July 29…100 days living aboard
the TUMBLEWEED…Dakota is finally getting the hang of it. This morning he stayed
on the couch as we departed and has actually slept most of the morning on the
fly bridge. Usually he is “on his spot” as soon as engines start and then just
lays around …alert to any movement we
make. Beautiful calm this morning…and a lovely loon singing…we charted a path
off shore…so we are out in the open as opposed to zig-zagging among the rocks.
It’s gonna be another warm one as we are traveling with the breeze most of the
day. Captain is a little worried about the wind kicking up significantly for
the next couple of days…that could hinder travel plans. We’ll keep an eye on
the forecast and certainly talk with the locals tonight before heading to
Killarney in the morning. The marina tonight has WiFi and laundry facilities…and
every one is saying don’t go…Captain will look again in the morning. We had
Kawartha ice cream this afternoon and a nap instead of laundry so I’m counting
on us staying around tomorrow. We zipped along at 9 MPH today and burned less
gas than if we had gone our usual 7.5…Captain is amazed…and I’m thrilled!!!
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
July 28…sleeping with the sounds
of water rushing and gushing over the dam was lovely…things cooled off and we
had a most pleasant evening all alone at the bottom of the last lock on the
Trent-Severn. We didn’t need to wait for them to open…so we were outta there a
little before 8 AM…twisty, windy, narrow channel out into Georgian Bay…Blue
water, clear skies, warmer temps and NO LOCKS!!!! We stowed away those short
black lines and finally the fenders are back where they belong. Captain bumped
the speed up a little and we arrived at Killbear Marina almost 30 minutes ahead
of schedule. This place has really nice docks but more are empty than full…and
no WiFi. A big chandlery, a convenience store and restaurant…but, most
importantly, Hershey’s ice cream…imagine that! We were most impressed by the
handwritten sign next to the dumpster warning about the bear and reminding
everyone to use the t-bar closing. We’ll keep a lookout!!! Restaurant menu
didn’t do much for us…and we couldn’t find anything to buy but ice cream. So just chilled on the aft deck…fixed some
chicken fettuccini alfredo…and hit the sack.
July 27…What is it about plans???
Our clue should have been that the lock folks showed up and were actually
calling us over before 9 AM. They determine who goes first based on boat
size…so they wanted us in the harness first, followed by NEARLY PERFECT. We
were “Johnny on the spot”…but once we arrived, they couldn’t get the railway
car to start up and load us in. They pulled and punched all sorts of buttons,
scratched and hem-hawed, called on the radio and phone…after about an hour,
they backed us out and sent us back to the blue wall. Small problem…other boats
had arrived and we no longer had a spot. Lucky for us, NEARLY PERFECT offered
to let us raft to them. Lock master announced that it would probably be three hours
or more before they were up and running. The electrician was coming from
Peterborough to fix things. So we kicked back…I challenged the girls on NEARLY
PERFECT to a RUMMICUB game…we snacked, giggled and discovered that Jennifer had
attended school at Southeast with Dennis. Small World!!! We had lots of notes
to compare about that whole situation. Meanwhile, more and more boats were
arriving…the docks filled up…lunch was had…and finally the electrician arrived.
Locks are wonderful when they work…and it doesn’t take long for things to go
south when they don’t. At 2, things started moving…and we were once again
“Johnny on the spot” at 2:30 when they called us over. Thank goodness, we
weren’t part of the mob that arrived today thinking they’d lock through. We did
think ourselves pretty brave to be the first boat over…it’s a scary ride!
This chute is truly a marvel!
This lock is actually a complex system of straps and rams that actually lift
your boat up out of the water (keeping it level), over a road, and carry you
down a very steep rocky terrain and place your boat ever so gracefully in
another basin. Cross currents make entering the railway car pretty tricky…but
Captain Floyd made it look easy…not once, but twice. It’s like a roller coaster
in slow motion…
And because we were so late
leaving, we decided we couldn’t make Frying Pan Bay…so we finished the day at Lock
45 Port Severn…on the wall below the lock, ready to head straight to Parry
Sound in the morning. It’s pretty noisy with water rushing over the dam right
beside us. But we have great shade, a little park area, and we are positioned
to leave before 9 AM. Oh, joy!!! We traveled 8 whole miles today…whew!!! We are
done with the Trent-Severn…
We figured we have done 123 locks
since June 24th and spent 15 nights on locks walls. Captain Floyd
thinks the fees were well worth the cost. He’s happy…everyone is happy. I
figured we are nearing 100 days of boat living…by the time we finish this trip,
it may be our longest boating stay. I think I’ll plan a little celebration for
Wednesday…just like in elementary school, 100 days!!! Don’t tell…it’ll be our
little secret.
July 26…puttered around and
finally left Port of Orillia around 10 AM…two locks and planned to arrive at
the Big Chute for a night on the wall. One small detail we forgot to factor
into our plan was that this was Sunday…and we’ve been warned about weekend traffic
on this end of the Trent-Severn…OMG…we waited an hour at the first lock and
almost two hours at the second lock…in the heat (85 degrees) and with loads of
other frustrated boaters. We arrived at the Big Chute basin docks and there
were our friends on NEARLY PERFECT, another looper PLANE 2 SEA we hadn’t met,
and a gold looper CHER III. Chatted and traded cards…inspected the shade awning
that CHER III had (think I can do that)…then the lockmaster came by to visit.
We decided that in order to make time in the morning it would be in our best
interest to spend the night on the blue line…so three of us went at 7…leaving
CHER III alone on the dock. She is headed the other direction and so not part
of this plan. Floyd, Charlie and Jack had a little captain time….cigars…and we
were done in. Tomorrow is the Big Chute and we plan to head into Georgian Bay
…we want to stay at Frying Pan Bay, one of our favorite stops on the last
trip. Shouldn’t be an issue, we are third in line so probably will be off the
Chute in plenty of time for the 30 mile trip.
Sunday, July 26, 2015
July 25… Floyd went to bed way
too early last night…so at 5AM he is up and fiddling with the dinghy…repairs
seem to have slowed the leaking significantly. So he hoisted it back in place
and announced that we would be locking through with the group at 9. Special
breakfast today consisted of Canadian peameal, eggs and toast. This was our
first experience of slicing and cooking peameal…tasted like ham…but don’t try
to cook the eggs in the drippings. Way too watery for that!! Even with the
misstep we were ready to go with the crowd. MAZEL TUG, PENNY PINCHIN’, MR BOUY,
and TUMBLEWEED…three step locks and out onto Lake Simcoe…we stopped for gas and
a pump out and still managed to beat the rain into Port of Orillia Marina. And then it poured…just long enough to allow
us to check supplies and make our grocery list.
Once the rain cleared, we were
off to the Metro store. While there we talked to NEARLY PERFECT…probably see
them tomorrow on the waterway. We just barely beat the second rain storm back
to the boat. Big fishing tournament going on today…so lots of little boats
gathered. We were a little worried about facing that crowd when we leave in the
morning, but we discovered that it is over today. We spent some time
downloading charts for Floyd’s I pad…somewhere in the last couple of days we
ran off the chart. Interesting view!!!
We were also surprised to find another
36’ Carver named TUMBELWEED at the marina…makes for just a little confusion
when docking. We found the boat…but so far no one is there…
We skipped docktails with the
other loopers tonight…headed into town hoping to find a store that might have a
rug we could use to protect the dinghy floor…no luck. But we did find a good
outdoor restaurant for burgers and wings.
We plan to head out in the
morning…60 miles and four more locks then we finish the Trent–Severn …since
it’s still the weekend we probably won’t push too hard tomorrow. We are ahead
of schedule!!! Even more amazing!!!!
Saturday, July 25, 2015
July 24…Said good bye once again
to Graham and Deb…we left Fenelon Falls right on schedule…down the walkway come
Jim and Elaine…we invite them to ride through the lock with us. Not our best
effort…but Jim is amazed at how slow we approach…his only experience is in a
houseboat…lol… we encouraged them to meet us at the next lock as well. We
locked through with another, small faster boat… which we see several times
throughout the day.
Our next lock is Kirkfield Lift lock…the twin of the Peterborough lift lock…but this time we are going down 65
feet…and our entry into the pan faces out…much more of a roller coaster
feeling. Jim and Elaine get to ride that with us…Elaine sits right out on the
bow with me…we are both snapping photos the whole time…Jim handles the stern
line like a pro…this is great stuff, but alas, they must head home. They do
designate Dakota an official Canadian as he is still proudly wearing the
bandana. We assure them that we will take it off shortly and then he can wear
it every year on Canada Day.
Three more locks…a couple of
swing bridges and a couple of very tight canals (one where we had to announce
on the radio that we were entering…warning….and yet we met a rental houseboat
in there. He got way over into the trees…and we managed somehow). We’ve heard stories at the locks all day that
the lock at Fenelon Falls was down. Also that the swing bridge going through
Bobcaygeon was experiencing difficulties…Glad we are past all that. At 2:30, we
arrive at our stopping point…lock #39…we stayed on the wall here in 2011…a
lovely lonely spot. We are ready for lonely. We are at the top of a set of
three locks…nice breeze and even a little shade. Dakota romps and Floyd attacks
the dinghy…I’m in manicure mode. Not
much traffic but a few boats do pass…and then around the bend comes loopers
MAZEL TUG and PENNY PINCHIN’ …to tie up and spend the night…there goes the
neighborhood. Before we finish supper another local boat arrives and we make
room for him. REALLY!! I make nice conversation but make excuses so we don’t
have to gather, drink or eat with anyone. By 8, I’m done…in and almost down for
the count.
Tomorrow we plan to have special
breakfast. This time it will include the Canadian specialty ‘peameal’…some sort
of pork bacon rolled in cornmeal…we shall see…then load the dinghy and head to
Orillia. Weather tomorrow afternoon is supposed to include thunderstorms and we
must cross Lake Simcoe, known for shallowness which is not good in wind and
weather. The only locks we’ll encounter are the three right here. Coming up on
Sunday will be the ever famous Marine Railway lock #44…google that one…we are
almost done with the Trent-Severn Waterway.
July 23…AUNT AGGIE and SEAHORSE
head out…and the scenery around us immediately begins to change as new boats
are already arriving…we prepare to go to breakfast…walk up the way to watch
some big boats lock through and decide we can walk to the restaurant…I return
to the boat to get my phone to let Jim and Elaine know our intentions. There is
a guy just standing by our boat…I speak and he mentions that he once met some
loopers from Wichita a couple of years ago…in Orillia…he was a retired police
officer…yes, I say that was probably us…my husband is retired police. No, he
says, this is not the boat. His wasn’t that big…oh, but his wife was a retired
teacher. Yes, that’s me…who are you??? Graham…I use to work at the marina.
OMG…it’s Graham and Deb…their boat was next to ours in the marina the week we
spent in Orillia in 2011. They can’t believe how different the boat looks with
new canvas. They are on the wall just in front of us!!!! SMALL WORLD!!!! We go
off to breakfast but promise to spend time together today.
WHAT A GREAT DAY!!! Elaine and I
do the town…I managed to help a couple of stores with their rent payments…ice
cream and boat watching (SPIRIT JOURNEY and SEQUASIOUS lock through today)…talk,
talk, talk, talk… drinks and hors de oeuvres on the aft deck with Jim, Elaine,
Deb and Graham…we all walk across the bridge to eat at a restaurant that overlooks
the falls…then, of course, another serving of ice cream…and good bys all
around. Jim and Elaine are headed back to London…Graham and Deb are heading to
Bobcaygeon…we are heading to Lock #39…my jaws hurt from so much chatter and my
side aches from all the laughter…we have had a blast!!! What we love about this
boating….the chance meetings and the great friends!!! We sure hope that Jim and
Elaine will join us on board in Lake Michigan sometime. FaceBook and the blog
will help us all keep in touch. We laughed because when we left Graham and Deb
last time, we said we’ll never see you again…and then poof, we did. So we said
it again! Hoping that we will!!!
July 22…I should mention that two
big houseboats passed the marina headed to Buckhorn (one in the dark)…actually
makes us glad we aren’t on the wall there…cause they are probably parked on the
blue line…partying!!!
We are on the move as planned…7
AM…Dakota and I are below where its warm…it’ll be a couple of hours before our
services are needed…well, except for taking coffee to the Captain (which we
aren’t really very good at)…as it warms up the wind picks up…we are at the
Bobcaygeon Lock just before 9 and join two other boats on the blue line…before
the gate closes we are joined by ALWAYS HOME and AUNT AGGIE…somehow they
squeeze all of us in the lock…fun to watch…and amazing to experience…we are off
to Fenelon Falls…it’s a parade…we are joined by a house boat…but not to worry.
There is plenty of room on the wall with electricity … AUNT AGGIE joins us for
lunch on the aft deck…then SEAHORSE folks return and join us. We are all
talking and eating and sharing stories on the aft deck. I failed to notice the
little wasp like creature on my carrot…and BAM! Shock to the tongue!!!! OUCH!
Thank goodness I have ice water handy!!!
Soon Jim and Elaine
appear…bearing gifts…and I can’t begin to tell you how good it is to
re-connect!!! They brought Chardonnay for me, a cute Canadian bandana for
Dakota and some maple syrup for Floyd…we walk down the line to watch boats lock
through and have Kawartha ice cream…breeze through town to scope things out.
Elaine and I will return tomorrow to do our bit for the local economy. Jim and
Elaine have a BBQ place they want to take us for supper. Off we go…Then we
return to the aft deck to provide a meal for the local misquotes….Geesh!!!
After doing a version of the Canadian folk dance, fighting them off…We make
plans to meet for breakfast and call it a night.
July 21…it all works out!!! Floyd
was up early (as usual) to re-mount the dinghy (which is still leaking…he
says…”I’ve just begun to fight”.) 8AM and we are outta here…only boat on the
blue line until 8:45…two or three loopers circling…and the house boat on the
wall making noises.
Just a word about house boats…we
have nothing against them…really…but they are overweight and always under
powered…add that to the fact that this is houseboat rental heaven!!! They pay,
watch a 5 minute video, and are turned loose in the canal system. Most never
venture very far from where they were rented…and thanks goodness they are
clearly labeled so you know what you are dealing with…but in the
locks…OMG…we’ve seen them backwards…but most of the time they resemble the pin
ball in the pin ball machine. So, in conversation with Looper friends
TRANQUILITY who spent the night on the wall with these guys, we hear that they
partied until 3AM and now are up, swigging coffee and smoking cigarettes in
preparation for heading into the lock. OH JOY!!! Lockmaster takes charge
immediately …house boat first …once he lands, then TUMBLEWEED, then fellow
loopers MUSAL TUG, and PENNY PINCHER…seems to work…and the three couples on the
houseboat quickly become our friends…we have this tiny lock and then comes the
Peterborough Lift Lock, an engineering marvel that consists of 2 big pans of
water that literally lifts boats 65 feet in the air. Once again, same
order…though there for a moment we thought PENNY PINCHER was going to have to
buy us a new dinghy (coulda worked) but I was quick with the boat hook and they
managed to get stopped. Our looper
friends stopped here so we traveled the next 4 locks with the houseboat. They
stopped at noon on a wall to rest up and prepare for the night …kinda made us
glad to move on. We are all alone in the locks…wind picks up…but Captain Floyd
is not worried. We push on…11 locks today…almost 50 miles…and wind!!! We make
Buckhorn at 4:30 right on schedule but there is no room on the walls…well,
there could be room if the houseboats weren’t so spread out. Lockmaster
suggests the marina a mile ahead…phone and radio calls go unanswered…so we just
pull up to the gas dock where we are greeted by SPIRIT, SEQUESIOUS and NEARLY
PERFECT. Mr. Grumpy, the marina owner, appears
and finally relents to let us stay on the gas dock, no electric and the dog
must stay on the gravel walkways. Oh, and $5 discount. I should mention that
there are acres and acres of grass. It’s a trip keeping Dakota on the short
leash but he seems to get it.
We make nice with the Loopers,
cook supper, and crash. Tomorrow we only have two locks…then two nights at
Fenelon Falls. Though folks have warned us that finding space on that wall is
hard to come by…get there early. So we are planning to head out at 7AM…make the
lock at Bobcaygeon when it opens…and be in Fenelon Falls around noon. If that
fails, there is a marina there. We are getting together Wednesday and Thursday
with Jim and Elaine, from London ON Canada. We meet them at the Looper
Rendezvous two years ago and really hit it off. They follow the blog and have
texted/e mailed several times. We are excited to spend some time with them.
Monday, July 20, 2015
July 19…We were joined by several other boats last night…most we think
are heading our direction…we left the wall at Campbellford to be first on the
blue line…we need to get this day started. Weather is predicted to kick up a
thunderstorm or two this afternoon. We are hoping to go 60 miles which is a
rrreeeaaallllyyyy long day for us…even without the 6 locks.None of which would be a problem if we could start at o'dark thirty...but the locks don't open until 9...plus it's Sunday, good boating weather. Plus in the chart
for today is Rice Lake…wide open shallow water with warnings about crossing in
wind and storms. It’ll be tricky…because
once we leave Hastings, we are commited to going all the way. There are no
stops for us in between. We are truly getting a little homesick for Kelli
Suzanne…Last time we did the Trent-Severn, she was aboard with us. Sure made
those locks easier for all of us. Plus she is ever the entertainer!!! But alas,
she’s home with a 2 year old…7 months pregnant…and probably missing her mother
as much as mother is missing her.
Hot and humid…and we did just fine…everyone
seems to think the weather will hold…and we make good time in the locks… on
Rice Lake the wind is right on our bow…feels like 20 mph…but we are going
almost 10 mph into it…Captain decided we needed speed. Storm clouds gathered so
we made all the necessary preparations to deal with that…it look very ominous
all around and, of course, we got only a few sprinkles.
Not to worry…we cruised into Peterborough
around 6…woulda been earlier but we had to wait at the last lock. There are
maybe 8 other Looper boats here…and the party is two slips over from where we
docked… hot, tired and stinky as we were, they still wanted us there. Several are
leaving in the morning…the others are saying they plan to leave on Tuesday…so
we’ll probably have company on the rest of our trip.
Floyd plans to make another stab at dinghy
repair in the morning…then we’ll visit the local marine store and tour the
town. We are hopeful that the Hot Momma restaurant is still there…lunch??? Or supper???
But for tonight we are off to the Souvlaki
Hut…we know it’s not great, but we’re not cooking.
Saturday, July 18, 2015
July 18...AND A NEW WORLD RECORD...gas/pump out/ 12 locks and 31 miles on a hot hot day on the Trent-Severn...we are trying to make up a day or two in here as we'd really like to be in Fenelon Falls on Thursday. Looper friends we made two years ago have arranged to meet us there...but that dang dinghy just won't quit leaking...time at the Peterborough Marina is a must (esp since there is a West Marine within walking distance)...so we shall see. The locks don't start until 9 ...and we'd like to go almost 60 miles tomorrow. The good news is there are only 5 locks...and lots of open water...the bad news is at 7.5 mph that's a long day...chance of rain is in the forecast...so we shall see... we shall see...
And the heat came...yesterday we were in jeans and sweatshirts...huddled against the cold. Today the sun was bright and hot from the get go. We are watching Dakota closely...making sure he stays in the shade. Since his hair is so short we are afraid he'll get a sunburn...poor shaved skinny baby..
Today was team work at it's best...we locked through the first 6 locks with a speed boat. Cable #5, Starboard side...lines, fenders, gloves, boat hooks...just like the book says.. Since the locks are just about a mile apart it didn't make sense for him to rush...they'd just make him wait for us...then we hit some open space and off he went...we had to wait a bit at lock #7 for 2 boats coming the other way...not a problem...we had planned to stop for ice cream there anyway...and there were our speed boat friends...eating ice cream too. Really a great day on the water...not much traffic and the locks were all efficient and most were open and waiting for our arrival.....slam, bam, thank you....it is just so much hotter at the bottom of a lock ...doors shut, no breeze or shade...and Ontario seems to have those pesky biting flies...we were dripping. And we sure missed Kelli. Last time we did this, Floyd had the two girl crew...he didn't have it so easy today...
Fiveish and we pulled up to the lock wall in Campbellford...plugged in those ACs and had a cold cold beer...a little left over pizza and a salad...showers and we are done in!!! Tomorrow is another day!!!
And the heat came...yesterday we were in jeans and sweatshirts...huddled against the cold. Today the sun was bright and hot from the get go. We are watching Dakota closely...making sure he stays in the shade. Since his hair is so short we are afraid he'll get a sunburn...poor shaved skinny baby..
Today was team work at it's best...we locked through the first 6 locks with a speed boat. Cable #5, Starboard side...lines, fenders, gloves, boat hooks...just like the book says.. Since the locks are just about a mile apart it didn't make sense for him to rush...they'd just make him wait for us...then we hit some open space and off he went...we had to wait a bit at lock #7 for 2 boats coming the other way...not a problem...we had planned to stop for ice cream there anyway...and there were our speed boat friends...eating ice cream too. Really a great day on the water...not much traffic and the locks were all efficient and most were open and waiting for our arrival.....slam, bam, thank you....it is just so much hotter at the bottom of a lock ...doors shut, no breeze or shade...and Ontario seems to have those pesky biting flies...we were dripping. And we sure missed Kelli. Last time we did this, Floyd had the two girl crew...he didn't have it so easy today...
Fiveish and we pulled up to the lock wall in Campbellford...plugged in those ACs and had a cold cold beer...a little left over pizza and a salad...showers and we are done in!!! Tomorrow is another day!!!
Friday, July 17, 2015
July 17…still the cool temps…and
Floyd started laundry at o’ dark thirty…so we’ll be finished by 10…9 loads…all
free and we use their supplies…we’d have spent $25 or more …woo hoo…we
celebrated by having special breakfast today instead of Saturday. Laundry done
and dishes cleaned, we (Dakota too) walked into town …post office, hair place (I
have an appointment later this afternoon), and little grocery munging. Floyd is
back to check out the dinghy repair. The new patch seems to be working…but
guess what…there are several other small holes…so he’s applying duck tape, and
saying prayers.
The sprinkles are starting…and we
planned on carry out pizza for supper. Since I’m going back shortly for that haircut,
I’m going to get the pizza and save us all a trip.
Then the rest of the day we can
rest…tomorrow we plan to leave around 8…stop for gas and a pump out…then let’s
do some locks on the Trent-Severn Canal. Should be interesting as we’ve seen
posters about “Dragon Boat Festival” at 9 tomorrow…so we may be involved in
that as well!!! But we aren’t a dragon boat…and we haven’t seen any around here
yet.
July 16- FLOYD’S BIRTHDAY…and the
weather for boating is P E R F E C T…glassy calm water and cool…we left Picton
at 6ish for our five hour run into Trenton…so that Dakota could make a 1:00
grooming appointment. It all worked.
First the NEW marina in Trenton…OMG…it
is huge (over 300 boat slips) and brand spanking new. The boats have been here
since May, but the marina building just opened on Wednesday…and it’s Thursday. Craig
greeted us warmly and gave me a quick tour…OMG….10 Lovely individual shower
spaces that would put most hotels to shame (and they intend to provide towels)…and
3 front load washers/3 front load dryers (and they provide the detergent/dryer
sheets) that are F R E E…and we’re not paying that much to dock here. Craig is
still managing the place…with a large staff of soon to be trained young ones…you
can only get gas and pump out at the old marina…but this is truly top drawer
stuff. We’ve stayed at LOTS of marinas….this is BEST EVER…well, will be. Right
now they are still doing landscape work…so it’s all dirt…no grass…and the walk
from the dock to land is now my exercise program…What a hike!!!We miss the atmosphere/character
of the old place that was literally a hole in the wall next to the city park
and gazebo…but I’m sure this will be just as beautified when the work is
actually completed …almost makes you want to do the Loop again just so we could
come back….NOT!!! they are gonna lose some money on us because I haven’t done
laundry since we left Plattsburg NY…last time we were here, a lady picked up
and delivered your laundry…for a small fee. Worth IT!!! Tomorrow we’ll have to
be serious about laundry.
Now about that grooming
appointment…the lady was so eager to work with us on timing even with the
weather delay we experienced…probably should have been a red flag when she had
no idea where she was from the marina/waterway. First taxi they called never
showed up…and the other guys may have gouged me…$16 one way to the groomer….then
I sat in their break room while they “shaved” my handsome boy….oh, and I
totally nixed the idea that they dye his tail purple!!!! Charge seemed a ltiile
high…and then you add the Taxi fare…you get the worst grooming experience ever.
He seems to feel okay about it…and after a few tears, I’m good…but the weather
has turned cooler so the whole “summer do” idea is not really working for me right
now. I won’t have to worry about brushing him out for at least three weeks…this
is gonna take awhile…
That took a major chunk out of my
day…meanwhile, Floyd (the BIRTHDAY BOY) picked up mail, had his first Kawartha
ice cream of the season and immediately began to work on the dinghy repair.
Totally improved glue system and patch…so in 24 hours we’ll know if this one is
successful…the previous two patches have failed. We aren’t desperate yet…but a
dinghy will be a must in North Channel and Georgian Bay where we’ll be forced
to anchor out.
Then we celebrated…The birthday
boy has had his present since NYC…I got him a celestial navigation system
(books, charts and sextant)…it is pretty intimidating…but something he wants to
learn…we bought carrot cake cupcakes at the bakery in Picton ( good but not as good as Muriel's carrot cake)…and he found a
sushi place he wants to try. So a great boating day, cooler weather, sushi and
gifts he wanted…a great way to spend a birthday!!!
We met SANTA…Yep, he works for
Pepsi in the off season. On the 15th, in aisle 7 at the Sobey’s
grocery store in Picton ON Canada, we met Santa…as we walked by, he was sitting
on a few cases of Pepsi, making a list and checking it twice…for re-stocking the
Pepsi products. We made a silly comment about him looking like Santa (which he
did). He came to life. In very animated
style, he told a great story about his recent vacation in Mexico where he and a
dad conspired to convince a male child that he was indeed the REAL Santa. Dad
told him the kid’s name and about the big stuffed animal he had received last
Christmas. Swimming by, he made comments to the kid. Calling him by name and
asking about the animal that the kid had named “Ted”. Said child freaked out!!! Santa even showed
us photos. What a hoot!!!
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
July 15…iffy weather was iffy…wind
started howling around 2 AM …and stayed that way. So we decided to stay as well…The
groomer was able to shift dogs around so we can get in tomorrow afternoon …which,
of course, means an o’dark thirty departure…oh, for the love of dog…but it sure
beats staying an extra day in Trenton. So we plan to give it our best shot.
We tried to do things today that
we would have done in Trenton…Haircuts didn’t happen…but serious grocery shopping
did…and lunch in town at the County Canteen was lovely.
I didn’t get to wear my new
Canadian girl boating outfit, hey…today was a jeans and sweatshirt day for sure…but
around here it doesn’t take long for the weather to change…just like home…
Just when things were getting dull
this evening… a cruise ship arrived…the 48 passenger KAWARTHA VOYAGEUR…big mamou
pulled right up next to us. They are going from Peterborough to Kingston…so they’ve
been on the Trent-Severn and are headed to the Rideau…sure glad we didn’t meet
them at bridges, locks or on those narrow passages…geesh, I don’t even get how
they do that. Then before we got settled into that, a big sail training ship
pulled in on the other side…17 teenagers…they didn’t stay long but their
docking/undocking was exciting. There will
be photos…
Whew…if we had left this morning
as originally planned, we’d have missed all this…
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
July 14…weather turned…before we
could get away to make the 9 AM bridge opening in Kingston, rain showers and
wind moved in. But they didn’t seem to last long, so we left the dock and made
the 10 AM opening. And then the wind blew…crossing Kingston Bay was rough
stuff. But Dakota and I were below cuddled and snug…Captain Floyd was at the
fly bridge helm, grinning from ear to ear…so we left him there most of the day.
Just before we rounded the bend into Picton, the clouds cleared and we had
sunshine. Dakota and I joined him just in time to go to work.
Picton was totally my call…we
stopped here 6 years ago…I remembered several places that have since gone away…but
there were a few new ones to try.
Docked and ACs running by 4:30…Floyd
and I hiked the HILL into town…busy place for a Tuesday. We did some serious
shopping: new antler chews for Dakota, a few necessary groceries, a quick stop
for a Linda shop (struck pay dirt on some things that I can wear as first mate
that will let me be Canadian, hey), the olive oil store, and nice dinner at
Portabella. Oh, and ice cream at Scooperman’s. It wasn’t Kawartha…but we
thought maybe we needed to get into ice cream shape…
Weather tomorrow is looking a
little iffy for our trip to Trenton…but the more we check it the better it
gets. We think the weather should clear by or before noon so we can still make
it. As long as we get there tomorrow sometime we’re good. Dakota has a grooming
appointment on Thursday morning. Those are hard to come by…so we hate to miss
that. Looper friends who came up the Erie Canal, mail and a dinghy repair kit
should be waiting. We hear the new marina is opening tomorrow…but we’d be just
fine to stay in the old one. Stay tuned to see how this works.
SUMMARY OF OUR SMALL TRIANGLE LOOP… We left
Waterford NY on June 26 and arrived in Kingston on July 13…18 days, 542 miles,
72 locks. The Triangle is Waterford to
Sorel to Kingston back to Waterford. Since we’ve already done the stretch from
Kingston to Waterford, we see no need to back track down the Erie Canal. Once we made the turn at Sorel, every travel
day has brought us closer to home.
We used several Canal Systems: NY, Champlain,
Richelieu, St Lawrence, Ottawa and Rideau…plus two big commercial locks run by
the Canadian government. We spent most
of our time going up in the locks…and they were baby locks for the most part.
The big Carillion on the Ottawa River was certainly an exception. Several
flights of three…a couple of fours…and the BIG flight of eight right in the
heart of touristy Ottawa. Antennas down on the Champlain system…and we even
ducked going through a couple of bridges but really our height and depth was
fine.
Getting through Canadian customs was not nearly
the hassle we were expecting…People had built that up to ridiculous
proportions…we should have known better…we’ve done it twice before…and while we
wish we had brushed up on a little French, we had no issues communicating when
necessary.
We've also still be trying to keep to the "Belly Fat Cure" way of eating...so far Floyd has lost almost 20 pounds and 3 1/2 inches around his waist...I've lost 6 pounds and 3 inches...we are looking and feeling better...
Friday we start the Trent-Severn...oh, and there will be Kawartha Ice Cream!!! Yes, we plan to fall off the wagon for a while. We'll get back on eventually...but not when Kawartha is around!!!
Love it when they have free WiFi...so long until the next one!!!!
July 13…Loved that night at Davis Falls…met
another Gold Loopers and several folks who live along the Trent –Severn but are
headed to Ottawa and beyond…we locked through and headed out by 9:15…to the
music of a lonely loon…he sang and followed the boat for quiet some time…OMG,
how absolutely lovely. Always loved teaching the short story, “How the Loon Got
His Necklace”…and this was a sure sign of good things to come.
It is gonna be hot again today. Floyd decided to
“go Canadian” (shirtless)…but I’m in a tank top that can go another day…so no
swimwear yet. Maybe tomorrow.
Scenery today seems a little like Georgian
Bay…rocks, islands, narrow passage ways…it’s Monday so not much boat traffic.
Locks are ready for us and except for the go fast boat from Davis Falls who catches
up and locks through with us a couple of times, we are alone. Speed limits
through the twists and turns among the rocks slow us down…but we are still
making really good time until we hit the last flight of locks into Kingston.
They just started a group down, so we’ll be waiting at the top for them to
finish and then bring a group up…should be about an hour and a half. It’s hot
but the Blue Line area has plenty of shade and grass so we get off with Dakota
to enjoy the land.
Sure enough, right on time, they are ready for
us…and we can still make the marina in Kingston before their 6 PM closing. It
is nothing to write home about…small and full of character boats. The point of
interest is the fire boat manufacturing operation located there…all sorts of
fire boats, labeled and ready for shipping….pretty interesting stuff. We saw a
boats labeled Kuwait, Washington,DC, NYC and Savannah. Totally missed that Kodak
moment.
Floyd is able to visit with a man about our dinghy
leak…he has names and numbers so there is hope that the problem will be solved
soon…supper on the aft deck…showers…and once again we are OUT. I’m thrilled
that there are NO locks for me in the next travel days…and a layover day in
Trenton to enjoy Floyd’s birthday, get Dakota groomed, do laundry and go
grocery shopping, hey. A do-nothing kind of day!!! HA.
i
July 12…moment of panic when Linda yells about the
Rideau salad floating by the boat( Captain thought it was maybe something to
worry about.)… then another moment when the Captain thinks he’s misjudged the
bridge opening…but not to worry…it’s all good…and we continue to be made aware
that often what you say is misinterpreted / misunderstood by the other. Luckily
it hasn’t caused us trouble just tension…unnecessary tension … we must be
getting old…lol..
First narrow part…and poof, around the bend comes
a small boat…rocks on both sides…and he’s not giving way…little bit of
excitement there…coming out of our second lock in a narrow channel…we encounter
a boat more our size…once again, he has way more room to maneuver than we
do…but he just keeps on coming…cement walls 20’ apart…and we know we are 12’
wide…exciting!!!! Oh, it’s gonna be a fun day, hey.
A little excitement today provided by our sweet
Dakota…got excited by people and dogs at a busy lock and hopped off the boat.
EEEEcckkkk…didn’t last long…but scared us and him. Then coming through another
narrow section with lots of tall trees, he got spooked. Hopefully this will
pass.
So Chaffy Lock where we wanted to stay is full
full…so we went a couple of miles further to Davis Lock…#39…on a very low pier
with power…gonna be some AC running tonight!!!! Several folks here headed the
other direction…and the kids working the lock are super friendly (and bored
with nothing to do). Dakota is the hit…oh, and some little dog named Pippen,
who found a turtle…then jumped in the marsh water after it…and then rolled in
the dirt…glad to NOT be on that boat!
Tomorrow into Kingston most of the locks are
grouped together and it is only 33 miles. But can’t start until 9....YEAH!
July 11…still plan to do our 40 miles and 11 locks
today…and we are joined in the first lock by three other boats. The next
several miles and locks are a parade…first in is first out…the rest follow in
order…easy up…oh, is that a little fawn grazing by the canal? Why yes, it
is…and she/he is gone before anyone else in our little parade gets a peek. One fast
boat zips by us once we find some open space…TRAVELER diverts off at Merrickville…where once again
we are the tourist attraction…locks here are a flight of three…piece of
cake…Now just the two of us are together until we reach Lock 29A at Smith’s
Falls…where we stop for the night and they continue on.
Today has reminded us of sweet grass/swamp of the
Carolina’s…biting flies and scenery…nothing about it to entice you to hang
around. We laugh about learning the Canadian folk dance…hopping around and
waving your hands to beat off the deer flies. Bug repellent moves to the top of
our list…… geesh, I hate bugs…especially those that bite, hey. I do manage to
escape below for awhile…I’m still trying to find a dog groomer in Trenton.
The lock wall at Smith’s Falls is in the town
park…no electric…and it is HOT…strong breeze helps…but the shade is on shore
instead of us…but there’s is lots of it. A short walk to town…purchase of bug
repellent with serious DEET…and supper at the Rob Roy Pub. We are back in the
shade of the park and Dakota is running like a wild man, winning hearts and
giving out kisses. Whoo Hoo…a dog groomer is found…Mosquitoes are held at bay
tonight by this wind and our Canadian strength repellent…Floyd cranks up the
generator long enough to charge everything and runs AC enough to cool thing
off. And then, yep, you guessed it…we are OUT. These locks are wearing us out, hey.
Tomorrow we have only 4 locks in the next 33 miles
…let’s do the happy dance, hey. By the
end of tomorrow, we’ll start locking
down instead of up. This will get a little trickier as we’ll be starting with
just inches of concrete and an inability to grab our own cable. Parks Canada
folks will just step up to help, I’m sure. Looking at the chart gave the Captain a thrill…Wide parts with
narrow channels…follow the markers to avoid the stumps hiding outside the
channel markers…his kind of challenge…not mine!!! Should be another hot one…I
may have to join the Canadian women who boat in their swim wear…trust me, I’ll
be more covered than most of them….
July 10…busy day today…9:10 and we are through
that short bridge and headed west…it is like being on a boat driving slowly
through Eastbourough…or Crestview…no fixer-uppers on this route…lovely park
areas and well kept BIG houses…Dow Lake Marina is tiny…but our gas stop offers
Dakota a chance to play with a four month old bearded collie named Vera. Don’t
worry Pippa, you are still number one in his books…but they romped and wrestled
enough that he was worn out the rest of the day. And that’s always good…but
particularly today…after lunch the scenery changed to more rural settings…9
locks and 40 miles later we arrive at Burritts Rapids. Lock #17…where we have
planned to spend the night on a lock wall with electric and a restaurant. But
evidently lots of others made that plan as well. The Captain from TRAVELER
offers to let us raft to him as they are full and don’t want us below the lock
on the blue line…after talking to the Lockmaster, they found a lonely spot. So
up we go (which is what we wanted to do anyway)…and they made room for us on
the opposite side from everyone else…and managed to find one plug for our
electric. We are delighted…in the shade…across the canal from the party animals
(hehehe)…Dakota can run a little. We relax and practice our social skills
(though the boaters below the lock on the dock aren’t too happy with us because
they let us go up…they’ll have to wait til morning.) Clean up and it’s time to try Lock 17 Bistro.
It is better than most.
On the walk back, we stop by the camp fire to chat
with the locals…it’s good to be among those who speak English, hey.
Hehehe…plaid clothing and “hey” …they are a different breed. Oh, and they HATE
the Frenchies…they have other bad names for them. Next weekend starts the
holiday time for those workers in Quebec…last two weeks of July most of the big
companies shut down so the Frenchies can have vacation. We hope to be into the
Trent-Severn by then…thus avoiding the rush of boaters that swarm the St
Lawrence. We got to experience that rush on our last trip into Canada…once is
enough.
Floyd soon has serious second thoughts about that
evening cigar on the aft deck…yep, the national bird of Canada
invades….Mosquitoes as big as your thumb…We can’t light the OFF lantern fast
enough…and we hear them laughing. A quick change of plugs, we crank up the AC
and battle for our lives inside for about an hour. Floyd even kept evidence of
his kills…Dakota and I offered trash can burials. Soon we are ALL are out like
the lights. Tomorrow is another busy
day. Since it is Saturday on the Rideau Canal, we expect to encounter lots of
other boaters.
July 9….Short night…boaters behind us or someone
in the park partied til the wee hours…makes it hard for us old folks to sleep…Cooler
temps will make this slow rise more pleasant.
As we peeked out this morning, there came our
PRINCE ARTHUR friends…with tips about this flight of eight…so Robbie and Floyd
climbed the hill to visit the lockmaster. Stacy, Jazzy, Dakota and I watched
another boat arrive…now there are four of us. Once we start, there will be no
stopping….they tell us the UP process takes two hours. “Going up” group of four
goes first today…we are told to always enter and leave the locks in the same
order…we are first and port side…ready, set, go… No relaxing this morning…
third cable from the door…fenders at the rub rail…but then fenders constantly
need adjustment as often getting to the top of the lock wall leaves only inches
of concrete separating us from grass…It is truly a fascinating set of old
locks…I’d say there were thousands of tourists along the banks and at the top
of the Wellington Street Bridge watching the operation. So today in Ottawa, we
were part of the tourist attraction!
Sure enough, two hours later and we are at “our
spot” in downtown Ottawa. PRINCE ARTHUR
joined us on the wall and requested some assistance lowering their mast
in order to meet clearance requirements on the rest of the canal. We were also able to share some Skipper Bob
notes with them. They don’t plan to stay. We freshened up a bit and headed off in
search of lunch and to see Parliament Hill as well as visit the largest
open-air market in North America. Hard
boat work and playing tourist required a bit of a nap late afternoon.
We are planning to try the new “meat” tonight…”rosette
escalope de boeuf”…looks like steak wrap/ London broil…The pork souvlaki last night was good
so we have high hopes for this one as well.
Tomorrow we head west… hard to predict or make
plans about how far or how fast we can go…too many locks and low bridges…our
original goal was to go 40 miles a day…but who knows??? We do plan to make a stop for gas/pump out
tomorrow…but there is no need to rush as the bridges and locks won’t operate
before 9 AM. In many ways, these Parks
Canada folks are my kind of people!!!
July 8….breakfast and grocery shopping…we hope this is our
last true French encounter…as today we cross out of Quebec province into
Ontario… while it hasn’t been bad…it has certainly given personal experience to
the phrase “strangers in a foreign land”. Grocery shopping is our most interesting
experience…fruits and veggies are lovely…meats are usually well displayed and
labeled in both French and English…the rest is a crap shoot. Floyd says even
the photos on the boxes are in French!!! LOL…we’ve decided to do without a few
things…but basically we’ve figured it out. Plus we are really liking the
exchange rate…80 cents American to the Canadian dollar…we win!!! Though gas
sold by the liter at $1.50 takes it all back!!! I’m guessing that we’ll be
spending lots of time tied to lock walls as we’ve already bought a seasonal
mooring pass for that…and marina’s charge by the foot. And sometimes even at
marina’s, there is no electric…I’m just hoping the temps stay cool…that’s why
we’re here, of course.
The ride into Ottawa was uneventful and just like
we like it…cool and sunny…smooth waters…except for boat wakes. Can I mention
the three ferry boats crossing back and forth back and forth…timing on that was
a little tricky, but Captain Floyd, once again, proved superior!!! Long
pleasant hours of boredom…no moments of excitement or sheer terror!!!
We arrived at the Ottawa lock wall as
planned…after closing …so we will spend the night on the blue line at the
bottom of the flight of eight…yes, you heard me…eight locks…one leads to the
other…up 80 feet into the heart of downtown Ottawa. Lock opens at 9:00 AM and
depending on which way goes first…we plan to be on the lock wall at the top by
noon. We’ll spend the rest of the day playing tourist then head on toward
Kingston on Friday. We walked the lock and picked our mooring spot tonight
after supper. All looks good….
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
July
7…Lock opens at 9:30…and we are third in line to go through…it’s just a 3’
lift…but seems to take forever…people getting off boats to buy ice…making change…buying
permits and passes. This lock and really the rest of the locks we encounter
will be part of the Canadian Parks System…just like the Champlain Locks. Much
more friendly and willing to serve…we are ever so glad. The locks are small…and
this one has four of us rafted inside by the time we get all settled. PRINCE
ARTHUR is who we are rafted to and they speak English and travel at about our
speed. We figure we’ll be seeing each other at the Carillion Lock twenty-six
miles away at mid day. We quickly make friends and they decide to stay at the
Montebello Marina with us tonight. Father Jack, son and DIL, Robert and Stacy ,
and little Jasmine (5th grade)…they just bought this MONK trawler in
Quebec City (three days ago) and are taking it home to Gore Bay, Ontario.
Carillion
Lock is the biggest in all of Canada…65’ up…which is a pretty formidable view
from the bottom…we have to wait about 20 minutes …but that just allows me time
to get Dakota off for a little play/relief time…it all works! This is just the
second time we’ve encountered a lock where the gate on the lower side is lifted
over the entrance and vessels pass under it to lock through. It is very much
like looking at the wrong side of a guillotine.
There is a small floating dock inside the lock…so it is even better than
the floating bollards we are so use to… PRINCE ARTHUR, TUMBLEWEED are
secure…then a couple of others come zipping around the corner and they come
right in. Sixty-five feet of water takes some time….but the ride is smooth and
easy. We have 30 more miles to go before the marina tonight. A couple of rain
showers and howling wind …but we figure that is wind is made worse because we
are headed into it.
We
figure we’ll be seeing PRINCE ARTHUR plenty for the next week or so…Jassy fell in
love with Dakota…and they wear each other out at the marina…good timing…more storms
moved in one at 10 ish…another at around 11…then temps cooled and we all slept
really well!!!! It was a long day!
July
8…Wednesday…short trip up the hill to have breakfast and visit the grocery
store…we head to Ottawa today. No locks til we get there and there is docking
at the bottom and at the top…so either way we are good.
July
6… out of the marina by 8…AIS shows no freighters coming or going from the lock
area….Saint Lambert Lock…up 18 feet…we are there by 9…followed by three other
boats…We’ve been warned to not use the credit card machine as if it doesn’t
issue the receipt, you pay twice. You
use the special phone at the lock wall to call but the lockmaster says they are
doing maintenance on the bridge and we’ll have to wait about an hour…oh, then
just another 45 minutes or so…finally…almost 11 and we get into the lock. By
this time there are five of us…we are rafted to a 39’ Meridian who speaks
English…we are all secure and then here comes a sail boat, ever so slowly…so we
wait for him. This lock charges $30
…cash or charge…so once at the top we wait for everyone to settle up before
going. The next ten miles is in a canal
around Montreal to another big commercial lock, St Catherine. We meet a big sea
going freighter in the narrowest part (of course) and figure that he is the
reason we finally got our lift…they needed the lock ready for him. At St Catherine Lock, they are waiting for
us…and the sail boat…up 32’ this time…and another $30. But it is Canadian
money, which today is about 80 cents to the dollar. We go cheaper than they do.
We
opt to go on another 23 miles into the mouth of the Richelieu River to the town
of Saint Anne-de-Bellevue..There is a 3’ lock there and plenty of lock wall in
this town for 35 boats. We find space on the town shore side and tie up…we are
on a boardwalk that appears to be main street St Anne…lots of restaurants,
people, boats, jet skis….and it is hot. No AC/electric tonight. We get lots of advice from locals about where
not to eat…Klondike!!! And according to them, the pubs at our end are among the
best. We pick one…and then think why??? We fix better and cheaper on the boat.
What were we thinking??? The party never stops…we are still hearing folks walk
by at 3 AM…and it’s hot…not one of our better nights.
July
5…All is quiet at the marina…Floyd went off to solve the security gate key
issue and check on the ferry. We could easily make the 11:30 ferry into
Montreal, so that’s the plan. Once there finding the hop-on, hop-off bus was
not so easy…we walked in circles for about an hour then decided to stop at an
outdoor café for lunch/brunch and see if one went by us. Sure enough, every 15
minutes or so, one went by and stopped right at the corner…so we bought a
ticket and rode. It was a delightful two hour tour narrated by Richard …Old
Town, the Olympic area, a big park, Hippy fest, Jazz Fest, … we saw it all and
really were not tempted to hop off. We thought that very unusual for us…we can
always find something interesting to investigate. Montreal just didn’t seem to
spark that in us. We checked out a couple of souvenir shops and came away
empty. Somehow managed to walk right by the bakery…we are still trying to lose
weight. (Floyd’s lost over 20 pounds to my 6…but the belly fat is melting
away…) Floyd, on the other hand, finally found a liquor store. He bought
consumable souvenirs…and now he’ll sleep better knowing his supply of Jack
won’t run out.
Waiting
for the ferry we noticed the pressurized water-boot demonstration…we have seen
a couple now…the newest way to separate tourists from their money…we think
Kelli could be a star at this…but she probably needs to wait until after this
baby is born…
We
were able to give our second day bus tour passes to a couple of young ones from
NY…and arrived back at our marina around 5:30…where most of the boats around us
had changed. We are now among the residents…guess they didn’t know the marina
rented their slips when they weren’t here???? Hmmm, interesting!
Tomorrow
we pass around Montreal with the large ocean going freighters…two large locks
in a canal…and we are low man on the totem pole. Some we talk to say they wait
up to 5 hours…and no going ashore…poor Dakota. And we are hoping the temps stay
lower than predicted. We’ve studied the maps and charts…Skipper Bob book gave
Captain Floyd another route over to St Ann de Bellevue…we’ll be on a wall in
small town Canada tonight.
July
4…8 ish AM…we gave them a bit of a break… Fired up those engines…and not one
head appeared…clear, calm and sun is shining…water on the St Lawrence is glassy
smooth…Big ships are moving and some boaters …current is against us about 1
knot (that will increase through the day somewhat)…but that little breeze was
on the bow…we were plenty cool…about an hour in and we both opted for longer
pants and jackets…more and more boats on the water but it is Saturday and the
sun is shining. All chatter on our radio is in French…don’t understand a
word!!!
The
last two hours of our trip as we got closer to Montreal the boat wakes became
an issue…in fact, we thought it was just as rocky rolly as the bay going into NYC…we
were amazed…the big ship wakes were not nearly as bad as the other boaters. Too
many people on too many boats going too many directions and going too fast…
because the current is increasing, our speed is decreasing…which makes it even more
rocky rolly…poor Dakota got seasick. Always a not pleasant event! But one we
have learned to be prepared to deal with.
Our
arrival at Port de Plaisance Marina in Longueuil was an event for the record
books. The entrance from the river is a fight of boat traffic and river
current…once inside the break water, we
were looking at one of the busiest gas docks ever…big and little boats, lots of
people, dogs, and dock hands, of course, speaking and yelling in French. Lucky for us, a big slip emptied at just the
right moment, and we scooted right in…gas-o-line, pump out and two nights stay,
please…I took Dakota to shore where he regained his sense of land…and we were
in our slip by 3:30..
It
is a big place…and it is a great weather weekend for folks to be on their
boats…oh, and fireworks at 10PM. Yes, it seems the city is hosting some sort of
fireworks contest…and tonight is the Italian entry. We love the irony of
it…Americans in French speaking Canada on Independence Day enjoying Italian
fireworks…lol…and it is the third time in so many days we’ve had fireworks…this
time I don’t think we’ll be on the front row with smoke blowing in our windows.
We are so blessed that they don’t seem to disturb Dakota much either…he just
goes to bed.
We
did discover that there is some sort of key the marina forgot to give us for
the gate at the entrance to our slip. Better check that out when they open in
the morning.
So
the typical Fourth of July fare for us…burgers, brats, potato salad, deviled
eggs, and baked beans. Lots of Frenchies coming and going…boats headed out into
the river to watch those fireworks…oh, and yes, there is drinking involved. The
y put on quite the show….but we thought the fireworks were a bust but it was
just because there were too many trees between us and them…though they made
quite the racquet.
Tomorrow
we head into Montreal…we think the ferry leaves from this marina…to play
tourist. One day is about all we plan to do. We’ll probably do a “hop-on-hop-off”
bus tour…hope we can find one in English.
early night…we have work to do
tomorrow…but just like at Fort Edwards last week…people people people…and
fireworks. But then the band music returned…don’t these folks have to work
tomorrow??? We don’t really know when it finally stopped…we went to bed.
July
3…we slept like rocks! Even Dakota was a slug this morning…Frenchies are all
gone … we lollygagged around and spent time letting Dakota run loose in the
park and chase and chew sticks. At the crack of 9:55 AM we pulled away from the
mooring wall only to hear TRITON on the radio announcing their arrival on the
other side. We talked briefly…but kept on…it was a great ride…smooth
waters…wind has died down a little and the sun is finally shining. Lovely homes
and little towns dot the waterway…only one cable ferry today…and we only have
14 miles to the marina in Sorel…we’ll be on the St Lawrence River…they say it’s
a great stop to get groceries…and we need them.
Our
dockage into the marina here was just a bit tricky…those winds hadn’t died so
much…but we didn’t buy any boat parts so all is good. That close grocery store
was a long 30 minute walk…and the sun is shining…we aren’t complaining…but
geesh, we were ever so glad we had that wheelie cart…lugging groceries is not
fun.
Tonight
we are in party marina on Friday night…no one speaks much English and we don’t
speak much French…the older boaters are having a pot luck at the picnic area
(lots of wine and drinking songs) and the younger ones are playing loud music
and dancing on the docks. I’m talking Michael Jackson, Alabama, and Alan
Jackson…oh, and some French things…they’ll pay for all this when we fire up our
big engines at 0’dark thirty in the morning… hehehe…
From
here on we are headed home…mostly west and/or south…We head to Montreal
tomorrow…against the current on the St Lawrence…we plan to visit the city
briefly…then there is a busy commercial canal with two huge locks we have to
transit. We are studying the books about all that. Stay tuned!
St
Ours lock at the end of the day…and we tied to the floating dock there to spend
the night. Quiet rural setting…with two other boats of French speaking
Canadians…they pretty much help and then leave you alone…cause you don’t speak
the language. Picnickers, fisherman,
dogs and children… it was a busy little park area…and then who should go
whizzing by with a wave and giggles…those men on PANDORA II…lol…no damage…and
they went from being thirty minutes ahead of us all day to thirty minutes
behind…then boom bang…two more French speaking boats arrive…one is nicknamed
Captian Boom Boom…lol…not the most graceful docking…
Turned
on our phones to check in …discovered all our Looper friends are stuck on the
flooding Erie Canal...Dee is gonna buy a condo by us…and Ryne misses Gma and
Papou…We had steak and veggies on the aft deck…it was a great ending to a great
day.
JULY
2…our 100th anniversary (months, that is!)…Locks open at 9 (these
are my kind of people)…Sun is shining but wind is blowing…temps are cool…we are
making preparations to leave the dock when a sailboat (PANDORA II) and a small
motor boat (HORSE WITH NO NAME) zip right by and we hear them talking to the
lock master…we pull out and join the line and here comes TRITON a boat we saw
in Waterford…not the way we had hoped this would start…Lockmaster lets us all
through the low bridge but then makes us and Triton wait on a wall, while they
lock the other boats down. So we will be locking through with TRITON all
day…could be worse! The canal is very narrow…speed limit is 6 mph, sometimes
only 3 mph…we are being passed by bicycles and electric wheelchairs…even a
rather fat man on a really slow Vespa went zipping by us on the cart path next
to the Canal. Locks and bridges are mostly timed to be open and ready for you
when you arrive…We had great fun practicing our very limited French…(Dakota
even barks in French now) …we had to wait on a couple of walls for other boats
to pass but really it gave us time to be social with TRITON and give Dakota a
grass break. We loved it…lock workers
could not have been more helpful…smooth and slow ride in every lock…wind kicked
up a couple of times but we handled it just fine…Down 80 feet…10 miles in 5
hours…then we trucked on for another 20…hey, the sun was shining and Dakota had
already had several potty breaks.
Charts
and books we are using said more than once to “watch and be very careful going
through the bridge at Beloeil” …and we did…but as we flew by, there stuck in
the shallow section, was PANDORA II…we
had serious flashbacks of a bridge we encountered in Marathon…the police and
another rather official looking rescue boat was there…and there really was
nothing we could do…so we went on. Into the land of cable ferries…three small
towns…three small cable ferries…be careful of passing too close…you’ll get
caught in their cable…
St
Ours lock at the end of the day…and we tied to the floating dock there to spend
the night. Quiet rural setting…with two other boats of French speaking
Canadians…they pretty much help and then leave you alone…cause you don’t speak
the language. Picnickers, fisherman,
dogs and children… it was a busy little park area…and then who should go
whizzing by with a wave and giggles…those men on PANDORA II…lol…no damage…and
they went from being thirty minutes ahead of us all day to thirty minutes
behind…then boom bang…two more French speaking boats arrive…one is nicknamed
Captian Boom Boom…lol…not the most graceful docking…
Turned
on our phones to check in …discovered all our Looper friends are stuck on the
flooding Erie Canal...Dee is gonna buy a condo by us…and Ryne misses Gma and
Papou…We had steak and veggies on the aft deck…it was a great ending to a great
day.
Lots
of Wi Fi issues in Canada…so you’ll be missing photos…but here is what’s
happening so far….
July
1… Canada Day…Today is the day…we have just a few miles to travel and then we
pass into Canada…a stop at the Customs Wharf is required…yellow flag to fly…no
one leaves the boat but the Captain. He has gathered passports, Dakota’s rabies
info, boat registration, counted cigars and liquor bottles…we are a tad over
the limit on that…
It
is cloudy, cool…windy…and we are the only boat at the wharf…two very official
looking 12 year olds (I’m sure they were older as they wore guns) escorted the
Captain into the office…less than five minutes later we were outta
there…amazing!!! They didn’t care that he was over his limits…we boogied outta
there so fast that Floyd forgot all about that yellow flag until we were 30
minutes out.
And
then the rain came!!! The plan was to arrive at St Jeans Marina before it
started…yeah, well, that didn’t work so well. We were drenched!!! And docked on
the fuel dock…no slip for us…and one electric cord (three attached together
actually) strung through the puddles. Not worth the money, that’s for sure. We
had wet clothes and coats hanging everywhere…the sun would shine and then the
rain would return. During one sunny moment we walked down to Lock 9 of the
Chambly Canal to purchase our seasonal canal pass and the seasonal mooring pass.
These passes will be good on Chambly, Richelieu, Rideau and Trent-Severn
Waterways.
We
are excited about this Chambly Canal…10 miles…9 locks and 9 low bridges
…predicted 3-5 hour travel time …in what we would call “baby locks”. Hand
operated…French speaking…the list of Canal preparations is enough to make the
First Mate jittery…they use their own lines but want you to have yours
ready…fenders on both sides…boathook and gloves…locks are 21 feet wide and 100
feet long (very small when compared to those we traversed on the
Mississippi)…we are hoping no other boats appear.
Of course, as we walked back to the boat it
rained! More wet clothes…though I had opted to just wear my wet ones on the
trip…you know who didn’t…LOL…and we kept hearing band music…well, even in the
rain, it is Independence Day in Canada…Oh, and we noticed a large U-haul type
truck full of pyrotechnics and people 200 yards across from us on an island…you
guessed it…fireworks at 10:00PM.
Dakota
and I ventured out once more…trying to get our steps in while the sun was
shining…only to get drenched again…Don’t know where we managed to hang all
these wet items…but somehow we did.
Marina
had a nice restaurant...so we ventured up to try it…yes, menu was entirely in
French and our waitress barely spoke English…but we were amazed at how much we
understood….strangers in a foreign land…had a lovely meal and then waited for
those fireworks…cause man-oh-man, we have front row seating for this one. If
the wind blows or they have a miss fire, we are toast. Dakota was not
impressed. We were sort of looking forward to an early night…we have work to do
tomorrow…but just like at Fort Edwards last week…people people people…and
fireworks. But then the band music returned…don’t these folks have to work
tomorrow??? We don’t really know when it finally stopped…we went to bed.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
June 30.... Mooney Bay Marina....lots of boats...no dock hands...we couldn't even raise them on the phone. Good thing we can manage just fine by ourselves...Floyd and Dakota finally started the long walk from the gas dock to find help for adding fuel...and someone appeared...fueled and then showed us our slip....and then disappeared. Once again, we managed just fine...thank you very much. We picked this place partially because of the listed restaurant...and even asked about it when we made the reservation call...they just forgot to mention that it is only open Thursday thru Sunday. hhhhhmmmm, it's Tuesday!
I spent the afternoon doing laundry...Floyd finished a couple of chores and made preparations for Canadain customs inspection tomorrow...shouldn't be a big deal as he is a pretty strict rule follower! I'm the troublemaker...like you needed to be told! Lol
And the French boaters are here!!! In fact, we ae hard pressed to find an American boat in this crowd. A big 62' cruiser arrived late afternoon...stirring up the entire marina ...he's got way too many toys and gadgets...and crew! Fun to watch...easy to look at...can't understand a word they say! What are we thinking???
ADVENTURE....Challenge....giggles I'm sure!!
Our ride to Point Bay Marina was uneventful ... Just the way we like it....passed Fort Ticonderoga ...another chance missed for fort-lovin' Floyd....
Point Bay was a big place....in the middle of nowhere Charlotte, Vermont...not much help when it came to docking...and no restaurant...but a lovely view of Lake Champlain. Dakota won another heart...and she wanted breeder info, so maybe one of his relatives will end up here.
We continue to be in the area close to Clinton Penatentary. For some reason our phones keep reminding us of just how close we are...haven't decided if that's a heads up about strangers or a warning that they might have room for me....lol.
We are loving the depths we see on the chart plotter...today 399... Oh, and zebra mussels have started to appear so the water should begin to clear too. Floyd has requested more sunshine and less rain. It seems that we've spent more time at lower helm and in rain gear than anything else. I don't really mind the cool...as I'd rather be cold than HOT...and I have a new sweat shirt!! Lol....
Mooney Bay Marina is on tap tonight...June 30... Tomorrow we celebrate Canada Day by entering Canada...French speaking Canada....we could be in serious trouble here...we have added an international package to our cell and data service...stay tuned to see how that works...what you may get is comments and no photos for this stretch....we'll see how it tallies up.
Point Bay was a big place....in the middle of nowhere Charlotte, Vermont...not much help when it came to docking...and no restaurant...but a lovely view of Lake Champlain. Dakota won another heart...and she wanted breeder info, so maybe one of his relatives will end up here.
We continue to be in the area close to Clinton Penatentary. For some reason our phones keep reminding us of just how close we are...haven't decided if that's a heads up about strangers or a warning that they might have room for me....lol.
We are loving the depths we see on the chart plotter...today 399... Oh, and zebra mussels have started to appear so the water should begin to clear too. Floyd has requested more sunshine and less rain. It seems that we've spent more time at lower helm and in rain gear than anything else. I don't really mind the cool...as I'd rather be cold than HOT...and I have a new sweat shirt!! Lol....
Mooney Bay Marina is on tap tonight...June 30... Tomorrow we celebrate Canada Day by entering Canada...French speaking Canada....we could be in serious trouble here...we have added an international package to our cell and data service...stay tuned to see how that works...what you may get is comments and no photos for this stretch....we'll see how it tallies up.
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