WIND AND FOG IN BERING SEA 63 



That opened the subject and we talked it over for 

 about an hour. After it had been emphasized that we 

 had no part in any controversy and that all personal 

 differences should be settled after the voyage was car- 

 ried out as planned, and should not be allowed to spoil 

 the trip, Born came over handsomely and agreed to 

 coast up Siberia as we desired. The friendly atmos- 

 phere appeared once more to have been restored. 



It presently proved that we had overrun our reckon- 

 ing and gone past Indian Point before we changed our 

 course to pick it up. We ran through the fog-bank 

 and found ourselves about sixteen miles eastward of 

 our supposed position. Indian Point lay far on oiu- 

 weather quarter and the snov^^-streaked mountains of 

 Kayne Island in Seniavine Strait lay dead ahead about 

 fifteen miles away. We were too far to leeward of the 

 land to hold the course we most desired because of the 

 ''Abler's" inability to go against the strong wind. 

 Instead of being able to get in between Ittygran and 

 Kayne Island we were forced to go under the lee of 

 Kayne Island and sail almost around it through Chiyar- 

 liun Pass at its north to an anchorage in the shelter 

 north of Ittygran Island opposite Glazenap Harbor. 



t\ 





