Monday, September 29, 2008

Annapolis days...when we are not cruising, our activities take another turn! Today was a typical day: we had a mix of bike rides, boat stores visits, repairs, and a great lunch at the dinner Chick & Ruth! We had the "Colossal Smoked meat sandwich" which was indeed colossal because even at 20h00 we are still not hungry!!! It was good though because we have to dismantle the stove in order to have the burner pipes welded and we tackled wo other very long jobs: Heiner looked after the Outboarder and I did "Winch dentistry" with kerosene, degreaser, brushes, etc...

Ce fut une journee typique de plaisanciers" " nous avons pris les velos - gracieusete du Hrbour Master de Annapolis - pour aller assez loin dans un magasin specialise ou nous avons achete un winch usage qui a demande beaucoup de nettoyage! Heiner reparait le hors-bord et tout ca c'etait apres avoir demonte notre poele a kerosene qui doit avoir ses "tubes" soudes! Heureusement que nous nous etions regales d'un immense sandwich au boeuf fume chez le "Schwartz" d'Annapolis...ca nous a pemis de travailler plusieurs heures sans fringale!

Sunday, September 28, 2008



Annapolis!
We have been here so often that it feels like home! Boater's paradise with free wifi in Spa creek, free bikes, free shuttles to go around town, etc...
The weather has been very rainy in the last days. The crab boats are on the bay however...rain or shine!




Yesterday's sailing under the Bay Bridge was in a grey soup of fog and rain...we could not see anything. Spa creek is still very quiet, with mostly American boats and only 2 other canadian boats. We will stay here for a week and enjoy the town. We have many projects that must be completed before we leave for North Carolina.
Nous voila a Annapolis, un endroit que nous adorons et qui est tellement familier que nous nous sentons chez nous. Demain et mardi, la pluie devrait cesser et les temperatures grimper vers les 75-80F...c'est bien ca...pas de maringoins...juste des crabes et comme ils ne grimpent pas aux fenetres, c'est parfait. Nous avons pu enfin faire une epicerie et ce soir, en plus des pains qui cuisent, il y aura un bon boeuf bourguignon. Nous resterons ici une semaine, question de finir des projets, recevoir le courrier et nous amuser a gouter les bonnes choses des cafe et restos de la place....

Wednesday, September 24, 2008







Chesapeake City on the C&D canal...










...if you look at this picture, left of the bridge, you can see the basin in which we are anchored!





Chesapeake city has an historic district to which we are closest and it has been delightful to take walks in its streets!!!


No easy shopping here...but it keeps us healthy walking while admiring the sights pulling our little caddy!

Monday, September 22, 2008

Time for the 120 miles overnight ocean passage from New York to Cape May! After checking the tides...we had to accept the fact that again, the best time to leave was a t 5h30!!! Ah! cruising life can be demanding...espeically when it's cool outside...5h30 is early. But we did...and by 7h30 we were on the ocean, bopping up and down waves of 4 to 5 feet, with a light southerly wind (on the nose...) for all 24 hours! The west winds never came...and the waves diminished, as soon as we were 3 miles offshore. It was an uneventful passage during which we slept, taking turns on watch and eating well. I prepared pasta salad, sandwiches, coffee, and non-alcoholic beer and water for the drinks. I made tea...enjoying the russian chocolate bouth in Staten Island!!! We read...I actually read a complete book which was quite fascinating (The Bone House by Betsy Tobin...) and which made the night go by quite quickly!!! At 7h30 we were entering Cape May. Given the tide in our favor, we decided to continue the trip and cross the Delaware River to arrive at Chesapeake City at 18h30, entering the anchorage with a 8 knots speed! Youpi!

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Great Kill Harbour...we arrived in time for our second breakfast...around 9h30 and then went to bed as we were pretty tired. When we woke up, the sun was shining and the waters were so calm...after the hectic currents of the Hudson, it felt wonderful. Another wonderful surprise was to see a dinghy coming towards us..Andree and Benoit of Douce Folie V, a sailboat of Collins Bay on Lake Ontario! We were all so happy to see each other again! We spent quite a bit of time with them on the two following days, exchanging engine stories and sharing our current experiences of cruising life. Those two have been cruising in the Bahamas before and like us, have decided to take another sabbatical on their boat. I discovered new shops in the little town - russian and east-european products such as smoked fish, makerels, even huge boxes of chocolates with golden ornaments in honour of the Tsar Nicolaus II...almost a trip in itself to visit the store! Indeed, the burgeoning Russian population of Staten Island is said to be hovering around 75,000!

Friday, September 19, 2008














Leaving Manhattan...already??????????? Yes, these are the constraints of cruising. Weather conditions constantly affect your life! We had savoured our two days in Manhattan. For the first time, we spent time in central Park and its beautiful venues.
The oldest man-made object in Central Park is this Obelisk, located directly behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Nicknamed Cleopatra’s Needle soon after its installation, the stone shaft has nothing to do with the legendary Queen of the Nile. Thutmosis III, an Egyptian pharaoh who ruled from 1479-1425 B.C., had a pair of obelisks made to celebrate his third jubilee (30th year of reign). This is one of them, and the other stands on the bank of the Thames River in London.(...)The Obelisk’s trip from Egypt to New York was a complicated engineering feat. The delicate moving process required laborers to inch the monument on parallel beams, aided by roll boxes and a pile-driver engine. It took nineteen days just to cross the 86th Street transverse road, and it took another twenty days to move it from Fifth Avenue to its resting place on Greywacke Knoll due to a winter blizzard. All together, it took one hundred and twelve days from the time the Obelisk touched upon the banks of the Hudson River until it reached this place. A huge crowd was on hand for the turning of the obelisk upright on January 22, 1881. A crowd of thousands stood in the snow to watch the event. As reported in the New York World, “Bonfires had been built on each side and the scene was most picturesque as the huge mass of 220 tons swung majestically from the horizontal to the vertical position.”
We thought it was worth a picture!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


We walked on the 5th avenue, on the Avenue of the Americas, and made it to Times Square. We had lunch behind the Rockefeller Centre in a wonderful cafe with all those Manhattan office workers streaming in and out like ants...we went to a wonderful market type store and felt like in heaven. We bought great cheeses, salamis, sourdough bread...and went back to the boat although it had become quite breezy in the mean time. our boat was quite a way from the marina's dock and it took almost 30 minutes to go against wave and current. That night was going to be very turbulent with the bow of our boat hitting the mooring ball and forcing us to sleep in the salon setties.






At 5h15 in the morning, after a very short night, we were up and unhooking the boat from this devilish ball to ride across the New York harbour, in the darkness! Despite traffic of barges and ferries, we had the time to greet the Statue of Liberty, Ellis and Governor Islands and by sunrise, we had reached the Verrazano Bridge and had to sail another 2 hours to reach Staten Island's Great Kill Harbour.


NY harbour is immense and we positioned ourselves ready to take the ocean whenever a weather window comes up. Great Kill Harbour is only 4 miles from the ocean (always keep in mind here that our speed is 5mph...).

Thursday, September 18, 2008










NY City! 79th Street Marina, on the can!

We arrived yesterday, after a long day on the Hudson. It was wonderful to admire Hudson Palisades a line of steep cliffs along the west side of the lower Hudson River in northeast New Jersey. They rise nearly vertically from near the edge of the river, ranging in height between 350 ft and 550 ft . These cliffs are among the most dramatic geologic features in the vicinity of New York City, provide a dramatic vista of the New York City skyline from the opposite bank of the Hudson.






But the current was in our favour and after we filled the diesel tanks in Tarrytown ($4.58 a gallon compared to $1.09 in 1999), we drove down the Hudson in style! Perfect weather, ebb current hitting 3 knots, which made the mooring can dance under the water pressure. But no problems picking up the mooring lines, they streamed straight in the current and it required only to position the bow close enogh to the dancing can so that Marleyne could pick up the lines.

No Wifi where we are moored, but we are sitting here in the beautiful public library,

in rooms looking out of these Harry Potter movies, and (together with hundred of others) typing away at our terminals. In a few minutes, our time is up, and we will be walking back to the boat.

Friday, September 12, 2008

When did we arrive here in Waterford?????????It all seems a blur...time passed quickly. We were supposed to leave today for Castelton on the Hudson in order to raise the mast but the weather was poor with wind on the nose and lots of rain...so, everybody stayed puthere on the docks. Our friends von Benoit and Andree on Douce Folie were hoping to come to our dock but ...no such luck. On this very rainy day, we decided to ...sew curtains in preparation for the hot caribbean sun!





We received many mails asking how to find our current position: the instructions are in the heading now...as it seems that people had not noticed the instruction on the right hand side of the page.





As we will leave tomorrow, this blog will not be updated for a while...until we get an Internet connection again. And yes, we are watching Ike's path and are very confident that its effects will be felt only slightly here up north.





Voilà notre séjour à Waterford qui tire à sa fin...nous devions partir pour Castelton on the Hudson ce matin mais les vents et la pluie nous ont vite mis d'autres idées dans la tête...comme celui de coudre des rideaux pour nous protéger du soleil des Antilles!
Nous avons reçu plusieurs courriels nous demandant comment faire pour trouver notre position actuelle: voilà, nous avons noté les instructions dans l'entête de la page puisqu'il semble que peu d'entre vous aviez noté le côté droit de la page...
Nous serons donc dans l'impossibilité de mettre le blog à jour pour les prochains jours jusqu'à ce que nous redevenions "branchés" sur l'Internet...mais ne vous inquiétez pas, nous sommes prudents et gardons un oeil vigilant sur Ike qui ne devrait plus être très fort quand il sera dans nos parages.





In preparation for Ike???????? Est-ce là en prévision des effets dévastateurs de Ike???

Thursday, September 11, 2008






Here is the long but busy dock of Waterford, just as one exits Lock 2. It is a friendly and picturesque village nested between the Mohawk and the Hudson rivers.Many tugboats make it their home port and add character to the waterfront. We found the Old Canal Champlain to be very lovely and evoquing far away times...


































Nous sommes tombés sous le charme du joli village de Waterford et du vieux canal Champlain aux murs recouverts de verdure! Paysages bucoliques.......





















Après avoir enfin réussi à quitter notre marina de Kingston, nous avons décidé de faire notre dernier "pèlerinage" dans les eaux claires du lac Ontario, à Kerr Bay puis dans la baie de Prince Edward County et d’y passer quelques jours, question d’y rencontrer des amis et de nous reposer un peu du stress des derniers mois...avant de partir! La traversée du lac a été super agréable, et nous avons passe 7 jours dans les eaux du Canal Erie, soit dans la rivière Oswego puis dans la rivière Mohawk. De très beaux paysages mais des villages ou villes qui se sont endormis depuis le début du 20 e siècle et qui ne se sont pas encore réveillés...en arrivant ici a Waterford, près d’Albany, on a l’impression d’une bouffée d’air frais. Les berges des rivières Hudson et Mohawk offrent des paysages bucoliques et il y a même des grandes aigrettes (sorte de héron blanc qu’on retrouve jusqu’en Floride mais pas au Canada!). Il est très plaisant de rencontrer les autres voyageurs, canadiens, américains, français, qu’importe la nationalité...nous avons tous nos projets de croisière, un goût pour l’aventure et pour le soleil! Mais il y a des rencontres plus étonnantes que d’autres, comme celle du voilier La Loupiote et de son équipage d’acrobates qui ont réussi a unir leur goût du voyage, des arts et de la voile..tout en étant parents! Ouf! Leur site décrit bien leurs escales (plusieurs au Québec, aussi loin que Natashquan): http://www.voilierspectacle.com/. Ici on voit la jolie Lovéa qui adore marcher sur le mât et quelle grâce!



Voila des journées bien remplies, avec les petites taches, les lectures, les rencontres...
Celebrating our arrival in Waterford (September 9, 2008).
After a successful "landing" on the 8' wall of the Waterford docks, we have been enjoying the commodities (free Internet, showers, groceries, etc...)of the great visitor center, here in the village of Waterford. Yesterday, we did the locks 6 to 2 for a descent of about 150 feet which brought us almost at sea level. It became realllllllly exciting when the thunderstorms picked up intensity and forced us to stop at lock # 3 for about an hour! But today, the sun was shining and despite the chilly nights, is a great weather to accomplish tasks (laudry, repairs, cleaning, etc...)and clean the boat. We had nice moments with the crew of the French boat La Loupiote, a family of traveling artists, boat acrobats, who are traveling around the world after having spent quite some time in Quebec, giving representations. Their performance is really amazing and can be sen on their bilingual website http://www.voilierspectacle.com/ . That’s what we like about cruising: in addition to enable us to be close to nature, it gives us the opportunity to meet interesting people and share all kinds of experiences with them.

It is the end of the Erie Canal. Next will be raisng the mast again...but in the mean time, we enjoy life here!


Tuesday, September 09, 2008

September 2, 2008
Great lake crossing, with some motoring but also sailing for the last 2 hours. It was really hot weather and after our arrival in the US, at the Oswego Marina, we sure enjoyed a couple of Genny’s...we were on American soil once more. We were to unmast next day at 8h30 so the rest of the afternoon was spent preparing for the task.

September 3, 2008
One of the very first thing we did in the morning is removing all instruments from the mast top...we now of experience that these can be destroyed in just a very brief encounter with the lock walls! Heiner had a very decent view from up there!




That’s how she looked like our Buena Vida...packed to the rim! Full of stuff...But somehow one gets used to the mast, the canisters, the sails and on we go...departing Oswego for a long Canal voyage.





We did not want to rush and bought a 10 days vacation pass at $37.50. We have done this trip quite often and we like the flexibility to stop wherever and whenever we feel like it. The Fulton’s Price Choppers was going to be the only store we would find at walking distance from the water. Yes, we are in America and the malls are far away..if you don’t have bikes or cars.

September 4, 2008
Very hot day, windless day and the day we chose to cross Lake Oneida...which was, to our surprise, discovered by Samuel de Champlain in one of his first voyages in the new world. Several French explorers have been here, including D’Iberville, LaSalle...where are my history books? That night we docked at the pier of Sylvan Beach..to the sound of the Beach Boys music! Every Thursday night, from 5h30 to dusk, amateurs of old cars gather in the Park. I liked the 1950's feel of the place









That evening, we met Mike on Resolute, a 27th footer of Midland Ontario who is also going south...finding it pretty challenging to lock by himself...his dog being of not much use except for his barking at the geese!

September 5, 2008
Our first rainy day..thanks to hurricane Hanna..but giving the mountainous landscapes a dramatic touch. And wait that you see Marleyne the lock witch.......


She dangles her stick, speaks a couple of magic words and voila, the huge guillotine type door o p e n s...





August 30th, 2008


After we finally managed to leave Portsmouth Harbour Marina, saying final goodbyes to our dock friends, Sheila, Mark, Al and to begin our voyage, we decided to make our first stop at Kerr Bay because there was no wind whatsoever but mostly because we were able to meet our friends Mireille and Christian once more before leaving Canada. It was a wonderful gathering and next day, we were off to Waupoos to meet once more with our friends Lindsay and Karen at the County Cider Company. We realized more and more that these were our last days in the clear waters of Lake Ontario and enjoyed our swimming even more. We left Ontario for the US (Oswego) after a very quiet night at Long Point, Prince Edward County, with a sight of False Ducks, Main Duck and Long Point lighthouses.