We had an excellent time cruising these past 5
weeks. The Chesapeake Bay is just filled
with nice rivers to cruise, tucked-away places to anchor, quaint towns to
visit, crab traps everywhere in the water to dodge, and thousands of blue crab
to eat!
| Another quiet anchorage in a beautiful cove |
We’re back at Colonial Beach VA at the same marina we
stayed 2 months ago. We’ll put the boat
in the slip for 2-3 weeks while we become landlubbers again, driving first to
Chattanooga, then to New Orleans, then back to Chattanooga, then back to New
Orleans, then back again to Chattanooga, and finally back to the boat. By mid-October, we’ll be ready to start
heading south to our winter home.
A few miscellaneous thoughts and observations for the
past 2 months. Since the weather this
month has finally turned cool, we can shut down the air conditioning and genset
when we anchor for the night. We’ve
refined our electrical load management on the boat to extend our battery life
and the use of our inverter, and found that we can go about 6-7 days on our own
before we need to head to a marina. The
overall weather this summer on the Bay has been relatively cool, with only 4-5
days over 90 degrees. Quite a difference
from our past couple summers in Florida and in New Orleans.
When we were in Baltimore Harbor, the wakes from all the
boats were serious. Anchoring, as well
as traveling, was uncomfortable. Many
Loopers complain about the same problem when transiting New York Harbor. Something we can look forward to next
year. I was reminded of the song by the
group Kiss, “I-I-I want to rock and roll, all night…”
| Another hard day at work! |
We thoroughly enjoyed learning all the history along the
Chesapeake, especially that of the War of 1812.
But I found it interesting that the park ranger at Ft McHenry said that
nearly every British tourist visiting the area had never heard of “The War of
1812” and did not know that Britain was fighting those pesky Americans! Thinking it through, it makes sense that
British history students don’t bother with a trivial war on the other side of
the world, when Britain was fighting the Napoleonic Wars from 1803 to about
1814 in Europe (remember that short Frenchman named Mr Bonaparte?). Remember also (as I’m sure you do) that the
composer Tchaikovsky wrote the “1812 Overture” to commemorate Russia’s victory
over Napoleon on the eastern European front.
So in the light of world events, our “War of 1812” in America and Canada
was almost a non-event.
All in all, it was a very memorable summer. But isn’t that what cruising is all about – “Making
Memories”.