Skip to main content

Sailing Northward...Baxter Bound




Good Fall Morning to all! It’s great to be back home, back by the sea and yet it was great to be in Maine’s North Woods away from it all! Annie & I have just finished our 4 day camping trip with 19 middle school students to Baxter State Park. One of the many amazing moments of the trip was making the connection of land and sea…


My first day of the trip was filled with canoeing on Ambajejus Lake to learn about Maine’s logging industry of the past. The Boom House Museum, set out on an island on the lake used to house 11 fellows who’s job was to gather the cut logs as they came down the river to the lake into a large circle, or rather a “boom” that was held together by chained logs. It’s very similar to how fisherman work a seine’s fishing net to gather herring. Once the boom was filled, a towboat would then hitch up to it and tow it down the river system of northern Maine to Millinocket or Bangor to the sawmills. In Bangor sawn boards were then loaded on schooners and taken to sea via the Penobscot River and delivered all over the world. It was so interesting to be in the middle of the state of Maine, camping alongside the Penobscot River and learning about the logs being driven down the river and having spent the whole summer sailing on the schooner at the other end of the river (at Fort Point). It was a cool connection to make.

We were even fortunate enough to spend time with a fellow who was a deckhand on the towboats and worked the last river drive in 1971. He now care takes the Boom House and builds birch bark canoes, which were awesome! They are still heavily logging Northern Maine, only to be witnessed by the droves of logging trucks barreling down the roads, loaded way too high & driving way too fast! Long gone are the river drives & booms being towed.

Another day was spent hiking up Sentinel Mountain, which Mt. Katahdin looks down upon. We were in search of moose and only came upon their great gift to the earth…

One of the class teachers had hiked this very mountain trail about 15-20 years prior and told the class his tale of meeting a thru hiker on the Appalachian Trail which passes thru the area. The hiker had started in Georgia and was completing the trek with just his dog, his Seeing Eye dog at that. This gentleman had somehow managed to make the journey all while being blind. It totally amazed us all at hearing this tale and so we made a point along our journey upward at taking turns being the blind hiker and being the seeing eye dog. How that gentleman did it was more than we could fathom! Our hike up the brightly fall colored trail ended in a cloud of mist with a brief glimpse of the valley below. Katahdin came out and greeted us as we descended…an awesome sight worthy of a long pause in the hike.

The woods were peaceful, the lake graceful and being there with a group of exceptional students was the icing on the cake. It was a sweet ending for the long summer for Annie & I. And as Thoreau once said, “We need the tonic of wildness…we can never have enough of nature…”.
Have a great day. Be well. Do good.

Comments

AL from Alabama said…
It is a small world. The blind hiker you mentioned is Bill Irwin, and his dog's name was Orient. He published a book called "Blind Courage" of which he gave me a signed copy in May of 1993. It was amazing to hear him speak of his trip. Last I heard of him he was living in North Carolina and publishing a newsletter called the "Orient Express" I do know his beloved dog Orient passed away only a few years after the trip. I highly recommend the book, I have seen it in some specialty stores that cater to the hiker. (If you cannot find it let me know, I would be glad to share mine).

I found the small sections of the Appalachian trail I have hiked difficult with both eyes open. Please do not ask Ed about a place called "Charlie's Bunion". It would dash any hope (as though I really had any) of ever climbing to the crosstrees of the Mary Day.
AL from Alabama said…
Follow up to my previous comment. A quick google search led me to Bill Irwin's website. Apparently he now lives in Sebec, in a state called Maine and is doing well.
Unknown said…
Jen,

Thanks for the fabulous pictures and the narrative. I hope you and Annie had as good a time on the trip as you seemed to be having planning it back in mid-September.

I read a book some time ago about Bill Irwin, a blind hiker who, along with his dog, Orient, completed the Appalachian trail. The title is Blind Courage written by Bill and David McCasland. Bill was the first blind person to complete the trail. Reading the book convinced me that hiking the trail is a very arduous endeavor for a sighted person and an amazing and inspiring accomplishment for someone who is blind.
Anonymous said…
Sounds like you and Annie had a great trip! I hiked Katahdin last Saturday (Oct. 13) and thought of you guys, but I think you were hope by then. Hope all is well,
Saphrona

Popular posts from this blog

Hail Mary

My heart is heavy with sadness as I write this particular blog. Since the beginning of August our dear friend and cook for the last 12 years, Mary Barney, had been struggling with cancer. I have intentionally respected Mary’s privacy and I apologize to you for not sharing any news about Mary’s health sooner. On Monday afternoon Mary passed away very peacefully at home, surrounded by friends and “family”. Her departure was as graceful as the rest of her life. Many people, including Jen, have been doing heroic work to support Mary these last few weeks. Oddly enough Mary was never very excited about transitions though this was about the fastest transition she ever made. And as I struggle to let go of Mary I realize I am terrible with transitions as well. We used to joke about how we liked things just the way they are, thank you very much, so why change what is working already even if it might be less labor intensive. Hard works is its own reward. I used to joke about getting Mary a Cui

Fall Maintenance

Good morning everyone. The sun has been kind to us these past few days and the crew has been spending much time aloft prepping and painting the mast heads and tarring the rig as part of our annual fall maintenance schedule. They were a little silly on tar fumes by the end of the day hence the rat board dance moves. Am I the only one who is reminded of Willy Wonka's little friends at the sight of the crew in their tyvek suits? Schoona-loompas? The smell of tar, after all, is what we sailors live for. Extracted from the stumps and roots of pine trees through dry distillation pine tar will cure what ails you especially some skin conditions and any emotional maladies from being too long away from the sea. All we know for sure is that Mary Day’s rigging is kept hail and hearty by coats of tar mixed with boiled linseed oil. Notice that I specified boiled linseed oil and not raw linseed oil. Tar mix with raw linseed oil will not “kick”. Don’t ask me how I know this… just take my wo

Oh Captain, Oh Captain, Please Don't Rumba!

Good morning everyone. Another 6” of snow fell this weekend and we took a few hours to enjoy the wonders of winter here in New England skiing in the woods. The full Wolf Moon on Saturday causing astronomical high tides plus a 1’ tidal surge brought by the low pressure system meant we had tides over the bulkhead in Camden. At low tide just the opposite happens and the tides dip well below normal. I was able to step to the docks from the beach and get aboard the schooner on Friday after work and all was well. I had an interesting email this morning from a wonderful gentleman looking for a vacation to replace a now defunct “windjammer” sailing experience that formerly sailed in the Caribbean. He sent us a very humorous swashbuckling note, complete with colorful pirate party images, wondering if we might be able to fill the void, complete with canons and limbo parties and would the captain be leading the rumba line? I regretted to tell him that we probably did not offer the booty he was