Intrepid Travels

Vessel Name: Intrepid Elk
Vessel Make/Model: Outremer catamaran 51
Hailing Port: Fremantle
Crew: Robert and Revle Elks
16 May 2017
06 October 2016
30 September 2016
22 September 2016
18 September 2016
17 September 2016
14 September 2016
13 September 2016
12 September 2016
10 September 2016
04 September 2016
01 September 2016
31 August 2016
30 August 2016
27 August 2016
24 August 2016
23 August 2016
21 August 2016
19 August 2016
Recent Blog Posts
16 May 2017

Cherbourg encore

We are reunited with Intrepid Elk after a winter/summer separation and it is good to be home again. IE has had a facelift and her shiny white hulls are dazzling once more. She has a beautiful new bimini (shade cover) over the helm seat, which Robert designed and which was fabricated in Portsmouth and [...]

06 October 2016

IE preparation for winter

Our sailing days for this year are over and we are once again busy getting IE ready for a winter in the northern hemisphere. This year, she will be in the water for most of the time, with a short interlude on land in a large painting shed, where she will have her hulls painted. In order to get her into [...]

30 September 2016

Cherbourg, France

It was an inky black moonless night as we slipped out of the river and across the sand bar with fishing vessel Emma Louise behind us. Revle was on the bowsprit with a spotlight looking for hazards ahead. I was at the helm, peering at our chartplotter and concentrating on following our inward track. [...]

22 September 2016

Plymouth

We made a motoring passage of 35 miles to Plymouth Sound, then battled against strong currents up the Tamar River to an anchorage at West Mud where we spent a peaceful night. Plymouth has been a major naval base for centuries and we had some close encounters with modern navy ships in the harbour. We [...]

18 September 2016

Falmouth

Our passage to Falmouth took us past The Lizard, a projecting headland with a ferocious tidal race. We passed a little too close and got caught in the race which was too bumpy for comfort. Approaching the Falmouth harbour, we had the excitement of crossing our track from June 2015 when we made landfall [...]

17 September 2016

Newlyn

We left the Isles of Scilly early in the morning to catch a light northerly wind to Land's End and the fishing port of Newlyn, just south of Penzance. We couldn't believe our luck, having another gentle passage through one of the most treacherous and notorious waterways in northern Europe. We galloped [...]

The Saints

24 January 2015
With sad hearts and a promise to Martin to return, we left Prince Rupert Bay in Dominica for the small group of islands to the north, known as "the Saints". We were well stocked with fresh produce in the knowledge that it would be hard to find such quality fruit and vegetables anywhere else. We had a delightful beam reach with a moderate swell and clear skies, arriving about 5 hours later. We dropped anchor in a pretty bay in the Terre-de-Haut Island.
The Saints was the site of an historic naval battle that took place in 1782. This was a victory of a British fleet over a French fleet forcing the French and Spanish to abandon a planned invasion of Jamaica.
Terre-de-Haut is a convenient stopover for cruising yachts and is a pleasantly low key tourist destination, mainly for the French. We stayed a few nights and enjoyed walking and snorkelling. One of the interesting sites was Fort Napoléon, located on the bluff overlooking our bay. It never saw use in battle, and was instead used as a prison. Now it is a museum of the Saints' history.
In keeping with our policy of spreading our hairdressing assignments far and wide, Revle had a haircut in Terre-de-Haut. She was well pleased with the result.
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