Captain’s log 10-30-06
Arrival Point / End Time Midway Marina ICW NC 9:30PM
Distance Traveled / Engine 35 NM
This is our first true encounter with the ICW, and first lesson learned: NEVER TRAVEL THE ICW AT NIGHT. I was convinced that at night, it would be nicer to travel. No powerboats, no traffic, no wake, nobody around to bother you. Peaceful, and quiet, you have the road to yourself. Well, it was like that until we got into whole lot of trouble that took us hours to get out of. We started the day filling up the water tanks and emptying the holding tank at the AYB marina. Free water, that’s hard to find in the Northeast! We started the trip through the series of restricted bridges and with bunch of powerboats on our back eager to make it through all the bridge openings. Waiting for the bridge to open became a nightmare. One time, we were all alone waiting for a bridge, first in line to pass. As the time approached, bunch of big trollers came up and tried to squeeze their way in front of me. I warned them that I have very little maneuverability. It didn’t help, that is apparently the trend all along the ICW. Anyhow, by early afternoon the traffic and bridges cleared out and we had a stretch of open water to crosss. This was North Landing River leading to Currituck Sound, with depths of 3-5 feet and a narrow ICW canal going through it. The anchorage just before it didn’t work out as we got stuck in the mud trying to enter it. So we proceeded through the sound realizing that night would fall just as we passed it and entered another narrow section of ICW, Currituck-Abemarle Canal, connecting Currituck and Abemarle Sounds. It seems that narrow canals had plenty of deep water and that the problems with shoaling was in the open bodies of water with ICW going through them. And so it was, at the end of the Currituck sound at around sunset we wondered off a merely 10 yards off the channel and ran aground. There were couple of trollers behind me and they got on the radio as they saw me roll out the jib trying to heel the boat and get out of shallow water. One of the trollers had a 6’ draft, so he waited for me to get out and follow him through the critical section. It worked, and we went through this particular bad section. Soon after, the night fell, and we were all alone. Troller on the radio advised us that another bad sections is coming but that there was plenty of water in the middle of ICW. So Crystal was on the computer guiding me each step of the way. The lighted marks are far and between in this section and wondering off is very easy. However, things worked out, and it seems that with Crystal keeping an eye on the boat’s position on the computer and keeping us between the dotted lines of the channel, thighs were moving along. We entered the Currituck-Abemarle Canal which was a breeze. Our next anchorage was about a mile after this canal. In the canal, we saw two marinas, Midway and Coinjoc and I was tempted to pull in there, which Crystal also suggested. I should have! But the thought of paying $50-$100 for overnight dock made me try to go to the next anchorage. Looking at the chart there appeared to be a tricky section of the ICW just after the canal in the next open body of water. And tricky it was. Crystal kept me between the lines but just as we rounded the green daybeacon, and headed for what should be next red marker, we ran aground pretty hard. The funny thing was that we were smack in the middle of the dotted line channel on the computer chart. The GPS was showing the boat exactly in the middle. That scared me a bit. Which way to go? No idea. The boat didn’t heel, but were stuck in some deep mud. Our navigator (Crystal) said that we went too far to the left. I thought we didn’t go left enough. So I tried going further to the left ignoring her opinion, revving the engine and wiggling the boat from side to side. Well, it didn’t help after about 15 minutes of that, I decided to investigate exactly where we were. I went in the dinghy and took a ride with the flashlight to look for unlighted daybeacons. And fine enough, I found one on the right. It was too far to be visible with the flashlight. So I was wrong we should have staid more to the right. Luckily, we were in not so shallow water to even heel very much. The mud here stretches about another 2-3 feet, so you have chance to maneuver in 5 feet of water. The mud just gets progressively denser after that and then the boat heels. So I reved up the engine again and turned the boat 180 degrees to go to the right side of the channel. After about and hour of reving and overheating the poor engine, the technique didn’t seem to work. The only thing I was able to do is turn the boat around, but we made no forward progress. I had to take a break and try some other techniques. I first deployed the anchor with the dinghy about 50 yards in front of the boat. Meanwhile the engine cooled down, and with both the engine and windlass we tried to pull the boat. No way. That didn’t work. The anchor techniques, that I was reading so much about really doesn’t work! I got back in the dinghy and tried to pull the anchor out but that didn’t work either. I made a mistake of not using a trip line. So now I was really getting mad. We are stuck pretty deep in the mud, perhaps in the middle of the channel, at least that’s what the chart was saying, so any pasign troller or even worse, a tug boat with a platform will run into us. Second thing was the anchor. It is stuck and is not coming out. My cloths are covered in this black mud and so is everything around me, the dinghy, deck and cockpit. Its pitch black, and I hated myself for not taking that slip and paying the money for overnight docking about an hour ago. But I still had hope, and had plenty of options to try. My next thought was to deploy another anchor about 50 yards to the side of us, and attach one of the mast halyards to it. This way as we pull on the halyard, the boat would heel. After we reach enough heel, we would be able to maneuver in the radius of the anchor hopefully enough to get out to deep water. I took my reaching strut, about 10’ long aluminum pole, and went with the dinghy around the boat probing for how deep the water is. Amazing, near the mid section and stern, the pole would get stuck in the mud. But at the bow, I couldn’t feel the bottom. So we were only about 20 feet from deep water. With so little to go, I decided to abandon the second anchor plan, and just keep trying to wiggle the boat out of the mud. I had to let out more and more of the chain on our first anchor so that we could move around. The technique of getting out of the mud on a boat with fin keel, is to steer the boat all the way to one side with full throttle on the engine. The boat would turn there but at one point would stop turning. At that moment, I would turn the boat to the other side as far as the helm would go. This action actually makes the boat wiggle its way out of the mud. After about half hour of this we floated the boat. We were in 10 feet of water and the chain started coming out faster and faster. I remembered that the chain was free falling out. I ran to the bow and locked the windlass, and tried pulling the anchor. Unfortunately, the anchor was back in the shallow water. Well, it was actually somewhere on the edge. Things actually worked out ok. Our powerful windlass pulled the anchor without a problem and as soon as the anchor was free, I steered back towards deep water, and back towards where we came from. Without a hesitation, I took the marina option, and paying for the dock seemed like a cheap insurance for not running aground again. By now it was already 11PM, and people sleep early around here. I just tied up to the dock and we went to bed. The next morning I went and paid $55 for overnight docking and talked to the locals. It looks like charts are wrong and you have to follow the markers. The markers are not always lit, and traveling at night is not an option.