Northern Loop - Saturday, Sep 12
It was overcast but not raining this morning, a pleasant change.
Slept late, ate breakfast at the hotel, and repacked all the wet items that had dried out overnight. Got on the road about 0900. Ran up I-95 through CT. This picture is from the Gold Star Bridge of the Electric Boat works in Groton.
As I approached Stonington, I grabbed this overall view of Mystic Seaport from a pullout.
AS I entered RI, the weather was deteriorating.
In MA, I stopped in Boston at the Charlestown Navy Yard and took the tour of the USS Constitution, AKA, Old Ironsides. What an impressive hunk of wood. To think that this ship is over 200 years old, still commissioned in the US Navy, and available to the public. She is currently undergoing renovation once again, so there was a temporary cover over the spar deck, and some of the areas below decks were off limits. Still, a lot to see and take in. I retired from the Navy over 25 years ago, and it has taken until now for me to see this.
One of the items being replaced is the main decking. This is about 4 inches thick. They replace the decking on average every 20 to 30 years. This is a shot of some of the old decking waiting replacement.
One of the items to warm a sailors soul is the grog barrel. The sailor was our guide through this part of the ship. Yes, he is an active duty sailor, a tour I would have killed for.
One of the 24 pounder guns, she carries 44 of them.
The ship carried a crew of 450 to 500 sailors and marines in wartime. They slept on the berth deck in hammocks like these.
Some of the framing that stiffened this ship’s hull.
The Commanding Officers of the USS Constitution since she was commissioned in 1797.
She was nicknamed ‘Old Ironsides’ due to the live oak that was sandwiched in her hull. There was the normal horizontal planking for the outer hull, then vertical planking of live oak, and then another inner layer of horizontal planking to complete the 3 layer hull structure. In her first combat, the enemy cannon balls bounced off the hull, earning the nickname of 'Old Ironsides'.
The ship’s bell, which the crew rings religiously as aboard any commissioned ship in the Navy.
As I left Boston, the weather was deteriorating, and getting sloppy.
I arrived in Kittery, MA around 1730. I had not been here in over 30 years. The last time being when the USS John C Calhoun was in the shipyard for overhaul. A lot has changed around here in 30 years.
The weather service says that this storm is moving out. I may have decent weather in another day or two. Tomorrow I head north a ways into ME, then back into NH to hit Mount Washington before venturing into VT and back into NY via Lake Champlaign.