I'm eagerly awaiting the chance to go pickup our new-to-us Catalina 22 in a couple weeks. In the meantime, I found myself overly eager to get out on the water, so I dragged my old dinghy out, finished glassing in the new transom that I started two years ago (it only took about 2 hours to finish, plus curing time), bought an electric motor and loaded up the truck.
(To interject, sorry, I'm not brave enough to take my digital camera out on the dingy just yet, so use your imagination)
Monday, I took my dinghy up to the large ramp in Portland, OR on the Columbia near the airport. Pulled all the gear out of my 10' Columbia dinghy, gave it a push off the back of my little toyota truck and-promptly deposited two gallons of water that ran in over the bow as it landed. Oops.
Ok, it's not that much water, and it ran into the bilge. Whatever, it's 2pm and I'm itchin' to get on the water. Installed the Minn Kota electric on the stern, dropped two older car batteries (stay tuned...) that I had handy and charged in the stern, dropped in my bag-o-goodies, check that the oars were indeed fastened in their chocks, verified there was indeed a dinghy anchor attached to my new rode and hopped in.
In the meantime, three other boats have launched. Did I mention I'm real efficient on this whole setup thing? One the boats was a large, black special forces looking RIB with a Big Ol' Outboard. I'm thinking, hey, that's kinda cool. Then I look up at the two guys who're standing by the open doors of their privately owned pickup and pulling on what looked like some kind of lite version of a camo survival suit. Backpacks well packed with gear go into black rubber sleeves, launch is VERY coordinated. The whole thing really does scream of SEAL's...Jokingly, I ask one of the guys "So, you hunting birds, or people?" He looks at me, very seriously, then says "Neither," and goes back to launching. Who knows what these guys were up to, but it wasn't just fishing...
Back to the cruising. I untie the docklines, kick the moter up to it's highest setting and buzz out of the launch area, emerging into the main channel of the Columbia in my 10' plastic dinghy with ~14" of clearance to the gunnels. No problems so far.
Heading downstream, I try out the different motor settings and settle on 3 to stetch my batteries. For exercise, I break out the oars and row part of the way. About half a mile downstream is an island. One side is the main channel, the other is the harbor. Heading into the harbor, I spend some time exploring various marinas, ooohing and aaahing at various boats. My wife calls, says she's in town and will meet me for lunch at a floating cafe we like at our old marina. She'll be a while so, I continue downstream past the cafe to explore some more.
Uh oh. I'm rowing around, checking things out, admiring the Osprey chicks and enjoying the day. It's time to head back to the cafe to meet my wife. Turning into the current, I bring the motor up to it's highest setting to make some speed and, a hundred yards in, the motor slows waaayyy down. Huh, guess what everyone says about using deep cycle batteries is true. Car batteries suck. Good news, the wind is at my back. Running with the moter on it's lowest setting to help things along, I break out the oars and make my way to the cafe, probably a quarter mile. Woohoo! The sign at the dock (the NEW sign, I might add) says: "No Dinghies." My wife asks if I can park there anyway, hey no problem. In fact, come around the side here, you'll fit perfectly. Great, I'm hungry!
Some fish and chips and an hour of conversation later, then it's off to Sexton's Chandlery for a new battery. While I there, I pick up some new bronze oar sockets to replace the plastic falling apart ones on the boat. Back to the marina, a quick battery change (the old ones go home with my wife) and I'm back on the river again. Wow! This deep cycle battery gives me another 30-40% of thrust. Guess those old car batteries really did suck, huh?
Heading upstream, I anchor out off of the wilderness end of the island, read a while and drink a couple Reeds gingerale, then it's out in to the main channel. The wind has been kicking up for the evening breeze, but my little dinghy does great. The bow has a scoop underneath, so as long as weight is distributed to the rear, it'll ride up over some impressive chop without picking up any water. I'm out in the middle of the Columbia when the local regatta fires up. Someone in China must have hit that switch that doesn't seem to do anything, because in the space of 5 minutes I go from being the only boat on the river to being in the middle of probably twenty Melges 24's, Hunter 22's, San Juan 21's as well as a number of random older cruising styles in the 30-40 foot range. This is the racing fleet. In addition, there's a few folks in cruising boats just heading upstream in the midst of this.
I had great fun dodging and admiring over the next hour, had a real nice phone conversation with my dad while the dinghy drove itself upstream once I got out of the regatta area, then headed in.
Repairing the dinghy: ~$60 in West System epoxy and cloth.
Buying motor, new battery, oar sockets, anchor, etch: ~$250.
Experiencing "true" cruising - (Fixing your boat in new and interesting places) - Priceless!
(Actually, it was a great outing. low 70's, cloudy skies so very little sunburn and great views of the river and a bunch of other boats.)