Richard Hudson and Issuma are northbound to Toronto for the winter- on the inside. The route is, I assume, the shortest: Hudson River -Erie Canal - Oswego Canal - Lake Ontario. Tugster and Bowsprite did a leg of it - up to Catskill, where Rosemary Ruth will winter and, hopefully, find a buyer.
Issuma and Rosemary Ruth rafted up in Catskill
Richard and Gabriela - loyal crew
Next summer Richard hopes to head east - and north. Maybe Greenland - if all works out.
This spring he started out in the Rio Plata - Uruguay and Argentina, and made his way north - single handed the great bulk of the way to New York. From there it was northbound, up the Labrador coast and over to Baffin Island. All photos by Will Van Dorp
New York City was the Big Oyster - the oyster capital of the world. Oyster stands used to dot New York like push cart food vendors do today. And the selfish were local products too. Here is Mark Kulansky the brilliant author of The Big Oyster, Cod, and Salt to talk about it all on WNYC.
I was a Brooklyn Dodger fan. I remember sitting with my grandmother Mae Trautfield watching the tiny gray TV screen. She gave me her love of the game and she taught me its rules. Her death when I was seven was the biggest in my life - and terrible for my mother who had lost her father Walter when I was an infant. So I stayed a Dodger fan - until the death of Jim Gilliam in about 1980. He was the last Dodger still in uniform who had been on the field that glorious day in 1955 when Johnny Podres shut out the Yankees 2-0 at Yankee Stadium. TI was in 4th grade at Abbey Lane School in Levittown. someone had a portable radio and school let out as the game was ending. I joined the parade of Dodger fans who marched in triumph down the lane to the school's gate.