Thursday, July 30, 2009

20090730: visitors!

20090730

can tomorrow really be the last day of july? no way! it all goes by way too fast.
but it's like the frog says, "time's fun when you're having flys!"

today we were blessed to have such good friends as jason and becca vandewettering! they loaned us their car for the day (thank you guys so much!), and this morning we went to gloucester for our final food shopping trip. our larder is now full enough for the last couple weeks on cricket.
cricket's decks were filled with the joy and laughter of david and anna this afternoon and evening, as we went out for a short sail with becca and jason's family. it was great fun to have them all on board with us! little jiminny did a fantastic job toting six people from the yorktown city dock out to cricket. he was perhaps slightly beyond capacity (perhaps), but jiminny kept us all afloat, and mostly dry.
all of the vanderwetterings got a chance at different sailing tasks, and did a fine job! all plied a hand at the wheel, jason raised and lowered sail, and worked the lines when tacking (becca and jason tacked a few times together, becca at the wheel, and jason at the sails) and were a crack crew! david was an excellent watchman, looking out for other craft, bouys, and helped navigate us back to our mooring. anna helped with the piloting, and many other jobs aboard. she boosted the moral of the crew many times over with her bubbly, joyful outlook.
we had a lovely sail! the winds where light, but where there enough to push us along to get the idea of sailing. we were excited to see a few bottlenose around us, and a few pelicans diving headfirst into the sea for fish. we also sailed near the coast guard's pier, where jason works.
when we were back safely at our mooring, we had a fine ship's meal together on the stern of cricket. grilled brats, beans, fresh cucumbers, tomatoes, cherries, grapes, chips and iced tea (w/o the ice) were perfect as the sun set, and the city and bridge lights began shining on the york river's surface. a great day!
jiminny took us all back to the city dock, and after hugs goodbye with jason and becca and anna and david, pam and i got an iced latte, walked the historic streets for a bit, and headed back to cricket, tired but smiling! warm friends on a hot day is cool!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

20090729:

owen to shore
coffee
wait for becca
a ride in the country
ice cream
jason and becca's
games
pizza
pictures
borrowed car / parking under the bridge

20090728:

shower
coffee
bus to jamestown
jamestown historic
jamestown settlment
square riggers
fort
indian village
yorktown victory center
pub

20090727:

20080727

fantastic day for a birthdate! thank you all for all the thoughtful birthday greetings! warms a guy's heart, that's for sure!
this morning we navigated cricket out of sarah creek, and crossed the york river to the yorktown dock moorings. to our starboard side was the large, double swing bridge that spans the river. moorings are big, red and white balls floating on the water off from the shore a little ways with a very strong (hopefully) tether going to the bottom of the water attached to a very strong (hopefully) and heavy hunk of concrete to keep it there. you tie your very heavy boat to it and it works like a super-anchor, only you don't have to worry about it holding, even in the hugest winds AND you don't have to clean the mud of the chain when it's time to leave! sweet! typically you pay a small fee to use moorings. so we set off to pay the dockmaster, and explore the shores.
jiminny took us to the city dock, located past a park on the river, the victory monument (revolutionary war victory), and a bunch of public beaches filled with summer bathers. we saw a largish, grey navel vessel go by, and the bridge open for her, and a three masted schooner tooling about the dock and river. a wonderously strange mixture of new and old.
dockmaster
back to cricket
helping our neighbors
trolly and driver
walking main
carrot tree
antique store
storm under the bridge
owen as captain
lovely evening
biggest birthday candle

Sunday, July 26, 2009

20090726: quite a storm

20090726
we had a wonderful, shortish sail today, from our anchorage in mobjack bay to the historic york river (we barely got to know the place, because we got there after dark yesterday, and are off this morning). 
we took a shortcut through a very narrow channel through some very shallow waters. it's amazing out here in the chesapeake how far out from land you are, and how shallow it can be! pam did an excellent job of navigating us through the channel. there were moments when we were very close to grounding (6 feet), but we never did ground cricket. the little channel saved us at least 6 miles.
on our way up the york river to yorktown we got some mighty winds which helped us to break some cricket speed records! we had a steady 6-7 knots, and at one time hit 7.8! flying! although it was plenty windy, it was plenty hot to boot. felt lie standing in front of one of those turbo hand dryers for prolonged periods.
when we arrived in sarah creek, just across the river from yorktown, we had quite a time navigating the little creek. lots of shallows. we may have run aground one little time. we arrived at a spot where it seemed like it was anchorable, but the first try put us too close to a 5 foot area, and what seemed like right in the middle of the channel. pulled anchor. second try seemed a little better, but right then...
wham! a huge thunderstorm caught us before we could even try to set the anchor. lots and lots of lightning strikes all around us, the a deluge of rain, then it got colder, then came the hail, then the huge winds! we dragged our anchor right into a shallow area (luckly not into someone elses dock or something). the wind was so strong that it nearly put us on our side! oh my! fortunately we'de made it into a harbour, and had just enough time to batten down the hatches. huge winds blowing us through the shallow mud, rain coming down in sheeets, lightning striking all around us. quite a time... two waves of that. then we pulled anchor again (it took some doing, as the anchor was set in a shallow area we didn't want to get further into. dropped anchor again (all the time watching another wave of the storm getting nearer and nearer). we tried to set the anchor again, but she dragged again! argh! pulled it up once again (our anchor is brought up by a manual winch and our own strength). this particular part of sarah creek just wasn't working out, so it was navigate once again through the shallows, and find a new place. we did, al the while with another wave of the storm coming. we found another likely place, dropped the hook, and then came another wave of the storm. seemed to hold for a while, but then dragged for a bit. i ran to the controls and motored for a little to allow the anchor to settle a bit. it seemed to, and we watched lots and lots of rain for a good long time. thankfully, the wind didn't seem to blow nearly as strongly this time. whew! that was a lot of work! but it is amazing how well we were taken care of through it all! God is good!
weird having a day when you feel like you're in a convection oven, and then are shivering from the cold rain! weird, but good when you sit down to some warm tomato soup, and think about how much grace was in the day!

20090725: distance record

deltaville to mobjack
dolphins
strong winds
reefing on the fly
47.8 miles!

Friday, July 24, 2009

20090724: the best $20 ever spent and... play ball!






the winds decided for us today. ah yes! we intended to go south, and the winds are blowing from the south, so instead of beating it today it was pay $10 each at the deltaville marina and get:

> use of their dinghy dock.

> use of their toilets.

> use of their bicycles to go into town in the morning for a wonderful cup of coffee at coffee creations and, bonus! an amazing slice of apple pie for breakfast! and the people watching wasn't bad either. we even got to gossip with the gossip ladies at the table outside on the porch. one of the women was looking through her binoculars from her porch on the creek and saw a boat heading out of the creek this morning with a woman who was wearing a tee shirt, but when she bent over there was nothing on under her tee shirt ("naked as a jay, under her tee shirt," the woman said). we were also offered a ride to the drug store from the woman as well.

> use of their lounge, and wifi. pam got a pile of work done.

> use of their laundry room, for a few well needed loads (whew!).

> use of their car to go 6-7 miles to the drug store.

> use of their boatyard grounds to meet all kinds of good folks! one of which is another hans christian owner, and a couple who own a baba (a similar kind of boat).

> use of their bikes again, to go to the town baseball game between the deltaville deltas, and the ??? pirates. fun! they play in a wwii vintage stadium. they lost tonight, but it was a good, nail biter game. pam is the best "fan in the stands" you could ever want! i love that girl! here's more info on the team and park: http://www.deltavilledeltas.com/

> and finally, use of their showers before we go to bed!

what a deal, eh!

20090723:

motored from little bay to jackson creek.
deltaville marina / pumped out bilge
visited with derral and nancy
life's stories

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

20090722: the true porpose of this trip

a day of recovery of health after our little adventure up the antipoison creek (of which pam filled you in on the details yesterday)... (did she mention her health need, our long dinghy ride, tying up on another's property, the long walk, the drug store, the take out ribs place, jimmy carter, the jag offer, dinner at the picnic table, the long dinghy ride back, the amazing sunset, and ben sleeping outside, under the stars, on the deck of cricket? if not, let me know and i'll fill you in on the details).
this morning i was awakened by pam yelling something from the deck (by this time i had moved inside the
cabin to finish off my sleep, because the wind had died this morning, and the mosquitoes were taking over the great out of doors). i woke to her yelling, very excitedly, "dolphins! dolphins!" i bounced outside (as much as i can "bounce" first thing in the morning, which isn't much), and there they were. dolphins! probably a half a dozen or more! it was so much fun to watch there fins and tails and blowholes surface and go back down! i can't wait to go sailing with them. we must be truly in the southern end of the chesapeake now.
today was watching the crabbers, watching the locals, swimming, jumping off the bowsprit, reading, napping, eating and ended with a sweet sunset walk on the nearby sandy beach with a very happy owen, who gets to run free on this secluded beach, and chase little crabs into their sand holes. pam's feeling way better! t'was a good day. we're all very happy!

sailing tomorrow!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

20090721: noises

i am inspired to do a series on "things that go bump in the night." it is funny how on a boat such as cricket, not all that big, say, compared to your house, that there can be so many noises that are very dificult to figure out where they are coming from! especially when all is "quiet" at night time while you're laying cozy in your bunk. many times the wind will cause a hailyard (a line used to raise the sails) to bump against the mast and make a sound to keep even the heaviest of sleepers from dozing too heavily. when you are moored in a slip (a spot for a single boat on a dock), and there are hundreds of other boats in slips all around you, and the wind picks up it is amazing how loud all the haiiyards banging away on all those boats can be! it sounds like a bell choir gone crazy! it is common courtesy to keep this from happening on your boat, especcially around other boats, but it's amazing how many people allow their boats to clang away. when kell (the previous owner of cricket) was with us, he would get up and go over to some of the worst hailyard banger offenders, board their boats and fix the ringing of the bells himself! i admit, i did do this once myself... so that pam could sleep better,  of course. anyway, when there is a strange noise coming from somewhere on the boat, lines are one of the first things to check, but those strange noises aren't always so easily traced...
last night while pam and i were playing a rousing game of backgammon in the cabin we heard what sounded like rain outside. i went to go close some hatches, but no rain falling. hummm. went outside. no rain. there were even a pile of stars shining above. i looked all around the deck of the boat to see if i could find the source of the noise. i could find no clues. couldn't even hear the sound at all. i went back below and there was that sound again. strange, but oh well. we went to sleep to the sound of the ghost rainfall.
this morning when we woke, it was still "raining." the sun was shining hotter n blazes. hardly a cloud in the sky. i poked my head into the head, into the galley, into the stern berth, and the noise seemed equally loud in each area. i started putting my ear against this and that and did find that it sounded loudest against the hull of the boat.
later today met a guy, whose name happens to be jimmy carter. nice guy. a fellow sailor. he'd been sailing the bay and the bahamas for many years. he gave us a ride (you may read the interesting details of this saga from pam's blog today). while we were riding along i told him about this peculiar sound. he laughed, and said that many a sailboat owner had heard that sound, and layed awake worrying that some electrical wires were frying beneith the surface of where they could not reach. he said the answer is much simpler and less worrysome than that. the noise is produced by little sea critters, such as shrimp, eating away at the vegetation growing on the underside of the boat! sweet! i don't want vegetation growing on the hull of cricket, so i welcome those shrimpies to dine away! now that sound will be as welcome as rain on the roof while i'm sleeping!  

Monday, July 20, 2009

20090720: today's news in a letter to my dear ol' dad

greetings from virginia! yes! we made it to a new state today! we'll miss maryland. s'been very good to us!
i'm going to cheat a bit today and copy an e-mail i sent to my father. it's still got the news o th' day, so it's cheating just a wee little bit...:



hey there papa!
nice to hear from you. hope things are going as well as can be!
getting things right the first time is way overrated! and the power of understanding is often way underrated! doing things right the second or third or hundreth time is just fine. i'm pretty sure Jesus would agree. amazing grace is an awfully good thing!
even though the picnic is 1995 years later than previously announced, pam and i still won't be able to attend as it is 6 days or so before we return from our first journey on cricket.

things are going very well out here on the chesapeake! today we broke our daily sailing milage record with 35+ miles (honestly, it was for 19-20 miles as the crow flies, but we had to do a huge tack to get out of the rather large potomac river mouth. such is the nature of sailing). however today we also got to experiance some of the best winds yet, even though they were contrary. we sailed much of the day at a speedy 5-6 knots. cricket lept and pounced through the 4-6 foot waves. quite a wild ride! not for those with the seasick gene, and fortunately for me the dna angels passed over my doorposts!
we went right by a lighthouse ( the smith point lighthouse) that is owned by a couple from winona, mn.

here's a good article about it:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/24/AR2005122400836.html

and here's an interesting blog page about the lighthouse:

http://lighthousestars.com/2007/10/08/smith-point-lighthouse-extreme-makeover/

it's a cute, old, round, concrete building thrusting right out of the bashing waves a few miles out from the potomac. it was not a good day to visit, however. the wind and waves would have either cut the visit way short, or worse, extended it indefinately! anyways, it didn't look like anyone was home.
we are anchored tonight in a nice spot up the big wicomoco river, off of sandy point.  over to starboard there's a line of cabins, much like the lake cabins on minnesota's 10,000 lakes, with little sandy beaches and boat docks.
we were briefly visited by a pair of women on kayaks. they admired owen and cricket, and we admired their kayaks. we would like to get a pair of them aboard someday to explore shallow areas. our dinghy, jiminny, does a wonderful job of dinghying, but his outboard is a bit loud and smelly to sneak up on local widlife.
there is the sound of crickets, or frogs, or something coming from the shore. the wind is blowing relatively gently over our bows (of course... we're anchored). the breeze sometimes brings with it scents of a nearby seafood packing plant in the true workingman's town of reedsville. maybe not the best smell in the world, but it does help remind us of this place of the sea, of which we are blessed to be part of today.
owen, the cat is happy to be done with the pounding up and down of the day! he spent the day on the floor of the cabin, trying to find a place where he wouldn't slide downhill everytime we tacked. he's a good sport, though. never complained once! he is now cheerily prancing about the deck of the boat, batting at this line and that line, looking over the edge at the calm harbour waters. every once in a while he checks in on my lap, purring and nudging my face with his cool, whiskery nose.

i love you, papa! pam sends you her love too. please deliver loving hugs and kisses to mom for us too!


On Jul 20, 2009, at 2:24 PM, "WELLUMSON HOWARD" wrote:

Greetings again ...
 
I try to do things right the first time, but I find as I get older, IT'S Harder.
 
 
The date for the picnic is August 9, 2009, NOT August 9th 14th.
 
Any other corrections will be appreciated.
 
Howard

Sunday, July 19, 2009

20090719: gettin to smith creek

we made it to the potomac river, and a few miles up it to smith creek. on the way we saw a huge sailboat race that was huge, a nifty old lighthouse in the middle of some pretty expansive water that was looking rather old, and a half sunken world war one or two (not sure which) ship that was half out of the water. we saw another lighthouse called "point lookout" right at the mouth of the potomac. a couple of boy's camps lined the shore on our way up the very wide river.
the winds were quite light most of the day, so we ended up motoring a good while.
smith creek is a lovely little inlet, lined with pines and hardwoods. from where we are we can see one big ol'  farm house a ways away, some lights from a marina a little further away, and trees, trees and trees. we like this sort of anchorage! 

Saturday, July 18, 2009

20090718: little choptank river to patuxent river

today was one of those good-n-simple sailing days. not a lot to report, which must mean that we're getting a-hang of this sailing stuff! it was a sunny day sailing from the delmarva penninsula (del-aware, mar-yland, v-irgini-a) on the east side of the chesapeak across to the west side, and farther on down south. souther than we have been yet! winds varried from lightish to light, ussually on our tail, which was nice for a change. our plan is to keep heading south, river by river until we get to the mouth of the bay, and then if we have time and wind (oh boy oh boy) we will venture out into the big atlantic ocean! the next river down is the famous potomak. you know, the one with george washington crossing in that little boat, and the one that washington dc is on. then the rappahannock river is the next river south. we hear there's some beautiful places there, and a good marina we may winter cricket over at. then famous york and james rivers. the "birthplaces" of the usa. historic sites, such as yorktown, jamestown (ahhh, thus the names of the rivers!) and colonial williamsburg. looking forward to seeing a few of those places, and having becca (used to be steinmeier) and jason and anna and david vandewettering visit the boat down there!
today we are in a town called solomons landing. we are anchored in a tiny offshoot of the river in what feels very much like the backyards of some residents of the town. we dinghied jiminny over to a spot to get... yup, you guessed it, ice cream. it's a bit of a funny thing because when we were on the hard we were constantly driving on a long, well used road called "solomons island road," and now here we are. we went around this tiny-tiny little, scrubby, uninhabited island held together on all sides by timbers. the only island around, so we figure it's got to be solomons island. very underwhelming! there must be more to the story than we know.
i hear crickets chirping for the first time on this trip. nice!

Friday, July 17, 2009

20090717: a new rope ladder of old line

today is a day of rest! woa! can we ever rest! yes, pam too. she can be taught! for me resting comes easily, and is often a good quality... sometimes it can wander into the "lazy zone," but can very often linger in the "patient zone," which is where it's at today. the wind was deader than dead this a.m., so rather than sit in the middle of the cheapeake bay, we're sitting in our cozy little cove off the mouth of the little choptank river. a thin peninsula is to our east, lined with pine trees and sand. a lovely veiw! it is a beautiful thing to live by God's weather!
funny, pam mentioned how it was a bit difficult to sleep last night on account of it being so still! now there's a change! we're getting to be true sailors, eh!?
we read, napped, read and worked on a cute little ship's ladder made of rope. the aluminum ladder we've been using works great, except that it is super hard to fold out, and fold back in. so we decided to try to make a ladder from the instructions given in a book we have aboard called, "the marlinspike sailor." it's a very fun, salty book about how to make all sorts of nautical items mostly out of rope (line) like turk's heads and monkey's fists and such. pam is amazing at figuring out knots and such! she has quite a knack for that good, practical stuff. she's got a lot of what folks call "c.s.," (common sense, which is not at all so common, far as i can tell!) and i truly appreciate those gifts! it was fun making the ladder, and it looks excellent! we feel all the saltier for putting it together, and will feel saltier yet when we get proficient at using it. we tried it out, risking jellyfish stings, and found that it will take some practice to use well, but it is a great addition to cricket's supplies. read pam's blog to hear a great story of her and the jellyfish today (i'm not qualified to tell it as it is too "personal."
a small storm blew by this afternoon, consisting of a good blow and a little rain. no anchor dragging. no other drama.
i'm going to see if i can get Pam to play a game of cribbage or two in this evening. we're driven below by the evening mosquitos, it is a bit stuffy in here because the wind is dead calm again. the oil lamp burns with a sweet glow, maybe warming things up even more down here, but it's sweet glow is worth the tenth of a degree!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

20090716: sailing in the morning, sailing in the afternoon, sailing in the evening

i've decided that on the days i'm either too lazy or too busy to post i will simply put my little list of notes to fill in later (i've been saving them, but not publishing them) i can edit them later...


20090716
windy night
fueled
sailed
sailed
sunset
anchor

20090715: touring the academy

i've decided that on the days i'm either too lazy or too busy to post i will simply put my little list of notes to fill in later (i've been saving them, but not publishing them) i can edit them later...

20090715
showers
coffee shop
navy academy
dinner at ??? & ruth's

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

20090715: yet more pictures



cute, condemned house with the bugs

pam and jiminny on tighlman island

cricket in a happy little bay (typical of our anchorages : )

chesapeake bay veiw


horseshoe crab

owen happily on dry land

20090715: some more random pictures worth 1000 words






city dock in annapolis

papa jerr bear joins us on the hard in june

our "true sailor's" bimini










20090714: walking a lot, and a little riding too

once again i woke to the early morning callithump of naval callisthenics, and owen scratching on this and that. he's got us trained now for the morning. he knows how we love our lovely woodwork so he'll start scratching on one of the locker doors (wood), and then typically pam will yell, "hey! owwwen!," and he'll know she'll be awake enough to jump up on the bunk and cuddle into one of our faces, purr, and begin nibbling on an earlobe or loose neck skin. this morning when i heard him beginning his morning attention system coinciding with the calls of the navy ranks i decided to try to relieve pam of her morning bawl and get up to take owen outside on the deck. so owen and i collected a few blankets, a pillow and my down sleeping bag and headed out into the early morning sunrise, closing the hatch behind us... i ended up getting warm, cozy and snoozy enough to forsake the important task of watching the cadets working their tails off and dropped off to sleep while they were running their "company run," and dreamt of giant centipedes.
after pam finally woke me up from the stern of cricket we took jiminny to city dock. we disposed of our ship's garbage, finally found a place to bring our ship's recycling, and then we took a long walk to an annapolis fire station. we wanted to properly dispose of our old fire extinguishers. the fireman at the firehouse door didn't sound like they typically did this, but kindly took them from us when he'd heard that we walked a ways to do the right thing.
our walked continued, and after a brief stop at a coffee shop we passed a humane society with a sign announcing kittens... who could resist looking at cute kittens, even knowing that you have a slight tendency towards shedding tears in such places?! up the driveway we went, and saw many, many cats and kittens waiting for someone to sweep them off to a loving home. amazingly, that someone was not us. not at this time. i don't know how we kept from completely melting from the warmth of those pleading eyes, but somehow made it out of there without a kitten. (could you please do me a favor and go adopt an orphan kitty today? it would help me feel better. thanks! : ) i said we didn't melt from the cat's eyes, but i didn't say anything about the dogs... when my eyes started to water over looking at the pups, i knew it was time to move on. (could you please do me another favor?) it took a while of walking to dry the ol' lids.
our walk continued. always away from jiminny at the city dock. we finally made it to our destination... west marine store. as captain of jiminny i was tired of dumping gasoline all over him, and into the bay everytime we needed to fill his petite tank, so we decided it would be good to install an external tank. you know, the kind with the long rubber hose with the little hollow rubber ball to squeeze the gasoline to the motor? anyways, we found just the guy (giff) to help us because of two reasons:
1. he'd just gotten back from circumnavigating the world (our ultimate goal in cricket). did we ply him with questions and distract him from his job? you bet we did! and we've got his websight and contact info too.
2. when we didn't know which fitting to buy he gladly drove us to the city dock after he got off work! wow! we tried to pry as much information out of him as we could while we rode on the bench seat of his old pickup truck.
i am pleased to think that jiminny, the sea, and my body will be smelling much less of fossil fuel!
when we'd been deposited once again at the city dock we walked across the street to have a couple pieces of pizza and a couple bottles of ibc root beer. when we were almost finished eating glen (the guy from yesterday) walked by, and we hailed him fully knowing this could be a while. it was. he apologised about the dirty shirt he'd been wearing yesterday. the shirt he was wearing looked ever so slightly cleaner. we told him that was ok (we haven't showered for a couple of weeks now). glen went on to say that he'd been thinking and we probably didn't have to listen to his favorite preacher on the radio anymore because he didn't believe a lot of what he said, and that he would just take the parts he knew were true in his heart, and not worry about the parts he knew weren't. he said he decided not to be stuck on any certain date that Jesus would return. way to go glen! the talk then changed to how cold the winters were in annapolis, and how very, very cold they were in minneapolis (glen will NOT be moving there). he talked about how his old oil burning furnace was a crap shoot as far as it's working this winter. we mentioned to him that we'd been thinking of him while we were visiting the humane society that morning, and that we thought he might have a good time volunteering there giving attention to those cats n kittens. he sounded interested, and asked a few questions about it. well... he said he didn't want to interrupt our dinner, and turned around and walked off down the street. God bless glen!
we then walked to the naval academy, and had a lovely time looking around the grounds at the beautiful historic old buildings, monuments, and trees. we stopped to watch the evening formations. salutes, swords, orders being yelled loudly, marching, drum beats, about faces... all very formal and impressive! paul, you would love it! we sure did.
from there we walked back to jiminny and took him up spa creek, under a draw bridge, past lots of sweet historic houses and boats on docks and moorings and little parks and church steeples, and more houses and boats farther up the creek to a little party on a sailboat. we'd been invited to join them earlier by an employee of the local marine supply store (fawcetts). it was great fun to sit in community with 8-9 folks in the cockpit of a sailboat on a city creek talking about sailing the world and living in this world. good folks. the owner of the boat works for the dock master here, and gave pam and i a couple of tokens for showers here at citydock (a little hint? things were a little tight in that boat). after a little 3 day homemade sauce and spaghetti it was goodbye and back to jiminny.
back up the creek in the faint evening glow, past the house's lit windows, past the drawbridge's green and red lights, past the big boats and fancy restaurants, across the waves and back to cricket's welcoming decks, with owen standing on them, glad to see us return (purr, purr, purr), and back to our warm bunk in the bow.

Monday, July 13, 2009

20090713: glen

well, i should be covered for the blogging for the day because of the pictures i posted previously. you know, a picture paints a thousand words and all that, but i know i can't get off that easy.

this morning pam was up with the naval acadimy cadets around 0615, but although i heard them begin their hour of p.t., i continued counting sheep and sawing logs in and out of the cadence counting. when i got up at 0715 they were cheerily marching off the feild to their breakfasts.

pam and i headed jiminny towards the city dock and over to citydock coffee house, complete with wifi. it was sure nuff pleasent to sit at a coffee house through a redeye (coffee with espresso) to wake up, a couple shots of espresso straight up to keep going, and an iced coffee for lunch. i like coffee shops.

back at cricket we got a few "no pressure" chores done. pam swabbed th' sole (cabin floor), and i put up the tarp and replaced 3 fire extinguishers. we hailed the holding tank pumper boat on channel 17, and got the poop pumped out for only 5 bucks! i pulled the hose off the boat a little prematurely and had to wash shit out of the scuppers. phew. but hey... i'm a true sailor now!

we went back into town this evening so that pam could wifi-iron some aslis work stuff out. we brought owen along since he hadn't been off the boat in well over a week. he doesn't love being handed over the rail and into the dory, but all in all he enjoyed bring on land, once it stopped pitching for him. he and i walked to the maryland capitol building (which was once our nation's capitol building for a short while) and sat on a bench beneath a frowning forefather statue. owen enjoyed chasing a few fireflies as evening came. he gets lots of comments and attention when you walk down the streets with him on your shoulders or walking at the end of his leash!

after pam met us, and hung out at our little happy spot for a while, we walked into the citydock business area for ice cream. enter glen. he's a thin man sitting on a bench in rags and peppered whiskers. he said in a very raspy voice (ever heard of tom waits?), "i've never seen a cat go walkin' round here." we stopped. he told us through his bad teeth (one of them sticking straight out) about the old days in the 70s when his ma n pa had a dozen or more cats, and they didn't have any mice problems and the cats could sleep in the basement in the winter, and they'd cover the davenport, but now ma n pa n the cats is gone and he's got lots of mice runnin around th' place, and he thinks they get in thru a certain spot and his friend steve is coming soon to help him hook up a tv, if glen won't chicken out and blow him off this time, and, and... i think he needed someone to listen for a while, so we did. for over an hour. off he went about this guy he listens to on the radio who used to say the world would end in may of 1993, and when it didn't he sort of dissappeared, but is back now preaching that Jesus'll come back in the summer of 2011. he wasn't sure whether to believe him this time, but couldn't help listening to him, and pondering the things he says. i know from what i'm saying that glen doesn't sound very bright, but he was bright in spirit! (and he actually made some very intellegent metaphores through his ramblings). i like glen. he said if we really knew that Jesus was to return in 2011 it'd be reason to rejoice, because then we could get our ducks in a row. i said it's ok if we don't have our ducks in a row because God loves us with crooked ducks, and gives us grace. i don't know if he heard me, but i know i heard him, and will rejoice because we're given time to realize who the Great Duck Arranger is! no matter who we are, and how confused we feel about who's right! glen had to quick use the public restroom before it closed, and we had to get our ice cream before they closed. glen said no thank you for the ice cream, but if we wanted to listen to this preacher man, he'd be on the radio about now, as far to the right as the radio dial could go. 

20090713: just another sunset?


from papa jerr bear's visit. it's a lovely thing to sit on the deck in the evening! breezes, waves, fishes and crack (irish for conversation).

20090713: picture?... picture!



photos on our blog!
a coffee shop in annapolis, wifi, and viola!

Sunday, July 12, 2009

20090712: back to the old city

not a lot to report today.

we woke this morning in our beautiful boat in a beautiful little cove. there were a few things we could do in annapolis so we were thinking that was a possibility, but when we discovered our holding tank (where all the poop goes while near land) was most likely full, going to annapolis became a sure thing.
so we up anchored. this morning reveiled the muckiest anchor chain yet! the gooey stuff just stuck to the chain like thick tar. i ended up actually diving into the water to brush the mud off the chain at the waterline, while pam winched it in from above. typically i hoist a sea bucket on a rope up to the deck to wash the chain, but today it would have taken dozens of buckets, and i'd rather have the lower impact workout of swimming rather than the "gold's gym" upper body calisthenics.

the sail today was nice, with some motoring necessary late in the afternoon. some decent winds in the morning, but nothing like the blow we got yesterday. a nice break from all the excitement.

we spent a lovely evening walking the town, eating out and sitting with alex haley at the end of the city docks.

looking forward to waking with the navy!

good night.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

20090711: goodbye j&a, hello lots of water

this morning we (pam and i, not annie or jason) were awakened by what i thought was a nearby anchored boat with it's uhf radio blasting way, way too loud. turned out that it was a guy on a megaphone calling out orders to hundreds of naval cadets on the field of the u.s. naval acadamy. we were anchored right off from there. we groggly woke up and sat comfortably on the stern of cricket and watched them do there early morning workout, complete with every calethstenic known to man, a 1.5 mile run, and lots of loud chanting.
soon afterwards jason and annie woke, and we dinghied them to the annapolis city dock to drop them off to wait for us as we sailed back to the little bay a little ways down the big bay. annie's tummy could not take any more sailing, so pam and i arranged to leave them there, anchor the boat near the car, and bring it back to them in annapolis. it was a very good thing that annie's tummy didn't come along! it was a fantastic morning if great sailing in good winds! we felt bad that jason couldn't've been there with us, but it was very kind of him to keep annie company for the rather long wait!
the sailing taught us more again. we were beating, mostly (sailing against the wind), through some pretty heavy traffic, with some pretty heavy winds. some of the traffic consisted of biggish, grey, navy vessels, a couple of giant cargo ships, and lots of sail and motor boats. whew! pam did a fantastic job of piloting and navigating! we may have been carrying too much sail... but cricket is a fine boat, and very forgiving. there was one moment when i was piloting, and the wind gusted, and i came fairly close to laying her on her side! exciting! not a great big deal, because cricket's heavy keel will bring her right back up, but still a little disconcerting with a boat this size. well, wouldn't have been as much of a deal if i'd've remembered to close her portholes! water came gushing into the cabin, soaking of settee (seat) cushions, and waterlogging a good number of good books on our bookshelf. they will all dry, but the books will be thicker than they once were : (
we eventually made it back to our anchorage near the car, took jiminny to the car, picked up a&j, took us back to jiminny, and said our goodbyes. it is sad to see the kids go. we'll miss them. t'was great to have them be part of our summer adventures!
it's nice, however, to be back to the original crew. pam, owen, cricket, jiminny and i are looking forward to whatever adventures the second bit of the summer has in store for us!

Friday, July 10, 2009

20090710: breaking radio silence

allright... time to break radio silence. sorry about the lack of bloggation the last couple of days. with annie and jason here it's been a little socially busier than usual, and i haven't figured out the socio-journio balance just yet.
even tonight it's a bit late for me to spend too much time on this, so allow me to give a breif outline, of which i shall fill in the details once we send our sweet guests on their way tomorrow. there really hasn't been much in the way of seafairin' tales the last couple days, unless you call dinghying in jiminny "sea fairin'." we've been trying to avoid them with annie's propensity toward heaving sea-n-gut syndrome.  

today: 
> motoring to annapolis, with sail drills but no wind
> annie's bout with the face of green, then red
> anchoring in the big city / bad timing fir engine troubles
> a day to the city with jiminny, fawcetts, restaurants, cabs, theaters and jiminny.

yeterday:
> a day going to visit becca, david, anna, and jason in gloucester, and yorktown.

day before yeterday:
> a fun day in dc

hopefully there'll time tomorrow! good night.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

20090707: our youngest visitors

annie and jason arrived this morning! it's so fun having the younger ones aboard! i love seeing this boat through their wonderous eyes! we had a great time in annapolis, then a wonderful, jellyfish free swim, then back to annapolis. we found it more adventurous than we thought trying to find a place ashore to park the car for a couple of days. we ended up with the "i'd rather ask for forgiveness than ask ask for permission" principle.
jason and i did some bowsprit jumping! fun! poor annie's equalibrium is not behaving itself, thus making it neccessary to find cures for the common motion sickness. ginger cookies, ginger candy, ginger pills, and extra ginger ginger beer... plus the usual dramamine. and this is only at anchor.

it's off to do some obama spotting tomorrow!

Monday, July 6, 2009

20090706: here they come!

today we are staging ourselves for an exciting antisipation of annie and jason coming out to visit! they were somewhere near chicago when we called this afternoon. we are crossing the water of the bay to get somewhere closer to annapolis, so that when they come it will be easier for them to meet us. we tried to sail it today. according to noaa (national oceanographic and atmospheric administration, the weather dudes) we were supposed to have north north west winds from 10-15mph, shifting to the east as the day progressed. ha! the wind pretty much took the day off. we made something like 8 miles in so many hours. mind you, we don't mind sitting still on the water, but if we were to sail around the world at today's speeds it would take us at least 20 years of continuous sailing. we had to motor quite a bit at the end. all in all it was 12 hours of sailing and motoring today for 29 miles. i hope jase and annie are moving a bit faster, in spite of chicago traffic ; )
now we're tucked away in a spot with sweet little, forested islands around us. we have several sailboat neighbors. we think some folks took the week off for the fourth of july.
snug. sun drenched. tired.
good night.

oh yeah! we had a skater gliding right beside us today while under sail! beautiful! look up skaters on chesapeake bay in wikipedia. they're a form of a sea ray.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

20090705: sunday

sunday... day of rest. and rest we did.

we did manage to take jimminy into a nearby town. about two miles away or so. owen stayed to guard cricket while we were gone.
the town of tilghman is very much a working boatman's town. lots of crab, and oyster, and fishing boats. tilghman is set on a long peninsula where there is a narrow cannal (nap's narrows) for boats with a shallow draft to cut through (saving them 6-7 miles). a nice town with a cool bridge that swivals up to allow taller boats through. it was fun to explore. we even explored an interesting old, abandoned house, inside and out. the doors were open. who could ressist?when we were snooping in the upstairs we felt something tickling our ankles. when we looked down our feet were covered, and i mean covered with tiny little black bugs, making their way up our legs! thousands of the little buggers! we got out of there double quick, and quickly brushed the things off. weird! i'm glad the ground around here isn't like that.
we ate out at a little tiki style restaurant on the canal.
owen greeted us when we returned. so nice to have the little rascal with us!   

Saturday, July 4, 2009

20090704: a joyful depend-dance day

tis july the fourth. a day for us to remember He who gives us true freedom from the burdens of this world! to give thanks for the wonderful gifts we have been given, including this amazing place to live. and a good day to reflect on the reality that we are wholy dependant upon the love and grace that freely flows from The Creator!
"america, america, God shed His grace on thee,
and crown Thy good with sisterhood (and botherhood)
from sea to shining sea!!!"

ah, yes! the sea!
we had an amazing day upon the sea! we left our sweet little harbour this morning, waving goodbye to our new friends as we pulled anchor and headed for the narrow channel. darrell and nancy gave as a happy little toot on their airhorn as we embarked on the day's journey.
the plan was to head northeast from latrappe creek to dun cove in harris creek 9 miles away, as the crow flies (with no prevailing winds). the forecast called for northeast winds, so this was going to be a day of tacking and tacking (something we haven't been the greatest in, in the past). however, that is in the past! tacking is going back and forth at angles into the wind. it has to be done on a sailboat, as a sailboat can not sail directly into the wind. generally speaking, you have to sail at least 30 degrees from head on winds. obviously this means you have to go much farther to get from point a to point b.
but it is much fun, once you (we) get (got) the hang of it! it is wonderful to look at our course lines on the gps plotter. our tacks were not only nearly perfectly executed, but they were all very well timed! i'm not bragging, i'm just feeling mighty fine that we've come a long way in learning the craft of sail. cricket and Somebody has taught us well, and has been taking very good care of us, in spite of ourselves. one word... grace!

we are now anchored in the snuggest little cove we could imagine! in our view there is a pretty farm, and pine trees lining the shore. not a lot of wiggle room in here, but our anchor seems set quite well, and there is plenty of protection from both wind and waves.

earlier, as were finding our way into this little bit of paradise, a motor boat hailed us to say their batteries had died, and they couldn't get their boat started. we were in a very narrow channel, and couldn't stop to help at the moment, but as soon as we were securely anchored, we dinghied over on jimminy to see if we could assist. they appreciated the offer, but said someone else could help. so we thought, "why dinghy straight back to cricket, when we could let jimminy help us explore this sweet cove?" turned out to be a great idea, because we found an amazing camp/picnic sight just up the cove from us. so we headed back to cricket, pam packed a wonderful picnic dinner, we took a quick dip to cool off, we grabbed owen and took off for our shore lunch/supper. the spot had beautiful huge oaks, pines and even some holly trees (prickly leaves on the ground!). there were two picnic tables, a swing, horseshoe pits, a little grill, a lovely wooden swing hanging from the oak's high branches, and even a little tree fort! we had a great walk across a couple of young corn feilds, and over to the main part of harris creek bay. owen loved the place! he loved feeling dry ground under his paws, and walked a long ways with us on his leash. we even took a little nap together up in the little tree fort.
back on cricket now, i hear distant fireworks popping off, see the nearly full moon rising to the east, and have a grateful heart for all the blessings of the day!

oh yeah... and i got some pretty cool footage of jellyfish swimming around this evening! i'll try'n figure a way to post 'em in a week or so.

oh, oh yeah... pam and i played backgammon this evening too. i won't say who won more games. that would be bragging.

Friday, July 3, 2009

20090703: owen's adventure on jimminy

owen had his first adventure on the dinghy today. he wasn't too thrilled with being passed over the railing and into jimminy. so much so that he lept up high out of the dinghy, and onto cricket's deck four feet above. i helped him back into jimminy, and into pam's arms for comfort. we motored over to a nearby sandy, shelly shore to explore. owen did what his mother, allie did when confronted with a completely new terrain. he found the nearest ""cave" (in this case some dense bushes) and holed up until he could observe his surroundings for a while, and then slowly venture out from there. he didn't naturally want to come too near the wavy shoreline, but was happy to explore the grass and bushes and sand a few yards back from it. he enjoyed watching pam and i explore the shoreline for nice rocks and shells and driftwood. he found a perfect sandy spot to dig and pee. his first time peeing outdoors this trip. i figured, as a guy, this must have been very enjoyable to him. he covered his business up and i thought, "yeah! he does know how to do this. he just needed a primative setting to trigger his instincts (see the earlier blog on pooping). then he continued to dig, and dug up what he had just done, and i thought, "o well. never mind." once, when pam went around a corner, and i stayed behind with him he started to try to follow pam and meowed in great worry, just like my old dog henry would have done, which warmed our hearts completely (only henry whined instead of meowed, of course). we had owen on a leash, so he couldn't go far, so i went through grass and under bushes so he could find his beloved mother in an adjacent beach. i found an old glass pepsicola bottle! i love old bottles! treasaarrre! pam found a good small pile of polished white and dark stones with which to play backgammon with. i also found a nice twisty piece of driftwood that looks like a snake. we brought all our booty back to the boat. owen was very happy to upon his beloved cricket once more, and immediately went below to hunker himself into a cozy nap.

also today we had little baths from the side of cricket, between the jellyfish. this evening we went over to our neighbors boat and enjoyed some good conversation in thier cockpit. there was another boat who was having great trouble anchoring, so we went over to help them. wow! i've learned enough now to help somebody else!

tonight is the 3rd of july, and i could hear a nearby town's fireworks, and see a very little bit of them over the shores treeline. i am going to sleep out under the stars tonight, on cricket's deck! yeah! pam is in our berth just below me, so it's like bunk beds again!

Thursday, July 2, 2009

20090702: boat healer, ice cream, and cards

today i am very pleased and proud to announce that pam and i successfully docked cricket with no pressure, no mishaps, no bad feelings! the dock we docked upon was into a fairly narrow opening, into a cute little river that extends up into the town of oxford. it is lined on both sides with boat docks. lots of pretty boats. lots of not so pretty boats. sail boats, motor boats, pleasure boats, work boats. plenty of reason here to feel the pressure, but we took plenty of deep breaths beforehand, and drove in, and docked her. it took two passes at the dock, but we both knew we'd finallize the docking procedures when we were good and ready to do so! yeah for us!
the reason for docking the boat today, instead of simply finding another easy anchorage was not simply for the practice, or to make us feel better about such manoeuvres. nope. we really wanted to figure out our electrical issues once and for all! we pulled up to the dock, walked to the oxford marina buildings, found the offices (more challanging than it sounds. everybody there says, "it's in that blue building over there," but all of the buildings are blue! and the office doesn't say "office" anywhere on it). anyway, when we entered we were greeted by a great big rottweiler dog, with a long string of drewl hanging down his starboard jowl. a very nice greeting, as far as we were concearned. we found out later that this dog's nickname was nettles, after the long stringy nettles jellyfish all over the bay. we were directed into a room with a couple of chairs, a desk and a man behind the desk. as soon as he spoke, we knew we were in the right place! not only was he friendly, and interested in hearing our whole boring story about our electrics, but he also had the best english accent. could listen to it all day, and we did get to hear quite a lot of it, because he took plenty of time with us to explain in patient words we could understand all about how our electric system works. wonderful! he also tested this and that, and fixed a few things that have been annoying us, and causing us to be very electrically "shy." at one point he had his head buried in one of the spots with batteries, voltage regulators and the like, and we saw him pull out his wire cutters and heard "snip." pam and i both gasped, and he said in a very cheery voice, "don't worry! i'm a professional. this won't hurt a bit!" he was right. our battery, the one that didn't start our engine in a crucial time of need was soon charging up like it should have been. it was great to find a competant, friendly, wholistic boat healer.

we celebrated with a pint of homemade ice cream each, and motored our way to nearby latrap river. that is where we are now, anchored in a pretty little "lagoon." there are three other sailboats sharing this harbor with us with their anchor lights shining on the tops of their masts, reflecting on the water.

earlier this evening we had a lovely visit from our news friends, the urban couple, who are also anchored in this bay. we laughed, told stories, and they taught us how to play cannasta. such amazing community on these waters! we are blessed!

20090701:

anniversary

paul a martin

cemetary

oxford, ice cream, author

jelly pictures

storm