Cookbooks, the Galley, and Submarine Hunting…

Ok, its “Christmas after Christmas” for me! I just went to Alibris.com and purchased copies of three out-of-print books that were written by Mahdee’s first owner, Alexander “Sandy” White Moffat. They’ll be showing up in the mail soon 🙂

The first one, written in 1928, must have been good since it has been reprinted several time between then and 1977. The title is awesome:

The Galley Guide: A Purely Humanitarian Work Planned Out of Consideration for Those Who Cruise on Water and for Their Digestive Apparatus, Upon Which, After All, Success or Failure Largely Depends.

This title sounds like something David’s Dad would write in regards to Quetico canoe trip provisioning…

I can’t wait to get it. Reviews of the book state that it is written in common language and includes some references to cooking methods and equipment used on yachts in the late 1920s. This should go wonderfully in Mahdee’s galley along with my 1931 version of the Joy of Cooking. See the galley as designed by Sandy Moffat:

book

The other books I’ve ordered were written by Mr. Moffat in the 1970’s it seems. The first, Maverick Navy, is about his experiences as a Navy Reserve Ensign during WWI. The publishers notes are that it is “a narrative memoir of the little-known and largely forgotten anti-submarine warfare in World War I ~ a moving story of ingenuity, resourcefulness, and adventure at sea.” A review by the Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia follows: MAVERICK NAVY is “a vivid narrative of Captain Moffat’s adventures while in command of Subchaser No. 143 during World War I. With the patriotic but naive innocence which so characterized the period and ‘with experience only in small sailing yachts in coastwise cruising’ he was catapulted, in 1917, into the Navy, the real and earnest blue water fighting Navy. With apparent total recall, 85-year-old former U.S. Naval Reserve officer ‘Sandy’ Moffat has written a fascinating, humorous account of his experiences as an ensign commander of U.S. Navy patrol boats, both in American and European waters, in World War I. This book performs a fine service in recalling a little-known but useful activity by volunteers which contributed its part to the Allied victory at sea. The story is eminently refreshing and readable as well.”

His sequel, A Navy Maverick Comes of Age, 1939-1945 is described as “A spirited account of one man’s varied service in the defense of New England’s shoreline during World War II–the Inshore Patrol, minesweeping, and the surrender of German U-Boats in Northeast waters.”

Sounds like good intrigue.

So, Mahdee’s library is growing…

Next item of business: Counter Timber

So, the “counter timber” (reference Lloyds) aka “tail feather” (reference Crocker and McIntosh) aka “horn timber” (reference most boatbuilders) has some checking and some rot around the rudder tube. We’re hoping to repair rather than replace this lengthy timber. More posts to come on this one..

countertimber

“Oceans as Wilderness” Environmental Campaign

On December 9, 2006, Congress passed the reauthorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA). The primary law governing fishing in U.S. waters, MSA was first passed in 1976, and requires reauthorization every 10 years. This year’s reauthorization includes important conservation measures for promoting sustainable fisheries nationwide. Read more about it and other ocean environmental issues on the Patagonia webpage about the company’s Oceans as Wilderness 2006-2007 environmental campaign.

Oceans as Wilderness

The Atlantic Ocean Nova Scotia            photo: Brenda 2003

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