Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Ad Lib 9

Two fingers down the pontoon, lies Stargazer's sailing companion from yesterday. The Vancouver 28 Caroline. A boat whose 'that face looks familiar’ appearance (a mutual feeling) is probably explained by Lyndsey and Graham's penchant for the ports of Atlantic France. Where they spend their summers.


It is a sun dappled sit-in-the-cockpit-and-watch-the-world-go-by day, in Sovereign Harbour.


Stargazer is in her accustomed spot, behind the lifeboat. Taking her ease after the spirited passage from Dover.


Caroline intends to sail on to the West Country, before crossing to Brittany. Whereas Stargazer favours leaving the English shore more immediately. In both cases we are likely to route via Guernsey, where our wakes may cross once more. This time on a first name basis.

Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Ad Lib 8


Now this is more like a first sail of the season! For that is how I shall remember it.The golden light of dawn. Sixteen knots of breeze on our quarter. Stargazer cantering down Channel. Folkestone away to leeward.


A trio of boats slips out of Dover's Western Entrance at the turn of the tide. Caroline, a Vancouver 28, Dolphin, a Bavaria 38 and Stargazer a Hallberg-Rassy 310.


Stargazer steers resolutely down the rhumb line. Whilst Dolphin and Caroline 'sail the angles.' Their foresails drawing better. But sailing a longer distance.


Dungeness slips by as the morning warms. Coffee and hot crossed buns are consumed in Stargazer's cockpit, by way of celebration.


We stand close in to the steep-to shingle spit. Hoping to shave some distance from our course. But the Lydd (Ministry of Defence Gunnery Range) guard boat shepherds us back seaward. Advising that our armed forces enjoy no Easter respite and that live firing will shortly commence.


Dolphin, despite her greater length, has dropped astern. As has the sturdy Caroline. Shorter of waterline and heavier of displacement.


Stargazer runs goose winged toward Hastings. Angling inshore after our detour. The breeze steadily building. Enabling Caroline to close to within five miles. And causing Dolphin to stand out into the Channel shipping lanes on a reach.


By the time Stargazer passes the beaches, on which William the Conqueror came ashore, we have over twenty knots at our back. We hand the genoa. Lyndsey and Graham (later tell me that they) maintain full sail on Caroline. Both of us making better than six knots against the now turned tide. Dolphin falling further behind.


The Sovereign Harbour outer entrance is a welter of white water. Whipped up by a wind which is driving directly into it. No place to pause and drop sail. Stargazer sweeps around the dogleg. Finding shelter inside the breakwaters, in which to ready for the lock. 






 

Monday, 6 April 2026

Ad Lib 7

 

Stargazer's barometer rises on a balmy Bank Holiday Monday.

With barely enough breeze to balloon a freshly hoist genoa. The waters of the Wellington Dock mirror smooth.

On the shingle beach, gleeful rowers race to launch their rapier slim craft.

 Tomorrow's forecast holds fair for Beachy Head.

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Ad Lib 6

 


Golden plumage aglow, a gimlet eyed Great Crested Grebe circles, preens and dives. Biding her time, this Easter Sunday, within the shelter of Dover's harbour walls. 


Off Dungeness, a westerly gale gusts. But, for the past several days, twelve to sixteen knots of easterly breeze has been forecast on Tuesday. Fair, for a passage to Beachy Head.

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Ad Lib 5

 

A shirtsleeve and sunglasses breakfast in Stargazer's cockpit. On a still spring morning.

Stealthily high cirrus creeps in. The wind freshens. Clammy billows of low cloud swallow the cliff top.

Castle keep and all.

Parting periodically

To allow the sun to blaze through. Whilst a westerly breeze whistles artlessly, from the skies, as its speed steadily rises.

Friday, 3 April 2026

Ad Lib 4

King Harold's (aka Storm Dave's) vanguard approaches. A phalanx of lowering grey cloud, firing off volleys of forty knot squalls. Which whistle harmlessly over the heads of Stargazer and her (few) hardy travelling companions. Who shelter behind Dover's high harbour walls and higher white cliffs. 

We have chosen to wait for our weather window here, rather than in Ramsgate, both because of better shelter and of superior shoreside facilities (chandlers, supermarkets, choice of cliff walks and fuel forecourt proximity). Rather than in Sovereign Harbour, for financial reasons. On a weekly rate (swiftly secured, upon arrival, before the annual April 1st price rise) Dover is just over half of the cost of Sovereign. Where only a day rate is offered.

(Yesterday's pictures. See yesterday's post for King Harold reference)


Thursday, 2 April 2026

Ad Lib 3


 Spring perfumes the Dover air. White clouds of cherry blossom adorn china blue skies. Beneath flint walls, laid in the aftermath of the 1066 Norman Conquest, daffodils unfurl their saffron standards.

Whilst Easter Bunnies sunbathe, ears pricked warily, upon the grassy slopes which crown the White Cliffs.

The air is so crisply clear that, from up here, beyond the bustle of the ferry port. . . .

. . . .the rectangular reactor halls, of the two (decommissioned) Dungeness nuclear power stations, are visible on the horizon. Fully twenty miles to the west.

At the cliff foot, the sea laps laguidly. Calm, for now. Above, clouds boil. A sign that Storm Dave is riding in from the north, astride the jetstream. Like a latter day King Harold, galloping south to do battle upon the Hastings shoreline.