Clarkston Washington, It’s on the map --- barely… Southeast corner of 
Washington State, 24 miles north of Oregon, touching the Idaho border.

 

JP

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Knowles Rich
Sent: Tuesday, August 13, 2013 6:09 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List A joy

 

Great story, JP. I may have missed this as I'm on a road trip, but can you post 
the coordinates of your final destination. Is it a yacht club or..?

 

Welcome to our little slice of madness. But we do have fun:)

 

Rich Knowles

INDIGO. LF38

Halifax. NS

 

From: "J.P." <ja...@jpiworldwide.com>

To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 13, 2013 12:26:47 PM
Subject: Stus-List A joy




Hi All,

 

I have never been a C&C owner until this past week. 

 

I recently purchased C&C 34 (1978)  s/v Gabriela from a fate worse than death… 
She had been consigned to a boat charity and was in a backwater boat slip in 
Seattle.. and was in some need of repair. I purchased the boat last week, and 
dismasted it in Seattle, and prepped her for trucking to Pasco Washington, 
where the Columbia and Snake rivers converge.

 

I had 3 days to check out the boat in Seattle and make the most needed repairs. 
She is powered with a Yanmar SGM30 (I think that’s the model) with 670 hours 
showing on the Hobbs meter, a folding prop, the original C&C sails and 9 more 
to boot. She had been some what known as a racer in the Puget Sound and 
actually has a couple of bronze plates on her inner bulkhead where she was 
award prizes for racing in the area in the 80’s … but had not been used much 
(from what I could tell) since about 2007-2008. The running rigging was in 
rough shape – so we redid a lot of that… put on some new dock lines, loaded it 
on a truck and sent it to Pasco. 

 

The goal was to run up river to a small town in Eastern Washington called 
“Clarkston”. This would be about a 104 mile UPRIVER run.  This would entail 
navigation among the barges, moving up 4 sets of locks, and enduring the heat 
of August in eastern  Washington (it often reaches 100+ degrees here. Also 
running up river is against a varying current depending on the season, rains, 
and shifting sand bars. Although I have done everything from coastal cruising, 
to blue water sailing to sailing on the Great lakes,  I have never done a river 
run on the Columbia and Snake rivers before.  

 

Besides the work entailed in moving through the lock system, the levels on the 
river change quite a bit. There are bridges that have very low clearances.. one 
is at 52 feet. 52 Feet if the water hasn’t risen. With the wind instruments and 
antenna, 52 feet seems pretty close.

 

We left the docks at Pasco and headed down the Columbia at noon on Saturday, 
then went into our first lock at 15:00. This was the Ice Harbor Lock and Dam. A 
cabin cruiser about 30’ -  was “mis tied” against the lock and almost turned 
turtle after getting caught on the side of the lock wall by swim platform. 
After that, we fired up the Yanmar and went on up river. Gabriela ran 
flawlessly and we got to Windust park by dark, just ahead of a thunderstorm. 
The cabin stayed dry and the boat rocked along at the dock in 40+mph winds. 

 

The next morning we moved on to the Lower Monumental Dam, and through Little 
Goose Dam and finally came to rest at the Byron marina just short of the Lower 
Granite Dam. Since this was my first C&C I was apprehensive about the whole 
process because of the river sand bars, and the feat of bringing a sailboat 
upriver into territory that was unfamiliar. Also there is very little in the 
way of any kinds of repair services along the route. I had spares of “critical 
pieces”… but still after having the boat only 2-3 days, and it being in 6-8 
YEARS of disarray, I was a tad nervous. 

 

Sitting at the tie off in Byron, reflecting on the day, the weather cooled down 
to 70 degrees at dusk, I was eating a sandwich and drinking a cold Coke…. The 
music was wafting up out of the cabin, and I realized the trip had been 
uneventful and pretty good so far. Settling down to sleep with a gentle rocking 
motion at the mooring, we watched a paddle wheel boat carrying a couple hundred 
tourist passengers, barges full of wheat from the harvest, and fisheries barges 
carrying “juvenile fish” to deposit in the river… We had seen huge rock 
outcroppings, deer, eagles, herons, cranes, huge fish breaking the water…

 

The next day we left early, transitted the lock at Lower Granite, and headed 
home. 

 

After tying off at the dock and securing the boat, (in about 100 degrees heat) 
I was washing down the decks, and these thoughts  occurred to me … the engine 
purred like a kitten (not one hiccup, running at 2850 RPM we produced hull 
speed at about .65 gallons per hour) , the boat was dry, and very comfortable. 
The tiller worked well with the little Simrad auto pilot, all the gauges worked 
(with a little twiddling on the wiring terminal blocks), the pressure water 
systems were perfect the boat slept well, handled well, and - every piece of it 
for being out of use for 5-7 years, were in a thought - far better than 
expected. 

 

In short, the trip was a joy in a good boat. I’m glad I bought a C&C.

 

JP 

 

Gabriela C&C 34

Clarkston Wa.


_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

Reply via email to