Schooners make snug, festive fit in Camden Harbor for Windjammer Festival
Almost all in, and lined up, in Camden, where the mountains meet the sea. It is the 2023 Windjammer Festival and the guests of honor – the fleet of schooners – is in and ready for a celebration. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
The Public Landing at Camden Harbor is festive as a crowd gathers to hear Capt. Jim Sharp tell tales and impart maritime history. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Richard Stetson gets the elegant wooden skiffs over to the dock. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
The Heritage moves toward the inner harbor.
Camden Harbor Master Steve Pixley, moving the Schooner Heritage into her temporary berth in Camden’s inner harbor. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Bridget Qualey again loaded her Clarion kitchen wood stove on trailer, along with an icebox reminiscent of the 1930s, and displayed for two days how meals are prepared on schooners, and in old Maine kitchens, in general. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Assistant Harbor Master
Camden staff members Josh Johnson and Adam Jipson helps out as the schooners move in Friday afternoon. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Climbing the mast to tend to the rigging. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
(Photo by Lynda Clancy)
On the Public Landing, vendors and artisans set their wares. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Courtney Sukeforth and her new popcorn business. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
And always, the Pirates of the Dark Rose were growling, and smiling. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Almost all in, and lined up, in Camden, where the mountains meet the sea. It is the 2023 Windjammer Festival and the guests of honor – the fleet of schooners – is in and ready for a celebration. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
The Public Landing at Camden Harbor is festive as a crowd gathers to hear Capt. Jim Sharp tell tales and impart maritime history. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Richard Stetson gets the elegant wooden skiffs over to the dock. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
The Heritage moves toward the inner harbor.
Camden Harbor Master Steve Pixley, moving the Schooner Heritage into her temporary berth in Camden’s inner harbor. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Bridget Qualey again loaded her Clarion kitchen wood stove on trailer, along with an icebox reminiscent of the 1930s, and displayed for two days how meals are prepared on schooners, and in old Maine kitchens, in general. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Assistant Harbor Master
Camden staff members Josh Johnson and Adam Jipson helps out as the schooners move in Friday afternoon. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Climbing the mast to tend to the rigging. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
(Photo by Lynda Clancy)
On the Public Landing, vendors and artisans set their wares. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
Courtney Sukeforth and her new popcorn business. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)
And always, the Pirates of the Dark Rose were growling, and smiling. (Photo by Lynda Clancy)CAMDEN — There could not have been a finer weekend to celebrate Camden’s most storied legacy, the windjammers that make their trade where the mountains meet the sea, and contribute to the town’s unique schooner culture.
But to start the annual Windjammer Festival, always taking place on the few days just before the Labor Day holiday, the vessels first need to nestle in tight quarters at the head of Camden’s inner harbor, where the Megunticook River empties into the seawater, where dinghies and small boats fill the dock space, and where the admiring crowds gather to see them all come together.
It is tense process to park the schooners, large and small, with masts towering over head. Assist boats help nudge the schooners around, as their captains back them into berths.
The homeport schooners have it a little easier, as they make their way to their regular dock space; but the visiting schooners are provided extra care, their shiny wooden hulls lovingly tendered into their assigned spots.
And overseeing it all, a maestro in moving the pieces around the marine chessboard, is Camden Harbor Master Steve Pixley. In charge of getting the vessels safely in and out of the harbor, he zips around in small Whaler, his phone rocketing messages and ringing for attention. “Garth, go,” he speaks fast, getting the latest information from the bay. Or he jokes with a friend, or clips a friendly redirection to a visiting motorboat that inconveniently ties up where it should not.
And the marine radio is likewise alive with chatter. It’s Camden’s 2023 Windjammer Weekend, Sept. 1 and 2, with boats remaining in the harbor over Labor Day Weekend, or sailing on the bay.
Everyone is happy to gather and celebrate schooners, the aged two- and three-masted vessels whose sails fill and billow out on Penobscot Bay, the boats that turn heads, no matter how often you have seen them on the water. Because they are always beautiful and full of unique maritime history, still proudly rolling with the tides.
