Kefken Adasi: Paying tribute to Apollo

This lighthouse, coast guard station and the two breakwaters extending south
from it are the only structures on the tiny island of Kefken Adasi.
Black Sea Logbook Entry
Date: 6/2/2010
Distance: 4.3 nm
Sailed from: Kefken
Lat: 41° 12.7'N
Long: 30° 15.5'E
Although full gales are rare in the Black Sea during the
summer, we are expecting a few days of stronger (Force 6) winds. One of
our cruising guides provides a list of dates in the ancient Coptic calendar
because these windy days often arrive on the same dates every year. June
2nd is listed as "strong wind northerly" which makes it the third time
since arriving in Istanbul last month that the old calendar has been
right. By 6:00 a.m. the winds were blowing 20-25 knots from the northwest
inside the harbor, so it must have been windier outside.
The wind dropped off again
around noon, so we decided to poke our nose out of Kefken's protected harbor to
experience for ourselves the infamous Black Sea swell. The short hop to
Kefken Adasi, a tiny island four miles away, was a good way to get a small dose
of the big seas on this leeward shore. We really wanted to spend a night
at Kefken Adasi, known in ancient times as Apollonia because of a sanctuary to
Apollo built by the Argonauts on the island. We cast-off from the raft of
fishing boats and were anchored in the island's harbor an hour later. It
was a rolly ride, but Gyatso took it all in stride. We shared the
anchorage with one other yacht which we later learned had spent the previous
night here and had a terrible time in the storm. David watched the sunrise
the following morning and gave thanks to Apollo
for a peaceful night at anchor.
Our voyage around the Black Sea continues in Akçakoca,
Turkey...
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