Sailing Today

Scotland or bust

Around Britain – Part two

It took months of planning and preparations to have Sea Jay, my 27ft classic Rhodes 6-tonner ready for departure on 1 April, but as if to prove this was ‘All Fools Day’, the winds were storm force, waves were breaking over the bar at the entrance to Chichester Harbour and, to make matters worse, the auxiliary suddenly developed an intermittent fault, the revs running up and down the scale in uncontrolled and unpredictable bursts. I wasn’t expecting to have to engage Plan B in this adventure sail up to the Scottish Western Isles and back quite so early!

The course

My original plan had been to cross the Irish Sea either from Newlyn directly to Wicklow, the nearest port on the Irish coast, or via Milford Haven, depending on the wind, but after meeting Angus Mcphie, an old sailing friend in Plymouth who had cruised up to Scottish waters a few years before, his advice was to give Irish ports in the southwest a wide berth. “The shallow waters around there extend a long way out and are home to 100s of lobster pots.” He told me. Unlike his own fin and skeg configured cruising yacht, Sea Jay has a long keel extending right back to the rudder and simply rides over pot lines, but when I heard that Angus had been forced to call out the Wicklow lifeboat to tow his yacht to safety after wrapping a pot line around the prop, I took his advice and pointed our bows further north to Arklow as our first Irish port of call.

Having heard so many stories about post-Brexit red tape from sailors visiting France, I felt rather foolish tying up to the visitors’ pontoon in Arklow with an Irish courtesy flag, and yellow Q quarantine pennant fluttering in the rigging, and passport and ships papers to hand ready for a Customs inspection. No one troubled us for seven hours, and then it was only the marina manager wanting his 30 Euros for an overnight stay. I experienced

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

More from Sailing Today

Sailing Today2 min read
Skipper’s View
THE STORY OF THE Sunday Times Golden Globe race of 1969 is an iconic sailing event and some of the most striking images from the archive relating to this race are the grainy photos of Donald Crowhurst and Nigel Tetley setting out in their trimarans -
Sailing Today6 min read
Cool For C- Cats
Think of an Italian yacht and I generally think of a stylish cruiser/racer; I’m thinking Grand Soleil, Solaris, Eleva, Italia, ICE yachts – I could go on but the point is made and, frankly I love this genre of yacht. I mean who doesn’t want to sail f
Sailing Today9 min read
Adventure Playground
With a multitude of coral reef atolls encompassing aquamarine water, secluded anchorages and miles of low lying coconut palm trees, you could be forgiven for thinking you’d arrived in a tropical paradise when sailing in the Tuamotus in the heart of F

Related