New York, New York; second time (11739 miles)




Fika with Shirley, she comes to New York, lovely to have company, my favourite company too!

 (Fika is a Swedish word for coffee break, must have something sweet. Fika is Swedish for Coffee spelt backwards... In belfastese it means Elevensus)

There is also beer (that night)



sort of beer...

Anyway, to get to New York I have to leave Boston after Nick has flown home.


My last sight of the city, and then we approach the islands that separate Boston from open water, as I said in a previous blog, some of the islands are parks and would be a great day trip from the city. Boston is my favourite city so far.




And goodbye to the islands of Boston - and it's quirky lighthouse


I have a long trip to get South to the Cape Cod Canal and end up going through it in the darkness, fairly tricky, as was the pickup of a buoy in a tide current ridden bay!.


(Screendumps of OpenCPN and free NOAA charts, not to be used for Navigation)
I have the advantage of having come this way before.


The gap at the 16 foot depth is only 300 feet wide. The cross current was 2 to 3 knots. I rammed the mooring buoy so it was amidships and hooked it with my Swedish mooring hook lashed tight to a rope and cleat - this gives me time to lie down on the sidedeck, lean over and thread the bow lines through the eye on the top of the buoy. I'm sure you can appreciate that the cameraman was busy at this point. I have also lassoed bouys before but it is difficult if the buoy is pressed hard against the boat in a current. YippyAyeAh.

And onwards to Port Washington. I visit Newport again and this time go to the Newport Yacht club - famous as the endpoint of the singlehanded across the atlantic race. (and others). The harbourmaster had told me I can get in if I am a member of a "Yacht Club". I am fairly sure I have to be a member of a "Reciprocating yacht club". I wing it, I say I am a member of Donaghadee Sailing Cub (and the Ocean Crusing club) and the barmaid asks to see my membership card, which I have conveniently forgotten - A friendly couple say they will sign me in and I enjoy their company whilst ordering local ale and meatloaf - brilliant and under 10 bucks!.

Unbeknown to me, my nephew Scott is sitting in a different yacht club half a mile across the bay in Newport, but we do get to meet in New York for 30 minutes a few days later. (Scott lives in London but was sailing with the New York Yacht Club in Newport for a few days. He was also putting video of candycrush being played onto the side of a massive building, it's what he does (the video bit, not the candycrush bit)


His long arms are very useful for Selfies, This is just before Shirley and I see "The Ferryman" a most moving 3 hour play about... Well, about a family and friends in a farm when the hunger strike was going on. An insight into the IRA and frankly a really good piece of theatre - I'll not spoil it but you should try and see it. It will make you cry, and laugh, and sigh...


After Newport, I retrace my steps, stop in New London and then head to Port Jefferson where I experiment with putting down two anchors 60 degrees apart. I use my Danforth as I suspect it is better if the mud is soft enough to enjoy getting plowed in long furrows hundreds of yards long with a CQR. It works though I suspect I only lay to the Danforth, it was a bug*er to get up and I may have slightly strained my back - the fairleads at the front of Shadowmere hold two 45lb CQRs so I had dropped the Danforth from the bow cleat to Port. It has two different sizes of chain and rope so using the windlass is not convenient. After Port Jefferson I head to Port Washington where I take a buoy - two nights free then 25 bucks a night. Cheap but no showers, poor public toilets. You do get water taxi service although at this time of year it stops at 8pm. A big advantage of Port Washington is that (a) it is a lovely example of small town America and (b) it has a 45 minute train ride to Central Manhattan for 8 bucks. And Shirley is arriving in Manhattan!

Before heading to Shirley I make a mistake, for the second time. In the photograph below, you will get points awarded if you realise that you are supposed to attach the black thingy to the very sharp metal thingy below it. Yes, I swiped my beard with a number -1 and removed everything. And of course having done one side, I had to do the other. That skin hasn't seen daylight since I was 18. My mother always said my beard hid a weak chin.


Off to get Shirley


And here she is


Once on board bad weather sets in for a day, we get a few jobs done. Shirley (Paint Wizard) redoes the heads having discovered american paint - latex water based, really good!


Front and Back


And I hide up the mast. Thank God and Christine for my new knee.



I cook up steaks and I have to admit, the Americans do great meat, the steaks actually melted in our mouth. And no, they weren't frozen


And then in on the water taxi to explore. Always better with two, particularly with Shirley.



Chairs and Adirondaks



Note these are really bad Adirondaks, I photographed them to remind me to fit beer holders to my design when I get home. (the chair above has no curved seat or back. Although to be fair it does fold.)

Port Washington has a dockside walk adorned with "scuptures" and artworks. We see these wind chimes and I add then to the things to do when I get home

We took a video, forgetting it had sound, please ignore





The town has a great community spirit,and many shops that sell nice things (as well as shops where you can buy a loaf of bread - my acid test of a good place!



In fact we go to a local concert in the community centre by JJ Grey, a legend in his own town. We visit the Library - a fantastic place/

And Shirley buys a cushion - or what will become a cushion (plus read the writing!)



And of course Fika


And then New York. We visit MoMa, we do this by getting the Metro to the Met and then Walking to MoMa 20 minutes away (oops) But it is a nice day for a walk...


Interestingly, outside the Met is a protest by some religious people, Quite adamant they are right. (I suppose they always are)They put on a concerted effort to get their message across. From Choir singing to Bagpipes


At the Museum for Modern Art (MoMa - you knew that wasn't the Met didn't you? I meet an old friend - does his bum look big in this. And no, I am not misbehaving.





MoMa has a lot of art displayed - a lot of Picassos and interestingly displayed with compatriots and showing a historical timeline of his development. We snapped pictures of some stuff. The displays were crowded though.



I prefer the one in the background, the one in the foreground reminds me of Davros - you know Davros - the founder of the Daleks



Now that is a starry night


Now where did I put my car keys



Words fail me, let's try initials .... WTF

The scenery outside in their courtyard was amazing


And then there were the shops


We visit Macys It's big, it's expensive. We did not get asked "Are you being Served" - no hang on, that was Gracey's wasn't it?

It does not have husband chairs, I usually seek these out when shopping with Shirley. It does have a high tech play area... sexism is real, its full of men. It is their Samsung exhibit.


3D is coming, so is the real world!


These sensors monitor all sorts of things and let you know when stuff happens in your house - I have built things like this but the current fear of big data mining and hacking might make them hard to market (at present). The "internet of things" is taking a bit of time to catch on. Though I do like the Nest - an online thermostat and there is a video camera online doorbell with microphone and speaker that is kinda cool...

My top prize goes to the Samsung pen that will work with any android or Ios device. No lag, I would have loved to have this when I was teaching the great unwashed how to be engineers or failed graduates - their choice. I still covet one for my random scribbles...


And Shirley buys a bag. 


And I have no idea what I am doing beneath this Call of Duty poster, maybe Shirley said adopt an aggressive pose?


And then all too soon, Shirley has to fly hone. In the end the bus comes quickly and the goodbye is really quick - sometimes better as both of us are a bit tearful. 

Still, only 8 weeks to Christmas in the Virgin Islands.

 I head back to Port Washington, Alone. And plot with the weather gods to head South. There are a few other yachts in the same boat (sic).

In the end I travel in company with Dima - a New Yorker from Belarus with a boat called Cheers. We do a 110 mile run in convoy from Port Washington to Atlantic City which is 30 miles North (East actually) of Cape May and the Delaware inlet. I hope to go straight from there to the Chesapeake inlet - 160 miles of open sea. The weather is not very amenable to my hopes but we do what we can. Once I get to the Chesapeake and the start of the ICW I am more sheltered and slightly more immune to bad weather.