Wednesday, August 28, 2024

At the Tom Verlaine Book Sale - Alex Abramovich - LRBlog


 https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/0z32mdsmzktsv06fa8v55/At-the-Tom-Verlaine-Book-Sale.docx?rlkey=kciq5br264k7w88l058fxqdwe&dl=0

Monday, August 26, 2024

Why did Bayesian sink? >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors

Why did Bayesian sink? >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors

Why did it sink?

Bayesian was a massive sailing yacht with one of the tallest masts in yachting history, a 246-foot pole that would have commanded attention even if it hadn’t been illuminated at a peaceful anchorage just north of Sicily on Sunday night.

Mike Lynch, the owner, a British tech billionaire who had been compared to both Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, was onboard, celebrating his acquittal on fraud charges that could have sent him to prison for 20 years. He was joined by members of his family, two of the lawyers who defended him, and an investment banker who had provided helpful testimony.






Sunday, August 18, 2024

West Boothbay Harbor

 







Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Hatchet Cove - my homeport

The memorial cross at Georges Harbor 
five miles south of my mooring at Hatchet Cove, Friendship,
Maine


When we first came to Friendship thirty years ago, this was Brian Reed's wharf. It's the Carter family's now.
The Reeds and the Carters had fishing camps on Benner Island about five miles south.
Betsy Wyeth then bought two islands - Allen and Benner -   of the four that make up Georges Harbor where English explorer George Waymouth first landed on the coast of Maine in 1605.  In 1905 the State of Maine  erected a granite cross on Allen and claimed it as the founding of Maine.  
The Carters swung a deal with Betsy Wyeth who had a big wharf built on Allen Island and a house for her family on the south side of Benner.  The Carters still have traps stored there.  They are buyers as well as fishermen now.   Below are shots of Carter's wharf at Hatchet  Cove, Friendship now.

BrAvery's haul today - about 1,000 lbs.
@$7lb - before fuel, boat, crew, truck
It isn't easy

Salt 
dinghy dock
Bait - redfish heads from iceland
Diesel oil
Some bait is local - menhaden (pogies or bunker)
netted in the Cove or the St. George River
Product of Iceland
Clara - boatyard dog
A monhegan skiff
"Do not expect a warning shot"
Harvester wharf (fka Brian's wharf) 
Hatchet Cove, Friendship, ME

                                                                Storage shed
                                                                                The wharf
                                                                            Refrigerated bait shed

                                                                                


 

Friday, August 9, 2024

Cape Breton - Road Photos 2024 | tugster: a waterblog

Road Photos 2024 F | tugster: a waterblog

Maine Mist - August 9, 2024

 Back River, Friendship, Maine

The Back River

The town wharf - Friendship, Maine
















Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Bloodhound - a Fife Cutter replica - in Thomaston for service


The original Bloodhound

Bloodhound - the replica, on the St. George, Thomaston, ME


Shamrock and Columbia - 1899 - America's Cup

My boat GeorgiaBel is nothing special: a 22 foot Eastern center console with a 90 HP Yamaha.
But it's maintained and stored across the Thomaston, Maine harbor from Lyman Morse where legends regularly call for service, and are launched fresh from the LM workshop. So it was when I saw an old 70 foot sailboat of unfamiliar design head off the floating dock and down the St. George River.
I got lucky - as I was about to cross the St. George I saw the cutter right across the narrow 75 yard channel from Jeff's Marine where my powerboat is stored and maintained. I stopped, of course. and ran to the dock.
Bloodhound's design - to me it looks like an old English Channel cutter - is a replica of an 1857 design  by Scotland's William Fife,* the great yacht builder of the late 1800's.

William Fife III [1857- 1944] was a great Scottish sailboat designer and builder inducted twenty years ago in the America's Cup Hall of Fame at the  Herreshoff Marine Museum.  His Shamrocks - designed for the great AC challenger the merchant Thomas Lipton - never quite beat the Nat Herreshoff designs but are remembered as the Lipton Era.

If you are interested in chartering Bloodhound - contact them HERE.


















Saturday, August 3, 2024