Sunday, October 7, 2012

Falling into Autumn


I want to thank the readers for their comments and patience and invite you to enjoy some pictures of a spectacular day on the River this Saturday.  It was a watershed week in more ways than one.  The week started with my mother in the hospital in Washington DC to a major flood at my house with Surfpro professionals drying up the mess.  Despite all external and internal worries and concerns, a breezy day transports us, for a while, into an enchanted realm.


 I am surrounded by wonderful people, at work, at play, and at home.   I consider myself lucky and fortunate.  Song of the Wind has found new owners, and it was strangely exciting to see her on the water without us on her new maiden voyage.


When time permits, I will be moving soon  to sailingenchantress.blogspot.com.



























As we travel the River and the Bay, I often wonder how we look to others on the water.  And so these images ....






































Monday, September 3, 2012

Leaving Song of the Wind



She sits patiently waiting for us to return.    She does not groan querulously when we open her doors.   She does have stored aromatic memories of the weeks inactivity, but after some openings, she is again fresh.





















Song of the Wind has been faithful and loyal and true to us for the last nine years. She houses indelible memories in her bones.   The kids have grown up in her berths, and I have become a white haired middle aged man.   She represents  promise of new and old adventures fulfilled.  And now, for a new family, more beginnings and memories to be cherished.











We are moving on to Enchantress, a larger vessel but perhaps with smaller dreams.   She still has many issues to resolve but in the solving of problems, she becomes our own.  Trials and tribulations strengthen character, and fractured bones are often stronger.









Yet we do not wish for hardship or broken bones but for fair weather.   We wish for a  strong breeze freshening over rippled waves with the sun behind us and  the promise of summer evenings.  In our memories,  Song of the Wind glistens in the soft glow and the waves darken with shadows but we glide over them with just a shudder.  




She is only fiberglass, wood, and canvas.   We have embedded her with meaning and thus she is alive for us.      I feel a little betrayed in courting Enchantress, but perhaps our hearts are capable of loving more than one vessel.   We will miss you Song of the Wind.   We only hope that you give others the same joy and freedom that you have given us.    Good Bye Song of the Wind.    Good Bye.




Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Passages


Noah leans over to gauge the distance that Song of the Wind must glide before she turns sharp into her slip.  It is a controlled movement.  His raised eyebrow coincides with a quick turn of the wheel.   Song of  the Wind moves gracefully at slightly over a knot with a foot under her keel.  She moves from the first piling and presents her hind quarters to the far post.  My job is to grab the line which is just within reach.  We pivot on the stern cleat, and we are back home.



He is a taller young man of fifteen now but the the boy still remains.  Noah was six when we first met Song of the Wind.  When she would heel, Noah would scream.  He sat at the head of the steps, wide eyed and looking astern, wishing for the end of this folly.  He sat patiently through all of the lessons, and made practical comments such as “why do you not tip over completely when we heel?”  Looking at the strong keels of boats on dry dock did not assuage his inner equilibrium when we went out in strong winds.



Noah is now the captain and has a better sense of the water than me.  He is comfortable and is at ease when encountering problems on the Bay.  Whereas I have to use my left brain to analyze and equate and muddle through, he seizes up the situation quickly with his right brain and thus has the use of his full faculties for other tasks.  So it seems to me, as I look over my glasses with my elongated eyeballs, graying hair cascading over wrinkled brow...



A few weeks ago, we ventured to the St Mary’s River during  Spring Break.  Last year, we had witnessed the ravages of a tornado in Deltaville and sailed with his friend Cameron.  Cameron lost his house but not his dog.  He  is a resilient waterman.  This year, we went forth man to man into heavy and sustained winds.  Small craft advisory for three days was mana for our souls.  We went North to the Potomac.



Flying our jib with a tiny main was our best strategy.  Song of the Wind seemed carefully tamed as she galloped over the wind capped waves.  Too much jib, she groaned, and too much main made a mess of the cabin.   She quickly came to when we depowered, and we felt safe in the cockpit with our foul gear and old life vests.



At night, we marveled that we can make Thai vegetables and watch the evening news.  Ben and Jerry’s were ours for taking as it was mano a mano.  The stark windy bay was just a memory when we went below like troglodytes.




I look at our old pictures and am reminded of the old woman in Fanny and Alexander.  In the long winter night,  during the rain, she is counting her children amongst the pictures that are spread on the kitchen table.  The table that gave sustenance and life now recounting her memories.  She is alone, it is a white light, and it is coming down in doves.





We pass though our time with a little wave and try not to make big wakes behind us. Our footprints are somewhat sustainable.  We want our lives to be meaningful but come to understand that only we can make sense of our lives.  Our treasures are with us in the here and now.   We look backwards with some longing but the future also beckons.  Sailing interweaves these desires and thoughts in the present.   We are loking backwards at our wakes but gazing ahead to the next mark.  We are living in the passage.




I think of Noah at six and now he is fifteen and a half.  Miju, Ben, Mark and Reuben are really out of the harbor and venturing into the world.  They are making their own passages.   We have a common bond as we all grew up together.  A small speck on the water we appear to the jet fighters above us near the waters off the Aberdeen Proving Grounds.  Together and alone we feel connected to each other even when apart.  These are the passages that Song of the Wind has given us.