All at Sea with Stargazer
I live by the sea, maybe live for the sea, on an island in the tidal River Medway. Just downstream of the historic Chatham Naval Dockyard - where Nelson's Victory was built. For me the sea is about freedom and exploration - both personal and geographical. Stargazer is a 31' Hallberg-Rassy sloop; and companion on my journey
Monday, 29 June 2026
Ad Lib 85
Sunday, 28 June 2026
Ad Lib 84
African lillies peer over garden fences.
Friday, 26 June 2026
Ad Lib 83
Confounding the forecasters, and delighting Stargazer's skipper, the elusive breeze has awoken from its six day siesta.
Unexpectedly carrying Stargazer into the sun spangled waters of the Vendee.
Far from petering out by mid morning (see Ad Lib 82) it is with us the full day. Stargazer stands on south. Instead of putting in at one of the cluster of Breton ports around Le Croisic.(Annotated as ‘Croisic Corner,’ on Stargazer’s passage chart.)
The wind is on Stargazer's quarter. Jib just drawing.
We skirt the reef markers and windfarm boundaries to stay on the rhumb line.
Sailing through the row of merchantmen, which are anchored along the 'hard shoulder' of the Loire channel. Queuing for the cranes of the Saint-Nazaire quayside.
To reach the picture postcard shores of the Ile de Noirmoutier.
Stargazer is swiftly squeezed into a space. By the ever resourceful Capitainerie. As a busy summer weekend begins in L'Herbaudiere.
A perenially popular destination: For smartly attired leisure sailors taking their ease, from stressful shorelife, aboard immaculately prepared craft.
As well as for the working fisher folk, whose businesses are based here. That mixture (of work and play), in this setting, proves as heady as the high-octane aroma created by Madame's blowtorch.
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Ad Lib 82
Tucked into a snug cove, at the entrance to the Golfe du Morbihan, Port Navalo is the calm eye at the centre of a watery vortex. Twice daily, within view of its walls, an urgent incoming tide collides with the Petit Vezid rock (Out of shot, top left, level with tree lined banks). Before rebounding and dividing forces. One phalanx races up the Auray river (visible behind yellow & black cardinal marker). The other forks abruptly right, toward the body of the Inland Sea (at green tower). The scale of the stone markers testify to the forces which they must withstand.
For boats transiting the bottleneck mouth, the ride is always fast and sometimes (as on Stargazer's entry, see Ad Lib 74) furious. A well trod cliff path winds above the sailors as they pass. With benches, set beneath shady trees, from which ambling onlookers are able to spectate.
Near to the head of the Auray river, in the rustic peace of Le Bono's churchyard, the bones of Eric Tabarly rest. After a lifetime of pioneering ocean voyaging, aboard his various Pen Duick's. Making it a place of sailing pilgrimage. The tradition being to leave a seashell, on the drystone wall beside his simple headstone.
The cliff path follows a small headland round to the seaward facing side of Port Navalo. Where a shimmering silver sand beach dips its toes in cooling indigo waters.
The heatwave high-pressure brings light winds to Quiberon Bay. Once the sun sets, however, a usable night breeze has set in for the past couple of days. Stargazer plans to set out early tomorrow, to see where it may carry us.
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
Ad Lib 81
Glassy seas greet Stargazer's skipper. Taking the morning air, by the harbour entrance.
A path clambers up a steep hillside. Through dense shoulder high scrub. Heavy with peeping wildflowers, ripening berries and shimmering with flitting butterflies.
Until it reaches the clifftop. Where the mysterious stone building civilisation has left its calling card. In the form of a terraced, drystone walled tumulus, containing chambers within.
It is sited to dominate the skyline, on the approaches to the Golfe du Morbihan (red stone marker, top left). Looking out across Quiberon Bay.
Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Ad Lib 80
Stargazer sets sail in search of a cooling breeze. As the shelter, in Vannes, proves too complete to be comfortable, in the Saharan heatwave conditions.
Desert islands slip by. Robinson Crusoe picnickers seeking out the shade of their tall Scots Pines.
Swimmers gleefully plunge from slipways.
Whilst moored boats wait for their summer-season-owners. Before high walls, surrounding the manicured grounds of grand houses.
All hands turn out on deck to sweat up the heavy gaff of a pilot cutter.
Today's neap tide treats Stargazer more gently, in the narrows, than did the boisterous spring of our entry.
Stargazer gurgles out of the Golfe du Morbihan. Making a sedate (for the waters off Port Navalo) seven knots. We secure shortly after, in Crouesty, to consider our next move.
Monday, 22 June 2026
Ad Lib 79
Rumours of an alcohol ban, in light of extreme heat levels, prove unfounded. With refreshingly cold lager served, in reusable plastic ‘glasses,’ to those on the hoof.
Whilst patrons seated before the overflowing bars and bistros, sip wine from bottles plunged into ice filled coolers.
Not that alcohol is required in order to enjoy the Fete de la Musique. Families turn the crowded quayside into an impromptu picnic table. To take their evening meals.
Snacking from street food stalls. Which have sprung up on the closed-to-traffic-carriageways of the Vannes harbourside and Old Town.
Almost every cafe has a live act performing. Music, of every genre, mingles in the Midsummer air.
