Blog Archive

Tuesday 31 August 2021

Aladdin's Magic Carpet Ride

Crew: Andrew, Lena, Sergey

A few weeks ago, a fellow sailor expressed his feelings about sailing as “the closest you’ll ever get to Aladdin's magic carpet ride”, and that sentiment stuck with me. It feels so right that I decided to name this blog entry after that quote.

Zeitgeist and Henri
Way back at the beginning of 2021, Andrew reached out to the crew asking about our appetite to schedule a weeklong cruise in the New England area. The appetite was there and after researching different charter companies—and realizing that everything available seemed to be already booked—the crew converged on booking the Zeitgeist—a Jeanneau 410 owned by the Narragansett Sailing Charters company—for the last week of August. Little did we know how meaningful our chosen date would become to many New Englanders, ourselves included.

As August rolled by, the excitement was palpable. I pulled my camping backpack from the closet early in the hopes that that would help time move faster. And then, a few days before the 22nd, when we were scheduled to cast off, the weather forecast issued a warning for a hurricane that completely changed the course of our vacation: Henri was headed straight toward the coast of Rhode Island. The 20th and the 21st were tense as I obsessively watched the weather forecasts to understand where and when the hurricane would hit the coast. Andrew found and shared a quote about Henri: “This is the most serious hurricane risk in New England in 30 years, since Hurricane Bob in 1991”. Bob the hurricane rang a bell—its effects had been described in a book that I read recently—Coast of Summer by Anthony Bailey—where the author describes an eerie and desolate landscape and seascape during and after it. Anthony had been sailing a course that I was hoping we could partially replicate. Bob had made landfall in Block Island and Newport on August 19th, 1991. Henri was downgraded to a tropical storm and made landfall in Westerly, Rhode Island on August 22nd, 2021.


The forecast did not bode well for our adventure.


The charter company first told us to not show up at the dock in Barrington until late Monday as they would need to assess the damage. Monday morning we heard the bad news from Andrew: the Zeitgeist had been damaged, it would take at least two weeks to repair. All sorts of feelings went through my head as I read those words—denial, anger, depression and acceptance—the only one I skipped from the "five stages of depression" was bargaining because… what would be the point?

Andrew went through the stages apparently faster than I did because while I was still processing, he asked the crew if we would like to do a shorter 3-day cruise using one of the boats from the Boston Sailing Center. We did and that’s how we ended up in a shorter cruise with a smaller crew on the Aeolus taking off from Boston and sailing to Gloucester instead of our original plan of taking off from Barrington and sailing to Long Island or Martha’s Vineyard.

Aeolus
It was drizzly in Boston when I woke up on Tuesday the 24th. Sergey picked me up and we drove to the BSC with all our gear. Andrew was already on the boat when we arrived and reported having checked for the dinghy, the stove and a few other things we would need. Sergey motored the Aeolus away from the dock and with the wind in my face, the disappointment slowly started to melt away. There was not a lot of wind in Boston Inner Harbor, and whatever wind there was was East / South East, thus requiring a few tacks on the way out. We made slow progress toward Castle Island and then toward Deer Island but as the big ships were numerous and in need to use the waters where we were trying to maneuver with whatever little wind we had, Andrew decided to turn the engine on.


Departure from Boston

We motored the Aeolus over to Middle Brewster Island, where we anchored, swam a bit and enjoyed a nice late lunch. We arrived around 2PM and took off around 3.30PM. We figured that the night might need to be spent at Nahant, if we were unable to make enough progress, or even in Boston Harbor if the wind was really disappointing.

Salem and fisherman
With less wind than I hoped for, but still enough for a steady progress of 2-3 knots, we continued on past Nahant, and I set my hopes on reaching Marblehead or Salem. I would have been fine with Nahant, but we carried on past it and continued on towards Marblehead. My mind was still processing the stolen opportunity to sail to Nantucket and back to Martha’s Vineyard, so spending the night anywhere that was not my bed in my apartment was fine by me. Although I have to admit that a harbor further away from Boston than Nahant would have been a nicer choice.

We arrived at Marblehead Channel around sunset. I was at the helm and aiming toward Children’s Island on a course that would allow us to fall off once we got close enough to the island. To the starboard I heard what appeared to be a tune played with bells. This turned out to be the red/green “FR” buoy which seemed to have been fitted with 3 or even 4 different tones creating a very enjoyable sound as it bobbed in the waves, almost like improvised music—“Sea-Jazz”. I regret not having recorded the sound but Andrew did capture it in a video.


Our lively discussion about how many tones we can hear.

A cat boat in front of us dropped her sail just before reaching Children’s Island, and we soon understood why—as we approached the area, the wind died on us as well, and it definitely felt safer to motor. We resisted turning on the engine a little longer and managed to cross between Marblehead Rock and the mainland under sail, which was an important milestone. We eventually did turn the engine on in order to arrive at Salem Harbor before it got too dark. To my surprise, the light green two-mast boat owned by Frank—whom I blogged about before—was still there! (It’s possible that it was there again, but from our previous conversation with him, his boat needed to be fixed in order to be sailed!) Later we learned that Frank was there too as we saw him in the distance at the stern of his boat—he waved, we waved, and that was the end of the interaction with Frank. What an interesting life he must have!


We saw the last rays on sunlight for the day as we approached Marblehead

The anchorage in Salem Harbor is in the vicinity of the quick green buoy marking part of the channel. We anchored not too far from Frank, and Sergey grilled the swordfish that he had brought from home. Andrew opened the bottle of Pessimist wine that he had brought. I saw a shooting star and some fireworks before falling asleep in the cockpit, under the stars, without a care in the world.

Quiet nights of quiet stars, Quiet chords from my guitar, Floating on the silence that surrounds us...
This is where I want to be

Sergey's note: It was a very enjoyable evening, the conversation flowed, and we covered a lot of topics, ending up on a pretty in-depth discussion of various sci-fi authors, and while I was extolling the virtues of Peter Watts' "Blindsight", I heard a noise I didn't immediately recognize - after a quick investigation, we realized that Lena had fallen asleep in the middle of it all.

Andrew and I sat around and spoke for another 10 minutes, and then started winding down for the night as well. As Andrew was inspecting the boat, he called to me in a stage whisper, sounding alarmed. The combination of wind and current had been rotating the boat in weird ways, and apparently we got very close to an empty mooring ball which we had deemed far enough. Figuring that the anchor may have been dragging, we decided to tie the boat to the mooring ball - after all, it was very unlikely that someone would need it.

Andrew started pulling the mooring lines and told me, sounding even more alarmed, that I should bring my sailing gloves. As we continued pulling out the line together, I saw why: the mooring line was nasty. And not the usual "there is some gunk here" nasty, no. The line was thick and crawling with creatures, some looking like slugs and some writhing little legs and perhaps tentacles. I said - "Dude, it's alive," to which Andrew responded "...and it's looking at me!". Nevertheless, determined to keep the boat securely moored, we put a docking line through the loops and cleated it on the bow. Thinking that perhaps the spawn of Cthulhu could gnaw through the mooring lines in the middle of the night, I also took an extra line and attached it to the ball directly. Better safe than sorry.

Afterwards, before going off to sleep, we went back to the cockpit and poured some rum - it had to be done.


In the middle of the night I woke up and decided to check if our anchor was holding. Surprised, I noticed a mooring ball hitting the Aeolus on the starboard side and wondered if we had hit it while swinging. But then I saw the lines connecting us to the ball and decided that the guys must have done it and went back to bed.

I woke up again as the day was breaking and noticed some crawling things next to my “bed” in the cockpit. I didn’t know it then, but these were vestiges of the overnight adventure with the mooring ball. While we were drinking coffee and tea, we noticed a fishing boat circling our Aeolus. Unsure what they were up to, we waited and watched. They asked us what’s for breakfast and then asked if we had a storm anchor in the channel. We said we did though our intent had not been to anchor in the channel. Soon after that, they dropped their net in the water. They were apparently following a school of fish that they planned to circumscribe with their net. As they closed the gap in the net, a guy in a small motor boat that had been attached to the main boat started driving it in circles next to the gap, probably to scare the fish in the school to stay trapped inside the net instead of trying to escape through the opening.

My little fishing rod is no match to fishing with a net.


As they brought the net out of the water, I felt sorry for the fish for having been entrapped and their lives lost like that. I felt angry with the fisherman for not caring at all about removing hundreds if not thousands of fish from the sea with one fell swoop, way more than their small crew can eat. And yet I know that fishing like that is necessary in order for me to be able to go to the grocery store and buy dinner.

But the morning adventures with fishing were not over. As I was carrying on with cleaning the grill from the previous night, I saw another boat approach us as they were trolling for fish. At some point the guy shouted - “do you guys have an anchor out in the channel”. We did. Turned out his $50 lure had gotten caught in our anchor. He asked if we could help him get his lure back. As Sergey and I started raising the anchor, we realized that our anchor was not where we dropped it. Our anchor had dragged overnight and so the mooring ball coming within reach in the middle of the night—and Sergey and Andrew having the foresight to use it—was quite fortuitous.

Since we had already pulled half of the anchor line on board, we decided that we might as well pull the rest. The only thing left to do was to put away the grill and we could be on our way.

Onward to Great Misery Island


Great Misery Island Eggs
We decided to go for a swim at Great Misery Island. The breeze was back and we could sail all the way. As we approached the gap between Great Misery Island and Little Misery Island, we saw mooring balls, one of which we promptly caught and used to moor. When we looked in the water, however, we saw hundreds of some sort of creature floating around. We weren’t sure if it was safe to swim there. These creatures were semi-transparent with several pairs of white dots along a strap-like body. I tried to grab one using the boat hook but it fell apart and split in two. I tried again and this time was able to pull one of the creatures onto the boat. I carefully touched it with my finger to check if it would sting. It didn’t sting but it fell apart easily. I figured they must be eggs of some creature—presumably fish, possibly bluefish—but I still could not find the species that they belong to. I will leave the question open here for any professional or amateur marine biologist to figure out what they were.


Great Misery Island "eggs"

We decided that swimming in that water would not feel very nice and decided to inflate the dinghy instead to go visit the island. However, when Sergey and Andrew attempted to connect the foot pump to the dinghy valve, they noticed something was not right: they had brought the wrong pump! And it was the only one we had... The dinghy valve had a pushpin inside that needed to be pressed down in order to allow air to be pumped in. Our pump connector was a simple cylinder with no way to push the pushpin down while inflating. This required a little MacGyvering to fix—the spring from a clothespin did the trick: Sergey simply secured the spring inside the cylinder, which pushed the pin while inflating. It worked like a charm and soon we had our dinghy fully inflated and ready for adventure.

As we finished securing the dinghy on shore, Sergey reported to have seen a deer. There were a few ruins and an outhouse with an interesting architecture but what drew me the most were the mooring balls and beach on the other side of the island, which—judging by the transparency of the water in the beach—were not as crowded with the mysterious eggs as the place where we had moored. On the other hand, it was crowded.

Shenanigans in the ruins and the other mooring field.


After the island exploration, we went back to the Aeolus and as we were getting ready to cast off in order to motor to the other side of the island, a goose swam over and floated around our boat, clearly hoping we would throw some food into the water. As we motored away without complying with the goose tax, we saw him swim to another boat moored nearby and do the same thing.

Once in the north of Great Misery Island, we had a very nice swim off the mooring field and Sergey even snorkeled some. After lunch, which was accompanied by the grapefruit rosé that Andrew had brought, it was time to decide where to spend the night. We wanted to go further north but were unsure whether there would be enough wind the following day to return to Boston. We decided to head North anyway and depending on progress, decide on the way whether to proceed to Gloucester or spend the night in Salem again.


Snorkeling and the collector of the Goose tax

Gloucester
A nice breeze carried us almost all the way to Gloucester. On the way, Andrew told us that he had recently re-watched The Truman Show and as we were discussing the scene where Ed Harris’ character—the producer of the show—ramps up the wind toward the end of the movie to discourage Truman from going any further, our own wind stopped as if Ed Harris’ character decided that we had gone far enough.

Nevertheless, we persisted! by switching to diesel power. Pretty soon, Gloucester Harbor was in sight. As we approached, one of the most visible features of the harbor was the Eastern Point Lighthouse and the associated breakwater nearby called “Dog Bar Breakwater”. The breakwater was finished in 1905 as an aid to navigation since numerous ships had run aground in the reef that it now protects them from—Dog Bar reef [1]. The end of the breakwater is marked by the Dog Bar Breakwater Lighthouse, which, in spite of its important navigation aid role (preventing ships from crashing into the breakwater), it in fact looks like a tiny adorable house with a tower on stilts!

Dog Bar Breakwater Lighthouse

As the Aeolus approached the anchorage site in Gloucester Harbor, she started needing to compete for space with a lot of other recreational boaters. It didn’t help that her crew got slightly distracted taking photos of 3 gorgeous tall ships sailing in the harbor. As there was no room to anchor, Andrew called the harbormaster, who sent us to a mooring ball in Stage Head, an area much less protected than the inner harbor (I did feel some rocking from the waves later that night) but the only place where he had mooring balls available. Stage Head was otherwise gorgeous, quiet, next to a small cute beach and a great place to experience the sunset and the sunrise the following morning.


Two out of 3 tall ships and the view from Stage Head

Fortunately, the harbormaster office provided a free launch service—on the ride over to the Gloucester inner harbor we met a local woman who gave us some advice on where to grab dinner (and to not be tempted to grab dinner in one of the restaurants by the water). As soon as we arrived, we quickly made our way to a small Italian gourmet shop that closed at 7PM for reprovisioning. Finding the restaurants that the woman on the launch had suggested was easier than I thought as they were all in Main Street. We ended up eating at Oliver’s which had a table for us (indoors) and where we were able to recharge our phones—unlike other boats at BSC, the Aeolus was not fitted with a 12v charging socket, which meant that, after two days of taking pictures with my phone, it was quickly running out of juice.

The food at Oliver’s was amazing and by mistake they brought me a free glass of wine, which is always nice! Around 9PM we headed over to the launch dock so that it could take us back to our boat. Before heading to Stage Head, where the Aeolus was moored, the launch first dropped off people all over the inner harbor and watching all those people board their 40 footer gorgeous, fairly recent sailboats made me wonder about what I’m doing with my life and why I don’t have one of those myself!

Once back at the Aeolus I promptly fell asleep, once more in the cockpit under the stars. On nights like that, I’m always grateful to live on a planet with a transparent atmosphere and thus able to get a glimpse of the Universe just by looking up! If our species had evolved on a cloud-covered planet, we probably would not have developed space travel. We might even not have discovered the physics of lift that we rely on to sail the Aeolus upwind.

Trust Meditation and Blue Water Sailing
I woke up shaken by waves—probably wake waves from the morning boats—and could not go back to sleep so I got up, made coffee and came back to the cockpit in time to watch the sunrise, which was spectacular. We needed to start making our way back to Boston early as we had no idea if we had enough wind for the whole journey. However, we had to wait until around 8AM, which is when a breeze started to blow around us. The weather buoy closest to us (but still a few miles offshore) indicated WSW winds of 7.8 knots. That was good sailing weather so we took off from the mooring field and began our journey back to Boston.

Sunrise from Stage Head

As we cleared the Estern Point Lighthouse we heard someone on another boat scream “F****” very loudly. Looking around, we saw a lobster boat nearby… At first, I thought that he was talking with someone else in the cabin of the boat or over the radio, but upon closer inspection with binoculars he seemed to be alone and screaming a stream of obscenities while preparing his lobster traps. Sergey and I decided that this was probably some sort of scream therapy for anger management. We could still hear him 30 minutes later when we were well on our way offshore heading South.

Lena's Meditation: That first starboard tack offshore gave me a good opportunity to spend some time ruminating. I took the wheel and watched the telltales on the jib to help me decide if our heading was the best possible one. Having been cerebral (yes, a nerd) my entire life, I never understood why people find it enjoyable to spend hours doing work with their hands, whether that’s playing an instrument, painting, sculpting, etc. It occurred to me, a few months ago, while attending a painting class as part of a community building event at work, that the pleasure of doing manual work comes when one intentionally rests their awareness on the hands instead of the million thoughts and emotions trying to compete for her attention. I realized that steering the boat can provide a similar experience—just like the painter’s eyes act as a sensor that she uses to guide the painting, the telltales on the jib acted as my sensor to guide the steering. But that’s not all, I realized—if I were not steering toward optimal use of the wind and closed my eyes, I could hear the change in the sound the boat made while cutting through the water, I could sense the change of the wind pressure on my skin. I decided that I was not only the sensor that guided the boat, but the boat was an extension of myself.


Blue Ocean Sailing


The intent of steering offshore was to get enough distance (3 nautical miles) between the Aeolus and the shore so that we could open the holding tank and release its contents into the open ocean (the harbormaster at Gloucester had told Andrew that this was OK to do). When we approached the 3 mile mark, however, the wind died; lost in my rumination, I didn’t notice that at this point, where we had no wind and thus no forward motion, a wave turned us around such that the wind was behind me when it returned. Andrew, upon noticing this, shouted something and quickly snapped me out of my meditation. I corrected the course, and we were off again with enough speed to tack toward the southwest heading that would take us back to Boston (Unfortunately we could not figure out how to open the holding tank so the offshore excursion was fun but useless!)

Lena's Meditation: After handing the helm over to Sergey, I went over to the bow to continue my meditation. The rumination this time was about trust. At work, I have been learning a lot about trust. I decided a little over one year ago to accept an offer to work at a consulting firm, and this past year has been filled with learning to build trust. One of the most meaningful lessons that I have learned is that trust between two people cannot exist when there is an agenda being enforced. One book that I recently read—the Trusted Advisor—even proposes an equation for trust (I told you I was a nerd 🤓): Trust = ( credibility + reliability + intimacy ) / self-orientation. In layman terms, the authors observe that no matter how credible and reliable a person is, if they are too focused on their own agenda, trust becomes incredibly hard to build. I was skeptical when I first read this, the geek inside me shouted “This can’t be right, surely merit and credibility matter a lot more in building trust”. Nevertheless, I decided to try it anyway—partially out of desperation because I needed to start being more successful at learning to build my business. At every interaction, I started noticing how I brought my own agenda to the conversation, even if it was very subtle—for example, as someone who has been invited to be a keynote at a few conferences, I like to be treated / to feel like “the expert”. As a result, when I bring that mindset to a conversation, the result in often a monologue about my research whether the other person asked for it or not! Other instances of bringing my agenda to the conversation were less subtle and I’m too embarrassed to admit them out loud. But as a result, I started repeating to myself “suspend the agenda” every time I joined a conversation. Needless to say, the authors of the book were spot on. Until I became aware of my own conscious or subconscious agenda I failed to suppress it. I’m sure I still have some subconscious agendas leftover—I’m human and as a result I have needs and fears—but at least the ones that I am aware of are no longer sabotaging the trust that I want to build in my professional and personal relationships.


I came back to the cockpit where Sergey was relying on what he calls the “Iron Man”. This consists of locking the wheel and thus the rudder so that the ship stays on course instead of moving with the waves. He asked me to keep a lookout for lobster traps but I either didn’t hear it or was too lost in my ruminations. He in fact had closed his eyes and was falling asleep and thus not paying attention at all. As a result, nobody but the “Iron Man” was steering… Until I saw a lobster trap float by really close to our propeller on the port side and finally realized that nobody was paying attention to the avoidance of lobster traps (we had caught a lobster trap in our propeller before... twice !) This episode for me was a great example of the trust equation: Sergey needed a break from steering and asked me to be on the lookout but being lost in my thoughts (my agenda), I did not listen.

Steering with the Iron Man


Lena's Meditation: After I unlocked the wheel and got my bearings, I realized that trust is not only something that’s built between people—an archaic definition of trust, according to the Oxford dictionary, is hope or expectation. I like this definition because what I was doing at that exact moment was trusting or expecting the telltales to reliably tell me if I was optimizing for wind, trusting that the imobile rudder would keep us steering where we needed to go, trusting that I would see lobster trap floats before my propeller got tangled in them. Of course, with objects there is no agenda, they simply are what they are in spite of my temptation to give them roles and personalities. But trust is everywhere in sailing, even trust between the crew—I expect the crew to be forgiving when I make small mistakes or fail to notice something while steering, and I trust them to share the less enjoyable tasks such as cleaning the dishes and cooking the meals, etc. In a highly intimate environment like that of a 30ft boat, where personal space is limited, bringing an agenda to the boat, however unconcious--such as noticing the dirty dishes in the sink and not doing anything about it, or wanting to be “the sailing expert” or patronizing another crew member--(and there are many reasons why people do this to others) can break that trust in ways that can become, sometimes, unfixable...


In spite of the slow wind forecast (which was wrong) and the excursion offshore, it was only 2PM when we caught a glimpse of Boston! The wind had been kind to us in more ways than one—not only was it blowing at a reasonable speed but it was doing so from a direction that allowed us to arrive to Boston Harbor on a single tack. It felt like the best possible conditions we could have asked for.

Sergey, who was steering, went to the galley and asked me to steer so there I was at the wheel again relying on the “Iron man”. And then, for the second time on this leg of the journey, the wind died on me and a wave rotated my bow such that we were no longer pointing at The Graves Lighthouse, which had been our heading up to that point. Since the wheel was still stuck due to 'Iron Man' I had to first unlock the wheel before I could recover my bearings—-as a result of this delay, we accidentally jibed (not violently), which sent the boom flying over to the other side of the boat. This for me was again was a lesson in trust: while the wind blowed steady, I trusted the 'Iron Man' to keep the Aeolus on course. When the wind died, however, my trust that the 'Iron Man' would prevent a rotation--since the wheel was locked and thus the rudder, which I would use to rotate the move, was not moving--was eroded. I decided that the 'Iron Man' was not to be trusted in low-wind situations.

Sergey's note: I believe that this is about understanding the limits of trust. We have to rely on mechanisms in order to scale things (here, to go further on a cruise and get some rest from steering), but it’s impossible without knowing when to check in and course-correct, and making some routine. It works the same with people and delegation - while it’s possible to do everything single-handedly, one has to question the actual productivity.


As the Aeolus approached the North Channel, we started to see airplanes, a sign that Boston Logan was near! Behind us, we saw a tugboat bringing a large barge into the harbor. We assumed that they would go around us since we had the right-of-way according to the US navigation rules, but they disagreed—with a loud honk she told us that we were in her way (or maybe she was just alerting us of her presence). We got out of here way, jibing in the process. Thirty-foot sailboats get out of the way of large ~200ft barges. That's the pragmatic navigation rule!

Boston in the distance


Lena's Meditation: As I observe the tugboat’s behavior towards us, my thoughts on trust and expectations return. What the tugboat had just shown us was assertiveness (or maybe she was just making sure we were paying attention). When I suspend my agenda, which is what we did by giving the tug boat the right-of-way, there is a chance that someone else who is more assertive will build a habit of taking advantage of me. Suspecting the agenda comes at the risk of becoming a “doormat” or being manipulated by others to meet their needs and ignore mine. This is a dilemma I often struggle with, as I tend to be on the low assertiveness side (due to cultural or personality reasons, I am not sure). An important leadership lesson I learned from observing other boats and how they compete for the same water is to be on the look out for and ask myself about the dangers of giving someone else the 'right-of-way'. If giving them the 'right-of-way' means that I will be pushed into some rocks then I will assert my needs. So far, it has helped me a lot!


As the Aeolus approached Boston, it was hard to get used to having to pay attention to other boats again after so many hours of blue sailing. Since it was still early (and hot), the crew decided to make a swimming stop near Spectacle Island and finish the rum. The water was warm and we could hear the blasts from the barges that were dredging the channel, making it deeper for modern container ships. While drying off in the cockpit, I noticed the head of a seal popping up above the water. The blasts from the channel dredging barges that started operating this year must've bothered her, poor thing... Or maybe she was just enjoying the sun!


'I'll be back' Sergey signs as he enjoys his swimming


We cast off from Spectacle Island under sail—the last cast-off of our 3-day adventure—and pointed the bow toward the Boston Inner Harbor. We left the “red right return” buoys marking the main channel to our port but did not stray too far from the channel: we trusted that if we stayed close to them, we would not run aground ;-) And we did not.

We arrived at the BSC marina after dark… the adventure was over. Sergey drove us all home to resume our “normal” lives.

Lena's Meditation Conclusion: Trust is a very delicate and volatile thing—-hard to build but very easy to lose. After nearly 10 years in Boston without experiencing anything close to a hurricane in the New England area, I trusted that our planned week-long sailing adventure toward Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket at the end of August was a done deal. And then a hurricane damaged the Zeitgeist. Fortunately the 3 days onboard the Aeolus were beautiful, sunny, warm and with just enough wind to get the crew to Gloucester and back. But the fear lingers in me—can I trust that the weather will be beneficial for a longer term sailing cruise? Or will climate change make these types of weather events more common and harder to plan these types of adventures? Only time will tell.


Friday 28 May 2021

Marblehead Meditations

Crew: Andrew, Lena, Sergey

Prologue
I call this blog entry a Meditation inspired by the book by Robert Pirsig “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” (recommended by Sergey on a gorgeous morning during our sailing adventure to Salem last year). The book describes the author’s motorcycle trip across the US. The narrative description is interspersed with what the author calls Chautauquas—for him, philosophical deliberations about the nature of “quality”. Which made me wonder—what would my Chautauquas be about? What do I focus on while sailing for hours uninterrupted except for a chart check or a sail trim here and there? And one word kept coming back: Communication. I realized a while back that of the many things that interest me in this world - underwater marine life, the immune system, writing, programming - communication is the common thread across all of them that interests me the most. So this time I decided, during the quiet time, to redirect my attention toward the true nature of Communication.

Five to ten knots with showers
The first overnight sail of the season was scheduled for the 16 and 17 of May: Sunday and Monday. That meant that I had all Saturday to prepare for the trip, which in turn meant that I was not going to have to prepare for it during the week. The result was that the weekend sprung up on me - it was not until Thursday the 14th that I realized that our overnight trip was coming up. I started getting excited - the sort of excitement that I had not felt since my previous overnight sail with this crew in September 2020.

Andrew had reserved the Eliza, one of the newest and nicest boats in the BSC’s “Cruising 35” fleet. The forecast was for 5-10 knot southwest winds with showers. The crew anticipated a slow day and prepared to make good use of the pre-packed rain gear.

The Eliza was waiting for us on her slip. Arriving at the BSC that Sunday morning and boarding our boat felt as natural as if our sailing streak had not been rudely interrupted by the Boston Winter for the previous 6 months.

Andrew undocked the Eliza smoothly, and pretty soon we were on our way to adventure. True to the forecast, the wind was no more than a breeze. It was actually blowing partially from behind us and partially from the Boston side of the inner harbor, which meant steady progress to the outer harbor with no heeling.
andrew and bsc

just sergey


North or South
After passing Castle Island the wind decreased even more and with it, our speed. It also got warmer, which filled me with the desire to jump in the water. At the speed at which we were going, I could have easily jumped into the water, swam for a bit and gotten back on board. I didn’t though. The lull lasted only a few minutes but enough to have the crew earning for a lunch stop, possibly accompanied by some swimming. We first aimed for the public mooring balls next to Gallops Island, but they were missing their lines, which meant that we would have to anchor. The west side of Lovells Island had a good anchorage and the wind had slowed down again, which meant slow motion toward the island. I went down below to change into my swimsuit and told Andrew that I would swim to the island and meet him there. He agreed, but I chickened out. We were only a few meters away and yet with zero speed, not much was happening. In the distance, we could see what appeared to be rain falling at various locations across the harbor. After an uneventful anchoring, Sergey and I did swim for a bit. The water was very cold so for me it was less about swimming and more about jumping into the water and immediately getting out!

lena in the water

sergey in the water


A small motor boat saw us and decided to follow our lead and anchor at the beach. Normally that would not bother us but instead of quietly enjoying their time on the island, the occupants decided to blast loud music from speakers on their boat and head over to the beach. Not very nice of them. Not very nice at all. As we enjoyed our lunch, the weather started changing around us. The sun disappeared behind the rain clouds. Waves rocked our boat and nearly spilled our drinks. And it started getting cold - cold enough, in fact, that it made Andrew and Sergey want to change into their foul weather gear. As we were putting the food away, it started to rain. The shower didn’t last long but it did make us want to go sail since the wind had definitely improved significantly!


We had planned to travel north for this overnight as the forecast had predicted SW winds for Sunday and NW winds for Monday, which meant that going north would not have us beating into the wind on either the trip north or the return. The reality that we observed, however, was a strong wind on Sunday blowing from the north. And if we couldn’t trust the forecast for Sunday, how much confidence should we have that the people at the National Weather Service had correctly forecasted the weather for the following Monday? None at all... We ended up travelling on a northeast heading to take advantage of the northerly winds and continued on to Nahant. The boat was heeling, we even had to shorten the jib to avoid heeling too much. In spite of the clear 10-15 knot wind which helped us make progress toward Nahant, the forecast continued to indicate southwest winds. We were of course loving the fact that we had good wind, but it was disturbing, to say the least, how wrong the forecast had been. Nahant came and went and it was still early so we kept going. After some deliberation, Sergey decided that Marblehead Harbor would likely be a much better / quieter anchorage for the night than Nahant given the northerly winds. We continued heading northeast, looking for our good old friend “red number four”. As for me, I kept looking out into the ocean hoping to spot a whale or two but it didn’t happen.

Marblehead Mooring
Arriving in Marblehead Harbor was uneventful. The wind continued to stubbornly blow from the north while the forecast stubbornly predicted southwest winds. I was puzzled by the lack of change in the forecast - isn’t that what weather stations are good for? Even windy.com, which is supposed to provide live weather station readings, was indicating SW winds. I stopped stressing about it and just enjoyed being on a sailboat with enough wind to get us to Marblehead Harbor. The inner harbor in Marblehead was somewhat protected from the north wind but not entirely, making the boat difficult to steer. There were also no anchorage spots, which meant that we would need to find ourselves a free mooring ball. The cruising guide suggested 3 yacht clubs renting mooring balls for transients. Two out of three didn’t answer the phone and the third told us that they were not taking transients due to COVID. Finally, we reached out to the Marblehead harbormaster, who told us to use our smartphones to pay for a mooring ball via dockwa.com and gave us a mooring ball number after that. As soon as we were moored, the rain caught up to us again. Perfect timing, it seemed.

umbrella the eliza rainbow

After the rain softened, we decided to inflate the dinghy and row to shore. It was still raining slightly but the sun was making a re-appearance, which resulted in a stunning double rainbow over the harbor. The town of Marblehead was nice but it did not seem very large, with a park overlooking the harbor—an ideal place for panoramic pictures—and lots of cute, well taken care of stores that were still “closed for the winter”.

park bench abbott hall harbor

Dinner was served in the galley—Sergey’s specialty of spaghetti, tomato sauce and kosher sausages was delicious—accompanied by a bottle of the Pessimist wine that Andrew had brought. Even though it was cold, we did enjoy the night air for some time before tiredness took over, and we retreated to our sleeping bags.

Communication
I woke up at around 5.15. The sunrise was at 5.30. The sunrise is absolutely my favorite part of these overnights on the boat and I try very hard not to miss it! I pulled an arm out of the sleeping bag and damn, it was cold! I pulled myself out anyway, there was a sunrise to experience! With my shoes and jacket on, I opened the companionway and stepped onto the cockpit wrapped in my blue blanket, which I bring on board for these exact situations. The water was quiet. A few birds here and there. And a gorgeous orange-yellow-pink reflection on the water as the sun emerged above the horizon.

sunrise

Meditation Interlude: The Sunday before had been too intense to think about communication so Monday was going to be the day. The first event that got me thinking about it was the distant sound of a bell coming from the town, which rang 6 times at 6AM. In this case, the communication was made up of a message—that at that moment it was 6AM—a communicator (not sure if a person or a computer nowadays) and an audience (i.e. the people who receive the communication). This was different from a 1:1 communication such as when I say “good morning” to Sergey because the bell’s audience is not specific: whereas I would probably not try to say “good morning” to Sergey if he was still asleep, the bell will (probably) still try to convey its message even if 100% of the people and animals within its hearing range were asleep. So that begs the question: if there’s no audience, is a message still a communication? I decided that no, if there’s no receiver of a message, communication does not happen.


The water was still too cold for swimming, so the crew prepared coffee/tea and oatmeal for breakfast, and just as we were getting ready for a second cup of coffee we ran out of propane. Our mooring neighbors had left and we needed to be on our way back to Boston as well since the wind forecast called for very weak 5 knot winds, which meant it would take us a while to get there. Nevertheless, we did have enough wind to cast off from the mooring ball at 7AM. We had failed to pump-out (again) much to Andrew’s dismay.

Leaving Marblehead Harbor


The Eliza made very good progress from Marblehead Harbor to Nahant - the wind was behind us, the sun was beaming and we were moving. And then, the wind died and our speed over ground was 0 knots. This was another excellent opportunity to think about communication.

Meditation Interlude: The topic this time was the communication of the marine animals swimming under our hull. What was on my mind was the question: when a whale sings, is it trying to communicate in the same way that I communicate “good morning” to Sergey and Andrew? Or is it communicating like the church bell? The whale’s language would be different and the message may be heard but not understood by us, which adds another element to the communication equation: language. If the message sender and receiver don’t use a language that is understood by both, the message is lost, so is it really a communication? Like us, whales don’t just use sound to communicate - body language is also key to the way they communicate. But of course, when they go about their business of fishing to feed themselves or to go to the surface to breathe, they need to move their body without any intent of communicating. So body motion may or may not constitute communication, which begs the question: does there have to be an intent to communicate in order for communication to occur? When a bigger fish is hunting a smaller fish, they try to be as still as they can until they can attack without being detected. When they approach their prey, they obviously don’t intend to communicate to the prey “I’m going to eat you”. And yet they do since the prey receives the message loud and clear and as a result will swim away. I decide that communication may or may not have an intent.


After a while the wind returned and we were moving again. It was quite early and we had made good progress toward Boston Harbor so we decided to stop for lunch somewhere. The wind had shifted and it was now blowing from the East - Great Brewster would protect us.

Swinging
Between the two Great Brewter’s drumlins we could see Boston Light. We dropped the mainsail and motored slowly toward the island. Every single time we do this, I always have the impression that we’re going to run aground because the island feels too close, but of course we never do. In these moments, whoever is steering the boat is paying close attention to the depth sounder to make sure that we’re not anchoring too far or too close.


We all went down to the galley to have our lunch, since the wind was making it very uncomfortable up in the cockpit. Normally, a good steady wind makes the boat point in the direction of the wind while anchored. But this time, an interesting phenomena was happening: we were swinging. Through the open companionway we could see our stern pointing in one direction for a while, then swinging and pointing in another direction for a while and then coming back to point at the original direction. It was making me a little seasick, to be honest.

Later, I understood why that was: to get to us, the wind had to go around the island’s northern drumlin - sometimes it was blowing stronger in between the two drumlins and our boat would point in that direction, other times it was stronger at the edge of the island, and so our boat would turn in that direction. We didn’t stay long in the swinging anchorage. Nobody swam this time, as far as I know (it was quite cold), but both Andrew and I did manage to take a short nap.

Soon enough we were on our way back to Boston. My last meditation was on the lighthouses and buoys in the harbor with which I had become very familiarized. Like the bell in Marblehead, they convey their message, whether or not someone is there to see and hear it. The first people who decided to mark certain locations such as “Sculpin Ledge” as dangerous—perhaps ancient mariners hoping they would return home safely—were communicating with other mariners with intent. Nowadays, the buoys that mark Sculpin Ledge are maintained by the coast guard, but the intent of the message they convey is the same even if the message sender changed. This begs the question—if the message stays the same but the sender and the receiver change, is it an instance of the same communication? I believe that it is. This belief helps me feel a special connection between us and all those other mariners who sailed these water, some of whom might have even lived hundreds of years ago.