The glass calm waters of Grenville Channel ripped apart like a zipper as our boat cruised southbound at a steady 40 knots. An otherworld-ly sunset played out astern. It was as good as it gets. Wind light. Seas flat. No traffic. Stunning end-of-day light. I was in a hurry to beat nightfall to Hartley Bay, a 75-mile run south from Prince Rupert, with the sun dropping at a rapid rate and my throttle dutifully engaged.
Half a day earlier I had checked the latest marine forecast for the north coast and spied a big change coming. We’d been enjoying high pressure and were drenched in sunshine for the better part of a week in Prince Rupert, which is almost unheard of. But the winds were coming up to 30-knot southerlies overnight and I didn’t want to take a bow beating the next day. We made the call on a late departure of around 19:00 for Hartley Bay while conditions were supreme. The only challenge was making port before dark, which was the sole reason for running at 40 and pumping up fuel burn in excess of 25 gallons per hour.
My cruising cohort and cameraman, Chris Wheeler, snapped photos while we rallied south. Darkness fell just as we exited the Grenville, a long and straight 40-mile shot from Rupert, and we crawled into Hartley Bay under the shroud of nightfall. Luckily, a thermal cam and some advanced electronics made for easy nocturnal navigation.
Boating the coast can be anywhere from blissful to demoralizing to downright demonic, so a run like this was the cruising stuff of dreams. Even cloaked in darkness. In the world of running British Columbia’s Inside Passage and Great Bear Rainforest, twisted tales, cruising side trips and unplanned adventure quickly become the norm. I’ve been incredibly fortunate the past decade to cruise and fish BC’s West Coast as part of filming our Big Coast television series. Each spring I run a 2725 Kingfisher Offshore with twin Yamaha 150 outboards from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert. It’s a run of about 275 miles, one we once completed in a 17-hour straight shot at 35 knots over glass calm waters.
In Prince Rupert we typically spend a week or two fishing and cruising the north coast before kicking off a six to eight-week voyage south, visiting various destinations, historical outposts, First Nations communities and fishing hotspots. Over the years it’s made for an incredible journey and represents true frontier in British Columbia. In that spirit of frontier, here’s an adventurous six-act primer on running BC’s Inside Passage and Great Bear Rainforest on a long, strange southbound tack.
A SIX PACK OF INSIDE PASSAGE TIPS
- Always check tides, swell, winds and weather for good planning and to understand the body of water that lays ahead.
- Plan for appropriate fuel, monitor consumption and don’t EVER pass a fuel stop.
- Pack backup paper charts, compass and GPS in addition to boat electronics.
- Stay focused. Hitting logs or debris on a trip of this magnitude can be a game-ender.
- Ensure mechanical and electronic health of your vessel and test radios/ communication.
- Take what the ocean gives you.