A light frost on the lawns, windshields and roofs gave way to the rising sun this morning as I walked laps around the neighborhood. It was the first frost I have noticed this year, a mild one. A hard frost should arrive in the next week or two.
The was barely enough of a breeze to rustle the leaves.
I had hoped for a good day on the water. It is late in the season and I want to get out a few more times before I begin the winter maintenance. Clear skies, eight mph of wind was the forecast. On the drive to the ramp I looked out from over the bridge and saw a heavy chop on the river. I'll need to tuck in a reef, I thought. At the ramp I walked down to the water's edge and it was bitterly cold. Blowing 15 mph just made the temperature in the mid-40's seem even colder. It was not a day for a relaxing sail, the kind where I could bask in the sunshine and tend the tiller with a nudge of the kneed. I turned around and headed back home.
The last sail of the year will be in the next few weeks. Last year I sailed after Thanksgiving, above, the wind strong enough that I finished the afternoon under mizzen and jib. The temperature was more comfortable than today.
In 2010, as far as I can tell from this log, my last sail was late October when I sailed with Paul and Dawn, above, for a few days in North Carolina. I came home to find a heavy work load and and early winter, one that brought an early season snow and then the heaviest snowfall I have seen here in over 20 years.
In 2009 my last sail was just a few days before Thanksgiving. Anytime I sail close to Thanksgiving I am happy. I know that by December the water will be cold, the cool fronts will be rolling in from the north bringing gusty breezes.
I hope I have a few more chances to get out this season. Maybe this coming Friday, when I'm off from work, I'll sneak out for the day. I need to hope that the weather will have settled down from the predicted mid-week nor'easter. The nor'easter seems to be close to a certainty, but the strength in unknown. ( A strong nor'easter would not be good for the outer banks, many areas of which lost their protective dune lines to Sandy.)
I have ordered a new camera for next year's sailing season. I've concluded that I will not find a better waterproof point and shoot camera than what I have now - all the waterproof point and shoots have flaws of one sort or another. I've decided to stay with that camera, a Pentax Optio W90, when waterproof is needed, either because of rain or salt spray. When waterproof is not needed, I hope to use the camera above, a Canon PowerShot SX160. The camera has a few features I like such as being powered by aa batteries, a 28 to 448 mm zoom, image stabilizer and the controls for shooting on full manual.
Is it a good camera? I don't know. The reviews have been good, but reviews can't be trusted. When this camera arrives I will put it through the paces. Should it not be the camera I want, I will use Amazon's return policy to the fullest.
steve
Does that say 16x OPTICAL zoom?
ReplyDeleteAwesome.
I have an older school Panasonic with a 10X optical and it is behemoth in comparison. I've found that 10-12X is about the limits of a handheld and getting the image stable enough..for me anyway. The IS features should help.
Waiting on feedback once you receive the camera.
That is what it says. We'll see. steve
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