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Pride IIās departure ceremony went off without a
hitch. The rain was on its way, but still had not arrived at the end of the
speeches. We motored off the dock waving to all the well wishers, marking the
departure with a firing of the cannon. Governor Ehrlich, Secretary of
Transportation Flanagan, Secretary of Business and Economic Development Aris
Melissaratos, members of our Board of Directors, and Pride, Inc.ās Executive
Director were aboard for a photo with the crew before the dock lines were taken
in. The U.S. Naval Academy Band heralded the departure and the Eastport
Elementary School chorus did a bang-up job as well.

It
has been five years since Pride II has sailed "off continent" and the
excitement in the air, ashore and aboard, telegraphed this fact. For me, it is
nothing new, having experienced several starts across the ocean voyages with
both the original Pride as well Pride II. But still, even with
these experiences, there is sincere and significant interest in the coming
voyage. So I, too, appreciated the warm send off. With all the preparations
for the voyage, and all the work ahead of us with its execution, it is important
to know that there is great support for the effort. You could say that part of
the "grease" for making the crew feel their responsibilities are worthy is
directly influenced by the interest shown by Maryland leaders and citizens in
Pride IIās activities. The send off was excellent for telegraphing the
importance Marylanderās see in the crew and their role, and should be permanent
fuel for them in their efforts.
We
diverted from the intended track by going over to Thomas Point Light for a photo
shoot on behalf of the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Once that was accomplished,
Pride II made for the Upper Bay and the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal,
rather than heading on south to the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. The overall
weather pattern in and out of the Bay suggested we would be better off going
north than south. So here we are motoring along in the dark through the C & D
Canal. The timing is not great insofar as we are motoring against an ebb
current. But I felt it was more important to "make time" than it was to
conserve fuel, so here we are.
We
executed a number of sail evolution drills and launched/recovered the small
rubber boat today. The sail handling related to the changing wind conditions as
the cold front passed over us÷20-30 knot wind from the SE and S moved to the SW,
W and NW in the space of 2 hours. The rubber boat was launched to give a hand
to a smaller sailing yacht that was giving aid to a swamped kayak operator.
Sail evolution occurred as I tried to take advantage of the wind for conserving
fuel. So there have been a number of drills that have helped re-orient the crew
along with introducing things to the five Guest Crew aboard for the voyage to
Ireland. Now everyone is divided into watches and that was started at 1600
hours (4 pm for those of you unfamiliar with military time). So some are
presently resting and some are handling the ship. This cycle will likely be the
"way of things" for the next three plus weeks.
Cheers,
Captain Miles
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