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Sunday 9/1: Long Cove/Tenants Harbor - Harbor Island (Rhumb Line Distance: 12.2 nm) PDF Route Chart Harbor Detail Chart Overnight, the wind dropped off completely and
the sky remained clear. This, coupled with a chilly air mass, allowed
temperatures to drop lower than any time during the cruise, making for a chilly
wakeup. Some inland areas recorded lows in the upper thirties and lower
forties! While I was out on deck in the early morning swabbing off the
night's dew, I glanced down to check on the progress of the coffee pot and
noticed that
Throughout the day, Heidi and I talked and basically decided to just blitz it home tomorrow, rather than try for one more day on board. It's funny how once you get close to the end, and closer to home, you are just ready to get there. We had thought we would stop somewhere in between for Monday night and head back on Tuesday, but we decided it would just be better to go tomorrow and get it over with. Plus, the weather forecast for Tuesday sounded less nice anyway, with higher, unfavorable winds and possible rain, so it's not like we would really miss anything anyway. Monday 9/2: Harbor Island - Falmouth Foreside (Rhumb Line Distance: 41.2 nm) PDF Route Chart Once you make the decision, you might as well just blitz it home. That's exactly what we decided to do--no sense pulling out another day just for the sake of it, plus the weather forecast for Tuesday was less good anyway. To that end, we got up early in the morning and by 0615 we had raised the anchor and were headed out into the calm, platinum seas and gray skies. Ahead lay about eight hours of boring motoring. The trip passed uneventfully--under power with the main up the whole way, no wind, and a pretty good-sized, but gentle, swell off the three rivers near Boothbay and in the outer portions of Casco Bay between Cape Small and Little Mark Island. We had the tide with us most of the time, so we averaged 5.5 - 6.0 knots over the ground. It was weird getting back to the yacht club--so many boats, so busy! Our mooring was waiting for us, and the lines weren't even tangled on the chain, which was a nice treat. However, they were twice their normal size with nasty growth and mussels. When I pulled the lines on deck, I realized that even the plant-looking things were squirming and wiggling around, nightmarish creatures that I had never seen before. Yuck! I pulled a lot of the stuff off and sluiced off the decks as best as I could. A major washdown is in order in the very near future...I can't wait! Not much to tell, other than we made it home to the mooring by 1400, put the boat away and went ashore with a bag of laundry and a few other things; most of the unloading will occur later this week, once I bring the boat into the dock. Then, I can unload the rest of our dirty laundry, clothing, books, etc. We will leave most of the food, books and other cruising gear on board for the remainder of the season and beyond, so the unloading really isn't so much of a big deal. But it will be nice to get rid of extra water and fuel jugs, other deck cargo, and so forth. More cruise details and observations to come in the near future. Meanwhile, I hope you enjoyed reading about our cruise, and will continue to check in now that we're back. I apologize for the delays in posting the logs during the cruise--it proved to me much more difficult and inconvenient than I had hoped, so we just never put much thought into getting it done. For those of you who suffered through the information drought on this website over the past couple months, thank you for checking back in! Feel free to get in touch anytime. Anyone want to buy a nice house with good property??? :<) I'm ready to load up and go right back out...
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