Two Years Before the Mast
Chapter 10: A South-Easter - Passage up the Coast
This night, after sundown, it looked black at the southward and eastward,
and we were told to keep a bright look-out. Expecting to be called up,
we turned in early. Walking up about midnight, I found a man who had just
come down form his watch striking a light. He said that it was beginning
to puff up from the southeast, and that the sea was rolling in, and he
had called the captain; and as he threw himself down on his chest with
all his clothes on, I knew that he expected to be called. I felt the vessel
pitching at her anchor, and the chain surging and snapping, and lay awake,
expecting an instant, summons. In a few minutes it came - three knocks
on the scuttle, and "All hands ahoy! bear-a-hand up and make sail." We
sprang up for our clothes, and were about half way dressed, when the mate
called out, down the scuttle, "Tumble up here, men! tumble up! before she
drags her anchor." We were on deck in an instant. "Lay aloft and loose
the topsails!" shouted the captain, as soon as the first man showed himself.
Springing into the rigging, I saw that the Ayacucho's topsails were loosed,
and heard her crew singing-out at the sheets as they were hauling them
home. This had probably started our captain; as "old Wilson" (the captain
of the Ayacucho) had been many years on the coast, and knew the signs of
the weather. We soon had the topsails loosed; and one hand remaining, as
usual, in each top, to overhaul the ringing and light the sail out, the
rest of us came down to man the sheets. While sheeting home, we saw the
Ayacucho standing athwart our hawse, sharp upon the wind, cutting through
the head seas like a knife, with her raking masts and sharp bows running
up like the head of a greyhound. It was a beautiful sight. She was like
a bird which had been frightened and had spread her wings in flight. After
the topsails had been sheeted home, the head yards braced aback, the fore-top-mast
staysail hoisted, and the buoys streamed, and all ready forward, for slipping,
we went aft and manned the slip-rope which came through the stern port
with a turn round the timber-heads. "All ready forward?" asked the captain.
"Aye, aye, sir; all ready," answered the mate. "Let go!" "All gone, sir;"
and the iron cable grated over the windlass and through the hawse-hole,
and the little vessel's head swinging off from the wind under the force
of her backed head sails, brought the strain upon the slip-rope "Let go
aft!" Instantly all was gone, and we were under weigh. As soon as she was
well off from the wind, we filled away the head yards, braced all up sharp,
set the foresail and trysail, and left our anchorage well astern, giving
the point a good berth. "Nye's off too," said the captain to the mate;
and looking astern we could just see the little hermaphrodite brig under
sail standing after us.
It now began to blow fresh; the rain fell fast, and it grew very black;
but the captain would not take in sail until we were well clear of the
point. As soon as well left this on our quarter, and were
standing
out to sea, the order was given, and we sprang aloft, double reefed each
topsail, furled the foresail, and double reefed the trysail, and were soon
under easy sail. In these cases of slipping for south-easters, there is
nothing to be done, after you have got clear of the coast, but to lie-to
under easy sail, and wait for the gale to be over, which seldom lasts more
than two days, and is often over in twelve hours; but the wind never comes
back to the southward until there has a good deal of rain fallen. "Go below
the watch," said the mate; but here was a dispute which watch it should
be, which the mate soon however settled by sending his watch below, saying
that we should have our turn the next time we got under weigh. We remained
on deck till the expiration of the watch, the wind blowing very fresh and
the rain coming down in torrents. When the watch came up, we wore ship,
and stood on the other tack, in towards land. When we came up again, which
was at four in the morning, it was very dark, and there was not much wind,
but it was raining as I thought I had never seen it rain before. We had
on oilcloth suits and south-wester caps, and had nothing to do but to stand
bolt upright and let it pour down upon us. There are no umbrellas, and
no sheds to go under at sea.
While we were standing about on deck, we saw the little brig drifting
by us, hove to under her fore topsail double reefed; and she glided by
like a phantom. Not a word was spoken, and we saw no one on deck but the
man at the wheel. Toward morning the captain put his head out of the companion-way
and told the second mate, who commanded our watch, to look out for a change
of wind, which usually followed a calm and heavy rain; and it was well
that he did; for in a few minutes it fell dead calm, the vessel lost her
steerage-way, and the rain ceased. We hauled up the trysail and courses,
squared the after yards, and waited for the change, which came in a few
minutes, with a vengeance, from the northwest, the opposite point of the
compass. Owing to our precautions, we were not taken aback, but ran before
the wind with square yards. The captain coming on deck, we braced up a
little and stood back for our anchorage. With the change of wind came a
change of weather, and in two hours the wind moderated into the light steady
breeze, which blows down the coast the greater part of the year, and, from
its regularity, might be called a trade wind. The sun came up bright, and
we set royals, skysails, and studding-sails, and were under fair way for
Santa Barbara. The little Loriotte was astern of us, nearly out of sight;
but we saw nothing of the Ayacucho. In a short time she appeared, standing
out from Santa Rosa Island, under the lee of which she had been hove to,
all night. Our captain was anxious to get in before her, for it would be
a great credit to us, on the coast, to beat the Ayacucho, which had been
called the best sailer in the North Pacific, in which she had been known
as a trader for six years or more. We had an advantage over her in light
winds, from our royals and skysails which we carried both at the fore and
main, and also in our studding-sails; for Captain Wilson carried nothing
above top-gallant-sails, and always unbent his studding-sails when on the
coast. As the wind was light and fair, we held our own, for some time,
when we were both obliged to brace up and come upon a taught bowline, after
rounding the point; and here he had us on fair ground, and walked away
from us, as you would haul in a line. He afterwards said that we sailed
well enough with the wind free, but that give him a taught bowline, and
he would beat us, if we had all the canvas of the Royal George.
The Ayacucho got to the anchoring ground about half an hour before us,
and was furling her sails when we came up to it. This picking up your cables
is a very nice piece of work. It requires some seamanship to do it, and
come to at your former moorings, without letting go another anchor. Captain
Wilson was remarkable, among the sailors on the coast, for his skill in
doing this; and our captain never let go a second anchor during all the
time that I was with him. Coming a little to the windward of our buoy,
we clewed up the light sails, backed our main top-sail, and lowered a boat,
which pulled off, and made fast a spare hawser to the buoy on the end of
the slip-rope. We brought the other end to the capstan, and hove in upon
it until we came to the slip-rope, which we took to the windlass, and walked
her up to her chain, the captain helping her by backing and filling the
sails. The chain is then passed through the hawse-hole and round the windlass,
and bitted, the slip-rope taken round outside and brought into the stern
port, and she is safe in her old berth. After we had got through, the mate
told us that this was a small touch of California, the like of which we
must expect to have through the winter.
After we had furled the sails and got dinner, we saw the Loriotte nearing,
and she had her anchor before night. At sundown we went ashore again, and
found the Loriotte's boat waiting on the beach. The Sandwich Islander,
who could speak English, told us that he had been up to the town; that
our agent, Mr. R___, and some other passengers, were going to Monterey
with us, and that we were to sail the same night. In a few minutes Captain
T___ with two gentlemen and a lady, came down, and we got ready to go off,
They had a good deal of baggage, which we put into the bows of the boat,
and then two of us took the senora in our arms, and waded with her through
the water, and put her down safely in the stern. She appeared much amused
with the transaction, and her husband was perfectly satisfied, thinking
any arrangement good which saved his wetting his feet. I pulled the after
oar, so that I heard the conversation, and learned that one of the men,
who, as well as I could see in the
darkness, was a young-looking man, in the European dress, and covered
up in a large cloak, was the agent of the firm to which our vessel belonged;
and the other, who was dressed in the Spanish dress of the country, was
a brother of our captain, who had been many years a trader on the coast,
and had married the lady who was in the boat. She was a delicate, dark-complexioned
young woman, and of one of the best families in California. I also found
that we were to sail the same night. As soon as we got on board, the boats
were hoisted up, the sails loosed, the windlass manned, the slip-ropes
and gear cast off; and after about twenty minutes of heaving at the windlass,
making sail, and bracing yards, we were well under weigh, and going with
a fair wind up the coast to Monterey. The Loriotte got under weigh at the
same time, and was also bound up to Monterey, but as she took a different
course from us, keeping the land aboard, while we kept well out to sea,
we soon lost sight of her. We had a fair wind, which is something unusual
when coming up, as the prevailing wind is the north, which blows directly
down the coast; whence the northern are called the windward, and the southern
the leeward ports.