Completed trip through North Channel, Canada

wahoo33417

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Blind River to Bruce Mines.
Thought about stopping at Thessalon, which is 9 miles closer than Bruce Mines and would be someplace new.

But Bruce Mines has that little hotel and restaurant adjacent and I could enjoy a rest day.

Also, Bruce Mines is very close to a more protected route back to DeTour, my destination to clear US Customs.

Blind River has similar bear stories, so was up early looking again. No luck. So back to instant coffee and cereal under the moon
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At least there is a warming trend
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Only a few islands as we leave Blind River, then it’s mostly open water while avoiding a few submerged rocks that are well marked on the charts
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Gets a bit bumpy with no islands around
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A look back at the coming sunrise.
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wahoo33417

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Continuing on from Blind River to Bruce Mines.

Kinda scary. That white is a blanket of fog over the land. Hope the water is cold enough to keep fog off. Running through my head what I would do if caught in a fog out here. Not much to do but idle along and follow protocol on horn and VHF. And hope others do the same. But I see 1 or 2 boats a day.

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Sunrise coming up over some of the fog.
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Get a few islands near Bruce Mines that give a smoother ride.
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Tied up at Bruce Mines City Marina. Will spend two nights in adjacent little motel. Looking forward to a rest day, a real bed, hot shower and real coffee.
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wahoo33417

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Rest day in Bruce Mines was mostly rain and T-storms. Lucky to have chosen that as a rest day in a motel.
Tomorrow is forecast to be winds NW at 10 with light rain and T-storms ending early morning.
So I adjust my route to DeTour to hug the east side of some big islands, hoping to knock down the W component of the wind.

Up at 4 am, but had to wait an hour beyond usual go time to let last T-storm pass. After that looked like scattered light rain

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Don’t usually, but had on more layers than I can count, so had to take a selfie. Only nine miles of open water after leaving Bruce Mines and then into islands
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somewhere in there is the small craft passage. There was never anything tight or shallow on this route
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N winds picked up a bit, but at least they were following. This is looking S down DeTour Channel. Lake Huron is well into background. Detour Harbor is two miles ahead on right
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Was pre-approved for CPBRoam app, so got my approval to enter US before stepping off the boat through the app. Rest of the day was rain, so was holed up in the cabin.
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Out of order, but a freighter coming down from Lake Superior. They all have to go through DeTour.
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wahoo33417

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Next stop is Hessel Marina in the Les Cheneaux Islands. Was hoping to take a rest day there to see the town. Weather says otherwise.
Tomorrow is N 10, picking up to 20. I can, hopefully, hug N coast of Lake Huron as much as I dare.
Next day is flat in early morning, then picking up S 15-20 for next couple of days. So I’ll be crossing Huron for Mackinaw during that calm break.

Round this light and we leave DeTour Channel and head W along the Straights of Mackinaw portion of Lake Huron.

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Ship Entering Detour

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Hugged the N coast as much as I could, but numerous shoals kept pretty well offshore.
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Cut it as close as I dared!


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Welcome to a beautiful sunrise over the Les Cheneaux

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Entering the beautiful passage into Hessel
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Channel is well marked, but need to pay attention
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Round this marker and slow speed float and marina should come into sight

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A look back at just a small piece of the Les Cheneaux Islands
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Tied up at Hessel City Marina. A little while later flags were holding straight out. The higher N winds had arrived.
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wahoo33417

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Really wanted that rest day in Hessel, but weather still said I had a few hours of calm water before it picked up a lot. And, unfortunately, I had a truck and trailer to meet in two days.

The north winds brought another cool early morning.
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Early morning making my way through Les Cheneaux. It is a slow speed zone and that seems to add to the peacefulness.

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Around one more red marker and between two islands and we'll be in the Mackinaw Straights portion of Lake Huron.

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Once in open water, our arget is the channel through Mackinac Island (on the right). A high end, touristy island with no cars.

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Looking back at sunrise over Les Cheneaux and some cormorants who weren't terribly worried about a boat going by.
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As I entered Mackinac Channel, there was a group of kayakers hugging a channel marker waiting for me to pass. The channel is not slow speed, but I idled past them.

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Downtown Mackinac. Several ferry loads of people spend the day here. Not for me.

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But they do have a cool lighthouse.
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With the Mackinaw Bridge in sight, I know I’m not far from the end of my trip. I also note that weather forecast was spot on.
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One more shoal to miss then I turn for Mackinaw City.
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Continued….
 
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wahoo33417

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Just as Apple weather app had forecast, it was a narrow weather window that would lead to winds picking up through the day.
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As I idled into Straights State Harbor, this little Easter Kingbird took a short ride.

I saw so many birds on this trip that I couldn’t ID. Lots of Sandhill Cranes and Ospreys. Many others, including some raptors, that I either didn’t know or didn’t get a good look at.
And, despite my early morning strolls, no bears.

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Tied back up at Straights State Harbor. They remembered the boat name and put me back in the same slip with no other boat next to me. Docking in unfamiliar slips, especially in the wind, is much more relaxing with no boat next to mw!.
The dock hands are all college kids and the state doesn’t allow them to take tips. That applies to all marinas that accept state grants, like State and City marinas.

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wahoo33417

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Some thoughts on this trip.

This is the first trip where I wish I had my own truck and trailer. I ran out of time to see as much of the North Channel as I had hoped. Some of that was weather days. Much of that was 'rest' days to let the bad discs in my neck not get to be real problematic. I also kept my boating days fairly short, dependent of course on spacing between marinas. I also took my time, trying to enjoy each moment.

But, we have nowhere to store a truck and trailer and many of our trips have different beginning and ending points. So, it's impractical for us.

I don't think I mentioned this, but on day two, the starboard engine put out Code 72, Cam Position Sensor. Both engines were running great. From then on, I got that code every day of the trip. I called my trusted Yamaha tech at our home Grady dealer. Her advice was if engines are running great, don't worry about it. If you feel the slightest roughness out of the starboard engine, shut it down immediately and limp back on one engine. I had paid too much to get here to turn around with engines running great. On day five, the marina was also a Yamaha dealer. He didn't stock the sensors for the older F250s, so he called around to see if he could get one in a day or two. No luck. He said the Yamaha Canada warehouse didn't even have any, so it would take 2-3 weeks to get some. Hard to believe, but okay.

That dealer brought his tech in who said the same thing my Grady dealer tech said. So I tried not to think about it too much after that.

Boat hauler was right on time of the scheduled morning for pick up. Plan was I would ride with him from Mackinaw City to Ann Arbor, where I could then get an Uber to Detroit airport. I had a direct flight for two days later, but wife got it moved up a day at less cost than a night in a hotel.

Tony's Ram 3500 was humming along down I-75 when he yelled "oh Shit!" and made his way to the emergency lane. By the time we got there, steam was pouring out from under the hood. From that point on, we were quite lucky.

The radiator cap wasn't on properly and we could see where coolant had flowed out from under the cap instead of into the collection bottle. The cap wasn't even hot.

Tony had one gallon of coolant. The radiator took that easily. Them I remembered I still had gallons of drinking water in the boat. It took two more gallons before the radiator was full.

We put the cap on tight. But something else had caused it to overheat and Tony was convinced it was a stuck thermostat. Turns out he was right.

I googled O'Reily's Auto Parts. There was one ten miles down the road. Tony said they carry parts for Cummins diesels and they're open Sunday mornings.

The truck ran slightly warm for those ten miles. Tony theorized that the stuck thermostat had become at least partially unstuck as the engine cooled alongside the road.

Sure enough, O'Reily's had the thermostat, a nifty 5 gallon jug that lies on it's side to catch the draining coolant, and a new cap, just to be sure. Tony asked their permission to pull around back to change the thermostat, assuring them we would leave no trace. They were fine with it. By the looks of the front parking spaces, people changed their own oil there and weren't so careful about it.

Changing the thermostat in a Cummins diesel isn't so hard. Getting to the thermostat and finding all the screws you dropped is the hard part. Fortunately, Tony had one of those flexible magnetic pick-up tools. Working together, with frequent water breaks, it took us about two hours to change the thermostat and refill with fresh coolant.

We could see scratch marks on the disc on the old thermostat, presumably indicating that it was, indeed, the culprit. Tony said that, in a pinch, he has cut that cent disc out to get him to a parts store. Apparently, you cant just run without the thermostat, because the gasket is built into the thermostat.

In any case, the engine ran fine and cool after that. Tony picked up his pace a bit to get me to Ann Arbor, cruising at about 72 mph, where he normally cruises about 65. FWIW, he was getting 10.3 mpg at 72 mph.

So I made it to my hotel at a reasonable hour and Tony dropped the boat at my local Grady dealer for some cam position sensors.
 

wahoo33417

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"Do you need AC up there? I'm surprised it doesn't naturally cool down at night."
Turns out that was the only night I wanted the AC. I was going to bed so early to be up at 4 am and the cabin had not yet cooled down. But you're right, well into the night I was in my sleeping bag!

After that, during my first night in Canada, a 'cool' front came through and overnight lows stayed in the low 50's for a while. The highest overnight low I recall seeing in Canada was 60F. There were two 'cool' fronts' pass through while I was in the North Channel. Made for nice sleeping, but forced me to stay in port on two occasions.

Those fronts and their persistent NW wind also kept me on the N side of the channel. So I never got down to see some areas like Gore Bay or Meldrum Bay on the S side.

But no regrets. Weather is what it is. I knew going in that one of their strong fronts could have me sitting in port for a week (or more) and I'm glad that didn't happen.
 

Halfhitch

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It seemed you did a good job of dodging the bad winds. Was there ever a time in that trip that you had to slow down or come off plane because of water conditions.
 

wahoo33417

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It seemed you did a good job of dodging the bad winds. Was there ever a time in that trip that you had to slow down or come off plane because of water conditions.
Fortunately, never had to come off plane. But did have to put the trim tabs down a few times. Sometimes, when I only had a couple of miles to go and winds were picking up, I slowed to about 1500 rpms and left it on auto pilot and just enjoyed the scenery. And took a little less wear and tear on my neck.

But yes, there were a couple of days that I stayed in port due to winds that the boat could have handled but would have given me a bad headache. I have become much more of a calm water boater with age!
 
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