The Manor House at Rolph's Wharf |
Our Dock at Rolph's |
One of our Sunsets from Rolph's (Typical) |
Although there were exceptions, our days at Rolph's were mainly quiet and happy and full. During the almost two months we lived there on our boat, our life was essentially a pastoral idyll. Typically, during the morning, I worked on my writing in the office in the forward cabin. Nancy would frequently take a long walk as part of her conditioning program and then work on some of her projects, perhaps an article she was preparing for possible publication in one of the boating magazines. After our sandwich lunch we would work on the boat if that were needed and we would often tend crab traps that we set out from the dock during this time. (The Chester River is justly famous for its number and quality of blue crabs, and we always caught enough, almost without trying, for a delicious appetizer or, occasionally, a complete meal.) If boat work did not demand our attention we sometimes drove to Chestertown for shopping, mail or other errands. Frequently we went for bike rides. There was a paved road, Rolph's Wharf Road, that we could follow for about two miles to the intersection with Highway 213. The road was bordered by fields of corn and other crops, the grades were gentle and the traffic was always light. It was ideal for biking. There was a local vegetable stand near the intersection with 213 and we frequently brought back fresh vegetables. On hot days we sometimes swam in the pool before showers and dinner, after which, in the evening, we almost always walked around the grounds and the marina, or perhaps we would fish from the end of our dock. (In contrast to the crabbing, fishing was unproductive while we were there.) The time after dark was reserved for reading, writing in our journals, sharing our ideas or discussing our plans and future possibilities. We always had our nightcaps before bed.
Dinner - A Pot of Blue Crabs Ready for Steaming |
We knew that regular care and preventive maintenance were absolutely necessary to the success of our adventure. One of our main accomplishments while staying at Rolph's was the development of a series of computer spreadsheets to help us schedule checks, inspections and routine maintenance. We also used this spreadsheet system to help us keep track of the contents of the various onboard storage areas including necessary supplies (engine oils, transmission oils, engine coolant, etc.) and spare parts (impellers for the various pumps, fan belts, oil and fuel filters, water and waste valves, etc.). The spreadsheets listed each task together with the corresponding service interval (weekly, monthly, every 200 engine hours, etc.), and provided a series of spaces where we could fill in the date that each item was performed. Without these spreadsheets we had already found that keeping on top of needed maintenance was difficult and confusing. When was the last time the head drains were treated? When did I last check the water levels in the batteries? When did I last change the outboard gear oil? When did I last change the oil and filter in the main engine? In the generator? When did I last check the packing around the propeller shaft? And on and on and on. Now we hoped to be able to keep track of the myriad tasks necessary to the proper upkeep and maintenance of our traveling home on the water, and we hoped that this would help spare us unnecessary delays and plan changes, major unexpected expenses, and perhaps even hazardous situations. Not only did future developments confirm our expectations, but the boat work we did at Rolph's, both the mental as well as the physical, gave us great satisfaction and helped add depth and purpose to our lives.
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But of course we had to deal with some problems while at Rolph's, problems due to the exposed position of the docks on the river, problems due to weather, difficulties with some of the old-timers on the docks who had been coming to their boats at Rolph's for years, and problems with my health. But we tried to learn from all of these, to develop strategies that would help us cope.Rolph's was on the east side of the river and the arrangement of the marina was such that the boats, as they lay in their slips, were aligned parallel to the river. The problem with this was that any boat traveling on the river at speed would produce a wake that would send waves toward the shore that would strike the moored boats broadside and cause them to rock from side to side and bounce up and down. If the boat on the river was large and moving at anything other than a slow idle speed the waves it produced could be several feet high and the effects on the boats tied to the docks could be severe; the boats would toss violently pulling hard against the dock lines, perhaps knocking things in the cabins onto the floor or hitting the docks or the finger piers or the pilings. Real damage could be done. People standing on the decks could be knocked down and injured. There was not any Coast Guard sanctioned NO WAKE zone near the marina so transiting boats did not by law have to slow down. Chip had put out two small NO WAKE buoys at either end of the marina, but these had no legal status and were very difficult to see from a traveling boat in the middle of the river. Although maritime law held that any moving boat was legally responsible for any damage caused by its wake, this was no consolation for the anxiety caused by trying to hold the pans on the stove when cooking dinner or, even worse, trying to keep from being thrown off the boat when working up on the bridge. Also, a fast boat was gone and out of sight by the time its wake hit the marina. I think that many of the boats did not even notice the marina because it was small and the river was wide. One day, even a Coast Guard boat passed up the river at speed creating a troublesome wake. When Nancy called them on the radio they slowed down immediately and apologized but of course by then it was too late, the wake had already been created. The wake problem was especially severe on weekends.
Other worries caused by our exposed position on the river were created by the weather. This was a real concern to us since shortly after we arrived at Rolph's, Hurricane Bertha came plowing through the Atlantic toward the North Carolina coast. Although hurricane-force winds would make the river extremely rough and generate high uncomfortable wave action, the really significant dangers would be caused by the force of the winds on the boats at the docks and the tidal surge that developed. At our slip the surface of the pier was only about two feet above the normal high water mark. The end of the dock at the T-head was even lower. A significant surge could put the docks under water and leave us stranded, if we were on the boat, or unable to get to the boat if we were on shore. An even greater problem would be caused by the effect of the wind and surge on the boats and the dock structure. A tidal surge of five feet, say, would tend to raise the boats five feet in the slips. If the docks were fixed as at Rolph's, as opposed to floating as at Summit North, and the docking lines were not able to accommodate this increase in height, an enormous strain would be placed on the lines, the boats, the pilings and dock structure with consequent serious damage. Yet if too much slack were left in the lines, the boats would be blown about violently in the slips before or after the surge, crashing into pilings and other parts of the docks. In the worst case pilings would be pulled free of the bottom, the docks would break apart and everything would be carried away by the wind and the tides. It is for this reason that many marinas required boats to be removed prior to the arrival of a hurricane, either by finding a sheltered anchorage (a "hurricane-hole") or other safer moorage with strong floating docks, or by having them hauled and stored on land.
On the night of Thursday, July 11, just nine days after we had arrived, we studied the charts of the local area to see if we could find a hurricane-hole in nearby waters. Bertha was forecast to slam into the North Carolina coast on Friday and then come up the Chesapeake before heading out to sea again through the New York City area. We found that, about ten miles down the Chester, another river entered from the west called the Corsica River, much narrower than the Chester. The charts showed that adequate depths, yet without being too deep, were held to well upstream. Of real interest to us was a place about three miles up the Corsica, sheltered from the larger expanse of the Chester by several points of land, where a narrow creek entered the Corsica on its north bank. This was Emory Creek. Two depth soundings were shown on the chart: one at eight feet and, farther up, another at six feet. If these were accurate, and if we could find our way into the creek past the inevitable shoals near the mouth, we might find excellent protection there, perhaps even being able to tie mooring lines to trees along the banks. However, we would certainly need to explore this creek carefully, preferably by dinghy, before attempting to use it.
By Friday, our weather began to deteriorate. Although Bertha had made landfall in North Carolina causing major damage, it was predicted that it would lose considerable strength before entering Chesapeake waters. We decided to remain in our slip at Rolph's rather than risk the exploration of new waters in deteriorating weather. We retied our boat more in the center of the slip with as much clearance as possible from pilings and the dock, adding extra lines and securing all our lines in such a way that they were as long as possible. Up on the bridge we folded up the Bimini top. Everything that was not tied down on the bridge and the decks was moved to the interior of the boat. And then we waited. Rain began in the afternoon and by night it was a torrent with rising winds. There were small leaks from the forward and aft hatches and from one of the windows in the aft cabin that kept us busy mopping up. At about 11 p.m. we went to bed amid the sounds of strong wind and lashing rain. I was awakened at 4 a.m. on Saturday morning by the sound of strong winds and the boat tugging hard on the mooring lines. The wind continued throughout the day but it was far from hurricane strength. The highest gust we recorded on our weather station was 39 mph. Nevertheless we experienced a significant storm surge that caused the low tide to be higher than the normal high tide. For a while the end of the dock at the T-head was under water. But there was no serious damage either to ourselves, other boats or the marina itself. By late Saturday afternoon the wind had subsided and the sky had cleared. We felt very fortunate.
Brushed by Hurricane Bertha - Docks beginning to Flood |
Throughout all our time at Rolph's I had periodic bouts with the ulcer condition that had plagued me for the past year. At times I had a gnawing ache in the pit of my stomach. I regularly took Zantac and, during times of the worst attacks, I took Pepto-Bismol several times a day. On July 16 we drove to Philadelphia for my regularly scheduled visit to Dr. Mason. He was pleased with the status of my leukemia: my white cell count was in the normal range and my platelet count, while still low, had increased significantly. However, he was quite concerned with my continued stomach problems. He strongly urged that I see a GI (gastro-intestinal) specialist and provided me with a list of doctors he would recommend. However, I demurred, still hoping that this problem would go away now that we had our happy lives on the boat. But by the end of the month it had become worse, and I consulted with one of the specialists, a Dr. Ruffini in Delaware. On August 7 Dr. Ruffini performed an endoscopy and biopsy of my esophagus and stomach, a procedure I had been dreading, at Cristiana Hospital in Delaware. The results showed that I had scarring from an old peptic ulcer, a moderately sized hiatal hernia, and small areas of erosion in the esophagus. The biopsy was negative. He prescribed Prilosec, which was at that time a new and powerful drug for the treatment of such conditions, and told me that I probably would have to take it indefinitely. However, he promised it would eventually relieve my discomfort and for that I was grateful if perhaps a little skeptical.
Our problems with people on the dock were not nearly as serious as those due to Bertha or my health, but they were nevertheless annoying. The dock was populated by three houseboats and an equal number of older cabin cruisers. All these boats were used mainly for live-aboard bases on weekends and summer vacations. The people formed a tightly linked social group that had been coming to Rolph's for many years. For their purposes they had an ideal situation: very inexpensive long term slip rentals; beautiful grounds complete with picnic tables and a large gas grill available for their use; easy access from their homes in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware; excellent crabbing right from the dock and elsewhere in the nearby waters; reasonably good fishing especially for striped bass (usually called rock-fish locally) in season. They usually arrived on Friday evening and took over the dock and the grounds. They had been the only ones on the dock for so many years that they acted as if they owned it, and it was this attitude and the actions resulting from it that we found annoying. Soon after they arrived late on Friday afternoon they would put out their crab traps from almost every piling and post on the dock including the ones in our slip. These would be tended at frequent intervals throughout the weekend. They would set out a lot of equipment onto the dock including their deck chairs, which they arranged in a group so that they all could sit and visit and chat, at a location between our slip and the shore. Every time we walked down the dock we had to excuse ourselves and ask them to move so we could get by. Similarly, they took over the picnic tables and the grill on shore for their pot-luck suppers and crab boils, automatically assuming that they were the only ones to use these facilities, which were thus not available for us or any other transient boaters who might come in to Rolph's for the weekend. Such transient cruisers (and there were not many during our time at the marina) would also have to run the gauntlet down the congested dock through the group sitting on the deck chairs. Most other marinas that we knew would not have allowed the docks to become congested and blocked, but apparently this had always been the way at Rolph's. We were outsiders, different, not part of the group. Although these people were reasonably polite (though certainly not considerate), at least at first, it was obvious that our residence on the dock was not entirely welcome. As we continued to stay, there came to be increasing friction. During the latter half of our time at Rolph's we usually left the marina for much of the weekends, using this time to explore the local area or enjoy the facilities and activities in Chestertown. This practice also spared us the worst of the problems due to the wakes of passing boats.
Despite the few difficulties we encountered at Rolph's, in the balance our experiences were good and we enjoyed our lives there. Besides, two events occurred that summer that made it easy to put our little problems in perspective. On July 27 a bomb exploded at the Summer Olympics killing 2 and injuring 110. Previously, on July 17 TWA Flight 800 dropped out of the sky off Long Island, killing 230 people, perhaps destroyed by a ground-launched missile as some claimed. What kind of a country were we living in, I asked in my journal. Our lives on the boat seemed far removed from these things, for which we were glad, and our little problems appeared to be very insignificant.
As we neared the end of August we became very restless. We were anxious to be on our way, to take the next step in our adventure. We had come to the conclusion that we would spend the winter somewhere in North Carolina, perhaps in Beaufort, which we had enjoyed so much on our cruise north the previous year, and where, we had heard, there were good winter rates on slip rentals. We eschewed going to Florida, as ever trying to avoid crowds and congestion. And we thought that perhaps on the North Carolina coast we would have enough of colder weather to satisfy our desire for a change of season without having temperatures so low that there would be resulting problems to worry us such as water freezing. But we did not want to head south toward North Carolina while there was still the likelihood of encountering really hot weather. Instead we decided to take some time during the fall to explore part of the Chesapeake, something that we had always wanted to do.
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