Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Cruising the Carolinas

After a few days of polishing winches and playing WORDLE, while waiting for a weather window, on April 23rd we finally had an opening to begin the 200+ mile sail to Charleston, SC. We left at 9am and had some great sailing until the wind dropped out around 3am the next morning. We caught site of the infamous Charleston bridge, that looks like two giant sailboats from far away, and motor-sailed into the Harbor around 3:30 pm that day. 

We thought about anchoring off the Coast Guard Station but there were half a dozen derelict boats there and we weren't sure how well they were tended to so we opted for the anchorage across from Charleston City Marina, despite the reports of strong currents and sunken objects. We felt the anchor drag over something hard and then grab and weren't entirely sure of what was holding us, but we were holding. We made drinks and were entertained that evening by all the private yachts and party boats that traffic the Ashley River.


The next day, we launched the dinghy and took an Uber into town to scope it out. We had our first she-crab soup and a shrimp po-boy at Virginia's on King Street. Definitely, the best crab soup ever but still looking for the best po-boy! We went all out tourist and hired a horse drawn carriage from Old South Carriage Tours to take us through the historic parts of town. We learned about the old homes with side porches that had doors used to indicate whether the family was open (or closed) to visitors, the wrought iron collected during the Revolutionary war to make canon balls and the churches painted black to obscure them from bombs at night.



We discovered that our friends Cary & Martha Thomson's place was close to our anchorage as well as a historic plantation near by, so one day we took the dinghy to their dock and walked to the McLeod Plantation, where we saw the main house and the living & working quarters for the enslaved workers. It was a simple & beautiful home with fantastically large Live Oaks that had moss weeping over them providing a stark reminder of how the slaves lived and tried to raise their families in one room abodes.



Later that day, we had the best South Carolina barbeque ever at Rodney Scott's. We ordered two meats w/ two sides each (chicken & pork w/collard greens & beans for me, ribs & beef w/ macaroni & slaw for Andrew). We ate what we could for lunch, switched plates and took the rest home for dinner. 

On 4/28 we crossed our fingers while pulling up the anchor, which came up uneventfully, and moved to a slip at Charleston City Marina so that we could do laundry, provision and take advantage of their town shuttle. One morning, we had a good southern breakfast at the Marina Variety Store just off the docks and another evening, we took the shuttle to Laurel Restaurant in town for a deliciously decadent meal of octopus w/ smoked paprika & fried sweet potatoes and grilled grouper w/saffron rice & butter beans. It was the best meal we've had in months and the best octopus ever!

That afternoon, Andrew asked me if I would like to get off the boat for a night. Being the financial planner in the family, I saw no need to pay for a slip and a hotel room but when Andrew insisted on paying, I succumbed to one night at The Ansonborough Inn in Charleston. I have to say I am not sorry to have spent one luxurious night in a huge bed with puffy white comforters and starchy clean sheets. It was a pleasant treat and worth every penny (say I who didn't pay)!!


That weekend was Charleston Race Week so we went out in our dinghy to watch. There were over 200 boats participating with 5 race courses in the harbor and 2 or 3 out in the ocean. We got some great pictures and were heading back to shore when Andrew spotted our friend Tom, on Alladin, arriving with his crew, Howie. That evening, we deflated the dinghy and stowed her on board in preparation for departure to Beaufort, NC the next day and had a nice meal out with Tom & Howie. 


At 0800 on May 1st, we were off the dock on another 200+ mile trip north. We arrived in Beaufort at 1430 on May 2, motoring most of the way. The entrance to Beaufort Inlet is wide open but according to the cruising guides, "difficult only when high northerly or southerly winds blow against an unfavorable tide." Unfortunately, we had the unfavorable tide but fortunately, not the strongest southerly winds. After seeing the 6-7 foot waves and white caps for a quarter mile into the entrance, I would strongly advise against approaching it in worse conditions.

After getting through that, we had to take our boat (with 75 foot airdraft) under electrical wires that were reported to be 77 foot "safe passage". Technically, that means there is 77 feet of clearance off the water at the highest reported tide but... we took it slow! We arrived at Holmer Smith's Marina and tossed the lines in relief only to run aground 5 feet from the dock... It was low tide!! We've spent 6 months in The Bahamas managing those shallow waters with our 7 foot draft and it took until now for us to run aground, fortunately in mud. Andrew strapped on one of our fender boards with a cushion to the boat and creating a gangway for us to reach shore.

Beaufort is a quaint town with small, well-kept historic homes, pretty churches, spooky cool graveyards, a busy Front Street on the water with shops and restaurants and lots of flowers this time of year. We've enjoyed walks around town, breakfast at Cru, lunches at The Dock House & Front Street Grill and dinners at Town Dock Marina & Aqua, but in general, we've been waiting for a large low pressure to dissipate off the east coast.

 


Next stop: Little Creek in the Chesapeake. Hoping for a departure this Sunday, May 11th.


Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Venturing up the Florida coast

On April 12th, we arrived in the high rent district of West Palm Beach and anchored near our friend Tom Saxe, a Salty Dawg that has been hanging out here on his boat, Aladdin, all season. We had lunch at the Safe Harbor Rybovich marina where there were dozens of 150 foot and larger yachts at the dock, a pool, workout room, bar & restaurant. It was quite a playground for the off duty yacht crews.

The next day we had a weather window to head north so we took off for Ft. Pierce, an all day motor sail in lumpy seas. We had the dinghy deflated and onboard so there wasn't much opportunity to do anything in Ft. Pierce other than wait for the thunderstorms to move on so we could continue our journey up the coast to St. Augustine. On 4/15, we waited for the tide to rise high enough for us to get into the 'skinny' water around Pelican Yacht Club to fill up with fuel. The following day, we took off for an overnight sail with the full moon low in the horizon off our starboard quarter.

We arrived in St. Augustine at 0900 and set anchor just before the Bridge of Lions drawbridge right off town, while waiting for our mooring assignment from the St. Augustine Municipal Marina. The mooring gave us access to the marina launch which ran every hour to and from the docks. Once we settled in, we hopped a ride to shore and found the very popular, Henry's, could accommodate us in their second floor bar on the waterfront, where we had a great view of Billy Ruff'n and savored some fabulous fish dishes for lunch, with enough leftover for us to swap at dinner.


Over the next few days, we enjoyed walks around town, shopping on Commerce Row (a touristy but cute street of shops, restaurants and historical buildings in the center of town), more excellent meals and the company of friends, Scott & Katherine on s/v Latitude, that we had met in George Town and showed up shortly after our arrival in St. Augustine. The town has many historic buildings including the Castillo de San Marcos fortress dating back to 1672, Flagler College built in 1888 and Casa Monica Resort, where we had a spectacular meal in their moroccan themed restaurant. My mother told me that her parents used to holiday in St. Augustine and I could just imagine them in this 1940's style building.



On 4/19, we moved to a slip at the Municipal Marina, in order to provision for our next leg to Brunswick, Ga. but mother nature had other plans for us and we were socked in for another couple days. Hoping to get to Annapolis in early May, we decided our next destination would have to get us further up the coast; next stop, Charleston, SC. 


Thursday, April 14, 2022

Saying good bye to The Bahamas

After almost six months of living on Billy Ruff’n in The Bahamas, it’s time to move on to our next adventure but we wanted to get a final taste of some of the cays that we missed on the way down the Exumas. So, on April 3rd we left George Town for Farmer’s Cay, approximately 40 miles north. On a sunny, blustery, puffy cloud day like many others, with the wind on the nose, after 6 hours of pounding into the waves, we arrived at the rocky & rolling Farmers Cut. Once inside, we tried anchoring off of Little Farmers Yacht Club but the bottom was scraped rock, so we took a mooring. We called the Club to make dinner reservations and they suggested that we order ahead, which we were happy to have done when we arrived for dinner at 7pm and another boating couple had already been waiting for an hour for their meal. We sat down and immediately got served a tasty and traditional Bahamian meal of chicken, rice & beans (which they call “peas”).

Next stop on our way north was Cambridge Cay, approximately 30 miles of mostly motor sailing. This cay provides a beautiful anchorage in the Exuma Land & Sea Park where they also have moorings for $27/night. Since there was a lot of current, in a relatively tight spot and all types of boats with different swing patterns, we thought a mooring ball was the best way to go. We were proven right when we found ourselves perpendicular to a 56 foot trawler in the middle of the night!


We stayed in Cambridge Cay two nights so that we could spend a day exploring. We took the dinghy past Rocky Dundas (with too much chop to snorkel) to Compass Cay to see Rachel’s Bath, which is a pretty spot on the north end of the island that, in high tide, lets ocean water in through the rocks to fill a deep and calm, sandy bottom pool of sun warmed salty water that the crowds don’t get to. We were told, however, that Taylor Swift was seen there this year!

Another long motor sail and swirly cut and we were further north in Highborne Cay. We anchored off the western shore and took the dinghy in for a very good, but expensive dinner at Xuma Restaurant in a very nice, well kept high-end resort. The rather large boats at the dock looked like they spend their season there.

The last leg of our trip in The Bahamas was to Rose Island, off Nassau, where we anchored overnight near what I dubbed “Gillian’s island” before entering the harbor and taking a slip at Nassau Harbor Club & Marina. We came here to pick up crew, provision and to enjoy the amenities before our crossing to Florida. The marina has a nice pool, restaurant and laundry facilities and an excellent location close to a drug store, grocery store, marine store, Domino’s and Starbucks… good for reorienting us to the US of A. 

Allen, from s/v Woza Moya, joined us on Friday, April 8th and we enjoyed a day of sightseeing before setting sail. We walked to the Queen’s Stairway, where the local kids were taking graduation pictures and found an excellent brewery called Rip Tyd, where we sampled flights of their latest craft and ate barbecue from the stand next door. The owner, from Canada, who had been in Nassau for 30 years, regaled us with stories about how she found a Bahamian sailboat abandoned in Farmers Cay and shipped it to Nassau to serve as her bar in the brewery.



On my birthday, April 10th, we treated ourselves to an English breakfast at The Nassau Cricket Club before shoving off for the 190 mile trip to Florida. On the way, we taught Allan how to protect his head from the hard dodger and other obstacles on our boat and he taught us how to catch a big fish! We had an excellent sail most of the way, only turning on the motor for a couple hours in the middle of the night and made it to West Palm Beach in 27 hours, at an average speed of 7.1 knots… not bad for our last sail in this beautiful place with the shallow seas, called The Bahamas!







Monday, April 4, 2022

Best of Great Exuma

On March 27th my sister and her husband Jim, came for a visit. It was a fleeting five days so we tried to show them the best of Great Exuma during their stay. Here's what we came up with:

1) The best VRBO (that we saw because Pam & Jim stayed there) - AQUA VISTA, on the western side of the island provides a beautiful view of the bank and comfortable accommodations for 4 to 6 guests.

2) The best place for dinner in George Town (especially when it's late Sunday night and nothing else is open or Monday night and Exuma Yacht Club is busy): PEACE & PLENTY serves up excellent fish, burgers, conch fritters and lobster.

3) The best beach for hunting sand dollars - COCO PLUM on the north end of Great Exuma is a long, white, sandy beach with sand bars extending far into the bay, providing soft landings for sand dollars to be discovered.

4) The best place to see (& feed) turtles - HOOPERS BAY, near Jolly Hall beach, is where visitors bring lettuce to feed the turtles. We saw little baby turtles, big mama and daddy turtles, all looking for a handout. They'll swim right up to you and eat out of your hand (or bite your bottom if you're not looking).

5) The best day sail (when the wind is out of the northeast going southeast) - CALABASH BAY, LONG ISLAND is a day sail destination with a spectacularly beautiful beach and a good restaurant at Cape Santa Maria Beach Resort (when you can get a reservation). 

6) The best hike - THE MONUMENT on Stocking Island provides a fabulous view of the 300 plus boats anchored in the three anchorages off the island as well as in the hurricane holes.

7) The best hangout - CHAT 'N CHILL for volleyball, music, dominos, meeting new & old friends, great pork roast & grilled fish and good (but expensive) drinks.

8) The best boat tour - MINN's in Victoria Lake rents boats for $375 per day and we were able to take ourselves on a four hour tour to find good snorkeling venues (Guana Island & Moss Cay) and explore the vast Man 'o War beach at low tide.

9) The best special occasion dinner - BLU'S ON THE WATER offers a great view of Man 'o War beach and elegantly presented deliciousness in a lively, music enhanced indoor and outdoor space.

10) The best sunset - ELIZABETH HARBOR, from any Stocking Island anchorage provides a  spectacle of sunsets, one day after another.




Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Entertained in Exuma

On Feb. 21, the day after we returned from our voyage to Cat, Conception and Long Islands, we were graciously invited to the beautiful blue hulled catamaran, Agility, to join a group of other Chris White designed boat owners, including the owners of Valianna, Penmanship as well as Chris (himself) & his lovely wife, Kate on Leopard. The Chris White designs are sleek and low with lifting dagger boards that help the boats go upwind. Some of them have the latest sailing technology in the form of foiling masts. We got a chance to go out on one of these boats and found sailing foiling masts a whole new skillset!


Over the next few days, we caught up with Allan & Joey on Woza Moya, enjoyed yoga, lunches and volleyball at Chat 'n Chill and met some new friends on s/v Shooting Star and s/v Gaya, that started up a regular pickleball game with their portable net set up on the town basketball court.


One day after pickleball, we went to a roadside restaurant in Georgetown called Island Boy for lunch and across the bar, we saw a fellow that looked a lot like one of our favorite CNN commentators. After confirming that it was he, we spent the next hour or so talking with him about everything from his process for preparing commentaries to where he went to college (Villanova). He asked us questions about what it's like to live on a boat and invited us to his farm in Virginia where he raises cattle. Really nice guy... anyone recognize him?

We spent the next few days making water, provisioning, planning our trip north and trying to find a good snorkel site in Elizabeth Harbor. We found an excellent spot for breakfast in town, called Driftwood, and enjoyed their Signature Benedicts: Benedict Royals served with salmon on Italian Bread with hollandaise for Andrew and Caribbean Benedict served on corn fritters w/ their secret "comeback" sauce, pickles and pineapple mango hot sauce for me. Delish!


Once again, it was time to hunker down so we picked a spot off of Kahari Resort for another blow with steady 20-25 knot breezes gusting to 35 - 40. Some brave wind surfers took advantage and a few moorings broke lose, anchors dragged while multiple dinghies went on a walk about.

When we could finally get off our boats again, I enjoyed a long walk on Sand Dollar beach and attempted to take some photos for the Georgetown Cruisers Facebook Group photo contest. This week, we will be continuing planning for our trip north in April and getting me prepared to fly home to do our taxes. When I return, we're looking forward to having my sister and her husband visit so we can show them all of our favorite things in the Exumas.











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