Making good progress across the Bay of Fundy. Southern Wolf Island is ahead and left |
So, the alarm call on Monday 10 September was hideously early! So early that I don’t have any pictures of our departure from Westport, but then it was pretty dark. But we achieved the aim and had a gentle 1½ -2kts of tide helping us out of the northern entrance of the channel between Brier and Long Islands, rather than being squirted out madly in a rush of, as the charts warn, up to 6kt of tide. With full sail set and a very pleasant 10-12kt easterly breeze, we had a great sail north towards and past Grand Manan Island and onwards to the southern tip of the Wolf Islands. It was very cool again for most of the passage and the person on the helm needed to be well wrapped up with an oilskin jacket, fleecy hat, gloves and a scarf. But by late morning it was quite warm enough for the person not on the helm to sit in the shelter of the sprayhood in trousers and a t-shirt; the sun’s warm but the moving air isn’t.
Southern Wolf Island |
About halfway across we were lucky enough to see 2 puffins flying in formation, stiff wings flapping furiously as they headed out towards Nova Scotia and, presumably, the North Atlantic beyond. Our books say that puffins leave Maine and New Bruswick in August and spend the winter on the ocean so these must have been 2 of the last ones to leave for the overwintering grounds. Neither of us had ever seen puffins before that moment [Ed: amazing really since they breed on the cliff around Herm], so we have our fingers crossed that they have good fishing and survive the winter well so that we have the chance of seeing them in their breeding plumage next year.
Off Southern Wolf Island we furled the genoa, slowed down and had a good peer around. Cate and Murray Basingthwaite (Coolchange) had told us that whales can often be seen in the area, sleeping on the surface. We saw a couple of whale-watching boats and headed towards them but, as we did so, they headed off back to the mainland, presumably at the end of their tours.
A rather blurred, and very distant, photo of, we think, a fin whale. The whale was too far away and not on the surface for long enough for me to get any more pictures |
And then suddenly we saw a blow! We headed over towards where we had seen it but, by then, the whale had disappeared. We did this a couple more time and eventually got close enough to see the whale surface and dive a few time, and I also managed to get just the one picture. We never saw the whale’s flukes (which is, apparently, typical of fin whales and Minkes) but, equally, we didn’t see the blowhole at the same time as the dorsal fin (typical of Minkes), so we assume it was a fin whale. It led us a merry dance for about half an hour and then just slipped away. So we carried on, under mainsail alone towards East Quoddy Light at the eastern end of the Canadian island of Campobello.
South of East Quoddy Light and the entrance to Head Harbour |
Making our way into Head Harbour |
East Quoddy Light from the northeast |
By this time, because we had spent time whale watching, sailed slowly from there to Head Harbour and also explored the harbour somewhat, the tide had turned and we found ourselves bucking 2-3 knots of outflowing tide as we motored along the northern side of Campobello. East Quoddy Light took quite some time to disappear in the rearview mirror! But at one point we did pick up a very useful back-eddy, which had us whizzing along at 9-10kts over the ground. Unfortunately, all too soon we lost that and were back to fighting our way along. We considered stopping off somewhere at anchor until the tide turned or slackened but by the time we reached a suitable bay we were tucked far enough into the shore that the tide against us wasn’t so bad, so we just continued onwards.
Friars Bay on Campobello Island - Canada |
To our port side is Eastport - USA |
The jetty/dock to get ashore to the International Park and President Roosevelt’s summer cottage |
Campobello is famous as the island on which President Franklin D Roosevelt had his summer cottage. His wife, Eleanor, survived FDR by about 20 years and after her death a large portion of the island as well as their summer cottage, was gifted to the Canadian and American Governments to become an International Park, celebrating the many years of friendship between the 2 nations.
Rain – and suntan lotion(?) |
Reflections on a rainy day! |
Friars Bay, Campobello, NB, Canada |
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