I arrived in Annapolis yesterday and shoehorned KR into a small gap in the anchorage in Back Creek. The harbormaster was not particularly thrilled with my effort (the picture does not show it but the boat behind me is not quite a full boat length away - there was more space between us until the wind shifted) but was not overly threatening so I stayed put. There is going to be a bit of wind tonight as a front passes through. I have two anchors out and they are both well set so I am not overly worried. However, there will be some sleep lost, I am sure.
My travels have gone well. I did leave New York City on Sunday. While not idyllic, the passage was not too painful. Lack of winds Sunday afternoon left me to motor out to Sandy Hook. When the winds filled in they were from the SSE (where in God's name did those come from?). I decided to beat it out until the passsing front allowed the forecast westerlies to arrive. I was soon fully powered up and moving fast towards Cape May. And, I was able to sail right to the channel entrance by 2:00pm on Monday. Unfortunately, the last 30 miles had been beating into 20-25knots of wind. It was wet.
Looking at the weather and currents for the Delaware River that night left no doubt that Tuesday was the day to make the next jump - no rest for the weary. There were not going to be any winds to speak of but if you have to motor, it was definitely the right day for it. I jumped on the early part of the flood current starting up the Delaware and carried a fair tide all the way to Chesapeake City on the Chesapeake-Delaware Canal. I saw over 8 knots on the GPS for 3 hours straight and over 7 knots for most of the remaining 40 miles! That doesn't happen often with KR.
I chose to motor up the Delaware Tuesday because of the forecast for Wednesday. With 40 knot winds predicted, it was clear that I should be hunkered down in a better harbor than Cape May. Chesapeake City is a small, completely land-locked harbor - great protection from all directions. And, miraculously, there was still space on the (free) town dock when I arrived. With the docks nestled into the West corner of the harbor and westerly winds forecast, it simply couldn't be a better place to hang out. The dock soon filled and we all had a new batch of "best friends for the day" as Suzie calls cruising friends.
The entertainment for the day was a large ketch (with 9' draft) that had come in late Tuesday night and had to winch itself sideways through the mud until they lay alongside the canal maintenance sea wall. When I met the Captain later in the day my question was "Why in the world are you bringing that boat into the Chesapeake?" They had their reasons, of course, but will not, I am sure, relax completely until they leave Hampton Roads.
I spent Wednesday morning baking bread and doing boat projects (I had a new crop of shellfish inhabiting the impeller wheel for the knot meter. New York apparently has a healthy mollusk population) and expecting at any minute to hear the plans for a cruiser's cocktail party that evening. Lunchtime came and went and still there were no plans. We had 20 boats hunkered down with windy (but sunny and warm) weather - and no one had put together cocktail hour. This was, simply put, very wrong.
So, I launched Katerik and endeavored (successfully) to row around the anchorage in the 30 knot gusts at the time to spread the word.
We had a nice gathering that evening with over twenty cruisers - including two very talented guitar players - enjoying themselves and each other.
Thursday morning at 4:00am the entertainment continued as the ketch tried to leave. After 20 minutes of straining engines, prop noise and bow thruster whining, the ketch was still there and I was wide awake. It is amazing how sounds travel through the water and resonate in a boat hull. I decided to get under way and, literally, plowed a furrow in the mud with KR's keel all the way to the harbor entrance. Apparently, the previous day's winds had created an artificially low low-tide. It was no wonder that the ketch couldn't move - it took all of KR's power to get her 5' draft out of there!
I understand the ketch made it out around 12:30.
I did the boat show today - a beautiful, very warm sunny day; perfect boat show weather. The highlight for me were the two North Carolina-built Pacific Seacraft yachts at the show. When PS went through liquidation a couple of years ago, a company in Washington, NC bought the molds, moved 18 of the California workers (and their families) and restarted production. The 40' at the show was a hull that had been laid up in California but finished in North Carolina - the 34' was all North Carolina production. They look great. Clearly, the current economic situation is not making the new company's life easy. However, I am happy to see that PS has a new lease on life. The boats are simply too good to go away.
My plan to head up the Potomac to Washington DC is in doubt. After 1 ½ months of heavy boat moving, albeit interspersed with down time along the way, I am thinking that a couple of weeks of harbor hopping down the Chesapeake would be a better idea. I'll make a decision in the next couple of days.
Either way, I'll get to Deltaville towards the end of October, spend a few days on boat projects and then continue the journey south. There are fewer time constraints from here on - except for the ones that I inflict on myself, of course.
Best to all.
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E-mail From: Contractors 'R Us
To: Architects Inc
Re: New Office Building at 18th St and West Ave, Manhattan
Dear Sirs,
We are in receipt of the plans for your new office building in Manhattan. Please be advised that, as there is no surface which is plumb or, for that matter, square to any other surface, we have absolutely no idea how to build it.
Enclosed, please find a t-square and straight edge for use in your next design effort.
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Now here's a view that I never want to see from KR's cockpit. Admittedly, a huge bow wave would make it more threatening. Still ...
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