View PDF - Thaddeus Kubis
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View PDF - Thaddeus Kubis
Home Port Long Island’s Huntington Bay can be a boater’s perfect base of operations, with its sheltered waters, sandy beaches and more than one comfy harbor to visit. Sheltered from the Sound to the north, Huntington Bay is a popular boating area on Long Island’s North Shore. 48 Offshore | October 2006 by Frances Cerra Whittelse y photog raphs by Thaddeus Kubis O n days when wind and tide pile up the waves in Long Island Sound, I’m always glad to see the smokestacks of the Northport power plant get larger on the horizon. The sight of those four towering red-and-white-striped stacks means we will shortly be back in the gentle waters of Huntington Bay. We’ll be protected by the hillsides of Lloyd Neck and Eatons Neck Point, treecovered and deep green until they finish in continuous sandy beaches. In front of us will be the wide ease of Huntington Bay, with no ferries or commercial shipping to dodge, just a few lobster pots. I sigh, relax, and often sit out on one of the bows of Great White, our Atlantic 46 sailing catamaran, to take in the familiar scenery. It has been almost 25 years since my husband, Harry, and I sailed our first boat on the bay. A 36-foot Magregor catamaran, it accelerated in the wind like a car with the gas pedal tromped down, spoiling us forever for slow sailing. We traded the Magregor for what everyone referred to as “the pink trimaran,” a Condor 40 that we had whimsically decided to paint the color of raspberry sherbet. It was beautiful for a few years. Who knew it would fade to pink? Now, we keep our conservatively painted white catamaran on the outer edge of the mooring field in Northport Harbor. It is one Offshore | October 2006 49 for the angler Flounder, stripers, bluefish and blackfish keep anglers busy in Huntington Bay and the Sound. by Tom Schlichter T Tom Richardson he busy waters of Huntington Harbor and adjacent Long Island Sound offer many piscatorial possibilities. The season begins with winter flounder, Big stripers in the 20- to 40-pound range are available through November. which can be taken on mussel and worm baits through April. Probe the 12- to 15-foot holes inside Lloyd Harbor, Centerport Harbor and around Duck Island as the season begins, then slide toward 6 to 10 feet of water as May approaches. It’s tough to catch a limit, but you can usually pick up enough fish for dinner. “Stripers arrive around May 8,” says Capt. Jimmy Schneider, skipper of the Huntington-based James-Joseph fishing fleet. “Live-line a bunker or work poppers around the docks and shoreline structure inside the harbor and you can take fish over the 20-pound mark. In the Sound, drop bunker chunks right on the bottom in 12 to 30 feet of water off any rocky beach or point. Try your luck right in front of Huntington Harbor or at Target Rock. Most of the bass run from 12 to 20 pounds, but there are some 30-, 40- and even 50-pounders in this area.” By July 4, warming waters drive most of the stripers into 30 to 50 feet of water in the Sound. “At that point,” Schneider notes, “the bass set up in the rips inside the Eatons Neck triangle, formed by the construction buoy, buoy 13 and buoy 11B.” Tempt these fish with bunker chunks or whole sandworms fished on a three-way rig. Big bluefish up to 18 pounds mix with the bass from mid-July through the fall, often exploding on bunker schools inside the harbor and providing spectacular topwater action on blue or yellow pencil poppers. Love fluke? Summer flatties up to 4 pounds are relatively numerous in June, July and August, with a smattering of 6- to 8-pounders caught each year. Fish the shallow water around Sand City in June with 1⁄2- to 1-ounce white bucktails tipped with spearing. As the water warms, move out to the open Sound. Fish the ebb tide in early summer and the flood during hot weather. “The best action with mid-summer fluke comes from deep water in the open Sound,” advises Schneider. “During July and August, concentrate your efforts in the 40- to 80-foot depths.” While summer and spring fishing are great, fall can be spectacular. The bass and blues inside the Eatons Neck triangle will smack diamond jigs, poppers, live bunker and bunker chunks with abandon. Blackfish topping 10 pounds invade the rocky shallows and patrol underwater ledges in search of green and calico crabs, while pods of false albacore will take small metal spoons or 3- to 4-inch sparse, white streamer flies. The tiny tunas vanish by mid-October, but the bass, blues and blackfish will hang out through Thanksgiving if the weather remains mild. 50 Offshore | October 2006 Above: Eagle’s Nest, once the tiled-roofed mansion of William K. Vanderbilt and now a museum, dominates a hillside above Centerport’s village and harbor. Opposite page, top: Once the site of a sand-mining operation, the island of Sand City is now a popular beach. Opposite page, center: Seymour’s Boatyard is the lone survivor from Northport’s long history of shipbuilding and maritime industry. of several harbors that, with Northport Bay, make up the complex that locals generally refer to, simply, as “the bay.” Through these years of sailing and socializing with friends and members of the Northport Yacht Club, the bay has become as familiar to me as the streets around my home. This is my home port. Arguably one of the most inviting boating destinations not just in the Northeast, but also anywhere in the country, the bay is a nautical playground, home to thousands of pleasure boats. Many never venture into the Sound at all. There are more than four nautical miles of usually placid water running east to west. Like a large but salty lake, with only a few shallows and rocks to avoid, the bay is perfect for sailing, waterskiing, zooming in personal watercraft, swimming, fishing, spending the night in tranquility or partying at a raft-up with friends. Onshore, visitors find a full array of marine services and downtowns with free summer concerts, museums and galleries. The main streets of Northport and Huntington have escaped almost entirely the spread of chain stores and restaurants. Instead, second-, thirdand even fourth-generation entrepreneurs give the business areas a genuine small-town feeling of deep roots and commitment. “Compared to other destinations, I’d give it a 10,” said Ed Flanders, owner of Just Coastin’, a Bayliner 34 out of Stamford, Connecticut, that was tied up at the Northport Village Dock on a bright Sunday last July. “The only downside is that this isn’t a floating dock, so you have to adjust the lines with the tide.” J ust 100 yards up Main Street from where Flanders was tied up at the Northport Village Dock, a parade of people leave the Northport Sweet Shop smiling and licking their ice-cream cones. Some also stay inside to eat, and behind the grill is likely to be Pete Panarites. He grew up beside the bay, and saw Northport go through hard times when the Sweet Shop was the only restau- UT TIC EC NN CO NEW YORK d d Soun Long Islan Area of Detail ND LA LONG IS nti ng OC EA Eatons Neck ton Ba y Lloyd Neck West Beach Hu ATLA C NTI West Neck g L on u So nd a l Is nd 40°57'N Duck Island Sand City Island Bay or t Nor thp Lloyd Harbor N 40°55'N Little Neck East Neck • Northport • Huntington Harbor Centerport 40°53'N • Huntington 73°25'W mirtoart.com rant in town. He’s the village mayor now, but he still spends most of his time in the shop, which his father founded in 1929. “We have a boater-friendly policy on the dock,” he said, as he flipped an omelet. “Our harbor and dock are great assets. They draw a lot of boaters who bring money into the community, so we want to encourage that.” At the dock, “boater-friendly” means free water and electricity hookups, no charge to tie up for any stretch of time during the day (first come, first served), and a dockmaster who helps boaters like Flanders adjust their lines as the tide changes. Many boaters opt to anchor in Northport Bay, and for them the village provides multiple dinghy docks. Once ashore, boaters can literally walk to Main Street in a minute. Lined up for their pleasure are pubs, seafood and ethnic restaurants, gourmet delicatessens, crafts shops, art galleries and clothing stores. The village park, adjacent to the dock, has a quaint band shell where free concerts are performed regularly throughout the summer. History buffs and fans of nineteenth-century architecture particularly appreciate Northport. Together with much more land stretching east, Northport was purchased from the Mattinecock Indians in 1656. By the nineteenth century, the bay had brought wealth to shipbuilders and captains, as well as oyster barons. They built grand homes in Queen Anne and Victorian styles, many of which have been preserved along Bayview Avenue, the narrow street that runs beside the village park. One of the finest examples, a circa-1885 Victorian, is home to Seymour’s Boatyard, the only survivor of Northport’s shipbuilding era. Northport Village might not have the polish and manicured look of upscale New England towns like Essex, Connecticut, but there is plenty of wealth in Northport—as the waterfront homes obviously show. The village also has a mix of housing that allows working peo- Nautical miles 0 2 73°20'W Offshore | October 2006 51 ple to live here. Northport is a living village, not a historical re-creation stuck in time to attract tourists. To me, that is a virtue. O Top: Workboats cluster around a float at the town dock in busy Huntington Harbor. Middle: Huntington’s Main Street has kept its old-fashioned flavor. Bottom: Huntington Harbor Lighthouse marks the entrances to Huntington and Lloyd Harbors. 52 ne of the great things about the bay is that it is not one boating destination but several. Turn west when you pass through the bay, instead of east to Northport, and you’ll see the Huntington Harbor Lighthouse, a small stone castle that resembles a chess piece. Leave it to port and you’ll be in Lloyd Harbor, a lovely place to anchor and watch birds, with no commercial development on its shores. Leave the lighthouse to starboard and you will enter Huntington Harbor, S-shaped, narrow and almost filled from shore to shore with moored boats. Marinas crowd Huntington Harbor’s dead end, while individual stores and small shopping centers line the side streets. In one is a small restaurant run by another man who also grew up beside the bay and has stayed put. Known to everyone as “TK,” he is a Knutson, but he won’t tell anyone what the “T” stands for. From the time he was 8, TK played in Huntington Bay. He sailed Sunfish and Shields, swam in shallow ponds that warmed up early in the season and patiently waited for his three-horse outboard to propel his dinghy out to Sand City, the abandoned site of a sandmining operation. There he and his friends played in the tunnels where the sand was once washed before being shipped east and used to build the skyscrapers of Manhattan. TK is a grandson of the founder of the Knutson shipyard and marina. At its peak, the yard employed 500 workers who built landing craft, sub chasers and other naval vessels in Huntington Harbor. “We built our last boat of any kind in 1973,” said TK, who has been running the restaurant TK’s Galley for 27 years. On the walls hang photos of Knutson boats and views of the harbor as it was in the early and mid-twentieth century. “Some of the people who used to work at the yard come in every so often with their grandchildren to check out the old pictures,” said TK, his graying blonde continued on page 83 Offshore | October 2006 Huntington Bay at a Glance Getting There On the North Shore of Long Island, Huntington Bay is about 33 miles northeast of Manhattan and 11 miles almost due south of Stamford, Connecticut. If coming from the west, head southeast into the bay from flashing green buoy “15”. From the east, enter the bay at flashing green buoy “11B” and head southwest. Once inside the bay, follow the buoys to port to enter Northport Bay and Northport Harbor. Follow the buoys to starboard to enter Lloyd and Huntington Harbors. Lloyd Harbor is to starboard of the Huntington Harbor Lighthouse, while Huntington Harbor is to port of the lighthouse. Use NOAA chart 12364. Dockage and Moorings For moorings in Huntington Harbor, contact Coney’s Marine (631-4213366, www.coneys.com) or Willis Marine Center (631-421-3400, www.willismarine.com). Knutson’s Yacht Haven Marina (631-673-0700) has limited dock space and some moorings for transients. West Shore Marina (631-427-3444) has extensive dock space, a swimming pool, picnic area and showers. In Northport you can tie up free during the day on a first-come, first-served basis at the Northport Village Dock; electricity and water are also free. After 7 p.m. the fee is $2/foot. For a mooring with launch service, make a reservation at Seymour’s Boatyard (631-261-6574, www.seymoursboatyard.com). Seymour’s has gas and diesel. The yard can haul boats up to 50 tons. Anchorages Eaton’s Neck Basin is a sheltered anchorage just south of the Eaton’s Neck Lighthouse after you round the point. Another is at Sand City Island on the east side of West Beach. In Northport Bay, you can anchor northeast or northwest of the entrance to the mooring field. Or, for a much quieter night, tuck your boat in close to the shore to the east of Duck Island. The closest anchorage to Huntington Harbor is in Lloyd Harbor, to the west of the Huntington Lighthouse. Attractions and Diversions In Huntington, the nonprofit Cinema Arts Centre (631-423-3456) screens American and foreign film gems. A Summer Arts Festival (631-271-8423), a free series of outdoor performances in Heckscher Park, runs from late June into late August. Shows start at 8:30 every night, except for Tuesday children’s shows, which begin at 7:30. Inside the park you’ll also find the Heckscher Art Museum (631-351-3250; www.heckscher.org). The Huntington Arts Council (631-271-8423; www.huntingtonarts.org) has changing exhibits of paintings, sculptures and drawings, all for sale, in its free Petite Gallery. Huntington’s Inter-Media Art Center (631-549-2787; www.imac.org) features live concerts. In Northport there are free band concerts, musical performances or dancing at the Band Shell in the village park at the foot of Main Street almost every Thursday and Friday evening throughout the summer. For a look back at Northport’s past, visit the Northport Historical Society & Museum (631-757-9859; www.northporthistorical.org). Onehour guided walking tours are offered every third Sunday of the month beginning at 1:30 p.m.; cost is $4. The museum is open Tuesday This planetarium is part of the facilities open to the public in Centerport on the grounds of the former Vanderbilt mansion. through Sunday from 1 to 4:30 p.m.; suggested donation, $2. It’s also worth the taxi fare to reach the Vanderbilt Museum and Planetarium in nearby Centerport (631-854-5555; www.vanderbiltmuseum.org) on the west shore of Northport Harbor. This estate features William K. Vanderbilt III’s impressive collections, as well as his 24-room, fully-furnished mansion; a marine museum; and a 60-foot planetarium with sky and laser shows. The mansion is open every day except Monday from noon to 5 p.m. Call for times and dates of planetarium shows and special events. To explore the shallows and bird sanctuary at the south end of Northport Bay, you can rent a kayak at Glacier Bay Sports in Northport (631-262-9116; www.glacierbaysports.com). Accommodations and Dining There are no hotels near Huntington Bay. Two bed-and-breakfasts in the area are Centerport Harbor Bed & Breakfast (631-754-1730), about 15 minutes from the foot of Huntington Bay, and Carr Bed & Breakfast in Northport (631-757-1625), close to Main Street. In contrast to the sparse accommodations, the area offers all sorts of dining. In Huntington, on the east side of Huntington Harbor at its south end, are Aix en-Provence (631-549-3338, www.aixli.com) and the Shamrock (631-427-4221). TK’s Galley (631-351-8666), an unofficial museum of local nautical history, has good sandwiches, hearty breakfasts and satisfying selections that won’t break the bank. In Northport, within 100 yards of the dinghy dock at the foot of Main Street, are Skipper’s Pub (631-261-3589; www.skipperspub.com) and the Sea Shanty (631-261-8538; www.seashanty.com), along with Maroni’s (631-757-4500; www.maronicuisine.com), with takeout Italian food served in cast-iron pots. Get a taste of Northport’s history—and good food—at Tim’s Shipwreck Diner (631-754-1797). At Bayview Bistro (631-262-9744; www.bayviewbistro.com) you can dine outdoors on prime steak or lobster. For homemade ice cream, try the Northport Sweet Shop (631-754-9679). Provisions In Huntington, a King Kullen Supermarket is just a quarter-mile south on Route 110 from the south end of Huntington Harbor. In Northport, Main Street offers delicatessens and takeout restaurants. Getting Around In Huntington, call Orange & White Taxi Service (631-271-3600). In Northport, call (631-261-0235). —F. C. W. Offshore | October 2006 53 Home Port continued from page 53 hair tied in a ponytail beneath a captain’s cap. “It was fantastic, beautiful, growing up here—and it still us. There are just a lot more boats, and the water is cleaner.” V isiting Huntington Harbor is not as easy as going to Northport. Transient moorings and dock space are available, but there is virtually no room for anchoring. Once ashore at the bottom of the harbor, you’ll find a topnotch world of culture and shopping only a mile away. Founded in 1653, Huntington bills itself, with a certain justification, as “The Little Apple,” Long Island’s cultural capital. Along the downtown stretches of Main Street and New York Avenue, bars and cafés stay open late with bands and soloists sending their music into the sweet summer air from outdoor sitting areas. There’s a multi-screen movie house with the usual commercial offerings, but there is also an art cinema and an arts theater featuring live jazz, blues and other performers. Art galleries, fine restaurants and upscale stores also abound. In town-owned Heckscher Park you’ll find a significant museum and an outdoor stage named after folk singer Harry Chapin, who made his home in Huntington before his death in an auto accident in 1981. Almost every night throughout the summer, people come with blankets and folding chairs to sit on the grass in the park and hear professional musicians and singers, watch dance companies and get wrapped up in yarns spun by storytellers. The museum, founded in 1920 by the industrialist August Heckscher, has an excellent permanent collection of European and American paintings and sculpture from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, as well as changing exhibits. Heckscher lived in Huntington. His mansion is gone, but just inside Huntington Harbor is what used to be his boathouse, now a family home we once considered buying. The mansions of other early twentieth century financiers and 54 Offshore | October 2006 merchants, or their heirs, dot the waterfront around the bay. Marshall Field III, whose father founded the successful Field’s department store, built a mansion and working farm, with prize Guernsey cows, on 1,500 acres of Lloyd Neck. You can see the mansion, now a New York State environmental center and passive park, to your west as you enter Huntington Bay. It’s called Caumsett. When we sit on our boat at its mooring, it amuses me that we are in the view that William K. Vanderbilt III saw from his mansion, “Eagle’s Nest.” The tiled-roof mansion sprawls across the hillside in Centerport, on the west side of Northport Harbor. When he wasn’t sailing across the globe, bringing back marine specimens and cultural artifacts, Vanderbilt raced his boat in the bay against J. P. Morgan. The mansion is now a museum where you can see the collections Vanderbilt amassed on his voyages. Also on the grounds is an impressive planetarium, Huntington Bay is also associated with Revolutionary War hero Nathan Hale. On the Mill Dam road, at the dead end of Huntington Harbor, a traffic triangle holds a large rock with a plaque commemorating Hale. The neighborhood is even known as Halesite. But the British didn’t actually hang him in Huntington, as some local residents believe. Hale sneaked ashore in Huntington after coming across the Sound from Connecticut, but, according to town historian Bob Hughes, he was hanged as an American spy on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. O ur sons, Eric and Chris, now in their 20s, may not have had a boat when they were as young as TK, but when they were in junior high school we gave them an unsinkable Boston Whaler with a small motor. They, too, often headed out to Sand City to play, cook out and camp overnight. Now they go there in a small speedboat they traded years back for the Whaler. Sand City is probably the most universally used and recognized spot within the bay. Its history captures the constant change to the bay brought about by natural causes and human enterprise. Today, Sand City is a tiny island lying just behind West Beach on Eaton’s Neck. West Beach is so attenuated for part of its length that boulders have been placed along its spine to keep it from being breached by storm-driven water. At its southern end it widens out a bit into a grassy sanctuary for terns and gulls. The birds compete with anglers, who often anchor in the channel that sweeps around the tip of the beach, oblivious to the traffic obstacles they become. West Beach wasn’t always so narrow. When mining began there in the 1880s— exploiting the deep deposits of sand left behind by the last glacier that bulldozed this part of the world—there were several more acres of beach than exist today. In fact, in those days it took so long to get out to what was then known as Port Eaton that the workers could not commute; they lived there in a company town. Sand City was abandoned in the 1920s, and fire subsequently destroyed all the wooden buildings. But in the 1950s, Henry J. Steers leased West Beach and continued dredging sand. He stopped in 1964 when alarmed local residents saw that West Beach would be breached if the mining continued. In the decades since, young people tied ropes to the concrete structure that remained, swinging out from it, amusement-park style, for a thrilling drop into the water. (The structure was demolished some years ago as a safety measure.) Boaters of all ages discovered that the deep crescent dug out by the sand mining behind the beach made for a perfect anchorage and swimming hole. Dozens of boats anchor there on any good day in the summer, getting away from it all only a couple of miles from home. The tiny island, with grass now taking over, is all that remains of Sand City. When I first started boating in Huntington Bay, I didn’t know how unusual it was. But over the years, as I’ve cruised to many of the most popular destinations in the Northeast, been in the Chesapeake and seen the coast of California, I’ve come to appreciate its rarity. Mirror of the sky, sanctuary in a storm, nautical playground for boats of every size, fishing ground for people and birds, passageway to the sea, it is a world within itself, varied, ever-changing. It is my home port. Huntington Bay, Long Island, is home port for Frances Cerra Whittelsey and her husband Harry, shown here aboard Great White, the 46-foot sailing catamaran that takes them to many of the locales she writes about. Offshore | October 2006 55