Around Britain Summer Cruise 2024

This year’s club top sailor award must go to Simon Browning. He recently completed a magnificent cruise around Britain, following the Caledonian Canal route clockwise and starting from Loch Feochan. In total, he covered 1680 miles. This extended journey presented its own set of challenges. Simon efficiently dealt with a diesel engine cylinder head gasket failure, which resulted in a dramatic loss of power and a momentary white smoke scare while at sea with land barely in sight. Fortunately, the ever resourceful skipper located a good man, sourced the necessary bits and pieces, and finally resolved the mechanicals with minimal delay. Despite this challenge, the cruise around Britain allowed Simon and his crew, Jo, to visit some of the most enchanted and unforgettable places, including the White Cliffs of Dover, Lindisfarne, Wells-next-the-Sea, Land’s End, the Brighton Pavilion, and Belfast, the birthplace of the Titanic and her sister ship. His yacht, Raindance, a 34-foot Moody, is flawlessly suited for the task—spacious enough for extended living yet manageable for short-handed sailing. With its relatively shallow draft and bilge keels, it can navigate the salt marshes and tidal estuaries that thankfully abound in UK waters, unlocking the possibility of lingering in some of the most renowned and memorable locations.

On day 1, following extensive preparation, Raindance set sail from Ardoran Marine on Loch Feochan at high tide, embarking on an extraordinary journey. A brief voyage brought Simon and Jo to Loch Spelve on the Isle of Mull. Eager to savour every moment of the long voyage ahead, they acquired and enjoyed fresh mussels for lunch, marking a delightful beginning to their adventure.
The caption above depicts the northern part of the cruise from the mentioned website. The red pin marks the start and end locations, and the circular photos show different places, ports, anchorages, or havens that Raindance visited during the journey around Great Britain.
Continuing from the above, the journey heads south, down through the North Sea, into the English Channel, westward as far as Cornwall and Land’s End, then north to Wales, onto the Isle of Man, with a brief stop in Northern Ireland, before returning to Scotland.
And back at the start on day 101, all safe and sound.

Click here for the whole story. (Best viewed on a desktop PC with a big screen; I recommend working through the photos with accompanying well-written and engaging narrative)

Leave a Reply