Monday, September 14, 2020

Fishing Fire Island Inlet - Captree and Robert Moses State Parks

We grew up on South Oyster Bay about five miles from the Captree Bridge across the Great South Bay.  On summer mornings in our 15' Snipe I sailed east to the bridge in a light offshore breeze, then turned back west against the reliable southwesterly blow - rails buried, water pouring in through the leaky side deck, put it in irons, bail, and head off into the wind again. On a couple of occasions I made it to the Fire Island Inlet before heading back home.
In the evening our mother Clare would throw us boys out of the house to go fishing for snappers at the mouth of the canal across the street.  The baby bluefish would wait off the point for schools of shiners, like the one that was skewered on a snelling hook below the red and white bobbin at the end of our bamboo poles.Snelling a Hook, How to Tie a Snell Knot | Sport Fishing Magazine
So it was an occasion for reminiscing to visit Captree yesterday, seeing dozens of people (mostly Asian - men and women) fishing for snappers, perhaps a fluke or sea bass, or tossing a chicken baited crab trap into the waters at the eastern end of the Jones Beach Island where the ocean gushes into the Bay. 
At the Captree State Park boat basin on the bay side a dozen 80 foot party boats vie to take out a dozen or so in these covid-constrained days to snag fluke and sea bass until the striper run starts later in the fall.  The flocks of gulls hovering over the returning boats signal success as they wait for returning fishermen, cleaning their catch, to throw the scraps overboard.  For fifty bucks the fluke boats will hand you a rod, rig, and bait then take you out for three hours of hoping for an 18 inch or better keeper or three.
- GWC










 

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Teen boat builder

 One clever kid

https://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/news/2020/08/27/when-the-pandemic-shut-down-schools-this-naples-ny-teen-built-a-boat/5641945002/



Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Ian & Sylvia Reunion 1986

Four strong winds only carried Ian and Sylvia Tyson so far.  They divorced in 1975.  But did a reunion concert in 1986.  Ian is 86 now and still performs.  Sylvia is a member of the all-female folk super group Quartette.

Ian and Sylvia are joined by Gordon Lightfoot, Judy Collins, Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt.


Four Strong Winds - Ian and Sylvia Tyson

 Many have covered this song, but none better than the great Canadian folk duo Ian and Sylvia Tyson.


Tomorrow is a Long Time - Keb' Mo

 

Monday, September 7, 2020

Sebastian Steudtner German pro-surfer catches 115 foot wave in Portugal

 Sebastian Steudtner at Nazare, Portugal

115 feet!  But how does it end?


Embedded video 

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Swamped: At Least 4 Boats Sink During ‘Trump Boat Parade’ in Texas, Officials Say - The New York Times

This stupidity astonishes.  Lake Travis is fed by two dams which form Inks Lake on the Colorado River (NOT the one that runs through the Grand Canyon].  It's a sliver that looks perhaps 100 yards wide to me.  10 miles an hour by these boats is a lot of displacement.  Why these guys put these big boats in that river for a Trump parade is a mystery to me.  Hail to the Chief, I guess.  What coud go wrong?

At Least 4 Boats Sink During ‘Trump Boat Parade’ in Texas, Officials Say - The New York Times

Owners of boats of “all shapes and sizes” were encouraged to participate and to decorate their craft with “as many Trump flags” as possible at the event in Lake Travis in Texas, a Facebook page said.

Multiple boats in distress, sinking at Trump Boat Parade on Lake Travis | KEYE

Multiple boats in distress, sinking at Trump Boat Parade on Lake Travis | KEYE

Thursday, September 3, 2020

The last year? For 100 years the Quinn Family has delivered the mail to Penobscot Bay islands


“I’m in love with that boat,” Ms. Quinn said, sighing.



The Eagle Island Light is a landmark on the East Penobscot Bay.  Author Ben Howe's family maintains it, the sort of act of love for a place that makes Maine Maine.  Here he tells the story of the Quinns who have lived on the high mile square island a mile west of Little Deer Isle, one of a group of islands that make the Bay a mystical archipelago.  I'll let him Ben tell the story.  Be sure to click through to the whole piece in the Times.  - GWC

  The last year? For 100 years the Quinn Family has delivered the mail to Penobscot Bay islands

 By 

HANCOCK COUNTY, MAINE — In blinding fog, an aging boat called the TM 2 zigzagged through the Cricket Hole, a shallow reef in Maine’s Penobscot Bay. The ocean’s calm surface concealed a maze of unseen ledges, around which the TM 2’s captain, Karl Osterby, cut a tight course. The boat soon approached an aluminum dock on Great Spruce Head Island, where a man in shorts and rubber boots awaited.

“Another busy day?” the man said, his sarcasm as evident — this being Maine — as the invisible bottom of the Cricket Hole. Mr. Osterby said nothing and held out an all but empty canvas bag of U.S. mail with one hand, as the TM 2 glided past the dock without stopping. There was a single passenger aboard (me). In the state that calls itself Vacationland, high season had just begun.

Normally, by July, the mail boat that serves six of the small and rugged islands of northern Penobscot Bay — Barred, Butter, Eagle, Bear, Scrag and Great Spruce Head — would be weighed down with letters and packages, plus a dozen or so passengers at $25 per ride. Some riders would have been sightseers scanning the reef-laden harbors for porpoises and harbor seals, and some would have been seasonal residents of the islands. Many in the latter group would be stranded without the mail boat — a lifeline delivering essentials like prescriptions, groceries and, this year, ballots.

ImageKarl Osterby, 63, a boat captain, caretaker of the Quinn family property, and sole year-round resident of Eagle Island, Maine, delivers the day's mail by boat to the several islands in Penobscot Bay.
Credit...Tristan Spinski for The New York Times

Operating the route has been the responsibility of one family since 1905 — and this year is likely to be the last because of the hardships imposed by Covid-19.

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