We left you on a particularly rolly morning at Bornholm Island. We were still protected from the wind, but the swells were bending round the headland and across the bay. It must have been bad to get us underway at 5:30am.

North of us was a stretch of open water leading to the Swedish coast around Karlskrona. As we approached the coast we passed the small island and harbour of Utklippan. We considered stopping for the night, but over 10 masts in a small surgy harbour put us off.

Utklippan has a large seal colony, a disused lighthouse and a small restaurant.

North of Utklippan is the area where the cold war ‘Whiskey on the Rocks’ incident occurred. One morning in 1981 a fisherman noticed a Soviet whiskey class submarine parked on the rocks where there wasn’t usually one. The soviets claimed it was parked there due to a navigation error. We weren’t sure if we should be proud or concerned that our navigation was more accurate than a nuclear submarine.

The anchorage we had chosen had several boats tied up to the rocks and enough room for us to anchor in deeper water. The next day after all the other boats had gone and no one was watching, we practiced mooring up to the rocks. This involves throwing a spare anchor off the back as you approach the rocks, driving the bow towards the rocks and stopping 10cm before impact so the person on the bow can run along the bowsprit and launch themselves onto the rocks with hammer, peg and a bow line in hand. They quickly hammer a peg in a rock fissure and secure the bow. Then you tug on the stern anchor line, which is hopefully not caught on the propeller, and secure the boat far enough from the rocks that its not touching, but close enough that one can step onto the rock, with BBQ in one hand and esky in the other.

After 3 attempts we were happy with our first rock berth. Most Baltic boats have an overhanging bow to make this a little easier.
We had the compulsory BBQ on the rocks

The forecast for the next day was for solid travelling winds on the beam. We followed the narrow channel out to the coast and headed north towards Kalmar. There were plenty of other boats with the same plan and we avoided most of the traffic a bit further off the coast.

We made a bee line for Kalmar
Away sped along enjoying the gusty conditions.
They’ve built a nice castle to welcome you into Kalmar

We had booked a berth in the marina and a RIB came out to meet us and show us in. It had been gusting over 30 knots on the sail in to Kalmar so it was quite exciting to be led through ever narrowing channels until there was barely a boat length to turn into our berth!
The castle had been here a long time and now housed a museum.
Fi found this new frock but wasn’t convinced it would work on the boat. Wrong colour?
The castle even had some recipes from days gone by. We particularly liked this one and tried unsuccessfully to track down a suitable duck in the moat.

We were now in the land of Volvos and took the opportunity for a quick engine service before moving on up the coast. This area of coast has so many islands that its not hard to find a beautiful place to stop.

We left Kalmar in big red sail weather, but the winds filled in as the day progressed.

The anchorage we had picked was jam packed full with two other boats, so we continued on to look for somewhere quieter. We had been warned it could be busy in July and August.

We found this cool little bay. The depth sounder showed just 1.2m as we entered the bay, so it wasn’t too crowded. Did we say we love our lifting center board?

Next day was another sailing day to the southern end of the Stockholm archipelago. Fi had picked out a secret anchorage with a hidden shallow entrance that we hoped might deter less intrepid sailors.

The entrance to the anchorage is a narrow channel behind the trees.

The anchorage was empty, sheltered and with good holding. We decided to stay a while.

Fi spotted an abundance of wild blueberries growing on the islands.
We managed to stay up late enough to see the sun set.
Some of us braved the refreshing waters.
We even installed the hammock

After a relaxing few days we started the final journey into Stockholm. Unlike the approach to most ports, Stockholm is surrounded by a complex archipelago with many low bridges and narrow channels. We reached the outer islands and discovered our chosen anchorage had 50 boats in it! Fortunately the surrounding bays provided some quieter anchorages.

Only a few miles from Stockholm we found an empty bay for the night.
This channel into Stockholm is a little tight in places
As we got closer to the center the houses got bigger and reminded us of parts of Sydney harbour
A crane in disguise
The Stockholm skyline appeared around a corner and we motored into our marina
Fi had picked out the marina, and by co-incidence there were rollercoasters right next door!