Thursday, November 26, 2015

Pearl is in Dry Dock

This is it - the final blog of this segment of the trip. The boat is staying at River Forest Marina in Florida inside an enormous building. Pearl won’t know what to do with herself, sitting around all day in dry-dock. She will have plenty of time to rest and recover before we return in April to continue up the east coast. This will be her first (and only) winter away from the freezing cold and snow of New England. 

The cat and all the new houseplants are coming home with us. The car is absolutely stuffed; there is hardly room for anything else. On Monday we worked all morning, packing and getting the boat cleaned up. That afternoon we drove to Ponte Vedra to spend Thanksgiving with Brian’s father and family. We learned that you should never, never drive through Orlando at 5:30 p.m. It was horrible. The next day we visited our boat friends from the Melinda B at their house. It felt very odd to see each other in a land-based situation, but it was very good to get to see them. Tomorrow we’ll continue north to see some of our kids, then we’ll go home. Normally, if we weren’t right in the middle of our extraordinary adventure, a week-long road trip would be like a vacation. Instead it feels more like a transition-phase between Boat Life and Real Life, helping to break us back in gradually.

This is the difference between Boat Life and Real Life. Real Life is when you watch the clock and the calendar to be sure you get everything done at the right time. Boat Life is when you don’t actually remember what day it is. Recently I overheard a conversation about a woman who was so glad that Wednesday was over. Someone told her that it was only Monday, but then a man chimed in to say that he thought it was only Tuesday! THAT is Boat Life - and we have reached it. 

I hope that everyone who reads this will have the opportunity to discover Boat Life. It can make all the difference in your life.

Check back next Spring. Wishing you Happy Holidays and a short Winter.


 
Reflecting on the past and the future.

Pearl takes a break in Florida. 

Friday, November 20, 2015

Books I've Read on the Great Loop

Books I’ve Read on The Great Loop:                                             

9.20.15

Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery

Dancing at the Rascal Fair by Ivan Doig

The Patriotic Murders by Agatha Christie

The Walk by Richard Paul Evans

The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens

Introducing Miss Phryne Fisher by Kerry Greenwood 
         Cocaine Blues
         Flying Too High
         Murder on the Ballarat Train

Teahouse of the August Moon by Vern Sneider

Try Anything Twice by Jan Strutters

Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild

Julie and Julia by Julie Powell

Mr. Owita’s Guide to Gardening by Carol Wall

The Maggie Hope Series by Susan Elia MacNeal
        
         Mr. Churchill’s Secretary
        
         Princess Elizabeth’s Spy
        
         His Majesty’s Hope
        
         The Prime Minister’s Secret Agent

The Martian by Andy Weir (plus we saw the movie and the IMAX film about space travel at the Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville. I am ready to go!)

Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Little Golden Book by Diane Muldrow

Reader’s Digest Condensed Books:

         The Old Neighborhood by Avery Corman

         A Piano for Mrs. Cimino by Robert Oliphant

         A Walk Across America by Peter Jenkins

         Norman Rockwell’s Greatest Painting by Hollis Hodges

         Murder in the Oval Office by Elliott Roosevelt

         Sadie Shapiro Matchmaker, by Robert Kimmel Smith

Lord Peter Wimsey stories by Dorothy xxx

Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

The Swiss Family Robinson by Johann Wyss


Added 10.20.15

Benediction by Kent Haruf

Hail to the Chef by Julie Hyzy

Mr. Monk and the Two Assistants by Lee Goldberg

Julie by Catherine Marshall

Evangeline by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow


Added 11.19.15

Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

Somewhere Safe with Someone Good by Jan Karon

The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown

The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien

Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll

Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee

Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop by Lee Goldberg

Grace Under Pressure by Julie Hazy



Reading 11.20.15

The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf

2 books of short stories and fables

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Photos - Charming Fort Myers


Hello Fort Myers
House at anchor. Really?
Rainbow over the marina
New Nordic Tug 44


Sunset from the marina
Pearl looking a bit cluttered


Downtown Fort Myers
Old buildings and palms
Royal Palms

Banyon tree and eagle carved into oak stump


Banyon tree

Banyon tree up close 

Swiss Family Robinson residence

Three bars?








Dolphins, Rainbows and Charming Fort Myers


We finally found a Florida city that we both like - Fort Myers. Even our trip that day from Palm Island Marina to Fort Myers was special. That’s the day that three sets of dolphins swam with us and rainbows appeared in the late afternoon sky.

As we traveled east on the Caloosahatchee River in the afternoon, we encountered three different sets of dolphins who traveled with us for 5 to 15 minutes. They seem to have their own boundaries that they won’t pass. We saw one dolphin actually turn around when she reached a certain point, but usually they just vanished after a while. They looked so joyful in their pursuit of swimming in our wake at 10 miles per hour and leaping out of the water to catch a breath from time to time.

As we got closer to Fort Myers, the sun came through the clouds and a huge, bright and colorful rainbow appeared in the sky. Another one appeared just before sundown.

We had been heading for Sanibel Island where there’s a nice anchorage and a national wildlife refugee on the north side of the island. The winds were too strong from the east at 20 mph, so it would have been a rocky night and Brian wanted something more protected. The Fort Myers Yacht Basin had only one slip available, and for one night only, but that suited us just fine. When we arrived, the Fort Myers Boat Show was all set up in the west half of the marina. All the boats that were usually in those slips had been moved to the east side, so it was really crowded. Brian wanted to see the new Nordic Tug 44, so we walked over and got a preview of everything. Lots of boats of all sizes. 

Even though we were eager to get going Wednesday morning, we realized that we had to get off the boat and walk to town to at least get a feel for the place. We were very glad we did. They have preserved the old downtown from the early 1900s. The streets are paved with brick and stone and lined with large Royal Palms, a very impressive sight. The buildings are no more than three stories high and retain their charming exteriors with lots of color and details. There were people walking their dogs, taking a morning walk, or just wandering around. We found a great place for a good English breakfast, the United Cafe. Some people sat outside to eat, but we enjoyed the air conditioning. The town made a very good impression on us. I especially liked the enormous old banyon trees with their roots exposed, the eagle carved from the tall stump of an old oak, and the rows of palms everywhere.

After Fort Myers, we continued heading east on the ICW, through through two more locks (#111 and #112 for us) and one swing-bridge. Once we were past a lock there would be no more dolphins, of course, and the water was as black as any we had ever seen - from the tannins. By late-afternoon we reached River Forest Marina where we are putting Pearl in dry-dock while we go back to Connecticut for the winter. I think that’s backwards - people go to Florida for the winter, not Connecticut!


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Dolphins With Us - ICW to Fort Myers


There is nothing more fun on the whole planet than to be a dolphin in the wake of a Nordic Tug, swimming along with your friends at 10 miles per hour. Between six and eight dolphins, including one with a damaged fin and a baby that stayed close to her mother, swam with us in the starboard wake of our boat. We got to watch them for fifteen minutes (while Brian also kept his eye on the channel in front of us). When we finally had to slow down to go through a narrow passage with several other boats, they left. We are in awe and appreciation for being chosen for that brief time. We felt as though we had been blessed by their presence and by their simple delight in just being alive in the water. We didn’t even take pictures this time; it was so special just to watch.


Dolphin on starboard swimming at 10 mph

Dolphins on our port side - a one minute video


Monday, November 16, 2015

Photos - Sarasota and Palm Island

Glamorous Marina

Sarasota condos and big boats

Corner lot

Ordinary Sarasota houses

Oops

Tight squeeze

Palm Island Marina

Palm Island

I live at #4 Red











Traveling on the ICW on Florida's Gulf Coast

One more week until we’re in the car heading to Grandad’s for Thanksgiving, then north to St. Mary’s to see the children, then home. Bittersweet, mixed feelings about going back. We have loved this trip. It’s nice, first of all, to actually live together instead of Brian traveling all the time and me being home. That’s been different for us. Somehow the “to do” list is significantly shorter and it gets done in less time. We cook meals. 

The good thing is that next summer we get to do this again for three more months! 

The ICW (the Intracoastal Waterway) is another new kind of waterway for us. Like the other waterways, it’s a combination of natural rivers and lakes linked where necessary by man-made canals. I love the way the scenery changes every day. We have passed enormous posh houses, lots of tall condos, a few small houses, several natural areas for birds and wildlife, a park with a bike path, man-made canals that are very boring, rivers and bays, trailer parks, big cities and small marinas. It’s been very shallow in some spots, but generally it’s at least 10 - 20 feet deep. We’ll be on the ICW on Florida’s Gulf coast until we reach Fort Myers and we’ll continue on it through Lake Okeechobee next year to reach the east coast. It goes all the way to New Jersey.

Here they have a different way of tying up the boats at the docks. The docks are very low and fixed, with very tall poles; you have to lasso the pole with a long line to keep the bow in place. I’m getting better at it now, but it’s still confusing. Our fenders are as low as they can be without dragging in the water. I don’t have any idea why docks are so different in different parts of the country. 

Florida is very HOT. I thought November was supposed to be mild and pleasant, but it has been in the 90s and very sunny for several days, actually making me look forward to our cold Connecticut days. Everything on the exterior of the boat is covered in big chunks of sea salt and everything inside is clammy. (Except now we’re running the air conditioner all the time.) Also, there are bugs. They are invisible and they bite your legs and itch, itch, itch. All in all, it is better to just stay inside.

I had just about given up on recycling when we finally started finding recycling bins again here in Florida. We haven’t recycled anything since leaving New England. It just doesn’t seem to be what people in the middle of the country do - everything goes into the trash! I hope this will change.

This may sound silly, but I love the way skin dries so quickly after it gets wet. Not like sox that are dry one minute and soaking wet the next, and not like towels that take hours and hours to dry. Skin dries immediately - a very handy situation when you live on a boat.

I should mention some of the Florida cities we have visited:

Miramar Beach - I felt like we had been dropped from the sky into an affluent shopping mall. We never saw any homes or neighborhoods, just the mall. 
Carrabelle - for Loopers, this is one of the most important places on the itinerary and for some reason we expected it to be a cute and charming little town, but it wasn't. 
Clearwater - a nice place. It had a great beach, a wonderful craft-market, and very good restaurants.
St. Petersburg - all we saw was a clunky marina.
Sarasota - it seemed very clean and sterile, or maybe it was just too hot and sunny that day.
Palm Island - this seemed like a very nice place, but again, all we did was spend the night in the marina.










Crossing the Gulf of Mexico in the dark

Monday, November 16, 2015 in Sarasota, Florida

I have not written in a long time, at least not since “the crossing” of the Gulf of Mexico. First of all, the two parts of Florida that we’ve visited are completely different. Down here on the western side of the peninsula, it’s all about condos and restaurants, retirees and sunshine. Earlier, on the coast of the panhandle, it was all about fishing and military bases and making a living. From what we can tell, the two areas are not alike at all.

The unfortunate part, for us, is that our Florida experience is all about getting where we’re going and putting the boat away for the winter. The leisurely life of exploring new places and enjoying the water ended about the time we arrived in Mobile. At that point, knowing that there would be only one short “window” for crossing the gulf within the next couple of weeks, we were completely focused on getting to Carrabelle in time.

The “windows" are mainly for small boats like ours. A freighter or a naval ship would not be bothered by the winds or waves that would beat us up. And actually, our Nordic Tug wouldn’t be bothered by them much either, but the people on board certainly would be! In the days leading up to our crossing, there had been rainstorms and a hurricane from Mexico that kept us in port a couple of days, in Demopolis and in Miramar Beach, so we had to account for those delays. Along with the rain came the wind, and the wind is what really stirs up a big body of water like the Gulf of Mexico. 

We watched the weather information closely, monitoring Apps for wind, tides, waves, phases of the moon, and reading the locals’ advice. Eventually we knew that the window would be during the day of Wednesday, November 11, throughout the night and into the morning of November 12. There wouldn’t be another window for more than a week after that.

We had decided to cross from Carrabelle to Clearwater, although you can choose to arrive at many cities on the coast. Look at the map of Florida to find Carrabelle (near Apalachicola) on the panhandle, then make a straight line to Clearwater on the Gulf coast of the peninsula. That is the crossing. If you don’t want to go straight across, you can hug the edge of the coast all the way around, but it’s very shallow (less than 10 feet) and filled with grass that can wrap around your propeller. So boats go straight across instead. A fast boat can make it in about 8 hours; a boat like ours takes about 18.

Once you know the date of the window, the next thing to consider is the time of sunrise on the peninsula. For us, it would be 6:50 a.m. When arriving from the west, you stare right into the rising sun. It’s like millions and millions of flashbulbs popping on the surface of the water, burning your eyes. In those waters, at depths of 50’ or less, fishermen have placed crab pot markers, and you have to watch for them closely to keep from snarling your prop. This is why you don’t come in at night or when the sun is in your eyes. 

We decided that we had to arrive after 9:00 a.m. A good speed for our boat (and the five others who eventually traveled with us) is about 8 knots, or 9.2 miles per hour. So we had to allow about 18 hours to cross. We also needed to be outside the islands around Carrabelle before dark, and sunset was at 5:44 p.m. So we decided to depart at 4:00 p.m. on November 11, putting us in around 10:00 Thursday morning. The two of us would take turns monitoring the helm, but the autopilot was set on a straight line and there was basically nothing to do until we arrived.

Now the good part. The water was calm and smooth. The sunset was beautiful. The night was spectacular. It was DARK. There was a new moon that night, but it wasn’t even due to rise until after sunrise the next day. It was so dark out on the open water that we could see ALL the stars. Over the course of twelve hours of darkness, we learned more about the night sky and the constellations than we had ever known. We watched stars rise in the east and set in the west. We followed the course of the constellations as they rotated in the sky. For a while I couldn’t find the Big Dipper, but several hours later I saw it on the horizon. The North Star stayed in one spot, just like they say it does, and Cassiopeia was visible all night. We saw the International Space Station with its blinking lights, and in the early morning hours, the planets Venus, Jupiter and Mars rose big and bright in the east.

At one point in the night, while I was “driving” and Brian was sleeping, a dolphin leaped out of the water beside my open door. At first it scared me to death, but when I realized what it was, I was excited. He jumped a few more times before letting us go. Oh my!

We ate pimento cheese sandwiches all night in honor of my father who always took them on his adventures. When made with roasted red peppers, extra sharp cheddar, good mayonnaise and fresh bread, they are OUTSTANDING!

We arrived safely in Clearwater around 10:30 the next morning. By 11:00, Brian had docked the boat perfectly in a strong current, even though he was dead tired. We ate lunch at Kara Lynn’s Kitchen in Clearwater, an excellent gluten-free and organic restaurant. Then we went back to our boats to sleep for several hours. Later that night, we slept again and Brian woke up around 11:00 the following morning, finally rested.

Yesterday in St. Petersburg we parted company with the Melinda B, our buddy-boat and companions since September and Chicago. They are heading home today, but we have one more week. We’ve seen Clearwater and Sarasota, and are continuing south via Englewood and Sanibel. Once we reach the Fort Myers area, we’re pulling the boat out of the water to store for the winter. Then there’s Thanksgiving and visiting family in several spots before we get home. 

We have traveled with dolphins in our wake and with my new favorite bird, the pelican, overhead. Other interesting creatures in this area are the pistol shrimp beneath the boat. They are little shrimp that snap, snap, snap all night long, sending out a rapid spray of hot water to stun their food. The noise is like snapping your fingers with your whole community, all the time. When you know what it is, it can be a very comforting sound.


Another sunny, warm November day in Florida, oh my!

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Photos - Clearwater, Florida

Brian (and Ellen) on the Clearwater pier

Melinda and Bob on the pier

There is a lot of dolphin art in Clearwater, but this was my favorite

Ellen and Brian in Clearwater Beach, Florida
This is not the kind of November we are used to!

Tucked in under the bridge in Clearwater

Our fame as matching Nordic Tugs, traveling together,
preceded us on the Loop!

Photos - The Gulf of Mexico at its best

Departing from Carrabelle around 4 pm November 11

Pearl on her way
Pearl on the horizon at sunset on the Gulf



A perfect night to cross the Gulf

Smooth as silk

Sunset on the Gulf of Mexico

Our radar showing Pearl in the center,
the five other boats on our port side
 and an Air Force marker 

Morning shows three companions on the horizon

The calm waters held up all the way across

Two boats on horizon

Entering Clearwater after 18 hours on the Gulf
Coming in to Clearwater

Success! Melinda B and Pearl
safely tied up at the Clearwater Municipal Marina