I’m Back

Diana required that I do not do any boat chores until noon today so I have some time to write on our neglected blog. It’s been well over a month since my last post and a lot has happened, most of which has been chronicled by Diana, our trip across the country, time spent in Beaufort, passage up to the Chesapeake and a few of the place we’ve been so far. I’ll break this post down into my two most realizations on this trip; 1) there are some really interesting folks out there and 2) boats are a lot of work.

A month in we have met some really interesting folks floating around on the water. In Hampton VA we met Tony and Bente a super sweat retired couple that; have crossed the Atlantic via Iceland on a small single engine plane for their honeymoon, lived aboard their boat for 12 years 3 of which were in Venezuela where they stayed while Bente successfully battled cancer, and get this were professionally and personally close with Carl Sagan (these folks are very smart). After we left Hampton we made our way up to Deltaville, VA a small unincorporated community and met Michael on his very early 1960’s Prout Catamaran. Micheal has been sailing his small catamaran back and forth from the Bahamas to Virginia for over 30 years most of which he has been by himself and now he is in his mid 80’s! If there is anyone who I have ever met that needs to write a memoir he is on the top of my list. His father helped found BP, his childhood was spent in many countries in the East and West, he fought in WWII and then stayed to help keep peace during the founding of Israel, he married the daughter of a US ambassador, moved to the US had 3 kids and found himself to be a young widower. Michael did not bend to the wishes of his family and move back to the UK so his family could help raise the kids he stayed true to his and his wife’s plan to raise the children in the US; two of which are doctors and the other is successful in business. To me this trip can be called a success, just by having the time to have wine with Micheal.

Michael's early Prout, "Wind in the Willows" at anchor in Deltaville, VA

Michael’s early Prout, “Wind in the Willows” at anchor in Deltaville, VA

We also met Sean and Louise in Deltaville, this couple has spent the last 12 years touring the Americas on a converted double decker bus that was designed to be completely grid dependent and were just making the move to water. Their fist boat which was at the marina to have some work done is a 50ft, 100k pound, steel trawler; essentially a small ship. They got some private instruction for sometime and are looking to take off and potentially cross oceans on that single screw boat! Oh and if your in the market for a converted doubledecker bus, let me know I can get you in touch with them! The last folks worth a mention are Ron and Mark, we met these two at the only restaurant in the tiny fishing village of Reedville, VA. Ron just retired from flying F16s in the Airforce and decided he wanted to sail so rather than taking lessons or starting small he bought an early 80’s IOR (International Offshore Rule) boat. For folks not familiar, it would be like buying a not very well maintained early 80’s Lamborghini for your first car; crazy complicated maintenance, out dated impossible to find parts, super scary handling characteristics, but crazy fast once mastered. Mark was hired as a captain to help sail the boat from Norfolk, VA to Baltimore, MD. Mark’s past life was a Navy Salvage diver who then retired to mostly sail boats between the West Coast and Hawaii where he currently lives. These guys estimate it took at least 300 man hours between them just getting the boat seaworthy for the ride up the Chesapeake and once in Baltimore Ron has his hands full with endless more projects! Both super nice and interesting folks who both gave us offers to meet again when in Baltimore or Kona.

Ron and Mark with us at the Tiki Bar in Solomons, MD

Ron and Mark with us at the Tiki Bar in Solomons, MD

Boat work. . . it was thought if we bought a new boat I wouldn’t be burdened with so much maintenance and repair headaches! Well maybe there are fewer tasks, but its hard to tell, because there isn’t anything to relate to as our old boat Frog was much too simple to use as a relative comparison. I thought I’d have time to piter around on small upgrades here and there (water maker, inverter, SSB, etc) but unplanned failures continue to occur which require attention. So far our electronics have been a big headache with intermittent failures of AIS, Wind and GPS all which have magically resolved themselves with no concrete resolution, though I have taken everything apart (maybe loose connections?) Just yesterday the air conditioning condensation pump quit and the generator impeller died with less than 100hrs of use. Countless other gremlins and hiccups have taken a lot of my time so nope, the water maker is not yet installed. Later this week we will be redoing our battery bank increasing our charger size, installing an inverter and much more sophisticated AC and DC monitoring systems; but we’re paying some who knows what their doing while I watch over their shoulder! I shouldn’t be complaining each little hiccup lets me learn a bit more about the boat which is important, I just wish the frequency was less; which should begin to decline as she really hasn’t been put through her paces until now.

All in all it’s been a great trip so far with all the folks we have meet, great little towns we’ve seen and a wonderful sunset almost every night. In the coming weeks I should get more time to study the subjects I’m hoping to and post more on the blog.

Annapolis Sunset

Annapolis Sunset