We arrived at Jones Falls at about noon to find a group of boats just starting to lock up, so this gave us about an hour to wait. We decided to have lunch and go look at the boats locking. At about 1315 we joined four other boats in a group to lock down. This got us through Jones Falls by 1410. We knew Upper Brewers was only another hour or so away, and the skies didn't look *that* bad, so we decided to press on.
About half an hour in and the skies started to get a bit dark and ominous, and we started to wonder what Mother Nature would have in store for us before we got to Upper Brewers.
Hmm, those look a little nasty |
We had been hearing about problems with that bridge for the last couple days, but we had heard it had been fixed. Wouldn't you know it, but we get there and they couldn't get it open. It took about 15 minutes for them to get the bridge to even start moving, all the while with light liquid sunshine sprinkling from the sky, with promises of more to come. Finally we cleared the bridge and continued on.
We managed to make it to Upper Brewers at 1545, and had been in light to less light rain for about 15 minutes. We got the boat tied up, got it all buttoned up just in time for the rain to stop. *sigh* Mother Nature has my kind of sense of humour... :-)
However, she wasn't done for the night, and we've had two good downpours so far.
At least the heavy stuff waited until after we got in |
I don't think I've ever seen anything like this before |
This beautiful boat was tied up at the Hotel Kenney dock at the bottom of Jones Falls. I knew right away that it was a Kadey Krogen, and after doing some googling narrowed it down to probably being a Krogen 42 widebody.
Kadey Krogen 42 named Outport, out of Toronto |
I heard a pretty funny line today. A cigarette boat (google for what they look like - they are essentially a hull built around engines and a fuel tank that go stinking fast from fuel dock to fuel dock) came in to tie up at the dock so a guy from one of the other boats already here and myself went over to give him a hand with lines. As he was circling the dock I mentioned to the other boater that the cigarette boat probably burnt more fuel just circling the dock than I did all day. The other boater replied that he had heard they use special liquid cooled fuel gauges on those cigarette boats. The liquid cooling is to keep the bearings on the needle from burning out. :-)
We had planned on continuing down to and through Kingston tomorrow, on our way to Trenton. We decided to change that plan when we read the marine forecast for eastern Lake Ontario for Friday and found high winds from the southwest and waves of 1 to 1.5 metres. While we weren't going to be going out on Lake Ontario, the problem is the gap between Amherst and Wolfe Islands. Anything on the lake coming from the southwest gets channelled up into that gap. We found that out on our first season with the boat when a gale on the lake prevented us from getting the boat from Collins Bay to Portsmouth for several days.
It looks like the winds will shift to the northwest on Saturday, so we're going to take a down day here at Upper Brewers tomorrow and take it easy while letting the winds on Lake Ontario blow themselves out.
Rick, it's called a Friendship flag to show relatio.ship between our two countries. We see it a lot in motorcoach resorts and mostly by Canadians.
ReplyDeleteLooks like you are having a lovely trip down the system. Can't believe you passed Morton Bay without anchoring. Though I do know you want to get to Trenton.
ReplyDeleteYes that Kadey Krogen 42 is a lovely boat. It is high on my list of possible boats to do the kind of adventure you are doing.
C-Shel