Day Two of the
McNish Classic Yacht Race Adventure
Day Two was a sail to Smugglers Cove
on the south east side of Santa Cruz Island.
Santa Cruz Island is the
larger island to the right and Smugglers Cove is barely visible hard to the east
facing the Anacapa Passage.
The sail had is own series of events
too. A few miles out of Paradise we happened to look to the windward side
of the boat (offshore) and I'll be damned - its a shark easing southerly - no
pictures but still. First time I saw a shark in the wild.
And it
got better. We were all in the cockpit when Captain bolted upright at the
helm... huh? Captain said somethings wierd up ahead and we all
looked around and sure enough - there was an odd "yellowish" blob in the water
directly ahead of the boat - kind of like a reef just under the water - but we
were way off shore in deep water. Captain screamed WHALE!
And sure
enough the Dirigo II eased ahead as we closed in on the blob which moved to
starboard. We crowded the leeward rail and sure enough - the blobs crested
and blew spouts. It turned out to be two Blue Whales. The long backs
of the whales eased across the top of the ocean as they finished their breath
and again eased below the surface. I was stunned. Now I had seen a
Blue Whale in the wild. What a great day at sea.

We began to settle in by
pulling the sails down. That's me in the picture below ready to pull down
one of the jibs.

I wish I had a picture
of us approaching Santa Cruz Island but I dont. Still, you can see the
Dirigo II anchored a few hundred yards off shore. We went ashore for a
look around.

Time to introduce an new
player. Mr. Len D. Len needs a bit of introduction. Len is the
owner of Horizons West Adventures and he is our host on this trip. Len is
an exceptional host. Len cooked all the meals aboard ship, made all the
arrangements for the yacht race, arranged for the captain, arranged for the
crew, and did a perfect job in each case. Len is on the left in the
picture below with Susanne on the beach at Smugglers Cove on Santa Cruz
Island. Len is explaining to Susanne that the beach at this location is
actually the remnants of an Indian Mound containing centurys of the discarded
debris from the Chumash Indians that previously lived on Santa Cruz
Island.

Len has first hand
knowledge of this region of Santa Cruz Island. I understand that he lived
here for a few years and has operated adventure trips to the island for several
years. Len gave us a tour of the area and told us that a treat awaited us
after a short walk off the beach - we were curious about what was up the
road????

Incredible. A beautiful
home was back in the canyon. Apparently the house was plenty old having
been built in the 1800's. I wish I could tell you the whole story but it
is to intreaguing to get it wrong - we need to go with Len again to get the
story right. Suffice to say - its old, its nice, and Len has a lot of
history here.

We had a chance to walk all
around the house peering into the windows. The rooms inside were clean and
ready to use. The history according to Len was fascinating.

And as usual - all good things must come to an
end. Len toured us around the site pointing out interesting things as we
walked back to the beach. Mike resued us from the surf in the skiff as we
waded back offshore.
While we were onshore we had a visitor pull up for
the evening. I wonder if she is racing in the McNish race on
Saturday?

Spent - I kicked back in the cockpit of the Dirigo II
soaking up the days events. Overwhelming... started the day in a
rolly anchorage, powered across the Santa Barbara Channel to Santa Cruz Island,
saw a shark headed south, saw a blue whale, landed on a beach just like a Navy
Seal, toured a great historic spot on a seldom visited island. Can this
adventure get any better?

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Here to go to Day Three