‘Ancient Mariners’ still coming to Maine

Ruth and Herb Weiss next to their new boat, Ancient Mariners II, at The Dolphin Marina in Harpswell in 2023. The Weisses, now 99 and soon to be 107, respectively, are now summer residents of Camden. (Philip Conner photo/Harpswell Anchor file)

Remember the boating couple with a combined age surpassing 200 who called themselves the Ancient Mariners?

Herb Weiss will turn 107 on Oct. 2. His wife, Ruth, celebrated her 99th birthday in April. They’ve given up cruising, but not Maine.

After finally deeming themselves too old to continue their ocean journeys, the Weisses now are summer residents of Camden. They live on the first floor of a home that Ruth has been busily redecorating. Their son, John, resides on the second floor.

“I’m 50 years older” than most old folks, said Herb, chuckling in the background of a phone call between a reporter and his wife. Ruth said she’s planning a small morning party for Herb.

“We have our parties in the morning because we’re awake in the morning,” she quipped.

“We’re just getting older,” she mused, but both are in good health. They keep moving, going out for walks in downtown Camden.

They’ll head to Florida for the winter. Their 41-foot American Tug, Ancient Mariners II, is still for sale in Portland. It comes with their dinghy, Rhyme, an ode to Samuel Coleridge’s 1798 poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”

Before heading up the coast, their first summer stop traditionally was at The Dolphin Marina & Restaurant in Harpswell.

Ruth and Herb had voyaged around the world in sailboats before buying trawlers. Ruth is a Harvard-educated pediatrician. Herb was 15 or 16 years old when he enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

During World War II, Herb was sent to England to install radar with a novel navigation system he and his team had developed at MIT for the Royal Air Force. Until then, he said, Great Britain had been losing the air war. He also was part of a team at MIT that helped develop the North American Aerospace Defense Command on the East Coast of the U.S.

Related Posts
Read more

Harpswell shipwreck still a mystery 8 decades later

This month marks the 84th anniversary of the infamous Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. The surprise assault sank four battleships, killed thousands and hurled the United States headlong into the Second World War. However, a persistent coastal Maine legend suggests the Axis powers actually fired their first fatal shot on an American vessel five months earlier, 5,000 miles east of Hawaii and not far from Bailey Island.
Read more

Harpswell has 44 of Maine’s 600 remaining overboard discharge systems

With no municipal sewer system, almost all of Harpswell's homes and businesses rely on septic systems to handle their wastewater. But a few dozen properties that are too small or too rocky for conventional septic systems still use what are called overboard discharge systems, even as the state and town governments work to replace them.

Thank you for your interest in receiving emails from the Harpswell Anchor! It may take a couple days for you to start receiving emails. If you have any questions, please contact info@harpswellanchor.org.

Sign up to receive email updates from the Anchor

← Back

Thank you!

Thank you for your interest in receiving emails from the Harpswell Anchor! It may take a couple days for you to start receiving emails. If you have any questions, please contact info@harpswellanchor.org.
Warning
Warning
Warning.

Total
0
Share