Here was the first use of the title.
I took the first four photos here on May 25, 2018 in Washburn WI. Don’t know where Washburn is? It’s near the SW end of Lake Superior, just south of Bayfield, and I was searching for fish tugs, i.e., focused. I recall noticing the masts and that pinky stern over beyond the boat in the foreground.
The mast rake and size was familiar, as were the ratlines. And the stern lines . . . truly unique.
I even walked over there and thought the details of the bow . . . what I call the head rig . . . was something I’d seen before.
I recall the words “Thomas Colvin” bubbled to the surface of my brain. But I saw this before 0800 at the start of a long day that would involved a car trip to Sault Sainte Marie, i.e., lots of miles to gallivant safely while seeing the most interesting sights. That trip ended and led into another in my picaresque journey through this part of my life.
And then yesterday, the social media entity I call “bookface” popped this photo to the surface as having been posted 11 years ago, exactly. Indeed that was me, slouching way back into a pinky stern, keeping my feet clear of any adjustments the tiller man needed.
And a friend wrote to ask, “and where is that boat these days?”
I was busy at that moment, so only later in the afternoon did I get back to the question. Since google helps answer a lot of such questions, I consulted it and came up with Rosemary Ruth Sailing Charters out of Washburn WI. At first, I regretted having been through Washburn twice in May. How could I not have seen it, I wondered. That led me to go to my photo library . . . thinking I’d seen it and it hadn’t registered.
But there she is, in plain sight, close enough that I could have touched it. For photos of this delightful small schooner, click here. For photos of her high and dry from 12 years ago showing the weld signature that I should have checked in Washburn, click here. For photos of me on the tiller, click here. Then owner Richard Hudson (click on his tag at the top of the post) put her on the land while he got Issuma, a sturdier schooner. and sailed tens of thousands of miles touching four continents and crossing the Northwest Passage. For some of those photos, click here. See Richard’s own blog, as his journey continues, here. For some video, click here.
Thanks to bookface and thanks to Tom Briggs for asking her whereabouts.
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