One more day!

Sanderling is just about ready to depart. Everything is aboard except for our personal items and food. We still have to hurricane-proof the house, but that is just a matter of picking up everything that is outside and moving it into the garage, or other areas indoors. Our house-sitter will take care of things if a hurricane invades the area.

We’ll be departing either Thursday afternoon (the 29th), or early on Friday (the 30th). We’ll have to watch the shuttle launch while underway north of Daytona, Florida.

June 28, 2006 – About to depart Merritt Island

Sanderling is just about ready to get underway. We only have to place our personal items aboard, do the food shopping, and get the house ready for hurricane season.

We’ll be departing either late Thursday afternoon (the 29th) or early on Friday (the 30th). Either way we’ll be in St. Augustine in plenty of time on Saturday to meet Charlie Matterson who is going to join ship’s company for a week on the way north.

We should be in the Chesapeake in about 14 days, and will continue north without sight-seeing, since we did that last summer and we’re trying to get as far northeast as we can in order to be on Cape Cod by the 21st of July. If we don’t get that far we’ll put Sanderling in a marina for a few days, and rent a car in order to be on the Cape that weekend. We’ll probably be going through Long Island on the way up and on the way back down.

After that we hope to cruise around Cape Cod Bay and Massachusetts Bay, then head north along the coast of New Hampshire and Maine, perhaps as far north as Eastport, but that will depend on the weather. Then we’ll start working our way back southwest, visiting more places along the way. By the end of September we hope to be in Solomons, Maryland, for TrawlerFest, and afterwards will depart once again for Florida.

We’ll be in contact by email and cell phone along the way. We’ll also try to keep our blog up to date as time permits, so you can check us out at: http://sanderlingcruise.blogspot.com/

For those of you who live along the way, we’ll contact you when we have a good idea of when we’ll be in your area and hopefully we’ll be able to get together.

Ready to Depart Boat Yard

Everything has been completed as far as the fuel tank replacement project is concerned. The generator was connected to the fuel line and run this morning. The “shark skin” that had been protecting (with some success) the saloon deck has been removed. The sand and small pieces of gravel cleaned up.

The final item was to haul Sanderling to check her bottom, cutlass bearings, and zincs. The bottom only had a bit of slime, and there was a small amount of growth (worms and small barnacles) on the shafts and wheels which were scraped off. Two shaft zincs needed to be replaced; the remaining zincs were still in good shape. Sanderling was out of the water for no more than 45 minutes.

Now she’s lying against the dock. I reconnected the starting battery and ran the engines for a short while as I was checking out the various electronics, inverter and Link 1000 electrical usage monitor. We ran the generator so we could check out the heat pumps and charger.

Now we need to clean and dust, and put things away. We should finish cleaning tomorrow (Sunday) and then we can take her down to our marina on Monday, and load items we need for our trip north on Tuesday and Wednesday. With any luck we’ll be on our way north on Thursday.

Good news!


Good news – both engines are back in the engine room (along with new tanks)! The port engine is all hooked up and ready to run for the first time in over three months. The starboard engine is resting on the stringers, but not yet fastened in place with the engine mounts. That will be accomplished today, along with reattaching all of the hoses, lines and cables. With a little luck, the generator will be placed in the engine room today.

After reconnecting the electrical system, starting the engines, and making sure that everything is operating properly, the only thing left to do is to haul Sanderling for a short while (keeping her in the slings) to clean the bottom and replace any corroded zincs. Then we’ll be out of the boat yard and back in our marina.

Still in the boat yard


Sanderling is still undergoing repairs at Banana River Marine on Merritt Island, Florida. Earlier this spring her generator, two diesel engines, and fuel tanks were removed in order to replace the fuel tanks with new ones. In the process, the entire engine room and bilge was cleaned and painted, and all hoses and impellers on the engines replaced.

Work has proceeded slowly, as the yard is short-handed and has been repairing other boats while Sanderling’s work took a back seat. On June 9th work started again after a month of inactivity. As of today (June 14th) the 900 pound engines are being lifted into place. In a few days they should be connected and running again.

Following completion of the yard work, we will take Sanderling back to her marina at Patrick Air Force Base and begin the task of getting her ready for the cruise north.

November 30, 2005 – Home at Manatee Cove Marina!

We beat the cold front to Florida! We finally pulled into our slip at Manatee Cove Marina a little after 1100 on Tuesday, November 29th. We almost made it home on Monday, but by the time it started to get dark we were still 14 miles away, so decided to anchor for the night (just off the Canaveral Barge Canal near the locks into Port Canaveral) and continue the next morning. It was nice being able to sleep in on Tuesday, knowing we only had to make 14 miles that day!

Saturday evening we anchored in the Umbrella River, just north of St. Andrews Sound, Georgia. With a pre-sunrise start on Sunday, we passed the sub base at Kings Bay, Georgia, then entered Florida on the St. Marys River just north of Fernandina Beach, Florida. Then across the St. Johns River (east of Jacksonville) and made it as far as Daytona late Sunday afternoon when we pulled into a marina for a little bit of fuel (40 gallons) to ensure we’d make the rest of the trip and stayed the night. An early start the next morning raised the possibility of making it home in one day, but the tidal currents were against us most of the day, and we ended up short!

We have had a great trip and enjoyed seeing old friends and meeting new ones. Now we have a lot of work to do to get ready for our next trip north in the late spring.

November 26, 2005 – St. Augustine, Florida

Well, we’re getting closer to home. We departed an anchorage SE of
Brunswick GA at 0700 this morning, just as it was light enough to see,
crossed St. Simons Sound early in the morning before the wind picked up
(along with the waves), and almost 80 miles later we’re anchored for the
night just north of St. Augustine, Florida. We should arrive back at our
home marina no later than the morning of the 29th (Tuesday), possibly
late in the afternoon of the 28th (Monday).

We’ve had some fair tidal currents which pushed us along at up to 9.5
MPH when our normal speed through the water is only 7.5 MPH, so we’ve
made good time the past several days. The temperature is starting to
warm up a little during the day, but the early morning temps are still
in thye 50s. Nonetheless, we’re enjoying the warmer weather.

We’ll depart this anchorage about 0700 on Sunday morning, and be well
south of Daytona by tomorrow evening.

November 21, 2005 – Charleston, South Carolina

We arrived in Charleston, SC, on Saturday, planning to spend two nights so we could do some sightseeing on Sunday. Our location is on the west side of Charleston, on the Ashley River, just south of the first large bridge across the river (coming in from the harbor). A great location, and the marina (City Marina) has an hourly shuttle van for trips downtown, or anywhere in the local area.

We spent Sunday afternoon sightseeing. Took the marina shuttle to the visitor’s center, and from there took a 1.5 hour tour of the city by van, to get the lay of the land. Afterwards, we walked back downtown and through the market, then south to the Battery where we toured a historic home. Then walked back through the market and a little north to a large grocery store where we bought a few things we needed, and then had the shuttle meet us to take us back to the marina. We ate dinner with boating friends who have an 1820s era home in the old city; went to a restaurant across the Ashley River from the marina. My only criteria for the restaurant selection was that they have shrimp and grits (a Charleston specialty according to Norm Wulf and Emeril) – and of course, the restaurant served up some great seafood, including shrimp and grits.

Today we took care of some housekeeping on Sanderling, then went to the Charleston Museum.

We had decided by late afternoon yesterday that we would depart today (Monday) as planned, despite a forecast for heavy rains today, and very windy conditions tomorrow. We reasoned that we would be well protected on the ICW by the time the wind worked its way up in the form of a Nor-easter running up the coast (remnants of the last tropical depression). Last night during the night it rained almost five inches! When the alarm went off this morning at 0615 I checked the weather radar (cable TV) and we were surrounded by heavy rain, and the forecast for tomorrow, although sunny, was still for high winds (20-30 MPH). We have a couple of large sounds to cross the second day south of Charleston, so we decided to stay here another day or two and enjoy the amenities of the marina! We’ll depart whenever the forecast improves or the windy conditions pass.

This delay is going to put us back home around the 29th/30th, if we can keep going once we depart. If more bad weather intervenes again, we may be cruising into early December! We’ll certainly be cruising on Thanksgiving Day. Actually, Thursday’s forecast is for warmer weather and sunshine, and we’ll be further south by then, so all in all we should have some nice weather again.

Our thoughts will be with you on Thanksgiving.

As I send this, late in the afternoon, the wind has clocked around to the northwest and is blowing steadily at around 15-20 mph. We’re glad we’re in the marina tonight.

November 17, 2005 – Myrtle Beach Yacht Club

Just wanted to let you know that we are currently at the Myrtle Beach
Yacht Club. We’ll depart Myrtle Beach YC marina Friday morning, anchor
out one night, and will probably be in Charleston by mid afternoon on
Saturday, the 19th (weather permitting). We have a reservation at the
City Marina in Charleston for Saturday and Sunday nights, so will have a
day or more to explore the downtown part of the city and see some
boating friends who live there.

We stopped here for a full day at Myrtle Beach in order to work on our
port engine that decided to stop running, twice, yesterday – the last
when we were about six miles away from the Yacht Club, so got to
practice backing into a slip with a single engine! Turned out to be an
air leak just before the fuel pump – have no idea why it shut down the
engine, then tightened up enough to allow the engine to restart about
half an hour later and run for more than six hours before shutting down
the engine again! Oh, well, we hope that was the problem.

We departed Camp Lejeune, NC, (Jacksonville, NC) on Tuesday morning, and
again returned to the ICW about 1100. The weather was a bit overcast,
not quite warm enough to be topside, so we stayed inside all day.
Anchored for the night about three miles south of Wrightsville Beach, on
a little cove off the ICW. The porpoises were fishing most of the
evening and night, and we saw numerous schools of them, chasing fish,
and even “broaching” and slapping their tails on the water. Must have
been some escapees from a aquatic show!

The next day (Wednesday) in addition to the problem with the port
engine, which decided to quite just after we’d entered the Cape Fear
River, and then again just before we reached the marina we’re in now, we
encountered quite a bit of shallow water, due to the full moon. In fact,
the floating swing bridge at Sunset Beach couldn’t open on the hour at
1400 because the water was so low, so about a dozen boats waited until
the bridge tender finally opened a little after 1500 when the water
level had gone up enough. After waiting about 20 minutes, not knowing
whether he would open the bridge, or not, he announced on channel 13
that he wouldn’t open until 1500 at the earliest, so we (and several
other boats) simply anchored in the middle of the channel.

We encountered a few other areas where the water on the ICW was very
shallow due to the low tide, but we only draw a little over three feet,
and very seldom have a problem unless we unintentionally get out of the
channel. Some of the mid to large size sailboats frequently go around in
some of the shallow areas.

Today is sunny and the air is warm, but the wind is making it a bit
chilly in the shade. The engine is repaired, and I’ve done some other
work in the bilge to tidy things up a bit since I was working down there
anyway. Judy did some laundry and took a walk around the periphery of
this beautiful marina/apartment/condo complex built on the site of an
old stone quarry. We ate in one of their restaurants last night, and
probably will again tonight – we’re making this a little vacation rather
than trying to eat in all of the time.

August 30, 2005 – Solomons, Maryland

After an enjoyable week at the Navy Recreation Center
Marina in Solomons (Sanderling's former home), we're
going to leave tomorrow morning (Wednesday) and head
to the eastern shore. We'll visit Salisbury on the
Wicomico River, Oxford, St. Michaels, and Chestertown,
before heading to Baltimore where we'll stay three
nights or so. We then head south back to Solomons,
stopping in Annapolis on the way, where we have to be
by the evening of the 11th so we can have Sanderling
at Washburn's Boat Yard on the 12th. 

Have had a great time at Solomons, revisiting our
favorite restaurants and the Chesapeake Maritime
Museum. Jennifer and Mark came down from Baltimore on
Saturday, and we had a nice cruise up river to
Stoney's Restaurant for crab cakes, and back (of
course). 

Our schedule might change a bit, as Judy still needs
to head back to Florida for a meeting that was
cancelled when Katrina visited Florida a week ago, but
she still doesn't know the rescheduled date.

After returning to Solomons we'll head to Washington
DC and will be there around the 17th/18th, then return
to Solomons for Trawler Fest starting the 27th of
September.

Julie and Khepera are doing fine. They'll be happy
when we're out of a marina and at anchor so they can
have the run of the boat!