&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for November, 2008

Nov 20 2008

Sail Training International Video

Published by justindemetri under ships Edit This

Sail Training International is looking for the next generation of sailors and has produced a pretty cool video to help. If you are young, healthy and have a love for the sea this could be the experience of a lifetime. I’ve never done it and with a bad hip, that ship has figuratively sailed. But I do know a few people that have done a season or two on a tall ship an it is tons of fun. 

 A couple of my friends did Carribean runs when they were teenagers on the schooners Harvey Gamage and Roseway and came back to Lanesville with tales of legendary parties. Oh and they learned a thing or two about sailing as well…

Advertise Here with Today.com

No responses yet

Nov 14 2008

Just Waiting and Waiting

Published by justindemetri under trips Edit This

With the shipbuilding museum getting into winter mode, I find myself with a lot of free time that I am trying to fill up with writing. Problem is I don’t exactly want to spend all this time focusing on my book idea - it is very tedious and so I try to get as much done as possible during those times of “inspiration”. As many of you probably know - writing isn’t something you can fake, you have to be in the zone. You can judge from this rambling post, that I’m not in the zone this morning.

Besides, the trip to Amsterdam is getting closer and I am still doing research on where to go, eat, visit etc.. I’m pretty much exhausted information on the city and I am going a bit overboard, it’s not like I haven’t been there before. However now that I’m in my 30’s I feel like I am old enough to do many of the things I was too young/poor/immature to do on my previous visits.

I recall walking past a warm cozy Dutch restaurant on a cold day in February of 1996 and thinking it looks so nice and comfy in there (gezellig) but I was with a group of teenagers and as a group we would rather spend what little money we had in coffeeshops or bars. That is exactly what we did. The other day I was thinking that “huh, I’m an adult now - I can finally try out these sit-down restaurants where people other than stoned tourists eat.

No responses yet

Nov 07 2008

The Return of the Old Lady

Published by justindemetri under ships Edit This

 A piece that’s been on the hard drive a little too long…

That hot and humid day in August started like just about every other day that summer when I was twelve. It was mid morning and all that my cousin and I had on our minds was fishing. The mackerel were everywhere and we planned a day’s worth of jigging from one of Gloucester‘s wharves. We called ourselves the Hook, Line and Sinker Fish Company and along with a few of our other friends, we made some good spending money selling our catch for bait or to the old Italian fishermen who would grill them for dinner. However, that day in August it was just the two of us and we decided to try a new location at the State Fish Pier, a decent walk for a couple of twelve year olds from my house down the Fort. That one small decision would end up affecting my life much more than the bucket of mackerel we caught that day.

I cannot recall the exact time of day, but our fishing was halted as an impressive sight unfolded before us: a flotilla of police, fire and Coast Guard boats escorting a beautiful two-masted schooner painted a yachtsman’s white under full sail. The scene unfolded before us slowly, the great canvas mainsail, one of the largest in North America was at eye level due to the low-tide and so close I felt I could touch it. The tall ship was the schooner Adventure, the last of what in sailing circles is known as a “knockabout”, a schooner without a bowsprit. Known to her crew as the Old Lady, she was coming home at last, a gift from her last captain to the city that was once the world’s greatest fishing port, thanks to vessels such as this one. My sheer fascination was in direct contrast to my cousin’s disinterest, so while he continued to fish for mackerel I hauled in my line and made my way toward the most famous of the Gloucester fishing schooners.

Although my family had fished for generations, this was no steel dragger or even my grandfather’s old wooden side trawler, the Adventure was a link to Gloucester’s golden age. A time of “iron men and wooden ships”, when two men would row away from the relative safety of such a grand vessel in tiny wooden dories to haul codfish, haddock and massive halibut all by hand line. Many of these men would never return and so Gloucester’s thriving fishing industry was tempered by the harsh price the sea demands for such successes. The Adventure in her heyday was the last of her kind in both form and function; the last knockabout style schooner as well as the last to fish using dories and handlines. Even though her competitors, which included my family used nets to scoop thousands of pound of fish at a time, the Adventure, with her aging crew of dorymen out fished them all using their hands and hundreds of hooks.

Although I was only twelve, this sense of history was not lost on me as I first stepped onto her linseed-oiled deck and smelled that smell that only used and abused old boats have. It was on Adventure’s deck that I first met the author Joseph E. Garland, Gloucester’s historian and a man that would mentor me for years to come and encourage me to pursue my dreams. I was also lucky enough to meet Captain Leo Hynes, quite possibly the greatest fishermen of all time, a real Highliner that spent more time at sea than on shore in his life. That first visit to the Old Lady would lead to many others and before long, I was helping with her restoration. My first act in restoring Adventure happened the next day when I donated a few dollars of my mackerel money to become one of the original members of the non-profit organization, Gloucester Adventure.

Looking back on those times on board Adventure and the people I met makes me realize just how much it helped mold the person I have become. It was through Joe Garland and our long conversations onboard the Old Lady that I learned to appreciate my own Sicilian heritage and the importance of keeping traditions alive. Captain Leo reminded me never to forget how hard the fishermen in my family worked so that I could get an education instead of going out to sea. Of course there were many more people involved with the Adventure in those early days that positively impacted my life, but just being on the vessel gave me a charge and a sense of pride in my hometown that most twelve year olds never experience. When I think back, it still amazes that the simple act of going fishing one hot summer day led me down the path I now tread. In all the days of that I have gone fishing since, never have I seen such a catch.

No responses yet

Nov 05 2008

Joe Garland’s Unknown Soldiers

Published by justindemetri under ships Edit This

Gloucester historian, writer, and my friend and mentor Joe Garland has just unveiled his latest and perhaps greatest work. Unknown Soldiers was a project that Joe had planned to do for quite some time, a chronicle of his experiences in World War II as well as his buddies -both the survivors and those that did not make it. Anyone that knows Joe understands how monumental this undertaking was, scouring memories long forgotten, relegated to his war-time journal or buried down deep in subconciousness. The fact that is took so long for Joe to write all this down is no surprise and it one of the messages of this book: Each generation that goes to war has to learn these lessons fresh - because rarely if ever are the veterans of the past able to bring themselves to tell of the horrors they’ve seen. And so we trudge on through the muck and blood of history….

The book is on sale now and it also has a website that has excellent images from the book as well as excerpts read by both Joe Garland and his old army buddies. Some of these guys are gone now - thank god Joe got it all on tape!

If you are in the Gloucester area on November 18 @ 7pm, Joe will be reading from Unknown Soldiers at The Bookstore on Main Street.

One response so far

Nov 03 2008

Preparations For The Trip

Published by justindemetri under trips Edit This

With plane tickets and apartment all set to go, there is not much more to get ready except to upgrade our winter gear. I was heartbroken when my trusty daypack of over 10 years had succumed to mold. And so a replacement is on the list of needed gear besides a new waterproof winter jacket, winter boots, and some long underwear.

Amsterdam is not any colder than Gloucester during winter, but that cold wind goes right through you. Besides with with an 8am sunrise and a 5:30 sunset, there is not much the sun can do to warm up this city of stone and water.

One of my favorite memories of my first trip to Holland was the early morning walks downtown. Amazing how quiet the city is at around 7 am in February.

Besides the gear the rest of the planning involves just how many daytrips we want to take and how many restaurants I want to splurge in. I’ve pretty much decided that the IAmsterdam card is not worth the money after reading the posts in the many Amsterdam forums out there. Although if this was my first time in the city and I only had a few days (in warmer weather) then I can see it being pretty convenient. But you have to keep yourself busy in order for the card to be a real money saver.

No responses yet

Nov 01 2008

Here Comes The Off-Season

Published by justindemetri under ships, trips Edit This

Well, November is here and so it’s time for things to get into winter mode. The Essex Shipbuilding Museum will now be open on weekends for the public - but groups can still be scheduled during the week. We’ve even been toying with the idea of closing down during the coldest months to 1) save money and 2) allow us to do some organizing and re-arranging. Besides, January is not the best time to be walking around a boatyard. In the meantime we are still getting some glorious fall days down on the Essex marsh and the foliage, although past peak, is still aglow in crisp autumn color.

Harold Burnham’s Pinky Maine

For me, Fall begins with the first dish of risotto - a Northern Italian classic that I fell in love with during a dinner in Venice on cold October evening. Danielle and I still vividly remember just how intense the mushroom flavor of the rice was. And so each fall I do my best to replicate that risotto al funghi to varying degrees of success. This week I think I made my all-time best with some excellent dried porcini and fresh crimini and shitake. The whole house smelled of mushrooms that night.

Of course, with each winter night that goes by, our big trip to Holland gets closer. With that comes the realization that I need to buy a whole new winter wardrobe if I plan to walk the frozen canals in comfort…

No responses yet

Advertise Here