I
mentioned in yesterday’s post that a few years ago I spent some time in Key
West, Florida. When there I enjoyed a short sail on the Appledore an 86 foot
wooden Windjammer. At first it was the sound. Creaks and cricks and moaning
groans of teak wood joints in the planking of the deck as the internal timbers
torqued from the blowing stress of wind in the sails. Wood on wood, a sound all
sailors know.
Straining
lines answered back to the groans.
I knew
we were underway, but now it was confirmed by the splashing spray and snapping
sails. Soon would come commands from the Captain to trim the mizzen sheet
before he shouts, “ready to come about”.
The
Schooner glided or’ and through the wave swells and white caps in the
confluence of the Gulf and Atlantic waters. The spray was salty, but warm since
the air was cold. The sun lowered closer to its green splash of light in the
distant sea; its celestial candle dimmed for the coming dusk then darkened for
the hours till dawn.
I am not
a sailor, but I love to sail. My poets mind translates the wind to grace as I
let it carry me to the lost horizons of time and the wonderment of what’s
there.
The
salted spray with its mist and aroma ignited my spirit in a liquid flame of awe
and I felt my other lives and places on and near the sea.
The
mighty clapping flaps of canvas sails slapped me back to the NOW and to the
gusty folds of waning winds that heeled the boat to an awkward tilt. I stand
with my back braced to the main mast and knees bent ready for instantaneous
adjustments in balance. Shanty words come from somewhere in my mind.
“Hi Lo
High, sailors cry when God’s on the water”.
The sea
has always been measured by the sadness of time and tide and in the cries of
separation. Family here, future there. Vast waves of hopes and wishes in
between. Adventure? Yes! Fearful too, especially for those who love the result,
but know not the process.
I am far
more appreciative now of the early explorers who mastered the seas and set
humankind on the path of expansion.
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