It was time to hit the road for real. No more safety net of RV supercenters or Kate’s house. We hit the road and headed for Castle Marina, just outside Annapolis. The drive down was uneventful. John made friends with a trucker who showed him the insiders method of checking tire pressure (all you need is a “Tire buddy” – which will also work for fending off any intruders). Everyone was buying gas in New Jersey before heading into sniper country in Maryland. The entire region was paralyzed with fear of pumping gas or shopping at Home Depot for fear of being killed by the sniper.
We got off 95 and onto Route 301, a beautiful double lane highway running through farmland and squash and pumpkin patches. We found our way to Castle Marina and CJ helped us settle into the parking lot outside the Marina office. After 10 years, it was good to see her again and the years melted away. Jeff was at the Annapolis Power Boat Show, so we made a stop at the boat to see their “home”- a gorgeous 58 foot boat. The “Pinch Me” was huge- much bigger than I ever expected. It was 58’ long, with 3 berths, a full kitchen (with full-sized appliances) and a real living room with large screen TV. CJ made a Cosmopolitan and after 2 drinks, we stumbled off to dinner at a local Italian place . Our first night in the marina was on our own- generator power, but once again, we slept like babies.
Jeff stopped by in the morning and with the marina manager’s help, we got set up with an electrical hookup. The propane gauge was showing empty, so we located “Big Daddy’s” Texaco station, towing service and propane station just a few blocks away. Big Daddy was out on a tow, so we talked with Big Mamma and she told us to stop by about 10:00. Big Daddy was a real local Eastern Shore guy – huge beer belly and a marble-mouthed accent. We filled up the tank (it wasn’t empty) and filled the gas tank.
In the afternoon, we headed to Chestertown with CJ and Jeff. The town dates from the 1600’s and has a charming little business district just blocks from the harbor. Housing styles ran the gamut from Federal to Georgian to Italianate to Queen Anne. We walked the downtown streets, got an ice cream (3 scoops for $1) and then drove through the historic district of houses. The houses on the water were beautiful and the town became #1 on our possible list of future homes.
We headed back to Kent Island and had a beautiful sunset dinner at The Narrows. Food was spectacular- pecan crusted catfish.
Encouraged by the charm of Chestertown, we decided to head north to another small historic town called Chesapeake City. Situated on the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, the views were spectacular and the possibility of watching the Canal traffic was intriguing. But, the town itself, was very small. The main business street was filled with small Victorian houses, but there wasn’t much of an infrastructure to support anything but tourism. It was a micro-Marblehead without the surrounding neighborhoods – a one street town.
We continued to Hartford County at the northern edge of the Chesapeake Bay and at the mouth of the Susquehanna River found a lovely town, Havre de Grace (pronounced by the locals as “Hava de Grace”). The town was real- obviously still oriented towards tourism, but with the feel of a real town outside the tourist season. They made abysmal use of their spectacular waterfront with only one restaurant on the water. Another possible option if small town life and a Victorian house are our primary factors.
We drove back through Baltimore and got back to the Marina for dinner on the boat with CJ and Jeff. She made fresh grilled trout and zucchini pancakes. It was wonderful.
John started to make a daily am visit to Big Daddy’s to dump our trash and get the Washington Post. The first day, he put in a quarter and the box wouldn’t open, When he asked Big Daddy, he simply explained that the paper was now 35 cents (he just hadn’t gotten around to changing the sign)
To pay them back for two dinners in a row, we took CJ and Jeff to Annie’s for brunch. The brunch tables filled two rooms with everything from fresh made omlettes to chipped beef to a table of just desserts. We ate and ate and ate. Then, Jeff drove us all around the islands of Kent (through the tiny town of Stevensville) to Romancoke and Love Point. We saw a few interesting houses but determined that the area would probably close in on us.
With Annapolis just across the Bay Bridge, it was time for a visit. After a quick stop at Home Depot (Jeff and John shopping while CJ and I waited by the registers), we headed into the historic district. We found a parking spot and grabbed lunch at Rams Head Tavern and Fordham Brewing Company. It was sunny and still warm enough to sit on the patio and gourge on fish and chips. After lunch, we took a bus tour of the city and we were in love. It was no doubt that we could live in this town. The historic district was a bit of Marblehead and Salem mixed together – beautiful houses on tree lined streets with brick sidewalks and tons of porches right on the sidewalk. We called a realtor on the way home to set up an appointment to explore further.
Dinner was back at Kent Island- this time at a crab shack. We all ordered all you can eat crabs. In addition to a huge platter of large crabs, we got hush puppies, french fries, green beans, and potato salad. The group behind us were on their third platter of crabs- while we managed to only finish one platter plus and extra 6 crabs. By the time we finished, the table was filled with cracked crab shells.
We met Nan, our Coldwell Banker Real Estate agent and got the low-down on the Annapolis real estate market. Expensive- but not quite to Boston standards (although, fast approaching the insanity). The properties that we had admired on our bus tour were all in the $1M plus range, but she did have a few that were smaller and a bit more modest in price so we asked her to set up appointments.
We started our house hunt at a B&B on Duke of Gloucester Street. The property was in bankruptcy and needed some work. It had some possibilities, but the street was fairly busy and parking would have been a nightmare. From there, we went to Market Street and before we even walked in the door, we were in love with this house. The street was tree lined, with porches on all the houses, abutting the sidewalks. The house was small- long and narrow with a beautiful entryway, small living and dining rooms and beautiful kitchen overlooking a large garden. The second floor had 3 bedrooms and a bath and the master was on the third floor. As John mouthed “I love this house” walking behind the realtor who asked no questions, we continued the march.
We looked at a house in Eastport, a older blue collar part of Annapolis. The area had definite potential- a up and coming area with an old “Townie” feeling. The house outside was gorgeous, but the developer had made a Jewish suburban dream house on the interior. The property next door was being “renovated” by the owners. The only thing standing from the original building was the front façade, propped up by wood beams. We couldn’t figure out if they were rebuilding a house or a bowling alley.
We made another stop in the Murray Hill neighborhood (John compared it to Cleveland Heights). A bit too suburban for us.
Finally, we made our last stop at a property on Green Street. The street was lovely, but the house wasn’t much (especially at it’s 589,000 asking price). We kept going back to the house on Market Street. The possibility of having a house with rental income (during the summer) and a house that we loved was becoming very real to us. We asked the realtor to set up a second look and we headed off to lunch in Eastport at Carol’s Creek, a restaurant right on the water. We sat at the bar and over lots of wine, tried to decide if “this was the place” for our next home. We consulted with the bartender, a local who thought it was a great idea and talked it over and over. We went back to the house and spent an hour walking around. If our new friend Nan had pushed us just a bit, we would have had our checkbooks out. But, we decided to mull it over that night.
We called CJ and Jeff and had drinks and appetizers on the boat and talked through our dilemma. We left the boat talking about making an offer on the house. But, turning into the parking lot, with the "Domuz" waiting for us, we had second thoughts. With only 2 weeks into our ‘adventure’, we weren’t ready to chuck it all and deal with a house and all the responsibilities associated with it. We just weren’t ready to give up our gypsy lifestyle.
When we got back, our other new realtor friend, Nan #2, called and told us about a house in Centerville, so we set up an appointment to see it the next day.
We met Nan and followed her up to Centerville and an old Victorian farmhouse just outside town. For just over 300,000, you got a huge house, garage with apartment, huge yard, but it just felt too country for our taste. Centerville was a candidate town for us –as long as you could be off the main road and close to town. The town was filled with huge Victorian houses. We continued our drive on the DelMarVa peninsula to see Queenstown (much too tiny with no infrastructure) and Easton (similar to Chestertown without water – given the choice, go for the water). St Michaels (too small, too cute), Cambridge (a lifeless town that was obviously experiencing white flight. The houses were beautiful, but the town was abandoned) and finally to Salisbury. Salisbury was the only candidate town – a good size town with several historic districts. The Victorian houses North of 50, West of 13 in New Town (off Isabella Street) were definite possibilities.
Time to start thinking about heading on. John made another run to Big Daddy’s (getting the last paper in the newspaper box again). We spent the morning combing the streets of Annapolis and mapping out the potential streets with housing that we would be interested in. It turned out to be just a handful of streets with housing and ambience that we liked. Then, it was errand time as we packed up.
We had dinner at Big Bat’s Sports Bar with CJ and Jeff for “graduation dinner”.
We got off 95 and onto Route 301, a beautiful double lane highway running through farmland and squash and pumpkin patches. We found our way to Castle Marina and CJ helped us settle into the parking lot outside the Marina office. After 10 years, it was good to see her again and the years melted away. Jeff was at the Annapolis Power Boat Show, so we made a stop at the boat to see their “home”- a gorgeous 58 foot boat. The “Pinch Me” was huge- much bigger than I ever expected. It was 58’ long, with 3 berths, a full kitchen (with full-sized appliances) and a real living room with large screen TV. CJ made a Cosmopolitan and after 2 drinks, we stumbled off to dinner at a local Italian place . Our first night in the marina was on our own- generator power, but once again, we slept like babies.
Jeff stopped by in the morning and with the marina manager’s help, we got set up with an electrical hookup. The propane gauge was showing empty, so we located “Big Daddy’s” Texaco station, towing service and propane station just a few blocks away. Big Daddy was out on a tow, so we talked with Big Mamma and she told us to stop by about 10:00. Big Daddy was a real local Eastern Shore guy – huge beer belly and a marble-mouthed accent. We filled up the tank (it wasn’t empty) and filled the gas tank.
In the afternoon, we headed to Chestertown with CJ and Jeff. The town dates from the 1600’s and has a charming little business district just blocks from the harbor. Housing styles ran the gamut from Federal to Georgian to Italianate to Queen Anne. We walked the downtown streets, got an ice cream (3 scoops for $1) and then drove through the historic district of houses. The houses on the water were beautiful and the town became #1 on our possible list of future homes.
We headed back to Kent Island and had a beautiful sunset dinner at The Narrows. Food was spectacular- pecan crusted catfish.
Encouraged by the charm of Chestertown, we decided to head north to another small historic town called Chesapeake City. Situated on the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, the views were spectacular and the possibility of watching the Canal traffic was intriguing. But, the town itself, was very small. The main business street was filled with small Victorian houses, but there wasn’t much of an infrastructure to support anything but tourism. It was a micro-Marblehead without the surrounding neighborhoods – a one street town.
We continued to Hartford County at the northern edge of the Chesapeake Bay and at the mouth of the Susquehanna River found a lovely town, Havre de Grace (pronounced by the locals as “Hava de Grace”). The town was real- obviously still oriented towards tourism, but with the feel of a real town outside the tourist season. They made abysmal use of their spectacular waterfront with only one restaurant on the water. Another possible option if small town life and a Victorian house are our primary factors.
We drove back through Baltimore and got back to the Marina for dinner on the boat with CJ and Jeff. She made fresh grilled trout and zucchini pancakes. It was wonderful.
John started to make a daily am visit to Big Daddy’s to dump our trash and get the Washington Post. The first day, he put in a quarter and the box wouldn’t open, When he asked Big Daddy, he simply explained that the paper was now 35 cents (he just hadn’t gotten around to changing the sign)
To pay them back for two dinners in a row, we took CJ and Jeff to Annie’s for brunch. The brunch tables filled two rooms with everything from fresh made omlettes to chipped beef to a table of just desserts. We ate and ate and ate. Then, Jeff drove us all around the islands of Kent (through the tiny town of Stevensville) to Romancoke and Love Point. We saw a few interesting houses but determined that the area would probably close in on us.
With Annapolis just across the Bay Bridge, it was time for a visit. After a quick stop at Home Depot (Jeff and John shopping while CJ and I waited by the registers), we headed into the historic district. We found a parking spot and grabbed lunch at Rams Head Tavern and Fordham Brewing Company. It was sunny and still warm enough to sit on the patio and gourge on fish and chips. After lunch, we took a bus tour of the city and we were in love. It was no doubt that we could live in this town. The historic district was a bit of Marblehead and Salem mixed together – beautiful houses on tree lined streets with brick sidewalks and tons of porches right on the sidewalk. We called a realtor on the way home to set up an appointment to explore further.
Dinner was back at Kent Island- this time at a crab shack. We all ordered all you can eat crabs. In addition to a huge platter of large crabs, we got hush puppies, french fries, green beans, and potato salad. The group behind us were on their third platter of crabs- while we managed to only finish one platter plus and extra 6 crabs. By the time we finished, the table was filled with cracked crab shells.
We met Nan, our Coldwell Banker Real Estate agent and got the low-down on the Annapolis real estate market. Expensive- but not quite to Boston standards (although, fast approaching the insanity). The properties that we had admired on our bus tour were all in the $1M plus range, but she did have a few that were smaller and a bit more modest in price so we asked her to set up appointments.
We started our house hunt at a B&B on Duke of Gloucester Street. The property was in bankruptcy and needed some work. It had some possibilities, but the street was fairly busy and parking would have been a nightmare. From there, we went to Market Street and before we even walked in the door, we were in love with this house. The street was tree lined, with porches on all the houses, abutting the sidewalks. The house was small- long and narrow with a beautiful entryway, small living and dining rooms and beautiful kitchen overlooking a large garden. The second floor had 3 bedrooms and a bath and the master was on the third floor. As John mouthed “I love this house” walking behind the realtor who asked no questions, we continued the march.
We looked at a house in Eastport, a older blue collar part of Annapolis. The area had definite potential- a up and coming area with an old “Townie” feeling. The house outside was gorgeous, but the developer had made a Jewish suburban dream house on the interior. The property next door was being “renovated” by the owners. The only thing standing from the original building was the front façade, propped up by wood beams. We couldn’t figure out if they were rebuilding a house or a bowling alley.
We made another stop in the Murray Hill neighborhood (John compared it to Cleveland Heights). A bit too suburban for us.
Finally, we made our last stop at a property on Green Street. The street was lovely, but the house wasn’t much (especially at it’s 589,000 asking price). We kept going back to the house on Market Street. The possibility of having a house with rental income (during the summer) and a house that we loved was becoming very real to us. We asked the realtor to set up a second look and we headed off to lunch in Eastport at Carol’s Creek, a restaurant right on the water. We sat at the bar and over lots of wine, tried to decide if “this was the place” for our next home. We consulted with the bartender, a local who thought it was a great idea and talked it over and over. We went back to the house and spent an hour walking around. If our new friend Nan had pushed us just a bit, we would have had our checkbooks out. But, we decided to mull it over that night.
We called CJ and Jeff and had drinks and appetizers on the boat and talked through our dilemma. We left the boat talking about making an offer on the house. But, turning into the parking lot, with the "Domuz" waiting for us, we had second thoughts. With only 2 weeks into our ‘adventure’, we weren’t ready to chuck it all and deal with a house and all the responsibilities associated with it. We just weren’t ready to give up our gypsy lifestyle.
When we got back, our other new realtor friend, Nan #2, called and told us about a house in Centerville, so we set up an appointment to see it the next day.
We met Nan and followed her up to Centerville and an old Victorian farmhouse just outside town. For just over 300,000, you got a huge house, garage with apartment, huge yard, but it just felt too country for our taste. Centerville was a candidate town for us –as long as you could be off the main road and close to town. The town was filled with huge Victorian houses. We continued our drive on the DelMarVa peninsula to see Queenstown (much too tiny with no infrastructure) and Easton (similar to Chestertown without water – given the choice, go for the water). St Michaels (too small, too cute), Cambridge (a lifeless town that was obviously experiencing white flight. The houses were beautiful, but the town was abandoned) and finally to Salisbury. Salisbury was the only candidate town – a good size town with several historic districts. The Victorian houses North of 50, West of 13 in New Town (off Isabella Street) were definite possibilities.
Time to start thinking about heading on. John made another run to Big Daddy’s (getting the last paper in the newspaper box again). We spent the morning combing the streets of Annapolis and mapping out the potential streets with housing that we would be interested in. It turned out to be just a handful of streets with housing and ambience that we liked. Then, it was errand time as we packed up.
We had dinner at Big Bat’s Sports Bar with CJ and Jeff for “graduation dinner”.
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