What to do. We changed course by 35 degrees, with the engine still working at its high speed for continuous use, 2500 rpms, and put out the small jib. Now less pitching, speed up to over six knots and a whole lot of heeling. The Saga owners network is having a discussion of the merits of adding a ton of extra lead at the bottom of the keel (a sole under the keel's foot as it were) and with Lene reporting this was on her "ten worst passages" list, I think the time has finally come to bite the financial bullet and do this -- next winter, when the boat is hauled. I thought of taking photos for you, or video, which could have shown the excitement, but decided to keep the salt water off the iPad, which was in a ziplock bag.
Turning a bit east, into the Choptank River, the wind was 60 to 80 degrees off the starboard bow and our speed was over seven knots with the throttle turned way down. But this wide but shallow river twists and turns and when we came to a point where tacking in the channel would have been required we elected to furl the small sail and motor the rest of the way. The trip took seven hours, from 11 to 6.
The landing at a dock in the Cambridge YC was very poor due to Captain Roger forgetting an important rule: always check the wind direction when attempting a landing at a dock. Maybe I was tired -- a reason but not an excuse. Anyway, the wind blew us onto the dock. We should have aimed further away from the dock, stopped and let the wind blow us to the Tee dock. Instead, with some way still on, we crashed our starboard quarter with the dinghy, hanging from its davits athwart the stern and protruding a few inches out past the side of the boat on each side, catching the dink's bow on one of the pilings that support the fixed height dock. The painter, which is one of three lines used to snug the dinghy to the boat, parted (here reattached and a foot shorter),
and one of the welded aluminum
padeyes holding up the bow ripped open.
But we landed and enjoyed three days at the YC, though the first of them was rainy.
On the sunny days that followed we enjoyed this view from ILENE of a replica of a screwpile lighthouse at the adjacent marina. I visited our friend, John's meticulously maintained 28 foot S2, "Hearts Content" there.
He drove us all around the town (population 12,250) showing us where everything was, took us to the post office to mail time sensitive mail, to the hardware store where we got a stainless steel padeye, bolts split washers, to the supermarket, several times, for provisions, to his home where we hacked off the extra length of the 1/2" bolts of the padeye and chamfered the edges, did our laundry and printed out a letter that was on our computer. He lent us one of his cars. He came to the boat and "helped" (let's just say he did the jobs with me as helper/learner/doer of the easy parts). He ground off the remnants of the old aluminum padeye, drilled the 1/2 inch holes for the new bolts
and we attached the new stainless padeye -- stronger than before!
We also replaced the old carburetor with the new one which had been fedexed to his house and he showed me how to adjust the idle and it works again!
We spent our days here with John and actually stayed the fourth night, when it was much calmer, at the wall of the town basin, rent free.
For our stay in the basin, he suggested the creation of the fender board, shown here, which uses two fenders and a hanging board to keep the pilings from harming the boat.
We watched John's TV. He took us to his favorite restaurants and bar, Leaky Pete's, where we had Natty Bo's (National Bohemian beer). We tried scrapple, and crab, oyster and fish.
Cambridge is a very sleepy town, which has seen better times, especially its downtown district, which was devastated by suburban stores, fires, the recession and greed. We toured its Arts Center, and visited its Maritime Museum
and the Harriet Tubman Museum, but the last two were closed.
Here are the kitties exploring a neighboring boat at the YC; maybe they smelled fish.
And I just loved this one, which I call "Still Life with Boat".
On our last day John took us on a long car ride to the southernmost of the three Hoopers Islands, connected by road and only a few feet above sea level, and populated mostly by watermen (crab and oyster harvesters) and their families. These islands were reached after driving through the Blackwater Wildlife Preserve, a huge swampy expanse. We had lunch at Old Salty's
where we will be going next. John and I are planning the next leg of the cruise, I wish we could have persuaded him to come along for a few days.
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