Daily Archives: July 24, 2010
Sunday, July 18
Brent & Rachel Temmer arrived in Kingston today. They flew in to Montreal (from Denver) the night before and took the train to Kingston. I am still feeling pretty blue about my son Steve having to go home so their arrival will cheer me up considerably. Over the past few years Brent & I have talked a number of times about he and Rachel coming to Canada for a visit and now it is finally going to happen. We stayed in the marina for our first night so they could get settled in and start to build up some “sea legs”. I arranged for them to meet me in front of the old steam locomotive in the park in front of the marina. I was waiting on a bench when a local tourism greeter came up to me and struck up a conversation. We chatted for a while and I tried to keep a watch for Brent & Rachel’s taxi from the train station without appearing to be rude to the Kingston ambassador. Just as I was finishing that conversation I saw an empty taxi go past me. I turned around and there were Brent & Rachel facing the other way looking for me! We celebrated being together & headed off to the boat so they could stow their belongings.
We had a late lunch at a nearby pub and then headed off to the local hardware/boating supply store for, you guessed it, more boating supply stuff! Actually it was only a few small things—most importantly a detailed chart of the 1000 Islands where we would be having a great adventure over the next few days. Our next stop was the local grocery store for food provisions, then back to the boat to continue our celebrating our reunion. Brent immediately went to work making awesome Margaritas for the entire crew. Best I have ever had! This man has a way with Tequila, Triple Sec and limes—a concoction that was as smooth as silk. The Margaritas taste like lime flavored lighter fluid compared to Brent’s magic elixir. This stuff was even better for my back than the codeine I had been taking a few days earlier! After a few drinks we teamed up and cooked a great meal, all the while catching up with each other and trading stories—we were gamming big time!
Saturday, July 17
Still anchored in Navy Bay. I intended to stay there another night until a late afternoon squall blew through Kingston and just about layed Ananda over on her side. This was the wildest thing I had ever been in on any boat. I had been staining and varnishing in the galley all day so there were lots of things out of the cupboards, etc.
What a mess after the wind hit! Pounding rain, hail and wind gusts over 30 knots. On the 2nd or 3rd major gust Ananda’s anchor lost it’s hold, cupboard doors in the galley flew open and I started drifting towards the shore. I immediately started up the engine and began to slowly motor away from the shore and towards the center of the little bay. My anchor was all on chain (rather than rope) so I was not too worried about getting it caught up in the propeller because any slack chain that resulted from me moving Ananda would immediately settle to the bottom and I could pass over it without difficulty.
After about 15-20 minutes (which seemed like forever!) the storm finally passed on and the wind dropped to next to nothing. The marine weather radio continued to issue additional severe thunderstorm warnings for the area and they were talking about tornado warnings in the Cornwall area – about 90 miles east of Kingston. That was enough for me. I pulled up the anchor and headed to the City marina. I had had all the excitement I wanted for one day. Plus, I needed the night to clean up the mess!
Friday, July 16
Thursday, July 15
Today is a double-whammy day. I am missing Catherine’s birthday and Steve has to leave for Ottawa today in order to catch his flight home on Friday. We got up early and showered and did laundry. After that we walked up to the boating store to buy some hardware supplies that I needed to help stabilize the dingy davits.
Steve rented a car and drove me to the local Home Depot to return some plumbing parts that I had bought in Coburg and ended up not needing to complete the installation of the new heads. Then he brought me back to the marina and headed off to Ottawa. We had an awesome time together. The only thing that would have made it better would have been if he could have stayed a few days longer and brought his daughter (and my grand daughter) Zoe with him. Oh well, we can always plan on next year’s journey & Zoe will be ready to visit a castle!