Feeling Loopy on the M/V Donna Mae
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You can check in any time you like, but....(oct 20-28)

10/28/2022

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Hello lads and lasses!

Still in good ole Virginnie.

We have our route planned down to Charleston and our slip reservations made for the next 7 stops, but alas, no operating engines to get there! Our heat exchangers are in the shop getting cleaned out and pressure tested. BUT….we think that will be the last thing we’re waiting on to get the heck out of Dodge. We’re counting on a Halloween departure. Apropos.

The cat (Gypsea) had enough of being an indoor cat on the boat. She’s used to roaming the fields, stalking her prey, perching on rooftops and meandering the streets back home. So nearing 4 weeks being cooped up in 600 square feet was pushing her tolerance level. She started sitting by the doors giving us eat-shit looks and yowling when we tried to negotiate around her to get in or out. So with a prayer and a hearty “good luck”, we opened the doors to the grand unknown and hoped the AirTag on her collar worked. At least she knows how to swim, so I figured she wouldn’t drown (unlike the sinking pug). I’m glad to report that she is happy once again and stays within earshot. Instead of roaming the fields, she roams the mostly-vacant boats around us! She’s always back by mealtime.

I know every one of my posts involves ‘the toilets’, but we live and breathe (literally) by the level in the poop tank. Remember, we don’t have working engines right now so we can’t just zip around to the other side of the marina for a pump out. So the tanks were filled…again. How do we know this without a working tank level indicator??? Well, when the toilet lets out a nasty fart that smells up the place every time you flush that means you’re starting to push your luck. Normally, in such an emergency, one would use the discharge pump and give a wee bit of the tank contents back to mother earth below the boat (even though legally you have to be 3 miles from shore). Well we couldn’t even do that because our discharge pump doesn’t work…something to do with faulty ‘duck beaks’. So to combat the odor, I fried some chicken.The best air freshener (and reason why Derek married me) that overcame all other odors with it’s wonderful aroma. Finally, the boat smelled like home. They did tow us around to the pump out tank yesterday so we have about 6-7 days worth of no tank worries.

Tater is a celebrity. He stops to say ‘hello, where’s my treat’ with the marina workers on his walks each day. First the boat shop, then the dockmaster. They always give him one. They all know his name and call him when they see him. Each mechanic that comes aboard spends time with him and Tater is happy to supervise everything they do…one time laying on a worker’s back when he was lying prone to do some wiring under the floor. Takes after his human dad…Mr. Mingle (but not the lying on a worker part!!!!). We also found a do-it-yourself dog bath place around the corner. He loved the bath but DID NOT love the industrial-sized blowdryer. 22-lb dog took me on and almost won.

Derek and I are getting antsy and tired of every conversation being about boat parts, so last night we decided to have a date night at a great Italian restaurant within walking distance. No boat talk allowed. After a beer, gin and tonic, wine and Sambuca (that was just me!), and a scrumptious veal piccata, life was awesome again. We were laughing like teenagers. Back at the boat (it was twice as far on the way back because of the zigzagging) we topped the night off with white Russians. Therefore, today’s only task was to write this blog. Derek is napping and I will join him in a minute. Some days you just need to do nothing but nurse a hangover, boat duties be damned.

Cheers, you all
L & D
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Gypsea's 'I-am-not-pleased' stare

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Great boat neighbors, Mark and Saffie. He delivers yachts all over the world and will be attempting to break the around-the-world record soon.
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October 20th, 2022

10/20/2022

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Groundhog Day (Oct 9-19)

We’re still sitting on our dock by the bay (Chesapeake Bay) in Virginia. Still waking up in the same spot, with the same view, with the never-ending list of things to be done to the boat! Things get completed, but new tasks get added. Derek now knows every inch of the engine room and has become quite the mechanic. This is out of necessity because we might be too old to cruise if we waited for the mechanics at this marina to get to it.

However, we did take Donna Mae out to stretch her legs a few days ago, and she purred like a kitten. We were rusty while docking, but made it back with no new scratches or dents!!! It’s not easy getting in and out of a 16’-wide slip with a 15’6”-wide boat.…all 43 feet of her. Gypsea and Tater loved the adventure and our fears of them bailing overboard while on way were dampened. Time will tell whether they can handle bigger waves on less-calm days.

We’ve made some special friends. Apparently this marina is like the United Nations. Erika and Holger from Germany, Safie and Mark (she’s from England) and Wallace and Sharon from Canada. We share docktails and dinners and lots of laughs.

Two major accomplishments to note. We  now have working heads (toilets). I can relieve myself without using a bucket or the sink or the public bathroom 2 blocks away. This is a major thing folks!!! And secondly, we finally have the tv hooked up to the boat’s antenna. We had been stuck with Kojak, Rockford Files or Big Bang Theory repeats for the past THREE WEEKS. Needless to say, with those selections I plowed through my 800-page book in record time.

One other thing to get used to: cooking without being able to use the stovetop and oven at the same time, or the ice maker and toaster oven at the same time. And…if you use more than 2 burners on the stove neither can be turned on high! So our routine is buying ready made microwave meals from Kroger.

We hope everyone is staying warm through the latest arctic blast. We dropped down in the 30’s ourselves so new blankets have been added.

Sending lots of love,

Lori and the Captain
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To  jump, or not to jump.
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Forward bilge that prolly hadn't been cleaned for 17 years!!!!
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Holger and Erika at Vino's Restaurant.
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Thinks he's a human and sits like one too!
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Same Book, Different Chapter (sept 23-oct 8)

10/12/2022

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On September 23rd we LOADED up a rented cargo van in Fayetteville with the cat (Gypsea) and dog (Tater) and a houseful of goods and headed east to Chesapeake, Virginia. Our new-to- us boat was waiting to meet her new family in Atlantic Yacht Basin.

The drive was relatively uneventful, but we had to break it into 3 legs since our bodies cannot sit in a vehicle for more than 5 hours without seizing up! Moving in and out of hotel rooms for 2 nights with a drugged cat, litter box, luggage, adult beverage bottles, and a hyperactive circus dog who tangles his leash around all of the former while walking in the hotel hallways is always a treat.

We bought the boat, which was named ‘Hulluvahoo’(!) on Sept 2nd. We commissioned the marina to add a bow thruster, new engine shaft seals, and inverter to the boat before we left Fayetteville so the boat would be ready to move into and take off when we arrived. Best laid plans. So we show up with ‘our crew’ and find our boat on dry land in a huge warehouse. The seals were done....but nothing else. I’m not gonna bad talk the marina repair guys, because they are all excellent, and they put our boat back in the water for us that day; however, 15 days later and we are still waiting on the inverter, batteries and thruster :( The good news is that this boatyard is considered the one of the best on east coast. The bad news is that boats arrive everyday from all over by owners who need their work done NOW! Derek does his best to stay in front of them and fight for attention.


We extended our stay here in Chesapeake till the end of October, which is a good thing because everyday we find new ‘problems to be fixed’ that our boat inspector/surveyor missed....like imploded poop tank, both main sea strainers cracked, heater not working, clogged air vents, etc. I know a lot of you don’t know what those things are, but they’re quite important to keep a boat running and afloat. It has become obvious that not all boat surveyors are created equal and we happened to get one that missed the mark.

We changed the name on the back of the boat to ‘Donna Mae’, the tried-and-true name of our first boat, so we’re no longer known as the Dr Seuss boat by the marina staff! Derek, Gypsea Tater and I feel right at home in our cozy digs and have managed to find a storage spot for 99% the stuff we brought onboard (just don’t ask me where anything is). We will send pics of the inside of Donna Mae later....when the interior walls aren’t removed and the guest room mattress isn’t in the living room because of all the rewiring being done!!!!

With no car, we walk to Krogers and restaurants and are definitely getting our exercise in. Amazon deliveries abound! Soon we’ll have to Uber to a department store because all our clothes are for warm weather and Virginia gets cold in October.

Derek (Mr. Mingle) has met almost all of the boaters/staff that are here. I’m often greeted with ‘you must be Derek’s wife’!!! But we’ve made lots of new friends already who now know my name too. We even ran into a couple here that traveled with us
for a while in 2017 on the Loop, Terry (known as Captain Crusty) and Dorothy on their boat ‘Magic’. It’s a small, wonderful world. And except for the cat finding her way through an AC intake vent and traveling into the secret bowels of the boat, no lives have been at risk! Luckily, when a cat gets hungry she eventually finds her way back to the opening. Said vent is now taped closed.

Things we already miss:
-Our home toilets where we can have unlimited poos and pees without a pump out, and can use toilet paper with wild abandon.
-A fenced-in yard where Tater can do his business off-leash without me worrying that he’s gonna jump off the boat/pier into the water.
 -The ability to go anywhere at any time in a car -A washer/dryer that doesn’t require quarters -My escape to pilates classes
-Clean feet!
-A normal-sized refrigerator
-A room big enough to spread your arms out and not touch anything
-Not saying ‘what’s that smell?’ or ‘what’s that noise?’ several times a day.
-And of course seeing the faces of family, friends, and my sweet grandson, Elliot.
But this is still worth it!

That’s it for now. More cleaning and small tasks await me this day.
Peace and love, Admiral Lori


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