SOME FISH AND SOME FISHING 



dreaded Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, eight 

 times and has passed Cape Sable, Florida, 

 even more often. She has rounded the in- 

 hospitable Cape San Antonio at the west 

 end of Cuba fourteen times, and has made 

 the voyage between New York and Key 

 West eleven times. 



She has also been to Antilla at the eastern 

 end of Cuba, as far south as the Isle of 

 Pines, and as far north as the Bay of Islands, 

 Newfoundland — a record which I do not 

 believe has ever been duplicated by a yacht 

 of her size. 



In the summer of 1909 she sailed from 

 Baltimore to Bar Harbor, from there to 

 Halifax, and to Canso, through the Bras 

 d'Or lakes to Sidney, Cape Breton Island, 

 and returned to New York by the same route. 



In October of that year she sailed from 

 New York for Key West, around the west 

 end of Cuba to Batabano and the Isle of 

 Pines. After cruising along the south coast 

 of Cuba we returned to Key West. We were 

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