Saturday, October 18, 2008

Sailing, sailing, over the bounding main…

It would appear that our readers are rising up in revolt due to the lack of activity on our blog. There is a post in the works involving a certain story that I promised, regarding a Scottish legend; however, it is not quite done, and putting up something in the meantime seemed in order. Think of this as the soup course, something to tide you over until the meat and potatoes….

Ahoy maties! Most of you know the story of our family’s rapid descent into the insane life of sailing. (For those of you who don’t, I apologize, but it is much too long of a tale to relate as an introduction, and too hilarious for being told hastily.) In this descent, we find ourselves taking many opportunities to further our sailing experience, some better than others. One of the better opportunities is associating with those who are as insane as ourselves, performing the very act that makes us insane: sailing!


That is a picture of Gary, brave Captain for our day on the bay. We want to take our little sailboat out on the bay, but it was wisely decided that we would accompany someone with more experience for the first couple trips. Finding ourselves on the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle would be exciting, but it should not be because we sank our sailboat, and had to be rescued by a helicopter! Always better to learn from someone who knows.

The bay to which I refer is the San Francisco Bay, discovered by Juan de Alaya, who said of this little gem of an area: "the fogs here hardly reach the entrance of the port, and once inside the harbor, the weather is very clear”. As you can see by the picture below, Alaya was quite correct in his statement:


Dad, Mom, Thomas and myself arrived on the dock at the amazingly early hour of 8:30am. Though that may not seem early, please note that we live over 2.5 hours from the Bay Area, and it gets a lot earlier. It was still overcast as we motored out into the main part of the bay, and we spent our time looking at the various sights off the starboard (right side in normal people talk) and port (the opposite of right….) sides of the boat:


Thomas and I decided that one of these might be our next boat purchase:


There were also lots of merchant ships coming in, baring exotic goods from far off lands. Ok, they were probably carrying plastic toys for Wal-Mart, but I choose to leave my romantic notions intact.


This seemed like a perfect time to take up piracy, but I could not convince the rest of the crew that throwing a few grappling hooks and boarding the other vessel was a good idea.

Because the winds were so light, to the point of being non-existent that morning, we motored underneath the Golden Gate Bridge, and out onto the very fringes of the Pacific Ocean! In case you were wondering what the bottom of the bridge looked like, here it is. Sorry about the two people standing in front, and ruining the picture!:


After lunch the wind picked up quite a bit, and we were able to hoist the mainsail, run up the jib, and man the helm (It is so fun to use nautical terms!). All the men got a chance to take the helm. Thomas won the prize for the fastest speed, getting us up to a delightful 7.8 knots:


Mom was quite content to kick back and enjoy the ride:


Oh, and in case you want to get into sailing, there is a really pretty boat we saw, called the Maltese Falcon:


289 feet of absolute luxury, yours for only $154,000,000.00, plus tax. Yes that is millions! It might take us awhile to save enough for that one. I think I will go count my pennies again, just in case….

We tacked and jibed our way across the bay, enjoying the wind in our hair, and the salt spray on our faces. It was a delightful day, and we enjoyed every moment of it. The day ended far too soon in our opinion. Sir Francis Drake said it quite well, "It isn't that life ashore is distasteful to me. But life at sea is better." He was on to something when he said that, and when you step onto the deck of a sailing ship, you feel like a descendant of that great linage of sailors. Whatever changes in the world, God will always give us the gift of wind, and it will be there take you freely across the Seven Seas, just as it has for centuries.


Ship’s Log recorded by BFH.

It may take a little while for the next post to find its way to the web. I am involved in the planning of our church's Reformation Party, and that will keep me quite busy until November!

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thomas didn't ruin the picture so much as you. What's with the cell phone, huh? ;-P Looks like a ton of fun though!

Say, since you mentioned it I have a question. Does your church celebrate Reformation Day ON the 31st? And while we're on the subject, what do y'all DO? Our family will be going to our very first Reformation Feast the Sunday after (hosted by our new church of course). We're just a tad excited, to say the very least!

Blessings on this Lord's Day,
Melanie H.

Jessica McDonald said...

Yay! A new post!! :-) I'm positively delighted! :-D

Looks like LOTS of fun!! I would love to go on a sailboat...hmm...so if I come and visit y'all in California do I get a ride? *grin*

And that luxury boat! Mhhh. Whats a couple million dollars anyway? :-D *goes to count her own pennies* :-)

Have a marvelous week! We sure miss y'all!!

~Jess

Stacy McDonald said...

Wish we all lived close enough where we could hit each others' Reformation Day events! Wouldn't that be fun? Ah...I guess we'll have to visit in "pictures."

DeusPrimus said...

Melanie,

I was actually taking pictures with my phone at the time. Used to be you could only make calls with them, now you can do just about anything, practically a Swiss Army Phone....

Jess,

Of course you can have a ride! That will definitely have to be a planned event for your next trip West. You could even man the helm, if you wanted.

Maybe if we combined our pennies.... *grin*

Stacy,

I think we should charter a jet, and hop from one Reformation party to the next. With time zone differences, we might even be able to hit them all!

BFH

Anonymous said...

"Swiss Army phone"

I LIKE IT!!! ;-D

MKH

Elissa said...

Looks like tons of fun!!!! I would love to sail on the San Fransisco Bay, it sounds too cool! I used to LOVE going out in my grandparents boat, but it was not a sail boat my any means.
~Elissa

JB said...

Benamin,

Pleasant post discussing an extremely pleasant day. I know the winds were light for you four guys, but it was really great for me - relaxing and all. BTW-I took the picture of you and Thomas with the bridge in the background, not the other way around!! ;) Dare I say, let's do it again? All in all, an incredible day with wonderful company.

Love ya, Mom

Thomas and Lindsey said...

I must say, one of the coolest parts of the trip was the "dock at the back door of the restaurant and eat calamari appetizers while watching the seagulls and enjoying the cool ocean weather". That was long and drawn out.

We really must do it again.

TJH

Simply Tiffany said...

Ohhhh...I can almost smell the water....

Great post, Ben! Looks like y'all had a lovely time. Maybe next time y'all come out here we can go a'sailin'!

The luxury boat looks "simply fastidious" (to quote Amy from Little Women :)). But, my brother found some plans for a yacht that was also a submarine...which was a spacious three stories, complete with a HUGE kitchen, dining area, loaded with bedrooms...and all of the sitting areas had walls of windows. It kinda reminded me of Captian Nemo's sub...only more modern. :) AND, if that isn't enough...you can also get a smaller detachable sub, that can take deeper routes for exploration...*sigh* Now, that's my kind of boat... :)

And yes, it would be wonderful if we could have joint Reformation parties...ya' sure your whole church doesn't want to move out here? I mean, there's no Golden Gate bridge, or bay, or fresh calamari...but we've got the Great Lakes! ;) Can't wait to see the Reformation Day saga!

Unknown said...

WOW! Those pictures are nice... looks like you all had fun?...

Jess

Anonymous said...

Melanie,
Yes, our Reformation party is on the 31st this year. Being a Friday, the date is conducive to the proceedings. We worship, fellowship, dine, learn and play while wearing period costumes that are not warm enough for Fall weather or comfortable enough for any time of the year. The apparel sure gets us in the reforming mood, however.

Stacy &Tiffany,
In an effort to link the Reformation parties through the use of sailboats, we are reviving (in reverse direction) the Lewis & Clark expedition in hopes of finding a navigable route from Ceres to Peoria. L & C didn’t have GPS or decent coffee, so we are confident that they may have missed something.

Jess,
We had great fun! Captains Ben, Thomas & Dave are willing to pull up anchor (an act that is purely ceremonial, the boat lives on a trailer in our yard) for any hardy soul brave enough to show up! This being a second drought year in a row (sorry ‘bout that, Midwest) the local lakes are nearly empty so be prepared to change course often.
Dave

Anonymous said...

Hey Hectors ,
Glad y'all had fun. Where were y'all on sunday? We missed you.
Wow, Ben look at all of the comments.:)I was very happy to see a new post also.
See you soon.
Miss.M

Sierra said...

SWEET!! Coast Guard ships are the coolest! :) Looks like y'all had an awesome time!

Joseph said...

Looks like a lot of fun!

Elizabeth said...

Nice! Looks like you all enjoyed yourself. Noticed your pictures didn't look as good. Was it a different camera? Doesn't really matter...just wondering :)

We were going to go sailing the other day with a biology research team but we had to go to a news channel station instead. Sad!

TTYL!

-Elizabeth

Anonymous said...

Hello again!
I have to admit, this is the first time I've been over to the new blog.
Boating IS fun!! A couple of times while on vacation at the beach in FL, my family has rented a pontoon boat for the day. My mom and dad both grew up boating, so it's fun for them, and for us kids, too. :-)

Hope things are going well on your side of the country... have a nice day!
Ashley