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Larry wrote:
"Armond Perretta" wrote ... Let's back up a bit. Didn't you just say one or two posts ago that boats belong offshore? When did you change your position and admit what I've been saying all along in this thread? Our original conversation was dealing with "ICW Anchorage Listing", a trip up (or down, depending on your reference I suppose) The Ditch. There are parts of it that meander way around South of Charleston in fairly pristine "Low Country", as the Chamber of Commerce prefers we call the SWAMPS we call home. The basis was to TRAVEL, not enjoy at leisure, from Nawth to Flo'da, as Yankees are inclined to do... Eureka moment. What seems to be the issue is that, never having actually "cruised" the ICW except for what appears to be a hasty and time-constrained delivery, you have come away with the impression that _all_ ICW travel resembles your rather unpleasant experience. My sympathies, old sport. Anyone who tries, day after day, to make the requisite 50 miles and never stops to explore is missing the essence of the trip. Obviously one cannot explore the entire route in depth on a single cruise. The weather is one's clock. It takes many visits, and at the right time of year, to eventually grasp nature's entire offering. For this trip, just leave me offshore ... Every time I've traveled the ICW I've encountered an individual who starts out with: "We're goin' offshore." There is usually a faint odor of testosterone associated with the individual making this remark. Sometimes I advise this individual that it's really difficult to see the blue herons or brown pelicans from 47 miles offshore. As often as not, I later encounter this individual further south, where his wife is seen unloading her bags and preparing to fly home. [ ... offshore pleasures snipped ... ] No argument that sailing offshore has its own rewards. Having done about 75,000 miles there I would have to agree. Yet my own experience has led me to value the special offerings of the ICW as well as the sometime serenity of sailing away from land. AS for the trip upriver to anchor out in some deserted estuary mouth so far away from the marked channel you see no blinking lights to spoil your latest book chapter after a fine meal.....that's a different topic altogether. The Low Country isn't the only place where this can happen. Try Cuba, Nova Scotia, many creeks on the Chesapeake, Roque Island, etc., etc. Y'all need to git out a bit, son. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare |
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