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December 19, 2001
Brunswick, Georgia

Dear Friends,

The first year of the new millenium has given us many things to think back upon and to recount with gratitude to you, our friends.  We celebrated Christmas of 2000 in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands at a party thrown by ham radio operators for local and visiting radio amateurs alike.  We toasted in the third millenium in true cruiser fashion at midnight Universal Time Coordinated (8:00 PM local time) in the quiet harbor of Hurricane Hole, St. John, USVI.

We left the Virgin Islands at the end of January and had a nice three-day passage reaching and running in strong trade winds to the Turks and Caicos.  We spent most of February exploring the islands of this little country, walking the beaches and snorkeling the waters.  We especially remember one day when we snorkeled at the entrance to the South Caicos channel, where the reef drops away to deep water in a short distance.  There we saw couples of rays swooping and swirling in an incomparable underwater ballet.  A little later the sight of a pair of menacing- looking black-tipped sharks convinced us it was a good time to head back to the dinghy.  Though beachcombing and snorkeling are nice memories, we really spent most of our time sitting aboard Sovereign, reading and waiting for the right weather for each little hop from one place to another.

During March we worked our way up through the Bahamas, from Mayaguana in the south, along Acklins and Long Island, through the Exumas, past Eleuthera, and through the Abacos.  Again we spent our time snorkeling, beachcombing, exploring, reading and, of course, traveling.  We enjoyed a five-day wait for weather in tiny Little Harbor, Long Island with five other boats, playing bocce on the beach during the day and exchanging sea stories over cocktails in the evenings.  Our favorite part of the Bahamas was Thunderball Cave in the Exumas, where we dove under a rock ledge to surface inside a large, hidden cavern, and snorkeled through schools of fearless fish.  

In early April we made a quick two-day passage from the northern Abacos to Brunswick, Georgia, our first time back on the North American continent in a year and a half.  We took the opportunity to rent a car and drive around the southeast, visiting friends and family we had not seen in the past two years.  After our fill of visiting and filling Sovereign’s lockers with provisions, we headed north up the Intracoastal Waterway.  

It took us about three weeks of mostly motoring to make the 700 miles from Brunswick to Hampton, Virginia.  We had been along this route many times in the past, but we enjoyed the calm anchorages, manageable distances, and readily available weather reports that make cruising this area so much easier than it is in the Caribbean.  After a short wait for a weather window, we headed offshore for Block Island, Rhode Island, where we arrived to the scent of wild roses drifting on the breeze.

We worked our way up the coast of New England during June, reveling in the “natural air conditioning” provided by the breeze wafting along the cool coastal waters.  For the first time in nearly two years we found ourselves wearing long pants, socks, and shoes, and even the occasional jacket.  After sweating for so long in the tropics, we really enjoyed the change.  Maine is our favorite place of all, and we enjoyed sailing “down east” with the prevailing summer breezes and watching the typical wildlife:  seals shyly poking their heads above water, sunfish the size of car tires basking in the sunshine, and cormorants and guillimonts scurrying away at Sovereign's approach.  We spent the 4th of July in Southwest Harbor, Maine, watching the fireworks shoot through a hundred feet of clear air only to burst in a muted diffusion of fog.

We spent the balance of July in Nova Scotia, exploring the eastern shore from Cape Sable to Halifax.  We found Nova Scotia like Maine, “only more so”.  The water was a little colder, the fog a little denser, the waves a little larger, and the people just as friendly.  We spent about three weeks there before returning to Maine.  We regretted having so little time to spend, but we had travel commitments for my family reunion in early August that required our return.

After the reunion we cruised Maine for the rest of August, going as far east as Roque Island, then working our way back along the winding, intricate, and intermittent route of Maine’s Inside Passage.  The highlight of this part of the trip was gathering fresh mussels at low tide and steaming them for the evening meal.  We worked our way back towards the west and south, taking advantage of occasional gaps in the prevailing southwesterly winds, and mostly motoring.  By September 11th we had made it as far as Castine, Maine, where we had just enough television reception to watch the terrible events of that day unfold.  As we recovered from our shock, we continued down the coast, making an effort to visit new harbors and a few of our very favorite old ones.

As autumn progressed, we sat out a series of strong cold fronts and we tried to dash south in the small openings between them.  We spent three days in Cuttyhunk, Massachusetts waiting while a gale blew over, and another ten days in Newport, Rhode Island as a combination of gales overhead and tropical storms well offshore provided either strong winds or high seas that kept us put.  We snuck into Long Island Sound on a short break between storms, and worked our way westward up the Sound in only three days.  We stopped in Oyster Bay and took the Long Island Railroad into New York City to see the devastation for ourselves and to heed the Mayor’s advice that the best way to help New York was to come and spend money.

After leaving New York, we passed the Mid-Atlantic states in two short offshore hops, from Sandy Hook, New Jersey to Ocean City, Maryland, and then on to Hampton, Virginia.  Mid-October in Virginia is the height of boater’s migration season, and we locked through the Dismal Swamp with 14 other boats.  Changeable weather and more offshore storms kept us in the Intracoastal Waterway for two and a half weeks.  The low point of our trip here was snagging a gill net around Sovereign’s propeller in North Carolina and having to hire a diver to cut it away.  We had a short 36-hour passage from Georgetown, South Carolina, which brought us into Brunswick, Georgia in building wind and seas, and we docked Sovereign at Brunswick Landing Marina on November 12, 2001.

Sovereign is showing the signs of having been “ridden hard and put away wet” for the past two and a half years, so we have decided to take some time off from cruising and get her back into shape.  We have rented an apartment here in Brunswick and have moved everything off the boat, including ourselves.  For now we are working on re-varnishing the interior and touching up some of the rusty spots on deck.  We are enjoying all the amenities of shoreside living that we have missed for most of the last 13 years.  We are being enticed by hot showers, cable TV, air conditioning, and a refrigerator that opens at the front and doesn’t require us to run the engine for an hour just to keep it cold.

We are looking ahead to 2002 with not a little trepidation.  We know that we will need to start making money again soon, but we haven’t worked out the details.  We would like to do something less stressful than our former careers.  Jim is hoping to make use of his commercial captain’s license, and Cathy is thinking about a job in a bookstore or perhaps a veterinarian’s office.  For the first time in two decades Jim is contemplating a future that might not include living aboard a boat.  For two old salts like us, this land life--despite the fact that the bed doesn’t move and we don’t have to worry about dragging anchor—is just a little scary.

We wish you the best this Christmastime and throughout the New Year.

Smooth sailing,

Jim and Cathy

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