Welcome to the Blog! If this is your first time visiting, please read the Preface. If not, welcome back.
-Paul

Thursday, October 25, 2012

10/25/12 Washington D.C.

Hi everyone,
            Well, we have had a busy week. It took us two days to travel up the Potomac River to D.C., where we spent five days before departing back down the Potomac River on another two days of traveling. We finished the trip back down the Potomac several days ago, but I was not able to write a post then because of our high data usage for the month (We have a wireless hotspot from Verizon with ten gigabytes of data per month, but we use almost all of it doing our schoolwork online). In any case, we had a few fun days in D.C. exploring all of the monuments and sights. When we pulled into the harbor, I was delighted to see several batteries of NASAMS(Norwegian Advanced Surface to Air Missile Systems) scanning the skies for possible attacks. Knowing that Washington D.C. was not going to be carpet-bombed with nuclear missiles during our stay was very reassuring. We anchored off the Capital Yacht Club marina, and stayed as guests of the marina. Interestingly, we anchored within sight of the boat that took my entire eighth grade class on a river cruise during our end-of-middle-school trip to D.C. last year. Another interesting thing about where we stayed was that it was a major helicopter patrol route. Every fifteen minutes or so, a different helicopter would fly over. They would come by low and fast, perhaps a hundred and fifty feet above the water, and by the time you looked out the window they would already have passed over you and be heading away. During our stay we saw one black hawk helicopter and also the Presidential Helicopters twice. The Presidential Helicopters(Marine One) always fly in pairs so that one can act as a decoy for the other. In any case, that was as close as we came to seeing Obama.
            When we arrived in D.C. it was around noon. After lunch and a check-in at the marina, it was one or two in the afternoon. Julia and I went for a kayak that afternoon, exploring up the river almost to the reflecting pool in front of the Jefferson Memorial. When we got back we had a nice happy hour, even though it was clouded over by then and getting dark. That night we took a trip to a local outdoor seafood market to get fresh food for dinner. The market was only a couple hundred yards away from the marina, and was filled with vendors selling fish that were caught only hours before. It was a massive affair, with hundreds of feet of iced display counters showcasing all manor of seafood. Clams, crabs, oysters, salmon fillets, shark fillets, whole tuna, just to name a few. We tried king crab legs for the first time, and we also had a swordfish steak on the grill.
             The next morning we headed out early for a big day of sightseeing. We went through the Roosevelt Memorial, the Jefferson Memorial, the Martin Luther King Junior Memorial, the Vietnam War Memorial, the Lincoln Memorial, and stood in front of the White House. Afterward, we had a quick lunch and continued onward, touring the National Air and Space Museum on the Mall. Needless to say, it was a long day and afterward we were exhausted. We returned to the seafood market and got a couple dozen clams and some salmon for dinner. I think we were all in bed by ten o'clock, we were so tired.
              The next morning we got up and walked to the Holocaust museum. We did not have much time there, however, because we had made an appointment to visit the Capitol building at one o'clock. If you have never been to the Capitol building, I highly recommend it. The building itself is magnificent, and the tour guides point out all sorts of interesting historical information.While history is not my favorite subject, I enjoyed the tour. After we toured the Capitol we did not have enough time to see anything else, so we asked Siri for a nearby restaurant that served ice cream. Twenty minutes and two miles through the hot city streets later, we finally found our ice cream store underground in a subway terminal. The ice cream was a serve-yourself style, like the Nuvita in Branford. Afterward we returned to the boat, when my mother's friend Karyn came to visit. She lives nearby, and we enjoyed another dinner of grilled scallops and shrimp with her.
             The next day we had a nice leisurely start to our morning and later went to the Natural History Museum. In front of the Museum there was a kiosk where a man was selling Segway tours of Washington. While we did not go on the tour, we instead chose to do an intro to Segway riding. All four of us tried riding the Segway; Only Dad had previous experience on a Segway but they are very easy to learn and we ended up taking lots of pictures and having a lot of fun. Afterward we toured the Natural History Museum, and walked a few blocks to meet a friend of ours. We got back fairly late in the afternoon, which is not a good time to be walking around in that area of D.C., but we got home safely and had another great dinner on the boat.
             The next morning we enjoyed a rather slow morning. Julia and I went to the Capital Yacht Club to use their wi-fi to get school work done, and afterwards we went to the National Portrait Gallery. After a mercifully short and, in my opinion, rather dull, tour through a museum filled with portraits of different presidents, we crossed the street to the Spy Museum. It showcased the history of spies and their effect on historical events, which was more interesting. As we left the museum, it was starting to rain, so we took a subway ride to a local Safeway grocery store for more food. By the time we had finished shopping, it was pouring outside, so we had to get a taxi to the marina. The taxi had a broken blower, and we had to drive with the windows down so the windshield did not fog up! It was still raining heavily as we got to the marina, and we were invited to stay for the club's 120th Founding day celebration. We stayed, and met a lot of wonderful people. Julia and I were the only two children there, but we were still accepted immediately into the group and we ended up having a lot of fun. The highlight of the evening was a speech by James P. Muldoon, who is a widely renowned sailor. We went home feeling like we had just made a lot of new friends. Unfortunately, we had to leave the next day, but we had a great visit to D.C. and we had a lot of great experiences.
Julia and I kayaking with the Washington Monument in the background.

A turtle that we found on our kayaking trip.

The family in front of the Washington Monument and the tidal basin.

The Jefferson Memorial.

The view from the Jefferson Memorial.

Inside the Roosevelt Memorial.

Julia and I posing in front of Roosevelt's dog, "Fala." Its ears are a golden color
because people rub them for good luck.

A waterfall in the Roosevelt Memorial.

The Martin Luther King Junior Memorial. "Out of the mountain of despair,
a stone of hope." I love that quote.


The view out of the Lincoln Memorial.

A reflection off the Vietnam War Memorial.

Julia and I in front of the White House. 

Inside the Air and Space Museum: This orange plane "Glamorous Glennis" was the
first plane to break the sound barrier.

The original Wright Brothers plane. 


Missile batteries overlooking the river.
Julia and I going kayaking.

Mom and Julia with the river in the background.
The Capitol building.

The main rotunda inside the Capitol.

A different room in the Capitol.
The center stone of the Capitol, which also happens to be the exact spot
where eight major roads meet in Washington D.C.


A panorama of the seafood market.

Another shot of all the different shops in the seafood market.

Dad and Julia shucking clams for a happy hour on the boat.

Julia petting a police horse "Big Mac."

First time on a Segway.

Julia's turn! Here she is threading her way through a line of cones.



What a gorgeous day!

Island Cat with us on board.

Serena does not like looking at the camera.
Making new friends! 

In front of the Capital Yacht Club.

The cake at the Yacht Club.

A wonderful sunset over the Potomac.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

10/13/12 Chesapeake City to Solomon Island


Hi everyone,
Since I last wrote a post a lot of stuff has happened. From Chesapeake City we sailed to Baltimore, where we anchored in the inner harbor (less than a hundred feet from the World Trade Center) and spent a night feeling wonderfully out of place in the middle of a bustling city. That night the Baltimore Orioles played the Yankees at a nearby stadium, and we could hear the roar of the crowds every time someone made a home run. It was very exciting. The next morning we moved a mile away to a local marina, where we took on more water and spent a night with the heat on, a first for the trip. The heater in Julia's room didn't work, while mine did. Suddenly, the cat was my new best friend! That day we walked along the shoreline of Baltimore, took lots of photos, and generally had a good time. Even during the off-season for tourism, there were still a lot of people and a lot to see and do. The next morning we spent all day traveling, during which time we doing school work and other less interesting tasks. With one night stopover in a small inlet inside of Gibson Island, we arrived at Annapolis the next day. We anchored just off of the soccer and football fields of the naval academy. While at Annapolis we toured the naval academy, explored town, and went to the boat show that was taking place at the time. In town, Julia and I found a shop that sold fudge, and we bought a pound and a half to take back to the boat. While on the boat, swarms of small sailboats would come out to join us and the other boats in the anchorage. Other highlights include seeing an F-16 fighter plane in flight circling the academy, and waking up to the sound of a 50-cal machine gun being fired. After deciding that our next major stop would be Washington D.C., we embarked today on the first of a three-day trip up the Potomac river. Right now we are in Solomon Island, Maryland. Tomorrow we will continue up the Potomac river, and my next blog post should be about everything we do and see in Washington D.C.
-Paul
A zebra that we saw en route to Baltimore. I thought Dad was kidding when he told me... 

The buoy at the entrance to Baltimore that marks where Francis Scott Key wrote the
Star Spangled Banner while imprisoned on a British ship.
A Ripley's Believe It Or Not museum in Baltimore.

A decommissioned submarine in Baltimore.

Me holding a 10,000 pound "marble" in front of Ripley's museum. It floats on a sheet of water 1/254 of an inch thick and can be pushed to go in a particular direction with a good shove.
Julia standing in front of a Bumblebee statue made of used car parts at Ripley's. 
A wall of soda cans that make Michael Jackson's face. You may have to stand back a ways to see it,
but the King of Pop is there. 

The family in front of an interesting statue in a traffic circle in Baltimore. 
A panorama of the statue.

A shop that sold only candy and other sugary treats.
A giant snickers bar...
A wall of M&M's containing every flavor ever invented. Awesome, no?
Dad, Julia, and I outside a bar where we had apps.

Us on a seawall of the Naval Academy.

Some of the boats at the Academy. Lasers, F-J's, and more, for those of you who are familiar with small boats. 

Their fleet of 44 foot training boats. All of the boats had very patriotic names. Fearless, Bravery, Justice, etc. 

Buildings at the Naval Academy.

More buildings.

The main hall/ assembly area.

The inside of the main hall. Huge, vaulted ceilings, beautiful stone floors... These pictures really don't do it justice. 

A stained glass window in the main hall.

One of the rooms in the main hall.

The ceiling, complete with two huge chandeliers and many other accents. 

The view out the front steps of the hall. 

A ship in the museum at the academy. The interesting thing is that it is made of bone. It was
made by French prisoners with time on their hands and apparently the ability to
catch small animals.

A man flying with a water-powered jet pack at the Annapolis boat show. These things are insanely expensive and very rare.
Look up videos of them on YouTube and you will be amazed.

A very zoomed-in shot of an F-16 over Annapolis. When I took it the pilot was
probably doing around 500 to 600 miles per hour.