| "Do you see how windy it is out there?" 
                            asked my wife as I prepared to throw off the dock 
                            lines. Yes, I had seen the white caps marching across 
                            Pamlico Sound and that is exactly why I was going 
                            sailing. I had launched my John Welsford-designed 
                            Pathfinder 
                            "Spartina" earlier in the summer and it 
                            looked like I had finally found a chance to sail the 
                            yawl under jib and mizzen in a nice little squall. 
                             
                              |  | We were on our 
                                  annual vacation down in Ocracoke Island, N.C., 
                                  one of the more remote spots on the Outer Banks. |  We were on our annual vacation down in Ocracoke Island, 
                            N.C., one of the more remote spots on the Outer Banks. 
                            We had been visiting the island for over a decade, 
                            staying at a nice little house on a canal leading 
                            to the sound. Two kids, four bikes, boogie boards, 
                            some nice bottles of wine and a stack of books. It 
                            was a family vacation, not a sailing trip. But I did 
                            get to spend plenty of time out on the water. 
                             
                              | Ocracoke is a quiet, 
                                isolated island reachable only by ferry. 
                                We came from our Chesapeake, Va. home by way of 
                                the Outer Banks towns of Nags Head, Kill Devil 
                                Hills and Kitty Hawk, then taking the Bonner Bridge 
                                over to Hatteras Island. | 
 |  Ocracoke is mostly known for the pirate Blackbeard 
                            and 13 miles white, sandy beaches. A 1823 lighthouse 
                            looks out over Silver Lake Harbor and the surrounding 
                            village. Once a working waterfront for commercial 
                            crabbers and fishermen, it is now a vacation spot 
                            with a handful of hotels and more than a hundred "cottages" 
                            for rent. It is a quiet, isolated island reachable 
                            only by ferry. We came from our Chesapeake, Va. home 
                            by way of the Outer Banks towns of Nags Head, Kill 
                            Devil Hills and Kitty Hawk, then taking the Bonner 
                            Bridge over to Hatteras Island. At the southern end 
                            of Hatteras we caught the free 40 minute ferry ride 
                            to Ocracoke. From the ferry docks it is about 12 more 
                            miles to the village at the southern end of the island. 
                           
                             
                              |  | Eventually the 
                                  rain moved on and the breeze slackened. I raised 
                                  the main with a single reef in place and continued 
                                  sailing. |  It was midweek when I spotted the white caps out 
                            on the sound. I motored down the canal and out in 
                            to Pamlico Sound, raised the mizzen and then the jib. 
                            And I was off sailing, perfectly under control. It 
                            was shallow water in that spot so I raised the cb 
                            a bit and still sailed to the windward very nicely. 
                            After about 20 minutes the rain came. No lightening 
                            or thunder, so why worry about it? I tacked back and 
                            forth in to the stiff wind, working between Ocracoke 
                            to the east and Howard's Reef, marked by a line of 
                            crab pot markers, to the west. Into the wind, or downwind, 
                            I felt very pleasantly in control. Eventually the 
                            rain moved on and the breeze slackened. I raised the 
                            main with a single reef in place and continued sailing. 
                            It was a real treat to the out there. 
                             
                              | In the harbor I 
                                tacked back and forth under the old lighthouse, 
                                watching the watermen and fishing guides head 
                                out for a day on the water. | 
 |  For most days of the vacation I was heading down 
                            the canal before dawn, raising sails as the sun crept 
                            up behind the cloud banks to the east. I would get 
                            in a two or three hour sail before the rest of the 
                            family was up and running (it was vacation for them 
                            after all). One morning I sailed out to a spoil island 
                            a few miles out in to the sound. I cut a good mile 
                            off the trip a by raising my cb and sneaking over 
                            a shoal in to the deep, well marked channel leading 
                            past the island. As I got closer I found I was tacking 
                            in to both the wind and the current, a nice little 
                            challenge for an early morning sail. Eventually reaching 
                            the island I heard the protests of screeching birds 
                            that used the spot as a rookery. I came about, cruised 
                            back down the channel, and jump over the shoal and 
                            sailed back to our house. Other mornings I would sail 
                            around to Silver Lake harbor. The entrance there is 
                            narrow, with rock jetties on either side. I found 
                            I struggled a bit getting in to the harbor as a copse 
                            of trees blocked the wind at the narrowest point. 
                            I think I could have made it in under sail eventually, 
                            but since I had to share the narrow channel with the 
                            large car ferries I opted to crank up the outboard 
                            and get in to harbor as quickly as possible. In the 
                            harbor I tacked back and forth under the old lighthouse, 
                            watching the watermen and fishing guides head out 
                            for a day on the water. 
                             
                              |  |  I put Spartina 
                                  through the paces, tacking and jibing; learning 
                                  how to sail with a mizzen. |  After a morning with the family at the beach the 
                            wife and daughters would take an afternoon walk in 
                            to the village for some ice cream. I would head out 
                            on the boat once again. The winds usually seemed strongest 
                            mid-afternoon. I would put Spartina through the paces; 
                            tacking and jibing, learning how to sail with a mizzen. 
                            Much of the time I sailed with the cb partially raised, 
                            and found that she sailed very well. A few times I 
                            did find the bottom with the 100 lb steel plate cb. 
                            A "shooshing" noise would tell me that the 
                            cb was nosing its way in to sand and mud bottom. A 
                            quick turn on the winch raised the board a few inches 
                            and on I went. 
                             
                              | After dinner it 
                                was time for a family time. A short sail followed 
                                by anchoring and then a sunset swim was just right 
                                for everybody. | 
 |  After dinner it was time for a family time. A short 
                            sail followed by anchoring and then a sunset swim 
                            was just right for everybody. The sunsets were spectacular, 
                            and off in the distant we would see the "pirate" 
                            charter schooner Windfall taking that evening's passengers 
                            out on for a sail.  
                             
                              |  | I can't say 
                                  enough good things about sailing down off of 
                                  Ocracoke. Plenty of wind and lots of sunshine, 
                                  perfect for a small boat. |  I can't say enough good things about sailing down 
                            off of Ocracoke. Plenty of wind and lots of sunshine, 
                            perfect for a small boat. The issue for larger boats 
                            is the skinny water, but with a centerboard and shallow 
                            draft, plus a little common sense, it is not a problem. 
                            I hope to be back down there for some more sailing, 
                            maybe with a boom tent and plans for some extended 
                            cruising.  
                             
                              | The Pathfinder 
                                is solid, spacious and easy to handle. I feel 
                                very comfortable sailing her by myself, but I've 
                                also sailed with four people on board and found 
                                her to be very comfortable. | 
 |  I also can't say enough good things about the Pathfinder 
                            design. I spent about 18 months building my Spartina, 
                            she replaced a Devlin designed Nancy's China that 
                            my Dad and I had built almost 20 years ago. I'm not 
                            a woodworker by any means; skills were picked up on 
                            the job. Spartina has a work-boat finish, nothing 
                            fancy there. But the hull is true to John's design, 
                            and very solid. That was the goal for the boat. The 
                            Pathfinder is solid, spacious and easy to handle. 
                            I feel very comfortable sailing her by myself, but 
                            I've also sailed with four people on board and found 
                            her to be very comfortable. I'm still learning to 
                            use the mizzen, but it makes more and more sense as 
                            I go along. Plenty of dry storage and positive flotation 
                            add the secure feeling of the design. The gaff-rigged 
                            yawl, with bird's mouth masts and spar that my Dad 
                            and I made, draw the attention of a lot of folks out 
                            on the water. 
                             
                              |  | The gaff-rigged 
                                  yawl, with bird's mouth masts and spar that 
                                  my Dad and I made, draw the attention of a lot 
                                  of folks out on the water. |  I believe the safety and comfort of Spartina will 
                            expand my sailing horizons. The sounds of North Carolina, 
                            the Chesapeake Bay, maybe even the coast of the Gulf 
                            of Mexico. I can't wait to find out where this boat 
                            will take me. 
  
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