SAIL

CRUISING THROUGH WINTER

Blow, blow, thou winter wind
Thou art not so unkind
As man’s ingratitude;
Thy tooth is not so keen,
Because thou art not seen,
Although thy breath be rude.
—William Shakespeare, As You Like It

A number of sailors have cruised Labrador, Greenland, Patagonia, South Georgia, Antarctica, Alaska and the Northwest Passage. Some have wintered-over in high latitudes. But fewer have deliberately undertaken winter cruises in high latitudes simply for the pleasures the season can offer.

My wife, Nancy, and I were fortunate to enjoy an extensive winter cruise aboard our 44ft steel ketch, Tamara, in extreme southern Chilean Patagonia, and in 2012 I took Tamara on a solo cruise to Alaska’s Prince William Sound late in a winter that saw record snowfall. I was subsequently honored with the Cruising Club of America (CCA) Royal Cruising Club Trophy for the effort. Since then I have returned to the sound every season.

Most of the equipment and techniques demanded for cruising high latitudes in summer carry over directly to winter efforts, and a good, reliable and simple heating system is of course axiomatic regardless of season. Winter, however, offers some extra challenges.

At the head of the list, after a good heat source, is insulation. Tamara was purpose-built for high-latitude work, and following the application of the epoxy coating system inside her steel hull, one to three inches of spray-foam insulation was applied to all interior surfaces above the bilges. A ceiling of marine plywood was then installed to cover it all, after which the interior joinery work was attached to the ceiling. This combination results in an extraordinarily well-insulated vessel, although even Tamara benefits from some additional tricks when the weather becomes truly extremes.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Sail

Sail12 min read
Home Is The Sailor
I am sailing with Robin Lee Graham, but there is no wind. It’s a hot day in July and Montana’s Flathead Lake is glass. The mountains around us are blurred by haze. A wildfire burns to our east. Robin’s blue eyes light up—he’s spotted catspaws ahead.
Sail2 min read
Airmar DST810 Smart Multisensor
Let’s be honest: Transducers aren’t as sexy as the cool graphics and touchscreen capabilities of today’s navigation and electronics packages. But the information that those packages deliver, like speed and depth, is only as good as the instrument tha
Sail4 min read
Daniel Hays and Sparrow
Daniel Hays, at age 63, is now almost 10 years older than his father David was when they sailed around Cape Horn together in a tiny 25-foot cutter named Sparrow. That was back in the mid-1980s. They co-wrote a book about their adventure and spent sev

Related Books & Audiobooks