We are in uncharted waters. Quite literally, since our chart
plotter went kablooey. But let me back-track a bit…
After three months in the north, we returned triumphantly to
our home and hailing port – Baltimore! What a pleasure it was to sail in under
the Key Bridge after being so long away. We spent a couple of days on anchor in
the harbor, then rented a slip at the Anchorage Marina in Canton. This was an
extravagance we don’t usually allow ourselves; slip fees can cost quite a bit
for transients, whereas anchoring is free. Plus, being in a slip means being surrounded
by a dense thicket of other boats, akin to living in a white plastic RV park. But we had an enormous “to do” list for this week, and having easy access
to shore, stores and a car would make things a great deal easier.
First things first... |
...and plenty of it! |
One of the big tasks on our list was to swap out our beloved
Trinka for her uglier but more practical inflatable brother. Yes, we’ve decided
to give her up for our trip south. As beautiful as Yalma is, she is extremely
tippy. We’ve gotten used to her over these past months, and never feel in
danger of accidently going overboard any more. But we plan to do a lot of snorkeling
in the Caribbean, and we will do it mostly from our dinghy. Getting in and out
of the Trinka from the water would be very difficult, and for me, with my lack
of upper body strength and hurt shoulder, pretty near impossible. But we’re not
abandoning her entirely – she’s going to winter in our garage, awaiting future
northern trips. We had originally thought we would sell the inflatable, but
then when we kept vacillating between the two dinghy options, we decided to
keep them both.
To make the dinghy switch, we enlisted the help of Rick’s
nephew Trevor, who delivered the new Achilles from Rick’s brother’s house in
Annapolis. He also brought the new outboard that we think will be powerful
enough for the inflatable, yet lightweight enough for our stern rail. We
loaded up Trevor's truck with the Trinka, along with all of her gear – oars, sails,
mast, etc. – and small outboard. Then we took her to our house
where we unloaded the whole shebang into the garage. Goodbye Yalma.
The Achilles (sigh... Not very poetic.) |
Leaving Baltimore this time means that we are moving into
unfamiliar territory. Rick has made the trip up to Maine and back eleven times,
including this past summer, and he knows the northern waters very well. When I
first started joining him on his summer trips a few years ago, I had complete
faith in his judgment and sailing ability, and he has never given me any reason
to doubt him. I always let him look at the weather, study the charts and tide
schedules, and make a decision about where to go next and when to take off. And
I loved it that way! Now, we are heading south where neither one of us has ever
sailed, and we are in a totally new ball game. Don’t get me wrong, I’m still
going to let Rick do all the real work (I’m no dummy), but the outcomes from
his decisions may be less successful from here on out. Rick’s general sailing
experience will keep us safe I am quite sure. What may get dicey will be
finding places with dinghy docks, grocery stores within walking distance,
opportunities for showers, laundry, etc.. I am now going to have to participate
in some of the research. Darn.
For the actual sailing part of navigation, we have a chart
plotter. This is a terrific modern improvement on sextants and paper charts. A
chart plotter is basically a GPS unit that locates your boat on the preloaded
charts, and tells you exactly where you are along with the depths at low tide,
and a number of other functions. Our chart plotter is mounted on the steering pedestal in
the cockpit, and displays everything on a nifty little TV screen that can be read equally well at night and in
bright sunlight. It’s satellite driven, and will work even when way offshore,
out of cellphone range.
So what happens if the chart plotter poops out? Rick bought
an iPad just for this reason and loaded in a chart plotter for a back-up. AND
we also have paper charts in case of an all out electrical failure. So we’re
good, right?
Just as we left Baltimore, the chart plotter started to
freak out. Rick fussed and fiddled with it, and discovered that a large
rectangular area of the charts, about twenty by sixty miles (that’s 1200 square
miles, plenty of space to get lost in) appeared to be simply blank on the
plotter. We don’t know if this was a recent injury to the software, or if it’s
always been that way. Never having ventured down this far, we never knew.
We managed to get the boat to Solomons Island, roughly forty miles south of Annapolis. We used Rick’s iPad, and it worked just fine, except
for the fact that you couldn’t read it very well in the sunlight, and it’s not
strapped to the console so you have to turn your head away from the action in
order to see where you are. My neck is not happy. On the one hand, I’m grateful
that we have the iPad as a back-up. But on the other hand, I sure wouldn’t want
to use that as our main navigation tool all the way down to the Bahamas and
back.
Neither of us is particularly well versed in computers. We
just want to plug something in, turn it on, and have it work, easy peasy. Rick,
somewhere along the line, has gotten the impression that I understand computery
things. For example, he thinks I’m a genius because I have figured out how to
stream movies on our television set at home. But that’s about the extent of my
knowledge. I finally joined Facebook a year ago, and went for months with zero
friends because I couldn’t figure anything out. But I’ll admit, as bad as I am,
Rick is even more hopeless. He even takes a certain pride in it, as though his ignorance of computers links him to a nobler, pre-digital past. So imagine our chagrin at learning that you are
supposed to upgrade your chart plotters periodically. The unit is from 2008 or
so and came with the boat when we bought it six years ago. We’ve never upgraded
it. Doh.
The new chart cards we need are too big (too much memory)
for our old, out-moded chart plotter. In order to upgrade the old charts
instead, we need to upgrade the unit itself. Different vendors tell us
different things, nothing seems to work, more and more money keeps being spent
- around and around we go. And we’re
working with cell phones as our internet source, on a boat, without a car.
I’m not sure how this is all going to turn out. We may be
spending the winter here in Solomon’s Island. Not my idea of a great adventure.
We’ve had software overnighted from Washington state, talked to a gazillion
different people, even had one terrific tech lady hold Rick’s hand over the
phone while he downloaded upgrades to a CF chip from his computer. See how
educated we’re becoming? But still… It. Doesn’t.
Work.
And now it’s even worse because the whole rest of the
coastline – the part that DID work – has been erased from the original chip,
which can’t be bought anywhere any more. I have offered to buy us a brand
spanking new chart plotter, but Rick says we would be set back at least two weeks
if we decided to go that direction. First of all, there are a mind-blowing
number of different chart plotters for sale online. Deciding which one to buy
is at least a week long project. Then there is a great deal of work involved in
setting it up, like connecting the wiring to the radar, and other things like
that. Not to mention, waiting for the thing to arrive. Marine electronics
repair people could do the work, for a hefty fee of course, but are difficult
to come by at this time of year; all the boats going south are looking for the
same repairs.
Rick finally figured out that the online upgrades he learned
to do are just too big for our system to handle. He kept shrinking the map for
the upgrade, each time taking about thirty minutes to reprogram the chip. We’ve been doing this for hours. We are
currently down to a map that gets us from where we are now down to about
Charleston and that’s it; we’ll have to reprogram that chip every time we go to
a new place. But it works!
If this seems like a temporary fix to you, well you’re
right. We will need to get a new chart plotter eventually, probably sooner rather than later. But we
think we can limp through the rest of our trip with the one we’ve got, and
worry about getting a new one after we return to Baltimore next year. In the
meantime, the various staff people at three different West Marine stores – the
people who should know about chart plotters – have sold us over four hundred
dollars worth of useless upgrade chips that couldn’t possibly have worked with
our ancient unit. So, computer literate or not, the blame is not entirely ours.
The one upside to this whole fiasco is that we successfully used
an Uber for the first time. We are indeed in uncharted territory.
Great story. I had no idea sailing had become such a high tech proposition!
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