Post Title – July 15th in Gananoque,
Canada
Current Location –
o Gananoque
Canada in the Thousand Islands Area
o Latitude 44°
19.3' N Longitude – 76° 9.9’ W
· Total Miles – 848
· Total locks – 64
· Number of Days Away From Home – 92 (Ouch!)
Sorry this Post is a couple of days late but the dog ate my homework er.....
OK, we have now completed the 120 mile
Rideau Canal and are in the NE part of lake Ontario. We are in the middle of the famous Thousand Island
Area which is like our San Juans times ten and there are hundreds of waterfront mansions that are called “cottages”
here. It’s all quite amazing.
Here are the highlights of the last two weeks.
July 1st,
2015 - Still at Westport for Canada Day
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Tod and Linda at the Canada Day Parade Showing the Flag |
We enjoyed a very simple Canada Day
celebration in a light rain by watching the town’s parade which included a fire
truck, a police car, and 50 kids on bicycles.
It was topped off by a pretty good fireworks display. Before we left I did a little casting from the boat with a spinner bait right in the town marina and hooked a good fish. It turned out to be a 27" walleye (called pickerel here). It was skinny for it's length and only weighed about 4 or 5 pounds.
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A Boat Neighbor Holding MY 27" Walleye |
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Tranquility at the Newborn Lock |
Here is a picture of the local guy who helped me land it.
July 2nd,
2015 - To Newboro Locks
After leaving Westport we went to the Newboro
Locks and found a spot at the top with power.
It is a beautiful location and we had a nice afternoon. I did a little fishing and caught a few small
bass. The Newboro locks are the highest
elevation for both the Rideau River to the North and the Cataraqui Rivers to
the south. Heading south such as we are, the nav aids are now red on
the left side of the channel, not the right and the locks are taking us "down". We walked to a store named
“Killborns” that is famous for its old building that has everything you would ever need for your fancy "cottage". We actually got lost and had to
ask the way out. I really like shopping. When we got back to the locks
we met an old couple who had driven 30 miles just to sit and watch the river
here. This is another perfect spot and
we have perfect weather.
July 3rd,
2015 - To Opinicon Resort
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Locks and More Locks on the Way to the Opinion |
We went down through the Newboro Locks at 10:00 am with
a couple of other boats and cruised
slowly to Chaffeys Lock. After locking through we went around the corner and into the Opinicon
resort. It has nice
grounds and a good restaurant. This place is
OLD and has been closed for three years. The resort was recently purchased by the founder
of Shopify and it is his wife's project to fix up. The channel
into the resort dock is very narrow with shallow tree stumps on either side. A houseboat almost crashed into us as he was trying to land. Linda and our boat neighbor Mike had to fend
him off quite hard. We had a fine lunch
there and then had a little party with dock friends Sheldon, Amanda, Mike and
Susan in the evening on our boat.
July 4th,
2015 - To Mortons Bay
We decided to skip the fourth of July celebration
at the Opinicon Resort so we worked our way out through the weeds and went south
through some very narrow winding passages on our way to Smith Falls and
beyond. At Smith Falls we went down through 4
locks although two were a single locking that they called a “double lock”. We continued on and went into Morton Bay
where we found our new boat buddies Ted and Joan Palango on Panchita at
anchor. They have cruised their Egg Harbor
sport fisherman Panchita from Seal beach, around Central America, through the Panama Canal and up to Canada starting
in about 2008. We anchored in the Bay and took the
dingy over to have wine with them in the afternoon and compare some boating
stories. I caught a 12 inch smallmouth
bass on a spinner bait - whoopee. It was quite hot
and humid today and we went swimming two or three times. This is a fantastic anchorage. It is very well protected and is 10 feet deep
throughout with a nice soft bottom.
July 5th,
2015 – To Cranberry Lake
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Billy Ray and Panchita at Anchor In Cranberry Lake |
We left Morton’s Bay after clearing a large weed
ball off the anchor. We snuck out of the narrow
entrance followed by Panchita and into Cranberry
Lake where we both anchored in about 10 feet of water. Ted and Joan visited for a drink and we showed them what a small boat is like. I fished some and only had a couple of
strikes. Beautiful night with lots of
loons calling.
July 6th,
2015 - To Washburn Lock
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Check out the Weed Pile on Panchita's Anchor |
In the morning I fiddled around a bit fishing and
caught another 4 pound pike. When I
lifted it up for Linda to get a picture it flipped off of my barbless hook so
no photo. We pulled anchor at the same
time as Panchita and we both had massive weeds to clear off.
The "gob" was about the size of a person and took a while to pull off
with the boat hook. We went back by
Seeley’s Bay and cruised through some very small passages and ended up going
through five locks. We spent the night below Lock 45 with Panchita. Beautiful place to tie up to the lock wall.
July 7th- Major Milestone – We Just completed the 124
miles and 49 locks of the Rideau Canal!
July 7th-9th,
2015 - In Kingston
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Dock Buddy at Kingston |
We did a few locks with Panchita and went into Confederation Basin Marina in Kingston. As usual with no car we hauled beer and wine from the Ontario liquor store then went out to lunch at Harpers Burger Bar (It’s
a Triple D place Jeff). Nice small
town. Joan and Ted on Panchita headed West for the Trent Severn, a 200 mile canal with 45 locks that connects Lake Ontario to Lake Huron. We will follow at some point.
We also did a lot of boat washing - I think I could spend hours cleaning bugs off every day. We are not doing much sightseeing, as we will be here with Scott and Connie in a couple of weeks.
July 10
th, 2015 - To Thawartway Island
We left Kingston at 9:30 and cruised NE to the
Thousand Island area and into a
Parks Canada moorage on Thwartway Island where we picked up a mooring buoy. Kind of
wakey and a bit windy but when you are on a buoy who cares. We went swimming and BBQ’d steaks for dinner.
July 11th
through the 16th, 2015 - In Gananoque
We met Wayne Salisbury and Sue Swanson in Gananoque. This is a small town in the heart of the Thousand Islands. We had excellent dining (the Riva Italian restaurant to start with) and spent one day that had thunderstorms driving up to the Rideau so they could see some locks.
We took a cruise boat to the famous Boldt Castle where we had to re-enter the US and then Canada coming home.
The castle was built by hotel mogul George Boldt in the late 1890s for his wife Louise who died unexpectedly before it was finished. He never set foot on the property again. George Boldt owned over 3,000 acres of property in the Thousand Island Area.
On another day, we were able to pick them up in front of their hotel
(the Gananoque Inn and Spa) to do some island
cruising. We tied up to a mooring buoy for lunch and a swim so I did a little casting.
This is a crummy picture, but I caught a pike of about 7 or 8 pounds.
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Linda, Wayne, Sue and Tod at Boldt Castle |
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Bold Castle Power House |
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The Main Castle - Picture Doesn't do it Justice |
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The Bill Ray in Front of Sue and Wayne's Hotel |
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Seven Pound Pike Caught from a Mooring Buoy |
Personal Topic - Showering in Marinas
Ok, here’s the personal moment and I'm sure you will find it fascinating. I’m going to talk about marina showers. If you have a mega yacht, you would NEVER
think about using the showers that marinas provide. If you have a tiny cruiser, you ALWAYs use
marina showers. Well we are in between
so we SOMETIMEs use marina showers.
What is a marina shower? – They are showers that
marinas make available to their patrons.
They vary from kind of crappy to really crappy.
The things that can make marina showers crappy are:
· They are
small.
· They are
dirty.
· They
don’t have warm/hot water.
· They have questionable clientels (people like me!).
· They have
bugs.
· The
dressing area (if any) is wet.
· There is
nowhere to hang your stuff.
· There is
other peoples soap or shampoo in the shower.
· And to
really add insult to injury, they usually charge us to use the showers.
So what do I do?
· If the
showers are totally dirty, I shower on the boat.
· If the
showers are a long way from the boat, I shower on the boat.
· If I
don’t mind the boat bathroom getting a little wet (e.g. a nice sunny day) – I shower on the boat.
· If I
don’t mind putting a little water in our tank, I shower on the boat.
· If I want
to shave, I shower at the marina unless its too awful.
If you gotta do it, here's the process:
· Make sure the warm water works before getting undressed
· Make sure the warm water works before getting undressed
· Keep my
flip flops on as much as possible. Never
let your feet touch the floor. It is a
challenge to get undressed but you can take one flip flop off at a time and
stand on leg. I find that standing on
the back end of the flip flop to be removed with the toe of the foot that you
are going to balance on helps the remove and replace process.
· Think
about a strategy for dealing with the bugs – wash them away normally.
· Find
somewhere to hang my stuff. I can hang
my towel, shorts, clean underwear, t-shirt and kit from one nail.
· Put my
soap dish and shampoo somewhere in the shower
· Take my
shower. Put my glasses, soap dish and
shampoo in the cleanest spot I can find outside the shower when I finish with
each one.
· Shut off
the shower.
· Drip dry
for a minute or so.
· Carefully
lift my towel so none of my other clothes items falls to the disgusting floor.
· Dry
myself from the top down. Only dry down to
my ankles.
· Trap my
towel between my chin and my chest and grab my under shorts.
· Touch the
cleanest spot on the wall I can find with my right elbow to steady myself.
· Stand on
my left leg and take off the flip flop on my right foot.
· Dry my
right foot and then slip on my underwear and then my shorts about to knee level
on my right leg while continuing to balance on my left leg
· Put my right
flip-flop back on while holding my underwear and shorts at about knee level.
· Do the
same thing with my left leg.
· Pull my
underwear and shorts up all the way.
· Do the
other stuff one normally does after a shower.
· Go back
to the boat feeling like I achieved something big.
Whew, that is hard to think about. Hopefully you get the idea. Using a marina shower is not that great if
you are fussy at all about cleanliness, which of course is why you take a
shower in the first place. I think I need to take a shower on the boat!
What's next?
We plan on staying in Lake Ontario for the next
couple of weeks and spending some time in Kingston with Scott and Connie Neish.
We are still firming up our plans for the year and for August.
More on August 1st.
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