Saturday, August 25, 2012

Still Catching up - Linekin Bay, Maine


Location:  Linekin Bay, Maine
We’re currently moored in Linekin Bay, Maine, visiting friends Brian and Kathy.  Linekin Bay is just east of Boothbay Harbor, one of Maine’s popular summer boating and tourist stops.  We arrived in Boothbay Thursday afternoon and went into Brown’s Wharf to load water and pick-up a mooring for the night.  Tim Brown, the marina manager at Brown’s, was good friends with Kathy’s late husband, Gregg.  Gregg and Dave grew up together in Beverly, MA and went to college together at Mass. Maritime.  Dave always says if it weren’t for Gregg he never would have finished at Mass. Maritime; Gregg kept him motivated and sane during their college years, studying, playing lacrosse and “midnight riding”.  Gregg died in a plane crash about 5 years ago leaving behind his wife Kathy and their three daughters, Kelsy, Sonni and Ali.  Gregg, in his passing, was once again a big motivator for Dave and me and was a big reason for retirement part 1 and now retirement part 2.  Life is too short and it is important to get out and do the things you want to do and see the things you want to see rather than being a slave to sitting behind a desk, pushing a pencil and trying to keep up with the Jones.  If you want to read more about Gregg’s daughter Kelsy and how she took charge of the family business after Gregg’s death, there is a good article “Saving Hartley Marine” in the August 2012 issue of Maine Magazine, online at http://www.themainemag.com/people/features/1937-saving-hartley-marine.html

So… Brian, another childhood friend of Dave’s, and Kathy hooked up a few years ago and just spent the winter living in a very small apartment in East Boothbay where they have a dock and access to this mooring we are on.  They both said that after surviving in an apartment that small they can handle anything.  Here is a picture of Seabiscuit on Kathy and Brian’s mooring in Linekin Bay:
 

We’re going to spend a few days here catching up with the two of them and seeing the Boothbay area.  We have some folks to visit in Pemaquid Harbor and then we’ll head to Christmas Cove for a night or two and dinner at the restaurant there.  Christmas Cove is one of the places Dave, Al and Patti stopped at on their cruise and really enjoyed.

A little catching up on where we’ve been recently…  I think the last blog ended about the time my friend Jennie came on board in Newburyport, MA.  Jennie and I went to college together in Montana and were roommates our senior year.  We joke that we’re not really friends, just ex-roommates because you can’t be friends with your roommates.  Jen-Jen was instrumental is helping us last year when we bought the boat.  She works in DC and lives in Bowie, MD, just across Chesapeake Bay from Rockhall where Seabiscuit was docked.  She spent several weekends running around getting parts, supplies and provisions for us while we were preparing to get underway to move the boat from Rockhall up to NH for the winter.  She cooked a bunch of food for us to take on the trip (breakfast burritos, spaghetti and sauce, etc.) and helped us test the crabs and beers at all of the Rockhall restaurants.  Jen-Jen used to work in MA and has several friends there so she spent the first half of her vacation week with us on the boat and the second half with her friends at their cabin on a lake in NH. 

Here is a picture of Jennie at the helm:

While she was aboard, we did lots of fun things.  Cruised from Newburyport to Salem, moored in Salem and had a wonderful dinner at 62 on Pickering Wharf; went out whale watching on Stellwagon Bank and saw lots of humpback whales; went back to Salem and had a wonderful dinner at a German/Polish place in town.  Sunday we went to Kettle Island and met up with Al and Patti and some of their friends.  We swam, hunted for seaglass on the beach, had a few cold ones, had summer reubens (corn-beef and cole-slaw) for lunch and passed the day away.  Doug, one of the Al and Patti’s friends, has invented a floating sunglass strap using wine corks.  He gave us a few and we have been wearing them and getting lots of comments.  He actually got a patent on them and sells them on line at www.winenomore.com.   We moored in Gloucester for the night and then waited for high slack water to go thru the Blynman Canal up to Annisquam. 

A little moaning and whining here… First, going up the Blynman Canal is pretty tricky; it’s narrow, i.e. all but the small boats go up it single file and it doesn’t have a lot of depth.  There are two bridges that need to be lifted, one at the Gloucester Harbor entrance and a railroad bridge further up.  The Cape Ann Marina is between the two bridges.  Because we are slow, while waiting for the first bridge to lift, two boats that were behind us moved up in line in front of us.  Rather than going all the way through the canal, both boats stopped to turn in at the Cape Ann Marina, backing up the line and causing everyone to reverse and horns to blow.   We moored for the  night at Annisquam.  According to the guide books, there is a market is Annisquam that can provide basic supplies, groceries, ice, beer, sodas, etc. so Jennie and I took the launch in to check it out.  The description of the market was slightly embellished… let’s  just say they had a limited supply of beer (Bud Light, Coors Light, Miller Light) and soda and that was it… so we walked the 100 yards to the other end of the town and took the launch back out to the boat.  Jennie and Dave barbequed steaks for dinner that night.  Here is a picture of Jennie trying to teach Dave how to tell when the steak is done “medium rare”.  They are up on the boat deck with Wingaersheek beach is in the background.

 
The next day we went around Cape Ann and anchored near Sandy Beach in Rockport.  We took the dinghy in to the dinghy dock, wandered around Rockport, had a lobster roll for lunch and strudel for dessert then headed north back to Newburyport to drop Jennie off for the second half of her vacation.

We decided to go from Newburyport back up to Great Bay Marine in NH to catch-up on some maintenance and to see Dave’s dad and the rest of his family one more time before heading back to Salem to spend a weekend with Heather (Dave’s daughter) and her boyfriend Derek.   When preparing to leave the Newburyport Town Dock, we discovered a fuel leak coming from one of the manhole covers on the starboard aft tank.  We tightened the bolts around the cover to slow the leak until we could repair it once we got into Great Bay. 

More on maintenance, our trip with Heather and Derek and our time so far in Maine in the next post…

No comments:

Post a Comment

Back to the USA - Houston, TX and Charleston, SC

Location: Houston, Texas, USA We ended our excellent 325 day adventure in Europe by flying from Amsterdam to Houston, Texas.  We had a wonde...