It's been a year since I posted on our blog. We are back on the water and trying to get back on track with this thing. We left Ely for the boat Friday October 1. The trip to the boat was somewhat indirect, detouring to the Twin Cities for the Eagle's concert Friday night before heading back to Duluth to catch the plane to Norfolk, Virginia. The concert was amazing, Joe Walsh still has it. Just great fun.
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The crowd at the Eagles Concert, full house, no masks for the most part and everybody happy. |
After the concert we headed to Duluth. We caught 4 hours of sleep at Mike and Shirleen's house before flying out at 8 am. Our flights were fine but picking up the Enterprise rental at Norfolk was a pain. The line was almost 2 hours long.
The boat was left at Zimmerman Marine in Mobjack Bay of the Chesapeake. They did some work on the boat, basic maintenance I was unable to do that needed to be done. We stayed at Zimmerman's through the weekend, then departed. They needed the dock space for other boats. But we still had work to do. Cindy wanted to get the brightwork varnished (2 coats) and we discovered the windless motor was toasted. We provisioned the boat and then anchored a mile from the boat yard, ordered a new windless motor which was delivered the next day. I then dis assembled the windless and installed the new motor while Cindy varnished. We planned on pulling out and heading north up the bay to tour the brewpubs of the lower Chesapeake, but weather had other plans and we found comfortable anchorages, met some interesting people and got some good hikes in. On one hike, we met a retired accountant from Richmond with a second home on the bay. He raises oysters off his dock in cages. He took an hour explaining what he did and then gave us a mesh bag full of oysters.
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Our friend showing us the oysters in his cages. He has different aged oysters in different cages.
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Shucking the oysters after steaming them on the grill to open them a bit |
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Ready to eat |
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Our house plant Luigi the basilian
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One of a pod of dolphins keeping us company |
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Bunch of mushrooms on one of our hikes. |
We pulled up anchor and moved to the next bay over, still waiting for weather and took the dinghy to shore, hiked into Gloucester and a brew pub for pizza and beer.
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Gloucester Brewing Company |
Over the past couple of days, Cindy told me the anchor roller needed replacing. It was working ok but clearly worn, and I new it. The weather broke and we went up the bay to Urbanna, Virginia, on the Rappahannock River. Had a nice meal (and beer), went to NAPA, and a thrift store, got our holding tank pumped out. It was urgent, then left the next morning to anchor at a little town across the river and down stream 7-8 miles, at Irvington. Enroute I called the name I had for getting a new anchor roller. he was located in Deltaville, 12 miles further down the river. He returned my called and emailed me a CAD drawing and said he would have it ready that afternoon. Well we had anchored by this time so arranged to pick it up the next day. We moved to the anchorage at Deltaville and hiked to his house a mile away. He works out of his house with his wife, a fascinating couple. He's South African, worked on a boat in the Norwegian arctic, is building an airplane, re modeling their home they bought at auction, just a fascinating guy, and he reconditioned our old roller as a spare for nothing. I installed the new roller and the next day we had a weather window to move down the bay, so we headed to Hampton Roads.
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Old worn roller |
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Beautiful homes at Irvington. We anchored off these places |
The trip down the bay was uneventful and anchored off Fort Monroe, a place we had always passed by, but I wanted to visit. We took a hike to the grocery store, picked up a few things, found a pharmacy for some antibiotics I needed and a brew pub on the way back to the boat. The next morning, we toured the Fort for 3 hours, then pulled out for a more protected spot off the Elizabeth River passed the naval yard at Norfolk. This was a delightful anchorage among private homes, very quiet, but only a couple of miles from the busiest shipyard in the world. I new we had weather coming, but even so, our anchor drug with the passage of the front with 50 knot winds. We just re anchored with a lot more rode and all was good.
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Making an anchor roller |
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Lawn Chess piece made by the fellow that made our anchor roller |
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Light house at Fort Monroe |
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Moat around the fort |
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Church at the fort |