Sailing on Biscayne Bay is not easy. First off it starts with a dock launch then a couple few hundred meters of rowing out of an calm intracoastal channel. Once on the bay there are tons of shallow areas/sand bars that easily cause the rudders to kick up all the time (the whole bay is very shallow other than where the channel has been dredged). In addition there are many small islands, tons of other boaters all the time and fully developed shoreline everywhere other than the small islands, which on any good days have lots of beached motor-boaters. The only ocean access for good open sailing where there's actually room to breath besides sailing 9-10 miles down to key Biscayne where the bay mouths into the ocean, is the haulover/bal harbour cut high level bridge. But this also basically the only real tide inlet/outlet other than the south area, so the current is quite strong. Additionally as with passing through any of the other high level or open drawbridge (which are hard to catch right btw), there are inconsistencies in the wind. Any tricks other than luffing the sails and having a little electric motor mounted to get through this outlet to the ocean? Really I am more or less planning on having to get a motor/small marine battery (fairly cheap and not the problem) as well as a proper mount (expensive and I don't fully understand how it works well) but I was wonder what else could be done while remaining a true sailor. BTW I tried going through the channel once against the wind but with a strong out current. It worked but we were bumping along the side of the bridge pilings because the current pushed us sideways hard (plastic covered but also lots of barnacles) and it didn't seem like something I'd want to do every time. We had to use our paddles because the current seemed to push us as harder laterally that outwards.
Thanks