, and you’ll be locking together! Their boat, the African queen is beautiful, and they look like a fun couple to be sharing this part of your adventure. We know with all your expertise and planning it will gp well. Loving the blog, keep them coming!

  9. Larry Kerpelman Avatar

    Hi, Dan and Sandy,
    Starting to read your day-by-day blog and hoping to catch up soon to do it in real time. So far, it’s been fascinating, and I expect it will get progressively fascinatinger with each new day.
    By providing the info below, am I subscribed, or is there something else I need to do? I don’t want to miss any part of your trip.
    Larry

    1. dkerpnc Avatar

      Thanks, Larry, Glad to have you “aboard”. We didn’t see your subscription come through, so we took the liberty of adding you manually. You should get the weekly updates hereafter. D & S

      1. Larry Kerpelman Avatar

        Thanks, Dan for forcing the invite to happen. Am now starting to catch up. On Day 10 as of now.

        1. dkerpnc Avatar

          Hope it works. And appreciate you taking so much interest! Day 10 seems like a year ago!

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