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I'm considering sailing outside, around Cape Lookout, North Carolina
and offshore to Ocracoke Island, North Carolina, this summer. Lee Huddleston wrote: I have made that trip twice and I draw 6 feet. As has been suggested by another poster, anchor in Lookout Bight before your trip. It is a delightful anchorage. Sure is. It can also get crowded in the summer, plus there are patches of grass. My wife & I love Lookout Bight. Back Sound is also a great anchorage, you can watch the ponies on Shackleford. Diamond Shoals are the shallows off of Cape Hatteras, not the ones off of Cape Lookout. Oops, you're right... I had a mental picture of the lighthouse itself, which has a big diamond pattern on it. ... In normal weather these shoals are not dangerous as long as you have a current chart Agreed, but it's not like navigating thru shallows in sheltered water. There is often a 'heave' effect in the sea and current that sets towards the shoal... I like to cross it with at least 15' under the keel, whereas most other places I'm comfortable with far less. ... and do not rely exclusively on GPS. Good advice anywhere IMHO. The trip up to Ocracoke is a straight shot without any unusual dangers or problems. Of course you will want to go when the wind is anywhere other than from the north. More good advice Ocracoke Inlet is another story. First of all, it is critical that you pass through it at slack tide. My first passage from ocean to sound was attempted at night with the tide ebbing, and I was singlehanding. The current was very strong. Most important, and dangerous, the tide does NOT follow the channel. It often runs across sandbars and cuts straight across the channels. I overlooked an unlighted bouy and got too close to the edge of the channel and the tidal current swept me right out of the channel and pinned me up against a sandbar. I could not move the boat and the current was pushing me more and more up on the bank. I eventually had to call TowBOAT/US. You were lucky the current didn't pile up sand around your keel. I've known a couple of boats trapped that way. The second time I made the passage was also at night. But this time was at slack tide and I had two crewmates. In addition, I now knew that there was a mix of lighted and unlighted bouys. One crewman stayed on the bow with a spotlight locating the bouys. The other crewman helped me keep track of the depth while I concentrated on steering. We took it VERY slowly. Sometimes we only had a few INCHES of water below the keel. It took us about two hours to just get through the inlet. The next day while we were walking around Ocracoke two locals sitting on the country store front porch declared that we were crazy for coming it at night. I've done some crazy stuff but I'd rather sail back & forth all night outside than run almost *any* unfamiliar inlet at night. There have been a lot of boats lost on those sandbars, and the tidal current sweeping across the channel is every bit as big a problem as you say here. One thing I'd recommend... go in when the tide is approaching low, slow current, but don't go in if it's going to start running strong behind you. You do not want the current shoving you forward at 3 knots when you're trying to slow down! Ocracoke is a delightful island community and well worth the trip. No no no! It's horrible, very hot, lots of mosquitoes, and the natives keep trying to feed you this dead pig stuff they call "barbeque." In fact don't even come to North Carolina at all. ![]() Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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