Sunday, 20 September 2009
MIss Daisie
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S.V. Bristol Rose
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Sunday, 13 April 2008
April Showers Bring May Flowers and To-dos
First things first.
You may be wondering why we are not posting about our adventures on Bristol Rose.
Bristol Rose is still winterized and in her slip in Baltimore's Inner Harbor. We are planning to take her sailing on the Memorial Day week-end. First we need to get our house in order.
Lots to do, the gardens are almost done and looking great. Then there is a long list of other household to-dos.
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S.V. Bristol Rose
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22:40
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Topics: Baltimore
Sunday, 27 January 2008
Getting cold, time to curl up with a good book and a boat tour.

One place I always like to visit when at the marina is the laundry because at the Anchorage Marina fellow cruisers leave books and DVDs they want to swap. Trish calls it the Laundry Library. We get a great kick out of leaving a book we've enjoyed and then seeing that it has moved on to who knows where. We have found some real treasures left by others.


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S.V. Bristol Rose
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Monday, 31 December 2007
Shannon Yachts, Rhode Island Boat Building Heritage. Finding Bristol Rose.
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Robert in the cardboard cutout cast of Spamalot on Broadway |


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Myrtle Beach, South Carolina |
In another time and place Charles and Anne Brackett had plans of their own. They’d done some sailing on their 38’ Shannon, also called Bristol Rose, and in 2001, planned to build their 43’ dream sailboat, Bristol Rose. Bristol Rose was designed by Walter Schulz and built by Shannon Boat Company in Bristol, Rhode Island. She was launched in October 2002 and the Bracketts sailed her to the Bahamas where she spent the next few years.


We also learned from Matt, our affable sailing instructor, how to tie lines like a sailor (power boaters go round and round and round in knots), and how to laugh at anyone silly enough to be caught out sailing with fenders still hanging over the rails. Most importantly, Matt taught us that sailing is “all about lookin’ good!” Thanks Matt!


In 2007 the decision was made to sell the much loved Sandpiper and buy the “dream” boat. Now, looking for a dream boat has a lot to do with the romance of sailing, of escapism, and above all else, “lookin’ good” while doing it. Our dream boat would be special; not brand new but one that previous owners had loved and cherished. She had to be an American design with traditional lines, solid, sea worthy, comfortable, sail well, have a good reputation, be big enough to live on for a year or more yet small enough for two of us to handle.


Bristol Rose is a Shannon 43, hull # 51, launched in 2002. She is the second-to-last of the 43’ hulls made by Schulz Boat Company in Bristol, Rhode Island. Walter Schulz’s experience working with boats began when he was still at school. In February 1975, he began construction on his own design, Shannon 38 hull number one, in the same building that now houses the Herreshoff Museum and employing craftspeople who had worked for Herreshoff. The boat was unveiled at the Annapolis Boat Show in October 1975. In the Fall of 1985, the first Shannon 43 was shown at the Annapolis Boat Show. Schulz named his Shannon yachts after the Shannon River in Ireland, where both his grandmothers were raised.







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S.V. Bristol Rose
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05:59
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Topics: Baltimore, Chesapeake Bay, Herreshoff, Rhode Island, Sandpiper, Shannon Yachts, USA
Monday, 17 December 2007
Baltimore's Inner Harbor on our new sailboat, Bristol Rose.
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The Anchorage Marina, Canton MD |
- Engine Service. Previous owners put 2000 hours on motoring up and down the Intracoastal Waterway
- Brightwork
- New TV
- Laptop computer, navigation & photography software
- Repace the Dinghy, we now have 2, a Trinka 10 and an Avon and a Honda 2hp outboard. I am thinking of getting a Walker Bay RIB
- New life raft and replace flairs
- Ham radio licence
- Windvane, still looking but like Cape Horn and Monitor
- Lots or organization, downsizing and packing stuff away
Posted by
S.V. Bristol Rose
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04:09
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Topics: Baltimore, Canton, Chesapeake Bay, Maintenance, marinas, USA
Sunday, 2 December 2007
White Rocks Marina, Pasadena to Crisfield, Home of Crabs. Two Weeks on the Chesapeake Bay
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S/V Sandpiper, 30ft S2 |
We purchased our first sailboat, Sandpiper, a 30ft S2 9.2, in 2005. Our collective sailing experience prior to Sandpiper was gained aboard OPB's (other people's boats) and on Hobie Cats rented on stormy afternoons (how to test sailing skills!) at Balmoral Beach in Sydney. During July of 2005, we spent two great weeks exploring the Chesapeake Bay with our son, Elliot and Daisie Dog.
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St Michaels Museum |
We sailed out of White Rocks Marina on Rock Creek, Pasedena Maryland on the 4th of July weekend, heading to St. Michaels. From there we criss-crossed the Bay all the way to Crisfield (the Home of Crabs) in the first week, then turned around and headed back towards Baltimore during the second. Anyone who sails the Chesapeake Bay will tell you that July is not the best time to sail. Despite the heat and light winds resulting in running the engine when we'd rather be sailing, we count those 2 weeks as two of the best weeks we've spent on vacation.

On the final day, we sailed back into White Rocks with a storm chasing us up from Annapolis and another closing around us out of Baltimore. A spectacular moment at the very end of our journey; the skies pitch dark all around, a small craft advisory over the radio, power boats tearing across the water for shelter, sailboats docked, and one bright shaft of skylight breaking through the clouds directly above the entrance to Rock Creek. Like a light in the window welcoming us home, it was as if someone had turned on the light waiting for our return; an incredible sight and the perfect ending to a special vacation.

Posted by
S.V. Bristol Rose
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Topics: Baltimore, Chesapeake Bay, Maintenance, marinas, Sandpiper, USA