I made our last blog in Canajoharie, while we were out walking around town, reprovisioning, and grabbing a bite to eat. What I didn't mention was that for an hour while I was writing that blog, Serena had become a tour guide for the locals. No matter how many times it happens, it still feels weird to be an attraction. There was a young lady yelling at us from the top of lock 17, "hello Vita", over and over. One gentleman and his grandson were taking pictures of at us at a lock, and then showed up later while we were docked in town, and had a tour of the boat. It is amazing the novelty we become to those that dream, but are not sailorly afflicted. I think Serena gets a kick out of it though. Vanna, show me a T.
I'm jumping around here, sorry. But this post has a lot little stuff. Below is Serena's new shirt that we picked up while we were fueling up. The Redneck Boat Club. If people remember the Trailer Trash shirt she was wearing all summer, then this fits right in. I almost bought a second one for our friend Denis, because this just had his name all over it. Maybe in the spring on the way back.
Below is a house we saw on while we were travelling down. I was curious whether the insurance company would cover it when it eventually fell into the river, which should be soon. The picture doesn't really do it justice. And, this wasn't the only one.
For the last too days we have been sitting in Waterford, NY. We spent some time visiting with our new friends from Lake Simcoe. Cs'ta Time (CS36) and Serenada (Ontario 32). They are headed south too, left there snow shovels at home. Both crews are snowbird virgins, just like us, so its nice to compare notes with somebody else, six heads are better than two. We also managed to get some shopping in, laundry, and some boat chores. I think I may have temporarily solved the fuel problem, but I won't know for sure for a few days. Serena got some badly needed cleaning in, and some reorganizing, but not too hectic.
Tomorrow we hit tidal waters for the first time. We aren't too worried about it, but we are making an effort to understand it. Like everything else, we know in a few weeks it will be like we where sailing in tidal waters our whole lives. We also get our mast up tomorrow, hopefully, then Vita will be a sailboat again. She did fine as a powerboat, but as I mentioned before, sailboats were meant to be free, like a bird on a good breeze.
We are starting to run a little low on time. We need to be in Annapolis, MD., for about the 18th of Sep. I fly to London, England on the 20th to crew in a boat delivery, from England to Spain, for a couple weeks. Luckily I come back on the 7th of October, just in time for the Annapolis sailboat show. But that means that we can't spend too much time sitting around drinking beer and watching the world go by. Now I know why everyone says, "don't set schedules", because having a deadline, blows. We could have spent a month coming through the Erie, and every place we've stopped begged for further exploration, but there just isn't enough time.
Okay, I'm done, go do something fun.
Hey Rob,
ReplyDeleteI am enjoying reading your blogs!
Good sailing (once you get your mast back up)!
Love the pictures!
Cheers
Joerg