Jun 292011
 

We arrived in Bass Harbor, Maine yesterday afternoon just after 5:00 pm after a pleasant sail over from Camden where we had spent the previous night. We had made “landfall” in Camden the previous day after a 32 hour journey across the Gulf of Maine from Provincetown, MA. The weather for the crossing was benign, although with no moon it was one dark night. We encountered numerous fishing boats working the banks in the Gulf and had to alter course to stay out of their way. Commercial fishermen have the right of way on the water and it was incumbent on us to avoid them. The idea is that they are dragging nets or lines and are not as maneuverable as we are. The same does not go for sport fishermen by the way. They are just ordinary motor vessels and are not considered “vessels engaged in fishing.” As an aside, at the halfway point we were about 40 miles from land, which was about the farthest out we have been on the entire trip. It was actually somewhat comforting to be out there with other boats.

Now we are bobbing comfortably on a mooring just off the Morris Yachts docks. Tomorrow we are going to take Gryphon over to the docks to have some checks done and to discuss the service work that will be required next. Other things like laundry and cleaning the boat will need to be done as well before we leave to fly back to Florida this weekend. Tonight we met some friends from Venice who were staying in Bar Harbor and we dinghied ashore to meet them and go out to dinner. We drove over to Thurston’s, a local lobster pound here in Bass Harbor. We all had lobsters with potato salad and cole slaw. You cannot believe how good it was.

Though we are here at the end of the journey, keep checking the blog. We will be posting more photos and impressions of things we have seen along the way.

Not all who depart are destined to arrive.

Not all who depart are destined to arrive.

Jun 282011
 

We departed Provincetown the morning of the 26th with the tide before the fog had lifted.  We motor sailed all day, all night, and all day the 27th until we reached Camden, Maine.  We depart for Bass Harbor on Mt. Desert Island in just a few minutes.  It should be an eight-hour voyage if all goes well.  This is the last leg of this journey.  A Morris Yachts mooring awaits us.   The sun is shining this morning and the forecast looks clear, so we should have a pretty sail with rocky islands safely distant.  Time to cast off!

Jun 222011
 

Hadley-Harbor
Hadley Harbor

Provincetown Harbor

Provincetown Harbor

We spent last night at anchor in a pretty harbor. The inner harbor was filled with private moorings, so we stayed in the outer harbor. It would be eposed to the storms coming, so we left for a hefty mooring in Provincetown. We’ve never visited here before, so we’ll catch a launch in for some sightseeing tomorrow.
Today was cloudy with light rain starting in the afternoon, so the harbors look very subdued. We expect to be in Provincetown for four or five days waiting for the latest rain front to pass through.

Jun 222011
 

Atlantic Ocean skies along the coast of New Jersey and Long Island, NY were truly awesome. The passage was quite smooth with ocean rollers about every 10 seconds.
The boat traffic was surprisingly light. I diverted course only once in the middle of the night to avoid a collision with a tug pulling a barge. RADAR is very helpful to read a ship’s size, location, bearing, speed and direction. We passed with about a half of one nautical mile between us.
Atlantic-Dawn
Atlantic-Sky
Gryphon-at-Dawn
Atlantic-Sunset

We passed by Block Island Monday morning. It is Race Week at Block Island, so we didn’t try to moor there, but kept going to Newport. We saw a few racing boats out practicing in very light breeze.
Block-Island-Sailer

Jun 212011
 

We had a delightful cruise from Cape May, NJ to Newport, RI, 52 hours of continuous journeying from Saturday morning to Monday afternoon. Last evening we enjoyed a wonderful evening with our Pelican Pointe friends, Mike and Liz Pinto, who have lived in Newport/Middleton their whole lives. After just one night here , we need to move on this morning to make use of the fair weather, so I’ll share more details and photos later.

Jun 172011
 

GPS Antenna Installation

GPS Antenna Installation


Scott, the marine electrician, feeds wiring for the new GPS antenna into the hollow cylinder mount and Randy pulls the wiring through. The GPS antenna is the tiny white bulb at the top over the RADAR.

Now all the electronic instruments are working again. If the good weather forecast holds, we’ll be cruising again on Saturday.

Jun 162011
 

My friend, Sonya Myers, taught me how to add a widget to my web site to allow you to “subscribe.”  This means if you sign up with your email address, you will get the latest blog post via email.   You won’t have to wonder when I will post a new blog, you’ll automatically receive it in your email.  This is the closest I can come to making an email blast without incurring the wrath of the Yahoo Spam god who precluded me from sending it out to all my friends and family at once.

We got a good weekly rate for staying at Bay Point Marina, so we’re “off the water” for a week to catch up on laundry, clean the boat inside and out, re-provision,  visit friends, experience cultural sites, eat the local delicacies, swim in a pool, walk on the beach, get an oil change, and clean out the holding tank and touch up the varnish.  This list is not in chronological order, nor order of importance, but in some order that my brain imposed.

We had a wonderful weekend visiting our friends Brian and Ginger.  Randy and Brian have been friends and finishing each other’s sentences since they were twelve. Randy’s and Brian’s brains each holds a “box of facts” that they use now to crack us up every five minutes, piling on one association after another.  It reminds me of all the fun times I had in the creative world of advertising and marketing.  Brian and Ginger live and work in Charlottesville and have a decompression beach condo at Virginia Beach.  We had a mini-vacation with them this weekend and shored up our humour quotient by doing so.  Ginger and I have met via Randy and Brian’s high school reunions and have “clicked together” based on shared values and outlook.Ginger and Brian at Norfolk Botanical Garden

Ginger and I decided we were going to visit the Norfolk Botanical Garden and to our surprise and delight the guys wanted to go too.  I recommend this garden highly to all who love beautiful places to stroll.  The weather was perfect and the garden had much to display.  We rode on a tram that gave us an overview of the 175 acres of garden, then with map in hand we concentrated our energies on a series of contiguous gardens:  Japanese, perennial, hydrangea, azaleas, camellias, sculptures of birds, evergreens that took us  back to the visitor’s center.  Wow!

Norfolk-Conifer-Garden
Butterfly and Day Lily

After a fabulous water-side lunch we headed back to the condo to gather beach gear.  We set up a roomy beach cabana and chairs and had a delightful beach siesta, while preserving our skin from the bright sun.  Saturday night we feasted at Aldo’s, a well-regarded local Italian ristorante, which offered marvelous ambiance, service, and dishes.  I was in heaven, having lump crab meat for both lunch and dinner.  Yum!

Brian and Ginger’s kitty who accompanied them to the condo is a sweetheart.  Sabrina is a Bengal,  a new breed that I don’t know how to spell or to describe properly, but she looks like the cross between a domesticated cat and a leopard, with fur so soft and beautifully marked with stripes and rosettes that she looks wild but acts very gentle.  Her eyes and ears are proportionately huge in contrast to her diminutive head giving her a wondrous and ever fascinating look.  Sabrina and I had some opportunity to play together in between our outings.

Sunday arrived with clouds and rain, so Ginger suggested we see the Chrysler Museum of Art.  I enthusiastically agreed and the guys decided to go with us and give up watching the tennis and golf tournaments on TV.  It was a wonderful collection taking us from medieval to contemporary art, beautifully described by plaques by each art work, making them a silent docent.  Walter Chrysler, Jr. was the son of the founder of the Chrysler Corporation.  Walter and his wife, a native of Norfolk, collected art and bequeathed their collection to this museum, which expanded to accommodate it.  What a treasure it is to all who can visit!

Jun 162011
 
Cape May Welcome monuments grace both sides of the bridge where the harbor narrows

Cape May Welcome monuments grace both sides of the bridge where the harbor narrows

Cape May Beach

Cape May Beach House

A New House in the Old Style

A New House in the Old Style

Still in Cape May you ask? Yes, challenging weather kept us here till Wednesday. We were all set to leave, but when  I turned on the engine and the instruments, not one of the electronic instruments was functioning: no GPS to run the electronic chart, no depth, no wind direction/speed, no speed over ground, therefore no departure. The authorized Raymarine sales/service dealers were all too busy to see us until next week. Randy walked over to West Marine to buy a volt meter so we could diagnose the problem and a fellow there gave him a card for Scott, a marine electrician at Electronic Marine Concepts. Before we could do the diagnostic checks, Scott came over, diagnosed the problem as a GPS antenna that had shorted out and was depriving the other instruments of their required power. They ordered the antenna and Scott installed it today. Scott is a sailor and was familiar with Peter McNeely, our host, for whom he had installed electronics on McNeelys’ sail boat.

We are grateful that the antenna broke at the dock in a pretty, boat-friendly city and not out on the ocean. We are also grateful that Scott was familiar with Raymarine systems, was available so quickly and was so nice to work with. Unfortunately we lost over favorable weather window and will wait till Saturday to try again. Unfortunately, these delays ate up all our remaining buffer days before our return trip to Florida, so we chose to push out our return trip to July 4, eat the airline penalties, and rebook hotel and rental cars in Maine and Florida.  You gotta be nimble.

Jun 142011
 

New Jersey is truly the Garden State. A walk through the neighborhoods, old and new, was a delightful garden tour. Hydrangeas, day lilies, and roses mingle in borders with conifers. Cape May is famous for its Painted Ladies:  Victorian B&B’s painted in splendid color combinations.

Painted-Lady

As a I made my way back from the beach and shopping district I discovered that newer neighborhoods also display beautiful, well maintained landscapes.

Begonias

At a corner house, an attractive fence came all the way to the sidewalk. To my surprise a white standard poodle came up to the fence and put her front paws up to greet me and another family walking from the opposite direction stopped to pet her.  Gracie is a also a Painted Lady: her toenails are painted pink to match her necklace!

Gracie of Cape May

Gracie of Cape May

Thanks to a map, I found a memorial park on the harbor dedicated to fishermen lost at sea. It is located in what appears to be a new neighborhood of houses made in the traditional style.

Memorial-to-Fishermen
Fishermen-Lost-at-Sea