Hi Warren,
I may have already mentioned to you that Scrappy happily pees on her pee pad. It's a piece of faux-grass doormat about 14" wide and 21" long, zip-tied (on one end only) into the upside-down top of a rubbermaid tub. Her feet stay dry, it doesn't slip around much on the deck, and it's easy to dump and rinse overboard.
Just for grins for everyone else, here's the full text of my thoughts to Warren on Inside Passage trip scheduling:
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> This year we launched in Prince Rupert on 6/11, and pulled out on 9/7. Through the end of August we had minimal difficult weather, then got stuck in Ketchikan for six days waiting for decent conditions to cross the Dixon. That and crossing the Queen (rounding Cape Caution) are generally the biggest challenges, although some of the long straight and wide channels in SE AK can get very tough. The sections in my book about weather and the cruising areas may be worth another look.
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> I understand the "North Pacific high", which keeps the stormy weather away from us in the summer, breaks down around the equinox in September. I've generally believed I should be south of Cape Caution no later than 9/15 or so. My experience (8 SE AK trips so far, and many more BC trips) suggests being south of the Dixon by 9/1. You can cruise at much higher speeds than most boats - the larger/slow cruisers typically head south from SE AK in early August, but you don't necessarily need to.
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> I'd say the first winter winds tend to arrive in SE AK late August or early September. I've had tough conditions for several days in late August or very early September in SE AK twice so far. Best weather in SE AK usually seems to be late June through late August. Most of June can be pretty cool and rainy, and sometimes windy, even in BC. The one trip we did from Everett all the way up through SE AK we started May 9 and returned in late August. May had us slipping on frost in Port Hardy, and we had rain/cool through most of June.
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> Two months is pretty short for that whole trip, unless you blast on through a good part of the distance. Were I able to travel as fast as your Tom Cat (20-25 knots?), I'd get at least to Port Hardy or Blunden Harbour very quickly (you can always do southern BC on a shorter trip) and be more leisurely north of Cape Caution, or even Prince Rupert.
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> If you really want to see much of SE AK, I'd suggest traveling as quickly as practical and enjoyable on up to Prince Rupert, spending at least a month in SE AK (there's so much to see that six weeks would be much better), then deciding how much time you want to spend in BC on the way home. Desolation Sound can be really nice in September. With only two months, you really don't have enough time to poke around southern BC on the way north, unless you want to barely skim SE AK. I'd think that you could get to Prince Rupert enjoyably in about two weeks with decent weather.
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> Once you've made the investment to get to SE AK, I think you're going to want to be there for a while. Just about everywhere from Petersburg on north and west is particularly wonderful, in my view. Don't miss the Tracy Arm, eastern Baranof and Chichagof Islands, Peril Strait and Hoonah Sound on the way to Sitka, Icy Strait and Cross Sound, and if you're lucky Glacier Bay. I'd be happy to discuss these areas and others in much more detail.
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> Are we getting excited yet? I'm already thinking about next year.
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> Richard