Hopetown to Vero Beach and Home to NH
Saturday, April 8,
2017. It cooled off quite a bit last
night as the wind swung into the north.
It was 65 degrees when we woke up this morning, sunny, no clouds, wind N
@ 5 -10. We were up early scouting the
anchorage for available moorings as Greenstone and Saber Tooth are on their way
here. Dream Catcher is departing about 9:00am, so that is one, but we
were unable to locate a second one. We
offered Dream Catcher’s to Avalon, who sat in a slip at the marina
last night, but they had found one already (Blue
Jacket’s). So, we will try again
tomorrow morning. The high tide is early
in the morning, so boats get moving to get out of here with the high tide.
|
Hopetown Light |
Baila is going for
a bike ride and picnic with the kids down to Tahiti Beach (at the south end of
this island (Elbow Cay)). Lisa declines
that opportunity, but instead goes to town to visit with the artists she met
yesterday (Hermann and Ann). While there
she also visits the Straw Market, owned by Muchies’ (the ice cream shop)
daughter Chaka. While she is off, I
continue to try to finish the blog so it can be published. It would not be so much work if I would do a
bit more often.
At 9:30am John and Nora (Saber
Tooth) and Bob and Judy (Greenstone)
arrive by dinghy. They have anchored
just outside the harbor. Lisa goes off to
town with them and has lunch at the beach bar at the Hopetown Harbour Lodge,
followed by ice cream at Munchies. Check
out the picture of John with blue lips after eating Cookie Monster Ice Cream!
We are planning to meet Jeff and Patti (Avalon) at the Hope Town Inn and Marina at 5:30, so we invite Saber Tooth and Greenstone to join us.
Melissa (Moondance)
came by for a visit. Moondance is a Catalina 445 and we
have been crossing paths with her for 3 months now. Lisa conducted a boat tour of Rhiannon and we invited her to join us
also. Her spouse (Ann) is back in the US
this week with a terminally ill ex-husband.
We invited Melissa to join us this evening also.
At 3:00pm, Lisa and I go back over to The Jib to pick up the
painting. It will make a nice addition
to our sailing art at home. Another
quick grocery stop and then it is time to head over for cocktails and
dinner. Jeff and Patti have also invited
Galileo (Larry and Gerry) so it is
quite a crowd at the bar (11 in our group).
We pretty much had the place to ourselves for dinner and the food was
very good and the drinks (Gombay Smash) were too. Nice evening. Back at the boat by 8:00pm.
Oh! And the updates to the blog and a bunch of pictures got
published today!
Sunday, April 9,
2017. Palm Sunday. It was cold last night, we had to put blankets on! By 10
am it is sunny, 75 degrees, puffy clouds, breezy, wind Southeast @ 15+. 65 degrees when we got up this morning. Lisa went to church with John and Nora (
Saber Tooth) at the Methodist Church. Later in the day we walked the beach, almost
no shells here and so far this trip we have not found many sea beans. Peter, who we have met in Vero a couple of
times now, sent us a bunch of information on sea beans, so we will pass that
along – click to this link for more info
www.seabean.com
We had dinner on board.
Afterwards, Saber Tooth came
for a game of Mexican Train.
Monday, April 10,
2017. Sunny, but very windy today South 15-20. OK for moving around the Abacos, but not so
outside. We went for a walk on the beach
with Avalon. Fiona (their English Cocker) loves the beach
and the water. We stopped at Munchies
for ice lunch, followed by ice cream, visited the Straw Market and then back to
the boat.
Later, we went to Lighthouse Marina and purchased some
fishing stuff (filet knife, lures, etc.).
Not that we fish that much, or catch anything, but just in case.
We were going to fill the jerry cans, but found that the
gasoline one had split. The plastic ones
tend to expand and contract because of the fumes from the gasoline. This one is five years old, so we can’t
complain too much. Lighthouse Marine has
some, so we dinghy back there to get a new one.
Dinner on board.
Tuesday, April 11,
2017. Cloudy, windy and rain
overnight. Cloudy and cool (65 degrees) this morning. We cleaned the boat (long over due). Lisa took laundry to the marina and dropped
it off (they have a wash and fold service).
We walked the beach and Lisa snorkeled with the folks on Baila. Ice cream at Munchies. On the way back to the boat, we stopped at Moon Dance and Melissa gave us a
tour. It is new Catalina 445. Very nice!
Dinner with Saber
Tooth, Greenstone, Moon Dance at Capt. Jack’s. Jordan (a waiter) remembered us for past
years. Baila, dorenavent and some folks with kids who have a house in
Hopetown were also there. Nice evening.
Wednesday, April 12,
2017. Showers overnight and early this morning, then partly sunny, windy,
NE 20+. We decide to stay one more day
in Hopetown. Baila comes for a
visit. Lisa is going to stay with the
kids and do make-up and other “girl things” this evening so Brad and Lynn can
have a night out. Lisa and the girls all
seemed to really enjoy the evening.
I went to dinner on Greenstone
with Saber Tooth and Moon Dance there also. Nice evening there too.
Thursday, April 13,
2017. Off the mooring at 10:10am.
Partly cloudy, 75 degrees, wind NE@15.
Greenstone, Saber Tooth and Avalon have already left this morning
heading to Man-o-War Cay. We wait for
our turn on the fuel dock to fill with fuel and water. We purchase 7 gallons of gasoline (for the
dinghy outboard), 12 gallons of diesel and 76 gallons of water. Yes, you have
to purchase potable water over here – unless you have a reverse osmosis water
maker on board (which some boats do).
10:45am we are underway with the foresail out, making 6+
knots.
12:20pm, we spot dorénavant
anchored in the cove north of Old Scopleys Rock by the beach. We tried twice to get the anchor to set with
no luck. We went east/south a bit to
Dickies and anchored with Saber Tooth
and Greenstone. Avalon
was enjoying the sailing so much, they continued on the Great Guana Cay.
We dinghied into town and walked the town with Greenstone
and Saber Tooth. We visited the hardware
store (quite a good one), the sail shop (where they make bags and other items
out of sail cloth – rumor has it you can still get canvas and sails repaired
there), the grocery, and the Painted Fish gift shop, where Lisa purchased a
cover-up for the beach and I got a new shirt (not a T-shirt this time). On the
way back to the boat, we spotted Odyssea
(Paul and Sue) who we met in Brunswick before we departed on this trip. They have spent the winter here on a friend’s
dock. Sue makes baskets out of pine
needles and is the person who got Lisa started do it.
|
Man-O-War Cay |
Dinner on board tonight.
6NM today.
26°36.83’N 077°00.71’W
Friday, April 14, 2017.
Cloudy, wind NE 20-25+. A bit
rolly where we are anchored. We dinghied
over to the “low cut” where dorénavent
is anchored. There is a narrow strip of
rock here connects the eastern half of the island with the western half. There is a “road” just wide enough for a golf
cart. It’s not obvious how they got the
materials for the big houses on the western half from the government dock on
the eastern half of the island. We walked across to the ocean side and then
down the “road” to the beach. Lots of
houses here, but few people. With this
NE wind, the surf is very rough. We went
for a swim on the south side of the beach which is protected from this
wind. Lisa and Nora snorkeled out to Old
Scopleys Rock. When we got
2:00pm Anchor up.
Wind NE 15-20+.
4:00pm Anchor set at Fishers Bay, Great Guana Cay. We walked the town with Saber Tooth and
Greenstone, stopping a Nippers Beach Grill to get new t-shirts. Almost no one
at Nippers today. You might remember
this is where we had Lisa’s birthday party a couple of years ago. We stopped at
Grabbers (on the other side of the island on the bay where we are
anchored). Avalon joined us (Saber
Tooth, Greenstone and us) there and we had drinks (frozen rum punches) and
dinner (Lisa had conch salad and I had grouper fingers). It was well after dark by the time we got
back to the boat. A long, busy nice day.
|
L to R: Benny, Judy (Greentstone), Lisa, Bob (Greenstone)
Nora and John (Saber Tooth) at Nipper's - Great Guana Cay |
8NM today 26°40.12’N 077°07.15'W
Saturday, April 15,
2017. The wind is still very strong out of the NE. Partly cloudy with rain showers on the
horizon. We walked to the beach with Saber Tooth and Greenstone, then walked the main road around the harbor. We met the pastor of The Gospel Chappel and
he invited us to Sunrise Services tomorrow (Easter), as well as the regular
service at 10:30am. We made a stop at
the grocery, Grabbers for a Pink Sands, and then back to the boat. The Pink Sands is a grapefruit radler
(mixture of grapefruit juice and beer) that is yummy and has become one of our
favorites – I know, we have so many favorites that it is difficult sometime to choose.
|
Us at Grabber's |
We found a couple of nice conch shells which will make nice
horns when cleaned up. Dinner on board
and then Mexican Train with Saber Tooth and
Greenstone aboard Rhiannon.
Sunday, April 16,
2017. Easter. Cloudy at 8:00am, wind
NE @ 15-20. It clears to partly cloudy
by 10:00am.
10:30am We attend the Easter Service at The Gospel Chappel
with Saber Tooth. It was a very nice service with lots of
music. More sedate than the Easter
Services we attended at Black Point and Staniel Cay the previous two Easters
though. Lunch on board, then a walk on the beach with Greenstone and Saber Tooth. Nora found a heart sea bean. One of the few this trip. We met Avalon
again at Grabbers. Had a Pink Sands and
Lisa got a conch salad to take back to the boat.
6:00pm We all met at Greenstone
(Avalon, Saber Tooth and us) for appetizers and drinks. I made a gallon of Goombay Smash – another
favorite. Nice evening.
Monday, April 17,
2017. Tax Day in the US – except New
England. There it is Patriot’s Day and
the running of the Boston Marathon.
Sunny, wind NE 10-15, puffy clouds.
Heavy rain clouds to the south over Great Abaco Island. We listened to the weather on the cruisers’
net at 8:15am, looked at the weather models and decided to cross “The Whale”
today. We are also looking at a possible
passage from Great Sale Cay to Fort Pierce Thursday night and Friday. We will see how the weather shapes up for
that. “The Whale” is Whale Cay and to continue toward the USA you have to go
through a cut on the east side of the cay, outside in the ocean for a couple of
miles, then back into the Sea of Abaco through a very narrow cut on the west
side of the cay. In calm weather it is not a big deal. In stormy weather it is very dangerous and
many boats have been wrecked there.
Today, it is rolly, with sea swells following the NE wind, but is not a
difficult passage.
10:00am Anchor up.
Motor sailing down wind (sort of) at 7 knots. Avalon
left early and is giving us reports along the way. Saber Tooth and Greenstone are with us. The Whale sounds manageable.
11:00am Negotiating through the Whale. It is very rolly with big ocean swells, but
we are making good time and it is an uneventful passage. Great!
12 noon Avalon is
at anchor in White Sound by Green Turtle Club which is where we stayed for a few
days last trip with Jeff and Carly.
12:40pm Anchored in White Sound at Green Turtle Cay, close
to Avalon. Because it is very shallow here, Greenstone (who draws 6 ½ feet) and Saber Tooth (who draws 7 feet) elect to
anchor just outside the harbor.
15NM today (seems like a lot more). 26°46.79’N 077°20.19’W
We talked to Paul at Rivers’ Edge Marina in St. Augustine
today. He will have a spot on the dock
for us when we arrive and a spot if we decide to leave the boat there for the
summer. We like St. Augustine.
Saber Tooth came by to pick up some movies we loaded onto a
memory stick for them. We are still
having issues with the sound on our new computer. We will have to call HP when we are somewhere
that we have internet and phone.
We purchased 11 gallons of fuel and dinghied it out to the boat using jerry cans.
Dinner on board. Pork
tenderloins (very tender), broccoli, baked potato, fresh tomato.
Tuesday, April 18,
2017. Sunny, high thin clouds, wind NE 10-15. We dinghy over to New Plymouth (the main town
on the island). We walked the town. Lisa
bought a very pretty dress at Shamon’s.
We stopped at the two groceries in town and bought a few things
including some yummy looking banana bread.
We met Jeff and Patti (Avalon)
at Harvey’s Café for lunch. It’s a local
place, new last year, good food and reasonable prices. After lunch, we dinghy back to the boat,
raise the anchor (it is now high tide) and motor the three miles over to
Manjack Cay. Lots lof boats anchored
here staging to cross to the USA. There
are about 20 other boats here including Saber
Tooth, Greenstone, Avalon, Easy Living, Moonraker.
3NM today.
26°48.92’N 077°21.89’W
Dinner on Saber Tooth
with Greenstone. Stir-fry vegies, wahoo tenderloins, rice,
cold slaw and the banana bread for dessert.
More Goombay Smash. Yummy
evening.
Wednesday, April 19,
2017. 7:00am. Sunny, puffy clouds,
75 degrees, wind East @ 15. We had a
couple of brief showers overnight, but they seem to have dissipated. The forecast to cross to the USA looks good
for tomorrow night and then begins to deteriorate after that.
8:00am Anchor up,
headed to Great Sale Cay. Greenstone and
Saber Tooth ahead of us. Avalon left an
hour ago. About half the boats in the
anchorage and moving this morning. Wind
15-20, but pretty much right on our stern.
Fore sail out sailing at 6.5 to 7 knots. Very nice!
|
Headed for Great Sale Cay |
One of the nice conch shells we found to make horns from
stinks. Whew! I got out a pick and poked around and about
half of the conch itself came out along with some maggots and muck. I rinsed it out in a bucket of seawater, then
bleach, then hot fresh water – no more stink,.
12:00 noon More clouds than sun, wind still East 15-20,
still a nice downwind sail at 6+ knots.
We can see 6 sails ahead of us and 3 behind. We are passed by 4 power boats – a couple of
sport fish going fast and a couple of trawlers not making much more speed than
we are. We see 3 sail boats pounding eastward into the wind and the waves. When they climb over the waves we can see
their whole bottom.
1:30pm Talked to Surprise on the VHF. He has been traveling along side us for the
past 2 hours. It is a CSY42. They are headed to the Gulf Stream today and
then on to Charleston. Long trip with no
stops. Wind now East at 20+, seas 4 feet
– still downwind.
3:15pm Little Sale
waypoint and we turn south toward the anchorage at Great Sale Cay. Avalon on the VHF says they are just putting
the anchor down.
4:40pm Anchor down in Northwest Harbor, Great Sale Cay.
Sunny, high thin clouds, wind East 20-25, 75 degrees. The wind is supposed to calm down, but so far
has shown no indication of that. It is
nice and flat in the anchorage though.
|
Sunset at Great Sale Cay |
57 NM today, 8.7 hours, 6.6 knots average all under
sail. 26°58.70'N 078°12.90”W
Dinner on board, sausage and rice. Early to bed.
Thursday, April 20,
2017. Sunny this morning, still windy E@20, high thin clouds, 80 degrees
already. Several boats left last evening
to cross to the USA, even though the weather still called for winds East @ 20
and significant waves in the Gulf Stream.
This morning several more boats left heading to West End (on Great
Bahama Island) for a crossing tomorrow.
That will make for a long day today, then a pre-dawn departure tomorrow
to make an incoming tide on the Florida East Coast. Our plan is to leave after dinner this
evening and go overnight across the Banks, arriving at the east wall of the
Gulf Stream about day break tomorrow.
Arrival planned in Fort Pierce at 2:00pm tomorrow – travel time to Fort
Pierce 16-18 hours. If we are “on schedule”, we will head north in the ICW to
Vero Beach arriving before dark. Autumn
Borne (Dean and Susan), our mentors during the first two years of cruising
are at Vero Beach.
We added fuel and water to the tanks from the jerry cans,
cleaned the knot meter (you can remove it from inside the boat) and got
everything ready for a long passage (put all the “fallables” away). We cooked the last of the lobster and had a
very nice lunch, the remainder will go into a lobster salad. We did more route planning, looking at other
places to exit the banks to the Gulf Stream.
We talked with Greenstone, Saber
Tooth, Easy Living, Escape and Avalon
about tonight’s departure.
Lisa made a nice dinner of grouper, rice and vegies. At 7:30pm, we raised the anchor and sailed
off into the sunset (literally). With us
are Saber Tooth, Greenstone, Avalon,
Escape, Easy Living and All the Way
There. Wind is East at 10-15, seas
about 2 feet, motor sailing downwind at 6.5 knots.
|
Underway from Great Sale Cay |
11:00pm Passing Mangrove Cay to the south. We are on a more
northerly course now headed toward Little Bahama Bank to get the seas to be
following (off our stern) instead of quartering (off our left rear). Quartering seas make for a very uncomfortable
ride.
Friday, April 21,
2017. 4:30am Wind still pretty much East @ 10-15. Lots of stars out and the moon finally rose
at midnight.
8:00am We are on the edge of the Gulf Stream. As predicted, the seas are confused. 4-8 foot
roller from the NE at 9 second intervals and 2-4 foot waves from the SE, with a
2 foot chop on top of all of that. The
wind has turned SE @ 10-15 and we are trying to stay downwind to keep the ride
as comfortable as possible, but we are still being tossed around quite a
bit. Skies are clear, 75 degrees.
1:00pm We are pretty much out of the Gulf Stream and the
seas have settled somewhat. Land is in
sight.
2:00pm Fort Pierce inlet.
Saber Tooth and Greenstone are already inside. Saber
Tooth has to stop at Fort Pierce to check in with Customs and Immigration.
2:30pm We enter the inlet.
It is rolly and rough and there is a significant cross current at the
outer edge of the breakwater. Nothing
unusual for this inlet, but we make it inside ok. Escape
and Avalon are through the North Fort
Pierce Bridge headed to Vero Beach.
3:00pm We pass through the North Fort Pierce Bridge and call
Customs to check in. Having a Small
Vessel Reporting System (SVRS) number and having previously filed a float plan
on-line makes checking in a 3 minute phone call. Nice. Easy Living is entering the inlet.
5:00pm We arrive at Vero Beach City Marina. We stopped at the fuel dock and filled Rhiannon's fuel tanks. The moorings are all taken so we raft (tie
alongside) Autumn Borne. We haven’t seen them since last season. You may remember that we traveled with them
quite a bit the first two years we were cruising. Escape here, as is Avalon
(in a slip).
6:00pm Greenstone,
Easy Living and Saber Tooth arrive.
6:30pm Group dinner at Riverside Café (just south of the
marina). Greenstone, Saber Tooth, Avalon,
Autumn Borne, Escape, Mike and Bev (did not get their boat name) and
us. Quite a crowd. Nice evening, good company, good food. Everyone exhausted and early to be.
136.8NM MM952 27.39.44N 080.22.20W
Saturday, April 22,
2017. It looks like rain. 75 degrees
and very muggy. We have been looking
at Craigslist for a vehicle. We need one
to drive home and while Hertz has an $8 a day rate if you drive the car north,
we need to replace a vehicle when we get home, so we thought we would look here
where they do not use road salt. We found a 2007 Chevy Trail Blazer with only
42,000 miles and the seller was kind enough to bring it by the marina for us to
look at. After driving it (drove very nice)
and examining it (looks great) we discover rust under all the doors, and on the
frame. We find out the vehicle actually
came from NY, but has been a Florida a while.
If we wanted something with rust we would wait until we get home to buy
something.
Lisa did laundry and I worked on this blog.
Dinner was at Saki, one of our favorite Thai/Japanese
restaurants here. Saber Tooth, Greenstone, Avalon and us. Probably our last time together this
season. Nice dinner, good food and
company.
Sunday, April 23,
2017. Cloudy, murky, rain over night.
Humid, 75 degrees. Saber Tooth
and Greenstone leave heading toward
St. Augustine, where they will again leave the boats for the summer. Lazy day, reading and visiting with Avalon and Autumn Borne. We also spent more time online looking for a vehicle.
Monday, April 24,
2017. Cloudy at 8:00am, but clears to partly cloudy by 9:00am. Wind
SE@15-20. We picked up a rental car from
Hertz so we could go car shopping, run errands, etc. We spent the morning
walking the beach with Jeff and Patti (Avalon).
I found a heart sea bean. Avalon has not ever found one and they
do not have one on their boat, so this one was a gift to them. Superstition says you should have one on the
boat and it will keep the boat from sinking.
We are not superstitious, but we do keep some on the boat, just to be on
the safe side.
We had lunch at Casey’s (like an outdoor diner). The food is always good and the prices are
very reasonable. After lunch, Avalon cast off and headed toward Titusville,
where the boat will spend the summer.
3:00pm Majestic Phoenix (Phil and Joanne) arrives and picks up a
mooring. You may remember we have
traveled with them off and on for the past three seasons. The last time we saw them was in George Town,
and Last we heard, they were having transmission issues. Great to see them.
6:00pm Dean and Susan (Autumn Borne) come to dinner. Lisa made chicken, rice, carrots and
salad. Nice evening.
Tuesday, April 25,
2017. We have several vehicles we
want to look at today, all SUVs. We originally wanted a small pickup like a
Chevy Colorado or a Nissan Frontier, but almost everyone we have found (used)
has been two wheel drive. Not too useful
in NH if we happen to be there is the winter.
The first is a private sale of a 2010 Cadillac SRX. Normally, not on our list, but it only has
36,000 miles and look like new. We
suggest that we have a dealer go over the vehicle to make sure it is as good as
it looks. We also ran a Carfax and a
complete service history.
We had lunch at an iHop, both Lisa and I wanting
breakfast. Then we trekked out to the Hyundai
dealer to look at 6 different used SUVs they had advertised, 3 Hyundai Santa
Fes and 3 Kia Sorrentos. All of them
were priced right (so we thought at the time) and all had low miles and are in
beautiful condition. We settled on one
and the dealing began. First they told
us there was no warranty, we would have to buy a warranty. The original warranty on these vehicle is 10
years or 100,000 miles, but it is not
transferable. The transferable part
is 5 years or 60,000 miles if the vehicle is certified (which means you pay money to have that happen). OR, you
can buy an extended warranty. There is also a $999 dealer fee for handling the paper work, prepping the vehicle and
getting the Florida plates. The dealer
refused to reduce the price of the vehicle from the “advertised price”. While they kept telling us what a great deal
they were giving us, and that they needed to sell more cars because the end of
the month was coming – and that they would do anything to make us happy, they
kept adding $ to the cost. It’s nice to
know some things don’t change. In 50
years I have been buying cars, the same stuff is still going on inside the
dealership sales office. The Cadillac is looking better all the time.
When we got back to the boat, Last Boat (Nelson and Ondra) and Gertie (Dan and Dawn) arrive.
You may remember that Nelson and Lisa rescued a pelican in Marathon on
our first trip. Both boats are also good
friends with Autumn Borne.
Wednesday, April 26,
2017. Beautiful morning. 75 degrees, wind SE @ 15, big puffy clouds.
Majestic Phoenix heads north to Titusville, where they will leave the boat for
the summer. We go the beach with Autumn
Borne. We did not find any sea beans
today, or even good shells. We all had
lunch at the Sunshine Grill on the beach and then went to Country Citrus for
orange ice cream. Delicious. Someone has taken the old line citrus of
Indian River and upscaled it, put a store on Ocean Avenue in Vero and a selling
the normal citrus products, plus ice cream, key lime pie and other goodies.
Pete comes by and cleans the bottom of the boat and checks
our zincs.
Dinner was again at Riverside. This time with Last Boat, Gertie, Autumn Borne and us. Nice evening.
We get a call from the owner of the Cadillac. The dealer has completed his check and he is
emailing us a report. Other than needing
a brake fluid change, the vehicle is great.
Nice to know we can stop car shopping.
Thursday, April 27,
2017. Sunny, 80 degrees, wind SE@20. Lisa spent the day at the beach with Autumn Borne, Last Boat and Gertie. Lots of swimming and bocce ball. Very red when she got back to the boat. I made a list of maintenance items for the
summer for the boat and worked on the blog.
We had dinner at Mulligan’s on the beach with Stan and Judy,
who now live here in Vero. They a former
cruisers that we met in Salem, MA, in 1987.
After dinner we walked the ½ block to Country Citrus to introduce them
to the orange ice cream. Great friends, nice evening.
Friday, April 28,
2017. Cloudy, wind SE @ 15-20, 80 degrees, showers overnight. By 10:00am, it has become partly cloudy. We met James (Cadillac owner) at the bank and
did the payoff of the lien on the vehicle and signed a purchase agreement and a
bill of sale. Florida does electronic
titles on vehicles and it takes longer for one of those to clear than it does a
paper title in NH. We need the “clear”
title to get a temporary tag so we can drive the caddy home. Once he delivers the car and the title, we
will pay him the balance of the purchase price, hopefully next week.
We went to Lowes and got sun shade to cover the boat while
we are gone. When we returned to the
boat, we said our good-byes to Last Boat
and Gertie. Last
Boat is headed to North Caroline and Gertie
to New Jersey.
We had dinner on board (leftovers from all those restaurant
outings). Later we went to Cravings for
ice cream.
Saturday, April 29,
2017. Sunny, wind SE 10-15, 80 degrees.
7:40am knocking on the hull. Autumn Borne is departing, heading
toward Catskill, NY, where they will summer.
We get the lines separated, transfer the mooring attachment to our boat
and give hugs good-bye once again.
Lisa and I walked two different beaches this morning, one
north of the marina and on south almost to Fort Pierce. We did not find any sea
beans at the first, although Lisa is now collecting “flat” shells for a mosaic
and we found those. At the second beach,
we found one hamburger bean and one bay bean, lots of “golf balls”, mostly
broken and lots of almonds (very common sea bean we don’t collect – but usually
indicate the presence of others). Lisa also found a “common spirula” which is a
spiral air chamber inside a squid that helps them maintain a certain
depth.
|
Sea Beans: Heart Bean, 2 Golf Ball Beans, 2 Hamburger beans, 1 Bay Bean |
We had lunch at Casey’s
(shared a giant BLT) and then drove to Sebastian to drop off the fishing
rod we bought in George Town that needs a new guide. We stopped at a nursery and looked at plants,
most would be “annuals” at our house. We stopped at Walmart and bought oil for
the engine and the generator (we will change it before we leave the boat). We also bought some steaks to grill for
dinner.
7:00pm by the time we returned to the boat. Steaks, zucchini, baked potato and Brussel
sprouts for dinner. Nice.
Sunday, April 30,
2017. Rain overnight, very
humid. Feels like a cold front
passing. Wind now shifted East at
20+. By 10:00am it has cleared to partly
cloudy.
Monday, May 1, 2017. Mayday. Avalon is at Titusville and sent us
pictures of the SpaceX launch. Very cool.
Lisa and I walked the beach and found another hamburger bean.
Tuesday, May 2, 2017. Ordered the starboard rear fixed portlight
from Catalina. We drove up to Melbourne and spent the afternoon with George and
Bev Major. Lisa calls them “aunt and
uncle”, but they are really very good friends of her parents since George and
Bruce (Lisa’s father) were in the military together. Bev made pulled pork and potato salad. We brought desserts from The Fresh Market and
wine. Very nice way to spend the day.
Wednesday, May 3,
2017. Sunny, 80 degrees. Breezy. We
moved the boat from the mooring to her summer home in a slip at the dock. Lisa spent the day cleaning the deck,
topsides and canvas. I changed the oil, oil filter and fuel filter on the main
engine and the generator. Checked over
both engines. We will wait to change the
raw water impellers until the fall. We
ordered new opening portlight seals and lenses (the Plexiglas part) from
Lewmar.
Thursday, May 4,
2017. Warm and sunny. 80 degrees.
Wind relatively calm. We spent the afternoon at Stan and Judy’s hanging
out by the pool. Stan grilled a chicken
and we had a very nice dinner. After
dinner, the skies darkened and two lines of thunderstorms moved through. Very windy before the rain. Lots of lightening. After it passed, we drove back to the
boat. The night turned out calm and
clear.
We heard from Down
Time (Roger and Connie). They have
just arrived from Norman’s Pensacola (Abacos) after a 32 hour passage and are
at Harbortown Marina in Fort Pierce. We
plan to drive down and see them tomorrow.
Friday, May 5, 2017. We saw Laurent and Henrick (age 2) (dorénavent). They came in yesterday after crossing from
Great Sale Cay. Laurent said it was a
“pretty rough crossing with confused seas” (sound familiar).
We got a call from the bait shop in Sebastian. The repair of the rod is complete, so we
drive up and get it. The guy put on 2
new rollers and a new guide, as well as a butt cap and charged us $25. I have no idea how you do all that work for
$25! We had a late breakfast at the
Country Café in Sebastian – a local place serving great food and then back to
the boat.
Our son Jeff called, he has a new job in the admissions
office of the University of Utah and is excited about it.
We drove down to Fort Pierce and met Roger and Connie for an
early dinner at The Cove, the restaurant at Harbortown. It was great to see them. The last time we saw them was in George Town. They are headed outside tomorrow to
Jacksonville, where they will leave the boat for the summer. Maybe we will get to see them again on the
way north.
Lisa met Baila (Brad,
Lynn, Anna, Izzy, Avery) heading out from the dinghy dock with a load of
groceries. We have not seen them since
Hopetown. They crossed over with dorénavent yesterday. That’s one of the
great things about Vero, you see lots of people coming and going and lots of
folks you have met before.
A week has passed since we paid off the loan for the car we
are buying. Florida has electronic
titles, and the bank “released” the title as soon as they posted the
payment. If the titles are all
electronic, why hasn’t the state “released” it on their end?
Saturday, May 6,
2017. The wind has switched to the
NW@20. It is only 60 degrees this
morning. It is 51 degrees in St.
Augustine. Rain most of the day, but
clearing in the afternoon. We went in to do laundry. Brad (Baila)
was there also.
Sunday, May 7, 2017. Clear
and windy, 75 degrees. We walked the beach south of town. Lots of people on the
beach. We went to Home Depot and bought
sun shade material which we will use to cover the boat for the summer. We also stopped at Harbor Freight, which is
always fun, then a stop a Walmart for some supplies. We had lunch at Nino’s
Corner (calzone, aka Stromboli).
Orient Moon (Terry
and Leslie) came by to visit. They are
at Morningstar Marina just to the south and came calling in their dinghy. Last time we saw them on this trip was George
Town.
Dinner on board. The
last of the Wahoo from Lighten’ Up
(Spanish Wells)). Yum.
Monday, May 8, 2017. Clear and cool, 65 degrees. The title for the
car has been cleared by the State of Florida.
We will pick it up tomorrow. We
saw Orient Moon on the gas dock this
morning and went over to say “good-bye for now”. They are headed north to the Chesapeake. They
left us a pound of shrimp they had vacuum packed and left in the freezer from
McClellanville. Hopefully, we will see
them again next year.
We walked the beach and found another hamburger bean. Yea!
One of three found on this trip. We
had a late lunch at Casey’s Place. We began going through the boat, getting rid
of excess stuff and packing for the trip home.
Lisa spent the afternoon making jewelry with the girls from
Baila (Anna, Lizzy and Avery).
NOTE: The next day Baila went to Walmart and bought all kinds of jewelry making stuff for the girls (Anna mainly). I was out and about in the car and picked them up there and gave them a ride back to the marina. Two days later, Anna was in the boaters lounge making jewelry and showing off what she had already made and she sold $57 dollars worth to several women who loved what she is doing! I told Brad he should encourage that and perhaps that could pay for more extended cruising!
Anna really is talented with the jewelry!
We had
dinner at the Polo Grill (Ocean Ave.) in Vero with Stan and Judy. Great food and company!
Tuesday, May 9, 2017. Sunny and warm today. Wind SE @ 15.
80 degrees. We drove down to Fort
Pierce and picked up the paperwork for the car.
Then on to the St. Lucie County Tax Collector to get the temporary plate
for the car (so we can drive it back to New Hampshire). You would think
that we were the only people who had
ever requested a temporary plate to take a car purchased in Florida out of
state. Once we had the plate, we headed back over to Hertz to turn in the
rental car and pick up the Cadillac. The
person selling us the car is the manager at Hertz, so he made us a great deal
on the rental while we were waiting for the paperwork.
|
Us and the "new" Caddy |
On the way back to Vero Beach we stopped at Lenzi’s Diner
(on Route 1 in Fort Pierce) and had a late lunch. Lisa had fish and chips and I had breakfast.
The fish is prepared with corn flakes and is very crunchy and delicious.
Wednesday, May 10,
2017. Lisa’s Birthday. Sunny and warm, 80 degrees in the morning, but no
wind. We removed the foresail,
folded and stored it for the summer. We
picked up the dinghy with the spinnaker halyard and put it on the foredeck,
then Lisa gave it a good cleaning and waxing.
I downloaded a bunch of pictures for the final edition of this year’s
blog.
In the afternoon, there was a birthday celebration at the
pavilion for Lisa. Lots of folks stopped
by. Pete managed the grill. There were many children (dorenavént, Baila and two other boats),
which Lisa thoroughly enjoyed. There was even a birthday cake!
|
Happy Birthday Lisa! |
Thursday, May 11,
2017. Another warm sunny morning. We took down the mainsail, folded it and
stored it below for the summer. We began
to pack the car for the trip home. I
ordered replacement parts for the opening ports. There are six and they are beginning to leak
just a bit around the seals. Pete will
work or repairs over the summer. We had cocktails and hors d’ oeuvres aboard Pemaquid, an Oyster 485 (my dream
boat).
Friday, May 12, 2017.
Sunny, 80 degrees. The car is fully loaded. We removed the sails and canvas, stored the dinghy on deck and completed the cover for Rhiannon and get everything stowed away. We completed a final load of laundry and went
over the “to do list” with Pete, who will be looking after the boat and doing
some projects over the summer. We had a
nice dinner at Sake with Stan and Judy and Pete (Grace). A very nice last evening in Vero.
|
Covering Rhiannon for the summer |
Saturday, May 13,
2017. After good-byes and making we
sure have everything we want to bring home, we depart Vero Beach City Marina at
9:40am. It is cloudy and it looks stormy
on the horizon. After a long day of
driving, we stop in Florence, SC for the night.
It rained hard and often as we passed through Georgia.
Sunday, May 14, 2017.
Mothers Day. We had the free
breakfast at the hotel and departed at 9:00am.
The weather is clear and cool.
Wind NW@15-20 and cool, 60 degrees.
Lots of traffic on I95, so we divert to Route 301, which is better, but
seems to sprout 10 new stop lights each year.
Getting around Washington DC is never easy. We arrive at Jim and Judy Foster’s (Tug-a-Long) at 4:00pm. We went out to dinner at a local crab shack,
Sea Side. Because it is Mothers’ Day
(and because it has great crabs) the place is jammed. We all had Crab Imperial, which was
delicious!
Monday, May 15, 2017. It is very cool this morning, 55 degrees,
brrrrrr! Too soon to be this far
north! We all went out to breakfast at a
local diner, Johnnie’s . A great
breakfast is always the best way to start the day.
We are on the road at 9:30am. We make very good time around
New York City, but then once on the Merritt Parkway through Connecticut, we hit
all the “after school taking the kids to soccer, dance, baseball, etc.”
traffic. By 5pm, we are on Route 9
across New Hampshire. There is snow
piled along the side of the road east of Keene.
Some friends (Kathy and Ken), who live in this area, sent us pictures
yesterday. They got 5 inches of snow!
Now we know it was too soon to leave the warm climes of Florida!
|
SNOW! |
We are home at 7:30pm. Another voyage completed. Time to start planning for the next!
|
Our yard full of "wild flowers" |