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Hey, if you call the Great Lakes part of the east coast, why
be picky? ![]() Wayne.B wrote: Ahem, we were talking about the Hudson River, not the Great Lakes. You can get there however if you keep on going. Been there, done that, interesting trip. I hope so, we plan on going that way next year. Big rocks & big tides make me nervous, but it has always been very appealing up there. The bugs are worse than down here. We had no issues with bugs, none at all. Well, we don't either. Good screens, citronella candles, and one of these http://www.magent.com/electronicbugzapper.htm quickly and easily chars any ones that get in. The bigger horseflies take two hits. My experience with New England biting insects is that their season is short but ferocious. I guess being careful where you anchor also helps a lot (as it does down here). .... The rocks have all been there a loooong time and are charted with a high degree of precision, unlike the shifty channel entrances further south. Had an interesting conversation with a Canadian who was doing the Great Loop, this spring. He started by indignantly saying that our charts are all wrong. This is one of the great challenges of cruising, to learn & adapt to different prevailing conditions & local hazards that wouldn't occur 'back home.' Once you get south of Cape Cod, September weather can be quite enjoyable, often the best of the season. Harbors are a lot less crowded, too. Couple years back, a boat I was on stopped in Cuttyhunk in August.... mob scene... than again a few weeks later in mid September... empty. The only downside to th elater visit was that the bakery was closed for the season. ... Last October was a bit drafty however until we cleared the Jersey coast and Chesapeake Bay. We came down through NY Harbor on the first Saturday in October when it was blowing 35 to 40 out of the south. The next day was 25 to 30 out of the north all the way down the Jersey coast, and the following week was gale force all throughout the northeast. We were in Baltimore inner harbor that week and heard a few "interesting" storys from people who had limped in. There was a howling nor'wester in the Chesapeake the following Sunday and everyone who had gone out for a weekend cruise was scurrying for cover as we went south to Solomons Island from St Michaels. Yowzah! Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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