The Hamilton Spectator

PASSENGERS KNIT A SEAWORTHY YARN

Sailing and knitting has a long seafaring history

- ANDREA SACHS

Captain Annie Mahle stood on the deck of the J.&E. Riggin and welcomed more than a dozen passengers already knuckle-deep in the theme of the September cruise.

As the guests knitted and purled, she described life aboard the two-masted schooner with no engine and marine plumbing. She discussed the toilet, which requires vigorous hand-pumping, and the bathing options, which include a rinse with a water pitcher and a shower in the narrow head. Then she introduced Maggie Radcliffe, who proceeded to explain the challenges of sailing around Penobscot Bay in Maine.

“Don’t put your knitting on the bench,” warned the instructor. “It could go overboard and then you have to wash the salt out of it. And knitting needles can roll on deck and out the scuppers. And put your gear in waterproof bags.”

She glanced knowingly at the waves playing patty cake against the hull.

Maggie, of Blacksburg, Va., was leading her 10th knitting cruise on the Riggin and, for our edificatio­n, she had brought samples of her work, helpful handouts and several salty yarns from previous trips. On one cruise, she told us, a passenger’s project blew over the railing and unravelled in the water. Maggie hauled in the yarn handover-hand, like a fisherman pulling in a net. On another voyage, a knitter’s wooden needles fell overboard and were lost at sea. Fortunatel­y, the cruiser had a spare pair.

“It’s very rare that you find a cruise without knitters,” said Maggie, who first taught on a Holland America ship in Alaska. “It’s a very convenient thing to do with your hands while you’re looking at the scenery.”

Annie and her husband, Captain Jon Finger, arrange at least three knitting cruises per season, which runs from late May through early October. Several of the trips sell out. On the Labour Day voyage, 16 passengers — all women, plus one husband — represente­d a mix of firsttimer­s and returnees. The veterans were easily identifiab­le: they had Riggin Relic patches on their hats, which they earned on their third sailing, and modelled their creations (beanies, scarves, shawls) from past sojourns.

“Initially, I came for the knitting and the adventure,” said Teresa Kendall, a four-time cruiser from St. Louis. “Now, I could easily come sailing without the knitting.”

Sailing and knitting might not seem like obvious hobby-mates: sharp needles plus swells could equal an accidental stabbing. But sewing has a long seafaring history. Those nets and sails of yore didn’t stitch themselves. Maggie also told me that the marline spike originated as a seaman’s pointed tool for untwisting rope before migrating into knitting circles. And when not harpooning, whalers knit. Perhaps Melville got it wrong and Captain Ahab wanted to catch Moby Dick to measure his neck for a scarf. Sailors and knitters also use similar knots. To make a hat, Maggie taught me to cast on with the same knot the crew used to secure the fenders.

And yet, despite the relative harmony on the seas, the knitters will occasional­ly incite a small mutiny.

“Sometimes, we call out ‘Ready about’ and we will hear, ‘I have to finish my row,’” said Annie, who was working on a shawl called Waiting for Rain. “So we tell them, ‘Finish your row and then we’ll lower the sails.’”

The 120-foot schooner is based in Rockland — a staging ground for several Windjammer­s, including the 19th-century Stephen Taber — where Annie and Jon fell in love with historic vessels and each other. On the day of departure, the cruisers on neighbouri­ng boats relaxed in the morning sun before casting off their lines. Our group, meanwhile, dashed into town for last-minute supplies at Over the Rainbow Yarn. On the counter, the employees had laid out totes containing a skein, a gift for the sailors.

“Souvenir yarn!” exclaimed Teresa, as she passed a display of Made in Maine products.

The Riggin had arranged for the shop to open early for us, knowing that this was our only chance to purchase materials before setting off for the week. (The store’s owner, Mim Bird, teaches on the June knitting cruise.) Most of our overnight stops — Bucks Harbor, Pulpit Harbor and Owls Head — were short on shopping opportunit­ies. We could stock up on beer, lighthouse magnets and fishing line at the general store, but were out of luck if we needed stitch markers or crochet hooks.

The group happily skipped through the thicket of yarn and tools. Lesley Watts, of Cambridge, Mass., eyed a kit called the Lobster on the Rocks Hat. Christina Cardone, of Philadelph­ia, headed for the ball winder. (On the Riggin, I looped the hank around the legs of a bar stool in the saloon, a Maggietest­ed trick.) I picked up a starter pack because, big confession, I have only tried knitting once. In a pretrip message, Maggie suggested that we bring along any unfinished projects. I resurrecte­d a nubby green scarf I had started on a long-ago visit to the Rockland-Camden area. The purple plastic needles resembled a Pompeii artifact, frozen in the same stitch for nearly a decade.

Back on the schooner, with our packages stowed away in our berths, we took our places on deck. Some passengers settled into stadium seats beneath the boom; others sat on benches wedged between the rigging. Fingers moved rhythmical­ly, hypnotical­ly. The sails puffed their cheeks. Abstract shapes started to transform into recognizab­le forms. The bowsprit bounced in the waves. I sat quietly, hands still, a nest of yarn in my lap.

“Is there any knitting going on?” Maggie shouted over the wind. “Should I be circulatin­g and mentoring?”

By the time we reached Warren Island, our first anchor site, my fingers were fluttering, too.

If you have cruised on a large vessel or chartered a sailboat, consider yourself pampered. The Riggin has more in common with camping than traditiona­l cruising. The most modern amenity on the former 1927 oyster dredger with National Historic Landmark status is an iPhone charger attached to a 12-volt battery.

The Riggin can carry up to 24 guests, who sleep in 11 subterrane­an cabins accessible by steep steps. A sign reminded us to descend backward; the “or else” was implicit. In the morning, we resembled prairie dogs, popping out of our holes for coffee and homemade toaster tarts or steel-cut oats with Maine blueberrie­s. On sold-out cruises, strangers will sometimes bunk with strangers in staterooms containing two or three beds. Returning guests will room with friends they haven’t seen since the last knitting cruise. Depending on the cabin, they often have to take turns standing up.

The Riggin’s matchmaker­s had originally paired me with a Virginian named Turtle, until they discovered that she was travelling with a North Carolinian sheep shearer named Charlotte, so I scored my own room in the bow. The sleeping section in the ship’s nose accommodat­ed four cabins, plus the captains’ digs.

I met Lesley, my across-the-hall neighbour, while she was debating the upper versus lower bunk. In my stateroom, a leak over the top bed made the decision for me. I stored my bags around the wet spot and placed my knitting parapherna­lia on a shelf by my feet. The cabin was snuggly, especially when I built a cocoon out of the two sets of wool blankets and quilts. I didn’t even have to risk cold feet to brush my teeth. I could reach the sink from my bed.

Unlike on the major cruise lines, we didn’t receive newsletter­s under our doors listing the day’s events. No ballroom dancing or zip lines or even swimming, unless you cared to brave the frigid Maine water. The Riggin’s main activities could fit on the corner of a cocktail napkin: sleep, eat, sail, knit. The quartet repeated itself several times throughout the day.

Eating started early, with breakfast served at 8 a.m. Annie is an accomplish­ed chef who has published several cookbooks. (She sells them on-board, along with Riggin clothing and souvenirs, and Maggie’s books.) Before every meal, which she signalled with a ring of the bell, she would describe the menu in the voice of a town crier delivering urgent news.

Annie and her assistant, Betsy Maislen, a retired nurse from Vermont, cooked on a Cottage Crawford wood stove that, under their command, performed like a Viking range. They assembled elaborate meals, such as a New England boiled dinner with brisket brined in salt and pickled with spice; a medley of savoy cabbage, onions and kohlrabi harvested from the captains’ garden in Rockland; homemade Irish soda bread; and, for dessert, raspberry galette with ricotta and maple cream. Annie and Jon don’t serve alcohol, but we could bring our own. Every night was open bar, with the knitters sharing their cider, boxed wines and vintages purchased at the Rite-Aid in Rockland.

We ate all of our meals on the ship except at Warren Island State Park, where the crew dinghied over the fixings for a lobster bake. Before motoring over to the picnic grounds, Jon ran down the items we should bring ashore: “Knitting, good footwear, bathing suit, something warm to wear and cold beverages of sorts. But you don’t need your mugs.” (We each adopted a mug that served as our drinking vessel for the week.)

Carol Thomas, a New Jersey garden centre owner on her eighth Riggin cruise, prioritize­d the list.

“The two most essential items are knitting and wine,” she said. “Maybe that explains why my knitting is so erratic.”

At the state park and on the ship, Maggie held classes based on this year’s theme, “Knitting without Boundaries.” (Translatio­n: Knitting without a pattern or plan, which is how I roll anyway.) She taught us to knit triangles, squares and crescents, and how to make sweaters with boat necks, evening bags with tassel closures and shawls with eight balls of yarn. She personaliz­ed the lessons to address our specific projects, such as Teresa’s sweater, Lesley’s sock, Turtle’s water-bottle carrier and my scarf. She would interrupt herself so we could watch lobster fishermen haul up their traps, help the crew raise the 500-pound anchor or refuel after an intense knitting session.

“Do you want hors d’oeuvre or do you want to hear Maggie talk?” Annie asked during our evening in Smith Cove. Our answer: both. We knitted any time and everywhere. Before breakfast and after dinner. In the saloon warmed by the stove and crush of bodies, and on the deck lit by gas lanterns and the rising moon. When the boat was heeling and when she was as still as a pine tree on a windless day. Alone and together. As bald eagles were our witnesses, we knitted.

I completed my scarf on the second day. Dinah Smith, a Vermonter logging her third schooner cruise of the summer, knitted me a fastener. I called my creation the Donna, a cowl-neck version of the dickie. The next day, I made a hat that I accessoriz­ed with a sailboat-shaped button purchased in Rockland. I wore it the entire next day, as armour against the chilly fog. At this point in the cruise, I was adept enough to knit, talk and gaze at the landscape without dropping too many stitches.

On the final night, we gathered below to hear Annie sing and Jon strum guitar. Around the room, knitting needles clicked softly. Like the slap of the waves and the creak of the masts, this was the sound of sailing.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The J&E Riggin is 120-foot schooner based in Rockland, Maine.
The J&E Riggin is 120-foot schooner based in Rockland, Maine.
 ??  ?? Every morning, Annie Mahle, the captain and chef, sets out an elaborate breakfast on deck.
Every morning, Annie Mahle, the captain and chef, sets out an elaborate breakfast on deck.
 ??  ?? Maggie Radcliffe, centre, the knitting instructor on the J&E Riggin, knits with the other cruisers during a weeklong sail on Penobscot Bay in Maine.
Maggie Radcliffe, centre, the knitting instructor on the J&E Riggin, knits with the other cruisers during a weeklong sail on Penobscot Bay in Maine.
 ??  ?? After eight years, the author finally finishes her green scarf.
After eight years, the author finally finishes her green scarf.
 ?? ANDREA SACHS, THE WASHINGTON POST ?? On the last night, the cruisers gather in the saloon to knit and listen to Annie Mahle sing and Jon Finger, her husband and co-captain, strum guitar.
ANDREA SACHS, THE WASHINGTON POST On the last night, the cruisers gather in the saloon to knit and listen to Annie Mahle sing and Jon Finger, her husband and co-captain, strum guitar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada