Saturday, 25 June 2022

Canada Cruising June 13 - June 20, 2022

June 13    We woke up to calm seas and a pull of the crab pots yielded us 4 more keepers so Crab boil tonight – with Louisiana Crab seasoning, Potatoes, Brats and Corn – a real feast!  We headed over to Shearwater today – Diane needs to go get her eye checked out at the emergency room.  She has had double vision or blurry vision since last Wednesday so it’s a good idea for her to get looked at since we will be somewhere with a clinic. The rest of us will do grocery shopping, dump garbage, some will fill up with fuel and some of us will just top off our tenders since the plan is to not be back by here for 20 days.  Diane got checked out and it was decided that she needs to fly home to Seattle since they have limited equipment available here to figure out what is going on with her vision. We spent the afternoon on the boats in nice weather and our Seafood boil was fantastic! We anchored just off Shearwater and enjoyed a calm evening at anchor.

June 14 -  A bit of a fire drill as Diane’s flight is delayed until 5:30 which means she would miss her connecting flight to Seattle.  After many phone calls it was decided that she should go to the airport anyhow since there was another flight she might be able to go standby on.  In the end a wonderful Canadian gave up his seat on a Canadian Fishing Charter flight and she left this afternoon at 2:00 in time for her Alaska flight. That is the hardest part about being remote on boats – when something like this comes up it adds additional challenges.   Once Diane was on her way home we left Shearwater at about 3:00 for Moss Bay – about a 3 hour cruise to Blair Inlet.

 

June 15 -16 – We went to the entrance to Higgins Passage where we spent two days exploring the ocean beaches – its amazing how much stuff ends up on the beaches here. We also explored the Inner Lagoon in the small boats – it was huge.  We saw our first Sandhill Cranes near the narrows. 

 The Lagoon becomes connected to the outside on a high tide so we had to wait to leave in the big boats until almost 3:30 so we could transit thru the lagoon. The other option is to go back the way we came and make a very huge detour to get to our next stop. As you can see from the chart it shows that the Lagoon is landlocked but that is not correct.  The Guys had charted our path thru the Lagoon the night before with the small boats and it is a know transit area at the correct tides – we had 2 sailboats that also waited to go thru the Lagoon.




















 The Lagoon becomes connected to the outside on a high tide so we had to wait to leave in the big boats until almost 3:30 so we could transit thru the lagoon. The other option is to go back the way we came and make a very huge detour to get to our next stop. As you can see from the chart it shows that the Lagoon is landlocked but that is not correct.  The Guys had charted our path thru the Lagoon the night before with the small boats and it is a known transit area at the correct tides – we had 2 sailboats that also waited to go thru the Lagoon.

 





 

 

June 17 – 18 –Via Higgins Lagoon, we moved the boats to Cann Inlet and we found lots of Shrimp!  Steve and Tom took the Grady out and came back with the first fish of the trip- Cod and Rockfish. This Inlet is in the Kitasoo Spirit Bear Conservancy so we went on a tour looking for Spirit Bears but only found Waterfalls!







June 19-20 – We left Cann Inlet and went thru Meyers Passage to Meyers Narrows which is kelp filled and with our lowest depth of 4.8 ft and less than 0.1  mile wide. This passage moved us from Laredo Sound to Tolmie Channel, Finlayson Channel which has depths over 2000 feet to our Anchorage for the night in Bottleneck Inlet.  This is one of the Inlets that is closed to crabbing so the guys headed out in the small boats to drop pots in Wallace Bight

   .  We left in the morning of the 20th in the rain headed for Culpepper Lagoon which is in the Fiordland Recreational Area.  We need to enter at high-water slack. We use the Douglass books for information about the places we go even though it was published over 20 years ago! We have found it to have the best information except when it comes to where to find gas, food, etc. Some of the places in the book no longer exist but from the landscape perspective they are great! The one we are referencing for this trip is the North Coast of British Columbia – Blunden Harbour to Dixon Entrance. The nice thing about the rain is the waterfalls are more dramatic when it is raining! We are transiting thru Finlayson Channel and even though we are close to shore it is over 30 Feet Deep!

   We ended the day with a cruise up the Lard Creek at the head of Culpepper Lagoon and had a wonderful encounter with a Grizzly Bear walking along the creek on a very well used game trail!


                                    Tom and Chris Miner and Miner's Debt



                                      Dave and Jane Mehlum on Bidarka
                                    











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