Loose Lines Sink Ships

Cries of Furies

Nonfiction, Travel, Canada, Western Canada, Adventure & Literary Travel, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Loose Lines Sink Ships by Dawn Kostelnik, Kobo
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Author: Dawn Kostelnik ISBN: 9781927812518
Publisher: Kobo Publication: May 9, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Dawn Kostelnik
ISBN: 9781927812518
Publisher: Kobo
Publication: May 9, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

…We streak (literally) towards the dock. Waves crash over us and the dock as we try to reach Audrey.

Grenville Channel, south of Prince Rupert, is deep, dark, long and narrow. Without a north wind, it is well protected. With the north wind a-blowing you are in a wind funnel from hell.

Fortunately there are no winds as we cruise down its narrow depths at the end of October. The fog has rolled in, covering the mountains and spilling over to fill the channels. Audrey’s twin Perkin diesel engines rumble in deep rhythm, the muffled sound echoes back off of the steep mountain walls. The fog parts just when we need it to. I am the bow rider, holding onto the short rail with my ears cocked for sounds of other muffled engines. If we come to an abrupt stop I will flip over the rail into the black water.

We are running with our radar on, but the radar does not see all. Wooden boats often place metal plates on masts or bows as a salute to the scanners that prefer to identify objects made of metal. Radar sometimes misses wooden boats.

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…We streak (literally) towards the dock. Waves crash over us and the dock as we try to reach Audrey.

Grenville Channel, south of Prince Rupert, is deep, dark, long and narrow. Without a north wind, it is well protected. With the north wind a-blowing you are in a wind funnel from hell.

Fortunately there are no winds as we cruise down its narrow depths at the end of October. The fog has rolled in, covering the mountains and spilling over to fill the channels. Audrey’s twin Perkin diesel engines rumble in deep rhythm, the muffled sound echoes back off of the steep mountain walls. The fog parts just when we need it to. I am the bow rider, holding onto the short rail with my ears cocked for sounds of other muffled engines. If we come to an abrupt stop I will flip over the rail into the black water.

We are running with our radar on, but the radar does not see all. Wooden boats often place metal plates on masts or bows as a salute to the scanners that prefer to identify objects made of metal. Radar sometimes misses wooden boats.

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