Come on Folks! Time to get more subscribers onto Kevins channel. In a world largely disconnected from reality, this is the real deal and deserves our support...
One unique aspect of Kevin’s channel is his faith in his abilities and Ruth Avery’s abilities. Most RUclips sailors avoid heavy weather at all costs. I understand the importance of weather routing but some channels exercise so much caution that it limits their itinerary and limits their ability to progress in heavy weather techniques. Kevin’s faith in himself and his vessel make viewing videos like this extremely interesting and exciting
Thanks for that, sir. The Bermuda run in the fall is a tricky one indeed. Unless you have a very fast boat, it is difficult to manage without encountering some blustery weather.
I am not a youtuber but I also try to avoid any bad weather if possible. Lessons learned from my early days of sailing the early 90s queens day storm.. Where if it wasn't cyclone seasone you were good to go. Now days i sail in cyclone season with confidence too.
You gotta be able to endure and some of us don't have that much willpower. A man's gotta know his limitations, and Mother Nature's gotta test those limits.
cruising is all cocktails, sunny beaches and bikini's... Yeah right...exceptional seamanship can get you anywhere in anything... exquisite sailing Kevin...
Sailing out as winter approaches, on the back of a weather system in an engineless sailboat. Intelligent sailor, great seamanship and trust in the ship and her systems. Big hats off to you Kevin. This is old school tough.
Great video! Brazil is not what I expected, economically independent, growing all their own food, including coffee and cocoa, producing oil, having a self-sufficient mind set. This country has a future. Here is an anchorage (S12.58, W38.30) in Salvador off the Port Captain's Office, adjacent to a small marina, paying $100 per month, accessing all their facilities like showers and laundry service.
Awesome Chills to your bones and rigging worries and solutions... Good Stuff!! Stay away from those Fronts, if possible. Thanks for your "VV" (Vivid Video)
Nice recovery on the staysail halyard mate! If you pass through on your way home we can make a pilgrimage to the R&W warehouse and replenish the bosun's locker.
I’m watching this video at work as a machinist. I’m in South Florida and I had to turn my fan off as you were describing your freezing fingers, I was getting cold! I would absolutely love to live your life style. I’ve been sailing since I was nine and now I’m sixty seven. Sigh. It so wonderful seeing you living your awesome dream Kevin. Thank You for sharing your life with us. Stay warm and have fun!
Your video brought back memories of a November sail years ago on Long Island Sound in blustery conditions. Still have a memory of how cold and lonely it got once the sun went down. It was a relief to get the anchor down and warm up in the cabin. These days I restrict my sails to the warmer parts of the year. :)
Snow flakes sure adds to the sailing experience, but not enough to make up for the discomfort. Great video to watch from the coach. I've had my snow flakes sailing experience a few times, mostly when sailing the boat home after winter storage, but at that time im so happy that the boat is back in the water that i don't care too much. Good stuff Kevin. Best regards from Jarle
Thanks Jarle. Yeah, boats are not designed for winter cruising, drafty and not well insulated. Still there is a certain beauty to sailing in a snow shower.
Good to find this Channel, a Gnarly older Chap, enjoying some sailing in an older purposeful boat. I’ve got nothing against pretty young ladies and earnest young men, but they do get a bit precious at times. Just to say that a Prussic loop would have been easier and kinder on the Staysail Halyard and cheaper too, in the UK awe would call that type of purchase a Handy Billy. Good sailing!
Kevin. As an alternate fix to get 2 to 1 purchase on the replaced halyard you could raise the sail and cleat the replacement halyard to the pin rail. Then instead of repurposing the jammer from the Master Climber you could just have a short line on the handy billy which you attach to halyard above the pin rail with a rolling hitch. Then pull the handy billy tight against the rolling hitch.
Ignorant question from a newbie: if a gale was coming wouldn't it be best to let that blow through at anchor ?. Or is it that the Vineyard anchorage was going to be exposed ?.
I'm facing a transatlantic on my Cape Dory 27. Planning to do the Azores high route from Miami running the 1020 pressure without any weather maps. Departing Galveston in about two weeks.
cold fingers? I duckhunt in ice and wind sometimes. I use Glacier Fishing gloves from walmart and basspro. some have cut off finger tips- some dont. thin neoprene . not good for extreme cold but you can feel and work lines good . $20ish
Great opening sequence..the sinister green gray water doent let us forget what date it is. Hats off to you. Just a comment about your decison making and preparedness. Right on point..while others polish and make thier boat super shiny, you prapare for voyaging. The track record speaks for itself. Prepare, prevent and prevail. Fair winds.
Well, you must have made it somewhere...after all, I'm watching this video in the last week of March, 2024. Wish I could contribute money to your channel, Kevin, but at 81, with a lifetime of skimpy wages as a working sailor combined with poor planning, I have to hold everything pretty close. Hope you're somewhere warm with flat water and a cold drink...
Hah all trips to Bermuda are races. That little island lives in a bad weather neighborhood. Although I just got hit with a 63knot "blast front" in Exuma Bahamas so...I guess we are creating new weather terms
Come on Folks! Time to get more subscribers onto Kevins channel.
In a world largely disconnected from reality, this is the real deal and deserves our support...
Well, Shiver Me Timbers, I agree!
One unique aspect of Kevin’s channel is his faith in his abilities and Ruth Avery’s abilities. Most RUclips sailors avoid heavy weather at all costs. I understand the importance of weather routing but some channels exercise so much caution that it limits their itinerary and limits their ability to progress in heavy weather techniques. Kevin’s faith in himself and his vessel make viewing videos like this extremely interesting and exciting
Thanks for that, sir. The Bermuda run in the fall is a tricky one indeed. Unless you have a very fast boat, it is difficult to manage without encountering some blustery weather.
I am not a youtuber but I also try to avoid any bad weather if possible. Lessons learned from my early days of sailing the early 90s queens day storm.. Where if it wasn't cyclone seasone you were good to go. Now days i sail in cyclone season with confidence too.
You gotta be able to endure and some of us don't have that much willpower. A man's gotta know his limitations, and Mother Nature's gotta test those limits.
cruising is all cocktails, sunny beaches and bikini's... Yeah right...exceptional seamanship can get you anywhere in anything... exquisite sailing Kevin...
Sailing out as winter approaches, on the back of a weather system in an engineless sailboat. Intelligent sailor, great seamanship and trust in the ship and her systems. Big hats off to you Kevin. This is old school tough.
Thanks mate.
Great video! Brazil is not what I expected, economically independent, growing all their own food, including coffee and cocoa, producing oil, having a self-sufficient mind set. This country has a future. Here is an anchorage (S12.58, W38.30) in Salvador off the Port Captain's Office, adjacent to a small marina, paying $100 per month, accessing all their facilities like showers and laundry service.
Cool! Thanks for the updates. But you still have to leave after 3 months? Fair winds, Kevin
@@howtosailoceans1423 You get 180 days in Brazil, being 2 x 90 days. The EU is 1 x 90 days.
Always the very best in sailing content and know how to! Thank you Captain for taking the time to share with us all!!🙏💪❤️
The narrative portions are the best of the best - sailing, sailing, sailing.
Awesome Chills to your bones and rigging worries and solutions... Good Stuff!! Stay away from those Fronts, if possible. Thanks for your "VV" (Vivid Video)
The cold fronts really start flying through in November. You really just try to pick the milder ones over the strong ones.
Safe travels
I would love a diagram of how you fixed the halyard issue❤
Real sailing on a real boat. Fabulously done sir!
Nice recovery on the staysail halyard mate! If you pass through on your way home we can make a pilgrimage to the R&W warehouse and replenish the bosun's locker.
You sir are a true sailor. I live and sail in Nova Scotia and to sail in the North Atlantic at that time of year is no joke. Much respect!
I’m watching this video at work as a machinist. I’m in South Florida and I had to turn my fan off as you were describing your freezing fingers, I was getting cold! I would absolutely love to live your life style. I’ve been sailing since I was nine and now I’m sixty seven. Sigh. It so wonderful seeing you living your awesome dream Kevin. Thank You for sharing your life with us. Stay warm and have fun!
Thanks Paul. I'm actually here in Southern Florida just now (Biscayne Bay). Much warmer indeed.
The boon of downwind sailing in fresh wind!
creative jury rig on the halyard!
Great viewing as always! Such a matter of fact down to earth approach to whatever is thrown at you. Sail well sir!
Look on the bright side, your haylard could have snapped anytime under worst sea conditions!! Well done Kevin!
⛵️🇺🇲
You make it look easier than it is. Very professional. Thanks for posting
Thanks for stopping by, Scott. Happy Easter.
Your video brought back memories of a November sail years ago on Long Island Sound in blustery conditions. Still have a memory of how cold and lonely it got once the sun went down. It was a relief to get the anchor down and warm up in the cabin. These days I restrict my sails to the warmer parts of the year. :)
If that is your home, I suggest you go somewhere warm. By the time you get there, the Med will be fabulous for your health. Good luck.
Sailing in strong conditions, while not my preference, taught me about the true capabilities of my boat, and built my confidence. Great video
Snow flakes sure adds to the sailing experience, but not enough to make up for the discomfort. Great video to watch from the coach. I've had my snow flakes sailing experience a few times, mostly when sailing the boat home after winter storage, but at that time im so happy that the boat is back in the water that i don't care too much.
Good stuff Kevin. Best regards from Jarle
Thanks Jarle. Yeah, boats are not designed for winter cruising, drafty and not well insulated. Still there is a certain beauty to sailing in a snow shower.
Good to find this Channel, a Gnarly older Chap, enjoying some sailing in an older purposeful boat. I’ve got nothing against pretty young ladies and earnest young men, but they do get a bit precious at times. Just to say that a Prussic loop would have been easier and kinder on the Staysail Halyard and cheaper too, in the UK awe would call that type of purchase a Handy Billy. Good sailing!
Be safe you all
Fantastic stuff. Hardcore
Great job!
Halyard, good solution. I guess you could have done it with a Prussic.
I would have had a multi purchase downhaul.
Another great video. 🎉🎉🎉
Another great video Kevin i agree with comments re you deserve way more subscibers your a sailor on a real sailing boat
Thanks John. Happy Easter.
Great stuff
Excellent video in challenging conditions with very good explanations, thanks.
Yay🎉
Kevin. As an alternate fix to get 2 to 1 purchase on the replaced halyard you could raise the sail and cleat the replacement halyard to the pin rail. Then instead of repurposing the jammer from the Master Climber you could just have a short line on the handy billy which you attach to halyard above the pin rail with a rolling hitch. Then pull the handy billy tight against the rolling hitch.
That would work too.
I think you wrung the last bit of good weather out of New England and the Maritimes, Kevin. Well done! I trust you found more along the way?
Those weather windows are tough to find in the late fall/early winter. All in all it was a good passage to Bermuda.
Ignorant question from a newbie: if a gale was coming wouldn't it be best to let that blow through at anchor ?. Or is it that the Vineyard anchorage was going to be exposed ?.
Perhaps, but there was another system on the maps in about 6 days time, wanted to get to Bermuda before that. Plus directionwise the gale was fair.
I'm facing a transatlantic on my Cape Dory 27. Planning to do the Azores high route from Miami running the 1020 pressure without any weather maps. Departing Galveston in about two weeks.
Fair winds! All the best. By the averages you should have a pretty good sail along that route, during the early summer months.
cold fingers? I duckhunt in ice and wind sometimes. I use Glacier Fishing gloves from walmart and basspro. some have cut off finger tips- some dont. thin neoprene . not good for extreme cold but you can feel and work lines good . $20ish
Thanks for the recommendation! I'll check that out. I've yet to find decent gloves for cold weather which will still allow you to haul on lines.
And you can't even blame it on, "When the gales of November came early." In my previous life this would be called "pilot error". ;-)
Lol Patrick. Now get back to work with that GoPro so we can see what you're up to these days.
Hey Kevin, can one use topping lifts as lazy jacks?
Yes, actually the topping lifts on a gaffer naturally double as lazy jacks.
"Light gale" sounds impressive compared to "Strong breeze." But call it what you want, baby, its cold outside....
Boats are almost always stronger than their crew.
Great opening sequence..the sinister green gray water doent let us forget what date it is. Hats off to you.
Just a comment about your decison making and preparedness. Right on point..while others polish and make thier boat super shiny, you prapare for voyaging. The track record speaks for itself. Prepare, prevent and prevail. Fair winds.
Well, you must have made it somewhere...after all, I'm watching this video in the last week of March, 2024. Wish I could contribute money to your channel, Kevin, but at 81, with a lifetime of skimpy wages as a working sailor combined with poor planning, I have to hold everything pretty close. Hope you're somewhere warm with flat water and a cold drink...
I'm in Florida just now, John. Watching the vids and commenting helps the channel, so you're still contributing. Thanks.
Hah all trips to Bermuda are races. That little island lives in a bad weather neighborhood.
Although I just got hit with a 63knot "blast front" in Exuma Bahamas so...I guess we are creating new weather terms
Yikes, gust fronts. Hope the anchor held.
"Smooth seas never made a skilled sailor". And adverse conditions make for more interesting content, right?