Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The Carolinas and South to Florida



The Carolinas and South to Florida

We finally left Coinjock on October 24th and sailed across the Albermarle Sound making 7+ knots. We anchored at Pt. Lookout with Utopia and then motored the next day to Campbell Creek. The fog in the Alligator River was very thick in spots and we had to go really slowly to be sure we didn’t run into other vessels or any stumps.  We had anchored in Campbell Creek on our way north, but Frank and Diane know the people who live in the big house at the back of the creek and we used their dock this time. (The owners were out of town.)
Fog on the Alligator River

We were supposed to get South before it got this cold!!
On October 26th, we sailed for about 3 hours and then had to motor-sail and then motor to Moorehead City, NC. We took a slip at Moorehead City Yacht Basin and met up with Sue and Jim Kuemmel (M/V Fruition), also from New Orleans. We had a reunion of the “Atlantic Fleet of the New Orleans Power Squadron” and celebrated with shrimp etouffee on our boat.
getting ready to dock in Moorehead City

New Orleans Power Squadron "Atlantic Fleet" reunion on Lagniappe with Jim and Sue Kuemmel
 We sailed and motor-sailed down the ICW to Mile Hammock Bay at Camp LeJeune, NC the next day and we were the first boat in the anchorage that day. It was great to have our pick of a place to anchor. We had gotten an early start because we heard they might be closing a section of the ICW for live firing range practice from Camp LeJeune and wanted to make sure we could get through before dark. They didn’t have the range closed that day so we made it through early.  We bumped the bottom coming out of Mile Hammock Bay the next morning (Liz Ann at the helm) but didn’t go aground, thankfully.
Shrimping Fleet going out at the New River inlet just south of Mile Hammock Bay

Pink house that is a landmark on the ICW
On the 28th, (Wednesday)  we made it to Carolina Beach, NC and took a mooring for the night. It is hairy getting in there too. The fathometer kept dropping and Liz Ann throttled back so we were going really slowly but we didn’t run aground and found if we stayed near the red markers, we were okay.
Sunset in the mooring field at Carolina Beach

The next day we had planned to anchor at Calabash River, but we were there by 1:30 (1330 for you nautical types) so we kept going. We found a free dock that just opened this summer on our Active Captain app and made it to that dock. It is in the North Myrtle Beach area in South Carolina. The dock is a nice floating dock on the side of the ICW with a little landscaped park. We decided to stay there 2 nights because there was a cold front with high winds and temps in the 30’s coming on Friday so we we left Friday morning and went to a marina in Georgetown where we could plug in and have heat. Georgetown has some nice historic homes and great fresh shrimp. Got some from the seafood store right next to the marina. It is owned by the guy with the shrimp boat so the seafood is very fresh. We enjoyed some boiled shrimp (had our Zatarain’s crab boil with us) and cocktail sauce. We waited out the 25 to 30 knot winds and temps in the 30's, getting laundry done and changing the oil and oil filters and fuel filters. Getting that maintenance done while we can't sail anyway!
October 31 along the ICW on the way to Georgetown. The fall foliage is beginning to turn.

After the front passed, we (and about 5 other boats) went offshore to sail to Charleston. As we left the inlet at Winyah Bay outside of Georgetown, we hit a “wind against current” situation and had a rocky ride out for about 30 minutes. That will teach us to check the current before going out again. We slammed into the waves but then got out and turned southwest for Charleston. We left Georgetown at 0550 and made it to Charleston at 1548, just under 10 hours.
Greg on the radio with other boats sailing with us offshore to Charleston

Once again, when we got to Charleston, our V-berth was wet from the water getting in although we had plugged up the hawse pipes and every other source of water intrusion we could think of. So after we dried out, we got to enjoy Charleston.  We stayed in Charleston for 4 days, playing tourist and enjoying the food. We toured Fort Sumter and took a tour of the city. We walked around in the area South of Broad- the wealthy area with beautiful old homes, reminiscent of Uptown New Orleans. We did happy hour at Pearlz with Frank and Diane (S/V Utopia) and new friends, Steve and Sharon (S/V A Bientot) one night and then had lunch with Dave and Sherry (S/V Mythago) at a great BBQ place (Nick's) when they arrived a few days later.
One of the beautiful gardens and homes in the South of Broad area

One of the gravestones in an old cemetery. Apparently this guy hasn't even died yet but knew what he wanted on his tombstone

One of the courtyards South of Broad

We met the guy who lives here and he gave us good tips on what areas to see


At Fort Sumter

Looking through the old wall of the fort
 We left Charleston on Friday and sailed offshore to Fernandina Beach, Fl. The wind died after about the first 4 hours so we motored the other 26 hours. We stood our watches and it was an uneventful night. Thankfully, it was clear and we had a beautiful full moon because our radar is still not working most of the time. It is one of those mysterious working/not working kinds of things. We anchored in Bells River and spent a couple of peaceful days at anchor. We motored on to the free dock at Sisters Creek just north of Jacksonville to wait a couple of days until the yard at Sadler Point could take us to do a bottom job and some other stuff. Browne Altman, the unofficial self-appointed greeter and port captain at the free dock came to see us and even took Greg to West Marine to get a couple of things. It has amazed us since we left home how kind and willing to help total strangers often are.

We are now in the yard at Sadler Point Marina having the bottom re-painted, some hoses replaced, the rudder post re-packed and the cutlass bearing adjusted and a few other things before we go to the islands. We re-bedded the intakes for the fuel and head pump-out because they were getting a bit of leakage around them. I guess when the boat is 16 years old, it needs a little rejuvenating. We also sprayed some foam around the anchor locker where we THINK the water may be coming in to the V-berth. Hopefully, this time we have solved that problem.
We called Greg's Navy buddy, Jeff, to have dinner with him. He has a condo in Jacksonville that he uses a few days a week for work in the area and generously gave us a key and told us to use the condo. Since the boat is out of the water and it has gotten quite cold here, we gladly accepted his offer. We hope to leave the yard this weekend or early next week and head down to Stuart, Fl. We will probably stop in Vero Beach for Thanksgiving and then leave the boat in Stuart in December to head home for the holidays. There is a bridge on the St. Johns River in Jacksonville which is being worked on and will not be able to open until Friday so we are stuck here until then even if we get the work finished before that.
Re-bedding deck penetrations. Who needs Yoga? Just try to work on a boat!

Lagniappe up on the hard

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

South from Maine

After we left Kittery, we made it back to Rockport, Mass where we anchored this time in the harbor around the back of the performance center. There is a town beach there and many families were out swimming and playing on the beach. A bit chilly for us.
Pretty stone gazebo which belongs to the house behind it

View of the Performance Center from the anchorage

Nice sunset in the anchorage that night

We sailed to Provincetown on northern Cape Cod and then back through the Cape Cod Canal to New Bedford. Greg had been reading a book about the tragedy of the whaleship Essex and we wanted to see the whaling museum there. The museum was great and we saw the Seamen's Bethel (church)  where Herman Melville attended services and modelled the Whalemen's Chapel in Moby Dick after this one. In the book, Melville described the pulpit in the church as being designed like the prow of a ship which it wasn't in the original church. As years went by and tourists visited and were disappointed not to see that, eventually the church had one built to look like the one in the book. Melville
actually shipped out on a whaler from New Bedford for about 18 months before he wrote the book. I have been reading a novel called "Ahab's Wife" which is really interesting and even more so after having seen the whaleships and whaleboats and the area where the events actually and fictionally took place. A lot of people from Portugal, Cape Verde and the Azores came to the U.S. as crew on the whaling ships and there is a large Portuguese population in New Bedford. We had dinner at a Portuguese restaurant here (Antonio's) and it was good.
The Seamen's Bethel



The pulpit in the shape of a prow (or bow of a ship)
Model of the tryworks where they boiled the blubber from the whales on a whaleship in the Whaling Musuem
After we left New Bedford we had a great sail down Buzzard's Bay to Woods Hole on Cape Cod. It is a very small town but the people were very friendly. It is a big marine and oceanographic research area with the Marine Biology Lab and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute(WHOI) there. We toured some of WHOI and saw the Deep Sea Challenger that James Cameron had built and went (alone) to the bottom on the Marianna Trench. They have some fantastic equipment there and are doing incredible research at WHOI and at the Marine Biology Lab.
The space for the person to sit inside the Deep Sea Challenger

More WHOI exploratory vehicles

We left Woods Hole on August 26 and sailed up to Narragansett Bay. We went up about 10 miles north of Newport and anchored in Potter Cove at Prudence Island. We decided to stay here over Labor Day weekend because we didn't want to worry about not being able to find a place with room to anchor or an available mooring. We did boat projects: cleaning and waxing the hull, cleaning out the refrigerator and generally cleaning the inside of the boat and fixing little things here and there. We also hiked on the island one day but it just couldn't compare to the views we had seen in Maine.We met Dan and Betsy who sail a Cabo Rico 38 named Wind Weaver and had happy hour on their boat one night. We passed a quiet 6 days or so and then headed out to Mystic Seaport, CT.





We sailed on  to Morris Cove near New Haven, CT where we anchored for the night.From New Haven, we sailed to Port Washington on Long Island. This was a very cruiser-friendly harbor with some free mooring balls, a dinghy dock right by a grocery store and a nice library with free internet. We took the LIRR (Long Island Railroad) into NYC for a day and visited Central Park. We saw the Belvedere castle and Shakespeare's garden as well as "Strawberry Fields" which is in Central Park across from the Dakota where John Lennon was killed. We've been reading a series of suspense/mystery novels in which a lot of the action takes place in NYC near Central Park and the Museum of Natural History and the main character lives in the Dakota. It was fun to see the places where the fictional stories took place.
Looking out from Belvedere Castle in Central Park


Sailing by the Good old Statue of Liberty
We had planned to sail straight through from Port Washington down the coast of New Jersey to Cape May but the weather didn't cooperate so we stopped at Sandy Hook and anchored for a few days. We even had to move down from there to Atlantic Highlands to anchor inside of the breakwater after a couple of days because a west wind was building and putting us on a lee shore. But we took the dinghy ashore and explored the Sandy Hook area and the park and beach on the Atlantic side. Unbeknownst to us, the beach was CLOTHING OPTIONAL! That was quite a surprise when we got there.While in Atlantic Highlands, we met Sherry and Dave from Ontario on a Pacific Seacraft 37(S/V Mythago) like ours. They had a sail that had come apart at the seams so we got out the Sailrite sewing machine and stitched it back up. We also made shrimp etouffee and had Sherry and Dave and Christian and Mary from IWanda over for dinner. Mary made a wonderful salad and Christian made some great foccaccia bread. Dave and Sherry brought wine and we all had a great meal!

Beautiful sunset our first day in Sandy Hook



Beautiful full moon the same night

Flowers on our hike at Sandy Hook



Sandy hook Lighthouse

Sherry and LizAnn working on their sail
On September 12, we left Atlantic Highlands and headed for Cape May. We had a great overnight sail and arrived tired but safely in Cape May 23 hours later. The radar quit working about half way down the Jersey coast. This started a LONG troubleshooting session with B&G which is still going on now in late October. We stayed on the anchor in Cape May that Saturday night and left to go up the Delaware Bay the next morning. There was a small craft advisory in effect until 0830 that morning but the wind was in the right direction and the current was going to turn soon in our favor so we set out. When we got out of the Cape May canal, we hit waves about 6 feet high. We pounded through for about 2 hours with waves breaking on the dodger then it gradually got better. By the time we were halfway up the bay, the current was pushing us and we were making 7 knots. We made it all the way through the C&D canal and into the Sassafrass River where we anchored. Sadly, when we went to crawl into our bunk after an exhausting 15 hour sail, the bunk was soaked. The pounding waves had come in through the hawse pipe and into the chain locker and leaked through the doors from the locker into the V-berth. We slept in the main salon that night and looked like the Beverly Hillbillies the next day with the sheets, comforter, and cushions spread out all over the deck.

We sailed to Bay Bridge Marina on the 16th and took a slip there so we could go to the Groco factory to get the head fixed. We had re-built it while we were in Marathon in February but it was still giving us problems. Greg took the pump assembly to the factory and they re-built it and let him watch so he could learn all the little techniques and they didn't even charge us! What great service! At Bay Bridge Marina, we also ran into Scott and Sally who we had met in Port Annapolis on our way north and who also have a Pacific Seacraft 37. They have their car there and so graciously took us to the bank, to mail the radar back to B&G, and to top off our propane tanks. Hope to see them farther South this winter.
Greg with Sally and Scott


 We left Bay Bridge on the 18th and went to St. Michael's, MD on the Eastern shore of the Chesapeake. We anchored out and took the dinghy in several times to town. One day the tides were up so high we had to wade through about a foot of water over the dock to get back to the dinghy. It was a great little town with a really good Maritime Museum. We re-provisioned a bit and went to the farmer's market, a brewery and a great Mexican restaurant. We missed the winery and the rum distillery.

Cute outhouse at a shop in St. Michael's


We left St. Michael's and went up the Wye River to Dividing Creek. This was a beautiful anchorage with a park and wildlife refuge. We hiked some trails and met a couple from Australia who left home 8 years ago and are still sailing. They plan to get back to Australia in about 3 years. Don't think we'll make it that long!
Blue heron on shore of Dividing Creek

250 year old Holly tree in the park at Dividing Creek
We left the Wye River and crossed the Chesapeake on Sept. 24th and anchored in the Rhode River off of Camp Letts, a YMCA camp that was the site of our SSCA gam. (Seven Seas Cruising Association).
The winds picked up to 20+ knots that afternoon and two boats near us dragged anchor. They moved to another area but for once, we held fast and stayed put. The gam started on the 26th and we had 3 days of good seminars and camraderie. We stayed in the Rhode river a couple of days after the gam and visited the Smithsonian Research Center and hiked around their trails and park area. There were pretty marsh areas and good views of the anchorage.B&G got back to us and said the radar unit checked out okay and they are shipping it back to us in Annapolis. Now we have to figure out if it's a wire that is bad or some other problem.
Itsy Bitsy Spider, on our hike at the Smithsonian Center

More from our hike

We left the Rhode River and went to the South River, closer to Annapolis and anchored in Harness Creek. This was a great anchorage with a beautiful park, Quiet Waters Park on the shore. They rent kayaks and bikes here and a walk through the park takes you to West Marine and a grocery store. What more could a sailor want? Oh yeah, a wine and liquor store too. We did a few projects like re-wiring the SSB to get rid of some of the static and noise interference we were getting. We also tried to trouble shoot the radar wiring to see if we could find the problem but everything we tried seemed to be working okay.We met Ross on S/V Black Hawk V who is from Kincardia, Ontario and he loaned us a bike one day so Liz Ann could ride to West Marine to get more cables for Greg to re-wire the SSB radio. Then LizAnn helped Ross identify wires on his boat as he was re-wiring some stuff and is color blind. Ross got some crabs from local fishermen and we provided the Zatarain's crab boil and had a great crab feast one night. 
Pretty schooner that came into our anchorage at Harness Creek. With Ross's boat on right.
We went to Annapolis on October 3rd and got a mooring ball in Spa Creek to hang out through the boat show. We spotted our friends' boat right next to us and re-connected with Frank and Diane from S/V Utopia. Ross moved over to Spa Creek too and we all went to happy hour together at the Boat Yard Bar and Grill one night. We got our radar back and tried again to figure out the problem but even having a tech guy provide a new jack for the cable didn't do the trick. He and Greg "rung out" the cable and there seemed to be good continuity.  Sue and John, Greg's sister and brother-in-law drove sown from New Brunswick, Canada for the boat show and stayed with us a couple of nights. We all accomplished a lot at the boat show, buying charts for the Caribbean and getting some things fixed by talking with the dealers there. We got B&G to get a radar cable for us and that seemed to solve the problem. We also got Weems and Plath to replace our trawler lantern because it was leaking and Vetus is supposed to mail us new dorades because ours are peeling.

We left Annapolis on Monday, October 13th and sailed to Solomons Island where we anchored in Leason cove. Once again, the radar would not work. We let B&G know and they are still trying to figure it out. We had planned to spend Tuesday there visiting Solomons but the weather was going to get bad on Wednesday and we needed to get farther south. So we went down to the Great Wicomoco River and anchored at Sandy Point on Tuesday and stayed there Wednesday while the rain and winds went through.

We motor-sailed down to Hampton, VA on Thursday, October 16 for the Snowbird Rendezvous. Frank and Diane had attended last year and told us it was a lot of fun. Dave and Sherry (S/V Mythago) who we met in Atlantic Highlands attended the rendezvous also. They had some very good seminars and LOTS of good food. Our friends Paul and Sherry with whom we had sailed in the Bahamas and all the way back to Norfolk joined us on Sunday night and we all went out for a great dinner at the Taproom in Hampton.

We left Hampton on 10/20 and motored to Great Bridge. We went through the locks and tied up to the free docks just before the Great Bridge. We left the next morning and made it to Coinjock, NC where we tied up at the Coinjock Marina and had one of their famous Prime Rib dinners. We had dinner with Bruce and Claudette who we had met at the Hampton Rendezvous. The winds on Albermarle Sound were up to 30 knots and seas were predicted to be 4 to 5 feet today so we decided to wait to cross the sound and instead we moved across the canal to Midway marina and went to the library(to use their wi-fi) and had great crab cake dinner with Frank and Diane at Crabbies Restaurant at the marina.

Rainbow over Utopia as we left Great Bridge

Dinner with Claudette and Bruce at Coinjock Marina Restaurant