On San Francisco Bay

On Tuesday, my last day in San Francisco, Daniell K., the visionary behind the DigitalBicycle, and I took BART up to the Berkeley Marina where we were met by Scott A. and Kari P., community media heavyweights and experienced sailors. The day started off cloudy with threats of rain, but by the time we had gotten through the pre-launch checklist of our -31- +32+ foot Catalina Magic Moves the sun had broken and was shining brightly down upon the bay.

Catalina 320

San Francisco’s cool, cloudy weather and excellent sailing is made possible by the hot, low-pressure sucking of the Central Valley. On this day, a moderate breeze +(15 – 17 knots)+ pulled our vessel out -past the estuary and through strong tides of the shipping channel- +of the Olympic Circle by Berkeley and into the Central Bay+. We -heaved to- +hove-to+ -about a mile upwind of the channel- +in the lee of Angel Island+, ate lunch, and comfortably drifted down towards Southampton Shoal. Once an elegant Victorian house, the pilings now carry a horn, some navigational equipment, a few solar panels and maybe a dozen terns. Lunch finished, we unlocked the wheel -and jibed away, the wind pushing us back toward Berkeley- +and reached back toward Berkeley+.

Kari checks the shrouds
Lunch on San Francisco Bay
Southampton Shoal
Daniell at the helm
Scott relaxes

+(Thanks Scott for the corrections)+

Related posts:

  1. Not another Rogue’s nest The following is from the 1824 edition of Zadok Cramer’s The Navigator on Island 94: No. 94, Stack or Crow’s...
  2. Notes of the first water Above is from the addendum of Zadok Cramer’s The Navigator from which I have quoted previously. Written buoyantly, it  makes jokes...


2 Responses to “On San Francisco Bay”

Kari Peterson on June 14th, 2006

Nice trip log, Ben. ‘Twas a pleasure; I think all of our meetings should be held aboard Magic Moves.

Daniell Krawczyk on June 25th, 2006

Ben, once again you prove why it is always important to bring a blogger along. That and to have someone to point out when I’m amount to steer us into the shoal.

I think I learned more about sailing from reading your (corrected) blog post than I did from paying attention on the sailboat. But damn was it was beautiful out there. Now I realize why all those dot-com’ers were so anxious to sell out and buy a sailboat!

Leave a Reply

(required)

(required)