Little Alligator River

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Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
The wind came up nicely as we left the Pasquotank and entered Albemarle Sound. I took off the sail cover with some trepidation. Would rats and birds have made nests in the sail? Would I remember which lines to pull? Would the cloth simply have rotted away since its last, barely remembered, use? All was well however, and it was a delightful sail, close reaching almost exactly along the route line on the chartplotter.

Sails were furled and covered again about four miles from our day’s destination, the Little Alligator River just past Middle Ground. The day was fairly short which suits my current ambition and state of mind perfectly. Maggie, the alpha dog of the armada, demands frequent walks ashore and, what Maggie wants, Maggie gets.

I had found a road and a place called Southshore Landing on the chart which looked promising for both human and dog walking and Google Earth confirmed the presence of the road. It was a 2.5 mile run in the RIB up to the landing. I was invited but should have declined since it turned into a long wet trip that probably would have been much drier for them without my extra weight.

We found the landing so choked with logs under the surface that we couldn’t get near the decrepit dock which didn’t seem to be connected to anything remotely walkable in any event. It’s been a long time since anything without wings landed here. We then tried the point across the river. With cypress knees sticking up and numerous sticks and snags, these shores are guarded more effectively against landing than even the beaches of D-Day.

Speaking of armed assault, every outboard boat in the area is painted in camouflage and groups of men dressed the same way keep going by with the boats so bristling with guns that they look like those fish trap stakes in Chesapeake Bay. I haven’t been following the news. Has political polarization reached the point of armed insurrection or have I anchored in the middle of some militia training camp? No gunfire, so far.

Poor Maggie was beside herself so they dropped me off back at Strider for greater speed and went to try their luck at the dock of a closed up waterfront cottage. The “cottages” here are, to say the least, very down home and biodegradable. I watched with binoculars because I was, by now, quite invested in the outcome, or should I say, “outflow”, of this expedition. The cottage next door was occupied and flying a confederate flag. Two New Yorkers landing on a foreign shore. I thought. This should be interesting. However, no apparent excitement, no gunfire, and they returned to their boat without incident.

I sat in the cockpit watching the sun set in an absolutely clear sky and the beautiful deepening red spreading up from the horizon until I noticed a mist. Suddenly, I realized that the mist was MOSQUITOS! I quickly retreated inside to a cabin with portholes darkened by bugs trying desperately to join their thousands of companions already inside. War did rage for a couple of hours. Bloodied and exhausted, I finally fell asleep. Not even in Maine’s infamous Robinhnood Cove have I seen the like.

It is beautiful here but it is also very, very, well defended.
 

rbgarr

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Sep 10, 2011
15
Shields 30 Boothbay Harbor
Orville and Wilbur Wright wrote about clouds of mosquitoes descending on their camp when the wind went light or from the NW at Kiill Devil Hills. They hated it and buried themselves in blankets with only their noses uncovered, and that wasn't a treat either..
 
Jul 24, 2006
628
Legnos, Starwind, Regal Mystic 30 cutter, 22 trailer sailor, bow rider NEW PORT RICHEY, FL
wHAT!!!!

i have been following your great adventure and was ready for an "aahhh" with the sun setting in the distance and Maggie well relieved. A wonderful warm dinner and other thought of sugar plumbs then "WAM" right between the eyes, damit anyway, can't you give us out here in cyber sailing a break from the brutal reality?! Luv your trip post though, hope you get south before your iced in. Pat
 

Tom J

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Sep 30, 2008
2,325
Catalina 310 Quincy, MA
Hopefully, if you decide to anchor in Mosquito Lagoon, just north of Cape Canaveral, the mosquitoes actually won't be nearly as bad as what you just saw. We anchored there overnight, and they weren't too bad. Now, the Everglades, that was another story! Of course, that was in the summer. We have anchored in the Everglades during the winter and the mosquitoes were not bad at all.
 
Jun 28, 2005
440
Hunter H33 2004 Mumford Cove,CT & Block Island
Duck hunting is big down there. You might have seen some permanent blinds, I hear they are outfitted like luxury boxes at Patriot Stadium.
 
Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
Duck hunting is big down there.
We saw a lot of blinds on the way out. If it's ducks, this isn't hunting, it's WAR!

Let's see, we've had the war against poverty, the war against drugs, and the war against old ladies with nail clippers and shampoo bottles larger than 3 OZ. What next? Ducks? Well, at least that's a war we can probably win.
 

Jimm

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Jan 22, 2008
372
Hunter 33.5 Bodkin Creek - Bodkin YC
We saw a lot of blinds on the way out. If it's ducks, this isn't hunting, it's WAR!

What next? Ducks? Well, at least that's a war we can probably win.
Not likely, there are more of them and they breed faster than we do .....:)
 
Jan 27, 2008
3,086
ODay 35 Beaufort, NC
Bald Eagles

Roger,
Keep your eyes peeled for bald eagles. My last trip through the wilderness we saw several of them and I've seen quite a few since. Here's a picture from a friend who just had one land on their deck and walk around. You are also now entering a region where other hazards exist like bear, and alligators. Here's a picture of a gator I took in south Carolina, so keep your eyes peeled for those too.
 

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Jan 1, 2006
7,588
Slickcraft 26 Sailfish
Yes Bald Eagles are there and I saw one last weekend I didn't see any alligators though
 
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