G
Gary Wyngarden
No, this is not a topic for a segment of Oprah.First let's set the stage. We went on a cruise for a couple of days this week to some of the islands on the northern fringe of the San Juans up near the Canadian border. Matia Island is both a State Marine Park and a National Wildlife Refuge. We're sitting on a mooring buoy. We can hear the throaty rumble of the huge sea lions we saw earlier in the day. Overhead a bald eagle soars--another sits in the trees making that characteristic whistle of theirs. The trees are old growth Douglas Firs that tower a couple of hundred feet over the anchorage thats surrounded by rock formations sculpted by the water. Otters splash in and out of the water. A Great Blue Heron fishes stealthily in the shallows. Exotic orange and purple sea stars cling to the rocks near the shore. The tidal current kind of burbles, and the only human sound to be heard is the occasional clank of the bail on the mooring buoy as it falls over and hits the shackle. And then...AND THEN the only other boat in the cove (a power boat naturally) starts its engine and runs it for 45 minutes. And then runs it again! Matia is not close to much of anything so it's kind of a long run to get there. Didn't they make hot water on the way out? Ditto for charging the batteries. Ditto all over again for cooling the freezer (God forbid they should buy ice blocks). I mean, why come to a place like this if all you are going to do is snap closed the plexiglass curtains over the cockpit and sit in the cabin with the engine running? Why pollute a pristine environment with engine noise and exhaust? Am I out of line on this?Gary WyngardenS/V Shibumi H335