A day sail to celebrate the Revolution.
To start the journey off on the right foot, a leisurely
scooter drive along the coastal road in the cool morning air, followed by a surprise
encounter in the marina with Tioga, a 1988 recreation of L. Francis Herreshoff’s
design no. 50, of 1931, itself the inspiration for what would become his most
famous boat of all, the legendary 72 ft Ticonderoga (originally also named
Tioga, but that’s a story for another day).
The first hint of something unusual was a pair of
sharply raked wooden masts amid the usual upright forest of aluminium and
carbon fibre. Extremely raked masts being a trademark of many boats by this, my
favourite yacht designer of all time, I was immediately on the alert. And, as I
looked over the edge of the pier, a set of incomparably graceful lines (in the
words of her designer at the time, “not at all tiresome to look at”), the
clipper bow and some building details – gilded dolphins on the taffrail, an
elegant scroll on the rudderhead – quickly confirmed my suspicions. As my first
ever live sighting of a Herreshoff boat, this could only be a good omen. And so
it proved to be.
Then, on to our steed for the day, the noble
Arquimedes (so named “because she floats”, we say), also a wooden boat – no
surprise if you know her owner/designer, the Comrade Skipper. Offshore, it looked
like one of those rare gentle days when it’s possible to sail in comfort out to
Guincho and Cabo da Roca, so we duly set our course westwards. Soon, however, an
increasing chop and vicious whitecaps dispelled any illusions about that.
It was then that, perhaps by way of
compensation, the good omen kicked in. A commotion in the distance proved to be
a pod of dolphins on the move, and we went out to meet and travel along with them
for as long as they deemed it worth their while to slow their progress and gambol with these excited landlubbers
and their ponderous vessel – how silly we must look to them, a bunch of ungainly two-legged creatures whistling, and babbling,
and jumping around to get a better view.
After they left us behind, we turned back to find
shelter for lunch, finally putting the hook down in the lee of a protective
lighthouse (Guia) and a cliff of beautiful stratified rock. Here, the Skipper
surprised the crew with a light, delicate salad of shrimps, cashew nuts, apples, sultanas, and cherry tomatoes, on a bed of shredded lettuce,
which a few in the party deemed “somewhat gay”, but of which all ate seconds
and thirds, so he must have done something right. Or we all are hiding something
in the closet.
To people of a certain age, who knew this coast from the past but may not have sailed
off it for a while, the sheer amount of construction is hard to comprehend.
Some buildings – a house here and there, a fort or two, a famous sanatorium –
are a reminder of more stylish times, but the rest is sad confirmation of
what greed and deregulation have been doing to so many shorelines around the
world.
And on that revolutionary note, celebrations were brought to a close.
3 comments:
...enchanting prose to picture the enjoyable day passed amidst comrades and everlasting friends on board our ARQUIMEDES!!! It's indeed an enormous pleasure to see that our TOLO friend is now openly sharing his views and comments with us...valuable knowledge and thoughts that cannot be missed...Bem Haja TOLODACOLINA!
...forgot to mention above the VERY IMPRESSING Photographs included in the post...simply magnificent!
… you are too kind, Princess
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