Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum

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To the PointSpring 2010Chesapeake Bay Maritime MuseumHeirloom Gardenby John Ford, Facilities ManagerModel Expoby Bob Mason, VolunteerThe Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is known forits well-interpreted, interactive exhibits set against abeautifully landscaped waterfront campus on the St.Michaels Harbor and Miles River. Recently, with theaddition of a Living Shoreline in Fogg’s Cove, CBMM hasapplied its interpretive expertise to its own natural setting,pointing out the changes and pressures facing the Bay andresponsible ways we can respond. Using CBMM’s physicalcampus as an exhibit was unique, with the Living Shorelineproject being the only tangible example to date. That isabout to change in an exciting way, thanks in large part tothe efforts of two CBMM volunteers.For the past several growing seasons, CBMM has beeninstalling native plants to replace many of the non-nativeplants on our campus. This initiative is partly driven bypracticality—native plants have a higher success rateA temporary pond will be built for demonstrations andcompetition at the Maritime Model Boat Expo in May.CBMM volunteer Roger Galvin’s skills as a MasterGardener are being utilized on the Museum’s campus.and require less maintenance than non-natives—but thetransition also fits nicely into the Museum’s larger movetoward a more sustainable, “greener” campus. Muchof this work has been done under the guidanceof CBMM volunteer Roger Galvin, a retiredattorney and Master Gardener who includesmanaging the historic gardens at the PacaHouse in Annapolis as one of his many “postretirement” accomplishments. Roger hascontinued on back coverOn Saturday, May 22, and Sunday, May 23, the Museumwill host its Maritime Model Boat Exposition for thesixth time. The Expo shares with visitors the pleasuresof building and exhibiting models which celebrate theartistry in ship and boat design. This event is presentedby CBMM’s Model Guild, the North American SteamboatModeler’s Association (NASMA), and the WashingtonShip Model Society (WSMS). The show will feature livesteamboat models, sailing skipjacks, speedboats, tugs,and other stationary and radio-controlled miniatures.Modelers will demonstrate the mobility of theirdetailed and realistic models in a temporary freshwaterpond located near the Museum’s Tolchester BeachBandstand. On Sunday, the Museum’s Model Sailing Clubwill race five-foot-long skipjacks – replicas of Maryland’sofficial state boat – across the waters of nearby Fogg’sCove, propelled by wind and under the remote guidanceof their builders. Children will have the opportunity tobuild a simple model and sail it in a small pond nearthe main event.As in past years, the Washington ShipModel Society and other craft personswill provide a separate display of theirvaried and intricately detailed ship models.Vendors will be on hand with models, kitsand refreshments for sale.

Annual Fund 2009-2010President’s MessageYour Annual Fund contribution supports everything wedo at CBMM. When you make a contribution, you help usacquire and preserve Bay boats and artifacts, help fundapprentices in the Boat Yard and help provide innovativeeducational programs for adults and children alike. Youbring concerts on the grounds during the summer andChesapeake People to talk to visitors about their lives living and working on the Bay. You help make possible exciting, new exhibitions such as the upcoming A Rising Tidein the Heart of the Chesapeake and the Feuchter/Castelliexhibit of paintings that will open this spring.Our 2009-2010 Annual Fund campaign ends on April30. Giving is easy. The Museum accepts checks, Visa,MasterCard and Discover, or you can make your contribution online. Simply go to www.cbmm.org and click on“click here to give now” to go to our secure area.We are very grateful to all of our supporters. We simply couldn’t do what we do without your support!There has been a lot of wintertime activity here as we preparefor another busy season filledwith many rich programs, exhibits and special events at yourChesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Though the rough seas inour economy regrettably haveforced us to trim our paid crewby more than half in the pastfew years, we are trimming our sails only a little, andhopefully not compromising your visitor experiencein a noticeable way. If all I’ve heard from staff is true,this actually may be our best season ever! The nexttime you visit maybe you’ll want to say “thanks” toone of our staff or dedicated volunteers who haveworked so hard to keep us sailing through the storm.I’m beginning to feel a gentle breeze at our backs.This spring we open two new exhibits in theSteamboat Building that I’m sure you’ll enjoy. Comesee “The Rising Tide in the Heart of the Chesapeake,” featuring the stunning photographs of theChesapeake’s most acclaimed landscape photographer Dave Harp and the insightful comments of naturalist writer Tom Horton. Together with the voicesof Chesapeake Bay islanders themselves, this firstof-a-kind exhibit portrays three island communitiesoffshore from Crisfield whose land and heritage areendangered and disappearing because of shorelineerosion and sea level rise.Visitors who are lucky enough to come the firstweek of April will thrill at the sight of the HMS Bountytied up alongside our boatyard. She’s the actual vessel Capt. Bligh and Fletcher Christian sailed in the1962 movie “Mutiny on the Bounty” and Johnny Deppsailed more recently in “Pirates of the Caribbean.”In May, we’ll open an exhibit of the paintings oftwo of the Chesapeake’s most prominent artists,Louis Feuchter who captured the last days of commercial sail on the Bay in the first half of the 20thCentury, and Marc Castelli whose contemporarywatercolors show both watermen at work and recreational log canoes under sail.This May alone we’ll have upwards of 1,000school children, K-12, visiting us to experience ourEastern Shore traditions and culture and to be introduced to some of the ways all of us can work to protect and improve our delicate Chesapeake Bay environment. Plan to spend an afternoon, a full day, oreven a weekend at the Museum this spring. Early falland now are my favorite times on the Eastern Shore.When you visit I hope you’ll stop by to say “hello” andto share your ideas on what you’d like to see us do tomake your visit even more enjoyable.Boat Yard ReportAnnual Reportby Rich Scofield, Boat Yard ManagerWe are going green! Our Annual Report for fiscal year2008-2009 is available by request. We will not be printing and mailing it to all our members, but you may receive a digital or printed copy, by contacting Julie Barnett at 410-745-2916, ext. 129 or jbarnett@cbmm.org.Winter always brings its own challenges, but this yearit kept us especially busy. Cold weather is tough on oldwooden boats —batteries die, bilges freeze up, but thebiggest threat is the weight of a heavy snowfall piled ondeck that push our boats deeper into the water. Early eachmorning, shipwright Don MacLeod’s first duty was tohead out on our docks to check the floating fleet. In theevent of a snow storm, the whole boat shop joins him toshovel off docks and boats. Suffice it to say we have hadour fill of shoveling this year.We’ve tackled our usual indoor winter jobs this year—varnishing and painting benches, doors and booms. Wealso have had a much less common project, shaping aChairman’s Messageby Robert Perkins, Chairman of the BoardIn the next three months,eleven members of the Boardof Governors will be retiring. Iam one of them. For us, it hasbeen a real pleasure to help thiswonderful, vibrant institution onthe Eastern Shore. The last twotumultuous years have not beenthe easiest or the best of timesfor the Museum, given the record-high gasolineprices which negatively impacted attendance, amajor recession and a collapse in financial markets.This has taken a toll, but the Museum has comethrough these challenging times in relatively goodshape. Our endowment, which fell to 8.4 million,has come back to 10.5 million, and our Annual Fund,which fell to 350,000 a year ago, is approachingan all-time record level of 500,000. We have alsorestructured our debt to reduce loan repaymentsby 250,000. Unfortunately, like all enterprises, ourstaff has felt the brunt of this downturn, but has comethrough with a solid, upbeat attitude anticipating agreat spring, summer and fall series of events, showsand programs.Most importantly, the Board elected LangleyShook last fall to be our new President. Langleyis a highly motivated, thoughtful and energeticleader and manager who we want all supporters,volunteers, members and visitors to get to know. Tohelp Langley lead the Museum forward, Joe Peters isslated to become our next Chair, supported by AlanGriffith and CG Appleby as Vice Chairs, Tom Seip asTreasurer, and Rev. Mark Nestlehutt as Secretary.Members and supporters can be confident thatthis team, working with staff and volunteers, willensure a bright and successful future for this uniqueinstitution on the shores of the Chesapeake.On a personal note, after nine years on the Board,I want to thank all the volunteers and Governorswith whom I have enjoyed this Museum and, inparticular, the dedicated and talented staff whomade painful sacrifices over the past two years.Working in cooperation with Langley and his staff, Iam confident that the incoming Board of Governorswill develop an exciting future for the CBMM.Dan Sutherland with a Rushton 14’ double-ended rowingboat at CBMM’s Apprentice for a Day program.Donate Your BoatDonate a boat to the Museum and receive a tax-deduction based on the value of your boat. An unwanted orrarely-used boat takes a lot of time and money to maintain, and sales of these boats support ongoing programsand annual operations here at CBMM. We make theprocess of donating a boat hassle-free, and our staff canguide you through the easy steps in a matter of minutes.If you would like more information about the program,contact Boat Donations Program Manager Lad Mills at410-745-2916, ext. 112, or lmills@cbmm.org.Langley R. Shook, President2new bow sprit for the bugeye Edna Lockwood. ShipwrightMarc Barto started with a beautiful piece of Douglas Fir 14inches square and 24 feet long. He and his volunteers haveshaped it to match the current bow sprit on Edna, whichis yellow pine and has reached its life span of almost 25years. Hopefully the fir bow sprit will last even longer. We’llremove the old bow sprit and install the new one whenEdna is on the railway this summer.In our Apprentice for a Day public boat building coursewe are building a 14 foot Rushton rowing boat. The hull isdouble ended, meaning it is pointed at both ends. She’splanked in the traditional lapped strake fashion, makingher a beautiful craft that, with loving care, can be passeddown through generations. Under the skilled, experiencedtutelage of Dan Sutherland, students are learning thebasics of traditional boat building while creating a rowingboat of lasting beauty and utility.Try to stop into the shop soon and check out our progresson our winter projects or help us build the Rushton boat inour weekend classes. No experience is needed to take theclass, and the cost for Members is only 35 a day. You’ll beamazed to see the immediate results of your handicraft,and you’ll surely have stories to take home about howmuch fun you had as a CBMM Apprentice for a Day!3

CalendarSpring 2010boats, boatbuilding demonstrations, maritimecraft vendors, live music, food, and more. Includedwith Museum admission. Boat rides and foodadditional cost.AprilThe Boating PartySaturday, September 11, 6-10pmBe a part of the Museum’s elegant fall gala fundraiser! In its13th year, the Boating Party includes cocktails, dinner, anddancing on Navy Point.July 10July 17July 24August 7August 14August 21August 28September 4September 11September 18September 25Concours d’EleganceSeptember 24-26This exciting event features very rare grand classicautomobiles from the golden age of motoring, 1900-1942.Famous marques such as Bugatti, Dusenberg, and RollsRoyce will grace the museum grounds along with an in-waterexhibition of vintage motor boats from the same era. Therewill also be a display of vintage carriages, a fashion show, andan art exhibit of local maritime artist Marc Castelli.Chesapeake Island Communities and Sea Level RiseThursday, April 29, 7pmHorn Point Laboratory Professor, Court Stevenson will discussthe impact of sea level rise on several Bay communities. Thispresentation will discuss how changes both past and presenthave effected inhabitants that settled on some of theChesapeake’s many islands. 8 non-members, 5 members.MayJulyOpen dates—AFAD will be run on a job specific basis.The Smith Island Skiff class is for teens 13-18 years of age.OctoberLighthouse OvernightsBig Band NightSaturday, July 3, 7-10pmJazzy big band sounds you can dance to will come alive onthe Museum’s Tolchester Beach Bandstand. Stay into theevening to enjoy the St. Michaels fireworks display over theMiles River. 10, 5 members.ChesapeakeFolk FestivalSaturday, July 31,10am-5pmCelebrate the Bay’speople, food, music,work and traditions.Enjoy live music,great food, maritimeand foodwaysdemonstrations, boat rides, and craft vendors.Included with CBMM admission (boat rides and food arean additional cost).“Lasting Reflections—Feuchter and Castelli—Two Centuries of the Chesapeake” Special ExhibitionSaturday, May 1Artists Louis Feuchter and Marc Castelli are two of theChesapeake’s finest marine artists whose works spannedalmost the entire 20th century. Their work captures thesailing vessels, landscapes and people working and sailing onthe Bay from the last days of commercial sail to today. Thisspecial exhibition brings together works from both artistsfrom CBMM’s collection and private collections.September13th Annual Boat AuctionSaturday, September 4, 11am-3pmBoating experts and novices alike have the sameopportunity to bid on the boat of their dreams! Offeringeverything from wooden rowing skiffs to classic sailboatsand modern power cruisers. Included with Museumadmission; food additional cost.Maritime Model ExpoSaturday, May 22, 10am-4pm, & Sunday, May 23, 10am-3pmHosted by the Museum’s Model Guild and the North AmericanSteamboat Modelers Association, this expo includes radiocontrolled models powered by steam, battery, and wind.Static displays of highly-detailed and realistic models will befeatured, as well as activities for children, too! Included withMuseum admission.* Group dates available Fridays and SaturdaysApril, May, June, September, October *28th Mid-Atlantic Small Craft FestivalSaturday, October 2, 10am – 5pmOne of the nation’s premier small craft events! Hundredsof amateur and professional boat builders and enthusiastscome from all over the region to display their skiffs, kayaks,and canoes. Take part in demonstrations and workshops, orsimply chat with the owners and watch these one-of-a-kindvessels race. Included with Museum admission.Can you keep the light burning?With fun, interactive activities, your group canenjoy an overnight sleepover and “travel back intime” to experience the keeper’s life in our 1879Hooper Straight Lighthouse.NovemberOysterFestSaturday, November 6, 10am-4pmCome celebrate the Bay oyster with live music, greatfood, family activities, skipjack and buyboat rides, oysteraquaculture and restoration demonstrations, oyster tonging,and cooking demonstrations. Included with Museumadmission. Boat rides and food additional cost. take a hands-on tour of the lighthouse try on the chores (and clothes) of a traditionallighthouse keeper hear the thrilling tales of adventure aboutlighthouses of years past discover facts and clues about living in alighthouse through games and puzzlesApprentice for a DayAFAD Schedule June through September, 2010June23rd Annual Antique and Classic Boat FestivalFriday, June 18, 11am-5pmSaturday, June 19, 10am-5pmSunday, June 20, 10am-2pmThis annual boat event is the largest of its kind in the MidAtlantic region! It features more than 100 antiqueand classic Marc Castelli4Smith Island skiff #2Sailing SaturdaySmith Island skiff #3Smith Island skiff #4Smith Island skiff #5Sailing SaturdaySmith Island skiff #6Open Topic to be announcedOpen Topic to be announcedSailing SaturdayOpen Topic to be announcedSaturdayActivityMay 29June 5June 12June 19June 26July 3Finish and launch Rushton canoeOpen Topic to be announcedSailing SaturdaySmith Island skiff #1Open Topic to be announcedOpen Topic to be announced swear the oath of lighthouse allegiance andbecome an official Hooper Strait Light Keeper work towards earning a lighthouse badge!To make a reservation or for moreinformation please call410-745-2916, ext. 243.5

Fourth Annual St. MichaelsConcours d’EleganceScenes like this as described by schooner captainWilliam T. Hooper were passing quickly in Feuchter’s day,and he consciously sought to capture what he knew wouldsoon disappear.Today’s Chesapeake watermen find themselves just asthreatened as the schoonermen of Feuchter’s day. Livingartist Marc Castelli of Chestertown captures the light andfeel of the waterman’s domain, going out on the water withwatermen aboard their boats and observing the detail oftheir work. He also depicts the thrill and majesty of sailingthe Chesapeake’s log canoes and shares the experiencesof the small cadre of sailors who race them.The exhibit will include paintings from the Museum’scollections and works borrowed from private collectors.Many of the stories behind these paintings will beinterpreted in the words of commercial sailors like WilliamT. Hooper and contemporary watermen as well.The Museum is producing a pair of limited editionprints, one by each artist, in conjunction with the exhibit.The prints are available in the Museum store for 250.The Feuchter print shows the schooners La Forrest L.Simmons and Stephen Chase nearing their last days inBaltimore Harbor. The second print, Still A Working River/Chestertown, by Marc Castelli, contrasts the commercialfishermen’s pound nets in the Chester River against thebackground of Chestertown’s waterfront.The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is proud to hostthe Fourth Annual St. Michaels Concours d’Elegance onSunday, September 26, 2010, here on our Museum campus.All proceeds from the event will benefit the Museum. Thisexciting event features very rare grand classic automobiles Marc CastelliSt. Michaels Concourse d’Elegance poster art, originalwatercolor by Marc Castelli.from the golden age of motoring, 1900-1942. Famousmarques such as Bugatti, Duesenberg, and Rolls-Roycewill grace the museum grounds along with an in-waterexhibition of vintage motor boats from the same era. Therewill also be a display of vintage carriages, a fashion show,and an art exhibit of local maritime artist Marc Castelli.Lasting Reflections:Feuchter and Castelli—Two Centuries on theChesapeake Opens May 1La Forrest L. Simmons and Stephen Chase,Louis J. Feuchter, 1938A new exhibit featuring the work of two artists will openin the Museum’s Steamboat Building on Saturday, May1. The exhibit will include almost 60 works by two artistswhose watercolors document endangered cultures of theBay. Louis Feuchter and Marc Castelli each haunted theshorelines and the water to capture distinctive scenes ofthe Chesapeake.Feuchter (1885-1957) lived his entire life in Baltimorebut also traveled to the Eastern Shore or sailed down thePatapsco River in his own boat to capture the rural settingsfor the sailing craft that he most often found on the urbanwaterfront. He documented in meticulous detail the end ofcommercial sail on the Chesapeake Bay.“There were hundreds of boats operating in HongaRiver. The night before the season opened, Hickory Coveand beyond, would be lit up like a city. Boats from UpperHoopers Island, Wingate, Crapo and Bishop’s Head wouldjoin us there, ready to go at dawn the next day.” Marc CastelliOne of Castelli’s paintings which will be featured in theexhibit is Fishing the Crazy Ivan/Bushwacker.6CBMM HeroesThere is still time to become a CBMM hero!These are our strongest supporters whose generouscontributions have boosted our 2009-2010 Annual Fundin sight of reaching an all-time record! Especially in thisdifficult economic climate our Annual Fund is absolutelyessential to sustain all of our rich exhibits, programsand special events. We simply couldn’t do what we dowithout these gifts. There is still time for you to join thisyear’s band of heroes by making your tax deductibleAnnual Fund donation to CBMM by April 30.Thank you to:Admiral of the Chesapeake ( 25,000 and above)Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. GriffithThe Ida Kemp & William M. PassanoFamily FoundationMr. & Mrs. Paul B. PragerAdmiral of the Fleet ( 10,000 to 24,999)Mr. & Mrs. C G ApplebyMr. & Mrs. George P. EysymonttDr. & Mrs. Gordon A. HughesMr. & Mrs. Peter R. KelloggLegg Mason Investment CounselDr. & Mrs. D. Ted LewersMr. & Mrs. William G. MayMr. & Mrs. William C. MillarMrs. Eleanor RequardMr. & Mrs. Langley R. ShookMr. & Mrs. Richard C. Tilghman, Jr. &Mrs. Mary D. TilghmanMr. Bruce B. WiltsieAdmiral ( 5,000 to 9,999)Mr. & Mrs. James O. BurriMr. Thomas H. HamiltonMr. & Mrs. Robert M. Hewes IIIMr. & Mrs. Richard H. KimberlyMr. & Mrs. Sumner ParkerMr. & Mrs. Robert A. PerkinsMr. & Mrs. Tom D. SeipMr. & Mrs. Richard W. SnowdonMr. & Mrs. Jack P. StoltzCommodore 2,500 to 4,999Candace & Cecil BackusMr. & Mrs. Duane W. BeckhornMr. & Mrs. Bruce P. BedfordDr. & Mrs. John A. HawkinsonMr. & Mrs. Francis HopkinsonMr. & Mrs. Peter M. KreindlerThe Reverends Mark & Abigail NestlehuttMr. Robert D. Nobel & Dr. Cecelia V. NobelMr. & Mrs. Joseph E. PetersMrs. Jean E. SenerCaptain ( 1,200 to 2,499)Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Batza, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Harold C. BrittMs. Janice DavisDr. & Mrs. Albert A. Del NegroElm Street Development Co.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Finan, Jr.Mrs. Shirley S. GoochMr. & Mrs. E. Brooke Harwood, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. HewesMrs. Margaret D. KellerMr. & Mrs. Fred C. MeendsenMr. John M. Pinney &Ms. Donna F. CantorMr. & Mrs. Norman H. PlummerMr. & Mrs. Joseph C. RobillardMs. Lucy I. SpiegelMr. & Mrs. Henry StansburyMr. & Mrs. Guy T. SteuartMr. & Mrs. James E. ThomasDr. & Mrs. L. Baird Tipson, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. WeisburgerDr. & Mrs. Clifton F. West, Jr.Commander ( 500 to 1,199)The Honorable & Mrs. George H. AldrichMr. & Mrs. Thomas L. AlnuttMr. & Mrs. J. Peirce AndersonAntique & Classic Boat Society/Chesapeake Bay ChapterMr. & Mrs. Edward B. Asplundh, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. BenburyMr. & Mrs. Richard J. BodorffMr. & Mrs. William R. BowlesMr. & Mrs. John F. Breyer, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Thomas A. BroadieMs. Audrey E. BrownMrs. Margarette CalvertMr. & Mrs. Peter C. ChamblissVice President & Mrs. Richard B. CheneyMr. & Mrs. William N. DemasMr. J. Orin EdsonMr. & Mrs. Charles C. FichtnerMr. & Mrs. Tom FranaMr. & Mrs. Howard S. FreedlanderMr. & Mrs. William R. GawneMr. Dalbert B. GinsbergMr. & Mrs. Robert GladstoneMr. & Mrs. Richard C. GranvilleMr. & Mrs. A. J. GuptaAmbassador & Mrs. Anthony S. HarringtonMr. & Mrs. James P. HarrisMr. & Mrs. Andrew D. HessMr. Thomas P. HoganMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. HollingsheadMs. Diane HumphreyMr. Raymond JenningsMr. & Mrs. Jerry JanaMr. & Mrs. R. Douglas JurriusMr. & Mrs. Paul KingMr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Lesher, Sr.Mr. Robert A. Luff & Ms. Dana A. EggertMr. & Mrs. John MarrahMs. Julie Parker McCahillThe Honorable Juliette C. McLennanCapt. & Mrs. Richards T. Miller, USN (Ret.)The Honorable & Mrs. John C. North IIMr. & Mrs. Stephen H. O’NeillMr. & Mrs. Carl H. OppenheimMr. & Mrs. John B. OwensMr. & Mrs. John D. ParchmanMr. & Mrs. James K. PetersonMr. Donald S. Rice & Ms. Elizabeth S. LokerDr. Daniel L. Ridout IIISecretary & Mrs. Donald H. RumsfeldSchluderberg FoundationMr. John SeifarthMr. & Mrs. John R. SherwoodMr. & Mrs. W. Rembert SimpsonMr. & Mrs. William S. StaffordMr. Gerould R. StangeMr. & Mrs. Thomas E. StevensonMr. & Mrs. Roger L. StobbartMr. Jefferson S. StriderMr. & Mrs. Alfred H. Taylor, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. James A. VailMr. & Mrs. Charles E. WheelerMr. & Mrs. Timothy E. WymanMrs. Roslyn D. YoungNote: This listing reflects gifts received through March 29, 2010.7

Heirloom GardenSave the Datecontinued from front coverbeen making the case for an heirloom herb and vegetablegarden on CBMM’s campus since he began volunteeringat CBMM last February, and it looks like Roger will win hiscase this spring. His vision will come to life in several patchessurrounding the log cabin on Fogg’s Landing, featuring both“pre-contact” plantings (tobacco and the “Three Sisters”—corn, beans and squash) along with plants typically grownduring the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, showing howEuropean and African influences changed the agriculturallandscape around the Chesapeake. There also will be anherb garden with some strewing herbs, plants grown fortheir aromatic qualities and used as early air fresheners tohide the unpleasant odors from both inside and outside ourearliest settlers’ cabins. Roger already has obtained nearly50 different types of heirloom seeds, some purchased fromcommercial seed companies and some donated by othermuseums and heirloom seed projects. The raised beds andsurrounding walkways are in the process of being installed,and the first seasonal planting may happen as soon as thesoil dries out.Initial installation of the garden has been a lot of work,but that will be just the start. The garden’s regular ongoingmaintenance requirements will be an even bigger challenge.for the 13th AnnualBoating PartySat., Sept. 11, 2010 forSwinging on a SparRecently certified Master Gardener and CBMM volunteerRobin Gordon understands this well and has done herhomework to get the heirloom vegetable garden approvedas an official Master Gardener site. This means participantsin the Master Gardener program can fulfill their volunteerwork requirements while toiling in our early Americangarden setting. Robin also has recognized the interpretivepotential of the site. She and Roger will train othervolunteers in both maintaining the garden and interpretingits riches to CBMM’s many visitors.All in all, the heirloom vegetable garden project will bea welcome addition to CBMM’s campus this season, andanother fine example of how CBMM’s offerings to its visitorsnever stop growing! (Please forgive the author’s pun.)This newsletter is printed on paper which is 50% recycledcontent; 25% of which is post consumer waste. The printinginks are vegetable oil based which are eco-friendly. We willcontinue to strive to use environmentally helpful products inthe production of this newsletter.Chesapeake Bay Maritime MuseumNavy Point u PO Box 636St. Michaels, MD 21663Chesapeake Bay Maritime MuseumChesapeake BayMaritime MuseumNon-Profit Org.U.S. Postage Paid

Vendors will be on hand with models, kits and refreshments for sale. To The PoinT Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum Spring 2010 CBMM volunteer Roger Galvin’s skills as a Master Gardener are being utilized on the Museum’s campus. A temporary pond will be built for demonstrations and competition at the Maritime Model Boat Expo in May.

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