Classic Boat – June 2019

(Marcin) #1

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CLASSIC BOAT JUNE 2019


THE CRUISE OF THE MAGIC


Above l-r: Delivery crewman Ben Zartman uses the sextant instead of GPS; a well-oiled taffrail log; a wahoo in the Gulf stream made for excellent sashimi


Opposite clockwise


from top: Charlotte


enjoys the bosun’s


chair while


Anneliese looks for


coral heads en route


to Highbourne Cay;


Charlotte explores


the mangrove


lagoon at Shroud


Cay in the Exuma


Land and Sea Park


on Magic’s Slipper,


a plywood


Shellback dinghy;


the famed


swimming pigs in


the central Exumas;


sunsets on the


shallow Bahamas


banks were


consistently


spectacular; still


warm but wet


reaching after


a cold front, Kara


keeps an eye on


the auto pilot


sand banks to the creek’s mouth. We shipped the lug


rig and rowed quietly, gliding with the tide as the girls


whispered “It’s a turtle. There’s another one!”


The GoPro was eagerly deployed underwater as we


rowed alongside turtle after turtle, some barely the size


of a serving platter. Mini eagle rays ghosted by and the


shallows along the edge of mangrove roots gave a lesson


in island building and an illustration of the food chain.


The last turn revealed a steep limestone edge and then


a wide, tourist office view of the deep blue sea. Protected


by a bright, white sand bar, we had our lunch, claimed this


empty coast as our own, then hoisted sail and chased


nimble little sea turtles all the way back. We’d done it.


LIVING WITH MAGIC


For the last three summers, we have shuttled our family


of five to beaches and dockside icecream shacks solely by


wind or muscle. All can sail the dinghy solo and all can


take an oar. There’s a reef in the lug sail on Magic’s Slipper,


and the girls giggle at the wake, even when momma and


papa get wide-eyed in a puff. These nautical abilities, and


the planning and piloting skills our full-keeled schooner


have taught us, allowed us the experience in Shroud Cay.


It was an indescribable feeling of accomplishment for all


of us. And life aboard Magic has been a series of those


same feelings.


She is everything you would want an old schooner


to be: salty and curvy with heavily raked, spruce masts,


typical of the pilot schooner type. Influenced by George


Steers, designer of America, and John Alden among other


great American naval architects, West Coast amateur


designer Craig Johnsen designed Magic to sail the Pacific


with his wife Vicky. He was mentored by Californian Lyle


Hess, most notable for designing two gaff cutters for


globetrotting sailing authors Lin and Larry Pardey.


Magic’s marriage of performance and ergonomics allow


her simple rig and manual systems to work harmoniously


for months on end at the hands of willing near-purists. In


Seraffyn and Taleisin, Hess gave the Pardeys a means of


exploring the world without an engine and with frugal


attitudes. Their books are bibles for the simple life at sea


and Magic is the legatee of those two plank-on-frame boats.


Built in 1993 of cold-moulded Western red cedar veneers


in West System epoxy, she’s not heavy at 10.4 tonnes


and is just shy of 40ft (12.2m) on deck. Her bilges carry


Magic, with her block and tackle, loose-footed gaff


foresail, fresh- and raw-water galley foot pumps, manual


windlass and sun showers, ingrained in us a thoughtful


process. Routine and planning saw us through days of


effortless sailing. The family was always busy, tanned


and fit – and most importantly, happy.


WHERE THERE’S A WILL


All the hot spots were on our Bahamas itinerary,


including seeing the iguanas at Allen’s Cay, the sunken


drug-running plane at Norman’s Cay and the swimming


pigs at Big Major’s Spot. But our family has refined its


exploration skills on the sweetest salt marshes of New


England. We love creeks. Since they could walk, our three


daughters have peered curiously at minnows, clams and


whole ecosystems scooped up in clear, plastic cups. I sadly


let go of Shroud Cay’s creek, worried I could force a bad


situation trying to make this elusive expedition happen.


I sailed Magic with two friends to Nassau without


a hitch, in two stages, during the fall of 2017. Family


adventure number one, over Christmas, saw us revelling


in moderate trade winds and a colourful underwater


world that had even the five-year-old fighting for a dive


mask. My wife Kara and I were getting the hang of the


essential sight navigation skills needed to avoid razor


sharp, and concrete-hard coral heads. But wind and


tides kept us away from Shroud Cay’s famous creek.


Stepping onto the dry, Alaskan yellow cedar deck one


warm, sunny morning last spring on the Bahama banks,


I stared for a bit at a diminutive starfish on the bottom.


Our three daughters were still rolling sleepily behind


their lee cloths when I looked at the yellow and brown


limestone and coral edge of Shroud Cay. Half tide.


The only way our family could make the notable


one-mile passage across the Cay to the white sand beach


on the ocean side was to time the tide perfectly. Row the


outgoing tide lazily through the twisting waters to the


ocean and sail the trades back with the incoming tide,


reversing our effortless passage with a nice snack break


in between. The tide was falling and it was 8.30am.


“Pick a bathing suit,” I yelled down the companionway.


“We gotta go!” Despite some protests and a few


authoritative “trust me” responses, we loaded up our


clinker-built Shellback dinghy, Magic’s Slipper and sailed


the two miles upwind across lemon- and lime-coloured

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