Longest Dead Calm (or Becalmed) Sailing Experience?
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			Bryan wrote: 
 
 I've never experienced an absence of wind where I didn't have an auxilliary 
 (sp?), you know, a motor, to fall back on; I've only read of the scenario. 
 
 What is the longest dead calm you've experienced?  Were you relaxed, you 
 know, calm, about it?  How long did it take before it started to get to you, 
 if at all? 
 
 If not you, what is the longest dead calm our sailing author's have 
 experienced and lived to tell? 
 
 
 
-The Crew of "The Tipsey": Two.- 
 
Mouth of the Sturgeon River, Lake Nippising, Ontario, 30 years ago. 
 
A 19 foot plywood bilge keeler, baggy sails, newlyweds, but for the 
sake of a few years. A seagull outboard motor disregarded, a 
wonderful week of sailing done, headed now for the last port of call 
looking toward a hamburger supper near a familiar dock before the 
week and soon, this weekend is done and then a return to Calandar 
Bay tomorrow, and resumption of work on monday, at NORAD in Trenton. 
Been nice all week then becalmed, with the river mouth in sight. Out 
of ice. 
 
Well after sailing all week, and lunchtime threatens, why not wait 
for wind, and eat the remnants in the cooler for late brunch adrift? 
But hold, is that a zephyr I feel on a hairy arm? Barely enough to 
make a matchstick move beside the boat, but still, promise.  Still 
purists, the decision is made to sail, regardless, like the old 
timers had to, before steam, an oath, OK? 
 
"OK." says Mrs. Super Principals, Spouse to the Captain of Youthful 
Principals, aboard the "S.V. Tipsey", in the Sturgeon's mouth. 
 
Lunch.  Stillness. Scraps. Thirst. Half a bottle of warm coke, one 
ounce of rum, one warm beer, two cigarettes remain. The last of the 
clean water went for breakfast coffee, caffeine and all. The porta 
pottie is full. Courage. 
 
Then, sail like a ghost toward Sturgeon Falls, an inch at a time, 
back and forth, inching, tacking flabbily against a devilish tease 
of wind, hinting, coming, going, never nearer, sunscreen all gone 
now too, burning skin, wet T shirts and hats, Ontario heat, muggy 
heat. 
 
Time, rocking and ticking halyards in tune up before a concert, 
forever tuning, tuning. Impatience, lazy seagulls, aspiring to 
vulture careers, circling, squawking, ****ting, aggravating as 
crackely candy wrappers at a movie, or a baby wailing in the smoking 
balcony. No cigarettes left. No paddles with which to kill them, as 
they come seeming sniffing, looking, smelling food and blood not yet 
quite dead, scraps and sweat. Seeing their victims' slow decline 
through thirst and suffering, patient, waiting, circling. *******s. 
Old timers, veterans, paying the continuing price. 
 
Tense smiles, salvation still beckons only a mile away, but too far 
to swim. A vow to keep. Brooding Silence. The mood is getting ugly, 
stubborn, frustrated. 
 
Sunset. Immobility. The occasional wake as photographers zoom by, 
damned papperazzi, close enough to take a picture of an odd couple 
in the darkeling, against the setting sun's hellfire, haggard, sails 
baggy, all at sea, getting desperate, now wavering?  Never! The last 
rationed beer spilled underfoot in it's cockpit shady spot, by a 
stumble, a skip, a slip, a wake. Blame. Mutiny? We conspire to kill 
powerboaters for diversion.  Still, murder is our hearts now, and 
freedom from this hell, dominated by principle over a childish oath, 
a foolish mission, pointless, but not to be abandoned lightly. 
 
Loyalty. 
 
Principles, a vow.  Acquiesecence. Patience. Suffering saints, 
stained hearts.  Dieting, now that rationing is ended, depleted, 
without means to ration, fasting, famine, hunger, thirst.  Mad, 
crazing thirst and heat, and those damned gulls, circling, circling. 
 
Drink the lake?  Ewww! 
 
"We will start the engine once we sail to a point between the red 
and green entrance bouys." Remember your vow, your loyalty to 
Captain, fellow crew, King, country, and holy mission? 
 
"OK."  She said, remember? Weary? Words given, words kept. 
 
We are close enough for the mosquitos to have found us. They brought 
their friends, the blackflies, and their little hitch hikers, the 
no-see-ums. *******s! Bloodthirsty *******s! *******s everywhere! 
 
We have no screens, only the companionway boards, closed forehatch, 
mosquito coils, the heat, no air, no drink, no food.  Nausea from 
the insecticide fumes and wakes, wakes, wakes and their noise, and 
the halyards' mad coded voices, urging murder, madly concerted now, 
Wagnerian, blood stirring, mad, mad, mad for water, cool water. 
 
Psycosis looms, our vows sacrosanct. Purgatory. Night. The anchor. 
Sleep? The heat, the bugs, the wakes, as starships warp past. The 
hurricane lantern, lighting an anchored prison ship. 
 
The stink of bodies and the head, the festering seas, sewer to 
Sturgeon falls, the moaning of thirsty sleep. Fitful, imprisoned, in 
red hot irons. No sweat left. Swollen tongues, dreams, fitful, 
memories dreamed:  "Don't you listen to him, Dan, he's a devil, not 
a man, as he spreads the burning sand with water.  -Cool, -clear, 
water-water." Startled! Awake again. Thirsty, trapped. Condemned? 
 
Dawn, again.  No wind, not one breath all night, and now, no grub, 
no pudding, no duff. Nothing to drink. Itching. One pink peppermint 
remains, to burn again the swollen, parched overhung tongues that 
share it, lovers star crossed, allies, fellow stubborn victims, 
fellow traitors, condemned together, we spy for weakness, seek out 
heresey to use to condemn the other, to save ourselves. 
 
"You want to give up?  Start the engine?" 
 
"Only if that's what you want." 
 
Where do women get that attitude? Perhaps they are bad luck at sea, 
as they say? 
 
Then the breakdown, shameful, mercy, debased, dishonour?  Then, 
motor, grudging seagull putting up the river, powerboats zooming by. 
One in particular, giant, fast, centre channel in a curved sewer 
ditch, stereo blaring, waving, joyful, blind to suffering and 
circumstance, ignorant fools! How I had wished to sail here. What if 
he met another like himself, blind, coming the other way?  But now, 
a common enemy, a unity refound, goal in sight, nearer, nearer. A 
monster wake, fitted perfectly to the damage seen on the boat houses 
and rocks awash on shore as we pass, slowly, put-putting, putting. 
 
Only a hour to the dock, washrooms, pop with ice, chips, hamburgers, 
salvation, heavan! 
 
Saturday shopping, beer store, then for home: showers, air 
conditioning, ice cream, beer, TV. Only twenty years on the parade 
square with rain and snow in November, remembrance days fly by, and 
other duties too, to get to here. 
 
A short becalming?  Still, the longest.  Too long.  A survival story 
for the kids, eventually, like the story of great grand dad in his 
tin hat crash landing in the bomb shelter sump full of water, ass 
full of shrapnel, chin strap tight, hat wedged tight in the sump, 
underwater, a nearby bomb echo resounding, hanged upside down by the 
chinstrap under water below great grandma's ankles in the mud, a 
near drowning in the blitz. Comical now, just a little character 
building now, memories of fun, then, in the good old days survived. 
 
-Recalled aboard "The Tipsey Two, Too" once, and now again, yard 
sailing at home, the house a part of a frozen winter flottilla in 
formation with "The Bote Ouele", a bigger bilge keeler on the 
trailer in the snow, thankful for the cool warmth, and water to 
waste. The water of life. The book of living. 
 
Terry K 
 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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