This spring Sandy thought that I should
extend the canoe launch dock behind the casita. I waited until November first,
which turned out to be a seventy-degree day, partly sunny and no mosquitos
We have had very little rain. October was the
sixth driest ever on the South Shore. Normally the water goes up to the original
dock but never over it. The water source comes from some ponds miles away off Temple Street in Duxbury. The streams west
of us flow into the South River.
Although from our casa it looks like a one-mile
long pond, in actuality it is the Green Harbor River. Years ago the Garretsons
on Route 3A, Moraine Street, dammed it up to fill their cranberry bogs. It is
called Green Harbor River because after winding through the Green Harbor Golf
Course under Webster Street it ends up in the Atlantico in Green Harbor.
Green's Harbour being named for the very first resident of Marshfield. William
Green was the first mate off a ship named the Mayflower who built a cod salting
business here on the point in 1621.
When the rain and snow comes, our canal will
fill and be around four or five feet deep. That will be enough to get our
canoes to the pond or when it freezes, a nice walkway to go out and ice skate.
Yah! You can fish also.
© Chris Bernstein/CDB Photos |
This is Chris's aerial photo, taken before
construction of the canal. The gunite swimming pool was completed in 1978.
To the left you can see all of the Elricks’ house.
They were already here 41 years ago when we built our original house. You
almost can't see Garage Mahal, built in 2004. You cannot see the Tea House (1972)
or Cabana (1978), the screened-in hammica room (2013) or even the Casita (2001). The Egans built the house to the
right in 1980. They are long gone, to Pennsylvania, but are coming up for
Thanksgiving. Dead center towards the bottom of the photo is a large green pine
tree. To the right of it is the original dock. I can see it but you probably
can't.
I sit out here at the end of my day to watch the
sunset. You can only see one other house. There is no traffic noise. We
are thirty miles from the Cape Cod Canal and the same from Fenway Park. On a
windless night you can hear the Fenway Faithful when Big Papi launches one to
right field.
Come over and listen if you don't believe me. You get the feeling
that you are in Vermont or New Hampshire. You hear only ducks and birds and
coyotes and frogs and peepers. Early one morning this summer I heard a deer
bellowing.
1 comment:
Sweet.
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