Saturday, January 31, 2009

1st Year Charleston, SC to St. Lucie Inlet, FL 2009

January, 2009


Riley (brown dress) at her Christmas play


A GREAT couple of months in Charleston and no, the boat never left the dock! The weather stayed just too chilly for full enjoyment on the boat., but we still had a great time visiting with the kids and friends we'd met in the area.

Daughter Leslie & RobertE @ Christmas play


 Every trip off the boat along the dock, however, was an exercise in trying to stay warm...we would have the last boat slip at the very end.. BRRRR... A very long walk in the cold.















One night it was too terribly cold to bundle up all the kids we had on board - Movie Night for RobertE & Riley + two more.  Left them alone, piled in our bed all night. 
Grandson Pickett Lea

 
We completed another to trip to Clearwater to drop our car off  at our condo -- leaving it virtually forever til we stop cruising... We planned the drop to be in Clearwater in time for our other new grandchild, Pickett's christening. 


After visiting with friends and family, we rented a car for the drive back to Charleston and our departure for warmer southern cruising waters.
Daughter Lindsay, Son-in-law Walker & Pickett

Wednesday, January 13, 2009

Finally!  Finally Fun is again on her way, cruising south away from ICW Mile Miler 469.   The U-Line refrig & freezer were replaced this morning, after months of hassle and repairs and delays.  Guess what - -it STILL makes a wind tunnel sound that can keep one awake all night!  No difference after all that fighting with the company to get rid of the noise they all say should not be there.  I give up.  I hate the damn things.


Ashley & City Marinas in our wake





We pulled away from the dock at noon with sunny, but chilly weather and a horrific cold front on its way to the South.  No way can
Finally Fun go fast enough to beat the arctic blast.  Leaving Charleston and its’ lovely skyline of pastel houses and huge homes on the Battery in our wake, we ultimately made our way to the Dawhoe River at White Point, Mile Marker 495. 

Charleston homes along The Battery
This is marshland country, with woods of hummocks of trees and/or the moss covered oaks off in the distance.  It is so very pristine through here, with hardly anyone or anything in sight, except bird life.  
Looking for a free meal they won't get!


Blue herons are fishing everywhere and gulls must think we are a fishing trawler because they follow behind us – hoping to grab some missed catch or catch thrown overboard.  No boats -- all the smart boaters are ALREADY south for the winter! 
Low country & marshes
This White Point area is confusing, with green cans ahead we can’t find our way to…and shoaling everywhere.  After bumping aground several times and on a lowering tide, we gave up, turning back toward where we had come.  We picked our way carefully back UP the Wadmalaw River, seeking anchorage for the night and to await a rising tide before attempting this section again.  

In spite of the warnings of ‘don’t go there – shoaling and shallows in the entrance’  in the Waterway Guides, we entered Toogoodoo Creek with NO problems, dropped anchor in relief and slept like the two exhausted people we were… or at least I did.  Andy says he got up about 4 times to check the anchor.  In spite of his techno-wiz background and love of technology and in spite of spending a zillion bucks on OUR equipment, which includes the ability to set a GPS circle around the anchor that will alarm if we pull anchor, dragging outside of the imaginary circle --  he must have no faith.  He keeps checking the anchor.  Me, I must snore.  I remember my sailing days many years ago – no such thing as a fancy GPS that would alarm if the anchor began to drag and a puny anchor held to the boat only by line – no chain.  I used to pop my head out to check our position at least every half hour, always in terror that we would drag anchor.  I don’t understand how it works – but I do LOVE this new technology.  


 Thursday, January 14, 2009

We pulled anchor at 9:15 AM with an extra 5 feet of water under us – a comforting feeling of true floating and made our way without any problems thru the section that gave us fits the day before.  Amazing what a little water can do under the hull.  So many dolphin sightings today – all eager to play with us in our bow and stern wakes!  We never tire of watching them! 



 We now truly understand the name, “Low Country” as it pertains to South Carolina.  This place is noted for its shoals and for the marshes that go as far as the eye can see.  It is LOW, and so remote and beautiful!

But COLD…..24 degrees.   That front has caught up w us!  The fly bridge, from which we pilot this trawler, acts like a greenhouse – the sun warms us up and as long as the wind is not blowing in behind us, we are reasonably comfortable.  The fleece pants, jackets and two pairs of wool socks also help!  I need a wool hat and some gloves….none of which I packed…Why should I?  This is supposed to be a southern boat….

We arrived in Beaufort, SC City Marina and in spite of the cold (sunny!) took a horse and buggy ride thru the historic section of this little city. The horse wore a blanket and we huddled under two blankets in the wagon!   Founded in 1711, this is one of SC’s oldest cities and the whole downtown is on the Natl Register of Historic Places.  The streets are lined with 1,000 year old oaks, with branches touching the ground, majestic homes, antebellum plantations, the Beaufort Arsenal, churches, great restaurants with beautiful vistas overlooking the ICW. 


The homes here are the oldest in the South (older than Charleston & Savanna!)  because none were destroyed in the Civil War.  Not one was touched, just lived in by the Union soldiers as the inhabitants fled, leaving their homes.  Being a southerner, it should be noted, however, that while the Yanks did not burn the houses, they did strip them, shipping the nicer things back North to their homes.  Given the beauty and charm, it is obvious why such movies as “Prince of Tides” and “The Big Chill” were filmed here. This city is simply idyllic.  I look forward to a return trip in warmer weather when we can stroll about and eat in one of the waterfront eateries.

Friday, January 15, 2009.

Wishing we could stay in Beaufort longer, but not willing to venture out to sight see because of the very cold temperatures, we pulled out, cruising further south, past Savannah.  Having toured this city twice in the past year by auto, we continued along the ICW, not cruising up the river to visit the city.  We did see from the ICW, however, the Bonaventure Cemetery, made famous in the book, “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil”, which we had toured a few months ago on a city tour and thoroughly enjoyed.    

 
Amazing - along the ICW
We cruised onward past the spectacular homes along the ICW of Hilton Head.  Hilton Head, so named in 1663 after a 17th century explorer, William Hilton now has too many NO WAKE zones to count.  Old Hilton would NEVER recognize the place he discovered!  
 
 This top rated destination used to be noted for its agriculture – Seas Island cotton, sugar and indigo.   Way too much development  now… for example:  The old lighthouse on Haig Point, a landmark for spotting the lighted buoy at the entrance to the Cooper River is now the centerpiece for a land development company.  Progress??  Bah.  I hate this kind of progress. 

If you want to gain a true sense of history and the old South, one should read “The River is Wide” by Pat Conroy, a GREAT southern writer.  He speaks of Daufuskie island in this area (DA FUS KEY – the first key), named by the early settlers and slaves in this area.  The movie, “Conrack” was filed on St. Simon Island and is based on this book.  Ah, the South and Southern writers!  So descriptive, so full of love, honor, lust and the bad man done good……

We pulled into Isle of Hope Marina (Mile Marker 500) to spend the night, ending up here two nights while mechanics worked on a fuel/water problem.  Nice marina, great mechanics who were most helpful – but so cold I never stuck my head out of the boat and Andy only went as far as the marina office.  Due to the freezing cold weather, no sightseeing in yet another charming village of winding roads and old restored houses scattered along the roadway next to the ICW.

Sunday, January 17, 2009

Pulled out of Isle of Hope on a rising tide at 10:25 AM hoping to successfully negotiate Skidaway Narrows & Hell Gate & Florida Passage….three challenging, twisting stretches of the ICW.   The 140 miles from Savannah  to Florida are noted for keeping cruisers on their toes – eyes glued to GPS and depth sounder, barely breathing as one bumps along on the bottom too many times – no matter that you are in the middle of the channel!  


So very beautiful through here, however, with the seemingly never ending marshes, winding, twisting rivers and creeks.  I spotted TWO bald eagles on two separate occasions; two shrimp boats and absolutely nothing else all day! 

We cruised past ‘Moon River’, made famous by Andy Williams, a singer from many years ago, but never felt mellow as we picked our way down the shallow ICW.  We breathed a sigh of relief after negotiating Hell Gate – the USCG is even considering removing all channel markers in this area because they cannot maintain their accuracy due to constant shoaling and the lack of maintenance!!  If the USCG doesn’t know where the shoals are – how are we to know???

We made it safely through Sapelo Sound and hoped to hook up with Lucy & Mike, the parents of our son-in-law and, like us, grandparents to our children’s baby, Pickett.  They live on Sapelo Island and it sounds so wonderful to be there.  Only a few more miles to get there.


Right off this curve - oops
 
Luck ran out at ICW marker 159/160.  In spite of the warnings to honor ‘red nun 160’, which I did,  at about 3:45 PM I ran Finally Fun aground here in Old Teakettle Creek, dead in the middle between the green and red in front of me in the distance, but with the aft end of Finally Fun slightly off the red I  had just passed.  


Looking at mud off our boat

Mud down there at the bottom of the boat!
No amount of powering or maneuvering moved us.  With tide falling, Andy quickly put in a call to Boat US for assistance.  The nearest help was about 2 hours away, in Brunswick and no matter, because with the falling tide, there would be nothing they could do.  We helplessly watched the remaining water under our boat RECEDE, until there was NO water left.  We could have walked around the boat on the dry sand for 40 yards on the port side to 1000+ yards or more on the starboard side. The remains of a wrecked shrimp boat became very visible off to starboard as the water receded – I hoped that would not be our fate!  

We settled in to wait – inexperienced and dumb enough to be relaxed……for a short time.  As the water disappeared, the boat began to list starboard.  WE began sliding starboard, holding on to the counter as it was the only solid fixed object.  The couch let go, the coffee table slid off the rug and I thought I’d do a handstand under some other power source other than my own!  The feeling was of being in one of those fun houses where the floor looks level, but you slide!  We quickly braced the coffee table and a bar stool between the helm chair and the couch, holding all in place.  About that time the two refrigerator drawers & the two freezer drawers began sliding out and the contents of the galley cabinets began hitting the inside of their cabinet doors.  We duct taped the freezer & refrig doors closed – to no avail.  One or the other of us sat on the galley (that is kitchen to you non-boaters) floor for hours, trying to keep ourselves braced in and to hold the drawers shut with our feet.  Going to the bathroom was an exercise  like being in that  fun house ….walking like a crab, holding on to the walls of the boat and as one got close to the starboard side, feeling like one’s body weight would be the extra that would ‘tip us over’ totally on our side.  Once in the bathroom – trying not to pee all over oneself was another exercise in futility. 


So, there we sat, sometimes laughing and other times as the boat groaned or creaked, we held our breath in abject fear of WHAT NEXT?  At least we would not drown.  There was no water for what now seemed like a mile away!  I must say, the red marker I cut slightly short in the aft was absolutely high and dry and we would have gone aground even if I had been a couple of feet or more over in the channel.   Somehow, that knowledge made me feel better – at least it gave me an excuse that this might have happened to even Capt. Andy.  Him, he loves it that the Admiral was THE ONE.  Ying and Yang again at work!

Finally about 10:00 PM, Boat US arrived in the black night, shining their bright searchlight on us and hailing us on the radio.  The water was still too shallow and with no water around us, Boat US hunkered down in the ICW channel, lights ablaze, to await water.  Around midnight they were able to get close enough to toss a line and we hooked up their bridle to our bow.  Much – much - much maneuvering and a couple hours later, as Boat US was about to give up and devise a Plan B, which would involved larger Boat US tugs and possibly some floats to put under Finally Fun and many more hours being stuck.   Suddenly, at the last moment before Boat US quit, Finally Fun released her hold on the hard sand bottom at 3:00 AM and we began to float!  A great feeling!

The fabulous and professional Boat US crew led us in the pitch black night a half mile up the ICW to safe anchorage – and to also make certain the boat had not been damaged and that we could work the engines.   After getting the anchor set, rearranging our furniture and untaping the refrig and freezers, we grabbed a bottle of wine and sat sipping until our nerves calmed enough to go to sleep at about 4:30 AM.  Cost:  $2,675 + Tax.  We paid nothing, as we had Boat US tow insurance (about $100 a year).  Anyone who does not have this type of insurance is taking a huge unexpected financial risk plus incurring the hassle of trying to get someone to come out to assist.  Call this the AAA of the water.

Monday, January 18, 2009

Awaking at first light, as shrimp boats began moving past our anchorage, we made coffee and grabbed for the tide tables.  Needing the sweetener for our coffee, I pulled open the cabinet door – only to have nearly the entire contents spill out on my head, arm and all over the counter top.  I’d forgotten that ALL had shifted during our sideways adventure the night before!  What a mess!!   We drank our coffee and studied the tide tables and charts over and over.  We calculated and recalculated and we did it about four times at least as we now have to negotiate again where we ran aground yesterday.  We also have to traverse Little Mud River which has horrific shoaling and must be traveled at absolute high tide, sayth the cruising guides.  We want no more grounding experiences!

That is it.  I’m done with GA and the ICW.  We had heard horror stories; heard people swear they will NEVER cruise the GA ICW and I am now one of them!  Never again!  Andy & I had discussed traveling ‘outside’ (i.e. the Atlantic Ocean) from SC to FL,   bypassing GA, but due to (a) inexperience – never done the Ocean before and (b) small to larger craft warnings for the Atlantic, we went the way of the ICW.  


Too bad GA is too cheap to maintain the ICW, because cruisers have the potential to spend a lot of money in the state on their way down – marinas, restaurants, fuel, services such as mechanics, etc etc, plus grocery and whatever else.  Andy & I, living in GA for 12 years, spent a lot of tax dollars which we never got anything in return for….terrible roads, traffic, poor schools and now the ICW clearly never benefited from our tax dollar!  Like many before us, we will skip GA during our future travels - which is a shame as it is a scenic cruise, down beautiful countryside, but just not worth the risk to one’s boat and/or sanity.  I’ll take the challenge of the open sea and even an angry King Neptune before putting up with GA’s ICW again.

At about Mile Marker 674 on the ICW coming to St. Simon’s Island, with me at the helm and Andy uncertain as to what I had written in the charts he was trying to read – I hit a crab pot when I took my eyes off the channel for a second to help him out.  Those $1,000 razors did their job and cut the line as we did not jerk or feel a pull, BUT a loud pounding emitted from below the hull.  Shutting down one engine and then the other, Andy determined it was the port engine.  We limped on one engine into nearby Golden Isle Marina on St. Simon’s in order to get a diver to check our props and remove whatever was there – obviously something was there!  



Sharon holding the offender bouy from the crab trab
Okay, so now it’s TWO goof ups to ONE goof up.  Two for me and one for Andy.  He loves having a chip over my head.  We retreated to the marina bar/restaurant for a beer and the best U Peel It shrimp we have ever eaten.

Tuesday, January 19, 2009

Diver showed up at 11:00 at slack tide and quickly pulled out the offending crab pot marker – all barnacled and orange.   It was simply stuck between the props and if we had reversed, it would have popped out by itself.  However, with expensive props at risk, had it been a different scenario, we would have been very unhappy.  At least we also now know no damage was done during yesterday’s grounding.  There is NO paint left on the keel and the props are so very shiny.  Amazing what sand will do… it sandpapered it all off.



After watching much of the Obama Presidential Inauguration til after the diver left, we cruised into Brunswick (which De Soto discovered in 1540 on behalf of Spain) to obtain fuel at a great price from a local petroleum company, only to turn back as the fuel line was so long and docking with the enormous tankers was too risky (they probably could not even SEE us – like gnats around a buffalo).   

Typical sight along the ICW in the South
We passed Jekyll Island and cruised into Cumberland Sound, a maze of range markers, lights and markers, as well as some unidentified structures in the water.  The Kings Bay Submarine Base is here, home to six Trident class subs and we think those unidentified strange looking structures might be something a sub comes up in to get worked on.  No luck in seeing a sub, however.

One of us is always working the chart and searching out the next marker with the binoculars while the other has the helm, watching the markers and the depth.  This is very much a two person job in the ICW and by day’s end, we are both exhausted.  Me, the night owl, often working at 2 and 3 AM, is dead asleep by 9:30 some nights.  It’s all stress of a different level and type!!  When I retired, by blood pressure dropped 10 points to 70 diastolic.  I need to start checking it again to see if this cruising elevates it!  I should also check Andy’s – when I am at the helm….grin.

Beautiful Cumberland Island is off to our port for 20+ miles of protected uninhabited land (US National Seashore).  We did spot two of the famous Cumberland Island wild horses in the distance.  I have always wanted to visit this Island – some time we will come back and go ashore.  It is still too cold to want to do much except hunker down.

We picked our way into a cove near St. Mary’s, dropping anchor for the evening.  A beautiful cold evening.   This is the last stop before hitting the 1,000 miles of FL shoreline.  I’m told the FL ICW will be a bit easier with more navigational aids and a little more water than what we’ve
experienced thus far.

I can’t WAIT to get to FL and get warm.  I’m so tired of the cold – much of which has been low 20’s and high teens as we cruised along over the past week or so.  I’m tired of wearing the same fleece pants and fleece jacket for days now.  I may burn them when I get South, as I can’t see how the washing machine will get them clean!  That AND I NEVER want to have to wear them again!!!   And surely we will never stay so far North again for so long past Fall!!  Lesson Learned.

Wednesday, January 20, 2009

We entered FL at Mile Marker 714.still seeking warm weather. We fueled up in Fernandina Beach (Petroleum City), taking on 493 gallons of diesel for $1002.  As we have been to Fernandina Beach a couple of times (and I visited many many times with my family as a child), we again skipped sightseeing – also still cold, in spite of the chart telling us we had arrived in FL!  We hunkered down at the fuel dock a few hours, begging forgiveness, awaiting higher tides before heading further south to Jacksonville.   

Arriving at the intersection of the St. John’s River and the ICW, I so wished we had time to explore the River – but that would take another two weeks of cruising and we don’t have the time if we are to make the Bahamas before our first visitors (Leslie & the grandchildren) arrive.  Besides, it’s the same refrain…….it is still COLD.  This section of the ICW is narrow, but deep enough but given the sand and currents, shoaling is a problem in FL also. 

Scary in tight places
We see large barges and tugs here in the ICW as we are near St. John’s River Inlet, which is the main shipping pathway to go out to the Atlantic.  




Our AIS (that I have mixed feelings about) – is a help as we can radio that “ black spot” that shows up on the chart plotter (barge) ahead by name and let them know this little bitty boat is in the channel with them and which side would they prefer we pass on.  That is certainly better than screaming into the radio, “black thing in the ICW near John’s River marker #x, “ look out for the little boat!”  Maybe we will get our money’s worth out of the AIS – except that many boats still are not using the system, so we do still revert from time to time to that illogical scream stated above.

We’ve got reservations at the Palm Cove Marina in Jacksonville Beach so we can spend a few days with my Mom, Sister Anne and Niece Devon and her daughter, Myla.  Arriving about 5:00 PM, we picked our way into the Marina on a low tide, again holding our breath.  We doubted there was enough water to get it, but get in we did.  We stayed til Monday, January 26, having a great time with family.  On Sunday, we somewhat cleaned the boat in the narrow window of warm and had former Novartis work colleagues and friends (Matt & Clint and Donna & Shannon) over for dinner aboard Finally Fun.   So fun to catch up with old friends!!!



Monday, January 26, 2009
BB McCormick Bridge sans fog
Whew, worst thick fog I’ve seen in a long long time.  That, plus the fact that the Bridge just south of us was to close from 7-12 and 1-5 for repairs was going to seriously delay our travels.  Via VHF radio, we reached the Tug Captain repairing the bridge and he said due to fog he would be delayed shutting down the bridge and he’d wait for us to get through.  As the fog has lessened and we could see somewhat, we picked our way slowly out of the Marina and its shallows.  Peering into the ICW and making the southern turn into it, we suddenly could not even see the bow of our boat.  I swear I could not see my nose cross eyed.  Andy very carefully pivoted the boat in the narrow channel and aimed back for the Marina.  We tied up at the dock we had just vacated and settled in for a few more hours.  

BB McCormick Bridge w/out fog



We figured the day was shot due to the Bridge construction, but cruised through in fairly good visibility at noon – headed to St. Augustine.  While it takes us HOURS to get to St. Augustine, my sister, Mom and niece drove it in about 40 minutes, meeting us for dinner!  One more fun night! 

We stayed at the City Marina, immediately south of the Bridge of Lions, which is under what appears to be continual construction.  In fact, at midnight, just off our aft deck, the construction crews were still at it.  Sometime in the wee hours, they stopped for a nap, allowing us to get some solid sleep. 

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Founded in 1565 as a Spanish military outpost, St. Augustine is the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the US.  There is so much to see here:  the Spanish heritage, battlements, dungeons, the oldest schoolhouse in the US, many specialty shops, restaurants, beautiful architecture and on and on.  As this is a city both Andy & I have visited more than once – actually lots… we skipped sightseeing here, even though the temperature is rising and walking would be a pleasure.

Traveling buddy for a couple of days
We pulled out at 8:00 AM behind BESO, a 40’ Nordhaven, our dock mates, again cruising in fog (but not as bad as the day before), to follow them southbound for the day. Somehow, following someone else’s wake PLUS our GPS tracks and the chart, is comforting….a sense of security that perhaps, following the wrong boater, could become a disaster!  Gotta be careful who one chooses as their LEADER!  Wait til the United States wakes up on that one after this past election with the inexperienced, socialistic Obama as our President! 



A beautiful SUNNY warm day -- the best in months – as we traveled down the FL ICW marshes, spoil areas loaded with birds.  Spotted numerous dolphins most of whom swam alongside, cavorting and leaping to entertain us yet again. 

Two manatee (looked like a Mom and perhaps a Baby) came alongside, rolled up at us and rolled on over!! The manatee, an endangered species, has got to be the ugliest creature I’ve ever seen – and I’ve seen a few close up, including one who only wanted her belly rubbed some 20 years ago when I was diving in Tarpon Springs, FL.  These slow moving mammals are most likely the original couch potato…


Birds again continually flew behind us as though they again think we are a FISHING trawler and might drop some food scraps.  Then, we saw a large number of birds flying low, flapping their wings on the water.  We learned they do this to stir up the fish they see from the air and then by really stirring up the water, agitating the fish, they can feed on the fish more readily!!     Smart birds!

Gulls stirring up the water to get the fish

 Cruising down toward Cape Kennedy, Cape Canaveral and the Space Center, we could see the VAB (Vertical Assembly Building) from many miles away.  How exciting it would be to be here when a shuttle launch would go off!   Having seen one many years ago – thanks to my Mom, I and my children got tickets for a front row seat with the press.  Awesome how the ground shakes long before one hears the sound  of the rockets taking off.  Wonder what it would be like viewing that from the water???

Bob & Jill Wells Bowman
Continuing our cruise southward, we zeroed in on the Cocoa water tower, easily finding the Cocoa Village Marina.   We spent the afternoon and evening docked there  – a delightful restored place (most of the buildings are listed on the Natl Historic Register – some as old as 1880)  to stroll around in, eat and drink and visiting with a high school friend, Jill and her husband, Bob.  Jill and I graduated from high school just a few miles on down the ICW at Satellite Beach.  Another fun evening reminiscing!





Thursday, January 29, 2009
Departed at 9:00 ish under sunny skies with those same sea gulls stirring up the fish again and Mommy, Daddy and Baby Dolphin following us, leaping, showing off and eyeballing me as I stood hanging over the side rail!   The dolphin do seems to stay longer when they know they have an audience!  

With high winds and a cold front approaching, we zipped (at trawler speed of 8 knots) further south, passing Sebastian Inlet, noted for its awesome, dangerous surfing and dangerous boating.  We could feel the effects of the raging Inlet tugging at our boat as we passed way west of it. I remember many a time driving from Satellite Beach down a two lane road all the way to Sebastian Inlet and stand on the northern side in awe, watching the sea rage in the Inlet…always a  scary sight.  God bless the local fisherman who traverse this area daily….tremendous skills sets!  

Moving right along,  we sought safe anchorage ahead of the coming weather.    Finding none along our route, (would you believe it is ILLEGAL to anchor in Vero Beach!!!) we ended up hunkering down and  sharing a mooring ball, at the Vero Beach Municipal Marina, rafting along side another trawler, Orient Express, with Bruce & Gail aboard.  This is always a great way to make new friends (or potential enemy if one does not mind one’s boating manners!)  With our heads spinning from all the great information imparted by Bruce & Gail (maybe 8 trips or so under their sailboat hull – but first trip aboard  their new trawler), we made plans to follow them across the Gulf Stream in a few days when the weather broke and both of our boats had completed their scheduled repairs.

Friday, January 30, 2009
Hunkered down, catching up on paperwork while it rained all day.  We are in no hurry, as we have scheduled  a few days ‘off’ in order to add an alternator and a water maker before departing to the Bahamas and we are currently slightly ahead of our scheduled work.  Enjoyed the company and cocktails with Bruce & Gail aboard Orient Express in the evening.

Saturday, January 31, 2009
Carefully calculating the tides so we could safely get OUT of this Marina, we unhooked Finally Fun from Orient Express and headed for Palm Cove.  Along the way, after a lot of difficulty, we finally found a commercial Petroleum Fuel Dock, where we filled all of our diesel tanks.  For the first time, we filled the aft tank (250 gallons) which sits under our bed and another 100 gallons in the lazarette.  We topped off the two side tanks (375 gallons each).  We do not want to purchase fuel in the Bahamas due to (a) a greatly inflated price and (b) chance of obtaining dirty fuel which would certainly ruin our day and potentially an engine.  Funny, and par for the course, after fully FULL tanks, our shower stall still holds all the water in the same corner as it has always held after bathing.  The broker kept telling us when we filled the fuel tanks the boat would level off.  Guess what did NOT happen.  Bah.  Same crappy story all over again.  Nothing and I mean NOTHING ever works as expected or promised. 

Cruising onward, we successfully passed by the St. Lucie Inlet, another tricky one where you must keep a firm hand on the wheel and eye on the currents and compass to avoid being swept off course and into shallow water.  We carefully negotiated the tricky course off the ICW to Palm City, where we docked at the back of a home in a canal area, where Steve will install our water maker and another alternator.  We pulled in promptly on time, and Steve and his wife, Captain Diane, were waiting to help us tie up and settle in.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

1st Year: Finally Underway: Gremlins Abound Aboard along the ICW 2008


                                               October 19 - November 4, 2008

What goes Where?
Our plan to depart Mears Marina at Kent Narrows on the Eastern Shore, near Annapolis, shortly after the Annapolis Boat Show ended on October 19 (we were committed to having our boat on display at the Boat Show per our agreement at time of purchase) went awry. Uncompleted commissioning, still more repair work and some detail work put off till after the show delayed departure. This delay put us smack in the face of winter on the way, with freezing, blowing, and very cold weather. We quickly realized why all the birds flying overhead were so loud in their honking honking...they knew better than we how bad the weather in Maryland was going to get & they were so delighted to be heading South !

On the eve of our already nearly 10 day delay in departure, an electrical wiring problem arose, complicating everything. YING, the Triple Type A from the corporate world has a VERY hard time accepting the fact that this NEW boat has so much trouble and that things fixed ONCE, break twice. YANG, on the other hand, is more philosophical, certainly more understanding of all these electronics and other things on board that go Break in the Night and he is certainly NICER to the repair folks than is YING. 

No wonder no one can Go Figure It Out




After 4 more long days of electrical repair that seemed to consist of mostly head scratching among the 3 - yes - three DIFFERENT electricians, Finally Fun was deemed Ready to Go on Halloween Eve, October 31. We cast off our lines with great relief and much excitement at first light on Saturday, Nov. 1.

We were finally On Our Way, beginning to fulfill our cruising dream of heading south to Charleston SC thru December, then down the East Coast of FL & to the Keys and then over to the Bahamas for the winter. We plan to leave the Bahamas sometime in April, heading back up the E. Coast, up the Hudson River at NY, in and out of Canada and into the Great Lakes and back into the South at the end of 2009. That's for starters. Ying has plans thru 2010, but Yang hasn't agreed just yet......grin

However, the gremlins and other demons that inhabit our engine room failed to depart on Halloween after the Good to Go, preferring to continue to haunt us. Five hours underway, down the Chesapeake Bay, with beautiful sunny skies and grins still from ear to ear since casting off, the port engine burped twice, shaking the boat. The grins disappeared and quickly turned to dismay as the engine kept burping and quitting. No amount of trouble shooting worked. We limped our way into the nearest cove for safe anchorage.


After a beautiful night under starry skies and warmish weather at anchor in Sandy Point in the Great Wicomico River, the burping engine refused to start at all and the coffee pot refused to turn on...
So worth the views!
 We decided that all the electrical problems and surging on/off must have fried the coffeepot as it was the only thing that generally stayed plugged in. YING is not to be messed with without her coffee, not an auspicious start to an already bad day...YANG is also highly annoyed....a rare sight.

We started our one engine float toward Deltaville, 18 nautical miles south. FIVE hours later, at 4 knots per hour, we limped into Deltaville. YANG was a wee bit green, as we had rolled our way down with beam seas pretty constant. He couldn't read the charts while underway, as rocking and rolling and reading at the same time is a stomach churning exercise for him.......So much for the belief that our semi-displacement hull might not need stabilizers, but now that we've already blown the budget, stabilizers are out of the question. Sea sick pills are a far less expensive alternative and will have to do if needed.
                                Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, November 2,3,4
We located the local fuel dock at the Deltaville Marina, and with the one engine, Andy was nervous about the docking and his ability to handle the boat. A sailor popped up out of his boat to assist us, but when Andy hollered he was having engine trouble and anticipated perhaps a problem, the poor man probably wished he were standing elsewhere -- without this huge boat coming at him!! 

Arriving early Monday, the mechanic quickly diagnosed the problem - an easy fix with a new relay switch IF one had the part. On Tuesday, no PART arrived and we are now hoping for a Wednesday delivery. This is a remote town on the water, away from UPS, FEDX etc. So many delays -- the YING personality CANNOT stand this - drives me crazy, even though I know the trip is all about the journey and not just getting to the destination. We've now caught a storm system, so even IF the part HAD arrived, YING would not have been able to talk YANG into departing for high seas, high winds and rain and fog. We may not get out of here til Thursday, now seriously WAY off schedule.
On the bright side, there are several boaters at this dock, all stuck like us. (Perhaps there is a conspiracy between the marina and the boatyard so the marina gets slip fees while the mechanics take their time....? Not really) We instituted Happy Hour aboard our boat - which the other boaters - all sailors – much appreciate due to the spaciousness within our salon (translate that to 'spaciousness' as compared to a sailboat!) We’ve spent a delightful two evenings with Jan & Marlene from Canada and Jim & Christine from England, trading boat war stories, etc.  

Amazingly, the Brits retired at 52, sold it all off, bought an old sailboat which they refurbished and promptly took off across the Atlantic to the US. They are entering their nearly second year cruising in the US and plan to just go/go! here and then heading off around the world. Jim, the Brit, did say upon questioning, "Well yes, the trip over the Atlantic was a wee bit scary!" He went on to say that upon arrival in the U.S. that he expected his wife, Christine, to say "Sell the Boat!" All Christine said was "Get me a bigger boat!" Their sailboat is up for sale so they can get a wee bigger boat....I admire their willingness to just go for it and to Just Do It.

Tonight it is Pizza aboard FINALLY FUN for all of us stuck in the rain at the docks and of course BYOB. This is a great source of new friendships and certainly learning experiences. YANG likes it too because after a glass on wine, YING shuts up and goes to sleep --- and the Honey Do List stops...at least temporarily 

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

I am now totally convinced that there is a 'deal' between the boatyard and marina (see comments above). We are spending money at a marina day after day when we could have anchored out somewhere, thereby saving the budget...but hanging in expecting the repairman.   The part, promised for delivery on Tuesday, is still NOT here....promised now for tomorrow. I'll believe it when I see it. So much for UPS and FEDX commitments!  It does not make me feel any better that we could not depart anyway as there are 5-6 foot seas lurking outside of this little river we are hunkered down in and that the winds are kicking up to 45 knots per hour (translate that into about 49 MPH), just waiting to toss us about. After four days in Deltaville, I could use a little excitement. Better be careful what I wish for...........

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Hooray the $40 part arrived and in 5 minutes the engine was fixed. It's too late to pull out and the weather is still bad. We hosted Happy Hour again and we all celebrated as most of us will be able to pull out of Deltaville at first light tomorrow, heading south. Somehow, it seems obscene to be listening to Jimmy Buffet music wearing fleece jackets, sweaters and wool socks....
Where is my sunshine?


Friday, November 7, 2008

We pulled out at first light, heading to Norfolk and Portsmith, VA cruising through misty fog with the radar highlighting larger and larger purple triangles --- (BIG ships out there). In between the wisps, we can see the battleships, tankers and tugs. Adding to our apprehension --The chart here is confusing with specific shipping lanes just like an auto highway to travel in. Norfolk is one of the largest ports around and home to Norfolk Naval Station, one of the largest naval installations in the world. I got out my books and re-read the sections on these travel lanes - still confused, not a good thing as the ships are getting closer and larger.


I'd been saying for a few weeks now that I would know we were truly heading south when I saw dolphin (never saw any in the Chesapeake all summer). Suddenly, three dolphin appeared on our bow, playing in our bow wake for a few minutes. I take this as a sign that all the breakdowns are behind us and we are now truly on our way to a cruising life.




The dolphins peeled off our bow, disappearing from view, jolting us back to the nerve racking Norfolk harbor. As we got closer, the sun came out and all the purple triangles on our radar became huge visible ships of all types. We could see a HUGE Navy aircraft carrier coming out of the harbor a couple of miles off our bow, headed our way.  




     

Tax payor dollars at work - Chasing Finally Fun!!
 
Suddenly, a large US Coast Guard cutter came up fast behind us. Imagine, USGC coming alongside us (a slow moving 8 knots per hour trawler) hailing us to slow down.  Andy started laughing, saying (not too loudly) "what - do they think my wake will bother that zillion pound aircraft carrier??" Our choices" were to slow down and stay away by 500 yards or face a $250,000 fine or risk being shot at" sayth the Coastie on the hailer to us.   Some choice.       


Note the guns



We were tailed by a smaller USCG cutter with large guns aboard and a USCG and Navy helicopter passed over our heads several times as the aircraft carrier passed by. Pretty scary stuff and I kept taking pictures, hoping that photo taking was not a NO/NO. The guys and the guns were huge to me.
Stayed overhead the entire time














We spent the night at Oceanic Marina in Portsmouth in order to take on 500 gallons of diesel and to hit the ICW early early in the AM. The Marina is at ICW Mile Marker #1, right at the start. We have to make a bridge opening and two timed locks and if we miss one, we will be delayed by hours as they are in sync. 

After taking on fuel and securing the boat, we spent a few hours sightseeing in Norfolk via Ferry and spent time walking around Old Towne Portsmouth which reminds me of Charleston, SC with beautiful old (1700's) homes everywhere. I could spend a little more time in Portsmouth..











NOW I really feel safe.  Waking up in Norfolk to this sunrise.


Imagine waking up at dawn and seeing this sight out over our aft deck --- talk about feeling safe with all this firepower around us. 








Sunday, November 8, 2008

Out by 7 AM, through and past the battleships, bridges and locks into the Dismal Swamp. 

One sees everything in Norfolk

This one of two very different routes via the ICW (Intercoastal Waterway) to Albemarle Sound. Some swear to never travel the Swamp route again and some love it every time. This route opened in 1805 due to the efforts of George Washington and was opened to shorten the shipping time for commercial boat traffic. This portion of the ICW can be open or closed, depending upon water levels and it is the low and fluctuating water levels that cause boaters grief as their boats run aground.

Dismal Swamp
Today, the ICW through the Dismal Swamp is pretty with orange, yellow and red leaves on the trees lining the shoreline, falling into black tannic water. Along this 30 mile section, we see birds and a few slithering reptiles in what appears to be a primeval forest -- magnificent countryside.
We hug the middle as the edges are shoaled in and will cause us to go aground. It is harder than it looks to stay in the middle and every time one of us takes our eyes off the centerline to look around, we stray left or right, stopping one's respiration in response to the shrill screech from the other.  Dodging logs floating in the middle is a trick -- too far a swing around will set one aground. 


From time to time we hear things go BUMP under the hull....things we did not see. We stay well behind any boat that gets in front of us (go fast boats headed south in a hurry!) as they will churn up logs from the bottom and we want time to react to an object suddenly in our face. No wonder we go to sleep so early every night - we are exhausted from tension.
Andy at the Lock
 
 


We successfully negotiated the two locks:   the one at Deep Creek and the other at South Mills with no mishaps, figuring it out watching the boat in front and behind us. It was harder for Andy as he had to handle the boat, getting it parallel to the wall and running down to the aft deck to throw a line over a post while I hooked a line at the bow and midsection, trying to keep us parallel.
Dismal Swamp Lock Master's house







As the water starts moving up you'd better be ready....Frustrating t0 me, no where could I  find instructions and details on how to maneuver in the lock BEFORE we got there...and no instructions once you were there...
Lock Master's Garden
Stayed at a free dock in Elizabeth City where the actual Mayor greeted us. There are supposed to be 'rosebud' ladies that greet boaters with roses and a wine/cheese reception. We didn't see them. but perhaps we arrived too late. Enjoyed a walk into town for a light dinner and a 'look see' at this town. 






Sunday, November 9
Pulled lines at 6:25 AM after re-checking weather for the 10th time in anticipation of our crossing of Albemarle Sound. This Sound is the first of a few challenging bodies of water we have to traverse on our way South and if one doesn't pay close attention to the weather -- one will be very, very sorry. Even a light, slight wind will create huge confused waves because the water is shallow. If the wind and seas are unfavorable, one must wait to cross -- often a several day delay. After our bad luck of past days, we crossed a very benign Albemarle Sound, following the markers carefully to Alligator River and it's Swing Bridge. This River is like the Swamp, with the need to stay carefully center channel and watching for logs all the while. 

We docked in Oriental, NC, overnight at the city marina -- much hype about Oriental as the sailing capital of NC. All hype from our perspective with only a few restaurants, etc. We walked around for a few miles, finally heading back to the boat to wash it down and ate on board. Decided this is yet another city we can skip in the future. Next time on way north or back south I want to go the Outer Banks route and explore.....it's somewhat off the ICW, with more ocean travel, but by next year we will have more confidence and can do it. OR maybe we should just do some of this stuff while we are still naive..............you think? YANG is hard to sway.

Monday, November 10
An absolutely glorious day with sunshine and another dolphin encounter. Looking ahead, we spied several pods of dolphin just ahead of us. Suddenly they made a bee-line for us, jumping and turning back into our bow wake. Five hitched a ride on our bow for 2-3 miles, jumping up and turning side to side to look up at either Andy or I standing at the bow (we took turns looking over the bow while the other steered from the fly bridge). 


Amazing game they play and they knew they were playing it with us. We had the same experience a few years ago in Belize when about 10 raced across the ocean about a mile to get to our boat and played in the bow. Those dolphin actually squeaked at each other and would peel off two by two until none were left. They were communicating with each other it was so obvious! Wonderful moments and memories.


Ran aground twice in the same spot trying to get off as we passed an inlet and we were dead center when we ran around! After three boats behind us did the same thing at the same spot (and they had the advantage of seeing us and others run aground!) Andy, who had the wheel, didn't feel so bad. Glad it was sand and not rock.....

The waterway guide tells us to look out for fishermen's markers which indicate nets just below the surface of the water. GREAT - BUT they don't describe what such a marker looks like. Back to the books and I can't find a description. Glad again for us, but not for the fishermen, that we have those 'razors' on our props.... 

Due to so many delays, we skipped sightseeing in Beaufort and Moorhead City which I had really been looking forward to, but we will catch it on the way back North in the spring and spend more time in the area. It appears there is a lot to see here, unlike some of the other cities we stopped in due to the hype in the waterway guide books (Oriental, Elizabeth City).
Solid line of boats heading South down the ICW for the winter
We're now in the part of the ICW that snakes through the US Marine Corp base of Cape Lejune, NC. Lucky for us, there were no artillery or small weapons firings going on today that would have closed this section, creating yet another delay for us of several hours to several days.
STOP Do Not Proceed - Live Firing says the sign
Suddenly, however, we saw four blacked out cigarette type boats coming in single file toward us with Navy seals aboard all dressed in black garb, holding very large weapons. As they passed, we realized the cigarette boats were making absolutely NO sound as they passed.... clearly a high tech spook boat. We waved and received waves in return and no weapons pointed at us. 

We dropped anchor in Hammock Basin, still on the Base, to spend the night where the marines were practicing amphibious landings in the basin before quitting time - never a dull moment. This basin is crowded with boats anchored for the evening and we picked our way carefully in, ever mindful of how much we might swing on anchor. We had a smaller trawler come in right behind us - way too close to suit me. We tightened up on the anchor chain deployed and set the GPS for a tight radius around the anchor so if the anchor pulled during the night the GPS alarm would go off, hopefully giving us time to maneuver in time to avoid crashing into another boat. 

Only woke up twice to check around! The benefit, however, of checking around in the middle of the night and/or early AM is that the scenery is spectacular....more stars that you think are out there, the water often sparkles and shines with phosphorous lights and the sounds of the night of the birds, owls, splashing fish are never heard in the daytime. 

Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Another beautiful early departure at 6:30 AM with the sun coming up over the barrier beaches. The sight is so worth the early rising. We bumped aground twice again today - shoaling is everywhere and the states don't have the money to dredge the ICW as often as needed. My tax dollars clearly are not going toward my benefit......
We traveled the Cape Fear River with NO issues - another potential problem avoided. Luck would have it that we arrived in Southport, NC area pretty much at slack tide, thereby avoiding the nasty seas that can develop and the strong currents that are there except at slack tide. Luck is still with us as dolphin again 'hitched' a ride on our bow for about a mile. This is a thrill every time that we will never tire of. 
Shrimp boats abound along the ICW

Bigger means we MOVE OVER

We have been traveling generally 9-10 hours a day in order to get to Charleston. While this is easier than riding in a car for that same amount of time, one must realize that the Captain of the moment must STAND up for most of the steering, as least along the ICW because we can't take our eyes off the water in front of the boat and somehow sitting doesn't seem to keep us in control. The 'Captain' is constantly steering left/right/left/right. It IS a different story when we have the autopilot on and one can 'wander' about the river or Bay. In the ICW, one cannot 'wander' six inches or one risks running aground or worse.

We hit a section of the ICW today that has little in the way of coves to anchor overnight and few marinas. One needs to plan travel carefully to avoid these situations, but we have been in a go/go mode. I kept reading the guide on this day of travel (and not much before as I never knew exactly how much distance we would travel) and checking the chart realizing that we had the potential to get 'stuck' with no place to anchor except with the boat sticking into the ICW -- a target to get hit. I knew if I told worry wart YANG he would have a southern 'come-apart' at the wheel. Me, I was starting to sweat....Finally, I noticed an ad in the guide from a small marina (St. James Marina south of Southport and Cape Fear) in a residential community on the ICW. One phone call & I got a slip for the night and the marina was well situated for our travels -- meaning we did not have to stop too soon nor travel after dark to get to it. Great place - only $1.05 a foot (cheap!) AND they gave us a free $15 bottle of wine and a bag full of goodies so we figured we spent about $40 to stay there. Andy slept like a log as he always does tied up at a dock......I didn't tell him how close we came to (1) potential major problem and (2) the ensuing marital mega dispute that would have occurred had I not found a place to stop.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Wet, Cold Sharon

Having set the alarm for 5:30 AM in order to pull out at first crack of light, we found ourselves in the middle of a lighting storm and thunder. Finally pulling out a little after 7:00 AM in the rain which stayed with us til noon, we couldn't make much time.  We hit lots of NO WAKE zones.  We do push a huge wake with this semi-displacement boat and there are lots of inlets with water rushing in from the ocean that create the infamous shoaling one reads so much about. 

The shoreline has now shifted to from low marshes to scrub trees.  More and more houses are now seen along what is called "The Ditch" portion of the ICW.

Pontoon Bridge
 It was a thrill to cruise through the last remaining pontoon bridge (Sunset Beach Pontoon Bridge at Mile 337.9) on the Atlantic ICW.  (There are a few remaining still on the Gulf Coast ICW in Texas.)  If the tide is really low, the bridge is unable to open and since there is zero clearance, no boat can go thru. We made it with only a short wait as the bridge opens only on the hour.
Note all moves on the barge


One has to be careful before proceeding through - making certain that the pontoon's cable has dropped all the way down before going through. Talk about a sudden stop if you misjudge!! 
Bridge Tender's 'house'













The Rock Pile section
The scenery changed along here at Little River and Pine Island Cut (Mile 347) to a higher bank and ROCK. Hard shale and coquina rock are both on the bottom and sides. One section, The Rock Pile, is notorious for trouble - we kept a sharp eye out and went very slow as many rock piles are not charted and there is little room to maneuver if another boat comes along and logs and floating flotsam and trees are everywhere. Again, probably our lack of tax dollars at work. We heard lots of radio calls with boaters identifying themselves as headed south/north near Rock Pile so one could slow down to avoid them. I have always said God looks after children and fools and I long since passed the children stage................


Waccamaw River in the Fall
Safely through this rock mess, thanks to Captain Andy, we entered the Waccamaw River. Absolutely beautiful with its wooded banks, moss draped cypress trees, wildflowers, the occasionally turtle on a stump and the black, tea colored river water. We dropped anchor in Thoroughfare Creek at Mile 389 just slightly off the center of the ICW, with no one in sight. 


We moved the boat a couple of times to make certain that our swing off the anchor would not set us on the bank. We poured a glass of wine and sat on the bow watching herons fish for their dinner and listening to owls in the distance. Thoroughly enchanting place! We awoke, however, to pea soup fog and had to wait awhile til it started clearing. A sailboat came by who had anchored further UP the Creek from us and kindly radioed us back telling us that once they got into the ICW off the Creek that there was good visibility so we pulled anchor and headed out.

Once underway I noticed that we had a film of water covering our teak floor in the master stateroom which Andy attributed to the 'humidity' and the fog. Weird. Later, I mentioned that sometimes I had NO water and then suddenly it would just come on when I opened the valve and no, we had not run out of water. He could find nothing wrong down below in that engine room I believe to be still haunted by gremlins and goblins.  I began swabbing the master stateroom floor over and over... So very weird.

On a routine check of the engine room later in the day, he opened the door to the engine room to find water spewing all over the place. A water hose had cracked and under pressure, they certainly do spew. Then the pump/hose would settle down, leaving me with NO water, spit some out and then undergo pressure and spew in the engine room again.   THAT was why we had all that water on the master stateroom floor - just above the engine room where it was spewing...creating steam basically and water on the floor above. I had been wiping down and drying our teak floors all day. He shut down the system and repaired with some tape the hose until we can replace the hose entirely with a better hose. Boat is still not a year old Bah.. 

Friday. November 14.

Charleston Harbor
A couple of discussions ensued as to whether or not we would make it to Charleston by Friday before dark or would we need to arrive on Saturday. Frantic calculations (remembering the conversion formulas as we are traveling via Knots per hour, traveling the ICW which is Statute miles) somewhat helped but by noonish we figured out we would make Charleston by dark!! We have been underway exactly 14 days and by the time we get to Charleston, we will have traveled 150 miles in the Chesapeake Bay from Mears Marina to Norfolk and then 469 miles along the ICW for a total of 619 miles. 


Coming into Charleston Harbor was harrowing to say the least - with extremely shallow water coming out of the ICW into the Harbor. The Harbor, however, is wide and vast and one could assume in just looking, that one could move anywhere.  

Charleston Harbor nearing Ashley Marina
No way. Range markers depict the route, but these particular ones are BEHIND you. No way could Andy see the range markers due to the dingy on our flybridge. I had difficulty also -- bobbing up and down to try to see and to hope that I was not off center, thereby lining us up incorrectly. We cruised into Ashley Marina, our 'home' for the next two months, without incident.


Turning into the marina and into our assigned slip was tricky as the current is amazingly swift here and the wind was blowing rather hard -- scaring us both. We made it in without incident -- although the marina crew would not allow us to back our boat into the slip. Bow first means an almost impossible 'jump' off the boat and another impossible climb to get onboard. One day of that, coupled with the necessity of getting two wiggling grandchildren on/off the boat, was enough. We requested and moved our boat to a slip that allows ease of on/off.

We are thrilled to be in Charleston, a city we love and to be close to family for the holiday season.  
Oldest daughter, Leslie, with me, my Mom & granddaughter, Riley

We plan to explore the city on foot, catch the Christmas Tree Lighting and Boat Parade, drive to Jacksonville, FL and Clearwater, FL to spend Thanksgiving with more family and to fly to Oklahoma City for Christmas with Andy's children and grandchildren, including our newest, number 6 grandson, Gage. That makes 2 boys and one girl for each of us! A very busy two months and a two month period in which I doubt we'll take the boat away from the dock! 

Grandpa Andy meeting newest grandson, Gage

Big sister Rylie w Gage 

Andy's twins Chris & Adam (Chris is the Father of the two grand babies)