Cleverdale, NY
34 miles (row), 2 miles (walk)
I’m home. Yesterday’s departure from Chipman Point at 5:45
may have been a bit early, as I had none of the trouble I’d anticipated in
winding my way up ‘La Chute’ to Ticonderoga’s town park. At this moment I sit
on mom’s porch ‘ the morning after,’ a hot cup of coffee and a day to do nothin’
at all in front of me, and the feeling is bittersweet; the last three weeks established
a healthy, challenging, and ever-varying routine concentrated on both enjoying
the moment and achieving a goal. What’s not to like – and miss - about that? Yet
here, home, with friends and family and an on-demand cup of coffee … well, as I’ve
said all through this journey, I’m a very lucky, lucky man.
Yesterday’s sunrise emerged over Vermont, ‘La Chute’ was
largely clear, and Doug and Susie Livingston arrived right on schedule to
enable me to cart my boat up the hill – a vigorous 2-mile portage – to Lake George.
They also delivered an egg salad sandwich and a vanilla malt, the only fare I
would eat, or need, to power myself home. A tip o’ the sunhat to Bob and the
crew at Snug Harbor Marina, who allowed me to re-launch the boat with good cheer
and no fee … and after a five-mile run on Champlain, I was only 29 miles from
home.
La Chute |
Where Lake George flows into Lake Champlain |
Within two hours, a south wind came up that would be on the nose
all day; what could have been a relaxing final sleigh ride down the lake was,
instead, a tough, slow slog down the east side. That these clear, inviting
waters were familiar and prompted the best kind of nostalgia eased the pain,
though, and by 6:30 PM I arrived to cheers, hugs, and kebabs from Hannaford.
Thanks again to Doug and Susie for their heroic logistics
support, to Bob and Bean and company for their moral support north of Black
Mountain Point, and to son Matt for checking on his dad a few hours later,
reminding me again of the warm welcome ahead. You all made a final hard push
for home a little bit easier.
So … last night my head hit a real pillow for the first time
in three weeks, and I don’t remember it. Instant sleep. Instant. Today I’ll
assemble the bits and pieces of my 3-week universe … I’ll take my steaming
laundry to a laundromat in town rather than tax our ‘lil Whirlpool, I’ll disassemble
and clean boat parts and hardware, and I’ll sleep and swim. And repeat.
And as odd as it sounds in the reading, I’ll write again
when Peg arrives with my computer; the handwritten journal has been a wonderful
old school throwback medium, but I’ll look to my keyboard for deeper stuff in
the coming weeks, if only for my own sense of closure to this blog.
Peg, thanks for the transcription and editing of it all, for
even sending a hard copy to my techno-peasant brother, and for being there in
every way … including finding my wallet by telephone. You rock!
If you’ve read, thanks for reading. If you’ve passed a gift
to Boys’ Latin, thanks for that generosity as well; ‘paying it forward’ leads
to our best selves, yes?
More blog later!
Peace, love, and happiness … and thanks for being aboard.