Update posted 2nd June 2003
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So, here we sit in a
wonderful scrubbing berth in Lezardrieux working hard with cement and
trowel………… but more of that later. We finally left
Cherbourg and headed along the coast toward Cap de la Hague and on toward
Carteret. As with many of the harbours along this coast timing is
everything as entry is controlled by a lock or sill. Of course we had our
fastest recorded speed ever of 10.7knots over the ground and under No 1,
stays’l and main we roared along the coast and down past Alderney before
the wind died and then headed us. The last hour was spent plugging into a
tide before finally gaining the sanctuary of Carteret. We spent a few days
there awaiting an improvement in the weather and met an English couple who
come from Hedge End, small world etc. Conscious of the budget we left even
tho the forecast was promising 6 or 7’s, with gusts of 8, it didn’t
disappoint! Westerly winds
meant Lezardrieux was always going to be difficult and the slow going in
the end had us turning south and into Granville. The two problems we had
here were: we didn’t really like the look of the place and we had no
passage chart to get us there. We managed it with a lot of care and
attention to sea states but the whole experience was physically &
mentally exhausting. Granville turned out to be a good place, cheap and
interesting with a free shower. We bought a passage chart to cover the
missing spots. We left Granville in
misty, lumpy conditions and used “Henry” to help us make some progress
against headwinds and contrary tides. By late afternoon we’d had enough,
despite a visit from a school of dolphins and headed for St. Cast picking
up a buoy outside the harbour for a swell ridden night before leaving
early the following day for Lezardrieux. The forecast was for 5 or 6 but
we left with gentle 3 and sunshine and made good progress despite the
headwind. Closing the shoal waters off Ile de Brehat the wind picked up to
a 6 with us doing 7 knots + we headed down the south side of Brehat toward
the river. No problem picking up the marks and under main and “Henry”
we made it into safety, serenity and a peaceful night’s kip, if only
that’s how the story went…. Tacking across the narrow channel under main and engine we cleared the Rade de Brehat and were NW of an isolated danger mark called Rompa. We’d tacked each time as the depth dropped to 4 metres under the keel only this time I took my eye off the sounder for a few seconds at the wrong moment. Looking back the depth had dropped to 3.2 and as I swung the tiller went down to 2.5…. I was about to shout to Bee that we could have a problem when we heard a crashing sound, felt a lurch to starboard, the bow rose ominously out of the water and all forward movement stopped. The boat tilted upward toward a sunny, blue sky, the stern was a foot lower in the water than it should be, the exhaust note muffled by the water that covered it. Dropping the main, no time for harbour stows now, we looked at each other in dismay. The wind was blowing strongly onto the port bow and if we managed to get off would simply pile us further onto other waiting rocks. A very rapid check below showed no water in any of the bilges but with the wind getting up and the tide beginning to flood we needed to work quickly. The only luck in the whole scene had been the lurch to starb’d as we found we could easily launch the dinghy over that side, away from the wind and waves. Thanks be to Yamaha as without the outboard the whole job would have been so much more difficult. We lowered the Danforth, 10 metres of very heavy chain and 50 metres of line into the dinghy and motored slowly away paying it all out. Tipping the anchor over in a hurried fashion gave me a ripped finger but once back aboard Bee slowly took up the strain and the anchor held. Every time we have used that anchor and combination we have had success but this was the most important to date. We waited. Every few minutes I would go gently astern and in due course we came off. The “only” damage we had been able to see was a long white gash on the keel but how low down we couldn’t work out. Having sorted ourselves out an hour and a half after running aground we set off tentatively up river toward our nights destination. Subdued and dry mouthed we followed the river watching the depth and twitching nervously when it dipped below 10 metres. Had one attempt at anchoring, dragged and picked up a nearby buoy for convenience before eating and DRINKING at midnight.
The pilot says Lezardrieux has a scrubbing berth.
It has. Its free, has
both water and electric laid on and your boat sits on a well drained
concrete base. We had to wait until after the w/e as we were still on
neaps but 4am on Monday we made our way gingerly onto the berth with 10
cms to spare. We’d met a French couple on Saturday whilst out in the
dinghy with Toots, invited them back to Hannah and subsequently been taken
out, by car, to a local Chateau and the next port down river from here.
Called Portrieux it offers Hannah sized moorings for £250 a year. True
you can only get out when the lock gates opens and you are a long way from
the sea but it is very tempting. And at 4 am there stood Philippe waiting
to take our lines as we nosed into the berth. So we’ve repaired and
painted, found one side didn’t take and had to turn Hannah around, more
drama and once again Philippe was on hand to lend a much-needed hand.
People use the adjacent slipway to launch Ribs etc and seem bemused at the
sight of a scruffy couple, watched over by a sunbathing cat, diligently
mixing up a batch of cement. Once again John & Minnie have reached out
and provided a solution, as it was their donation of quick drying cement
that has enabled us to make the repair. Today is, we hope, the last day on
the berth. The sunshine is wonderful as is the NE wind, all in all a day
to be out and heading for our next destination, Treguier. A couple of asides.
So far we haven’t found French libraries to be as Internet friendly as
other countries so emails may be more sporadic than we had hoped.
True, when it gets
lumpy she sometimes feels she should be allowed up top where she can
demonstrate her balancing skills by sitting on the self steering bracket
or leaning over the top of the capping rail. Both these activities leave
me anxious and Bee needs to hurriedly sweep her below before I start
bellowing. Toots has also started going ashore and seems to spend most of
the night wandering in our current berth, chasing bats, eating flies or
insects and seems to look forward to the next mystery destination. We have settled into
this trip much more quickly than the Danish one and have, for the most
part, enjoyed it more. Hannah goes extremely well and gets lots of
attention, including a free nights mooring from one friendly
harbourmaster. Finally. Thanks to
Paul and Sally who handle our mail etc whilst we are away and sorted out a
problem we had in Carteret when, penniless and with no credit on the
phone, we were unable to persuade the hole in the wall to give us any
cash. “No” said the bank “they could not cash a cheque” It seems
we had not notified Visa we were travelling again although I suspect the
real problem was my inability to work out the exchange rate on euro’s
and my request for a £100 was actually £989 sending alarm bells through
the banking system. Nice to know that 5 years of number crunching in
QuickBooks has left me sharp as a bowling bowl. Finally, Finally. We
still haven’t got any credit on our mobile so although we can receive
text or calls we can’t return them, we are not ignoring anyone just
slightly disorganised. |