Articles

From the Deck: Eclipse

Back in 1932 when I was only 15, astronomers predicted a total eclipse of the sun. The moon was to pass between the sun and the earth and for a moment cover completely the face of the sun. My father decreed this to be an event of historic, cosmic significance that would not recur in

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From the Deck: New mate

After a few elementary instructions, the new mate learns by experience. For instance, never tie up the peapod painter with a slippery hitch. Having her go adrift once is sufficient experience. We were beating out of the harbor with a full load of six passengers in our Friendship sloop. The mate was on the foredeck

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From the Deck

In 1969, The National Geographic Society sent some of its writers and photographers with their families on vacations quite new to each. Dean and Lee Conger and their three boys chose a week on the Maine coast with us on our Friendship sloop, Eastward. She is a 32-foot, wooden, sloop, gaff-rigged, and carrying gaff topsail

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From the Deck

You have a new boat! She is a neat little sloop of which you are sinfully proud. You need a good picture of her. Surely you have a friend with a small power boat and a camera. On the appointed day subject to proper conditions of sun, wind and water, be ready. Scrub off any

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From the Deck

Ploughing up Vinalhaven Late one calm August afternoon, my wife and I in our Friendship sloop Eastward anchored in Carvers Harbor, generally known as Vinalhaven. We felt secure on a quiet night in a good harbor lying to a 35-pound CQR plough anchor, 3 fathoms of chain and a stout rode. We enjoyed the lovely

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From the Deck

On a warm summer afternoon, Mr. Alfred West, among several other sightseers from away, stood on the co-op wharf watching the two “quaint” lobster boats lying alongside the lobster car below. A faint smell of salt bait pervaded the scene. The boats were each about 30 feet long with high, sharp bows, a little coop

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Serious Scientists

Scientists are a serious lot.. Sines and tangents, exponents and roots of radical equations, offer little in the way of humor, and scientific conclusions are rarely cheery. If you catch a fine fat mackerel,  “Don’t eat it. It is loaded with mercury.” “Lobster tamale is pure poison.” ” The average global temperature is rising at

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