Sunday, August 23, 2015

August 23rd

July 23rd SHAWL BAY ART

As mentioned earlier if we want the privilege of having these places like Pt Harvey, Lagoon, Echo, Shawl Bay, Sullivan, Kwatsi, Jennis, etc., we as a boating community HAVE TO SUPPORT THEM. They will NOT be here next year if we don’t.

After we turn the corner coming south around Cape Caution provision at Pt Hardy or Pt. McNeill. Then we head to our home port in the Broughtons at SHAWL BAY. Here we find water to fill our tanks, shore power, laundry, sweet goodies (cherry pie). A place to purge some of our accumulated pop cans, dog walks, internet, FREE PANCAKE BREAKFAST, HAPPY HOUR, fried turkey & seafood dinners and the socialization that is a major part of the fun coming to these destinations. We don’t just come for the pancakes, but for the comradery that takes place at the large wooden tables. WE ENJOY THE SOCIALING and catching up with old & new friends.

It’s a short season for Lorne and he & staff cannot do it all. So many of us come here and support him both financially and physically. It’s good exercise!

 
I carved the art signs here about 5 years ago. They have become part of the ambiance and charm here at this floating village. I admit it is a source of pride and pumps up my sagging ego when a group of new visitors arrive at Shawl and have their picture taken standing under the welcome sign. Frequently you find some with a very fancy camera person taking close ups of the colourful bedding plants that are potted all about the place.

 
Shawl Bay

                                                          We love it here and so will you!
 
                                                               WE END OUR BLOG HERE.PENNY & I HOPE THOSE WHO HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING HAVE ENJOYED THE RANTING AND MUMBLING OF OLD FOLKS DOING THEIR THING- MESSING ABOUT IN BOATS.

Those of you that have made Desolation Sound your final destination, but dream of venturing further - YOU CAN DO IT! Many yachters go around the corner to the Broughtons (just remember –wind & tide going the same way on Johnstone) and go even further north (stay away from Slingsby) on our way to FURY COVE above Cape Caution.

We have seen people traveling in war canoes, kayaks and Mega Yachts. They all enjoy the beauty and love the excitement of traveling the North West Coast of British Columbia.
Please join us in new adventures in the future.

THE END

 

Penny, David Thompson with Chevy the dog on“Oceanaire I”


August 22nd


August 22nd Shaw Bay

Today is busy day, GARBAGE TO BURN; I bet you have never thought about what happens to all the unwanted paper, bottles, cans and food stuff that we all generate while out boating. Well it is the same stuff that we have to deal with at home.  We do not have recycling binds so this is what we do.  All the perishable food stuffs go overboard, like lettuce, potato and carrot peels.  Scrap meat feeds the fishes.  We avoid doing it in bays where there are other boats, but we put it in the water when we are under way over the transom into the dishwater wash of our stern wave.  We have an aluminium can container on the back deck and when accumulated to the max we will almost surely be near a dock. Most anywhere in the Broughtons they will take them for recycle when the do grocery runs to Pt McNeill. Sometimes they just store them in huge bags (hidden in sheds) and empty them at seasons end. Most plastic containers have a deposit return and are light.  Anything that is heavy requires fuel and lifting energy to transport it to a recycling station. 

The problem trash is metal cans and they are taken care of in a beach burn.  This takes place in very specific areas like a drying rock in the middle of a bay.  This is a low tide thing. All the paper must be dry (paper towel is wrung out to dry in the sun) as they are the fuel for the fire. When the fire is going usually with the help of accelerant like paint thinner (not gasoline) that is the time for tin cans to be placed in the hot flames. Stir around till done and the flames are out. Go back at low tide pick up the metal pieces and bag these.  What is left usually has the protective finish removed. When under way what little is left goes over the dish washer of the stern when we are in very deep deep water.

NOW I CAN HEAR THE HUMAN CRY FROM THE ENVIROMENTALIST!  Put your hands up all of you that have seen the pictures of the Titanic in the briny after she has been sunk for about a hundred years.  This is the reality check. Mother Nature will reclaim her own.  The solution to pollution is dilution when you are out or the recycle area.

 

 

August 21st


August 21st the charm of Shawl Bay continues to hold us.  The long term mooring yacht owners that stay here for most of the summers add immensely to the entertainment value.  “Jacara Maru” with Larry and Nancy add spice to the joint.  They have come here for some time and Larry is a prawn fishing guru. He has only just discovered catching salmon but is wary of staying in his limit.  Darn now he has to hang out with Nancy again. 


GREEN BAY 
In last year’s Blog we talked about the condition of the marina. It was one of the thriving focal points of the Broughtons.  It is sad, very sad that as a cruising fraternity we are rapidly losing this resource.  I think by this time next year most of the docks will be torn away by the winter winds.  The good thing is that the marinas such as Echo and Sullivan have had a banner year.  The mega yachts have come in droves particularly for the pig roast, the turkey fry, and the FREE PANCAKE BREAKFAST.  WHAT WITH GETTING OF A MEGA YACHT TO GET FREE PANCAKES?

When in Green Bay we check out the Broughton Lagoon tidal bore. 

Broughton Tidal Bore
It is great fun to run the rapids and swift water.  We must be getting old as when we neared the white foaming over fall we backed down and idled away.  In previous blogs we posted some great pictures of the Pacific White Sided Dolphins doing the leaping thing in this lagoon.  Mom and Dad Dolphins sometimes come here to calf as the Killer Whales would not feel comfortable in the narrow pass and swift water coming and going during tide changes. 



Greenway docks
We checked out what is left of the Greenway docks and talk to people of the two visiting yachts.  They say that the dam has been compromised and there is NO WATER here. 
 

More Greenway

Forestry dock
We went to the Forestry dock and started to think about a walk to the lake above.  After a climb up the first flight of stairs I feel the burn in my thigh muscles and I give it up.  Penny would continue to carry on, as she is the goat in the family and me (the crab) gets nervous just leaving the close proximity of water).
I managed to deflect her concentration on going UP the mountain and turned her attention to going to Sullivan Bay to rectify our shortfall of supplies on OA.

Sullivan Bay


SULLIVAN BAY     

Sullivan Bay is truly the destination for the rich and famous yachts men.  It is Mega yacht city Broughton style.  It is justified in been called POSH.  The word POSH comes from the “White Star” passenger ships going to the Orient.  The preferred side of the ship during the passage there was Port side out Starboard side on the return voyage. 

Signs to Everywhere
Some of the amenities at Sullivan Bay include a floating golf driving range, general store and restaurant.  All on a cool quaint board walk.  Float homes that could grace the pages in the most POSH interior design magazine.  I think there is one with a helipad on the roof. It does my pride in county well as there is a huge CANADIAN FLAG there gracing the sky line.


Many years ago when my brother was flying an executive float plane and this was one of the main stop overs for clients of his boss.  We did not go in but I think there is a photo of him with his Beaver float plane on the wall in the restaurant.  We toured the floats admiring the floating gin palaces (giant yachts) noting there ports of registry as places like Hawaii, Grand Caymans etc. 


On the way out we putted passsing the bus stop (AIR PORT for float planes) and talked to a young man and his parents. The family was from Pittsburgh and I thought what a cultural shock it must be coming to this place at the end of the universe, jumping on to a small float plane and within hours landing in a city called Pittsburgh with a million or so busily going about their busy stuff.

 

 

 

 



August 20th



August 20th we have been to Wakeman Sound before. Much of this region is a preserve area.  There is possibly over 100 miles of logging roads crisscrossing the valley.  Much of the logging has happened over probably 75 years or more and the trees are very mature now. 
Entry to Abandoned House

                                                                                                

There is a fertile fishing river in the valley floor with steelhead salmon in abundance along with large river trout.  IT IS PRIME BEAR COUNTRY. 

When the main camp was shut down the story goes that a young couple moved into the old camp and wanted to set up a fish guide and wilderness camp.  When we visited there a number of years ago we were given a tour up the logging road for many miles (it was the short tour).  We thanked him profusely and slipped him some cash for gas and his time.  We promised we would promote his new enterprise.  
Tool Shed


                      THE WINTERS CAN AND ARE GENERALLY BRUTAL IN THESE REMOTE PLACES. 

When they are a well-supported logging show men can survive here.  When deep in the winter, winds trash down the sound at 75miles +++++++and its’ just the two of you, without a large corporation at your backsides.  It not tough, you are on the edge of survival.  When the snow drifts up and under the cabin door and the spray of the salt sea freezes your small skiff (out on a buoy) to a block of ice, enough is enough. It is enough when (the late to bed) in the winter grizzly wants his last meal before he hibernates and it’s you.  Enough is enough.  The grizzlies were at their front door for some time in that winter, it was the nice couples first and last adventure here. 

I think it was about 2 years ago when we went in Wakeman Sound and there was not a lot of evidence that anyone had been there for a long time. The little dock was barely hanging together.  It was very spooky walking up the main road that was growing over.  We spent a lot of time hooting and yelling to scare off bears that could have been around every corner. It was hard to walk past all the old nice beater trucks that had been abandoned beside the road, that in my youth I would have given my eye teeth to have owned in Vancouver. 

This trip the sign at the top of the ramp said “Visitors must report in at the office I km up the road.”  We trekked up the road and sure enough there was the camp.  It kind of weird to start knocking on doors and no one is there. The lights are on and no one’s is home (Penny said that very recently about me). 
New Logging Truck

 
 
We walked back to the “Ravens” and a crew boat comes in with a full box of groceries.  Penny talked to the operator of the crew boat for a while but I think the frozen goods were thawing and he was running for the freezer down the road.  He is on the road building crew working out into the sound on the mountain side.  There was a logging crew working on hard wood tree harvesting (alder).  It was rough in the Sound on the way back to Shawl Bay.  Our little boat just slices through the chop. What a treat. 

We could make out the rock drilling high on the mountain for the placement of explosives.  Even from a great distance we could see the granite dust swirling around the new road head. 

We stopped on the return trip and checked out the prawn traps, not a harvest worth the pull.  The one thing that is obvious is how warm the water has become up here, the depth sounder has a temp gauge, and it has been showing at about 65 degrees F (in the REAL DEGREES).  The world is really changing up here from a climate stand point, as last year at this time if you did not have good heat on in the boat (like an old fashion but new) oil stove you could not get the boat dry and warm. 

 

August 19th


Aug 19th The center of all the activity takes place under the big top blue tent.  Every morning during the yacht season, Tracy makes complementary pancake breakfast for all those that are not too hung over to join in the breakfast gathering.  This is a time that boaters share their secret anchorages and some technical tips, be it fishing or engine repair, etc.  It is a class hovel with laundry, washrooms, bakery, shore power and water. 



The Big Blue Tent


The main event is the arrival of fresh meat in the form of new arrivals that bring yummy tales and stories with them.  You may even get Lorne to give you some of his history in this area.

Sometimes roving musicians will arrive and the evening’s entertainment will be some talented person beating on the strings on some old weathered guitar.  If the cockles of your heart have been warmed with alcoholic libations and you are near to the musician to drowned out the out of tune vocalists it sounds ok.  When from afar if you have snuggled down for a very early evenings it sounds like a disjointed wolf pack howling at the new moon. 

In previous years Penny and I have undertaken to decorate the docks with wood signs.  Jim off “Sea Otter” is a machinist/welder/computer guy and he helps out with the metal bits and pieces for the artsy fartsy stuff.  Penny and others of the extended family join in and do a superlative job of helping Lorne with painting and replanting the massive array of flower pots which add all colours of the rainbow to these docks.  All of us who have been coming here for years just automatically take on some fun job here. Every year we come back, we as a boating community that boat north are blessed with this special part of the planet that for a short time we can call home.  We thank the Brown family and extended friends for making this all possible.
 


One of Chevy’s most favorite and ours to is the forestry dock in Moore Bay.  Almost every year some magic fairy from the Forestry Dept. comes by and repairs the docks, cleans up the whistle thumps (out houses) and grooms the camp sites.  Every year we promise we will write that dept. and thank them for their sterling effort but we move on and forget to do this.  I think it would be better to send a letter to Pacific Yachting and get the “THANK YOU” out on a broader scale. 

Shawl Bay Sunset


If you would like some further reading you can go back on earlier Blog sites. We tend to forget some of old stories and like an old man will repeat the same old stuff. Some is still worth repeating.

August 18th


August 19th Shaw Bay

We pull out of Joe Cove and head up northward to Shawl Bay. 


Cormorants Sunning
Fog on Fyfe
 
Shawl of Shawl Bay
 


Shawl bay is named for the Shawl of fog that shrouds the top of the mountain that encircle it, not all the time but in the morning and many times in the evening. It is an old floating logging camp that now provides a cool gathering place for the yachties in the Broughtons.  Lorne Brown is the proprietor and along with Tracy greets and makes everyone feel welcome.

 
If your thoughts are tying up at a top drawer establishment this is not the place for you. It has it all the character of the older float homes slightly listing with their soggy logs.  There is old machinery strewn about in the far corners.  It is a bit like going to a deserted logging camp with cool stuff stashed about. 

August 17th




Our dog has not had a lot of experience with cats yet and I am sure she will need a lesson in what a set of fangs and claws will do to her nose before she eventually learns.

We go for a gunk out around Fly Island and check every nook and cranny; we work around the islands back to our anchorage in Joe Cove. Rounding a point we could see a large drying reef covered with Sea Lions. There were a number of (over a ton in weight) massive Northern (Stellar) SEA Lions along with their harams. As we neared the bulls we are warned off by their bellowing, groaning snorting. The 17 ft. T/T “Due North” is also here.


Commodore & Sea Lions
 

Bull's In Charge
I was worried that he was going to scatter them but the large bull was standing guard and the harem just lounged around behind his guard. Penny took excellent pictures and captured the Commodore of BYC close aboard the ruckus on the rocks.

We sent a picture and short story to the “Trident”regarding our meeting with the Commodore.


Many years ago when first came to Joe Cove we went ashore in the little bay off the old floating dock moored in the bay. I don’t know to this day why we (I think Penny just likes rooting in the underbrush) did this? It was nothing we could see from the beach. We were on hands and knees, working our way under the thick almost impenetrable underbrush and came out at a clearing with a very small cabin.

I surmised it had lain undisturbed for years and years. The door was wired shut and when opened it turned out to be a tool shed with bits and pieces of plumbing and old tools scattered about the floor.



When in Joe Cove this year our Commodore is anchored nearby. This year he's on a hunt to discover this cabin. I had told him about it about many years ago and he wants to locate it.  He has poked around and spent some time not finding it. I went over to point him in what I suspected was the right location. He found it and announced it lay undisturbed all these years. I had to go look for myself.



There must be crab wars going on as where we are anchored there are a number of pots and a crab boat came in and relocated them out of our bay. A day later another boat came into the bay looking for his pots; I can only assume they were his that were moved.