b'Chapter FiveIn the half-light of a midsummer dawn, Stage Harbor lies asleep, a poetic water color by Jack Garver, an eye-catching narrative in oil by painter Sam Vokey. Hundreds of craft of all types, docile and immobile, are tethered to their moorings, waiting to stretch their limbs and escape.1Little more than an hour from now, the flat pasture of this waterway will be plowed by the restless, pulsing power of dozens and dozens of vessels, heading for the cut, Nantucket Sound, and freedom.From every corner of Little Mill Pond and Oyster Pond, from every mid-stream docking raft in Oyster River, from the twoThe subtly toned watercolors of Jack Garveroften of yacht clubs in this haven,the Stage Harbor environmentgrace the walls of more the procession of out than a few Chathamites.Gordon Zellnerbound boats will swell.It will transform the harbor into a watery 1-95 in New Haven at rush hour.And not surprisingly, many potential users are fretting on the shoreline, waiting to be assigned their passport to flee landa mooring. Overall, Chathams water courses offer 2,200 of them.A number of the 900 on the waiting list want a buoy in the Stage Harbor area.It promises entree to a world of marine adventure and recreation.Selectman Douglas Ann Bohman has lived in Chatham since 1966.Over her long years on the Finance Committee and the Board of Selectmen, she has watched the Stage Harbor waterway.Its a problem, she says, because we have so many outsiders coming in. That harbor is an accident waiting to happen.I worry about it.Members of FSHW and then FCW worried about it no less, ever since their beginnings in 1983.They and others have seen the urgent need for some kind of plan to manage and control this lush salt-water shelter.59'