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Lots of boats come to Oriental, some tie up at the Town Dock for a night or two, others drop anchor in the harbor for a while. If you've spent any time on the water you know that every boat has a story. The Shipping News on TownDock.net brings you the stories of the boats that have visited recently.
January 17, 2012
If you’re going to make a grand entrance or a graceful exit, it helps to cut a fine silhouette. In December, a boat from Nova Scotia showed how both are done.“Ask For” out of Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, during a stop in Oriental in December.“Ask For” first glided in to view near sunset, moments after the tail end of Oriental’s Spirit of Christmas parade had just passed by the Town Dock. Parade spectators who looked out toward the harbor were treated to the approach of a boat out of another time. It was as though this were another event in the Spirit of Christmas line-up.What little light the sun had left that day, seemed to gently push “Ask For” towards Oriental’s Town Dock. Crew member John Pankhurst on deck with captain Tam Flemming at the wheel.A few helping hands on shore for “Ask For“s arrival.As the boat’s captain Tam Flemming, and his crew of four neared the wharf, hands reached out from the shore for ther lines. Once the centerboard came up, the 45-foot long boat — a skipjack schooner — was pulled snugly to the wharf. Drawing only about 3 feet, she could.
Tam Flemming built “Ask For” over the course of 5 years, launching the wooden skipjack schooner in 2010. This was the boat’s first trip down the East Coast. Destination: the islands.Turning heads is nothing new for “Ask For”. Tam Flemming says he spent five years building “Ask For” near Tatamagouche on Nova Scotia’s northern shore. When he launched “Ask For” in the summer of 2010, the Truro Daily reported, 200 people turned out, among them, the widow of the man who had first dreamed of building the boat, but who died leaving only the hull. According to the Nova Scotia newspaper, she had asked Tam to take over the project, about the same time he’d been thinking of building such a boat. By that account, that’s how “Ask For” got its name.
Trans-Canadian crew of “Ask For”. From left, Lys Hermanski, Paige Littlefair, John Pankhurst, Tam Flemming and Mark Jennings.Fast forward to December of 2011: what Tam Flemming was asking for was a winter in the islands and toward that goal, he and the crew were making good time. A snowstorm had delayed their departure from Nova Scotia and they’d only gotten away from Shelburne on the southern coast on November 26. Two weeks later, they pulled up in Oriental.
Those would be sleeping bags drying in the rigging.They stayed for just two days, enough time to dry out sleeping bags in the rigging and do a bit of provisioning. And then at midday on Monday, Tam and crew started to raise sails while at the wharf. After a bit of fending off, they raised the others in the harbor and sailed off, just as they arrived, seemingly out of another time.
Farewell to Oriental. “Ask For” slips out of the harbor, all ten hands on deck.More photos, including a visit down below on “Ask For,” and her sailing away, just ahead:
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“Ask For” and crew members Mark Jennings and Paige Littlefair.Down below, from the companionway.Aft cabin and galley of “Ask For”.Crewmember Lys Hermanski.Behind the chair in the aft cabin is the crawl space toward the fore.Inner workings. Down below, next to a crawl space between the forward and aft sections of the boat, is the compartment for the center board. With the centerboard up, “Ask For” draws just a couple of feet.Forward cabin on “Ask For”: bunks lining both sides, a stove up front and a bookcase down the center.And up above, the forward hatch on “Ask For“s bow while tied up to Oriental’s wharf .[page]
Tam Flemming, who spent five years building “Ask For”. He was headed for the islands when he and four crew stopped in Oriental.Bow and chains.One of “Ask For“s masts and the courtesy flag.Much wood on board “Ask For”, including the blocks.One memento of Oriental for Paige Littlefair: a new pair of shoes bought on sale. They replace her boots which she says were 10 years old and had recently sprung leaks.Lines and systems aft of the wheel.[page]
“Ask For” at the Oriental Town Dock with one sail up and ready to go.Pushing away. Crewmembers Lys Hermanski and Mark Jennings on “Ask For” fend off of Bill and Lara Calfee’s boat, “Sunrise” at Oriental’s Town Dock.Clear of the Town Dock, “Ask For” heads down the Oriental harbor, raising still more sail.Mark, Paige and Lys work on the final sail.Tam Flemming at the helm as “Ask For” sails out of Oriental’s harbor with three sails up.“Ask For” sails away.Skipjack schooner, “Ask For” from Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia slips out of Oriental’s harbor after a two-day stay in December.