Inlet Chaos at St. Augustine

Charleston, SC — 11•12•24

After spending a week at the Charleston Maritime Center Marina, it was time to get going again. My crew had left, and it seemed like a good window to run to St. Augustine, FL. I moved Trouble out of the marina at slack tide and anchored in front of the Yorktown again for an early departure the next morning.

11•13•24 0500 — Engines on, anchor up, and riding the ebb tide out of Charleston. Reload N Charge was going to head out with me, but he had instrument issues and followed an hour later.

It would be an overnight passage and a gentle sail with following seas and wind. I was trying to time my entrance into St. Augustine on a flood tide, as the wind and waves were supposed to pick up, and the inlet channel is notorious for being nasty with wind against current.

Easy Sailing Out Of Charleston
Easy Sailing Out Of Charleston

11•14•24 1100 — St. Augustine Deep Water Buoy

I was a bit early to the St. Augustine Deep Water Buoy. Heading up to the buoy, I heard some broken-up chatter on the VHF radio about a man overboard and the sheriff’s department trying to help a boat. As I got closer, I heard a boat called Moon Shadow on the radio entering the channel, and the sheriff’s department was keeping an eye on them. They seemed to make it in. I didn’t hear anything else about the man overboard, so I suspect they got him back on board. I radioed Moon Shadow to get the conditions in the channel. His words back to me were, “I’m not gonna lie, that was pretty bad.” That was not reassuring.

Inlet Chaos

I prepped Trouble for the worst. This would not be our first rodeo in big seas in a channel. I headed Trouble into the mess ahead of me. I knew her tendencies—good and bad—in these conditions. The first set of waves, she rose up on the stern and took off on a surf— I looked at the speed and saw 12 knots. My biceps are burning, gripping the wheel, trying to keep her true. She was doing great, and I was thinking I could ride this wave all the way in, but I couldn’t hold her any longer, and she spun out of the wave. No problem, I thought, and got her under control before the next wave came. By then, we were out of the worst of it, and the surfing wasn’t as long. I got in fine, made the bridge, and stopped at the fuel dock to top off before going to my mooring assignment.

While all that was exciting, I was pretty calm about it and kind of hyped up as I enjoyed my passage cheeseburger and beer at OC White’s.

Passage Making Cheeseburger & Beer
Passage Making Cheeseburger & Beer

I texted Reload N Charge about the conditions and reassured him it might be better since I was a bit early coming in, and his entrance should be calmer. It wasn’t any better, but he made it in OK. Later that night, over a couple of beers, he told me he had heard the man-overboard calls and thought it might have been me. I had a few days of rest before my next leg.

Cover Photo—Sunset St Augustine