Monday, July 2, 2012

Monday, July 2, 2012. Port Huron



This morning Katherine and I drove to Belle Maer Harbor in Harrison Twp, our home marina. We unloaded supplies onto the boat and left the dock at 2:30pm. I worked the night before so we got a late start but we planned to travel a bit less than 50 miles so we thought we could arrive in Port Huron before dark. This was our first time using our Mac laptop navigation system MacENC, which worked great.

 The weather was clear, warm, and sunny. We left Belle Maer in southwest Anchor Bay and headed east to the North Channel, part of the marshy delta formed as the St. Clair River empties into Lake St. Clair.

NOAA chart 14850



Anchor Bay in Lake St. Clair

Buoy 20 entering North Channel of St. Clair River




Dickinson Island at delta of St. Clair River entering Lake St. Clair


We cruised up the St. Clair River to Port Huron, upstream against a 2 knot current. We made 7.5 knots speed over ground at 2400 rpm. This is a fair clip on our trawler, and we arrived in Port Huron in 5 hours. Along the river we saw lots of pleasure boaters including some kids on jet skis who liked to jump our wake.

Power plant on St. Clair River
Ferry across St. Clair river between Walpole Island and Algonac



We passed a freighter, Canada Steamship Lines CSL Tadoussac (730 ft, built 1972, capacity 30,000 tons). A Coast Guard Cutter, the Neah Bay, passed us going upbound. The USCG site states this vessel is 140' long, 37.5' beam, and 662 tons displacement with twin diesel engines. It is an icebreaking tug that uses an air bubbling system to force air and water between the hull and ice to lower resistance.

CSL Tadoussac


CSL Tadoussac

USCG Cutter Neah Bay

River Street Marina, Black River, Port Huron
I like river travel because the sites we pass vary and we are close enough to shore to see homes, factories, parks, and other vessels. We spent our first night at the River Street Marina on the Black River in Port Huron. Very quiet, a nice place to stay.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Getting ready for our Lake Huron cruise


We have been getting ready for our first expedition on Breathin' Easy. Some issues with the electronics have been corrected (we hope!), the boat is fueled, and I have developed a system of moving the dinghy off and on the boat deck with the davit by myself (thank you Shawn, Mark and Dave). We have a big heavy dinghy and the first time I tried to haul it off the boat deck with the davit with son Shawn, it was really a two man job. With some creative thinking, eventually a system with blocks and tackles was devised and I can now remove and replace the dinghy myself!


Getting ready for launch this spring


K has been provisioning the boat and I have all the equipment and spare parts I think we will need. The last purchase was an anchor snubbing line. This takes the strain off our all-chain anchor rode so it will not clank all night when we are at anchor (learned this chartering a sailboat in the Bahamas with three other guys a few years ago).


Breathin' Easy at anchor


Weather permitting, we will soon leave Belle Maer Harbor in Harrison Twp., MI for our three week cruise. However, we have learned from experience that weather and boat malfunctions may change our plans, so we try to be flexible and enjoy the time on the water whether we stay on schedule or not!