After six weeks or so we have made it back to Williamsburg, VA. It was a wonderful trip despite lots of rain, storms, and fog. I would like to thank everybody who gave advice on gear, system requirements, and cruising in New England. Everything worked extremely well and after six weeks on the high seas I'm not sure I would change much of anything. I think we are in pretty good shape for our upcoming Bahama's trip. Just so this isn't a really long post I'll break the trip up into a few segments.
The boat is a 1979 C&C 40 in excellent shape. These boats are designed as a fast racer / cruiser.
Segment 1 -- Wormley Creek Marina -- Yorktown, VA to Newport, RI
Crew for this segment includes my friends Dan and Amy Fox and my wife Denise -- all experienced racing sailors.
We left the lower end of the Chesapeake Bay during a storm and other than a few hours here and there we sailed in or near storms the whole way up. Seas ran from 3 to 5 at the low end to 5 to 8 at the high end. Winds averaged around 20 knots on the port quarter or beam except during storms when the wind was in the low to mid 30's and could be from any direction. We had to pass Fire Island twice on the way up because we got crushed ( very very high winds ) by a nasty thunderstorm line which drove us 14 miles due South before it blew past us -- The previous day we got blown 15 miles in towards the shore and ended up a few hundred yards off the entrance bouys to Barnegat Bay) The boat has real time NEXRAD color weather radar overlayed on a big Garmin 3210 chartplotter. This allowed us to avoid the worst of the storms but there were so many of them we still got caught a few times.
The rhumb line distance to Newport, RI was right around 400 miles ( although we probably covered closer to 450 ) and we made it in 2 days and 19 hours. Denise set the speed record during the 3am to 6am watch on the second day. When I came up on deck to relieve her it was blowing right at 25 knots and she had all the sails up plus the engine at full cruise. She said that this setup allowed here to skip the boat along the wave tops rather than get bogged down in the troughs. Average speed for her three hour watch -- 9.7 knots. Watches were 4 hours each during the days and 3 hours each at night.
It was impossible to get any photo's during storms but I was able to get a few either right before or right after a front hit us.




Racing along at dawn the first morning after a stormy night...

The Crew...

Dan's wife Amy proved to be very tough out there on the high seas...



We arrived in Newport Harbor right at dawn but here's a shot from later that day...

Our mooring ball at the Ida Lewis Yacht Club was in the New York Yacht Clubs front yard.

Yacht Club members can stay as guests of the Ida Lewis Yacht Club. $60 bucks a night gets you unlimited use of their launch and driver plus run of the club, showers, bar, etc.

I'll put up some pictures of the next segment soon.
George Jones