OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JULY 22, 2016 SETTING SAIL IN A NEW LIFE DIRECTION The Lady Washington W riter’s N otebook First of Two Parts By JULIE BROWN For The Daily Astorian I ’d been travel ing for 12 hours to get from Astoria to Morro Bay, California, and I was tired. I partially dragged the heavy duffel bag a friend had loaned me and was trying to jug- gle that with my carry-on bag full of books, a pillow, and a sleeping bag that had come unrolled and was trailing on the sidewalk behind me. It was one last mile from the bus station to the harbor and there wasn’t a taxi in sight. People were looking at me like I was a homeless woman. I fi nally reached the harbor and there she was: a beautiful tall ship gently rocking in the Julie sunny breeze, masts as Brown tall as the old -growth fi rs they were made from, sails bleached white from sun and salt water. I recognized the smiling face of Martha Washing- ton carved at the bow. The Lady Washington is a replica of a his- torical trading vessel that sailed 200 years ago, carrying furs and tea and silks to various ports. This crew was milling about in 18th century breeches and waistcoats, some on deck, some aloft in the rigging. I stepped aboard and intro- duced myself as the new deckhand-in-training. At 54, I was the same age as the captain, old enough to be everyone else’s mother. I have been an English professor at Clatsop Community College for many years. I live in a world of books and ideas, grammar and spelling and student research projects. I have always been more at home in a library than at the beach. And yet something had compelled me to try this new adventure, to test myself in a way I had never been tested before. So I signed up for the “Two Weeks before the Mast” train- ing program aboard the Lady Washington. “Stow your gear in the focsle!” some- one yelled. “Somebody get her some funnies and get her into a harness!” Funnies are the 18th -century sailor clothes that the crew wears on the Lady when members of the public are touring the ship. I was given knee breeches, a piratey-looking blouse with gorgeous puffy sleeves, and a long vest with buckles and brass buttons. After I dressed (in the galley, I soon learned there was no privacy at all on board), I was assigned to a group of 15 children who were gathered near the bow of the ship, learn- ing about the life of a sailor. Someone was explaining to them about life at sea: how pre- cious drinking water was, how fresh food only lasted the fi rst week and then the crew was given hard-as-nails sea biscuits to eat, how entertainment in those days consisted of sing- Photos by Julie Brown/For The Daily Astorian Shipmates hanging on the yardarms unfurling the sails. ing and playing cards and learning knots and carving scrimshaw. The kids were enthralled, and so was I. A ft on the quarterdeck, another group of chil- dren were learning about navigation. These fourth -graders all had GPS in their phones and could fi nd their way to China, but were now learning what a chart looked like, and how ships found their course before modern technol- ogy came along. How a chip line with knots in it was thrown overboard to calculate the ship’s speed. How a lead line was dropped over board to measure the depth and bring up particles from the sea fl oor (sand, gravel), which could then be analyzed. How sailors judged their position by looking at the sun, moon and stars. History was coming alive for them. A fter the children disembarked, it was time for us to quickly set sail for our next port. I had only been on the ship for about four hours, yet soon found myself preparing to “lay aloft,” something I didn’t expect would happen on my fi rst day. The chief mate strapped me into a parachute-type harness that wound around my waist and hips. I hadn’t even unpacked my bags yet, and I was already following a group of 20-some- things over the side of the ship to the ratlines (rope ladders) that stretched up 89 feet from the deck rail to the top of the fore mast. If I thought I was going to fall, the mate explained, it was bet- ter to fall into the water than onto the deck. I am not afraid of heights. I am not afraid of water. But I am afraid of dying. To conquer this fear, my strategy was to keep my eyes straight in front of me. I would not look up — or down. Right foot. Left foot. Right foot. Left foot. Eventually I made it up to the fi rst yardarm. With trembling hands I hooked my harness into a safety cable and edged my way out toward the port side, out over the water. Little more. Little more. Keep my eyes in front of me at all times. Little more, little more. When I had reached the very outer end of the yardarm, the bosun gave me instructions — we needed to untie the ribbon-like gaskets that were keeping the sail furled up. We had to do this without getting the gaskets tangled up in the sail or in our harnesses. We had to keep one arm around the yardarm while doing this, hanging out over the water and bobbing up and down. Three of us worked together on the Main Course sail. Finally the sail was free, and it dropped down beautifully and curtsied in the breeze. Rather than follow my shipmates higher up to the main topsail, I decided I needed to get my feet back on deck. Look straight ahead. Left foot. Right foot. Back on deck, I started to breathe again. Monday, in Part II, more about life on the ship. Julie Brown teaches writing, literature and maritime culture at Clatsop Community Col- lege. She enjoys fi shing and clam digging and was a co-founder of the Fisher Poets Gathering. This summer she will be a volunteer deckhand on the Lady Washington as it sails through the Straits of Juan de Fuca. Open forum Equality I ’ve been working on my family history for nearly 30 years. I asked my aunts to write about a trip they had taken to England and the Isle of Man, and our family genealogy. This is the fi rst paragraph of said docu- ment, written in 1994 by Delsie Reid. As I was reading through our history book today, I thought this applies to the world today: “When one starts to write a family history, it seems that he or she should start at the beginning. But when or where was the beginning? “The Bible says that ‘in the begin- ning was God,’ and he created Adam and Eve and placed them in the Gar- den of Eden, with instructions to mul- tiply. So aren’t we all descendants of the original family? Regardless of race, color, religion or social stan- dards? And, aren’t we all equal in the eyes of God? I believe that we are.” BRENDA KAY HOXSEY Warrenton Torture not funny T o the people of Cannon Beach: Recently I visited your city. Although there is, in general, a wel- coming atmosphere I had an unfor- tunate experience in the parking lot of one of the city’s restaurants. I am hopeful you will see it as a serious matter you need to confront if it con- tinues in your midst. There was a car in the parking lot with two signs on it. One, on the bumper, only presents a prob- lem of civility. It said “Up yours Hil- lary Clinton.” The other was differ- ent: it said “I love waterboarding.” That required a response, so I wrote a brief note, but he was gone before I could give it to him, or leave it on his car. This is the note, and I hope it will produce some thoughtful consider- ation in the Cannon Beach commu- nity. The note read as follows: I stand in awe, and I am humbled. I did not know anyone could dis- play such malicious ignorance. Your lack of civility undermines what so many have sacrifi ced in our courts, and on battlefi elds to secure for all of us. When waterboarding becomes “due process of law,” we sink to the level of the very totalitarians we have faced so often. You might read the Bill of Rights as a place to begin your education. THOMAS D. MORRIS Portland Safe and fair I n the July 14 edition of The Daily Astorian, there was an article about the Astoria Police Department hav- ing their periodic pedestrian safety program, where drivers will get cited for not yielding to pedestrians (“Asto- ria Police to join pedestrian safety enforcement program”). So far, so good. For a fair and balanced approach, I request they devote the same energy to walkers for a similar time frame. Jaywalking in the middle of a block seems to be a local sporting event. Pedestrians walking against the “don’t walk” light when cars are attempting to turn or proceed seems to be a game of chance, with prizes for the winners. How about a few citations for the bicycles running down the downtown sidewalks, putting the city at risk of a lawsuit for injuring the pedestri- ans we are trying to protect? Lastly, a good big ticket for the guys I see fre- quently roaring down the middle of Eighth Street on skateboards. We can all be safer when everyone follows the rules of the road. MIKE GREEN Astoria STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher • LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager • CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager • DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager HEATHER RAMSDELL, Circulation Manager Founded in 1873