My Lake Powell story in last year's 
      Duckworks highlighted the one upgrade I felt my 20' Tolman skiff needed: a 
      four-cycle outboard to replace the noisy, thirsty (but reliable) Suzuki 
      two-cycle.   The 100hp Yamaha I chose weighs as much as the two 
      Suzukis (85/9.9) I replaced, so I mounted the new 8hp kicker flat on the 
      deck behind the seats in order to keep additional weight off the transom.   
      In 45 years of mechanical fiddling, I've never enjoyed such a happy!  
      Quiet, thrifty, and with a feeling of complete mechanical reliability, the 
      Yamaha transformed the Tolman from a VW Microbus to a Porsche 911.  
      If you travel in an outboard-powered boat and are thinking of making the 
      jump to one of the new 4-cycles, don't hesitate.  But on to the 
      Canadian Gulf Islands. 
       
      Less well known to American boaters than the San Juans, the Gulf Islands 
      are more numerous, larger and cover a bigger area than the San Juans. 
      Amazingly, we spoke with lots of American boaters in the San Juans who 
      have never crossed the border due to unfamiliarity with Canadian Customs 
      procedures!   This is a shame because the Gulf Islands are far 
      less crowded, more remote, and the exchange rate makes you feel guilty 
      when paying for a great meal or moorage at any of the wonderful marinas. 
      Well,  almost guilty.   Anyway, some thoughts on the 
      Canadian Gulf Islands: 
       
      VICTORIA:  While south of the actual 
      Gulf Islands, Victoria is a glorious port to visit.  I'd always 
      wanted to moor in front of the grand old Empress Hotel, but was told upon 
      arrival that the docks were stuffed--stuffed until I told them I was 
      piloting a 20' powerboat, at which time the port authority told me to pull 
      to the inside of the first dock and tie off.  A couple of young 
      sweeties helped us into a snug berth and did the paper work, and we spent 
      a wonderful afternoon exploring.  Between the air traffic, huge 
      yachts, old wooden boats and speedy RIB whale-watching boats, Victoria is 
      a mariner's feast. 
       
      SIDNEY:  Adjacent to the Victoria 
      Airport and north of Victoria, Sidney is the entrance to the Gulf Islands 
      and boasts the most spectacular marina we visited.  Sidney and 
      Bedwell Harbor on East Pender Island are the most popular customs clearing 
      points when coming in from the USA. 
       
      SALTSPRING ISLAND:  The largest island 
      in the entire archipelago, Saltspring has several wonderful harbors.  
      Ganges is the most picturesque in the entire area.  If you were to be 
      weathered in anywhere in the Gulf Islands and left to entertain yourself 
      while a typical two-day low blew through, this is the spot you'd want to 
      be. 
       
      TIDE RIPS/CURRENTS: Huge volumes of water 
      fight to get in and out from behind Vancouver Island with every tide.  
      This creates sometimes-violent tidal currents at pinch points and openings 
      between islands.  The geography of the Gulf Islands is NW to SE with 
      the outer Island creating a shield, broken in three major places, between 
      the protected inner islands and the more open Strait of Georgia and the 
      Mainland/Vancouver City to the east.    North to South, 
      these major openings are Gabriola Pass, Porlier Pass and Active Pass.  
      These passages, along with Dodd Narrows adjacent to the Gulf Island's 
      northernmost city of Naniamo, should be approached by skippers of 
      displacement hull/slow craft with caution and at slack tide.  Active 
      Pass adds the thrill of large, fast-moving ferryboats in confined 
      waterways. 
       
      HAZARDS/NAVIGATION:  We saw both a 
      sailboat and a powerboat up on the rocks and, unlike my little skiff, both 
      were large enough to support a large navigation station.   
      Canada's official charts, in addition to being beautiful, are expensive.  
      The Canadian Government does not hand them out to companies wishing to 
      make cheap guide books.  You've got to pay for them, and pay you 
      should since there are lots of hazards up there.  This ain't lake 
      boatin'.  I crossed closely behind a fast-moving, unladen ocean-going 
      tug to find the biggest wake I'd ever seen.  My wife and I were 
      pleasantly surprised by the Tolman's willingness to cork over the top.  
      Not so happy were the folks beside us in the bowrider!  A local told 
      me that the wake behind a nuclear submarine is far more exciting.  I 
      guess this is what you call "local knowledge."  Additionally, if 
      running a planing hull boat, two sets of eyes are needed at all times to 
      spot debris in the water--some of it trip-ending debris! 
       
      SEASON:  Locals say summer doesn't start 
      up there until July 1st. You'll talk to lots of locals who will describe 
      "windows" of good weather both earlier and late into the fall.  Don't 
      believe them if you are driving more than three hours to get there. 
       
      Perhaps more important than any of this is the welcome you get from your 
      Canadian hosts when they find out you've traveled a long way to visit 
      their corner of the world.  Even captaining the smallest boat in the 
      harbor, my wife and I never felt anything but welcome.  Need a hand 
      securing lines, finding a place to dock, a bit of information about local 
      conditions?  It was always forthcoming.  Over seven days and 550 
      miles of running around Canada's Gulf Islands, the only unspoken 
      undercurrent we got from our fellow boaters was the look in the eyes of 
      captains of vastly bigger boats wondering if perhaps we were having more 
      fun than they were. | 
      
      
        
      North Seas Trawler |