Island boat loses sail in squall heading to Strait Challenge

'I don't know if someone was looking at us from above or what' says the ship's captain

Image | Jason MacAulay's boat Persuasion

Caption: Jason MacAulay's boat Persuasion lost her mainsail trying to outrun a squall in the Northumberland Strait on Saturday. (Brian Chandler/Facebook)

The captain of the Island sail boat Persuasion was trying to outrun a squall that was bearing down on his boat Saturday afternoon in the Northumberland Strait when the boat lost her mainsail.
Jason MacAulay and his crew member, Katherine Ballem, were sailing the 29-foot boat from Charlottetown to the start of the Strait Challenge in Shediac, N.B., and were just passing Petit-Cap, when MacAulay says they saw a curtain of black clouds ahead.

Decided to sail on

But another P.E.I. sail boat ahead of them, the Pepper sailed by John Rankin and didn't turn around, so they decided to keep going too. They were making good time, when the wind died, so they switched to the motor.
Then they saw lightning ahead.
"Course these types of boats have 40-foot long lightning rods on them, so that's a worry to start with, but when you get conditions, when the wind dies all of a sudden and you see a black cloud in front of you that's definitely a tell tale sign that things could get hairy in a hurry."

Image | Jason MacAulay

Caption: Captain of the boat Jason MacAulay said they decided to turn back when they saw lightning ahead in New Brunswick, but the return trip to P.E.I. was less than smooth sailing. (Heather Hoyt/Facebook)

MacAulay said the challenge with only two crew members is getting the sails down quickly, especially in windy conditions. So they decided to play it safe and turn around.

'Agonizing decision' what best to do

"It was kind of an agonizing decision because out of a 70 nautical mile trip from Charlottetown to Shediac, we were only 15 miles away from Shediac, and we were 18 miles away from turning back to the nearest safe port. And we had the tide with us too."
Turning back didn't end up being smooth sailing either.
"At this point we were basically trying to run from the black cloud. Of course, that's not a great scenario when you're on a sail boat. You're never going to outrun a storm cloud."
They decided to keep the main sail up to give the boat a fighting chance at staying ahead of the storm. The wind was gusting between 40 and 50 km/hr.

Old, wet sail gave out

But MacAulay said the sails on the boat are old, and it didn't help that the mainsail was also wet from hard rain that had started falling.
"It just couldn't take it, so we got a foot long rip in the sail in one area and a three or four inch rip in the other, and at that point the worse it becomes the harder it is to take the sail down."

Image | Crew member Katherine Ballem

Caption: The Persuasion was short-handed that day with only MacAulay and crew member Katherine Ballem on board. (Heather Hoyt/Facebook)

"My crew member actually had to change my shoes into rubber boots 'cause I couldn't really take my hands off the wheel there at one point."

Finally, some good luck

But then Persuasion finally hit a bit of good luck.
"I don't know whether somebody was looking at us from above or what but the black cloud that we were trying to avoid definitely rolled over us but the winds never got any worse."
MacAulay and Ballem sailed Persuasion to Borden-Carleton, P.E.I., where they tied the boat up for the night.
MacAulay took the sail into Charlottetown, where it was repaired by Ron White, a volunteer at the Charlottetown Yacht Club nicknamed "the sail doctor."

Image | Persuasion

Caption: MacAulay still plans to compete in the Strait Challenge regatta, starting with the leg from Summerside to Charlottetown on Tuesday with four to five crew. (Jason MacAulay/Facebook)

MacAulay plans to race the second leg of the four-leg Strait Challenge from Summerside to Charlottetown Tuesday.
He was a crew member on the boat that won the challenge last year, the Jagger sailed by Russell Compton from P.E.I.

Winning's not everything

MacAulay isn't worried that Saturday's setback could mean he has less of a chance of winning this year.
"For us, we just like to go sailing," he said.
"The [Northumberland] Strait is always a challenge whether it's no wind at all and you're kind of just doing the marathon hours and hours thing or whether there's too much wind and have to hunker down and bear some waves over the face a little bit."
There were 23 boats registered to race in the Strait Challenge as of Monday, according to organizers, with at least seven from the Island, and more expected to join along the way.
The Strait Challenge wraps up Friday with the last leg between Barachois and Pictou, N.S.