And Back to the Chesapeake – Day 31
Last night I was going back and forth in my mind do we go
tomorrow or do we stay here and extra day.
I was looking a weather reports some of which were showing winds as high
as 42 mph today and this evening, and other weather reports showing wind gusts
in the 25 mph range. Of course rain was
a given, with possible thunderstorms. I’m
thinking we can go in the rain, and we’ve handled wind of 25 mph, so why not
go. But the other source was showing
strong gusts that would be very difficult to deal with on a boat, or on land
for that matter. We got up early this
morning planning to leave at 7:00. I
went for a walk on the dock to check things out; it was calm and fairly warm
for that early in the morning. I’m
thinking it’s not bad, maybe we can go.
So I went back inside and rechecked the weather to see what was in store
for Norfolk, our destination. I started
reading weather reports about severe weather with damaging winds, possible
hail, thunderstorms and maybe tornados later in the day for northeast North
Carolina and Southeastern Virginia.
Exactly where we are and where we are going. So at 6:45 I told Jan we’re staying put. Of course she says something like,” well, you
could have told me that while I was in bed.”
Of course she was all dressed and ready to go so going back to bed was
out of the question. A couple of boats
that were here last night actually did go, and for part of the morning I was
second guessing myself. The weather was
overcast, but quite calm. Then about
11:00 it started to rain and lightning.
I didn’t really hear much thunder, but I could see the light
flashing. I thought maybe this was the
right choice. I sat down and looked at
the radar online and noticed that Norfolk was getting hammered, much worse than
we were here. Not where I would want to
be. The rain continued into the
afternoon then started to clear up for a while.
So we just hung out and sat on the back deck for a little while.
Later we mosied over to the restaurant for dinner but sat
there hearing the high pitched tone of weather alerts every so often. Eventually the dockmaster came by and told
us, as well as other boat operators in the restaurant that tornado warnings had
been issued and he was expecting a blow in an hour to two. It would be prudent to add a couple more
lines to hold the boat. So we went back
to the boat, doubled up lines fore and aft, and added an additional spring line. We also cleared all items that could blow
around and cause damage, and although the dinghy on the hardtop was already
strapped down, we added another line to hold it in the cradle. Hopefully all this will be sufficient. We’ll see when the blow comes through. After we were finished, we checked the
weather and alerts on the computer. They
had a mariners warning and alert issued for all the areas around Norfolk
including Willoughby Bay where we were going to anchor for the night. High winds and possible waterspouts-tornados
on the water. The alert was urging
mariners to seek safe harbor. In other
words it would be dangerous being out there.
Not where I want to be, so it seems staying here the extra day was the
prudent thing to do. Stay tuned.
Well I think we are through the worst of it. The boat blew around a bit then the rain and
lightning started. It rained pretty hard
for about 15 minutes then you could hear pieces of hail hitting the windshield and
decks, then all of a sudden the rain just stopped. There was still some lightning and thunder,
but I think the worst is over for today.
I guess it’s almost time to go to bed.
Tomorrow will be an early morning again.
We have to make up some of what we lost today. I believe it will be an 85 mile day instead
of a 65 mile day. Plus, the wind is
supposed to be back again tomorrow. That should make moving up the Chesapeake
Bay fun.
So boys and girls, until we have internet again……
P.S. Hi Tyler