Monday, 7 September 2015

A Day in the Life





Dawn breaks, breathlessly pink. The sky mirrored in the hushed stillness of the river.




Two egrets preen companionably on the bank, peering into looking glass water.




Stargazer too studies her reflection. She nuzzles her mooring buoy as the tide stirs invisibly beneath her.




A Curlew pipes reveille. The ringing call echoes across the salt marsh...




...disturbing a Redshank. He hurries down the bank, to see what all the commotion is about.





It is our signal to leave the Beaulieu River. I eat brunch and let slip the mooring. We make our way downstream....




....past the Sunday lunch time picnickers on Bucklers Hard...




...and on to the dogleg river mouth, set about with sculptural scotch pines.




18-20 knots of westerly breeze ruffles the Solent. I tuck two reefs in the main. Stargazer puts her shoulder to the wind over tide chop - and slices her way upwind in long, shore to shore, boards




We stand close in to Yarmouth's homely red tiled roofs, stone built walls and tall chimneys - before tacking off the harbour mouth.




The tide is fully making now, urging us on. The evening sun deepens the blue of the sea, warms the red stripes of the lighthouse, and douses the Needles in golden mead.




On we tack into the sunset - homeward bound across Poole Bay. Our wind stays true into a cloudless, moonless, night. It carries us to anchor in Blood Alley. There we lie snug beneath a cape of darkest blue velvet, richly jewelled with myriad stars.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone


Location:Woodlands Avenue,Poole,United Kingdom

Sunday, 6 September 2015

On Passage





Stargazer romps towards the setting sun, under double reefed main and jib, hoping to make landfall before dark.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, 5 September 2015

Bucklers Hard





I come ashore at Bucklers Hard. Once this terrace of weathered, red brick, cottages echoed with the adze strokes of the navy's master shipwrights.




The oak to build their wooden wall ships of the line came from the same ancient forest through which I now walk....




.....to reach the many gabled tree arched hamlet of Beaulieu, at the head of the river.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Location:Palace Lane,Brockenhurst,United Kingdom

Friday, 4 September 2015

The Beaulieu River





The cruising chute and the faintest of zephyrs carry Stargazer out of Swanage Bay and into the Solent.

First tawny sand bars, and then green tree lined banks, rise to either side of us, as we enter the Beaulieu River. Fingers of marsh reach out into tea brown water, sending it recoiling in serpentine meanders.

Stargazer finds a vacant mooring, above Bucklers Hard. A profound silence settles around us. One punctuated only by the warbling trill of a curlew; the sigh of wind in the treetops ; and the bright slap and lap of the river current against our hull.

(Only enough signal for one picture today. Should be back to normal tomorrow when I row ashore)

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Location:Brockenhurst,United Kingdom

Thursday, 3 September 2015

Pelican Bill





Stargazer slips out of Weymouth harbour to catch her tide.




We hoist main and cruising chute off the beach...




...and stand out towards a cloud shrouded Portland Bill - where the flow will be strongest and our wind clearest. We gybe inside the Shambles Bank and lope East, over a gently heaving sea, towards the Dancing Ledges and Durlston Head.




Pelican runs before us under Tops and Royals, sails aglow, framed by the plunging Jurassic cliffs.




Our fair tide falters. We tack into Swanage Bay and anchor, to wait out the westbound stream. On the jetty lies the Russian frigate Shtandart, her battle standard fluttering in the breeze.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Location:Shore Road,Swanage,United Kingdom

Tuesday, 1 September 2015

A Rude Awakening





Gulls wheel above Stargazer as she basks, in the sunshine, against the rough stone of the ancient quay.




We had dodged the Bank Holiday rain squalls anchored amid the soaring serenity of Worbarrow Bay....




....joined for a night by Amelie Rose.




This morning a polite rap on the hull broke our tranquil spell. "It's the first of September today. The Lulworth Range has re-opened. Live firing commences in an hour."




I hurriedly hoist sail. We beat west against the tide, out of the Firing Range. The sea sculpted arch of Durdle Door frames a family picnicking on the beach, as we sweep by.




Stargazer leans to a jolie brise from the NW and romps over a sun spangled turquoise sea. The shock of my rude awakening is erased. I breakfast sat to leeward in the cockpit - the sun on my face, wind rippling my shirt, and a mug of fresh brewed coffee in my hand.




We carry our tack in through the open arms of Weymouth harbour mouth, and drop sail as the tall ship Pelican comes abeam.




Stargazer picks her way through the bustle of the fairway. Up past the lifeboat station....




....and brightly coloured potting fleet...




.....to The Cove. Children cast for crabs between the boats. Their parents wash fish and chips down with cool beer, legs dangling over the harbour wall. Time meanders elastically.

Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone





Location:Cove Row,Weymouth,United Kingdom