Sea Pal's great loop adventures

Nice update! You two have been making some miles! Sorry to hear about your laptop, but it's good to hear from you.

Sure understand what you mean about size. When we were on the Erie Canal, there was a lot of interest in our C-Dory... mostly from people with much larger boats. We gave a few tours to those big boat folks - some could see the advantage of something trailerable, others seemed aghast that we could manage with such small accommodations. 8)

Have fun... and search out Lake Bob... fair is fair. :wink:

Best wishes,
Jim & Joan
 
Hi B&B,

Sure fun to follow along on your trip. Thanks for keeping us "in the loop". What a trip. NYC to Chicago, --Plus. Way to go.

3 Recomendations:
Travel Safe, Have Fun, and Stay Cool

Harvey
SleepyC :moon
 
Bob and Bettsy The best weather for SW florida is actually Mar- May and Oct.-Nov (if no hurricanes are near)
Feb can still be a little on the chilly side So maybe first week of March - early May usually perfect weather .

How far will you get this summer if you are near Chicago now you might want to get in on the upper mississippi gathering in Sept. Will you tow the boat back to Oregon or just keep it in storage in midwest area ?? Have fun and Godspeed

Looking forward to your Fl trip. Jim and Loree
 
Bob & Betsy, thanks for the update. Sounds like you are making great progress and having a wonderful time. I hope our paths will cross in the future so I can hear more details about the trip. Good luck and safe travels.

Dick
 
Thank you all so much for your interest in our doings. We've traveled 2,030 miles at this point. Will be adding another 70 something miles tomorrow as we head to Chicago.
We've been in South Haven, Mi. for the last three nights. Very nice municipal marina and pleasant town but again we have dock heights appropriate for ocean liners. They were built when the lake was at least 4 feet higher. Obviously we're not talking floating.
We had the sort of time warped, haunted experience of spending a month at an un-named, long in the tooth, marina in Holland,Mi. last Sunday night !! The captain could hardly wait to get underway Monday morning. Maybe that's why we love South Haven so much !!

Tuesday night we had two big lightening storms several hours a part. A fun exciting time, where we were grateful to be safely tied up in a slip. The high winds continued yesterday with small craft warnings and waves to 6-8 ft. We watched as some boaters headed out the channel toward Lake Michigan betting how long it would be before they turned around. Fortunately everyone of them did do an about face.

Yes, Wild Blue Jim, we have had interest in our little boat. Usually from men and mostly the lock masters. They were really intrigued especially because it is what they called, an Or. boat ( Oregon reg).

And Florida Jim, thanks for the input. By the time we get to your neck
of the woods ( to complete the southern part of The Loop ) it probably will be early March. We are planning to leave Sea Pal behind when we return to Bend this fall and will come pick her up in Feb.Unfortunately we will miss the gathering on the Mississippi as we will be way south on the rivers by then. Sea Pal needs to come out of the water by mid Sept. so we can get home by very early Oct. Some people aren't retired yet you know. We feel fortunate to have such a good manager that allows us to take this amount of special time away.

Wish you all were here. Remember message is by the Burks and typos by iPad .
 
B&B
Wow, over 2000 miles since we first met you guys in Virginia just a few months ago, what an adventure! Glad to hear from you and good to know you are safe and making good progress, keep the posts coming.
Rich and Kathie
 
***

Hi B&B......

Great to read you updates.
Travel safe.


(presently sitting in Lady KC.......
thank goodness for a/c.....
it has been hot in NC :hot )

***
 
B&B, I see no typos, great story! But also, :cry: I see no pictures in your album. Remember, they're worth a thousand typos :wink: Send me an address along the way and I'll send you a camera!! :lol:

Charlie
 
Sea Pal's crew is closing in on the end of her recent adventure. The boat is out of the water and will be at her home port in Bend,Or. in two days !!!!,
It is a very bittersweet time for her crew who are anxious to get home but have had the time of their live's the last four months traveling The Great Loop.

We will reminisce with you a little on where we've been since our last post.
We picked a perfect morning to cross Lake Michigan from South Haven to Chicago. You never know until you venture out there if the weather/water conditions will be as forecast, as we found out crossing Lake Ontario earlier in the trip. Our crossing was most pleasant and swift -- 70 miles in just about 3 hrs. Very exciting when we got our first glimpse of the Chicago skyline.

We stayed three nights at the Burnham Marina which is the closest one to the museum campus. It was very hot and muggy and experienced 4 storms while there but boy did we have a good time and cram a lot in our 3 days. Chicago has done such a great job of highlighting their waterfront and making it accessible for everyone to appreciate. We did three museums -- the Field Museum of Natural History (our favorite), the aquarium and the planetarium. We walked & walked & walked -- down to Millennium Park to see all that it had to offer, walked Michigan Avenue & ate at an outdoor cafe where the locals "hang" on Friday nights. Took the bus to the Magnificent Mile and people watched. Couldn't go to Grant Park as it was closed off for Loolapalooza. A weekend long music event that headlines 20 bands and draws 90,000 people !!!! It added to the Chicago experience for us.

We left Chicago on a Monday morning and took the scenic route on the Chicago River right through the downtown!!! What a unique perspective of that great old and new architecture. One of the highlights of our trip.

So began our southerly cruise down the rivers. The Chicago River met up with the Illinois shortly after leaving The Windy City. This was our first encounter with serious commercial traffic. Thus the start of our love hate relationship with the tows. They are completely fascinating to look at and to listen to the " cap's" bantering back & forth on the radio. But these babies are huge with always at least 3 barges abreast ( often 5 !!) and always at least 5 barges long. So a minimum of 15 barges to a tow. When they go up the Mississippi they move some serious water. Their prop wash quickly becomes a prop scouring with waves easily 6 ft. high and very close together. Sea Pal learned quickly how to negotiate but usually not without a little colorful language to help relieve the stress of the moment. These tows
are to be respected at all times.

One particularly challenging event occurred at lock 52 on the Ohio River
four miles before Paducah. Waiting at a lock on the rivers is a normal occurrence and this day was no exception --- well,yes, maybe it was. The two hour wait we were told by the lock master to expect turned into four and that was just to get in the lock. We were in the lock with part of a tow ( they often have to break up the barges because they won't all fit in at one time) and apparently it was having some kind of issues getting tied up. We were in the lock probably an hour before the lock started doing it's business -- very unusual in our experience. It also was unusual in our experience to run totally in the dark. Which is exactly what happened when we got out of that lock. Blackness everywhere. Heavy cloud cover and no moon. Barge lights everywhere to try and make sense of. It took over an hour but we felt our way those four miles to a public dock in Paducah --- no matter that our cruising guide said you could only use it for 15 minutes while launching. Who is launching at 10 p.m. anyway!!! We left early before the dock police showed up. The First Mate would have had lots to tell them though as she was sure that she observed drug deals going on through the night as autos met up for brief meetings down by the waterfront !!! Never a dull moment.

There's a million things we are leaving out. But we did do St. Louis and the Gateway Arch. Impressive. So fast forward. By the time we got to the very beginning of the Tombigbee Waterway Hurricane Irene was really getting our attention. Enough so that we rented a car and drove almost 1,000 miles down to get our truck and trailer in Chesapeaske, Va. which is near Norfolk. We felt fortunate that we were able to go and remove our valuables from harm's way. Many were not as lucky.

We brought them back to northern Mississippi and did some fancy maneuvers to get Sea Pal down to Columbus, Ms. on the water & got the wheeled vehicles reunited with her there. We took her out of the water at noon last Friday with a lot of mixed feelings.

What a wonderful adventure we have had these last four months. We've traveled 3,050 miles on the water in 12 states, plus Canada and Lakes Ontario, Huron & Michigan. We've met so many great people. Many are other boaters, but the most special to us have been the people we've met who actually have lived a long the way.

North America seems much smaller to us now and we feel more connected to it. Watching the news and weather reports will have a different significance to us. For this we feel very grateful.

Signing off from Rock Springs, Wy. Tomorrow night Wallmart in Sweet Home, Idaho then home !!
Bob and Betsy
 
It has been a privilege and a delight to follow along - thanks for the updates and kudos on making this trip! :thup

Best wishes,
Jim
 
Wow what a summer to remember .I'm glad no problems and your back safe and sound in Oregon . Now when are you coming back to finish the loop will it be in March 2012 ? Inquiring minds want to kow Jim and Loree
 
Bob and Betsy, It was our pleasure to meet you both last May for the Carolina\VA Mini-loop. We have enjoyed and been in awe of your posts throughout the summer. Ernie and I both hope you will bring Sea Pal back east soon.



Erma
 
B&B
Sure good to hear from you guys and good to know all is well, what an inspiring and challenging voyage. We hope the last few days on the ride home are peaceful with good weather.

Rich and Kathie
 
Wonderful Trip B&B, thanks so much for sharing. My memories of the Natural History Museum in Chicago (I think) were as a kid in the late 40's early 50's :roll: . I remember a "real" coal mine you could go down into, and a captured German Submarine, on the hard that you could tour. Are they still there, or has my memory given way to fantasies?

At any rate, great story, glad IRENE treated you both well, still recovering here but we're all fine and safe.

Go home, enjoy it and keep in touch.

Charlie and Sally
 
Hi Bob and Betsy,

What a great trip. Glad to hear you are safe and sound and back in the home country. Thanks for sharing, it was fun. Funny, my memories of Chicago, (there for a year of school on the waterfront campus of Northwestern) are of studying at Buckingham fountain, and Christmas walk to the WaterTower place, Michigan Ave shut down for fear of ice chunks falling off the high rise hotels, and one afternoon the green sky and reports of the waterspout just of the Pier building. Someday, maybe, the SleepyC will make that trip, so thanks for the great write up.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon
 
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