May 14th
After waiting several days for good weather, EverGreen left Annapolis at 6:40 AM to head north to the C& D Canal which connects the north end of the Chesapeake Bay to Deleware Bay. Favorable tidal currents made for a quick trip, and EverGreen arrived at Chesapeake City on the C & D Canal at 2:30 PM.
May 15th
Today we wanted to travel 54 miles down Deleware Bay to the southern tip of New Jersey, so in order to have favorable tidal currents to make a speedy trip across what can be a very treacherous body of water, we left Chesapeake City at 5:40 AM, as soon as it was light enough to see. We were lucky, and had very calm waters on Deleware Bay, so the crossing was very comfortable. We spent the night in Cape May, NJ, where we planned to stay until we had good weather to travel in the Atlantic Ocean up the coast of New Jersey. Regretfully, the next day was rainy, with very poor visibility, so we opted to stay in Cape May an extra day.
May 17th
Strong west wind greeted us on Saturday morning, but the threat of rain seemed to be minimal, so we headed up the Jersey coast towards New York City. With about 145 miles to reach NYC, we knew we wouldn’t make it before dark, so we decided to drop an anchor in the bay behind Sandy Hook, NJ (about 8 miles south of the entrance to New York Harbor). During the trip up the Jersey coast we had 20 – 30 knot winds blowing from the west, so by staying within 2 miles of shore, we were able to keep the waves to 3 – 5 feet. We arrived at Sandy Hook in rain about 11:30 PM and were approaching a shallow anchorage area in the middle of the bay, when a Coast Guard boat approached us from behind, and requested that we slow down so that they could board us for an inspection. Three men in their mid-20’s boarded and went over the entire boat and ship’s documents. After half an hour, they gave us a clean inspection report and then they were gone, as quickly as they had arrived. The young men were very polite and professional………a credit to the Coast Guard and our country. We didn’t get anchored until 1:00 AM, and wanting to enter NY Harbor at first light, didn’t give us much time to rest.
May 18th
The entrance to NY Harbor is under the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, the lights of which we could see from where we were anchored at Sandy Point. At 4 AM, there were a lot of large ships entering and leaving NY Harbor, and not wanting to get in their way, we delayed hauling anchor until 5:00 AM. We were still able to arrive at NY Harbor at first light as we had planned. Note the Narrows Bridge in the early morning haze (pic 1). As we came into the harbor, Manhatten appeared in the early morning light off to our right (pic 2). We felt lucky to be arriving early on a Sunday, as we only had to share the harbor with a couple of barges, one Statten Island ferry, and a cruise ship. Our timing went just as we had planned, and we cruised by Lady Liberty (pic 3) as the rising sun hit her full on. Like so many immigrants, who passed her this same way, we felt lucky to be here; and the euphoria made us forget how tired we were.
We headed up the Hudson River where we plan to meet the Erie canal in less than two weeks. Sunday night we stayed in a small marina in Tarrytown, NY, just north of the Tappan Zee Bridge, the longest bridge over the Hudson River. The Hudson River is magnificent to view from the water, with high cliffs on both sides of the river.
VERAZANO BRIDGE AT DAWN....AND THEN, FROM THE PILOT HOUSE, A PICTURE OF THE CITY....
AND THEN, OUR LADY LIBERTY AS DAWN BROKE UPON HER....
GOD BLESS EVERYONE.....HELEN