Tag: Boathouse

[caption id="attachment_5744" align="aligncenter" width="1024"]Rosslyn Boathouse (Source: Geo Davis) Rosslyn Boathouse (Source: Geo Davis)[/caption]

Technically a “dock house” built atop a pier that protrudes out into Lake Champlain, this Eastlake inspired structure was originally conceived and constructed as a seasonal residence for the engineer/captain of the Kestrel steam yacht. It is the only surviving example of residential Essex boathouses and one of few historic Lake Champlain boathouses. (Note: there are two commercial boathouses in Essex, the Old Dock Restaurant and the Essex Marina.)

In 2004 through 2006 when we finally purchased the property, Rosslyn’s boathouse—a pleasure-promising peninsula from our perspective—mesmerized Susan and me with her beguiling siren song… What if we abandoned all sensibility and dove into this fantasy?!?!

  • Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues

    Welcome to spring in the Champlain Valley. And to Rosslyn’s annual spring drama: the Lake Champlain boathouse blues!

    Over the last month lake water level has been rising, rising, rising. And rising some more. In fact, it’s even risen since I started drafting this post. (Current level a little further down.)

    Boathouse Blues Begin

    Until recently I was singing the end-of-ski-season rag and the dandelion ditty while quietly hoping that Lake Champlain water levels would rise enough to hedge against last summer’s all-too-low water levels.

    And then I received this recent message and photo from Essex friend and neighbor Tom Duca.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Tom Duca)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Tom Duca)

    “The lake was superlow last year, but now it’s moving right up… Most of the snow is melted in the higher elevations, so I don’t think the lake will get much higher than this…” ~ Tom Duca

    Nerve wracking, right? Hopefully Tom’s snow melt assessment is accurate. And hopefully it’s not an overly rainy spring.

    My mother was the next boathouse blues melody maker. Here are her updates.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Melissa Davis)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Melissa Davis)

    “Water much higher, you’ll be glad to know!” ~ Melissa Davis

    So I suppose my wishes for higher-than-2016 water levels weren’t as quiet as I had thought. And initially Lake Champlain’s spring  water level increase did relieve me.

    And then my mother sent me this.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Melissa Davis)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Melissa Davis)

    “Water rising! Almost even with Old Dock dock.” ~ Melissa Davis

    She was referring to the Old Dock Restaurant, located just south of the ferry dock. Time to start monitoring the official Lake Champlain water level.

    Boathouse Blues Reference & Refrain

    For the official Lake Champlain water level, I turn to USGS.gov and pull up a one year retrospective that reveals the lake is much higher than last spring.

    Current Lake Champlain water level on April 21, 2017 (Source: USGS.gov)
    Current Lake Champlain water level on April 21, 2017 (Source: USGS.gov)

    See that red line marking 100′ above sea level? That indicates flood stage. Yes, we’re pretty close. In fact, as of today, April 24, 2017 the most recent instantaneous “water surface elevation” is 99.74′ above sea level. And by the time you read this, it may be even higher. Check out the current Lake Champlain water level (and temperature) if you’re curious.

    Until then, here are couple of additional glimpses of Rosslyn boathouse struggling to stay dry. This latest refrain in the Lake Champlain boathouse blues was photographed by Katie Shepard.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)

    Great angle, Katie! You can tell that even on this relatively placid day, a medium-sized wave or boat wake would likely inundate the floorboards.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)

    Looking down on the boathouse gangway reveals flotsam and jetsum that have already washed up on the decking.

    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)
    Lake Champlain Boathouse Blues (Source: Katie Shepard)

    And Katie’s last photograph shows the water level almost cresting Roslyn’s waterfront retaining wall. Fingers crossed that we won’t experience flood stage this year!

  • October Wind, Canada Geese and Essex DNA

    Rosslyn from Lake Champlain in October (Photo: Kelly Youngs-Schmitt)
    Rosslyn in October (Photo: Kelly Youngs-Schmitt)

    My day was made when part-time Essex resident Kelly Youngs-Schmitt shared these fun photographs on Facebook.

    Kelly’s a relatively new acquaintance (although her Essex connection is far deeper, longer and more historically significant than my own.) But the Facebook-powered social web and the curiously compelling Essex DNA have brought us together. She participates in the Essex on Lake Champlain community blog, and she generously shares the stories and artifacts from her family’s Essex past.

    Essex DNA

    That curiously compelling Essex DNA is in no small part responsible for our decision to relocate here. It’s an elusive topic, one that surfaces and then almost as quickly vanishes again throughout this blog. Like Champ, the Lake Champlain monster, who so many have experienced, but few can clearly and concisely explain or even prove… Essex exerts a quasi-mystical pull on many of us. I suppose the closest analogy would be a large, loosely knit family or a college or prep school that becomes woven into your fibers in a way that you can never quite grasp. You meet a cousin or a fellow alum for the first time and instantly you are drawn to one another, despite only the most nominal connection.

    Kelly Youngs-Schmitt and James W. Schmitt (Photo: Kelly Youngs-Schmitt)
    Kelly Youngs-Schmitt and James W. Schmitt (Photo: Kelly Youngs-Schmitt)

    No, these analogies falter. Because living in Essex, even for a few short weeks at a time, forges far deeper, far more relevant connections. Human connections. Civic connections. Architectural, cultural and historic connections. Environmental connections too, for so much of Essex’s magnetism is derived from its geographically perfect location between Lake Champlain and the Adirondacks. Access to nature and outdoor recreation, year-round, often elicits the “playground” analogy to the annoyance of some. Certainly far more than play happens in these sacred waters, valleys, hills and mountains. But it’s true that this environment is a proverbial fountain of youth. It invites childhood energy and dreams and playfulness, so in a sense it is a metaphorical playground.

    But I’m wandering far from my starting point which was Kelly’s photographs shown here.

    October Wind & Canada Geese

    Despite the on-again-off-again Indian Summer that we’ve enjoyed this autumn, there have been some bracing days, many like the one captured in these photos. Picture perfect. Bluebird skies and sunshine. But crisp. And windy. That “selfie” in the canoe captures what I’m describing. Kelly’s husband, James W. Schmitt, is pretty well bundled up!

    You can practically hear the Canada Geese clamoring across the sky or settling onto the lake for a deserved rest. This time of year vast flocks of Canada Geese ply the skyways from early morning late into the night. It’s the soundtrack of Essex autumn. And Essex spring. And while no Canada Geese are visible in Kelly’s photos, I know they are there. Honking.

    There’s something else that’s not visible in the photos: summer sunshine. In addition to Canada Geese, Technicolor fall foliage, and the Gingko shedding its leaves suddenly, dramatically, another autumn highlight is the changing light. During midsummer these photographs would have been bathed in a considerably stronger, more orange hued light. But as autumn advances, even the brightest daylight shifts toward buttery yellow hues and flatter light. This is particularly apparent in the photograph of Rosslyn and the boathouse. They appear to be off-white. And while some credit for this may be due the camera or phone, the reality is simply that the paint colors appear fainter, less pigmented in the autumn light, even in the early morning when the sun rises up out of Vermont’s Green Mountains displaying its most colorful rays of the day.

    Hmmm… A meandering, ruminating post if there ever was one. Time to wrap up!

  • Moist May 2017

    Moist May 2017 (Source: S. Bacot-Davis)
    Moist May 2017 (Source: S. Bacot-Davis)

    The Lake Champlain water level is ever-so-slowly dropping, but it’s premature to rule out the possibility of hitting (or even exceeding) flood stage. At present, there’s about a foot of clearance between the bottom of Rosslyn boathouse’s cantilevered deck and the glass-flat water surface. Windy, wavy days are another story altogether.

    [pullquote]With the first impossibly green asparagus and precocious yellow narcissus, can summer be far off?[/pullquote]

    For now, at least, Rosslyn’s boathouse is safe.

    Safe, but not dry. The boathouse, house, carriage barn, ice house, yards, meadows, gardens, orchard, and woods are soggy. Persistant showers with insufficient soaking up / drying out time has resulted in waterlogging. My bride catalogued current circumstances (see video below) including a row of cedars that were destroyed in late winter when an old, rotten maple tree fell down, crushing the hedge. And the vegetable garden has finally been tilled once, at least a week or two later than ideal.

    [youtube https://youtu.be/RxaQQqDGoq0&w=550&rel=0 ]

    The final images offer a nice balance to the spring rain, rain, rain. With the first impossibly green asparagus and precocious yellow narcissus, can summer be far off?

  • Lake Champlain vs. Rosslyn Boathouse

    Rosslyn boathouse is flooded
    Rosslyn boathouse is flooded (6:00am April, 29, 2011)

    We knew it would happen sooner or later. But like so many inevitable but dreaded events, we’d wrapped ourselves in a warm comforter of denial. And four springs slipped quickly past since purchasing Rosslyn without the boathouse getting flooded. Sure, we’ve had plenty of high water, but the water’s never risen above the floorboards. In fact, the highest it had ever gotten was about 9-12″ below the floorboards!

    Not this year. Lake Champlain‘s water level has risen quickly in recent weeks due in part to seasonal spring melt after an extremely snowy winter and spring. But spring rains are the real culprit. Lots and lots and lots of rain. We’ve been watching day by day as the water crept up, reassuring ourselves that it must be cresting soon… Only it wasn’t. It’s still rising. About another 5″ inches since yesterday afternoon, bringing it to about one foot in the last 24 hours. That’s fast! But slow enough for us to clear out the items that don’t play well with water. Which put a dent in Doug’s carpentry work upstairs, finishing up the trim and oiling the fir. We also had to shut down all electric. Which makes for a dark and eerie lair in the evening. A bit like a flooded tunnel. Interesting photos though…

    Most of the drama surrounds the boathouse, especially since we’ve worked long and hard to restore it to health and happiness. But the waterfront is another big concern. Major erosion already, and that’s with relatively light wind and minimal wave action. Big wind and big waves could be catastrophic! Hoping against hope that the wind will remain calm and the waters will fall. Help me hope if you’ve got psychic horsepower to spare. Although we haven’t finished landscaping the entire waterfront, roughly a third (about 80′) looked great up until a few days ago. We’ve rebuilt the stone walls and planted a lawn on the terrace above the beach. The rear edge of the lawn, following the base of the next stone terrace had grown into a handsome daylily bed that stretched the full eighty feet. Spectacular in summer. Now virtually erased by drift wood grinding and churning in the waves. All hand planted. All pampered through the first season. All healthy and thriving earlier this week. All gone now. Memories. I can only hope that some of the bulbs are intact, floating around Lake Champlain, and that they will wash up on people’s beaches and surprise them this summer with heirloom blooms!

    In the time it took me to whip up this post, the USGS has changed the Lake Champlain water level from 102.54″ to 102.61″ which happened over an interval of about three hours. So, still not cresting. And the sky has gone from sunny and clear to dark and cloudy. Storm clouds threatening. Wind rising…

  • Boathouse Needs a Snorkel

    USGS Lake Champlain Water Level, April 28, 2011
    USGS Lake Champlain Water Level, April 28, 2011

    According to this USGS data for Lake Champlain we’re making history. To be more precise, Lake Champlain’s water levels are making history. That red line at the top of the graph is the historic high water mark set during spring flooding on April 27, 1993. And, as you can see, the blue “actual” recordings have already flickered above the red line a couple of times, though — as I understand it — these figures are not official. Yet. Not sure why. Nor when we’ll know the official water level, but I can assure you that Rosslyn boathouse is now swamped. And the lake is virtually windless and flat… Imagine what this afternoon will look like if/when the wind climbs into the high teens as forecast!

    Fortunately there’s less debris floating around the boathouse today. I’m worried that heavy wave action combined with a large floating log or two acting as a battering ram against the boathouse superstructure could be devastating. We’ve witnessed the damage already when the water level was 18″ lower. I’ll head down when the rain abates to take some more images of the drowning boathouse to share with you. Until then, please send dry, windless vibes Essex-way. Thanks!

  • Beavers & Boathouses

    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage (Source: Geo Davis)
    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage (Source: Geo Davis)

    We noticed yesterday that a beaver (or beavers?) have selected a pair of trees on our neighbor’s waterfront to sharpen their teeth.

    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage (Source: Geo Davis)
    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage (Source: Geo Davis)

    One is a large cottonwood with a pair of fallen locusts hung up on it. The beaver (Castor canadensis) has already gotten a pretty good start, and the tree is laaarge and disconcertingly close to Rosslyn’s boathouse.

    We contacted the neighbor in the hopes that they would take a look at their earliest convenience (i.e. before the cottonwood and gravity conspire against the boathouse!) I suggested the possibility of wrapping the tree with steel mesh/screen to inhibit further damage. This isn’t the most sightly solution, but it tends to be effective.

    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage prevention (Source: Geo Davis)
    Beavers & Boathouses: Castor canadensis damage prevention (Source: Geo Davis)

    Thanks, neighbors!

     

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  • After the Rain

    After the Rain: Rosslyn Waterfront (Geo Davis)
    After the Rain: Rosslyn Waterfront (Geo Davis)

    Just when a couple of dry, sunny days had begun to feel familiar, even normal, the rain returned. It came down in waves upon waves. Streams and rivers swelled, the driveway became two coursing torrents, and the vegetable garden turned to soupy mud.

    Spirits slipped.

    And then slid deeper.

    But… as cocktail hour yielded to dinner hour, the deluge ceased, the fog lifted, and the setting sun bathed Vermont’s Green Mountains in alpenglow.

    This is what it looked like.