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#1
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Eastward
Thanks to everyone who has offered advice on the Great Lakes and
canals. I've decided though that the boat is coming to Maine on a truck. Family reunions, graduations, and other commitments make the schedule very tight and complicated. A heavy rain closing the Erie Canal for the wrong few days could destroy the summer. When I add up fuel, airfare, boat storage, canal fees, etc., trucking suddenly doesn't look nearly so expensive. Trucking also means the boat can be here in Maine for nearly two months of tinkering and going over while the kids are still in school. We can start serious cruising without pressure in a boat I know thoroughly and the kids have had some experience on. This doesn't mean giving up on adventure. Some of the finest cruising grounds in the world start at our doorstep. Just beyond them is another country that the family has never seen. For the same time and commitment level as getting this boat from Detroit, we can sail to islands that consider Jacques CHIRAC of France to be their president. Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? -- Roger Long |
#2
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Roger Long wrote:
Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? My closest cruising friends are Wintering on their boat now in Newfoundland! Here's the pics from their last trip: http://www.sv-loki.com/Moonshadow/moonshadow.html |
#3
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On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 11:05:30 GMT, "Roger Long"
wrote: Thanks to everyone who has offered advice on the Great Lakes and canals. I've decided though that the boat is coming to Maine on a truck. Family reunions, graduations, and other commitments make the schedule very tight and complicated. A heavy rain closing the Erie Canal for the wrong few days could destroy the summer. When I add up fuel, airfare, boat storage, canal fees, etc., trucking suddenly doesn't look nearly so expensive. Trucking also means the boat can be here in Maine for nearly two months of tinkering and going over while the kids are still in school. We can start serious cruising without pressure in a boat I know thoroughly and the kids have had some experience on. This doesn't mean giving up on adventure. Some of the finest cruising grounds in the world start at our doorstep. Just beyond them is another country that the family has never seen. For the same time and commitment level as getting this boat from Detroit, we can sail to islands that consider Jacques CHIRAC of France to be their president. Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? We did cruise Nova Scotia about 20 years ago with a friend who had done the Marblehead-Halifax race with another crew. We expect to do so again this summer, and possibly visit the French islands and Newfoundland. I haven't yet determined what, if any, visa requirements we might face. The French web site doesn't list the US as not needing visas, although we have never needed one to go to mainland France by air. Rodney Myrvaagnes J36 Gjo/a Ask not with whom the buck stops . . . |
#4
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"Roger Long" wrote in message . .. Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? -- You might find some interesting winter reading in one of the following guides: http://ca.binnacle.com/online/dept.asp?dept%5Fid=13050 My cruise experience has been limited to Halifax to St. Margaret's Bay and Mahone Bay. Since I tend to get seasick in the heavier swells, I now have a trailerable sailboat that I can drive distances and then launch in new 'cruising grounds'. One area that would be perfect for me is the Bras d'Or lakes in Cape Breton, the largest sal****er lake in the world. they assure me that tides and swells are minimal there. |
#5
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On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 15:47:09 GMT, "Don White"
wrote: "Roger Long" wrote in message ... Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? -- You might find some interesting winter reading in one of the following guides: http://ca.binnacle.com/online/dept.asp?dept%5Fid=13050 My cruise experience has been limited to Halifax to St. Margaret's Bay and Mahone Bay. Since I tend to get seasick in the heavier swells, I now have a trailerable sailboat that I can drive distances and then launch in new 'cruising grounds'. One area that would be perfect for me is the Bras d'Or lakes in Cape Breton, the largest sal****er lake in the world. they assure me that tides and swells are minimal there. Indeed they are. The vegetation comes right to the edge of the water. You wouldn't know you were in salt water. There is a tide lock at the St. Peter (SW) end. Each end of the lock has gates facing both ways. It prevents flow in and out. At the other end the tidal currents are quite strong in the strait, but don't matter much when you are away from the end. While you are there, you should visit the Alexander Graham Bell Museum in Baddeck. Don't expect a temple of gastronomy while in Baddeck. I hope it has improved in that department in the last 20 years. There were lots of bald eagles when we were there. Also a woodcock came to the water's edge where we were anchored one day. Rodney Myrvaagnes J36 Gjo/a Ask not with whom the buck stops . . . |
#6
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There is a tide lock at the St. Peter (SW) end. Each end of the lock
has gates facing both ways. It prevents flow in and out. How does having this configuration have any advantage? I've never seen a lock like this. Doug s/v Callista |
#7
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"Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in message news:97WdnQDGHfCd_nXcRVn- How does having this configuration have any advantage? I've never seen a lock like this. Doug s/v Callista Half the time the water is higher on the lake side (low tide in ocean) and then it's higher in the bay end (high tide in ocean) see http://www.jimthompson.net/brasdor/ St. Peter's Canal |
#8
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Got it! Obviously my experience with locks is limited.
Thanks! Doug "Don White" wrote in message news "Doug Dotson" dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote in message news:97WdnQDGHfCd_nXcRVn- How does having this configuration have any advantage? I've never seen a lock like this. Doug s/v Callista Half the time the water is higher on the lake side (low tide in ocean) and then it's higher in the bay end (high tide in ocean) see http://www.jimthompson.net/brasdor/ St. Peter's Canal |
#9
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On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 19:24:56 -0500, "Doug Dotson"
dougdotson@NOSPAMcablespeedNOSPAMcom wrote: There is a tide lock at the St. Peter (SW) end. Each end of the lock has gates facing both ways. It prevents flow in and out. How does having this configuration have any advantage? I've never seen a lock like this. It is the only one I have seen. There is very little vertical movement. The gates close in a shallow V, so the water pressure holds them closed, whrn it pushes on the pointy side. Thus: _________________________ _____________________ I hope this makes sense. represents a gate that opens to the left. Its main purpose is to prevent rapid currents. Rodney Myrvaagnes J36 Gjo/a Ask not with whom the buck stops . . . |
#10
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On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 15:47:09 GMT, "Don White"
wrote: "Roger Long" wrote in message ... Now, any Nova Scotia or Newfoundland cruisers in this group? -- You might find some interesting winter reading in one of the following guides: http://ca.binnacle.com/online/dept.asp?dept%5Fid=13050 My cruise experience has been limited to Halifax to St. Margaret's Bay and Mahone Bay. Since I tend to get seasick in the heavier swells, I now have a trailerable sailboat that I can drive distances and then launch in new 'cruising grounds'. One area that would be perfect for me is the Bras d'Or lakes in Cape Breton, the largest sal****er lake in the world. they assure me that tides and swells are minimal there. I recommend the cruising books of Silver Donald Cameron. Yes, that's his legal name. Full of Cape Breton/Nova Scotia/Acadie sailing stuff. R. |