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
Tuesday, 26 May 2026
Ad Lib 54
Monday, 25 May 2026
Ad Lib 53
Rippling roars reverberate around the cliffs of St Peter Port.
The scent of tyre smoke and high octane fuel mingles in the still air.
Hot metal shimmers in the heat.
Final fettling is completed, in whatever shade can be engineered.
No detail is overlooked.
Competitors while away the morning. Awaiting their summons to the start line. Eyes seldom straying from the Leader Board.
A cool head proves to be the key. . . .
. . . .to posting a winning time.
Sunday, 24 May 2026
Ad Lib 52
The only way is up. An ascent into immaculately azure heavens.
Past the exiled Victor Hugo's island hideaway, Hauteville House. Its green front door forever shrouded in mystical shadow.
The south facing study providing the views which nourished his hungry soul.
Saturday, 23 May 2026
Ad Lib 51
St Peter Port steadily fills, at the start of a sizzling Late Spring Bank Holiday.
A shimmering heat haze blurs the beaches of Herm, beyond the Brehon tower. Catspaws of sea breeze softly pad, toward Guernsey, across a lightly ruffled Little Russel.
Motorboats make the most of the ideal (for them) conditions. Comfortably outnumbering arrivals under sail.
Caroline, last alongside Stargazer in Sovereign Harbour (see Ad Lib 9), puts in a surprise appearance.
Disembarking a troop of uniformed, mobile phone toting, 'deckhands.' Whom it transpires are engineers. On board to sea trial a new engine. Installed, during the week, in the venerable Vancouver 28.
Caroline, Stargazer and a Golden Hind, named Fiddlers Green, are in agreement. With surroundings as sublime as these, and the prevailing light airs, the only sensible course of action is to enjoy our Whit Bank Holiday in situ.
Whilst preparing to take advantage of passage making easterlies, expected on Monday or Tuesday. The tides, by then, suiting an overnight passage to the Breizh (Breton) shore. If Stargazer is to benefit from a daylight landfall.
Friday, 22 May 2026
Ad Lib 50
Castle Cornet has been a fortress since the Thirteenth Century. First built as a British fallback position, after King John lost possession of Normandy. Subsequently, it was held by French forces, during the Hundred Years War.
Henry VIII reinforced its walls during the Sixteenth Century. Following the European discovery of gunpowder (then known to the Chinese for seven hundred years) which ushered in the age of artillery.
Before the Liberation of Guernsey, on May the ninth 1945. When the changeling citadel's role reverted to protection of the island’s people.
An occasion since marked annually, by joyful street celebrations.
Thursday, 21 May 2026
Ad Lib 49
The walls are jutting igneous injections of hard granite. Moulded from molten magma, millennia ago. Impervious since, to the steady onslaught of winter seas.
Multiple surrounding reefs are home to lobsters and crabs. The harbour to a small fleet of their hunters.
Rock strewn approaches are guarded, from historic marauders, by Vale Castle. Whilst the hillside, which it tops, wards off prevailing winds, from the south and west.
Wednesday, 20 May 2026
Ad Lib 48
Flags ripple and billow, tides ebb and flow, friends come and go.
Sue is on the helm of Dehler 37 Illywhacker, as usual. Once of Guernsey, these days of Gosport. Usually in St Peter Port, when Stargazer is passing through. Often as not with a similar passage plan.
Mindful of Mike Richie's metaphor (along the lines of): Conducting a satisfying passage under sail is similar to fashioning a wooden chair (he, an accomplished wood carver). With many disparate elements to resolve into a, simultaneously aesthetically pleasing and functional, whole. (Alas, I cannot locate the original quote)
Mike, the owner of Blondie Haslar's pioneering Jester. Completing thirteen solo Atlantic crossings aboard the junk rigged, fully decked, Folkboat. Rejoicing in precision navigation by sextant, sun and star. A skill acquired during wartime service (which included a hand in the planning of the D Day Landings). Later put to civilian use, as a founding member of the Royal Institute of Navigation. Mike's full story on the Junk Rig Association Hall of Fame.
Picture Credits
Jester on passage courtesy of Rick Tomlinson
