Hello Hanna!

Bamboozle
Jamie and Lucy Telfer
Sat 6 Sep 2008 17:42
38:57.672N 076:28.882W
From Rhode Island we turned south again and made our way into the top of
the Chesapeake Bay via the Delaware and the C & D Canal. We had to
make a quick trip back to the UK so left Bamboozle tucked up
in Annapolis, Maryland. We returned to find her safe and well but
have no plans to leave this sheltered spot until after the weekend as Tropical
Storm Hanna is due to pay us a visit later today. The good news is it is not a
full blown hurricane but with winds up around 50 knots we are glad to
have a large number of pontoons, posts and piles to spread a web of mooring
lines out to. We are also forecast to receive a soggy 3 to 4
inches of rain during the next 12 hours so we have battened down the
hatches until the sun comes out again!
The plan is to spend the whole of the "fall" here in the Chesapeake
Bay exploring many of the rivers and smaller bays that lead off it. A
few friends in England expressed surprise that we are planning to
spend two months in one bay but.....it is a BIG "bay". It is
170nm from it's northernmost end where we entered via the
canal down to the southern opening into the Atlantic with 10,000 miles
of foreshore in between. 48 rivers flow into it including the
Potomac which is navigable, as far as Washington DC, 95 miles upstream from it's
entrance. There is also a huge amount of historical interest in the
surrounding area including Jamestown (the first English settlement in
America), Yorktown (where Cornwallis surrendered to General Washington) and,
Mount Vernon, Washington's home on the banks of the Potomac.
Coincidently, 2008 marks the 400th anniversary of the first European exploration
of the bay by Captain John Smith, who later made a more lasting name
for himself with his amorous entanglement with Pocahontas. History-phobes
beware...Jamie is on a roll!
We had received a few complaints from family members that our ensign looked
a bit too small in the photos of our new bigger boat. Always being
sensitive to public opinion we have invested in a bigger red duster as the
picture below shows. This is now a two yard flag (which means I am not as
tall as I thought I was!).

The only other excitement (exciting for us anyway) is that I seem to
have managed to fix our uncooperative watermaker by replacing the circuit board
and pressure switch (see photo below), a job which I feared might be beyond my
limited technical skills. The digital camera is
as important an element of my toolkit as and screw-driver or spanner
as I try to take plenty of photos of things before, and as, I take them
apart so I know what they looked like when I began to take then apart. If,
when I have finished, I have no spare bits left and it looks like it did when I
started, there is at least some hope it may work again.

For those of you wondering where Lucy is I promise to include a photo of
her legs next time!