We are often asked if we will do this trip again. I think a better question is whether we are glad we did it the first time. Our response is a resounding yes. We really enjoyed the planning and boat selection leading up to the trip. It became a shared interest, a hobby. The trip exceeded our expectations. Every day for a year was part of our adventure. We were challenged by the task and blessed by the experience. We are very grateful for everyone that helped us along the way. It's a big list that ranges from family, co-workers that covered our lives in our absence from home and work, to Loopers, the AGCLA, and many others we met along the way. To all of you - THANK YOU. We wish Millie could really tell us what she thought about her Great Loop. She made it really easy to have her along. Dogs have stereophonic nostrils whereby they can really pick up deep nuances of scents. I suspect she'd say she smelled some really cool things. I can tell you f
Tuesday 5/22 Off the dock at 6:00 its is sunny and flat seas - great conditions for the last day of our trip. As the North Shore of Boston came into view, it turned overcast and rainy - but we were able to hang onto the calm seas. We just so happened to arrive for the final stretch at dead low tide. We called Tim's Mom as we cruised passed her home and by 1:00 we were tied up at our slip at the Danversport Yacht Club for the summer. We began our trip a year ago today - Alice's Birthday. Passing Boston Our first glimpse of home Tim, in one of his most daring feats of the last year, decided before we reached the safety of our slip at Danversport, that he was going to nudge Observer over to our mooring off the house to see if there was enough water under her keel at dead low tide. Fortunately, there was and we didn't go aground three minutes before we finished where we began exactly a year ago to the day! Henry enjoying a kayak after work be