Entering the Intracoastal Waterway

Days and days have gone by with lots of beautiful sights and miles under our keel.

Days 33-34, October 13-14: Williamsburg, Virginia
Day 35, October 15: Hampton to Newport News and Norfolk, then into the Dismal Swamp 

We left Pandora on her hook in Hampton, Virginia, in order to visit our dear friends, Harris and Barbara, in Williamsburg.  As Bob predicted, we all regressed to the age when we met and became friends, roughly our mid-20s. There is no therapy like laughter, and we did a lot of that over the weekend.  We were spoiled with Harris and Barbara’s wonderful home cooked meals, visits with some of their local friends, and catching up on lots of family news.  We had a terrific time!

The contrasts in sights we’ve seen from the overwhelming display of naval power along the shores of Newport News and the commercial shipping of Norfolk to the tranquil, unspoiled sights of the Dismal Swamp are about as shockingly different as I can imagine any two days could be…

This is the buoy nun “RA36” which marks the beginning of the Intracoastal Waterway, mile 1.  We passed this on Monday, mid-morning, and I knew we were on to something completely different!

We entered the Dismal Swamp through my first lock on Tuesday morning, and what a complete contrast this is from the channel that runs through Norfolk. Just before entering the canal we had to lock through at Deep Creek Lock.  This is my first experience at locks, and I’m happy to say that it was not nearly as adventurous as I’d anticipated.  At this lock we went from the salt water of Norfolk up four feet into the fresh water of the swamp canal.

The Dismal Swamp is stunning and does not seem very much like a swamp and certainly is not dismal.

There just aren’t words to describe how beautiful this passage of water is.  It is a narrow channel of tea colored water, with verdant growth coming right down to the water on either side.  The woods are so lush it’s breathtaking.  All but the tallest trees are covered in vines.  There are very few ferns in the undergrowth, mostly vines.  The fall color is just beginning so we saw patches of red and yellow, and leaves were floating down on us as we motored south down the canal.  There were lots of leaves in the water already.  It was a beautiful fall day, bright sun and deep clouds which made dappled sunlight on the water for the whole trip.  The wind alternated from light breezes to fairly strong breezes, and this was reflected by the changing look of the water, from mirror surface dotted with leaves that reflected a perfect image of the clouds above and the trees overhanging both banks, alternating with ruffled water from the stronger breezes.  The canal is so straight that I could see a long distance down the way, and I could see the mirror surface changing to ruffled and back to mirror again a long way before we got to those bits of water.

We saw lots of painted turtles sunning themselves on  bits of logs and branches along the way, and at one point we were surprised by a wild turkey flying right across our bow!  This place is so serene….calm water, lush woodlands, the sound of birds (and unfortunately in some places the sounds of highway).  There were mallards on the water and Canada geese overhead.  If you’re not familiar with Dismal Swamp which is a national park, you might be surprised to learn that it was built under the direction of a group of men that included George Washington, starting in the 1760s.  Washington was president of the Dismal Swamp Company decades before he held the more memorable presidency.  The swamp was dug by slaves, and no doubt that was extremely dismal.

Dusk approaches, there is only a zephyr of wind as we sit on board Pandora gazing at the passing clouds mirrored in the still surface of the water.  It’s time for a Hendrick’s G&T!

News from Home

We passed into North Carolina on Tuesday, and it feels like we are really on a new adventure now!

But first…. we have had some particularly poignant news from our life back home…

On Friday I got very exciting news from our son Chris that the folks at Bloomberg News wanted someone from Columbia University to comment on the recent Nobel prize in physics.  Naturally they wanted Brian Greene, who was unavailable.  So they contacted Chris’ lab to talk to the head of the experiment, Tanya Zelevinsky.  She happened to be in Japan for a talk, so the next person in line was Christopher!  He was picked up by a driver on Friday afternoon and delivered to Bloomberg offices for the interview.  They taped the interview around 6pm and it went on the air at 8.30 Friday evening!  I was ecstatic!  In fact, I’m off the charts as a shamelessly proud mother!

You can see the interview HERE!!!   If I were savvier I would be able to inbed the video…
He was positively cool as a cucumber in front of the cameras and under the relentless questions of the newscasters!

The other news is that Jack Spangler, a new friend in Essex, has passed away.  From what we’ve heard it seems that he died peacefully in his sleep one night last week.  We knew of him when we were members of Norwalk Yacht Club, but we were just really getting to know him in Essex.  He sponsored us at Essex Yacht Club, and he took us under his wing, like a mentor, in our first months there.  One of the glorious highlights of our first summer in Essex was spending an afternoon with Jack aboard his classic Dyer 29′  Musketeer.

In the short time I was getting to know Jack he told wonderful stories about his wife who passed away years ago, he accompanied a lovely elderly woman who could no longer drive herself to the yacht club almost every evening so she could enjoy the sunsets with the rest of us, and he took a great interest in Bob and me.  Although I hardly knew him well, he had a great influence on our settling into town, and he seemed to be one of those gregarious people who are endlessly interested in everything and endlessly upbeat….which brings me to one of my favorite quotes from another sailor, Henry Plummer:

If I didn’t continually prove myself a fool I would think myself a philosopher–for I seem to come nearer to complete happiness more often than other folks.  I have worked hard for it, too, in a way, and I believe that I have made such friends with bluebird that neither poverty, want or woe can drive him far away for long…     (The Boy, Me and the Cat)

I know Jack will be missed by all who knew him.  How could anyone be impervious to his infectious optimism, his interest in everyone and everything, and his lightning sense of humor!  I am so thankful we had that lovely afternoon on the Connecticut River with him in August.

 

A Day of Sightseeing

Yesterday we did a bit of sightseeing in Hampton, starting with the Air and Space Museum.  It’s quite a well done museum, far smaller than the one near Dulles Airport, but therefore easier to manage.  There are planes and helicopters from almost every era of flight, as well as the actual Apollo 12 space capsule, and a full size model of the Mars Rover “Curiosity.” Bob has photos.  We had a great time there. (I did wish I could tell someone that all the planes need dusting!)

We walked some through of the older neighborhoods in Hampton, but there is nothing here older than the late 19th century.  I saw some wonderful bunglows!  It’s tragic that everything that dated before the Civil War (and this town was settled in 1604) was burned when the Union Army had stationed itself at one of the two forts in Hampton.  The Hamptonites decided to destroy their city rather than be taken by the Union Army.  A great loss…

Today we plan to visit Fort Monroe, as the “SSCA cruising station” volunteer Kate, who works at the Hampton City Marina, is loaning us her car for a few hours.  One of the benefits to membership!

Our friends from Williamsburg arrive this afternoon for lunch on board!

And speaking of SSCA (Seven Seas Cruising Association) I’ll end with a photo from Monday when Bob and I were volunteering in the booth during the boat show.  As luck would have it, the Hendricks booth was just across from our booth.  We all had to have a little nip to keep warm!

Day 32, October 12: Sightseeing in Hampton, then off to Williamsburg

A Landmark Day

We had another long, trying sail today….  we covered 70 miles in 11 hours.  We were under way at 7.30 am and entered the channel at Hampton, Virginia, as the bottom of the sun just touched the horizon.  By the time we got our anchor down, the sun was down too, and the horizon was soft rose, lavender, and pale blue.

This is a lovely city, but I’m afraid I was a bit too tired to care.  Although, now that I have complained, let me say that I am NOT going to complain!  Lots about the day was so much better than the previous day!  After once again getting dressed in every warm thing I could find, I stepped into the cockpit and realized that although it was cold it was not damp!  By mid morning there was one small hole in the thick overcast sky through which a beam of light was dazzling a spot of water just ahead of us!  I had high hopes of sailing right into that light!  …and we did!  By mid afternoon the sky was half cloud, half blue, and it was a gusty, brilliant fall day.  It’s that gusty bit that made sailing so hard…

Eleven hours later we planned to celebrate the fact that we had arrived at a place further south than we had ever been before by boat.  I had two enormous lamb chops thawed and a bottle of sauvignon blanc.  We were both exhausted and the oven took forever to come up to temp.  I guess I was asking more than it could deliver by setting it at 450.  I finally gave up after almost an hour and put the chops in at 375….somehow they turned out just fine!  And it did pick up our spirits to each such a wonderful meal….even it was 9pm by the time I got it on the table!

 

 We are anchored just off this lovely clock tower.

I got lots  of knitting done on both my ‘wingspan’ shawl and my ‘Ann Jacket.’  No photos yet.  They just look like blobs on the needles anyway!

Excitement of the day!!!…. we saw lots of pelicans!  And we saw a very large sea turtle floating on the surface, checking us out as much as we were checking him! Alas, we have a firm rule that the camera must stay zipped and buckled in its case at all times when it is not actually in our hands, and that means that we miss many shots in the time it takes to get it out of bondage!  We have to balance access to quick shots vs. safety of the camera.  Safety wins.

Today we explore Hampton: the Air and Space Museum, and an art gallery for certain.  We’ll spend the weekend in Williamsburg with old friends who happened to live right across a small pond from where my parents lived, while Pandora waits for us here on her anchor.

The weekend promises to be quite bittersweet for me since I’ll be seeing my parents’ old house.  This has been an emotional year and a half, with the death of my father, my mother being declared incompetent and having to face her long history of mental illness, getting her into a safe place up in New England much against her will.  I know this is becoming quite the norm for people in my generation.  It’s the hardest work I’ve ever done….

It’s October 11.  We have been away for one month…

Day 30, October 10: Glebe Creek on the Potomac to Hampton, Virginia
Day 31, October 11: sightseeing in Hampton!

D-R-E-A-R-Y

We were under way at 7.00am this morning, which I believe was just after sunrise, but I sure couldn’t tell.  There was just shy of 20 knots of wind, gun metal grey turbulent waters with white caps, and a sky only slightly lighter than the water.  The wind was coming from diagonally behind us, which made Bob happy, but also made the boat roll from side to side….ugh.  I watched the ‘levo-gauge’ go from 25 degrees on one side of level to 30 degrees on the other side of level.  Bob realized within our first few minutes out that he’d better find the stugeron for me.

Should I also mention that winter is nipping at our heels as we hurry south?  For the past two days we’ve awakened to temps in the mid 40s with the highs for the past two days in the mid-50s.  Have I mentioned that I only get warm showers, at best.  Sometimes I’d say they are tepid showers.  I’m getting seriously cold….

So today when I huddled down below, wrapped in a blanket on the settee, wearing my warmest clothes: one of only two full length pants (my summer weight jeans), one of only two turtleneckes (I wore the other one yesterday), my pullover fleece (why didn’t I bring any of my wool sweaters???), and luckily one of several of my hand knit wool socks, I began to think about what I could do to remedy this situation.  I have a number of sweaters that are near completion with me onboard, but, although they are wool, they are not what I’d call useful sweaters.  They are all cardigans with no buttons….jackets and such that are meant to be fashionable, not serviceable.  I began to think about the yarns I brought with me and the projects they are slated to become.  I remembered some yarn that I saw in the top of the first bin (easily accessible in the madly rolling conditions) and the ‘wingspan’ shawl pattern that goes with it.  I managed to get it out.  I opened up my iPad and found the pattern and the requirements, found the appropriate needles and some stitch markers.  I found my earbuds and opened up a Cast-On podcast to begin my shawl.  This project was to be for some future situation when I might hear about someone who might need a little love in the form of a knitted shawl which would represent my hugging them….  Well, sometimes you have to wrap yourself in your own hug to stay WARM…..

No photos of where we went today.  I spent the whole day down below!  We sailed until 5.30 pm and tucked into the Potomac River, into an estuary called Glebe’s Creek.  I learned in the guidebook that ‘glebe’ is an English word for a plot of land given to clergymen.  They could farm it or let it for extra income, and it’s another example to me of how much closer were the south’s ties with England than the north’s.

Two firsts today:  Bob saw a pelican!

What a marvelous bird is the pelican
His bill can hold more than his belly can.
He can hold in his beak enough food for a week
I wonder how in the hell he can! 

And we have crossed the line from Maryland to Virginia. Glebe Creek is a quiet little spot, and we are enjoying the peace after a week in Annapolis! The wind is howling but we are in a snug little spot in calm water.  I made a dinner of comfort food…penne with my best effort at Alfredo.  How can you go wrong with cream and fontina?  We cut the fat with a salad that included a ripe tomato that I picked totally green from my garden a month ago.  I never imagined that they would ripen before rotting.  But they are perfect!

Here are the last two FOs (finished objects) that have made their way to their rightful owners.

And here is the beginning of my ‘Wingspan’ shawl.  I finished two sections and started the third today.  Could I wrap up in it by this weekend??

Day 29, October 9: Annapolis to Potomac River

Family Time

We have just spent the weekend with our two sons Rob and Chris and Rob’s girlfriend Kandice!  Kandice was a sweetheart to host all of us along with Rob’s dog Bosun at her house in the suburbs of Baltimore!  We all crammed into one car, with our laundry and weekend gear!  We laughed a lot, played with our granddog and Kandice’s three cats, drank margaritas and ate wonderful food!

I don’t know what we were thinking to drive back to Annapolis (in boat show traffic!) on Saturday to walk around the town and have a late lunch aboard Pandora.  Just getting five people in the dinghy at such a crowded floating dock was a bit over the top!  We spent the afternoon walking through the Naval Academy.  There was a wedding in the ‘chapel’ and it was lovely to see all the men in uniform and the bridesmaids in rich fall colors of deep purple dresses (aubergine) carrying bouquets of deep orange and red gerbera daisies.  Those young women had to be freezing in their strapless dresses during the outdoor photo session!

We ate a lot of decadent food together, but Kandice’s Sunday morning ‘Monkey Bread’ took the prize!

 This is our last day in Annapolis….not a bit too soon for me!  That’s an odd thing to say about a place I love….so many beautiful places all within easy walking distance!  But to spend a week in a city while living on a boat is definitely weird.  Living on board is much more suited to being off the beaten path, in some remote location that is utterly unspoiled.  To be right in the middle of a busy harbor, especially during the biggest sailboat show in the US, is really quite jarring!  I’m living off the grid while sitting just off  a bustling city that rarely sleeps!  The Naval Academy run their stadium lights all night long!  (Well, that’s not entirely true…I think they are off from about 2 – 5 am each day.  Still….)

This is the kitchen window in an Arts and Crafts brick house circa early 1900s right near the academy.  I was smitten!  Wish I could have seen the whole kitchen!  I do want that light fixture!

Another view of the chapel at the Naval Academy.

Here is Bob taking a photo of Pandora from the Academy.

Chris took a couple of photos of the family during our weekend together, but I do not have them yet!

We will work our time slot in the SSCA booth this afternoon, after finishing up on our last needed purchases from the show, and tomorrow we will be on our way to more secluded locations.

The weather has changed and it’s now definitely autumn on the Chesapeake!  It was raining and in the mid-50s (F) when we returned to Pandora yesterday afternoon.  It went down into the 40s last night.  We are running our Esbar heater now… it’s definitely time to head for warmer climes if we are going to live this way!  Here is this morning’s sunrise.

Days 25 – 28, October 5 – 8: Annapolis and Baltimore suburbs (by land!)

Anticipation…

We are just hanging out in Annapolis, waiting….and waiting….

…waiting for the boat show to begin.  Bob is always excited to visit the boats on display and to find out what new and improved equipment and technology has entered the sailing universe.  He has a shopping list of things we need before going further south.  We are working in the booth of the SSCA (Seven Seas Cruising Association) on Monday afternoon so we cannot just pull up anchor and leave….we have obligations…

….also waiting for our two sons and one girlfriend to visit on Saturday and Sunday.  This is such a high point for me that I’m practically holding my breath until they arrive.  I’m worried about all the little details that might get in the way of enjoying their visit. At the moment the dingy dock situation is so awful only a handful of dinghies can actually make landfall.  This does not particularly bother Bob since he will scramble up any number of hurdles or obstacles to get ashore, but I really must insist on a more civilized disembarkment.  There is a water taxi, but the wait times can be long and the cost for one round trip is $20.  That will add up quickly….

Also, it’s been so humid, with rain all day on Tuesday and about 100% humidity on the days since then, with temps in the 80s.  It feels a bit too much like July, and that kind of weather does not promote my happiness or energy level for sight seeing.  Sigh… into each life some rain must fall…

Meanwhile, there is no denying that Annapolis is a beautiful city, easily walkable, with so much to see and do. Annapolis is the capitol of Maryland, and at the top of the main shopping district that rises from the edge of the harbor is the heart of the government sitting on a beautiful circle with surrounding government offices that look more colonial than either Philadelphia or Williamsburg.

Later today we plan to walk through the Naval Academy, which is also quite an architectural gem.

Days 22- 24, Oct 2 – 4: Still in Annapolis (yes, that is editorializing)

Summer Camp for Cruisers

About 75 boats and lots of cars (new word, CLODS: “Cruisers Living On Dirt) arrived at Camp Letts on the Rhodes River just south of Annapolis for a long weekend of seminars for long distance cruisers.  Bob was in sailor heaven, getting to share his passion with so many other like minded sailors, and getting to meet some of his cruising gurus:  Nigel Calder, Lynn and Larry Parday, and Hal Roth’s widow Michelle.  It was a quite the gathering of famous cruisers…

Each day from Friday through Sunday we had catered breakfasts, lunches and dinners ashore, with two morning seminars and two afternoon seminars.  It was a very busy weekend, and we fell into bed exhausted each night!  We met lots of people who will be spending the fall heading to various exotic locations, and some of them will be heading to the Bahamas like we are!  This gathering was a way of not only learning some important techniques and ideas from well known sailing authorities, but also a way to meet the folks who’ll be traveling to the same destination we are, or traveling to destinations that we hope to go in the future.  I can see why this yearly gathering of sailors is so important!

Bob and I took seminars on lots of subjects relating to long distance cruising, and I knitted through most of them.  The baby sweater is now finished and I’m nearing the end of the second front of my Vivian Hoxbro “Ann Jacket.”

Now we are in Annapolis, anchored right where all the hoopla is going on to get the Boat Show set up.  Bob is like a little kid at camp, enjoying watching all the pilings get driven in and the temporary docks being assembled.  As the next few days go by lots of show boats will get put on those docks.  We will be in the thick of it….

Today’s chores are laundry, restocking the larder, and mailing the shawl and the baby sweater!  ….mixed in with reconnecting with lots of friends who come to this boat show every year. This is our first year to arrive by boat rather than by car.

Days 17 – 20, Sept. 27 – 30: Camp Letts, Rhodes River

Day 21:  Annapolis  We are going to be here almost a week.  It’s hard to believe that we’ve only been out sailing for 3 weeks today.  In many ways it seems like a lot longer.  By the time we leave Annapolis next week, we will have been gone a month….and only have traveled such a small distance, 477 miles!  We have a lot more ground to cover to get to Vero Beach by early December, another 1200 miles or so.  It will be time to make tracks!

Just Chillin’

I’m feeling a tad homesick these days…..so I can’t stop taking photos of houses…. these are  the lovely houses in St. Michaels.

Days 15 and 16, Sept. 25 and 26: St. Michaels

There is a yarn store here which I’ve visited in past years, Frivolous Fibers, which just might be the friendliest yarn store ever!  When I got there yesterday there was hardly room to peruse the yarn shelves because there were so many women lounging together working on projects.  It wasn’t a class; it was a gathering, and it happens every Tuesday! They invited me to find a seat and join them.   These are my people!  Women were working on sweaters and afghans, lace shawls, cowls….you name it!  They were discussing books, knitting, grandchildren, husbands.  It felt like home.  It felt like my wonderful knitting group from NJ… I miss them SO much!

Back on board Pandora for a little ‘wine and roses’ before dinner.

Then back ashore for dinner at Ava’s, a wine bar and brick oven pizzeria.  Wonderful!

An Almost Perfect Day!

Not many days get better than this! ….
A walk through charming Chestertown….

In the mid 18th century Chestertown was a thriving British Colony and busy port.  Who knew?? (Well, clearly, I didn’t!)  It is so far up the Chester River it is hard to imagine this being such a busy port, but the number of stately brick houses and the depth of the river definitely attest to the town’s history of wealth.  Even the sidewalks are brick!

I know most sailors love a bit of shore leave, but I sometimes wonder if they can possibly love it as much as I do.  When I get ashore I sometimes wonder if it’s the shore leave I love most!  Walking through a beautiful town like Chestertown, seeing all the lovely homes, doing my best to get a glimpse of the interiors in some of these houses and the equally beautiful private gardens seems to be my main goal.  I’m always a little sad to go back on board.  Embarrassingly, I had never even heard of Chestertown before our visit.

We left in the early afternoon to take advantage of an ebbing tide and winds that should have been behind us. Sailing back down the river was somewhat less than perfect, but the sights along the shore were still bucolic, in spite of a flukey north wind that caused me some discomfort when we heeled more than I like!  At one point we heeled rather severely and I heard a crash, which was my computer flying off the nav station and sailing across the cabin.  What a distressing moment that was!  Kudos to Apple for making such a sturdy little machine.  The only damage seems to be a tiny nick in the corner.  I’ve learned my lesson not to leave it out anymore while we are underway.

We ended the day in another perfect spot, which makes me realize there are benefits to sailing that no land trip could ever match.  We are anchored in a quiet cove that is so undeveloped only our boat gives away what century we are in.  Trees and other fauna grow right to the banks of this little estuary off the Chester River called Queen’s Creek, and the banks are teaming with wildlife.  We took the dingy to explore this little round bay and saw a number of blue herons each staking their claim on a bit of shoreline, patiently wading the shallows.  Our dingy was ghosting along on a mirror surface with only the tiniest little rings of disturbance which I took to be insects landing on the water, which I imagined would be attracting the fish that the herons were anticipating.  When I looked a bit closer I saw that each of these little rings was being caused by a small jellyfish, and there were thousands of them!  The little bay was teeming with them. Are these the stinging nettles so famous in the Chesapeake? Further into the bay we saw a few deer drinking at the water’s edge, something we haven’t seen in many years. These days we are so familiar with deer wandering our suburban neighborhoods, eating right out of our manicured gardens.  I’d forgotten just how perfect they look in their natural setting!  Just above we noticed a bald eagle perched at the very top of a dead tree, surveying the bay.  Wouldn’t you know we left the camera on board when we set out on this wonderful exploration??

This photo was actually taken early the next morning when there was a light breeze ruffling the surface and a morning mist.

Perfect day turned into perfect evening as we watched a sunset just like the ones that must have inspired Maxfield Parrish….the sky all ‘parrish’ blue and deep rose.  Stunning.  The bright half moon rose shortly before the sun set, so that as one light faded the other was ready to take its place.  The large cumulus clouds that had filled the sky before evening made a dramatic setting for the moon’s travel across the sky.  As things go on such rare, perfect days, we also managed to put together a marvelous dinner, which included another loaf of bread fresh out of the oven….wish you could have smelled it!

 The absolute highlight of the day was getting in the dinghy to look up at the night sky.  Bob cast off from Pandora and we drifted around this lovely bay, barely moving since there was hardly a breeze and hardly a current. We watched the Big Dipper slide down below the horizon and and then found the easily identifiable Arcturus and Polaris.  And then I realized the autumn equinox was last night!  The moon will be full in another week, and I wonder what that will do to the higher than normal tides we’ve been seeing the past few days….

Day 14, Sept. 24: Queen’s Creek to St. Michaels