|   Mugford Tickle. A funny name for a narrow foreboding 
                channel walled on both sides by the sheer cliffs of two deserted 
                islands on the coast of Labrador. There is no refuge here, no 
                protection from the tidal current of the steel-colored sea, sprinkled 
                thick with chunks of ice. Even now, the water temperature is about 
                36 degrees, not a 
                place for a casual swim. Mugford Tickle would seem an awesome 
                place from the deck of the Queen Mary. Looking up at the cliffs 
                from a 16-foot open sailboat, the place hovers at the edge of 
                terrifying. 
              If there had been a way, I would have bypassed it, just as I 
                would have had a companion with me if luck hadn't run the other 
                way. But I had decided to sail, and changes of plans and illness 
                had left me with the choice of either a solo trip north along 
                the coast of Labrador, or none at all. So there I was, alone in 
                my Wayfarer dinghy, Wayward Drummer, with Mugford Tickle ahead 
                of me. It was like sailing straight into the Grand Canyon. Wind 
                does funny, unpredictable things around cliffs. I had been running 
                with a 15-knot breeze dead on my stern when suddenly, with no 
                warning, the wind was blowing 15 knots smack on the nose. Since 
                my Wayfarer is an unballasted centerboarder and relies on crew 
                weight for stability, sudden shifts of wind can capsize it. Wayward 
                Drummer has only tipped over twice, both times at the base of 
                cliffs, where a slight hesitation in tending the sheet and tiller 
                brought instant trouble. One capsizing took place in Somes Sound, 
                at home in Maine. The otherwas on the east coast of Newfoundland, 
                where Misha Kirk and I were killing time waiting for the freighter 
                that would carry us and Wayward Drummer north to Nain, Labrador, 
                its northernmost stop. Kirk and I had decided to get in some sailing 
                practice, and close under a cliff with the mainsheet cleated down, 
                we soon got our introduction to the frigid waters of the Far North. 
                By the time we had righted the boat and emptied the bilges with 
                a bucket we were wiser and meeker men.  
              
                 
                   
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              Trip Takes Shape 
                As we first planned it, my friend Dave Getchell, Sr. and I were 
                going to extend a trip we had taken north along the Labrador coast 
                in an 18-foot aluminum motor boat (SBJ#17). On our second trip, 
                we hoped to travel farther north, to Ramah Bay, where aerial photographs 
                showed an impressive range of mountains and glaciers. The only 
                topographical map of the region was practically blank, a strong 
                appeal to our spirit of exploration. We planned a combined boating/mountaineering 
                venture. However, fuel is not available north of Nain, 200 miles 
                short of Ramah Bay, and hammering along under power lacked the 
                sense of adventure we were seeking. 
              A sailboat seemed the most practical solution. The 1980 trip 
                confirmed our belief that a small, shallow-draft boat made the 
                most sense along the Labrador coast. Anchoring off in deep-water 
                fjords under storm conditions is far more dangerous than beaching 
                a boat and camping on shore. Also, the coast is only sketchily 
                charted, and the inshore waters are sprinkled with "sunkers," 
                the local term for rock ledges. Offshore only a few miles you 
                run into "iceberg alley," with all the navigational 
                unpleasantness the name implies. Frequent groundings, or even 
                occasional brushes with the pack ice, were experiences we could 
                do without. 
                
                Adventurer. Misha Kirk mans the helm 
                of the stalwart Wayfarer dinghy. 
               Speed as well as seaworthiness were prerequisites in our new 
                boat. Many of the headlands that we would have to round offer 
                no shelter for many miles. The swifter the boat, the less time 
                we would be exposed. The traditional dory and whaleboatwere ruled 
                out, as a result. The boat had to be able to ride on a trailer 
                behind my Datsun pickup, and it had to be reasonably cheap. Both 
                Dave and I had read Frank Dye's book, Ocean Crossing Wayfarer, 
                which recounts his offshore voyages from England to Iceland and 
                Norway in his Wayfarer (for other Dye adventures, see "The 
                Wayfarer Logs," SBJ #36). The Wayfarer certainly wasn't the 
                only small boat capable of making such a trip, but it was a proven 
                design, and available in kit form, which meant we could have a 
                new boat at a reasonable price. 
               Building and Outfitting 
                At the time I was working as a boat carpenter at Dan McCafferty's 
                Clark Island Boat Works, where I was generously provided with 
                a space to build the boat. The bits and pieces that would eventually 
                become Wayward Drummer arrived from Wayland Marine, and with the 
                help of one of the other boatbuilders, Mark Abb, we set about 
                building the Wayfarer. We put in two hours every day afterwork, 
                and at least one day each weekend. With Dave helping whenever 
                he could Find time, we finished the hull in three months. 
               The Wayfarer is a double-chined hull, built with Bruynzeel® 
                mahogany plywood over longitudinal stringers and bulkheads. Her 
                foredeck, stern sheets, and sidedecks add stiffness, and the entire 
                structure is epoxy glued and screw 
                fastened. It is an enormously strong boat. 
               Once the hull was completed, we diverged a bit from the recommended 
                procedures and covered the hull and foredeck with polypropylene 
                cloth and epoxy resin to add strength and abrasion resistance. 
                The boat was painted inside and out with Interlux linear polyurethane 
                paint, which was easy to put on and held up extremely well. 
               Sails were made by Gambell and Hunter ofCamden, Maine, to their 
                usual high standards and reasonable price. Grant Gambell sewed 
                in three sets of reef points, and Dick Gardiner, a local machinist, 
                fabricated the tack hooks and outhauls for a jiffy reef system, 
                which I decided to use instead of the Wayfarer's standard roller 
                reefing. 
               By mid-June, the boat was still untested, and many of the logistical 
                details of the trip were still unattended to. I decided that if 
                we were going to make our July I departure date, I needed to spend 
                full time on getting the Wayward Drummer ready. The only logical 
                thing to do was to quit my job. For me, work is what I do to raise 
                money for the next trip. 
               Bad Luck and Good 
                Things were going along well when disaster struck. Dave Getchell 
                suddenly found he couldn't make the trip. Circumstances beyond 
                control. I understood, sympathized, and felt terrible. It looked 
                as if the trip was off. 
                
                Hauled Up. Landing at high tide at the end of a long day on the 
                water and using a boat roller and block-and-tackle simplified 
                the task of hauling up.  
              Where do you find a replacement for the irreplaceable? One friend 
                (a fisherman) looked at me very oddly as I outlined the trip. 
                "I don't mind being cold and wet and miserable and in fear 
                of my life all the time," he told me, "but I tike to 
                get paid about a thousand a week for that sort of thing." 
              Alas! The words of H. W. Tilman, the great English climber, sailor, 
                and arctic explorer, came to mind: "Things and men are not 
                as they used to be." It was Tilman who found crew for his 
                arctic voyages by running an ad in the local papers. I was tempted 
                to copy the exact wording of Tilman's ad: "CREW WANTED for 
                extended voyage to northern waters. No frills, no pay." 
              Then Misha Kirk came on the scene. Misha is a mountaineering 
                friend and ex-Green Beret medic who had sailed on the Pacific. 
                He was a godsend. The preparations continued — Dave continued 
                to help — and on the last day of June we launched the Wayward 
                Drummer. The last week was spent testing the boat, changing small 
                details of the rig, and laying in supplies. 
              On July 8, we left Rockport, Maine, and drove the thousand miles 
                to Lewisport, Newfoundland. In Lewisport, we took our First sail 
                together in northern waters, where our capsize taught us that 
                high cliffs and dealed mains are a treacherous combination. We 
                left the truck in Newfoundland, and pushed the trailer and boat 
                on board the Canadian ferry bound for Goose Bay, Labrador. In 
                Goose Bay, we left the trailer in a lot maintained by the steamship 
                company, and Drummer was swayed up by the cargo tackle of the 
                weather-scarred coastal steamer Bona Vista and lashed down on 
                the forward cargo hatch. 
               When we eventually docked at the pier in Nain, we were overrun 
                by a hundred Innuit children, who in a few minutes had penetrated 
                to every corner of the ship. Amidst the pandemonium, Drummer was 
                unloaded, and we went ashore. 
               Going It Alone 
                We stayed in Nain no longer than it took to file our itinerary 
                with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and rig the boat. Then 
                we pushed off, ending one journey to begin another under drizzly 
                skies and 20 knots of wind — and sailed to a camping spot 
                7 miles out of town.  
              We camped on Hillsbury Island and climbed to the top of a granite 
                dome from which we could see the northern shore of the island 
                where thousand-foot-high sea cliffs dropped through low clouds 
                straight into the ocean. 
               Early the next morning, we sailed out in a light fog. The air 
                was still and we could hear whales blowing all around us. Occasionally, 
                we would see humpback whales surfacing. As we sailed along beneath 
                high cliffs, we both were busy climbing with our eyes, following 
                each crack system up, trying to gauge the difficulty and challenge 
                of the various routes. 
               Then disaster struck, again. Misha said that he was feeling 
                badly, and his face showed it. I knew that if Misha said he hurt, 
                the pain must be excruciating. We landed and made camp, and during 
                the night he diagnosed the problem as a kidney stone. 
                 
                Misha felt even worse the next morning. and it was apparent that 
                he was near the limit of his endurance. We decided to go for help. 
                There is a fishing station at Black Island, 20 miles to the south, 
                and we assumed because of its closeness to Nain that boats would 
                be going back and forth between the two places quite often. The 
                clinic in Nain was the only place nearby for Misha to get medical 
                help. 
               We beat all morning against a rising southerly and by 2 p.m. 
                we arrived at Black Island. As we sailed in, a boat was making 
                ready to leave for Nain .Misha jumped aboard, and by the time 
                I had tied up Wayward Drummer, the boat was 
                gone. 
              
                Misha was taken to the clinic in Nain, and finally flown 
                  to the military hospital in Goose Bay. His diagnosis was correct, 
                  and I'm lucky for his great endurance. Almost anyone else would 
                  have been disabled by the pain. 
               
               There I stood, alone on the fishing stage at Black Island. Even 
                if I wanted to place an ad for "Crew, no frills, no pay," 
                there wasn't a newspaper to print it. I was stuck without a companion 
                to sail and climb with. After all the trouble I had gone to — 
                buying the kit, building the boat, quitting my job, and travelling 
                hundreds of miles — I wasn't about to turn back after only 
                three days on the water. Better, to go ahead alone — and 
                be careful. 
              I've spent a lot of time climbing alone, and have found the satisfaction 
                of having my life in my own hands is enough to justify the risk. 
                As I tacked Drummer out of the harbor, we were laid over 
                by a sudden gust of wind and my hat blew overboard. I chose to 
                interpret that as a good sign, a sacrifice lo Neptune that would 
                guarantee a safe passage. 
               The strong southerly wind that had hindered our return to Black 
                Island was now a tail wind, and with whales breeching and spouting 
                and Drummer making a steady 7-1/2 knots, I headed for 
                Cape Kigiapait, Mugford Tickle, and Ramah Bay. Around midnight, 
                the wind vanished, and I mounted my 2 horsepower Mariner outboard 
                auxiliary and motored in behind an island. The motor was able 
                to push Drummer at about 3-1/2 knots, but since I had only 5 gallons 
                of gas with me, I seldom used it. 
               I anchored in a sheltered cove and heated food on the tiny gimballed 
                butane stove. The sky was perfectly clear, with northern lights 
                blazing overhead. I was off again in the morning.  
                
                Desolate Shoreline. Labrador has miles of uninhabited coastline, 
                with impressive mountains and glaciers that appeal to venturesome 
                spirits.  
              Beyond Cape Kiglapait, the trees disappeared, leaving a barren 
                seashore backed by snow-covered mountains. I was alone in this 
                deserted world, out of sight of man and his inventions. During 
                this part of the trip, I went for 22 days without speaking to 
                another person, but I was occupied by the daily challenges of 
                moving a small boat through this vast space, among these mountainous 
                islands and deep-carved fiords. 
               Rigging for Seaworthiness 
                As light dinghies go, Wayfarers are very stable and seaworthy. 
                The fact that they are standard equipment for many sailing schools 
                and are a popular class boat in Great Britain is testament to 
                their good qualities. But no dinghy of these proportions can be 
                considered forgiving. The Wayfarer demands good sailing to achieve 
                true seaworthiness, and improperly handled in a sudden gust or 
                squall, it will capsize with appalling speed. 
               Smart dinghy cruising means being adaptable to every change 
                in sea and wind. I set certain limits to the conditions l will 
                sail in and when I've decided to sail, I will reef when the wind 
                comes up, and put up sail when it goes down. Sailing alone, I 
                keep the mainsheet in hand and an eye on the weather. 
               The dinghy can be recovered from a capsizing if there is sea 
                room and if conditions will allow 20 to 30 minutes to dry out 
                the boat. But when the sea rages on and buries every attempt at 
                salvage under a stifling blanket of foam, the game may be over, 
                particularly if you capsize when single-handing. 
               Speed and caution are the dinghy sailor's saving graces. One's 
                boat must be kept shipshape for quick response. Everything is 
                lashed on or under the seats and in the buoyancy lockers. Three 
                things are always tied to the boat: a bailing bucket, a jug of 
                fresh water, and me. Everything I anticipate needing for the day 
                is in a watertight plastic box within arm's reach of the helm. 
                This kit includes food, sunglasses, camera, Chapstik, and other 
                knick-knack's. With a day's sail in Labrador lasting as much as 
                24 hours, and the Wayfarer unable to sail herself, anything that 
                I might need that was out of reach was a liability. 
               To leave the helm means heaving to. This is a safe and reliable 
                technique, but ground is lost and time is spent, and if there 
                is a lee shore nearby, it is risky. 
               Organization and consistency prevent tripping overboard, losing 
                things, or snarling halyards in a sail change. All the rigging 
                for reefing is kept within arm's reach at the base of the mast 
                so that I am able to make a jiffy reef in seconds. The jib is 
                rigged with a downhaul and can be brought down in one swift movement. 
                Such quick, reliable reefing arrangements add a solid measure 
                of safety in a small unballasted boat (see "Tame Your Sail," 
                SBJ #43 & 44). 
               The centerboard is trimmed regularly, and I never use a hold-down 
                pin in it. The rudder has a hold-down pin, which is necessary 
                when running, but the pin has a wire lanyard that allows removal 
                in an instant. 
               I use slippery cleat hitches on halyards to prevent jamming. 
                Cam cleats are provided for all sheet ropes and for the jiffy 
                reef clewlines. l use a Proctor lever boomvang and frequently 
                rig a preventer to hold the boom steady in a rolling situation. 
                This preventer is set up on a slip knot through a U-bolt on the 
                foredeck. In case of a jibe or change of wind speed, I can release 
                this preventer by pulling on the running end, which I hold in 
                my hand. 
               Heavy ground tackle includes a 25pound fisherman's anchor and 
                chain lead. This is not only reassuring when on the hook for the 
                night, but is also useful when set up in tandem with the small 
                Danforth for hauling the boat clear of the water in lieu of an 
                appropriately placed boulder. 
               With any sort of break on the time of day, I landed at or near 
                high tide and camped ashore. This saved time with haul-up but 
                committed me to launching on a high tide. Hauling up was made 
                simple with the aid of a boat roller and a nine-to-one block and 
                tackle. 
               Occasionally, single-handed dinghy cruising requires taking 
                a calculated risk, but in general, conservative sailing is required 
                to pull off a long cruise. Keeping the boat and gear in good repair, 
                anticipating conditions and then adapting the rig to suit, seemed 
                the safest policy. But there is no escaping the fact that a single-hander 
                in remote regions must be willing to accept the consequences of 
                going it alone. This is a condition that one must accept early 
                in planning, and if the commitment seems more than one can face 
                with a certain amount of confidence, then it's time to reconsider 
                the whole idea of going off alone. 
               Ramah Bay Adventures 
                In spite of the violent nature of the weather in high latitudes, 
                I predicted changes reasonably well using a small altimeter as 
                a barometer, and my logbook. As weather patterns revealed themselves, 
                I constantly checked the barometer, and then recorded the reading 
                with descriptions of cloud cover, wind, temperature, and any other 
                significant feature in my log. I soon had a body of information 
                that proved extremely useful in interpreting weather signs. If 
                I was confused by a certain pattern of clouds or a sudden drop 
                in the barometer, I would took back through the log for a similar 
                set of indications, and usually found something to help make a 
                forecast, or at least an informed guess. This admittedly rough 
                system worked well enough under the circumstances, and I was never 
                caught out by any of the several gales that came 
                through while I was on the coast. 
               The fury of a sub-arctic gale is terrible to endure, but it 
                is somehow less personal a threat than that posed by the polar 
                bear, mighty "nanuk." A polar bear is a huge animal, 
                superbly camouflaged, fast as a horse ashore or a seal in the 
                water, fearless, ferocious, and magnificent. I carried no weapons, 
                although my iceaxe and flare gun might be confused as such, nor 
                did I honestly imagine that I would be able to do more to a bear 
                than make him mad enough to work up an appetite. When I was camping 
                on shore, I tried to pitch my tent near a cliff, gambling that 
                I'm probably a better rock climber than a polar bear. What he 
                might do to my boat and gear was a question I wouldn't think about. 
                There wasn't much to be done in any case and so there was nothing 
                to lose sleep over. In fact, I never did see a polar bear, and 
                I hope none saw me. 
               The most difficult part of the trip was the passage through 
                Mugford Tickle, simply because the risk of capsizing was great, 
                and the chance of recovery slight. In fact, it was something of 
                an anti-climax. We didn't tip; there wasn't even anything you'd 
                call a close call — nothing more than a very, very long 
                ten minutes, with the cliffs soaring up on both sides, and the 
                clouds hanging low overhead. Then we were through, and the Drummer 
                was running fast for Ramah Bay, where the land-based side of the 
                trip would begin. 
               On shore in Little Ramah Bay I set up my tent and hauled the 
                Wayfarer up on the beach. I camped 30 feet from the collapsed 
                sod house of a Dorset culture home, the Dorsets being an ancient 
                race that lived in this area eons before the Innuit. 
               Once the Drummer was well secured, I loaded my pack 
                and set off on a week-long trek around the Ramah Bay region. The 
                weather was fine, clear, and warm, so warm that one day I watched 
                a herd of caribou climb onto a glacier and lie down on the snow. 
                Caribou don't seem to be able to recognize shapes; they respond 
                only to motion. By standing perfectly still, you can remain quite 
                close to a herd without frightening them in the least. 
               I climbed two 4,000-foot peaks in the Ramah Bay area, choosing 
                one because of an interesting snow couloir, and the other on account 
                of a beautiful rock buttress. On both peaks my altimeter read 
                1,000 feet higher than the height marked on the topographical 
                maps. 
               After a week of hiking and climbing, I decided that I'd had 
                enough of these warm days and the good exercise of hiking. It 
                was time to get back to the frigid, humid air that lies over the 
                water. By the time I had the boat-ready to go, the wind was out 
                of the south, so I headed north, reaching all the way to the mouth 
                of Nachvak Fjord before the wind died. I was near a small iceberg, 
                and as an experiment, I went in close to the leeward side and 
                planted my iceaxe for a mooring. I lay behind the iceberg for 
                six hours before the breeze came up from the northwest. Then I 
                recovered my axe and set sail for home. After a week ashore, it 
                was fine to be sailing again before a fresh breeze. I passed through 
                a small field of brash ice before coming back close to land. 
               The next day a storm developed that proved to be the worst of 
                the summer. I spent three days on shore while my tent kept trying 
                to tear loose and fly me home. The only diversion was a caribou 
                herd that ranged close to camp. 
               When the weather finally cleared I set out south again, a little 
                anxious to see people, but more than a bit sorry to give up the 
                wild freedom that I had enjoyed. As the day wore on, the clouds 
                and fog lifted enough to give me a view of the mountains, covered 
                with a new layer of snow that had fallen during the storm. It 
                was the first heavy snowfall of the season, and a sure sign that 
                it was time for visitors from the south in small open boats to 
                be gone. 
               The weather continued in good grace, and within a few days I 
                was back in Nain, enjoying the dubious fruits of civilization. 
                I continued sailing south until I met the Bona Vista in Hopedale, 
                where the Drummer was once again swayed up on deck and 
                made fast. 
               As I settled into the routine of life on the old packet, plans 
                formed for next year. Two hundred miles north of Ramah Bay, north 
                of Cape Chidley, lies Baffin Island, the site of one of the largest 
                continuous rockwalls in the world — Mount Asgaard. Think 
                of that. It's been climbed, by a solo climber, no less. You'd 
                have to winter over with the Innuit, but it's said that they're 
                willing to have you. 
               Baffin Island. The name of the place rolls well on a fella's 
                tongue. 
               
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