Like
the old watermen of Saint Mary’s Island, Davis’ pub remains stuck in the past.
Its walls are adorned with fading photographs of tall ships, wooden boats, log
canoes and skipjacks. Across the street the intoxicating smell of seaweed, salt
air and brine mix with the fresh varnish on a yacht anchored nearby.
Davis’
pub in Eastport, Annapolis reminds me of what the Bohemian Flats must have been
like on the West Bank of Minneapolis back in the 1940s.The pub has been around
since the ‘40s and their clientele hasn’t changed much since then. There are
the usual neighborhood relics, a few old watermen, the hangers-on, and now the
ever-present tourists drawn by concierges and travel blogs.
As
I sat safely ensconced in a corner booth, it was all coming back to me. The
dark dank inner harbor of Baltimore before redevelopment brightened its
shoreline. My job at the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting in Owings
Mills, our first tiny house in Reisterstown and weekend jaunts to the
Chesapeake Bay and around the state.
Many
of my changes started there. From 1972 through 1977, I sold video programming
during the day, wrote out my western adventures at night and toe-stepped the
Chesapeake on weekends. Our family started there and real estate first began to
pique my curiosity. It was a most audacious start to something great…the rest
of my life.
MCPB
is celebrating its fifty-year anniversary this summer. Dr. Breitenfeld, as well
as so many of the founding fathers, are gone now. What remains is a small cast
and crew from those Camelot years.
They’re
scattered around the country now, each with their own satchel of memories of
that time. Facebook is about the only link many of them have back to that
period in the early to mid- 70s when everything was new and venturesome and
sometimes scandalous.
Back
then I had long harbored great fantasies of sailing the Chesapeake Bay. A boat
ride on our friend’s runabout brought back a rush of old mental images. The air
is clearer on the water and there is a nautical language reserved for the fleet
of foot and strong of stomach. My friend spoke of new moons and dark skies. He
waxed on philosophically about the Orionids, the Leonids, North Taurids, and
Geminids; all meteor showers reserved for his patch of moonlit sky.
The
houses seemed to have gotten bigger and the sea lanes more crowded since our
last visit. But the inlets and bays were still nature’s nurseries. The
Chesapeake Bay supports more than 2700 species of plants and animals, including
348 species of finfish and 173 species of shellfish. Approximately 284,000
acres of the Chesapeake Bay are tidal wetlands.
The
Bay and its tidal tributaries have 11,684 miles of shoreline, more than the
entire United States West Coast. Estuarine science and research is relatively
young. Only in the last several decades has there been a good understanding of
estuaries and fisheries.
Back
in the seventies MCPB (Maryland Center for Public Broadcast) was one of the
best public television stations in the country. It was my Camelot existence for
almost five years.
My
job distributing television programming was a precursor to my own business
ventures born several years later. Our home was the first of a number of real
estate investments. My first published article for The Library Journal
kick-started a new focus on writing as a second career. Two western novels were
written, edited and then shelved for almost forty years before my new career as
a writer finally took off. It was in Maryland where I attempted the JFK Fifty
Mile Race on the Appalachian Trail but only got twenty-four miles before
hypothermia brought me to my knees. That failure propelled me to a lifetime of
running.
At
the Maryland Center, our General Manager, Dr. Frederick Breitenfeld was a
brilliant yet incredibly personable leader. He had an enormous influence on my
fantasies of becoming a writer. I’ve referenced one of his early research
papers on educational television in my latest play ‘PTV.’
It’s
come full circle now. Sailing the Chesapeake, revisiting old friends through
the MCPB Facebook page and writing as my new water pail to carry. I’d like to
believe it all began there when a young sprout came up from Tennessee to test
the waters of fledging television, tiptoed the bays and inlets, and drew in the
fresh ocean breezes.
It
was nice to be home again…if only in my imagination.
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