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Lindsey and Jackson unhooked us from the buoy.
Buoy Leaving Fox Cove
And we passed on by the incredible rock formations and out of Fox Cove.
Cool Rocks Sucia
This rock formation looks like a face to me.
Face in Rocks
We made our way to Patos Island which is not very far at all, maybe an hour tops away from Sucia. Just enough to enjoy some coffee.
Making Coffee
On our way in you are greeted with a really cool view of the lighthouse at the beginning of the bay you’d stay in at Patos Island.
Patos Lighthouse Approach
But the bay is really small, and it shallows quickly, and it’s also narrow, so it only has 2 buoys and room to maybe fit one or two extra people anchored.
When we got there, there were already two people tied up to the buoys so we decided to try anchoring.
Putting Down Anchor
It’s pretty tight in there, and we were uncomfortably close to the rock wall, and some other rocks behind us. Plus, close to another boat on the buoy.
Anchored Close To Rocks
It wasn’t the best anchorage, so we thought maybe we’d just stay there for the day, explore the island, and hope someone leaves a buoy, otherwise, we’d find somewhere else to go for the night.
We headed to shore, and checked out Patos.
Clover Jackson Dinghy
It is like a tiny Sucia Island, but maybe a little more wild and untouched. Probably because there’s not room for too many boats to hang out there. And therefore less people.
The rocks look a lot like the ones on Sucia, same sandstone formations that seem to go on forever.
Patos Sandstone On and On
We hiked the path to the lighthouse, and it was HOT. Especially for Lindsey, being pregnant in her third trimester.
But Lucky was loving it, and he was running back and forth on the trail. In and out of the shadows from the madrona trees above and into the super strong sunlight.
Lucky Runs out of the Darkness
And Jackson walked most the way, but I gave him a few breaks on my shoulders.
Jackson on Shoulders
He used my head as a drum.
Banging On Seans Head
Eventually we made it to the Lighthouse and looked around.
All Run To Lighthouse
Back on the beach, the dogs jumped in the water to cool off.
Lucky Shaking In Water
And we headed back to the sailboat in the dinghy. The tide gets really fast next to the beach there, and some Geese were having fun riding the fast tide like they were river rafting.
Geese Tide
Back on the sailboat, we noticed even more people coming in and trying to anchor. We thought that was pretty sketchy.
Anchoring Stern Line No Go
So we decided to leave, and go to Rocky Bay on San Juan Island for the night.

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It’s been a little while since I updated here, and lots of animated gifs have been piling up. Too many to load on one page without causing problems, so I’m going to split this post into 4 pages. I’ll just put a “next page” link at the bottom to keep things simple.

Right now we’re in Deer Harbor but when we last left off, we were still in Fox Cove on Sucia Island. And we were just about to go look for fossils in the area they recently found T-Rex dinosaur bones.

So we got in the dinghy, went to shore and started hiking along a path that someone on shore told us about.

It was a bit of a hike, some significant up and down action with steep cliffs off to one side.

Jackson was having fun. But falling a lot, probably due to his legs getting tired.

Fall Down Get Up

Fall Down Get Up 2

I didn’t see anywhere you could find fossils, and the mosquitoes were scary intense so we turned back around and went to the bottom of the trail, along the beach. That seemed much more promising for fossil action.

We didn’t find any dinosaurs, but we did see some fossilized tree trunks.

Fossil Wood

And some super old sea shells lodged into the rocks.

Jackson finds fossil

Shells In Wall

SONY DSC

SONY DSC

Speaking of dinosaurs being found in this bay, the rocks on the beach look like dinosaur skin. Check it out.

Rocks Look Like Dino Skin

 

Rocks Look Like Dino Skin 2

On our way back to the dinghy we stopped at a big open field, and Lucky and Jackson ran around.

Circles

Lucky Run Jackson Fall

The next day we had breakfast. Jackson and Clover shared a bowl of blueberries.

Sucia and Patos-7

Sucia and Patos-11

Then we headed out away from Sucia.

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On Friday morning we finished up on Eastsound, got back in the dingy…

Taking the dinghy back

Jackson and Lindsey pulled up anchor, and we started making our way to Sucia island.

Pulling up anchor

I think out of all the places we’re going to stay on this trip, Sucia is going to be the longest. (3 nights.)

It took 5 hours to get here from Eastsound, and we motored almost the whole way to accomplish two things.

  1. To get there in a reasonable time frame.
  2. To charge the batteries. (Motoring helps bring back up the voltage.)

The view of Mt. Baker was awesome again.

Mt Baker Number Two View

Jackson was on lookout with the binoculars.

Jackson Bonocs Up Front

Here’s where we went and where we are now.

Sucia Island Map

We were hoping to stay in Shallow Bay (the sunsets there are awesome and they have a cool little beach there) but two things prevented us from doing so.

  1. All the buoys were taken, and there wasn’t much room to anchor either due to other people already anchored. (It’s a small shallow bay as the name suggests.)
  2. The weather report for the Straight of Georgia (where Sucia is right next to) had a strong wind advisory saying that it could blow 25 knots from the northwest, and Shallow Bay is exposed to that direction of wind.

So we moved to the next cove down, Fox Cove, which surprisingly had the deepest buoy available. Although their deepest buoy was still a little scarily shallow. After checking the tide tables and comparing them to the charts it looked like we should be good, but barely. So we went on shore and paid our mooring fees.

Jackson wanted to stay on the beach so we let him until he realized we were gone and ran to catch up with us.

Dinghy Run Away

Back on the boat we were greeted with a flock of geese, and we had fun feeding them.

Feeding Geese

However, looking at the depth finder, it showed that when the tide was down, and we were being blown to the east we had only 7 feet of water. And this boat goes down 7 feet below the waterline.

So that was a little unnerving.

If the wind was going to blow us even more to the east during low tide, it looked like we would be potentially scraping bottom. I didn’t really like that idea. So I got out the map and looked for other possibilities. It’s a busy weekend for Sucia because of the nice weather, and it’s a weekend not a week day. So the spots were limited. And if we left our buoy in search of another, we may lose our spot, and not even find another.

In a search for ideas, I thought it might be fun to go explore in the dinghy and find another spot. So Jackson, Lucky and I went on an adventure out on the outside of Sucia and trolled around in the dinghy.

Lindsey and Clover cast us off.

Casting off Dinghy

And we were on our own.

All 3 in the Dinghy

Soon, I realized how far the other coves are on Sucia when trying to travel with a 2 horsepower engine on a small dinghy.

The scenery was incredible, and it was a ton of fun.

Bumpy Ride Sucia Cool Rock

Lucky Jackson Dinghy Sucia View

But it also got a little scary when the waves started to get bigger, and Jackson wanted to start exploring the dinghy and playing with the engine.

Dinghy Pull While Going

And some boats weirdly wanted to get super close to the dinghy

Boat Close 1

Incredibly close.

Boat Close 2

And Lucky was trying to go up on the sides of the boat to get a better view.

One rogue wave and he could have flown overboard.

Combine that with the strong wind warning, and I thought that if we winds did pick up sooner than expected, we might have a very stressful trip back. So after about half an hour I turned around. It was still fun, but we didn’t find another deeper spot that was more protected from the wind.

My alternate plan was to try and verify the depth that we got from the depth finder. Sometimes if there’s kelp or other seaweed stuff on the bottom the depth finder will bounce off that and give an inaccurate reading.

So, after looking around for something to drop down to the bottom, I decided on a can of soda, filled with rocks, tied to a string.

After a few attempts, it worked. And while the depth finder said 7 feet, the string-and-soda test said it was closer to 11 feet. That’s plenty of room, 4 feet to spare between the bottom of the boat and the bottom, at low tide.

We’ve been pretty lazy on Sucia, just taking the short trip on the dinghy to the beach right by us, hanging around in the water, and Jackson playing with bugs. Or “ah-mommys” as Jackson calls them. (For some reason he’s always called bugs “ah-mommys” not sure where he picked that up, but he’s a huge fan of ah-mommys.)

Bug-Ah-Mommy

The ah-mommy even came back to the boat with us.

Ah-Mommy

We played on the beach.

Getting off Dinghy

In the water.

Going in the Water

 

Sucia-8

Sucia-10

Sucia-18

Saw an otter.

Otter

Threw rocks.

Throwing Rocks

And some awesome sunsets.

Sunset Sucia

And Jackson’s getting pretty awesome at getting from the dingy to the boat all on his own.

Climbing from Dinghy to Boat

So far, our menu has been pretty uncomplicated. Just more hot dogs, and grilled cheese for lunch.

Lucky is Jackson’s best friend when he’s eating hot dogs.

Lucky Kiss

Jackson is a fan of the grilled cheese.

Toasted Cheese

Breakfast has been oatmeal and eggs.

Baby Eggs

Oatmeal Not So Much

Eating oatmeal and eggs on a boat in your Superman and Cookie Monster pajamas is pretty awesome.

Eggs Spoon Superman Cookiemonster

Jackson likes to feed me cookies.

Cookie Feeder

Recently they found the fossil remains of a T-Rex right next to where we’re floating right now. So after it stops raining (yea it’s raining right now, the weather has been really weird, super sunny, windy, and now cloudy and rainy.) I’m going to see if I can find some cool fossils of my own… maybe 🙂

And tomorrow we’re headed to Patos island. That’s the plan.

See ya!

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