Whittier to Seward

tpbrady

New member
Just completed the trip from Whittier to Seward. A day and half of rain and a day of sun and calm seas. Did about 160 miles over all counting side trips into Surprise Cove (first night), Eshamy Lagoon (fishing), Icy Bay (sight seeing), Otter Cove (second night), and fishing in Puget Bay, Johnston Bay, Whidbey Bay, Day Harbor, and looking for a place to spend the third night.

The route went from Whittier to Culross Passage, around Main Bay to Eshamy Lagoon. We had pretty much been in rain to point with visibility at 1.5 miles or less. On entering Eshamy Bay we could see some lighter sky to the south, but was wall of rain and fog in front. We went through the wall into pretty decent weather and had lunch at the head of the lagoon catching silvers in the sun. After a few hours of that and consulting the latest weather report for the Gulf of Alaska, we decided to advance the schedule and get into Resurrection Bay on Thursday rather than Friday. We went back into the gloom but came out into pretty good weather in Dangerous Passage. From there to Icy Bay the weather was good with calm seas. Only one other boat in the area and that followed us into Icy Bay. After dodging ice to get in Nassau Fjord, we got a great view of the Chenega Glacier.

After exiting Icy Bay, we were back into rain and fog with visibility less than .5 miles. Passed a Salmon tender which was the last boat we saw until after lunch the next day. I got a chance to do a lot of radar work in the poor visibility but didn't find a lot of targets. I was able to get a return off some of the bigger pieces of ice. We entered Bainbridge Passage and stopped in Otter Cove for the night in light rain.

The following morning we could see across Bainbridge Passage and the sun was starting to peak out. By 0900 we were on flat seas with the sun out and started a slow cruise down Bainbridge Passage to Port Bainbridge and then out into the Gulf. The sun was out, the winds were light, and when we rounded Puget Point we could see all the way to Aialik (about 60 miles). The fishing was great all the way over to Resurrection Bay, but as we got closer the winds started picking up. Friday's prediction was starting to come true early. We couldn't find any decent anchorage inside Resurrection Bay, so made for the small boat harbor and tied up in transient. By the time we got in, the winds were up to 20 knots with seas of 4-5 feet. It was even worse on Friday with winds pushing 30 knots. I was glad to be tied to the dock on Friday. We did go out fishing on Saturday, and managed to pick up 5 fish inside Resurrection Bay, one of which would have been a contender in the derby (just shy of 20 lbs) but I didn't have a derby ticket since I normally fish outside the bay.

With three people on board plus a kayak,inflatable, and an extra 20 gallons of gas we averaged right at 3 mpg. For safety sake, we took on another 15 gallons of gas at Falls Bay from a friend, and arrived in Seward with 27 gallons remaining.

It was a great trip, but I think I won't make the run all the way to Seward next time Crossing the Gulf was okay and the fishing fine, but I would rather make a round robin back to Whittier with the return being up Prince of Wales passage and then along the west side of Knight Island. Fewer people, better scenery, and better anchorages.
 
Sounds like a great trip. Thanks for sharing the details with us.
I agree with your comments about the gulf stretch to Resurrection Bay. Its not as interesting and the conditions can be downright nasty.
 
I have the grey 22ft Cruiser you visited in Johnstone Bay during your trip. We were sitting on our favorite chicken hole.

It's a good thing you went into Seward Thursday. Friday was a mess. We just slept in Friday morning, went out for breakfast and went home.

I noticed you had an Etec on your C-dory. How is it working for you? My boat is a 93 with twin Honda 45s which I have been extremely happy with. The round trip to Johnstone is roughly 80 miles with some putzing around. I do it on 18 gallons of gas.

Sounds like you had a great trip. We have done the Seward to Wittier and back a number of times. We make a 5 day trip out of it. I have two 18 gallon tanks and I take two spare 12 gallon tanks for the initial run to places we like to cruise in PWS.

You know, over the years I have noticed that just about the only boats in the 22ft class doing things out in Blying sound are C-Dorys. The rest are all 27ftrs and bigger.
 
Dtol,

After an initial problem of running too cold all the time which was finally fixed this spring, the motor runs fine. I burn a little more gas than you, I think mainly due to weight. 3 guys, 20 gals of water, 7 days of food, a kayak, an inflatable, lots of spare things (anchor, prop, oil, stove, propane, radios, computer) and the fuel consumption climbs quickly. The difference of one person is about .5 mpg on average over a long trip. I think we burned 56 gallons of gas in about 165 miles, 25% of which was into 3 and 4 foot seas on the bow. That really cuts economy in the name of comfort (a lot of bow down trim tab).

We went back out Saturday fishing, and in some respects it was worse than Friday. Going out wasn't bad, but winds were gusting to 30 knots when we came back in and the south side of El Dorado Narrows was brutal.
 
tpbrady,
Depending on waether I have anchored in Humpy Bay, Sunny Cove and Mary's Bay. Just don't trust Sunny Cove with a big SE blow - it acts as a wind tunnel. I learned that the hard way. Back in the SE corner of Humpy is probably the best spot, but may be too many boats in there in the summer.
Have done basicaly the same trip a couple of times before the tunnel - Seward to Main Bay and back to Seward (no real reason to go on into Whittier). Totalled nearly 400 miles on those expeditions, carrying 100 gal of fuel - didn't leave myself the cushion you did (about 8 gallons on one trip if I remember correctly). A very pretty trip. I would rarely see anyone. Tunnel has made it a little busier down in the southwestern end of the sound but high gas prices may be helping a little again - I only saw a few boats my last trip to Bainbridge in late June.

Had planned a Anchorage to Whittier trip this summer (about 360 NM), but had some family responsibilities that couldn't be avoided. Still on my list of things to do. Have done about all but 20 miles of it at various points in time - definitely will have to have a good weather window to get from about Flat Island to the other side of Gore Point.

dtol,
Glad to hear you are still poking around out there. I have seen you in years past out in Johnstone - usually when I am fishing silvers at Cape Fairfield. Think we even talked at one point, but can't remember the occasion - maybe at the dock. I am a red C-Dory with radar arch and twin 45 Hondas. No particular reason why, but I just haven't spent much time in Seward the last few years so it was probably 4 or 5 years ago. Maybe I can get down there a little more often in the future.
 
Nainu,

Let me know on the trip Anchorage to Whittier. I have been planning Anchorage to Homer and Homer to Seward so would be interested in giving it a go for some or all.
 
Nainu

Certainly do remember you and your boat. The number of C-Dorys on the water lately has increased by a bunch in this past couple of years. I have put my boat up for the winter already. I wasn't ready but it's done. The weather this year has been strange. It seems that every storm hit on the weekend. Good seas always seemed to be on Tuesday and Wednesday.
 
Hi tpbrady,

I just now read about your trip. I was saw you... I was fishing the derby in one of the Army rental boat. I was there 14 days and saw the sun only one day., But the fishing was good. Nothing to even enter The biggest we had was about 13 lbs. I should have traded you for your big one... hi.
I am not a c-dory owner yet but hope to be soon. The plans are to take it to AK and do some exploring. Hope to see you again..

Roger
 
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