(The rest of the sailboat story...)
The transport service only let my brother know two days in advance of when they planned to haul the boat. So my brother had to high-tail it down to NC to get it prep'd and give the underside as good of a cleaning as possible. My brother-in-law (who lives in Monroe NC) met him there to help. They did a 45 minute dive to clean the hull and keel the eve before hauling.
My brother's drive home after that was the most harrowing part. Here's the story (in his own words).
They will put her on stands and unstep the mast and get it ready for transporting to Connecticut. They'll come back a week from tomorrow and move it to Connecticut.
My drive from Washington to Newark NJ was definitely an exhilarating one. I have never been in so many electrical storms with so much intensity. It seemed like I caught a western moving front that ran from MD to CT. The lightning was blinding at times. I was at the apex of the Delaware Memorial Bridge and wind and rain was blowing upward over the bridge and an enormous flash and instant crack of thunder seemed like it was directly above me.
I was holding off on getting gas until NJ since they pump it for you (state law), it's considerably cheaper and it had been raining sideways since I was south of Baltimore. I pulled into the first service area off the NJ turnpike, but they had no power. The car computer read 40 miles until an empty tank and the next service area was 36 miles. One traffic jam and I would've been on the side of the road in monsoon rains so I took the first exit off the turnpike and headed for a town 2 miles west, but only to find the same result. No power. Off to the next town, lights out, trees and limbs down. Asked a cop who who was warning people of deep water on the road where to go and he sent me south on I 295 for 5 miles. Finally found a station that had power restored but the pumps would not reset. The guy said to give him 5 minutes. I did and he got them working though had to pay cash as the credit card machine was not working (keep that in mind Dad the next time you drive home from CT with $5 cash in your wallet).
I was finally headed back in the right direction with a full tank of gas. I arrived home at 12:30 this morning -- 10 hours after leaving NC.
Now to the good part -- see pictures below. It was really interesting to see how they have to haul boats at this lake. The trailer they pulled mine out on can handle up to 50' sailboats. They hauled it and put it on stands, then removed (unstepped) the mast with a boom crane. They then hauled a 35' power boat and took it to Myrtle Beach. They'll come back Wednesday and load mine to transport to CT.
Anyway, all went extremely well -- in fact, it could not have gone better. Looking forward to taking everyone out for a sail.
p.s. - wow, I can't believe I never posted any pix from the family sailing trip

last year. Guess that was back when I was still trying to make a go of it at alamedalink.com. God, I was so naive back then!
Yeah, some kid in Indonesia probably sent her little brother out to find the shells, then slaved all morning sewing them on so their family of four could earn 35 cents. Great, now I feel guilty about my shoes. Thanks Ajay!
On the other hand, maybe I'll retire to Indonesia. I can sew and find sea shells. And I hear the cost of living is way cheaper than the Bay area.
Time to go see if my estrip bumper sticker survived it's first overnight on the streets of San Francisco. And my lawyer says I'm risk averse. Ha!
yes, the seashells are cute. Where did you get these? They look like something made in India/Thailand...
DId you make those?
Now that I have these hella-cute sandals, maybe my lower half will get some sun. Did you notice the seashells!!!?
Yikes! You do need a tan.