August 5, 2005 – Manteo, North Carolina

We arrived in Manteo, NC, about 1400 yesterday (Thursday) afternoon, and are enjoying two nights in a marina right in the downtown area, close to shops and restaurants. Nice, quiet, historic area. Virginia Dare, The Lost Colony, all that stuff.

The night before (Wednesday) we anchored in a little wide spot in the Alligator River, about 10 miles south of where it enters Albermarle Sound.

Tomorrow we’re leaving Manteo for Elizabeth City, just on the south end of the Dismal Swamp Canal, and the next day (Sunday) we’ll start through the canal. The locks on each end only open at 0830 and 1530, so if we don’t make it to the end we’ll have to spend the night in the canal and go on to Norfolk the next day. We haven’t been through the canal before, and had heard that there were problems with depth and dead-heads, but in talking with several people who have recently made the trip, everything seems to be ok now, and the Army Corps of Engineers has recently dredged it out (again).

We spent the day today doing a little shopping, bought a few groceries, and I had a few things I needed at a hardware store (all within walking distance). I also did some work in the engine room this morning, while Judy was doing our laundry. Tonight we are eating an early dinner, then taking a taxi to the Elizabethan Gardens and Fort Raleigh National Historic Site for “The Lost Colony”, America’s longest running outdoor drama (I think that refers to the number of years it has been performed, rather than the length of the performance).

Weather continues good, although it is a little hot today. With the AC running in the marina, it doesn’t seem so bad, however, and we have WiFi access through the town’s WiFi system! Nice touch.

Will write next time we have a chance.

July 31, 2005 – Southport, North Carolina

We arrived here in Southport NC about 1650 this afternoon in a light
rain, after traveling in rain (light and heavy) since 1300 when we
passed the pontoon bridge at Sunset Beach, NC.

We’ve tied up to a free dock at a really funky, local seafood place (the
term “restaurant” doesn’t seem appropriate) with five free docks for
anyone eating at the restaurant. We were fortunate that they had space
available, since we’re in an area of the ICW with few anchorages to the
south for 20 miles, and a twelve mile stretch of the Cape Fear River is
about 100 yards to the north. We had great crab cakes and steamed shrimp
for dinner!

Last night we anchored in a cypres swamp in Old River at Bucksport SC. A
beautiful spot once the bass fishing tournament came to a close about
1600 in the afternoon! We only made 26 miles yesterday, after getting a
late start from Georgetown SC and a heading current all the way. Again,
we were faced with a long stretch with no anchorages if we had
continued, so we stopped about 1450, sat outside and read for the
afternoon. Enjoyed filet mignon steaks wrapped with bacon last night and
fresh salad. Obviously, we haven’t yet had to resort to the hard tack!

Tomorrow morning we’ll cruise about 12 miles upstream on the Cape Fear
River, keeping a sharp lookout for Robert Mitchum and Robert DiNiro!
Then we take a short channel to the northeast and are once again behind
some barrier islands in the ICW. High tide is at 0600, and we won’t get
started that early, so we’ll have a 1-2 knot current against us most of
the way up the river. Hopefully there will be no wind early in the
morning so the water should be relatively quiet. Once the wind picks up
it will undoubtedly be from the SE and would undoubtedly create some
confused and choppy water on the river.

We’re doing well. The cats don’t like being in marinas because we have
to keep them inside so they won’t jump ship! We have screens for the
doors that serve that purpose. We, on the other hand, enjoy getting out
and walking around a bit.

Weather has cooled considerably, and tonight it’s just plain pleasant,
although humid after the rain today.

2004-5 Cruise to the Keys

Sanderling – Cruise Patrick AFB to Key West 2004

December 8, 2004

Departed Manatee Cove Marina at about 1000 after bringing frozen food, ice and two cats (Julie and Khepera) aboard. Placed things in storage which hadn’t been, before.

Previous day had filled the water tanks, checked battery, transmission and engine fluids, and all were set to go.

After turning south in the Banana River and crossing under the Pineda Crossing bridge, we were accompanied by a school/pod of 5-6 dolphins, both adults and young, for 15 to 20 minutes. Seemed to be entertaining us.

The water was fairly calm all day with a slight wind from the east. Turned 1600 RPM making 8.1 mph where there was no current. Got as high as 9.2 mph with current near inlets; after crossing we would slow to 7.1 mph.

Observed some hurricane damage to homes along the water. Near Mico/Palm Bay (just south of Melbourne) there were many boats washed ashore and on land awaiting repair or destruction.

When we passed the area where Judy works at the Sebastian Hospital, we realized we were 37 miles from our home – a 45 minute drive. It took us 4 hours to get there.

Fort Pierce area – we saw many boats just piled up on shore in big lots, some totally destroyed. More damage to homes than there was a little further north, but it was getting dark about 1730 so we couldn’t see too well.

We anchored that night off to the east side of the ICW in 5 feet of water.

Day: 62.2 Miles 8H00M 7.7MPH

December 9, 2004

The day stated when we awoke about 0700. Had an immediate job of finding a diesel leak which was obvious from the smell permeating the saloon. Soon found that there was a slight leak at a loose connection in the fuel line just before the fuel pump on the port engine. Easy enough to get to since it was on the inboard side of the engine.

Underway at 0815. The wind picked up to about 15 mph from the south by 1000, and boat speed of 8-9 mph. The wind lessened about 1600, but we had a nice wind/sun burn from the glare of the sun on the water combined with the wind. The day mark numbers were difficult to see with the sun shining behind them.

After getting back on the ICW from our overnight anchorage we noticed major erosion of 20-25 foot bank on the west side of the river. Two hurricanes came through this area, so the wind-driven water did its job. There was yellow environmental boom material stretched for miles, and the bank was being rebuilt from the water level up. Huge mounds of dirt. One house slid from the top to the river’s level. There were more boats washed ashore.

Since it was a week day in the winter, St. Lucie Inlet was quiet. Quite a change from the last time we were here on a holiday weekend, in the summer.

We cruised past gorgeous homes with huge boats. The ICW narrows into small rivers and man-made cuts (unlike the Indian River Lagoon, which is wide). We cruised through Lake Worth with its narrow channel (similar to the Indian River Lagoon) – the lake itself is wide and long. There were 6-8 bridges south of Lake Worth, some of which were too low to pass through without having them open. They were on scheduled openings (not on demand) so we lost an hour of cruising time.

We anchored just south of a bridge in Lantana at ICW mile 1031, off to the west side of the ICW. There were about six other boats there, all anchored. We picked up WiFi signals on our laptops, and were able to connect to the internet. We took a quick nap, then showered and ate dinner. Then Judy worked on her classes, and Bob wrote in the logs.

We think Khepera might be sea sick; he doesn’t move around much during the day while we’re underway. He is eating and drinking, however. Julie seems to be just fine, and was really smelling the salmon cakes Judy made for dinner.

Day: 58.9M 8H00M 7.33MPH

Trip: 121.1M 16H00M 7.5MPH

December 10, 2004

Bob was up at 0650. Entered anchorages for Miami area into the laptop’s navigation software in preparation for a place to anchor tonight. Checked the oil and made coffee. Judy was up as soon as she smelled the coffee brewing. We have an inverter onboard, so we can turn on the inverter and have 110 volt electricity throughout the boat; its amperage is enough to run the coffee maker, the microwave, and a small hair dryer. If we need more, we simply fire up the generator, and then we can run just about anything we need, including the electric heaters, air conditioners, and hot water heater.

We were underway at 0750. The morning was beautiful as we cruised down narrow canals with houses occupying every foot. There were a few wider areas and boats heading out to the ocean for fishing. Along the sides there were frequent side canals leading back into housing areas.

We passed through Ft. Lauderdale just past noon. There were boats, everywhere – none seemed as small as Sanderling. Ft. Lauderdale is a water city, and claims to be the cruising capitol of the world. There were huge private yachts, many from Bermuda and many 100 feet or more in length with crews working to keep them shiny and new looking.

At the Ft. Lauderdale harbor entrance (we had to go past it to continue on our way south) we were stopped by a sheriff. He was stopping all boats heading across the channel. When we looked across the channel to the south, we realized there was a large aircraft carrier type ship heading toward the channel entrance leaving port, maneuvering with tugs. We (and 12-14 other boats) had to wait 20-30 minutes until the ship had cleared. It was LHD7 (a helicopter carrier). After the sheriff gave us the OK, we continued south in the company of Nenomoosha (another trawler about our length) much of the way until it stopped in an anchorage north of Miami about 1500 and we continued south. We had several conversations over the VHF radio as we were cruising together.

We again encountered many bridges, some too low to go under so we had to wait for an opening; others were high enough (we have an air draft of 17 feet 10 inches). There were about 25 in all from Ft. Lauderdale to Miami, and one we were able to clear with only about 6 inches to spare. Many boaters go outside on the ocean, from Ft. Lauderdale to south of Miami, and we had planned for that option, but it was too windy when we came through the area.

Before we reached Miami, the water was starting to turn a turquoise color, and becoming clearer.

We anchored alongside a causeway in what was essentially downtown Miami, but between Miami and Miami Beach (not in the heart of the city). The causeway provided protection from the 15 mph winds from the SSW when we first arrived; later the winds subsided.

Italian sausage and zucchini with onions for dinner. WiFi abounds, probably from the houses along the causeway. Judy worked on her course.

Day: 59.0M 9H00M 6.6MPH

Trip: 180.0M 25H00M 7.2MPH

December 11, 2004

Left the anchorage early and traveled through the busy Port of Miami. Five cruise ships (including mariner of the Seas) lined up end to end, with another at the corner. Downtown Miami was to the west with buildings down to the water; one entire island with condos, parks and people walking everywhere.

We left the city behind for Biscayne Bay but could still see Miami in the distance after leaving 22 miles under the keel and through a cut into another bay. Key Biscayne (where are you Richard Nixon) was off to the east. We passed about two miles from an area with stilt homes built out on the water – we thought they were fishing areas or duck blinds at first – and an old historic light house at the south end of Key Biscayne on the ocean side.

The character of the water has changed from narrow streams and canals with a few harbor openings to the ocean, to large, expansive bays. The wind was 15 mph from the west, and it gave us a beam seas and 1-2 foot waves (and rolling) as we headed south – very similar to Chesapeake Bay. Biscayne Bay is 8 miles wide at its widest point (again, similar to Chesapeake Bay).

Forty-five miles south of Miami we entered Jewfish Creek and passed through the bridge opening on US highway #1 at Key Largo to enter the “real” Keys. Stopped for fuel at $2.70 per gallon, filled the water tanks, and bought ice. We were underway again in 30 minutes.

Once through Jewfish Creek we left the shelter of leeward land masses, and since the wind had picked up to around 20 mph, we sought the shelter of a small bay protected by mangrove trees and stopped for the day at 1600 in Tarpon Basin. Higher winds were forecast for the night and next day, so we knew we would be there for at least another day so the wind would hopefully subside and we could continue south.

The cruising guide had warned that the anchorage in Tarpon Basin was poor due to seabed grass, but we didn’t realize how bad it could be. It was too windy to see the bottom; if we had been able to do so, we could have tried to drop the primary anchor (a SuperMax) in a sandy area. We immediately had a problem getting the anchor to hold on the first try, and when we pulled the anchor up to try again it was full of grasses “raked” from the bottom. We switched to a Danforth anchor with the same results. Then we changed to a small Delta, and after much coaxing got it to “catch” on the bottom and hold. Our GPS track for our anchoring maneuvers look like a 4-year-old’s drawing of a building! Bob spent the first half hour glued to the GPS in case we were dragging, but we held our position. The wind continued into the evening, but it started slacking off about 2200.

Day: 54.0M 8H50M 6.48MPH

Trip: 235.0M 33H50M 7.02MPH

December 12, 2004

The water in Tarpon Basin was calm, but the wind was still bad (for us) at about 15 mph and the air temperature had dropped to 63 degrees. Used the generator to heat up the boat and make coffee. The wind was from the north at 15 mph; too windy for us to continue through some of the long, unprotected areas we’d have to traverse after leaving the anchorage, so we spent the day working around the boat. Judy worked on a research paper for the American Heart Association; I worked on small projects, including getting the dingy (which had just been placed back on the boat after repairing some minor hurricane damage) ready to launch.

By 1300 the wind slacked to calm, but it was too late to depart and get to a decent anchorage for the night. There were 25 miles of fairly unprotected water to cross, with no decent anchorages to protect against any wind from a northerly quadrant. After the 25 miles, we intended to proceed through Channel 5 to the ocean side where we would have decent protection from a northerly or westerly wind. The distance to Hawk Channel at Marathon, Florida (Boot Key) from Tarpon Basin is approximately 50 miles. From Marathon it is only 35 miles to the marina at Boca Chica (NAS Key West).

Chili and corn bread for dinner.

Day: 0 miles

Trip:

December 13, 2004 (Monday)

Up at 0630 (with alarm clock) and underway at 0705 after making coffee, feeding the cats, dressing warmly, and raising the anchor. There was a Kady Krogen in the anchorage that left at first light, about 15 minutes before us.

Went thru several small bays and cuts thru mangrove islands. Water is still greenish and we can see the bottom at six feet. The KK is ahead about 1.5 miles when we first saw her; she’s leaving a “trail” in the water where the prop wash stirs up the bottom sand – we did also, like contrails in water.

About 1130 we departed Florida Bay (the Gulf side of the Keys) and ran through Channel Five to the ocean side and Hawk Channel which parallels the coast about 2-2.5 miles off shore. We stayed closer to shore in about 25 feet of water, changing course from time to time to avoid shallower water. We had planned to stop for the night at Marathon on Boot Key, but we got to that area so early in the afternoon we decided to continue for a few more hours and then find an anchorage in the ocean or one of the bays.

The wind was from the north about 10 knots and the water surface was fairly calm with no swell and waves less than 1 foot. The Keys to the north provided protection.

At about 1600 we anchored just ½ mile off the coast of Big Pine Key after turning north from our westerly course. Used SuperMax anchor; this time we could see the bottom in six feet of water quite clearly, so we looked for a sandy area clear of grass, and dropped the anchor slowly into sand, then let out line to permit the anchor to settle slowly into the sand while we drifted slowly backwards with the slight wind. After several minutes we took up the slack and the anchor held. The winds was less than 10 mph and after watching the GPS for 10-15 minutes were felt confident that the anchor was holding.

Nap and shower, then dinner of blackened chicken and pasta Alfredo.

Day: 71.9M 8H45M 8.2MPH

Trip: 305.l9M 42H35M 6.2MPH

December 14, 2004 (Tuesday)

Bob awoke before sunrise to glass-flat water (yes, this was the ocean!) and no breeze. Could readily see the bottom in brightening light, and the anchor rode bent around a stalk of sea plant, and the anchor resting on the blade and the tip of the shank with the blade buried about 2 inch into sand. Schools of small fish splashing from time to time. As sun came up, the bottom became even clearer. Probably should set the SuperMax to “hard bottom” when anchoring in sand, so the blade has a smaller angle of attack into the bottom.

Forecast: cold front coming thru in the afternoon with winds reaching 15-25 mph and temps in the 60s. Time to get moving.

We raised anchor about 100 heading for Boca chica, about 25 miles away. Could see the bottom in 20 feet of water when we first started. Schools of dolphins swam with us twice – could clearly see them underwater around Sanderling’s bow. Judy took many pictures of the playing off the bow.

The wind steadily increased throughout the day’s transit; as it increased the surface went from glass-smooth to small wavelets, and visibility into the water was reduced drastically.

By the time we reached the first marker for the channel into Boca Chica, the wind was out of the NNW at about 10 mph and clouds were building in the NW.

The channel was dredged thru coquina/coral/rock in a straight shot to the marina, about 2 miles from the ocean. The sides of the channel were very shallow, but the channel itself was about 10 feet or more in depth.

We turned into the marina’s basin, and then stern to into a transient slip with a concrete pier on our port side. The slips are wide, and fairly new, with nice facilities.

Day: 26.7M 3H20M 8.0MPH

Trip: 332.6M 45H55M 7.23MPH

Cruise through the Florida Keys, Part II – Fort Jefferson and the Dry Tortugas

We returned to Key West and Sanderling on December 26th, with Jennifer and Andrew and his family, and departed December 30th. Although Alyssa and Avery spent one night aboard while their parents and Jennifer did a night on the town in Key West, the weather was too windy and cool to do any cruising or swimming. Judy and I returned on January 3rd (Monday). Tuesday was spent getting ready for the first part of the cruise – purchased food, snorkeling gear, and a few other necessities. Judy had purchased a data card for her computer while we were home over Christmas, and spent a good deal of time that day helping Cingular wireless get their high speed wireless network back up and running properly. (Evidently, there was a data problem with one of their towers in Key West.)

January 5, 2005 (Wednesday)

Filled water tanks and purchased three bags of ice for the cooler.

We departed Boca Chica Marina about 1040, hoping to get as far west as Boca Grande Key for the night (about 15 miles west of Key West on the way to Dry Tortugas). There were a few clouds and the wind was out of the east about 10 knots, but the weather was otherwise sunny and warm. As we headed out of the marina channel into the ocean, the water was a greenish blue. We turned westerly to pick up 24 degrees 30 minutes north to the southwest of Key West. We would follow that line of latitude much of the way to the Dry Tortugas, turning slightly toward the north at Rebecca Shoal light. The water was fairly calm, and we made good time, cruising at 1600 rpm and making about 8.0 MPH. At 1340 the anchor was down in seven feet of water in a sand bottom at 24-31.9N, 82-00.7W, about 200-300 yards west of the western shore of Boca Grande Key. The water was still very clear and blue-green in color. We tidied up the boat, then sat on the aft deck and read until the sun went down and the air got chilly. Judy’s internet access data card was still functioning, even though we were 12-15 miles west of Key West and any cell towers, so we were able to send e-mail messages to family! After this day, we were out of cell phone or e-mail range until the return trip from Dry Tortugas.

Day: 24.8M 3H00M 8.2MPH

Trip: 357.4M 48H55M 7.29MPH

January 6, 2005 (Thursday)

We spent a nearly sleepless night due to the rolling motion of the boat. At times we almost had to hang on it was so bad. Several times I looked around to see if there was anything we could do to stop the uncomfortable motion, but it was dark and too dangerous to try to set a bridle line to turn the boat into the swell. The problem was caused by light winds and a strong current flowing parallel to the shoreline, and swells coming from the SW from the ocean. The current caused Sanderling to lie with the bow facing northward, and the quick SW swells were the equivalent of a beam sea – rolling Sanderling every time one passes under her. They were coming in such quick succession, that even though they were no more than 2 feet high, they would set up a rolling motion that would increase with each swell, then stop, then start building again. We could only sleep on our back or stomach to keep from getting turned over by the rolling motion. When the tidal current changed after six hours, and Sanderling’s bow was pointing south and into the swells, the rolling motion stopped.

When we awoke after a few short hours of sleep, the wind was from the SE at 10; clouds were scattered and there were a few local showers dancing around the area. We were underway by 0705 heading toward Garden Key (in the Dry Tortugas). The seas were again fairly calm, with a slight quartering sea running about 2 feet, which the auto pilot handled easily. The rain showers were replaced with high scattered clouds. At 1145 we were about one mile south of Rebecca Shoal Light on course 286 degrees true and a speed of 8.0 MPH (pushed along a little by the quartering seas). After Rebecca Shoal Light the depth of the water increased from 25-30 feet to 60-100 feet until we were within several miles of Garden Key. There is deep water close by on the south, and this is where the Gulf Stream exists the Gulf of Mexico to go around Florida (between Florida and Cuba) and then make a dramatic left turn to head up the east coast of the United States.

By 1300 or so Judy spotted Fort Jefferson on Garden Key at about ten miles distance. I was sleeping at the time.

We followed the channel around Garden Key from the southeastern side, around the north, and back down the western side into the anchorage just off the pier which connects with the entrance to the fort. There were two other boats in the anchorage, besides the two commercial catamarans made up to the pier. The two catamarans make one trip daily from Key West, arriving about 1000 and departing about 1430. They travel at about 30 MPH, so the trip takes a little over two hours each way, as long as the ocean cooperates!

The water around Fort Jefferson, and in the anchorage, was quite clear. At 1430 we anchored in 20 feet of water with 100 feet of anchor rode, backed down on the anchor to ensure that it was holding fast, and then watched one of the other boats that were already in the anchorage try to get its anchor to hold. The poor folks, it turned out, had been working for several hours to find good holding; they finally let out 160 feet of chain and hoped that it would hold. Fortunately, we didn’t experience any high winds, and neither of us dragged anchor while we were there.

As soon as we shut off our engines, we noticed several very large fish around Sanderling – not quite close enough to the surface to tell what they were. The first one I saw looked like a shark, about six feet long, but after observing them for awhile, and talking with other people at the fort, we learned that they were Jewfish – giant groupers – now called Goliath Groupers. It wasn’t at all unusual to see five or six of them congregating in the water under the boat, and it was obvious from their shape and actions that they were not sharks.

We watched the catamarans depart, almost at the same time, after loading their day trippers who had been sightseeing around the fort, sunning, and snorkeling. There were also two different sea planes landing and taking off from time to time, carrying passengers from Key West. They were exciting to watch, since they landed right in the channel and taxied fairly close to Sanderling when they were coming in. They would taxi right up to the beach, discharge their passengers who walked along the pontoons to dry beach, then would turn around to taxi and take-off. Over the course of our two days at Garden Key we watched them repeat the process several times a day, ferrying passengers from Key West and returning later in the day to pick them up and take them back to “civilization.”

Day: 57.4M 7H25M 7.6 MPH

Trip: 414.8M 56H20M 7.36MPH

January 7, 2005 (Friday)

This was a day for sight seeing. Weather forecast was favorable to stay through Saturday, and return to Key West on Sunday. Monday’s forecast was unfavorable, with higher winds forecast.

The first sea plane with passengers arrived about 0800.

We put the dinghy and outboard motor into the water (takes about five minutes), and motored to the beach where we pulled the dinghy up onto the sand and walked about 100 yards to the pier. We had to pay a park entrance fee (it is a national park) which consisted of putting your money in an envelope, writing your name and boat name on the envelope, and dropping it into a drop box. Visitors arriving by the commercial boats or planes pay in advance, so everyone arriving on their own pays via the honor system.

The tour boats arrived about 1000, and since we were already on the Key we simply joined up with one of their guides for a quick tour of the fort, then joined in the picnic lunch which the boats provide their patrons! The passengers didn’t have any identifying tags, and we were sure that there were way too many of them to keep track of, so I made myself a sandwich and drank some of their sodas; Judy doesn’t eat lunch, but she did have one of their sodas.

Check out the National Park Service web site for information about Fort Jefferson at

http://www.nps.gov/drto/

We returned to Sanderling about 1430 for a nap, then I worked on repairing the spreader light while Judy read. We ran the generator for about 1.5 hours to charge Sanderling’s battery bank, use the heat gun to fasten heat-shrink tubing around the electrical repair to the spreader light, and allow Judy to blow-dry her hair after several days in the salty wind!

The other trawler (Why Knot) prepared to depart on Saturday, anticipating that the weather conditions on Sunday may not be optimal. We had seen them in Boca Chica Marina, and they departed the same day we did, making the trip in one day instead of two (but arriving in the dark).

As it got dark, a number of fishing boats came into the anchorage for the night. They really can “drive” their boats, and have no problem anchoring with the huge anchors they carry. They went much further into the anchorage then we did – they obviously had been there before. By the time we went to bed, there were probably a dozen fishing boats in the area. The same thing occurred on Friday night, but that night some of them anchored on the SW corner of the fort, just outside of the channel in about 10 feet of water. A sailboat arrived on Thursday about 1700, and anchored behind us close to the channel used by the commercial catamarans. Sunset was occurring about 1757 both nights.

We enjoyed hamburgers and cole slaw for dinner after sunset.

January 8, 2005 (Saturday)

Why Knot departed about 0710 along with about 8-10 fishing boats. Last night, late, some fishing boats had anchored just outside the channel leading into the anchorage on the SE corner of Fort Jefferson. It was a windy night, but by mid- morning the wind was down to around 10-12 knots.

We tried snorkeling today with our new gear. Judy didn’t have any problem; I kept inhaling water through my nose, blaming the problem on a rather tight-fitting section of mask around my nose. The water was clear, however, and it was fun for awhile (for me). Judy continued by herself (and a few other snorkelers) around the pilings from the old coaling dock where the colorful fish and coral were plentiful. Afterwards, we both pretended we were passengers on the largest of the commercial catamarans, and went aboard to take fresh water showers which were located outside on both quarter-decks. It felt good to get rid of the salt water (and several days accumulation of salt and grime). We had been doing everything we could, including foregoing showers, in order to conserve our 125 gallons of water on Sanderling – the freshwater shower was a real luxury.

We were walking through the fort to look at some areas we hadn’t seen, when we met up with the wife of one of the Park Service employees whom we had talked with yesterday. She asked if we would like to see their living quarters, and of course we said we would. As we were walking toward their quarters, she told us that she’d see if her husband was available to take us through the fort’s mechanical spaces; he was, and did! So we had a guided tour, conducted by Chuck and Eloise, of the cisterns, the water purification and waste treatment systems (both very similar to those used on pleasure trawlers), the electrical generators, machine and wood shops, and then their quarters. Their quarters are built into the second level of the fort, on the SW side, with an expansive view of Loggerhead Key to the west, and fantastic sunsets! Afterwards, Judy and I walked around the western wall of the fort, and saw the chapel, bakery, cannonball heating furnace, and powder magazine.

We then returned to Sanderling for a nap, followed by preparations to get underway on Sunday for the return to Key West. We removed the window covers (in case we needed to steer from the inside), and closed and locked all the forward hatches and ports.

That night, many fishing boats anchored in the anchorage. The weather forecast (we could still get VHF radio weather) was good for the trip back the next day.

January 9, 2005 (Sunday)

We woke up to our alarm clock at 0600 and stayed in our warm bed another 15 minutes while we convinced ourselves that the wind was not going to be a problem on our trip today. Increasing wind was forecast for the following several days, so we needed to get back to Key West now. We had our coffee, and then secured some items that might become flying objects in a rough seas; Judy always makes sure the microwave is on the deck of the saloon where it won’t do any damage if we take a bad roll. We laid down lamps, and secured the coffee maker to the bulkhead with a bungee cord which is always in place when we are cruising.

The anchor came up about 0705 – it must have been buried deep in the sand as we had to work it back and forth with the engine in order to free it. The water was fairly smooth during the departure, despite 15 knots of wind from the NE. As we rounded the fort to the north we saw a square rigger coming in about five miles to the SW. We later heard a conversation between the captain of the square rigger and Chuck (at the fort) – the ship was the tall ship Bounty and they were coming into the fort for a visit with some students aboard. We certainly wished we could have been there to see it, but we had to keep going to take advantage of the weather today.

As we came onto our course back to Rebecca Shoal Light and got into deeper water, we started hitting 4-5 foot seas from the north, later from the NE, with the wind picking up to 15 to 20 knots – it was quite rough. We left the topside steering station and went down below, where the motion of the boat is less severe. By steering more to the east we were able to reduce that somewhat. It was too rough for the cats, however, and they both stayed in the aft cabin where there is less motion: Julie on the bed and Khepera on the floor. We reduced our speed to about 6.5 MPH to avoid a rougher ride; there was still a lot of water over the bow which blew back across the entire boat and left a crusty, salty deposit by the end of the day. We continued at the reduced speed for the next 3-4 hours as the miles slowly clicked by. We had hoped that once we were south of the Quicksands we would get some shelter and the swells would subside, but the rough seas continued until we got south of Marquesas Key. Then the seas calmed down to 2-3 feet and we could increase our speed to our near-normal 7.5-8.0 MPH.

We had to watch continuously for crab/longosta trap markers and steer around them. They were difficult to see in the waves/swells and looking into the sun. We were worried about becoming entangled in the lines, and losing an engine as a consequence.

By early afternoon it was apparent that we were not going to make it all the way to Key West before sunset, and we didn’t want to go into a strange harbor to anchor out in the dark. So, we stopped at Boca Grande Key (the same place we had anchored for the night on the way out). After our strenuous day, and since we felt cool from the wind and spray all day long, we fixed a good winter meal – chili and cornbread – for dinner – and took showers!

While watching the sunset at 1757, we observed the “green flash” – something that occurs only when atmospheric and viewing conditions are absolutely perfect. I had never seen that from Sanderling, before.

Unlike our first experience at this anchorage, tonight was quiet with no swells to rock us out of bed. Several fishing boats anchored nearby.

Day: 59.0 miles 8H25M 7.15 MPH

Trip: 473.8 miles 64H45M 7.3 MPH

January 10, 2005 (Monday)

The anchor was up at 1000 (no need to hurry today), and the wind was fairly calm, about 10 knots. By 1130 we were within site of Key West and into some heavier seas caused by the NE winds blowing down the west side of Key West. By 1300 we turned north into the channel to Stock Island where we had arranged to stay in a marina for several days until we decided what to do next. Our friends on Why Knot had taken a mooring in a mooring field to the east of Wisteria Island on the north side of Key West, but we need to get water and take a real shower before proceeding to an anchorage or mooring.

As we were maneuvering to get into the slip at Oceanside Marina, I noticed that I was having difficulty steering Sanderling – I couldn’t turn her as sharply as normal, and couldn’t get her to back into the slip. At first I attributed the problem to a beam wind about 15 knots, but after several attempts, it was apparent that something else was wrong. We went back out into the channel, and in short order determined that the starboard prop wasn’t turning. I assumed there was a problem with the transmission, but wouldn’t know for sure until I could go down into the engine room to check things out. The marina gave us a larger slip, to make it easier to get into with one engine not functioning, and the other off-center. With the help of some marina tenants on the dock, we got into our assigned slip without any problems. At 1340 we were secure in our slip.

Day: 22.2 M 3H40M 6.0 MPH

Trip: 496.0 M 68H25M

As soon as the engine room had cooled down, I went below and looked at the transmission. Everything seemed to be working OK (I had hoped that the linkage had somehow become loose, but that was not the case). I was convinced that the transmission had broken internally, and was checking the transmission fluid, when I noticed that the propeller shaft was no longer connected to the transmission coupling – it had backed out about six inches, enough that it was no longer turning.

By the end of the day I had arrange for a mechanic from the marina to look at the transmission. He was very familiar with the Borg-Warner transmissions and the engines, so I felt confident that he could fix everything.

January 10, 2005 (Tuesday)

While Mark the mechanic was working on the shaft, he noticed a leak around the edges of the starboard stuffing box, and quickly concluded that he couldn’t do anything until we determined why it was leaking (this wasn’t a normal leak through the stuffing box around the shaft – this was coming from behind the stuffing box). The leak wasn’t catastrophic, and our sump pumps could easily keep the water out of the boat – it was pumping about every hour rather than about every 12 hours, however.

Eventually I arranged to have Sanderling hauled out at a hard fairly close to the marina. They worked us into their schedule, and we had to be at their docks between 1200 and 1230 in order to be hauled out at 1300 on Wednesday.

I also talked with the fiberglass/paint/wax guy at the boat yard and arranged to have Sanderling’s bottom cleaned, sanded and painted, and the hull waxed – work I had planned on having done once we returned to our “home port” in early March. The same fellow would take care of any structural work that needed to be done to fix the leak around the stuffing box. Both he and the mechanic had worked together before, and both seemed to know what they were talking about in terms of the necessary work.

January 11, 2005 (Wednesday)

We made the 3 mile trip with the one engine, back out into the ocean and up another channel, to the boat yard without incident, and waited until about 1400 to be hauled out for repairs.

After we were hauled and blocked, I talked again with the mechanic and the fiberglass guy to make sure everything was in order for them to work together on the project of fixing the leak in the stuffing box and getting the shaft back in the transmission coupling. Judy and I were going to get a hotel room for the night, and then drive back to Merritt Island on Thursday, but at 1600 we decided we had plenty of time to get home that day and save the cost of an expensive hotel in Key West in high season! We packed up the food from the refrigerator, threw some away, put the cats in their cages, and left about 1715 to drive home.

Sanderling will be in the yard until we return around February 2nd to resume our cruise through the Keys.

Work completed while at Peninsular Marine, Key West:

– Remove and replace with epoxy and fiberglass the log for STBD stuffing box

– Refasten STBD and PORT stuffing boxes to log with 3M-5200

– Replace STBD transmission coupling with split coupling

– Replace STBD engine outboard-forward engine mount

– Realign both engines with shaft

– Wax the hull below the cap rail

– Paint the bottom (2 coats) with Interlux Micron Extra red

– Replace all exterior zincs

– Haul, wash, block, and splash

February 4, 2005 (Friday)

We returned to Key West via our car on the 3rd of February, bringing Julie and Khepera with us. We’ve gotten the drive down to about 6 ½ hours! We stayed in a motel that night since Sanderling was still blocked. The work on Sanderling didn’t get completed until the 3rd due to some complications aligning the engines and shafts. Mark had to replace one engine mount, and generally had to raise both engines various amounts to get everything aligned. Sanderling was placed back in the water around 1030 on the 4th, and Mark came over about 1300 to check to make sure everything was working OK. He tightened the stuffing boxes to stop the small leaks there, we ran the engines in gear, and checked the genset. We stayed at the bulkhead in the boat yard through the weekend, with the yard’s permission (there was no electricity or water), and then left early Monday morning before work got started in the yard.

During our stay at the bulkhead we visited some tourist spots in Key West: Mel Fisher’s Treasure Museum, the Truman Little White House, the Hemingway House, the lighthouse, and the botanical garden. As many days and nights as we’d been in Key West we hadn’t gotten to those things until this weekend. We also bought our perishables and last minute items. On Sunday we bought ice.

February 7, 2005 (Monday)

We departed Peninsular Marine about 0715 for Boca Chica Marina (the Navy base), and tied up to the service dock in order to pump out, fill our water tanks and take showers. We departed about 1000 for Oceanside marina (where we had the shaft problem) for fuel; while fueling, Judy moved the car to Oceanside Marina for “storage” for a few weeks with permission from the Dockmaster. We then departed about 1130 for Newfound Harbor which is about 26 miles away and about 3-4 miles inland from the ocean up a fairly well protected, but large, bay. We initially had difficulty getting the anchor to hold, but we moved to another area, dropped the anchor in sand (bottom was clear at about eight feet), and we held.

Day: 26.3 miles 3H30M

Trip: 522.3 miles 71H55M

February 8, 2005 (Tuesday)

We stayed the day in Newfound Harbor, working on Sanderling (she needed some cleaning after being in the yard), and took the dingy to a marina for black pepper – they had none and there was no place within walking distance to get some. I started reading “Old Man and the Sea” which we had purchased at the Hemingway House in Key West. Near the entrance to Newfound Harbor is a very exclusive resort/club/hotel, and we frequently saw a beautiful wooden express cruiser with guests aboard running down the Bay between the mainland and the resort which is on a separate small island with no access other than by water.

February 9, 2005 (Wednesday)

The anchor was up about 0830 and we headed back to the ocean. We were in the ocean and heading easterly toward Indian Key by 0905. It was a long day heading ENE against 2 foot swells and a 10-15 knot wind. We picked up a mooring at Indian Key about 1600 – there were a total of three moorings available and this was the last one. Several sailboats that came in later than we did had difficulty anchoring because of the grassy bottom. We took the dingy to a pier at the west side of the Key, and walked around the small island. Back around the 1840’s there was a small settlement on the island, headed by a man who was fairly wealthy (he was a “wrecker”) and convinced the Florida government to make Indian Key the county seat of Dade County! While walking around the island and reading the signs about the various buildings, we met a couple on a sailboat who were from Portland, Maine; they’d certainly traveled a long way from home.

Day: 54.8 miles 7H35M

Trip: 577.1 miles 79H30M

February 10, 2005 (Thursday)

The weather forecast was for strong winds (25 MPH) from the NE for the next several days, so we had decided it would be a good idea to go into a marina until the bad weather passed. We had called several different marinas as far south as Marathon, but none had any slips available. Finally Judy was able to find a marina fairly close at Snake Creek (Islamarada – Windley Key) that had space available along a dock. As we headed for Smuggler’s Cove Marina the steering was very sluggish, and when I checked the hydraulic fluid, I discovered that we had a leak near a junction in the lazarette and we had lost quite a bit of fluid. Fortunately, the leak was above the lines used by the auto pilot, so we were still able to steer using the auto pilot, but we were a little apprehensive about having to navigate a rather narrow and winding (hence, Snake Creek) channel to get to the marina, which was just on the north side of the Highway 1 bridge.

Nevertheless, the tide was right, and we entered the channel on a slack high tide, and were able to maneuver the channel as well as get into the marina without any problems. The high winds were forecast to last for 3-4 days, and we had company coming to visit (in Merritt Island) the next weekend, so we arranged to keep the slip for a month in order to get a more favorable rate for the slip (a monthly rental is quite a bit cheaper per day than a daily rate).

Day: 8.0 miles 1H20M

Trip: 585.1 miles 80H55M

We stayed several days on Sanderling in the marina at Windley Key (Snake River). During that time I worked on the steering problem and realized we needed some replacement hydraulic tubing for one area – no one locally had any of the right size, although I was able to get some compression fittings in case I had to make a temporary repair. We took a bus to Key West and got our car, and also saw Theater of the Sea with it’s dolphin show and sea life. We departed by car on the 15th of February to drive home to Merritt Island, bringing Julie and Khepera with us (again, poor cats!).

February 22, 2005 (Tuesday)

Our guests were Norm and Nancy Wulf. They arrived in Merritt Island yesterday. Judy worked at the hospital the night of the 21st, but as soon as she got home on Tuesday morning we departed for Sanderling – we had rented a car and the Wulf’s drove theirs since they were going to be onboard Sanderling for only a few days. We unloaded the cars and put the cats back aboard, then drove on to Marathon where the Wulf’s left their car to pick up when we all arrived in Marathon by boat, and we met their friends, had dinner, shopped for food for the next several days, and then drove back to Sanderling in our rental car.

February 23, 2005 (Wednesday)

Judy turned in the rental car and completed shopping while the rest of us prepared to get underway. I replaced a small section of the hydraulic steering line (I had found a source online while we were home), and it seemed to work. When Judy returned by taxi we were ready to depart for Lignumvitae Key (just several miles on the Bay side of the Keys). The trip over to Lignumvitae was quite beautiful, and the weather was marvelous. Our friends Norm and Nancy, were already beginning to realize why we enjoy being on Sanderling so much! At Lignumvitae Key, we picked up a mooring ball and spent the rest of the afternoon reading, relaxing, and chatting with our guests, the Wulfs.

Day: 9.2 miles 1H30M

Trip: 594.3 miles 82H25M

February 24, 2005 (Thursday)

With the Wulfs onboard, we are going to tour Lignumvitae Key and take it easy for a day before heading south to Marathon (Boot Key). We couldn’t locate the boat dock for the State Park on the chart, so had to do some exploring in order to find it. After checking out the west side of the island without finding any dock, we turned around and headed back out around the south side of the island to the eastern side. On the way, we snagged a crab pot; after stopping and anchoring to see if we could free it and deciding to head back to the mooring on one engine, the pot suddenly came loose and we continued on our way to explore the east side of the Key. We found the dock, and gingerly made our way up to it in four feet of water – the ranger on the dock assured us that the depth alongside was at least four feet. There was one 26 foot sailboat at the dock, and we were able to come in behind it and tie up.

The park/key was very interesting. The only way to get to the key is by boat, and tourists come via small craft from Lower Matecumbe Key (on US Rte 1). Several boat loads came while we were tying up. We joined the group lead by the ranger/botanist who gave the tour and accompanying lecture. There are many unique botanical species growing in various “climates” on the key. It’s hard to imagine that some species grow where the elevation is one foot above water level and a totally different kind of vegetation grows where it is three feet above water level! There is an old house on the island where one of the earlier owners lived with his family; it is now used as a museum. In the yard is a huge Banyan tree and strangler fig. The mosquitoes were quite active!

After the tour, which lasted about an hour, and looking through the house and grounds, we boarded Sanderling and went back to the mooring ball for the remainder of the day and evening. We observed a beautiful sunset, and again lamented about the joys of cruising!

Day: 5.0 miles 1H15M

Trip: 599.3 miles 83H40M

February 25, 2005 (Friday)

We left the mooring at mid morning and headed southerly for Boot Key and Marathon (the town). Judy was able to locate one marina in Marathon that had a slip available for the next two nights; otherwise, we were going to drop the Wulfs off and find a place to anchor for the night. The water was quite peaceful with the wind out of the south-east, but when we turned to the south-east to go under Seven Mile Bridge before entering Boot Key Harbor it got a little rough for our guests when we encountered 2-3 foot waves. We pulled into Burdine’s Marina, which is very near the channel spanned by Seven Mile Bridge. We all showered, and Norm got their car. We ate dinner at the Quay where Judy and I had eaten Thanksgiving dinner in 2002 on our drive to Key West for the holidays.

Day: 38.5 miles 5H25M

Trip: 637.7 miles 89H05M

On the 26th we had lunch with friends of the Wulfs at Sombrero Marina Dockside restaurant. We then shopped for food for the remainder of our trip home on Sanderling. Then the Wulfs departed via their car, for a visit with Nancy’s aunt in Boca Raton, before returning to northern Virginia. We were sad to see them leave, and hope they will join us again soon!

February 27, 2005 (Sunday)

We departed Marathon at about 0800 to head back into Florida Bay and north to Flamingo, Florida, on the very southern tip of the mainland. Despite a forecast calling for 15 knot winds from the south, the Bay was fairly quiet, although it was a little rough on our way out of Marathon and under Seven Mile Bridge. The trip was about 35 miles, with quartering 2-3 foot seas. We arrived several hours before high tide, and anchored several miles off Flamingo while the water depth increased enough that we wouldn’t have to worry about going aground in the shallow entrance channel.

Flamingo was a real town around the turn of the 19th century, but now the only thing there are buildings and operations associated with Everglades National Park. All the concessions are operated by a corporation which seems to have a corner on the national park market! There is a small marina (at $0.75 per foot per night) with new concrete floating piers, several restaurants, boat, kayak and bike rentals, a lodge, cabins, tour boats, fishing boats, walking trails, and similar concessions, all available to the public.

Day: 44.5 miles 5H50M

Trip: 682.2 miles 94H55M

Pizza for dinner at the “pub” style casual restaurant—the pizza and the service was good!

February 28, 2005 (Monday)

We took a nature boat ride into the Everglades on a pontoon boat carrying about 40 passengers. We saw American salt-water crocodiles sunning very close to the dock where we boarded the tour boat, many birds, fishing boats, canoes and kayaks along the way. A crewman gave a good naturalist lecture explaining recent natural events creating the Everglades, mangroves, various types of trees, and the effect of hurricane Andrew in 1992 and the recent hurricanes on the Everglades.

We ate dinner at the more expensive restaurant at the park; both the service and the food was terrible!

March 1, 2005 (Tuesday)

We decided to stay a third night to await a wind shift from west and north, to north and north-east in order to avoid a rough ride around the south-west corner of the Florida mainland. Cooler temperatures were forecast to accompany the wind shift. It had been quite hot for the past several days, and the presence of killer mosquitoes at sundown each night for several hours kept us confined to the interior of the boat or inside restaurants. We had come prepared with Avon Skin-So-Soft to ward off the mosquitoes, and new screens for the saloon doors and aft companionway hatch so we could at least have a little ventilation through the boat when we had to avoid bugs! The new screens also acted as “cat keepers” to prevent the cats from roaming the decks and jumping ship to the docks; we hadn’t thought about that when we made up the new screens, but we used them more to keep the cats inside when we were at docks than we did to keep mosquitoes out.

We hiked a nearby nature trail around Eco Pond and saw alligators, little blue heron, ibis, great blue herons, moorhens, and turtles.

A young couple was in an older sailboat a few slips away. Their engine had quit when they came in behind us on Sunday, and they had to tow their sailboat into the slip. We saw them frequently, and learned that they were from Alaska and were sailing around the southeastern United States during the Alaskan winters. They lived in a cabin they had built out in the wilderness. I suppose living on their old sailboat wasn’t much different than the cabin in the woods.

The marina had a free pumpout for boats in the marina, and when we tried to use the pumpout late this afternoon the marina employee on duty didn’t know anything about the adapter necessary to connect the pumpout hose to the pumpout fitting on Sanderling, even though two different employees had assured us earlier that the adapter was readily available. A supervisor was called in who claimed that he had been working there for six years and had never heard of such a thing. Finally, after doing our best to convince them that such things did exist, the supervisor and the employee found the adapter and we were able to pump out the holding tank prior to resuming our journey.

We ate dinner on Sanderling!

March 2, 2005 (Wednesday)

The NOAA weather-guesser got it wrong, again! Seems like boaters are always complaining about the inability of NOAA to provide accurate forecasts, and I guess that is the reason for so many private forecasters who get paid to provide routing information to commercial boating interests and private boaters who can afford the service. The wind didn’t shift to the north-east, so we motored into a 15 knot wind out of the north all the way to Little Shark River – about 35 miles to the north-west of Flamingo and still in the Everglades National Park. The charts showed the Little Shark River to be navigable for quite some distance inland, so we entered the calm river and cruised about eight miles upstream to its confluence with the Shark River. We didn’t see any alligators or crocodiles, but the mangrove trees were very impressive. On our way back downstream we came across a lone kayaker with an outrigger and sail looking for a “chickee” – a covered sleeping platform built at the edge of the rivers for the use of people who are boating through the wilderness trails.

We anchored in the mouth of the Little Shark River about 1500. There were several sailboats in the anchorage; by 1800 there were about a dozen boats anchored – seems that this is a favorite anchorage for boats transiting the south-west coast of Florida, undoubtedly because it is so well protected. The young couple from Alaska were there, also.

Day: 46.0 miles 7H0M

Trip: 728.2 miles 101H55M

March 3, 2005 (Thursday)

We were underway at 0815 on this overcast day, in order to run as far as we could before it got dark. We had about 110 miles to go by tomorrow night to get to the area of Sanibel Island and Fort Myer, where friends Bob and Sara live and whom we would like to meet for dinner on Friday. From Little Shark River we headed NNW and then into Gullivan Bay, and from there into several different rivers and channels which were all inland. We enjoyed the sights of the homes and various boating and fishing activities located near the water, but had to be careful about where we were heading in order to avoid a number of very shallow areas. By about 1630 we had passed Marco Island and were heading toward the ocean and Big Marco Pass, then back inland to proceed parallel to the ocean in an inland waterway which went as far as Naples, Florida. We anchored about six miles north of Marco Island, at a small, quiet body of water between a barrier island and Little Marco Island. The body of water was rather long and narrow, with nice homes on spacious lots in a “woodsy” setting; the far end of the body of water opened onto the ocean at Little Marco Pass, but that pass is too shallow for a boat of Sanderling’s draft. There was only one other cruising boat anchored in the area. We had one heck of a time getting the anchor to hold, but after trying four or five times in two different areas, we finally set the anchor in roughly” mid-stream” and had to use rather short scope to keep Sanderling off either shore, although fairly deep water ran close to each shore. The other boat in the area had its anchor set about “mid-stream” with its stern close to shore and an anchor on shore to hold the boat in position. This method of anchoring is called a “Bahama moor.”

We talked with Bob and Sara as well as arranged a marina for tomorrow night in Cape Coral (across the river from Ft. Myers. They are going to meet us mid-afternoon at the marina (we hope we’ll be there in time).

Day: 68.2 miles 9H0M

Trip: 796.4 miles 110H55M

March 4, 2005 (Friday)

We again left about 0815 in order to get to the Sanibel Island/Fort Myer area as early as possible. We stayed inland and out of the ocean until we were just a few miles south of Naples, and then turned west through Gordon Pass and back out into the ocean. We entered San Carlos Pass (near Sanibel Island) about 1300, and then turned onto the Okeechobee River (and the Okeechobee Waterway) about 1340. By 1445 we were at a fuel dock near the marina to get fuel, and were in our slip by 1510. Bob and Sarah showed up about 1600 and after washing the boat (covered with salt water from the ocean) and changing clothes, we went out for a delightful dinner at a restaurant in Ft. Myers.

Day: 47.1 miles 6H55M

Trip: 843.5 miles 117H50M

March 5, 2005 (Saturday)

We left Cape Coral Marina at 0830 heading toward our friend’s home and dock near Ortona on the Okeechobee Waterway (about 15 miles west of Lake Okeechobee). After two locks which each took about 40 minutes to transit (wait time and locking time) we arrived at Mark and Joyce’s home about 1645. The cruise through the Okeechobee River and Canal were interesting, with many beautiful homes and small towns nestled right up against the bank. We were reminded of our trip through the Erie Canal in the summer of 2001, except there were no verdant hills in the background, only swamps, evergreens, and palm trees.

Mark and Joyce live on a small canal just off the Okeechobee Waterway, in a very protected area. Mark had just completed renovating a second dock, and he graciously offered the dock to us so we were able to tie up just behind Winnie-The-Pooh and have electricity to keep the refrigerator running while we went back to Merritt Island for a few days.

Day: 49.1 miles 8H15M

Trip: 892.6 miles 126H05M

Judy traveled by car and Greyhound bus to get to the Ft. Myers airport that evening where she picked up a rental car and then drove back to Mark and Joyce’s home so we could drive to Merritt Island the next day.

We drove home on Sunday with the cats who by now, rode in the car OUTSIDE their cages…we found they travel much better that way!

March 9, 2005 (Wednesday)

We drove from Merritt Island to Mark and Joyce’s home, then loaded the cats and other supplies onboard Sanderling and left about 1015 for the final leg home. At about 1230 we transited the Moore Haven Lock in about 15 minutes, and then we were in the canal that runs around the rim of Lake Okeechobee. It had been raining most of the morning with a light drizzle, and the rain continued on and off throughout the day. We elected to cross the lake rather than continuing on the rim route in order to save time and get through the Port Mayaka Lock on the east side of the lake before night fall. What a mistake (although we made it). The wind had picked up to about 15-20 MPH out of the north, and it continued to rain. We had a very rough transit heading north on one leg of the transit, and had to slow down to about 6 MPH to handle the rough waves a little easier. Then we turned north-east for a long leg of 15 miles and the wave action became a little easier due to the fact that they were 45 degrees off the port bow rather than dead on the bow. By the time we got about 8 miles from the lock, the northern shore of the lake started to provide a little protection from the wind, but the rain continued. Needless to say, we drove from the lower/inside steering station for the entire transit of the lake, and had the radar on all of the time in order to spot the buoys and day-markers identifying the channel through what was otherwise a fairly shallow lake. The shallowness of the lake caused the rough and confused waves in such relatively light wind.

We entered the Port Mayaka Lock at 1750 as it was starting to get dark – the rain was still coming down. We asked the lockmaster for information about where we could anchor close by (our guide books had given us several locations, but it’s always good to get some local knowledge) and he suggested that we tie up to one of the dolphins (made from multiple pilings tied together) just beyond the lock. As it turned out, there were about six dolphins in a row along the north side of the St. Lucie Canal which runs from the Port Mayaka Lock to the St. Lucie Lock. The dolphins are used by the commercial tugs and tows which ply the area when they need to tie up waiting for the lock before entering Lake Okeechobee. There was a tug and one barge alongside two dolphine (perhaps three – it was difficult to tell) and one other trawler tied to one of the dolphins. The wind was out of the north, so we just nosed Sanderling up against the dolphin, and Judy took a line from the sampson post through the hawse pipe and around a huge cleat attached to one of the pilings on the dolphin; the light wind kept us well off the dolphin, but we took another line from the port mid-ship cleat at tied it to another dolphin cleat in order to keep Sanderling at a slight angle to the prevailing wind and to provide a little extra security. We speculated as to whether we would be required to move if a tug and tow arrived, but none did so we didn’t have to find out.

We heard another tug heading east talking by radio with the lock tender, and soon it was going through the lock. As it turned out the tug had delivered a barge on the west coast of Florida and was heading back to the east coast; it tied up to a concrete pier which we had passed and spent the night there. We listened to the captain of that new tug talking with the captain and a woman on the tug tied to the dolphin, and certainly learned more about tug captains than we cared to know. We had always thought that of all the people driving boats, tug captains surely knew what they were doing and had a great deal of experience. Well, we were soon disabused of that idea. The captain of the “dolphin tug” asked many questions of the “pier tug” about how to get across the lake, whether he would go across the lake with a barge in the weather forecast for the next day, how to get up the west coast to where he had to deliver the barge, etc. The “dolphin tug” captain had obviously been drinking, and the “pier tug” captain seemed to be doing his best to get rid of him. We couldn’t help but wonder whether the “dolphin tug” captain had much experience and why he didn’t seem to know anything about where he was going!

Day: 54.2 miles 7H55M

Trip: 946.8 miles 134H00M

March 10, 2005 (Thursday)

We had about 120 miles to go to reach our slip at Manatee Cove Marina, so we were underway at 0725 this morning. The sky was clear with a few clouds, and even though it was a chilly 50 degrees, the wind was very slight at around 5 MPH.

We continued eastbound on the St. Lucie Canal, which does not have the beautiful homes and small villages we had seen on the canal and river west of Lake Okeechobee. By 1020 we had entered the St. Lucie Lock at mile 15 (from Stuart and the ICW) and entered the St. Lucie River beyond the lock at 1045. As we approached Stuart the nice homes again appeared along the river banks, and in Stuart itself, near the mouth of the St. Lucie River, the homes are, again, truly magnificent.

At 1245 we turned north on the ICW and were back in familiar territory – we had passed the St. Lucie River entrance when we were southbound, on December 8th. We cruised past Ft. Pierce and Vero Beach, and anchored for the night in a familiar anchorage at Hole-In-The-Wall Island, about five miles north of Vero Beach. We knew we’d be home the next day!

Day: 79.5 miles 10H40M

Trip: 1026.3 miles 144H40M

March 11, 2005 (Friday)

Although the sky was cloudy when we got up, there was blue sky beyond and the temperature up to 57 degrees. We were underway at 0815 and cruised in familiar territory all the way back to Manatee Cove Marina. We have cruised this area on three or four different trips, so are getting quite familiar with the twists and turns of the channel. At 1220 we went under the Eau Galle Bridge at Melbourne and turned east to leave the ICW and head up the Banana River to Patrick AFB and our marina. We were back in our slip at 1320 after an uneventful day.

Day: 39.0 miles 5H05M

Trip: 1065 miles 149H45M (entire trip – Merritt Island to Merritt Island)

Total engine hours 2780 to 2951 = 171 hours

Stats for trip from Key West – Dry Tortugas – Merritt Island

Days underway: 23

Nights anchored: 16

Nights moorings/dolphin: 4

Nights marina (not storage): 10

Days yard/marina: 49

2002 Move to Florida

Sanderling trip to Florida – November 2002

(Written by Bob, unless otherwise indicated)

Preparation in Solomons, Maryland – October 28 to November 1

Judy drove me to the airport in Orlando, Florida, for a 0730 flight on Monday, October 28th, arriving in Washington, DC, about noon. I rented a car and drove to Solomons, where Sanderling was undergoing last minute preparations to be launched when I got there about 1445. She had been out of the water since June 16th at Washburn’s Boat Yard, so I anticipated that she’d be fairly dusty inside. While at Washburn’s, the yard had replaced the raw water pump assembly and exhaust risers on both engines, along with the exhaust hoses; they had also installed a new sump filter which should prevent the discharge overboard of any oil and diesel fuel which might accidently accumulate in the bilge (happens sometimes when changing filters, or as a consequence of a leak in a fuel line), the hull was waxed and polished, and the bottom and running gear painted with anti-fouling paint (to keep the barnacles and other marine growth off). The only thing left to do when I got there was to paint the areas of the hull where stanchions had been holding Sanderling upright while she was out of the water. Shortly after I arrived, she was back in the water. A mechanic came aboard to tighten up the stuffing boxes (a mechanical device that clamps around the shafts and allows the shafts to turn but still keep water from coming aboard) and check out the repairs with the engines running. All went well, and Sanderling and I left Washburn’s about 1600 heading to our old marina at Point Patience (Navy Recreation Center, Solomons).

There was still a lot to do to prepare Sanderling for the trip south to Florida before we could get underway. First things first – I had to do some major grocery shopping for the food and other things that Judy and I had discussed. We estimated that the trip would take about 14 days, weather permitting. It is difficult to judge the length of time exactly, since weather plays such an important role in determining your speed, and whether you can get underway at all. Even though this trip is on the Intra Coastal Waterway and not in the ocean (unlike the last two major trips), there are several big bodies of water to cross in North Carolina: the Albermarle Sound and the Pimlico Sound. Both are big and shallow, and even though the ICW crosses but a portion of each, a wind of 15-20 knots from the wrong direction can create very steep 4-5 foot waves that are very uncomfortable. Since Sanderling cruises at a speed of only 7.5 knots (8.5 MPH), it takes us a while to get anyplace and consequently when we have to cruise through these open bodies of water we can be exposed to rough conditions for quite some time. Once we get past Pimlico Sound and the Neuse River we will be less dependent on the weather. All this is to say that we planned on food and supplies for about two weeks, hoping that we’d be able to purchase other items, if needed, along the way. In addition, I had to clean up the interior of the boat, find things that had been stored out of the way in June that we’d need on the trip, check all the electronic gear to ensure that it was working, upload data from a laptop computer to two GPS units that we’d be using to help us keep track of our position, and change fuel filters – nothing major, but all together it would take the rest of the week before Judy arrived.

Tuesday was a shopping day. I needed to buy some items in order to complete the rest of my to do list, so figured I might as well get the major running around done up front. The Patuxent River Naval Air Station is only a short distance across the river, so that was my stop for groceries. A couple of marine supply stores and hardware store supplied the rest of the items on the list. Then the work began on the maintenance items, and the last thing was to give the interior of the boat a good dusting, cleaning, and to vacuum the carpets. Charlie Matterson was joining us for the first part of the trip, and he’d be quartered in the forward V-berth; consequently, I had to remove all my tools and supplies from that “storage” area so Charlie would have a place to sleep! Sanderling was ready by Friday afternoon.

Crew assembles – November 1 and 2

Judy was arriving at Washington National Airport about 1930 on Friday, so I drove up to Washington to meet her. We stopped at Red, Hot and Blue on the way back for dinner, and wouldn’t you know it – a waiter dropped a container of marinara sauce nearby, and some of it splashed on Judy’s new off-white fleece pullover! The waiter was very good about helping clean up her pullover, but soda water will only do so much!

Charlie Matterson arrived on Saturday morning, and after unloading his gear the four of us drove over to Lexington Park to turn in the rental car. On the way we had to stop at several places to try to find a gasket for the sump filter which the yard had failed to install along with the filter; as a consequence the filter leaked water back into the bilge and was useless. I ended up bypassing the filter since I couldn’t find the needed gasket.

November 2 – Underway on Chesapeake Bay: Solomons to Point Lookout Marina

We had hoped to get underway about noon on Saturday and anchor for the night south of where the Potomac River flows into the Chesapeake, but the problem with the sump filter delayed our departure about an hour. By the time we got down the Chesapeake at the north side of the Potomac (the Potomac is almost eight miles across where it enters Chesapeake Bay) we knew we wouldn’t have enough daylight left to cross the Potomac and find the river we wanted to anchor in. We made the decision to head about four miles up the north shore of the Potomac to a marina for the night. About 1600 I called the marina on the VHF and told them we’d be there about 1700 and the dock master to said he’d be expecting us and would meet us on the dock if we’d give him a call as we approached. When we did get in the area about 1720 we called and received no response; after we tied up to a dock I went to the office and it was locked up tight. We ate in a restaurant that is right next to the marina, and turned in early after a long day.

This time of year in the Chesapeake the sun rises about 0630 and sets about 1700, so we had to take advantage of all the daylight available by leaving as soon as the we could safely do so in the morning; we planned to always stop before it got dark.

Day: 31.6 nm 4H20M

November 3 – Chesapeake Bay: Point Lookout Marina to Norfolk

The next morning we were up at 0530, and were underway shortly before sunrise once we could see the water – about 0620. Our course took us on a south-easterly course down and across the Chesapeake toward Smith Point (where the south/Virginia shore of the Potomac River meets Chesapeake Bay). Because of shoal water which extends about 1 mile out into Chesapeake Bay, we were heading out into Chesapeake Bay before turning south. As we approached Smith Point, the water became very rough due to a southerly wind on Chesapeake Bay, a flooding tide (northbound) on Chesapeake Bay, and the outflowing current from the Potomac River. Waves started building rolling southerly down Chesapeake Bay; the further east we went down the Potomac River, the worse it became. At one point a series of three or four waves in succession hit us, turned Sanderling sideways to the waves, and we rolled over about 45 degrees. Everything that wasn’t fastened down went flying – drawers came open, cupboard contents spilled onto the floor, charts and anything else that we were using moved to the starboard (right) side of the boat. We got the boat back on a course where the waves were hitting us on the port quarter (left-stern), and got everything put back more or less. Fortunately, Judy had the forethought to move the microwave and TV onto the aft cabin floor and put a shock cord around the coffee maker to hold it in place, or we could have had a real disaster. From that point on we had to steer off to the east taking the waves at about a 45 degree angle on the port (left) side, and then finally cleared Smith Point and headed south. As we proceeded down the Bay the waves decreased, the tide turned so we had a favorable current, and by 1300 or so it was quiet and warm enough that we grilled bratwurst on the outside grill for sandwiches for lunch! What a change in a few hours.

The remainder of the day was rather uneventful compared to the morning. As we approached Norfolk we tried to reach the Navy operated marina at the Naval Operating Base (NOB) which is right on the south end of Chesapeake Bay and a perfect place to stop for the night. No one answered by VHF or by telephone (when Judy called them she just got a recorded message). We also tried to reach anyone on a boat in the marina, and someone did eventually answer us and told us to just come on in and find an empty slip. We tied up just about dark. Fortunately, there was another boat that came in shortly after we did and they were able to give us the combination to the security gates and the heads. We didn’t even see an office, nor did we see anyone around the marina prior to leaving Monday morning about 0730 and our first day on the ICW.

Charlie adds: For dinner we ate on board and made rice pilaf and heated up kuru fasulye which Mujgan had made for us.

Day: 76.9 nm 10H20M

Trip: 108.5 nm (124.9 sm) 14H40M

November 4th and the ICW – Norfolk, VA to Coinjock,, NC

The Intra Coastal Waterway (proper name) starts in Norfolk at the Elizabeth River. It runs along the east coast all the way to Miami, following various rivers, bays, and man-made canals (other than the stretch from Miami, Florida to Key West). It is measured in statute miles (rather than nautical miles as are most bodies of water) and extends from mile 0 at the start of the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, to mile 1244 at Key West, Florida. We’re heading to Melbourne, Florida, which is about mile 914. A statute mile is 5,280 feet, whereas a nautical mile is 6,000 feet in length; seven nautical miles is the same distance as eight statute miles.

The weather has been cool, so far, and varied from overcast to clear skies. We’ve been steering Sanderling from the inside steering station which is on the starboard (right) side at the forward end of the salon. Forward of the salon on the inside of the boat and down a short ladder (steep steps) is the V-berth, with a hanging locker to starboard and a head with sink and shower to port. From the inside steering station you can control every aspect of the boat – steer, control the engines and transmissions (forward, neutral, back), listen to and talk on the VHF radio, watch a radar display, control the auto-pilot, control a heater that runs on diesel fuel, keep track of various systems, and most important: stay out of the weather and keep warm!

The top steering station has some, but not all, of the same instruments as the lower (inside) steering station. It is the highest deck on the boat, above the salon, and provides a good vantage point from which to watch all the corners of the boat, and everything around it. We’ve used the upper steering station when entering and leaving slips, due to the good visibility, even though the air temperature is rather chilly in the morning and evening when we’re going in and out of a slip.

Today was no different in terms of the weather: overcast, 45 degrees, barometer 30.35 and the wind less than 10 knots. We were underway at 0730. We had slept in a little later than normal because there are some bridges in Norfolk that are too low for us to go under and do not open during the morning and evening rush hours. We had planned our arrival at the first bridge to correspond with the first opening after rush hour at 0900.

The course from the Navy marina took us out into the main shipping channel and south past the line of ships which line the channel on the naval base. We saw four aircraft carriers, and numerous smaller ships. In the same channel we saw our first bottle nose dolphins (porpoises). As we entered the Elizabeth River and passed mile zero of the ICW, we realized we were going to be a little late for the opening of the first bridge. We made the 0930 opening. Bridges along the ICW are not consistent in height, or opening schedule. Some open on demand, that is, you can contact the bridge tender on the VHF radio and ask that the bridge be opened, and if there isn’t any problem, it will be; sometimes the tender will ask that the first boat wait for other boats to catch up so that several boats can pass through the bridge at the same time. Other bridges open only on a fixed schedule: on the hour, or every hour and half-hour. Near large population areas they frequently do not open during morning and evening rush hours.

We passed through six bridges in distance of about 10 miles, then entered a lock which lifted us about two feet (hardly worth the effort) and then we were on our way with only a few bridges for which we had to wait to open. Other bridges were high enough that we could pass under them. We chose to follow the “Virginia Cut” which goes out to the east and then south into Albermarle Sound, rather than taking the “Dismal Swamp Canal” which goes south through a canal and then rejoins the ICW and the “Virginia Cut” route. Either route is about the same distance. We chose the route we did because the Dismal Swamp Canal has a lock at each end opening only at 0900 and 1500 while some work is being done. This would have resulted in some delay waiting for the southerly lock to open, and then we would have had a problem getting to an area with good anchorages and marinas before sunset.

We spent the day traveling along a rather narrow channel through swamps lined with trees, past industrial areas, a few marinas, large shallow lake-like bodies of water with narrow channels marked with day-markers, and narrow land-cuts.

Since there were three of us onboard, we set up a watch rotation so that all of us could take part in all aspects of the boat’s operation, as well as have some personal time to read, sleep, or just relax. One person was responsible for steering the boat and making the decision about speed, passing boats, and the general operation of the boat. A second person kept track of the boat’s position on the navigational chart, watched for buoys and day-markers, and generally helped the first person. The third person could spend time doing whatever he/she pleased, but could be called upon to help the other two if things got busy. We rotated on an hourly basis.

After being underway for 9 hours and 15 minutes, we pulled into a marina alongside the ICW at Coinjock, North Carolina, at ICW mile 49.5.

The dock at Coinjock runs parallel with the ICW, so we literally just pulled off to the side and tied up to the dock. After tying up, we refueled and filled the water tanks. The two fuel tanks hold a total of 150 gallons, and the two water tanks hold 125 gallons.

Fuel: 77.2 gallons diesel

Day: 57 sm 9H15M

Trip: 181.9 sm 23 H55M.

November 5th ICW – Coinjock, NC, to Dowry Creek, near Belhaven, NC

The temperature was still chilly (50 degrees) with a slight overcast. We were underway at 0625, which was about the time we could see the water clearly enough to navigate safely.

Shortly after leaving the marina I noticed that the inside port engine-hour meter was not working – it had stopped at hour 2416. Not a big deal, but that was the meter I normally used to keep track of the hours the engines run.

We entered some larger bodies of water approaching Albermarle Sound. The wide stretches of water had a very narrow channel deep enough for boats, and because of shoaling that is caused by shifting mud in the current, navigation between the day marks became critical. At one point we suddenly found ourselves in four feet of water and came to a stop, then turned slightly to the left and headed slowly back to where we believed the channel to be. This type of occurrence would become rather common over the remainder of the trip.

Albermarle Sound is a large, shallow body of water which is bounded on the east by barrier islands and the towns of Manteo and Kitty Hawk, among others. Once we were on the sound itself the water was a fairly consistent depth of over 15 feet and we didn’t have to worry about staying in a narrowly defined channel.

As we were approaching the highway bridge that crosses the ICW on the sound, we were boarded by the Coast Guard for a safety inspection. The fast inflatable boat they were using was heading north at a good speed, and as they got close I noticed that it had USCG markings and four crew members dressed in dark blue heavy jump suits with life vests. As they passed by, their boat slowed down and came up along our port side, about 10 yards distance. I happened to be steering at the time, and the auto pilot was keeping us on course. I opened the salon door to let them know we were slowing down, and they asked if we had been boarded by the Coast Guard within the past year. When I told them no, they said they’d like to come aboard for an inspection (it’s the type of request you can’t refuse). We agreed that they’d come around to the starboard side so that I could steer and watch out for them. As they got close they asked if we had any weapons onboard, and I told them that we did not, and how many people were on board. The operator of the USCG boat literally drove right up against Sanderling’s hull, I opened the gate in the railing, and three of the crew jumped aboard while the fourth kept their boat on a course parallel to and slightly behind Sanderling. One of the crew members on Sanderling introduced himself as the team leader, and started through his checklist. First the boat documentation (USCG issued title), then the engine room to make sure their were no leaks, then fire extinguishers, throw able flotation device, life preservers, and the heads to make sure the Y-valves were locked in the inboard position (to the holding tank). They were extremely courteous and professional. I signed an acknowledgment of the inspection with the notation that we had passed, and it was all over with in about 10 minutes at the most. The operator of the USCG boat came up along the starboard side again, the three crew departed by stepping quickly from Sanderling’s deck to their boat, and we were on our way again. All the time the inspection was going on we continued to motor through the water, although at a slightly reduced speed. Judy steered while I showed the inspection team the things they wanted to see, and Charlie stood by to help Judy if she needed anything. Once the Coasties left, we were on our way again at full cruising speed of 8.5 MPH!

Early in the afternoon we entered the Alligator River/Pungo River Canal. This is a long land cut that stretches for about 20 miles between the Alligator River on the north, and the Pungo River on the south. We cruised through swamps and forests on both sides, with an occasional house and bridge. The cut is very straight for almost its entire length, and there were always a number of boats in sight, most heading south.

Judy here, my turn to write for a while! 🙂 (Until Bob identifies himself as the narrator!) As we neared the end of the above mentioned canal, we had a decision to make–where to spend the night! It had begun raining earlier in the day, and all weather reports we received indicated there was more to come! There were two marinas to chose from and, fortunately for us, we chose the best one! Because of the rain and clouds it was nearly dark when we tied up to the docks at Dowry Creek Marina at 1700. What a welcomed site–the dockmaster and marina manager both met us at the dock in their bright yellow slickers to help tie up. We were soaked from the rain by the time we got the lines to dock, but spirits were high! The “greeting crew” from the marina was warm and friendly, and extremely helpful. We had dinner on Sanderling that evening, and Charlie, the Turkish Chef, delighted our taste buds with a wonderful Turkish dish!

Weather predictions from the Marina folks, as well as NOAA radio and TV, indicated continued rain the following day accompanied by strong winds. As we had the large Pungo River awaiting us, we made the decision to remain at Dowry Creek Marina another day/night.

Day: 83.0 sm 10H35M

Trip: 264.9 sm 34H30M

November 6th ICW – Dowry Creek, NC.

As predicted it was quite windy and rained the entire day. We spent the day catching up on e-mail, reading, boat maintenance, etc. In the late afternoon we rode into the small town of Belhaven, about 3 miles away, in the courtesy van provided by the marina. The town is quite small, and there were only a few businesses, but I managed to find some gloves in a store that claimed: ACE Hardware/Gourmet Wine and Cheese/Radio Shack! Yes, they indeed had some of everything they claimed! 🙂 We walked the few blocks from the little town to the OTHER Marina in the area, the River Forest Marina. This marina in directly off the Pungo River, which is a rather large body of water, and is very susceptible to rough water with North winds. Also, we were told by our marina-mates at Dowry Creek that the personnel of the River Forest Marina were not as friendly and helpful as the dockmaster/marina management at Dowry Creek. So, why were we here?? We had been told the restaurant at River Forest Marina had a world-class dinner buffet! Well, we had dinner with a beautiful view of the Pungo River, but we wouldn’t classify the food as “world class”, but the “cook” tried, I suppose! 🙂 After dinner we called OUR marina, the owner/manager personally drove over to Belhaven and gave us a lift back to the Marina and Sanderling! Absolutely first-class service from this Marina, and we will go back if in the area again!

November 7th ICW – Dowry Creek, NC, to Beaufort, NC

A beautiful day for cruising! Skies are clear, 50 degrees, barometer reading 29.9, and winds are less than 10 kts. We were underway at 0625, and observed a beautiful sunrise at 0630. As we entered Pungo River with marker R “4″ to port, we were thankful we had stayed in the marina the previous day. The wind was blowing from the North, directly down the river, and gave us a taste of what it could be like in 20-30 kt winds! This river is quite wide, and feels like being on a sound or bay, it is so wide. After 10 miles of the Pungo, the water didn’t have a chance to become smooth, as we entered the Pamlico River, which opens into the Pamlico sound. Crossing this wide body of water was uneventful, though a couple of “crazy” young men on a sailboat, hailing port Sausalito, CA, decided to pass us on our starboard side, close enough to shake hands–and they had the sails up!! We made a sharp turn port, and they just smiled! Ah, youth!! 🙂

This was a day for crossing large bodies of water. After crossing the Pamlico River, we entered the Goose River. Cruising was quite nice by this time. When we entered the Bay River, another large body of water, at 1018, the waves were less than 1 foot, winds were less than 10, and it had warmed up to the day’s high of 60 degrees! Needless to say, so far this trip has been steered from inside Sanderling’s warm salon! The Neuse River was our last large body of water for the day, as we entered Adams’s Creek at 1248. From here the ICW took us to our planned stop for the evening–historic Beaufort, North Carolina. We tied up to the docks at Beaufort Docks Marina at 1515, having cruised 71.7 statue miles. The Beaufort Docks Marina is in the downtown area of this neat little town, so we quickly secured Sanderling, and went for a walking tour. We found a grocery mart and purchased a few items, and walked along the boardwalk. For dinner this evening, we found a restaurant, “Stillwater Café and Market”, that overlooked the water and served salad! We were ready for fresh vegetables and roughage! 🙂 Though the meal was rather expensive, it was delicious, and the service was excellent! The weather was beautiful, though cool, and the temperatures this night and the next morning were in the upper 30’s!

Charlie adds: Beaufort also has a fascinating marine museum detailing the history of man and sea along the North Carolina coast. Of particular interest was the rather extensive display on how sea rescue evolved over time. From the map that show all the ship wrecks along that coast it looks like they had a great deal of practice. Not exactly the kind of map you wanted to see just before setting out again.

Day:71.7 sm 8H45M

Trip: 336.6 sm 43H15M

November 8th ICW – Beaufort, NC, to Wrightsville, NC

Bob back again, writing from the comfort of our house in Melbourne, and trying to remember some of the details of the past three weeks.

Although the waters, country side, weather, and boating conditions changed from day to day, and sometimes hour to hour, the memory has a difficult time remembering events and incidents which seemed memorable at the time, but now fade together. Next time we’re going to keep a separate notebook where we can jot down things as they occur.

The weather was clear, the temperature was 37 degrees, and winds calm when we left Beaufort. We had to make a south-easterly jog toward the ocean, and then cut back to the north-west in a different channel as we worked our way back onto the ICW. There were a number of other boats leaving about the same time (0640) and it helped to have someone to lead the way through the maze of buoys. After returning to the ICW at Morehead City which is just west of Beaufort, the ICW runs due west for a number of miles. It wasn’t long before we saw dolphins again, and from this point on would see them frequently swimming in the water ahead of the boat, breaking the surface in the typical dolphin fashion. We never did see any playing in the bow wave, or jumping into the air like you can see at water exhibits, but they were always fun to watch.

We had to wait for two bridge openings today, and those waits slowed us down a bit. We pulled into the Wrightsville Marina at 1730 after waiting a short while for a very large motor vessel to tie up at the same dock. We fueled at our assigned spot, took showers, and then went out to dinner at a restaurant located in the marina. Charlie and I had their combination baby back ribs and BBQ chicken, and had enough that Judy and I had the leftovers for dinner the following night.

The refrigerator still wasn’t working, so we had to rely on our cooler and a good supply of ice purchased along the way to keep our perishables cool.

Charlie had to be back in Rockville, Maryland, for business meetings on Monday, and it was obvious that we weren’t going to make Charleston, SC, in time for him to catch a plane. Wrightsville Beach was only a short distance from the Wilmington, SC, airport, so he arranged to pick up a rental car at the airport on Saturday morning, and a taxi to get him from the marina to the airport. (We later heard from Charlie; he was home by early afternoon.) What had taken us seven days on the water took him less than seven hours to drive by car!

Fuel: 91.1 gallons diesel

Day: 82.5 sm 10H50M

Trip:419.7 nm 54H05M

November 9th ICW – Wrightsville, NC, to North Myrtle Beach, NC

Charlie departed about 0630 for the airport by taxi.

Judy and I delayed our departure from our normal sunrise to 0820 so I could try to find the source of a fuel leak that had plagued us from the beginning of the trip. The fuel was accumulating in the bilge and causing a diesel smell throughout the boat once the engine room got hot from the running engines. Evening, after a day of cruising when the engine room temperature was around 110 degrees was definitely not the time to work on the problem, but by morning the engine room had cooled down to around 80 degrees. I wasn’t able to determine where the leak was originating, but did tighten up several nuts on the fuel line, hoping that would solve the problem.

Today we faced the Cape Fear River, a river made famous by the two movies “Cape Fear,” the latest featuring Robert DeNiro as the bad guy. We entered the river about half way between the ocean and Wilmington, and then followed the river almost to the ocean where the ICW cuts off to the south-east into another river. We saw several large container ships, one heading out to sea and another heading to Wilmington. W were also passed by a number of pleasure boats heading south, as well as a real fishing trawler heading out to sea. No storms, no bad weather, no escaped convicts, no Robert DeNiro!

Some time after we had passed from the Cape Fear River into the unnamed ICW channel at Southport, we heard a sail boat call the Coast Guard to report that they had run into a rather large daymark (which we had passed earlier) and that the daymark had been knocked over. Judy and I couldn’t believe that anyone had hit it in a sail boat, and that a sail boat had enough force to destroy it. Anyway, it was the topic of several conversations on the radio as one boat after another reported it damaged and wondered what had happened.

The ICW continues to run in a westerly direction through this area, and it was nice not to have to stare into the reflected sunlight while trying to pick out the daymarks and approaching boats. At one point we had to stop for the opening of the Sunset Beach Pontoon Bridge, a historic bridge that actually floats on pontoons. It only opens on the hour, and takes its time doing that. The center section is hinged on one end, and when the bridge is opened for river traffic cables pull the free end to a set of pilings. Our waterway guide books indicated that the bridge is scheduled to be replaced, but that there is a lot of opposition to removing the historic bridge.

The delay at the Sunset Beach bridge resulted in fewer miles than we had hoped for. That, coupled with the lack of marinas in the area and few good anchorages, we stopped at the Myrtle Beach Yacht Club for the night a little after 5:00PM. The Yacht Club is in a nicely protected basin just off the ICW, with good floating docks (necessary when there’s a big tidal range) and a ship’s store. We bought a chart of Charleston, SC, harbor, and feasted onboard on the leftover ribs and chicken from the night before.

Day: 62.8 sm 9H00M

Trip:482.5 sm 63H05M

November 10th ICW – Myrtle Beach, NC to South Santee River, NC

Judy’s entry in the ship’s log says: “0620 – Lines off, underway. Beautiful morning. We’re the first boat to leave the marina.”

The water inside the basin was like glass, and the air temperature was near 65 degrees. Shortly after turning into the ICW we passed through a bridge and then into a stretch called “The Rockpile” because of the rocks lining the rather narrow channel. The width is such, along with the rocky bottom and sides, that passing another boat going the same way is not recommended, and we were behind a tug, the Sharon B, pushing a barge making about 1.5 MPH less than we cruise (8.5 MPH). We stayed behind him for about an hour and a half, and then were able to find a wide spot in which to pass him. Again, we lost some time and mileage toward our goal.

We cruised through Winyah Bay in South Carolina, at ICW mile 401, and then entered the Estherville Minim Creek Canal (no locks) at mile 410. Again, because of the total lack of marinas and few good anchorages along this part of the ICW we stopped early in order to scout out an anchorage. We found a beautiful spot in the east side of the South Santee River, just off the ICW at mile 420, in six feet of water. When we pulled in to the east side of the river, there were already several boats anchored on the western side and we were the first on the east side. Shortly after we had our anchor set, a sailboat pulled in and anchored several hundred yards in front of us closer to the ICW. Other than that we were totally alone in this quiet, beautiful, spot, surrounded by marsh grass in every direction.

Since we were so far away from any urban area, the sky that evening was filled with visible stars, and I saw a very long and bright meteor fall to earth about 8:00 when I was outside looking at the sky.

Day: 74.0 sm 10H20M

Trip:556.5 sm 73H25M

November 11th ICW – South Santee River, NC, to Bohicket, SC

We were underway by 6:30AM and the temperature of 70 degrees promised the first day that we might be able to steer from the topside steering station if it warmed up a little more.

At about 8:00AM Judy spotted what she thought was something floating in the water off to the port side, and then noticed that it was moving toward the shore. Definitely not a dolphin. Suddenly, a deer started leaping out of the water as his feet touched bottom, and then ran up the shore and into the grass and shrub.

By mid-morning the temperature had warmed up enough and the sun was out that we decided we could move topside. Judy went up and removed the cover and put down the seat cushions. About the time she came back inside the sun had disappeared and we agreed that it wasn’t warm enough. There was a bit of a breeze blowing, so it made it cooler.

We also heard radio conversations from the vessel Grand Mariner. This was the name of a vessel which had tied up in back of Sanderling in Scotia, New York, last summer, and we were curious as to whether this one was the same. It didn’t take long before we could see it over the low grassy marshes, and sure enough, it was the same vessel. It’s built low, with a collapsing pilot house and antennas that lower down in order to get under the low bridges in the New York State Canal System waters, and was built by Blount Marine just north of Bristol, RI. When it was about one mile behind us we entered a “no wake” area just before coming into the Charleston Harbor, so he couldn’t go much faster than we were. It stayed behind us through a bridge which had to open for it (they evidently didn’t want to go to the trouble of reducing their height), and shortly we entered a sharp curve to the right which then entered into Charleston Harbor. A northbound tug radioed the Grand Mariner to tell the captain that there were numerous small fishing boats in the channel in the bend, but that he could weave his way through them. Well, this Grand Mariner is WIDE if nothing else, and we knew it would be interesting to see what the big guy does with the little guys. We were still in the lead, and as we proceeded through the curve it was obvious that Grand Mariner would have a problem. We told the small boats which we passed that there was a big boat coming and they’d best get out of the channel (literally, they were right on a line between two buoys that the BIG guy would be steering around), and we radioed the captain of the Grand Mariner that there were small boats in the channel, still. Enough of the small boats moved that the Grand Mariner didn’t have to stop, but he did sound his whistle as a warning when he entered the curve. Grand Mariner passed us in Charleston Harbor.

From the very beginning of planning this trip, we anticipated that we would take a day off in Charleston, SC, since it was about half way. Judy had never been there, and we could stay in a marina right in the heart of Charleston and walk through the historic areas. Because of the delay for the storm in North Carolina, and other delays caused by waiting for bridge openings, we were going to be pushing it to reach Melbourne, Florida, by the following Sunday. While crossing the bay heading toward both the marinas and the ICW, we decided that we had best keep moving if we wanted to get to Florida on time. Any delay might mean that we would have to leave Sanderling short of our goal, and come back another weekend to get her. We preferred to get to Melbourne on schedule rather than to stop for sightseeing in Charleston on this trip. Next time we’ll stop for certain.

We left Charleston behind and entered a river which was part of the ICW. Marinas would really be few and far between from now until we reached Florida, and we would need fuel either today or early Tuesday. We had to wait for another bridge opening, and we heard a weather forecast for high winds and rain during the night. We pushed on hoping to find an unlisted marina, but soon realized that there were none to be found. Unfortunately, we passed the last marina for a long stretch shortly after entering the river; otherwise we could have anchored out and continued the next day looking for fuel.

There was one marina on the Bohicket Creek about seven miles off the ICW. The only problem was that we had to travel the seven miles in each direction, we didn’t have a chart which included the Bohicket Creek, and the North Edisto River which leads to Bohicket Creek, flows directly into the ocean and has tidal currents of up to four knots (4.8 MPH). Judy checked with the marina and they had a slip available for us, and we were able to determine that the tide would not be running at full force against us. The only thing left was the little matter of lack of a chart to navigate the last several miles. Fortunately, Judy was able to determine the location of the last few buoys using a very small picture of a chart which was a part of an advertisement for the marina, and with her help looking at the picture chart with a small magnifying glass, we were able to stay in the channel while running up Bohicket Creek, making about 4 MPH against an outgoing tide. We arrived right at 5:00PM; we had called them on the radio about 4:45 to see if they could refuel us that evening, but were unable to reach anyone even though it was before their normal quitting time. The dock master had told us where we could tie up, and we found our spot without any problem. Because of the strong tidal current we set up several lines to keep Sanderling aligned with the dock. Several people offered advice about where to eat in nearby restaurants, we bought some supplies at the ship’s store, and showered.

This marina is popular with power and sailboaters who want access to the ocean, since the Atlantic is only about three miles away.

This night we ate in a local restaurant which featured “low country” cooking – it was very good – gourmet country style!

Day: 84.0 sm 10H35M

Trip:640.5 sm 84H00M

November 12th ICW – Bohicket, SC to Hilton Head, SC (Skull Creek Marina)

We knew that the marina fuel dock wouldn’t open until 0800, so we didn’t plan to get up at the crack of dawn, but the rain and thunder woke us up early anyway. The weather forecast for the rest of the day for the local area was continued rain, wind and thunder storms. We needed fuel before we could go anywhere, but we were determined we were going to get underway and back into the ICW where the wind wouldn’t be much of a factor. Rain is a different story, and although the radar is useful for picking out buoys, boats, and the shoreline, it is much easier to navigate when we can actually see where we’re going rather than trying to rely on the radar. I went to the dockmaster’s office to pay for our night’s stay, and talked with the assembled crew about the weather; they confirmed that the forecast was for dismal weather. It was still raining when I walked back to the boat after telling them that we would pull up to the fuel dock when the rain stopped; they said there was no problem as far as they were concerned with fueling even when it was lightning. “We’ll just give you the hose and run.”

Judy and I agreed that we needed to get underway as soon as we could do so safely, and that we should take on fuel and be ready to go. About 0845 the storm moved on and the rain let up a little. We moved Sanderling to the fuel dock, and about that time the rain stopped. We filled the fuel tanks, and were on our way. The tidal current worked against us in the Bohicket Creek, but gave us an extra push in the North Edisto River as we headed “upstream” away from the ocean. By 1030 we were back in the ICW where we had departed our route the day before.

Today we again navigated through a lot of marsh with trees and low hills in the background. Although most of the rivers were over 10 feet deep, some of the channels were rather narrow with shallow water on each side. In some of these, navigation is greatly aided by “range” markers. These are two permanent markers placed in line with the channel. The front marker is low, and the back marker is high. By lining them up, the low one right under the higher one, you know you are right in the channel. We will be encountering these ranges more frequently as we move from South Carolina through Georgia.

In the middle part of the afternoon we passed Beaufort, South Carolina, and then down the Beaufort River and into Port Royal Sound, which leads to the Atlantic Ocean. As we were motoring down the river we were able to determine that we’d be at the Skull Creek Marina just after sun down. With any luck we’d have another 15-20 minutes of twilight before it got dark. Judy called the marina, and arranged for a transient berth and paid for our night’s stay in advance over the phone. Fortunately, we again had a favorable tidal current which pushed us at a good rate down the river, we crossed Port Royal Sound in the fading rays of daylight, and got to the marina a few miles up Skull Creek (still on the ICW) before it got dark.

As we maneuvered Sanderling against the T-head (the dock that crosses the end of the dock that extends from shore), a friendly cat with a collar came right up to the boat and stood at the edge of the dock. As Judy was putting the first line on a cleat, the cat put his front paws on the cap rail and looked down onto Sanderling’s side deck. The boat wasn’t secure yet, and the cat must have realized that and got all four feet back on the dock. Shortly after I went aft to secure the second line, the cat hopped aboard, climbed the steps and ladder to the top deck, and started looking around, and even went under the cover which was over the forward portion of the top deck. Judy closed the salon doors so our visitor wouldn’t wander inside and become a stowaway, and we continued to secure the boat to the dock. Suddenly, someone on another boat called “here kitty,” the cat came down from the top deck, jumped off the boat, and disappeared down the dock. We never did see it again.

We showered in the marina heads, and then had a wonderful dinner onboard finishing the leftovers from last night’s dinner.

Day: 65.8 sm 8H00M

Trip:706.3 sm 92H00M

November 13th ICW – Hilton Head, SC to Wahoo River, GA

We departed shortly after sunrise (it’s getting later as the days advance and we get further south) with overcast skies, wind 15-20 knots, and temperature about 50 degrees. Another day to stay inside!

About two hours later we crossed into Georgia at ICW mile 575 and what would become mile after mile of marshes and grass. We crossed the Savannah River, about nine miles downstream from Savannah, and just a few miles from the ocean. Many cruisers choose not to take their boats to Savannah because of the high tides (up to eight feet) and poor docking facilities; we didn’t go there because it was out of the way, and because of the dock and tide issues. Not long after crossing the Savannah River we passed in front of the Palmer-Johnson Yacht Company, makers of beautiful luxury yachts, and there were a number of big boats in their yard, several of them brand new and at least 100 feet in length.

After Palmer-Johnson we entered a length of the ICW which twists and turns around various islands, with channels that are sometimes very narrow, and at other times wide and deep. Every where we looked there was grass growing in the marshes, so it looked a little like we were sailing through a sea of wheat. At one point in the afternoon we passed a sailboat that was probably 30 feet long that had gone hard aground and had a tow boat standing by to try to get it off when the tide came in. We heard them talking to the Coast Guard on the VHF radio and learned that they had been aground since about 2:00 AM! That means they had already gone through one complete tide cycle when we saw them, and they were still aground.

We were again in an area with few marinas, but this time anchorages were plentiful in little side creeks and rivers. By mid-afternoon we had crossed St. Catherine’s Sound, and were coming up on Sapelo Sound, which was too far across to complete transiting before sunset, so we anchored in the Wahoo River, just off of the South Newport River, a few miles before Sapelo Sound. There were already four boats anchored in the bend of the river, and after we anchored we were joined by one other sailboat. We enjoyed a beautiful sunset, had dinner, and a quiet evening of reading–no TV when we’re anchored out!

Day: 76.1 sm 9H35M

Trip:782.4 sm 101H35M

November 14th ICW – Wahoo River, GA to Fernandina Beach, FL

Today we celebrated Judy’s birthday. I was able to surprise her with a couple of gifts I had brought with me from Florida.

We got underway just after sunrise, about 0700, and were the third boat out of the anchorage. We headed downstream, then into the ICW, and across Sapelo Sound. Then we crossed Doboy Sound, Altamaha Sound, St. Simons Sound, St. Andrew Sound, one after the other (all between rather large islands). It was a day full of ranges – more than we’d encountered in any one day before. The channels were narrow, with shallow water on either side, and the range markers helped guide us through. Most of the ranges we encountered were “front” ranges – that is, you steered toward them; there were also some “back” ranges – those you steered away from. In either case, you kept the range markers lined up in order to keep the boat in the channel.

As we left St. Simons Sound and entered Jekyll Creek, a large cruise ship, American Eagle, was behind us. It had come out of Brunswick, Georgia, on the Brunswick River. Since the channel was very narrow and we didn’t want to impede this commercial vessel, we talked with the captain on the VHF radio and told him that we would move over to let him pass. He said he’d just stay behind us. As it turned out, he stopped at the Jekyll Island Marina. We stopped at the same marina to get ice, and Judy learned that American Eagle stopped there for the afternoon to let passengers explore Jekyll Island; it cruised between Charleston, SC, and Florida. After getting two blocks of ice for the cooler (the refrigerator had stopped working just before we departed Solomons), we were on our way again.

Just before getting to the Cumberland Island Sound a rather large boat (45-50 feet) named Lady Carol suddenly came up behind us going 20-25 knots, and without warning passed very close to us causing us to momentarily lose control of Sanderling. This happens when any boat with a large wake passes close by a smaller boat without slowing down. This happens from time to time, and it is the passing boat’s responsibility to arrange a safe passage, but obviously some people are in too much of a hurry to contact the boat they want to pass in order to arrange a safe passing, or to slow down. We let them know of our displeasure in no uncertain terms. At the very least it is uncomfortable; at the worst it is just plain dangerous and small boats have been capsized as a result of this potentially dangerous conduct. The perp didn’t respond to our admonition. A short time later, we saw the same boat pass another vessel, Mary Catherine, which was about 55 feet in length, and even that boat, bigger by 20 feet than Sanderling, had to take action to avoid being rolled from side to side. The captain of Mary Catherine also tried to contact the offender, with no success. Not too long after that, with both boats still in site and entering Cumberland Island Sound where the buoys changed from red on the right to green on the right (something you always had to check for on the chart), we heard Mary Catherine call out on the radio “Lady Carol, I’ll give you more consideration than you gave me. If you continue on your present course you’re going to run hard aground. The green buoy should be left on your starboard side.” We saw the perp make a quick swerve to port, and he did not go aground. I called the Mary Catherine and told the captain that the perp would have gotten his just desserts if he had gone aground. The captain replied that it might have been fun to watch!

We crossed the Georgia-Florida line about 1715, just after transiting the Cumberland Island Sound and the Cumberland Sound. As we left the last sound and entered the Amelia River, we contacted the Fernandina Harbor Marina and they had room for us. (This was the only marina we had contact with that didn’t take reservations.) We needed fuel, so first pulled into the fuel dock, right behind Mary Catherine. It was getting dark, and by the time we finished refueling it was dark and there was another, larger, boat waiting to fuel. The dockmaster showed us where he wanted us to dock for the night, and we moved the boat to the overnight location just ahead of and on the other side of the fuel pier. Just as we were fastening our lines to the dock, we heard the sound of a line being stretched to its limit, something being hit, and people yelling at each other. The large boat that had been waiting to fuel was having a difficult time getting alongside the fuel pier!

We were at ICW mile 717. Only about 200 miles to go, and three days to do it.

We showered, and then walked into town for dinner. We found a very good, friendly, local seafood restaurant just off a newly renovated area of the town close to the marina.

Fuel: 89.6 gallons

Day: 86.4 sm 10H35M

Trip:868.8 sm 112H10M

November 15th ICW – Fernandina Beach, FL to St. Augustine, FL

We were underway at 0700 with the temperature at 60 degrees. We are in Florida and it is finally getting warmer.

From this point on we would be traveling in a series of rivers, basically parallel and close to the Atlantic Ocean. In many places the only thing separating us from the ocean was the barrier beach. We’d cross just a few inlets, and the rivers are shallow with narrow, deeper, channels. The land near the rivers are still marsh with expanses of grass, but that would change to higher sandy banks from time to time.

As the morning progressed we passed through the St. Johns River, the location of Mayport Naval Station. As we entered the river and headed to the ICW on the other side, we passed several Navy cruisers being worked on in a boat yard, and there were S-3 Viking aircraft practicing touch and goes at the airfield.

The St. Johns River leads to Jacksonville, Florida, about 25 miles inland, and is a very busy waterway. We suddenly seemed to be joined by more pleasure boats, both sail and power, heading south.

Cruising was just a matter of keeping track of Sanderling’s location in mostly very narrow channels. Getting out of the channel was something to be avoided, because the depth of the water would suddenly shoal to 1-2 feet. There were other areas where the 6-8 foot depths would carry from shore to shore. Such was the case in a long, 6.5 mile stretch, where the state-mandated “no wake zone” was six miles an hour. For Sanderling, this meant that we could only cruise at about 4.5 miles an hour, obviously slowing us down considerably from our normal cruising speed of 8.5 miles an hour. The eastern shore of this 50 yard wide cut was lined with very large, expensive, homes, while the western shore was low land populated with mangrove and other trees, brush, and wild life. Many of the homes had their own boat docks, with their boats hoisted up on boat lifts to keep them out of the water. There were a few of the old, original, cabins interspersed with the big, new homes, but they were very scarce. My guess is that the wealthy home owners had paid off the politicians to create the no wake zone; there wasn’t any reason for it otherwise.

We encountered many “no wake zones” in the course of the trip. Some were the result of city, county, or state regulation and could be enforced with a speeding fine. There are stories of law enforcement officials checking boat speeds with radar or laser. These no wake zones were normally found around marinas, boat yards, or docks where boats were tied up, and had a valid reason: preventing wakes that would rock the boats and possibly cause damage to the boats or the docks. Other zones were obviously posted with hand-made signs, and were not legally enforceable. It was common to encounter these self-help zones when houses were close to the water. We generally ignored these latter zones, unless there were boats tied to docks, and then we slowed down a little as a courtesy to reduce our wake.

The matter of what constitutes a wake generates a of a lot of discussion. A court has actually ruled that the term “no wake” is so ambiguous as to be unenforceable in a regulation establishing a no wake zone, since even a pebble dropped in the water creates a “wake.” No matter how slowly a boat moves, no matter what the size of the boat, there is some sort of wake. We just use a rule of reason, and slow down enough that our wake is very small when it reaches the shore. The faster any boat moves, the more the height of the wake increases. Certain types of boats create a higher wake for a given speed. Sanderling is of the type that creates very little wake even at the hull speed of 7.5 knots (8.5 MPH).

As the day wore on and we projected our position at the time of sunset, and then checked for the location of marinas and anchorages, it again became apparent that we would end up some distance south of St. Augustine, Florida, in an area where there were no marinas or anchorages for some distance. So, again, we cut our day short at stopped at St. Augustine Municipal Marina at ICW mile 778 at 1530. The wind had come up and the tidal current was running quite fast at that time, and boats were having some difficulty getting into their slips. We had visited this marina from land last summer when we were in St. Augustine for a weekend, and it is located right in the historic downtown area. We had a nice dinner at an outdoor bistro right across the street from the marina, and enjoyed music by a folk singer who was very good.

One of the boats at the marina with us tonight was Washintonian, a boat that we had seen frequently ever since the lock we passed through south of Norfolk, Virginia.

Day: 60.7 sm 8H30M

Trip:929.5 sm 120H40M

November 16th ICW – St. Augustine, FL to Indian River (Titusville Lagoon), FL

We were underway at 0638 when it was just light enough to see the water with an overcast sky. Washintonian was about 10 minutes ahead of us (they had a head start being on the T-head of the dock). A short distance south of St. Augustine the ICW was very close to the ocean, and running almost parallel to route A1A and so close that we could see cars on the highway frequently between houses.

We were again cruising through narrow channels, some winding through the marshes, others long, straightaways well marked about every ½ mile or so with a pair of red and green daymarks along the edge of the channel. The only trick at all on the winding parts was to try to judge how the channel projected beyond the daymarks at a bend. There really wasn’t any trick to the long, narrow, straight portions, other than keeping the boat on the correct heading, and checking behind every once in awhile to make sure that the current or wind wasn’t blowing the boat to one side of the channel or the other, and perhaps out of the channel.

The ICW in the section on either side of Daytona was extraordinarily straight – again marked with daymarks in pairs at even intervals. As we approached the northernmost bridge across the ICW in Daytona we heard a boat talking with two other boats, all of whom had passed us several miles earlier. One of the boats was aground, and one of the other two took a line and tried to pull the grounded boat off, but was unsuccessful. Finally the grounded boat called TowBoat/US (a commercial towing company – it’s very expensive) for assistance. As we entered a long straight stretch leading to the bridge we could see a boat out of the channel by 100 yards or so. As we passed, we asked if we could help, but we knew the answer before asking. This was a boat about 40 feet in length, and one that will travel 25-30 miles an hour. It is hard to imagine how a boat under proper control could have strayed so far from the channel. The charts are clearly marked, and indicate that the water on either side is only a few feet deep. The weather was clear, with good visibility. My guess is that the operator was traveling fast and in his haste to pass a slower boat tried to go outside the channel, only to find himself hard aground.

After leaving Daytona, we started to encounter a light drizzle, and then it started raining quite hard. At one point on a long, narrow, straight, stretch, about 1630, the visibility was less than ½ miles. At this point the radar stopped operating – probably had water in the electrical circuit (it had never done that before, and I still haven’t figured out what is wrong with it).

We decided we’d keep pushing on until we got to a shallow area where we could anchor just through a narrow land cut named the Haulover Canal between the Mosquito Lagoon and the Indian River. Although we could have pulled out of the channel and anchored in any area that was deep enough, we wanted to keep going as long as we could today in order to shorten the time underway tomorrow, our last day.

When we were several miles from the Haulover Canal we heard another boat calling TowBoat/US asking for assistance. This boat was hard aground on the other side of the canal, in the Indian River. He had some difficulty talking with TowBoat/US, because every time TowBoat/US tried to give him a telephone number to call with his cell phone, the signal was interrupted while the telephone number was being spoken. This problem continued for several transmissions, when finally TowBoat/US said that the interference was being caused by a competitor towing company and that it happened frequently. The next transmission with the telephone number came through clearly.

As we approached the canal we called the grounded boat and asked where he was, and what side of the channel he was on. We wanted to avoid any problem if he were partially in the channel, inasmuch as it was getting dark. He said he was well out of the channel to the north (starboard) side. We asked if he wanted us to slow down so as not to cause as much of a wake (to avoid driving the boat further aground) and he said he’d like us to give him as much wake as we could so he could try to turn his bow out toward the channel using the anchor he’d thrown overboard. We told him that we’d do what we could at 8.5 MPH.

The rain had started to let up, and visibility improved a little as we entered the short canal, but the wind picked up, blowing from the west. When we exited the canal we saw the grounded boat, again quite a ways out of the channel. We think he mistook a manatee zone sign for a daymark, and was lead out of the channel. Again, it was about a 40 foot, fast, boat. The speed at which he was traveling undoubtedly contributed to his mistaking the sign for a daymark and to how far he was aground. I called him on the radio and told him that we were giving him all the wake we could muster, but it wasn’t much given the wind and our slower speed to make sure we didn’t misread the channel markers.

The shape of the red daymarks could have had a role in this last boat’s grounding. Red daymarks are always square; green daymarks are always triangular. Both sit on top of a post, are numbered, face up and down the channel, and mark the port and starboard side of fair water, much like buoys in deeper water mark the edges of the deep water. In this area there were rectangular signs placed parallel with the channel about 100 yards off the channel warning boats that they were in a manatee zone and indicating certain restrictions on speed. At the “wrong” angle from a distance in the dark the warning signs might easily be mistaken for a red daymark. Of course, you would normally want to identify the sign to see if it is a daymark or not; this can be done quite easily at night by shining a light on the object. If it appears bright luminescent read it is a red daymark. If not, . . . !

We continued about a mile past the grounded boat, and then turned off the channel into what the chart indicated would be four feet of water. The chart was fairly accurate – there might have been five feet – the bottom was as flat as a pancake. Fortunately, the rain stopped before we had to go outside to get the anchor set. With only five feet of depth we let out about 25 feet of anchor rhode, backed down on the anchor, and we were holding fast in a sand and mud bottom.

When you turn off the engines after a day of cruising, the quiet is almost unexpected. You think you should hear something, but there’s nothing but the wind or waves lapping on the side of the hull. We heard the distant sound of machinery and engines running. There it was, about 400 yards away, a working dredge, with all of its lights on. We hadn’t even noticed it when we were anchoring, or perhaps its lights blended in with the lights on the beach.

As we had a chance to relax and get our bearings (we were on very large expanse of water with just a narrow channel through it), we realized that we could see the lights of the Kennedy Space Center off to the east, and there appeared to be a tower with the shuttle all lighted. We didn’t realize at the time that we really were looking at the shuttle; we thought it had been launched earlier in the week.

This was the longest day of the trip for time underway and distance covered. We were at ICW mile 874, with about 45 miles to go to our new marina.

Day: 94.9 sm 11H20M

Trip:1024.4 sm 132H00M

November 17th ICW – Indian River to Patrick AFB, FL

We got underway for the last day of the trip at 0720. The sky was overcast, the temperature about 65 degrees (we were back in Florida), hazy and light rain.

We maneuvered back to the channel, staying in 4-5 feet of water until the depth increased to 7-8 feet as we got to the channel. We skirted the barge which was working in an area where the channel curves around to the south. Shortly after getting back into the channel, we encountered two bridges which were too low for us to pass under without opening, and several more dredges working near one of the bridges. Even though it was Sunday everyone was at work, with small tugs moving various pieces of equipment and pipes.

We went past the Canaveral Barge Canal and under the Barge Canal Bridge. The canal leads from the Indian River to Port Canaveral and was built for barges carrying rockets to Kennedy Space Center.

The skies eventually cleared up and the sun sparked on the water. A westerly wind came up, and was blowing at about 15 knots as we rounded Dragon Point on Merritt Island to head back north on the Banana River to get to the marina at Patrick AFB. The Banana River runs about 25 miles from Port Kennedy to Melbourne, and forms the east side of Merritt Island, with the Indian River Lagoon on the west side. We had to pick our way through a number of boats anchored in the basin at the end of the Banana River, wait for a little bridge from Merritt Island to the mainland to open, and then thread our way through a VERY narrow and poorly marked channel northward, under the Pineda Causeway Bridge, and into the marina.

We stopped just before turning into the channel which leads to the marina and opened up the topside steering area to give us a better view as we entered the marina. Judy got lines ready, and we turned to the east to head to Sanderling’s new home.

We found our new slip, and before entering the fairway discussed how we’d tie up. Judy placed lines where we could get to them easily, and we entered the fairway, and turned stern to in order to back into the slip. We suddenly realized how windy it had gotten since we left the Indian River Lagoon. We’d been relatively sheltered by Merritt Island as we headed north, and then we were traveling downwind as we entered the marina. The wind was directly on our stern, so it didn’t have much of an effect on the boat, except to make it easier to proceed slowly and stop when necessary. Judy got the first line over the piling at the port bow, and then another line aft on the port side. The time was 1310.

After that we were able to take our time to figure out how the lines should be placed, shut down the engines for the last time on the trip, gathered up our things to take home, and buttoned up Sanderling. By this time the wind had increased again, and was blowing at about 20 knots. We were glad we had gotten into the slip when we did.

We ordered our favorite pizza for dinner that evening.

Day: 46.6 sm 5H50M

Trip:1071.0 sm 137H50M

Over the next couple of weeks we got Sanderling cleaned up, and I was able to find, and repair, the source of the fuel leak which had plagued us the entire trip. The weather has turned cooler, and windy, so we haven’t taken Sanderling out to explore our new cruising grounds, but that is in the offing the first nice weekend that comes along.

2001 Erie Canal Trek Schedule

Here’s the basic info and schedule for the 2001 Erie Canal Trek sponsored by the NYS Canal Corporation. We traveled as far a Seneca Falls, then turned around and headed back to Chesapeake Bay and Solomons.

4th Annual Canal Cruise & Trek

July 10-27, 2001

CRUISE THE PAST, UNLOCK THE ADVENTURE

Join us for the 4th annual Canal Cruise & Trek across the New York State Canal System and come “test drive” one of the oldest navigable canals in the United States! Your boating adventure begins in Whitehall, birthplace of the American navy and brings you down the Champlain Canal to the mouth of the Erie in Waterford. Cruise westward on the Erie Canal all the way to Buffalo and join this annual flotilla for fun, adventure and camaraderie. This year’s event will be focused primarily on boating along the Canal System and will add a new boating segment on the Oswego Canal. Make new friends along the way, see historical sights and enjoy the newest boating amenities at our state-of-the-art harbors and service ports. Those interested in adventure cycling along the Canalway Trail are invited to participate in the Cycle the Erie Tour, sponsored by

NYPCA and the Canal Corporation, July 8-15, 2001. For Canal cycling event information, contact NYPCA at www.nypca.org/canaltour/

Cost for this year’s event is $175 and includes the registration fee, a seasonal pass for your vessel and the new Official Canal System Cruising Guide. To register for the 2001 Canal Cruise and Trek, please mail your registration form and check or money order payable to the New York State Canal Corporation by June 1, 2001. Registration is limited so be sure to contact us early. Come join us for the best inland cruise of the season on the 4th annual New York State Canal Cruise & Trek 2001!!

Get Registration Form for the 2001 Canal Cruise & Trek

SCHEDULE FOR CANAL CRUISE AND TREK 2001
Date Begin End
July 10 Whitehall Ft. Edward
July 11 Fort Edward Waterford
July 12 Waterford (Parade to Albany) Lock 7, Niskayuna
July 13 Lock 7, Niskayuna Canajoharie
July 14 Canajoharie Frankfort
July 15 Frankfort Sylvan Beach
July 16 Layover in Sylvan Beach
July 17 Sylvan Beach Syracuse
July 18 Syracuse Seneca Falls
July 19 Layover in Seneca Falls *** Oswego Trek begins ***
July 20 Seneca Falls Newark
July 21 Newark Fairport
July 22 Fairport Rochester
July 23 Rochester Brockport
July 24 Brockport Medina
July 25 Medina Lockport
July 26 Lockport Tonawanda
July 27 Tonawanda Buffalo

We cannot find our notes from the canal trek, but here are some photos:

Locking thru with Grand Erie, our "mother ship"

Some of the trek boats

Sanderling at Scotia town dock

Manhattan skyline from Hudson River - July 2001

2001 Philadelphia Cruise

In April 2001 Judy and I took Sanderling from Solomons to Philadelphia as more or less a shakedown cruise for our cruise to the Erie Canal that summer. Here are a few photos taken around Philadelphia.

Passing under Chesapeake Bay bridge at Annapolis

Car carrier in C&D Canal

Ship heading up the Delaware River

Ship at Philadelphia shipyard being berthed

Pier 3 Marina in Philadelphia

Philadelphia waterfront tour

Pier 3 Marina

New Jersey aquarium at Camden

1997 – Sanderling from Wianno, Massachusetts to Solomons, Maryland

An account of the voyage of Sanderling from Wianno, Massachusetts, to Patuxent River, Maryland

 Written in Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey (Sandy Hook).

On Tuesday, November 4, 1997, Andrew and I met at BWI airport. Andrew had flown in from Salt Lake City the night before, and arrived at BWI about 0800. A friend dropped me at the airport about 0830, and Andrew was sitting right by the door as I entered the terminal.

We arrived without difficulty in Providence, were met by Vic and Helga Piccoli, and drove straight to Osterville (Wianno) on Cape Cod and Sanderling. Shortly after we got our supplies from the car onboard, Bob Gill (the former owner) showed up and we went over a few details of the boat, then drove Andrew and me over to his home which wasn’t far away to pick up the two cartons I’d shipped up by UPS, and he drove us with the cartons back to the boat. Helga, Vic, Andrew and I transferred the contents of the boxes to the boat, then went to a restaurant for lunch. Afterwards, Vic drove Andrew back to the boat so he could get a nap (hadn’t slept all night on the flight from Salt Lake City) and got the two propane tanks to be filled, while Helga and I started shopping for groceries. Vic then joined up with Helga and me, we finished shopping, and had to drive a short distance to get the propane tanks filled (they only needed a little gas, but we wanted to make sure they were full).

When we returned to the boat, Bob Gill was there and we continued to review the boat systems. He had some repair work done by the boat yard, including getting the diesel heater working (he had never used it in three years). I was grateful for that, since we were sure we were going to need some heat if we got laid up because of weather. Helga left to return to Bristol, and Vic, Andrew and I were on our own to get the boat ship-shape for the trip south. We stayed aboard until about 8:00PM, then walked half a mile to a restaurant for dinner. By the time we returned about 9:30, the delivery captain, Tom Montgomery from Winthrop, Massachusetts, had arrived, and Bob Gill had stopped by and chatted with Tom about the boat. We turned on the diesel heater to take the chill off the air and chatted about the trip and what we would be doing. Tom Montgomery is a delightful person, with a LOT of experience with all types of boats and the Intra Coastal Waterway (ICW), and a Coast Guard Master’s license; he was in the Merchant Marines for almost 30 years, and skippered cargo vessels for about 15 years, all over the world. He has some great tales to tell.

We left Wianno as soon as we had enough light to make out the buoys readily – was about 0630. The draw bridge which would have led us directly to the sound doesn’t operate after October 31st, so we had to take the longer way around to the sound, which included travelling over some very “thin” water. Fortunately, we were able to leave about 2 hours before slack tide, so there was just enough water to clear a couple of shallow areas. When you know that the boat draws 4’4″ and the depth recorder reads 4 feet, you don’t have a lot of water under the keel, but in our case the transponder for the depth recorder is about 1 foot below the waterline, so we actually had about a foot to spare! Needless to say, Tom Montgomery proceeded very slowly over those areas and we never once touched bottom, as far as we know!

We headed in a westerly direction, and entered Buzzard’s Bay by turning into the Woods Hole area, then going out through a very narrow channel with an extremely fast current running against us for about 1/4 mile. That was actually fairly exciting for me, but Tom had done it on a number of occasions and knew exactly what to do. That was also our first encounter with a VERY LARGE BOAT, the passenger ferry which runs between Woods Hole and Martha’s Vineyard. We let the ferry pass in front of us before entering the passage into Woods Hole. This turned out to be the first of many encounters with other boats of our trip up to this point, none of which caused any problem. It’s amazing how accustomed one becomes to being dwarfed by really huge ships.

After entering Buzzard’s Bay we set up a two-man team watch system, each watch lasting two hours. That system continued for the next 24 hours, and worked well, allowing everyone a chance to eat and get some sleep throughout the day. The period between 2400 and 0600 were the worst, however, when the body couldn’t understand why it was being required to be alert instead of having a good sleep! Andrew and Tom were one team; Vic and I the other.

From Buzzard’s Bay we continued basically east past the entrance to Narragansett Bay (could see the Newport bridge from quite a distance even over Acquidneck Island), and then entered Long Island Sound at The Race, just off Point Lookout. We stayed to the right of Fisher’s Island and entered Fisher’s Sound before actually entering Long Island Sound because the current running against us wasn’t quite as strong there. By the time we left Fisher’s Sound, it was dark and we were getting ready for a long night on Long Island Sound. Tom set up all the courses well in advance, let us know what buoys to look for and their characteristics, and was generally available for questions, even if he was off watch. Fortunately, Vic and I never had to awaken him.

We essentially navigated Long Island Sound from buoy to buoy. Some of the distances between buoys were as much as 20 miles, and the unfavorable current tended to set us to the Long Island side of the sound, but generally by steering slightly higher (on the compass) than the intended track, we were always able to pick up the next buoy. Vic and I agreed that in many ways navigating at night was easier than in the daytime, since the light characteristics of the buoys were easier to identify in the darkness and at quite a distance (about 4.7 nautical miles at our height sitting down on the outside steering station – standing up gave us about 5 miles visibility to the horizon). There are many cities on both shore of Long Island Sound, so it was frequently difficult to distinguish the lights on the Sound (boats and navigational aids) from those on shore. No matter how confusing it seemed initially, eventually everything would fall into place. The flashing, colored lights of the buoys were always consistent and would become readily apparent as we got closer to each.

There was quite a bit of traffic on the Sound. We saw several ferries, which run generally from Long Island to Connecticut, 4-5 tows, and a number of other boats including fishing boats and at least one very large sailboat which was in sight for a long time because it had it’s high spreader lights on and was on a reciprocal course to ours. The night sky was very clear, and both watches also observed a lot of “falling stars” throughout the night. The temperature was relatively mild, although the damp air made it seem a little chilly – we all bundled up well. The tide was running against us on the first part of the transit and our speed over the ground slowed to about 5.2 knots despite our speed through the water was a little over 8 knots. About half way through the Sound, the tide changed, and our speed over the ground was as high as 12 knots on occasion. All the average speeds were displayed by the Loran at the touch of a button – what an improvement (at least easier) over having to calculate it directly from a chart and the DR plot.

Andrew made dinner for us, with the chili that Helga sent along, and some home-made biscuits that he made in the oven. The sea was calm enough that we could actually eat sitting down. Tom and Andrew ate toward the end of their “rest” period, and Vic and I as soon as we got off watch at 8:00 PM.

About 0430 Thursday morning, Tom and Andrew’s team brought us into the area of City Island, New York, which is just before the entrance to the East River which flows through New York City. By the time we found a mooring buoy and tied up, it was around 0500. Vic immediately began working on a problem with the fresh water pump. It had stopped working suddenly the night before we left Wianno, and Vic had concluded that it was a faulty in-line pressure switch; I had called Bob Gill to see if he had any thoughts about something we might have overlooked, but he had no suggestions other than to tell us where the switch and pump were located. With Vic’s expertise, he by-passed the pressure switch in the water line; that permitted us to get pressurized water at the sinks by turning on the water pump switch at the electrical panel, opening the faucet to get the water, then turning off both the faucet and switch. Throughout the preceding day, we’d been using water from a 2.5 gallon jug we had onboard for just such emergencies, but we hadn’t been able to get at the 150 gallons of water we had in the fresh water tanks. We had planned to disconnect the fresh water line beyond the tanks and fill the plastic jug directly from the line, if we had to. Vic’s electrical work saved us from having to use that solution to obtain fresh water.

We left the mooring as soon as it was light, about 0615, Thursday, November 6, and by about 0645 were passing under the Throgs Neck Bridge and into the East River. Due to the lateness of the season, there was very little pleasure boat traffic, and not even much commercial traffic. We made the initial part of the transit at slack tide, and arrived at Hells’Gate (a notoriously bad area for tidal currents) just after slack. We did pass a couple of tugs and tows headed up river, and a lot of commuter traffic once we reached the lower portion of the river around Brooklyn. There were a number of hydrofoil ferry boats speeding around, and the large ferries that operate in the area. After sailing past the United Nations building, and just before the Brooklyn Bridge, we were able to see the Statue of Liberty ahead of us in New York Harbor, past the Battery and the South Street Seaport Museum.

When we exited the East River, we turned south and proceeded through the Verrazano Narrows heading toward Sandy Hook. The marine weather forecasts had indicated that a low pressure area was building, and that by mid-day the north-easterly would be generating winds up to 35 knots and 8 to 10 foot seas along the Atlantic Coast, so we knew we wouldn’t be able to continue south until the storm passed. Tom was familiar with a municipal marina at Atlantic Highlands, and knew that they had some mooring we might be able to pick up, or if we were lucky, would be able to find a slip. We travelled through some fairly rough seas getting in, but we found the entrance to the break water and were in the marina by about 1200. We then found the fuel pier where we topped off the diesel fuel and also arranged for a slip on the leeward side of a pier where we wouldn’t be pushed against the pilings by the north-easterly winds. We made the Sanderling fast to the pier with double bow and stern lines, and two mid-ship spring lines, just to provide some insurance against the high winds we were anticipating. We also had to leave enough slack in the lines to anticipate the 5-6 foot tidal range, and the increased high tide which was being forecast because of the storm. As it turned out, Sanderling has handled the winds and tide well.

Tom’s entry in the Deck Log for passage from Osterville to Atlantic Highlands reads:

Total time: 1D-04H-25M (minus 1H-05M detention at City Island)

Running time: 1D-03H-20M

Total Distance 208.4 miles

Burned 4.47 gallons per hour running at 2000 RPM

Average speed: 7.6 knots @ 2000 RPM

Made 1.7 miles per gallon fuel consumed

The “main street” of the town is just a few short blocks from the boat. There is a lot of activity at the marina, but not much going on in town. Most of the boats have already been hauled for the winter, although the marina is still working to get boats out of the water.

Last night (Thursday) we ate at an Italian restaurant in town just a few blocks from the marina, and then went to the local small movie theater to see “Kiss the Girls” – a poor imitation of “Silence of the Lambs,” in my opinion. With a good night’s sleep, we’re all feeling much rested today. Winds are still fairly high, and the tide higher than normal – the walkway on the marina docks were almost submerged. After breakfast, Andrew and I went into town to the library while Vic and Tom remained behind. Andrew is taking a pre-GRE exam, and we’re using the quiet of the very small town library to give him the timed practice exams. I tried without success at virtually every store in town to find a spare phone line which I could use to access my internet account, but nobody was willing to let me use their lines. No phone booth in town has a telephone jack available. I asked a local telephone repairman if he knew of any place I could use, and he said “I’m just the man on the street – I don’t know about that stuff.” Consequently, I may not be able to send this along until I get home!! If we come back to the library tomorrow, I may try to talk the librarian into letting me use her ONE telephone line for a few minutes. Guess I’m going to have to buy an acoustic coupler!

This morning’s marine forecast indicates that the slow-moving low pressure area will still be with us tomorrow (Saturday), so we will be delayed at least another day. It’s disappointing to have to wait like this, but we can’t do anything about the weather and certainly don’t want to jeopardize our safety with the current sea state. We have about a 60 mile run before we can get into the inside ICW, south of Atlantic City, New Jersey. Once we get inside, we won’t be so vulnerable to the Atlantic storms, and can continue to Cape May, then through the canal to the Delaware. We have to have fairly good weather for the Delaware Bay, but wouldn’t have to worry as much about a “nor’easter” as we do on the open Atlantic

So here we are at the small town of Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey, waiting out a storm. Andrew is taking an exam, I’m writing this, and Vic and Tom just walked in and have found the paper back section of the library and a few books. We’re having a good time together, and conversation is lively, mostly about boats and boating (I wonder why). We ate breakfast together this morning, and tried out the stove-top toaster for the first time. It worked fairly well, but we learned that when the heat of the burner is high, it doesn’t take long at all to turn out a well-done piece of toast (burned)! Vic and Tom are in the V-berth forward. When we were on watch underway, Andrew and I both used the master cabin aft, but in port he’s sleeping on the settee made up into a double berth in the main cabin.

Unless something really dramatic occurs, we’ll certainly be here until Sunday, but that depends entirely on the weather. With any luck, we will be able to depart Sandy Hook on Sunday.

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Part II. Written in Annandale, Virginia

Weather was the critical factor in this trip from the very beginning. We had passed up several weeks in October when we would have been guaranteed good weather all the way down the coast, and now we were paying the price of starting too late in the season. After mid-October, storms develop more frequently along the Atlantic coast, creating winds which in turn create waves in the ocean which small boats are not able to deal safely with. When the wind is from the northeast, as was the case with the storm we were waiting out, the Atlantic ocean along the coast of New Jersey, Delaware and south is filled with big waves caused by the long distance the wind has to blow over open water thereby creating wind-blown waves. Add to the waves the fact that the shore is to the lee (the direction toward which the wind is blowing) and you can get into big trouble quickly.

Marine weather forecasts from the beginning of the trip indicated that a storm would be forming over the southern Atlantic coast and move northward, creating northeasterly winds. We were fortunate in getting to Sandy Hook and Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey, before we had to lay over. The forecast Thursday afternoon indicated that the storm was moving slowly up the coast, and may not pass until Saturday or Sunday, but that once the storm passed the winds would shift to the northwest. When that occurred, Tom felt we could get underway again for the open Atlantic part of our journey to Cape May, New Jersey. We would be in the lee of the shore and would be fairly well protected because the wind would not have a long fetch of water over which to build waves and the wind would “dampen” the waves which had been created by the preceding northeasterly.

Unfortunately, the nature of the low pressure area and its slow trip northward kept us in Atlantic Highlands through the weekend. The weather was nasty – windy and rainy most of the time. Andrew worked several afternoons in the small town library. Vic and Tom found the library’s books helped pass the time, and that there was a paperback table where one could simply take the books without having to check them out. Sanderling acquired a few adventure novels through that process. I spent time in the library as well as did some shopping for supplies for the boat. We all slept from time to time and read on the boat. It seemed to be a real luxury to be able to sleep in the morning. We saw two movies at the local theater, and ate a few meals ashore in the restaurants. At one movie which started at 9:30 PM, we were four of the six people in the theater! We all took showers at the marina.

We were surprised on Friday night after dinner by a knock on the door. When Tom answered, a man said he was looking for me. Turned out to be a couple who were friends of one of the recipients of my first email (the one sent from the library about the first part of the journey). The person who received the email lives in Quebec, Canada, had friends in Atlantic Highlands, called them and told them where we were, and the couple came to the marina and found us! What a coincidence. They invited us to their home up on the hill overlooking the bay, and we had a nice chat as well as a chance to warm up in a real house!

We were tied up port side to a pier near the end of one of the docks at the marina. Out bow was pointing toward the southeast, and there was a large sailboat (probably about 50 feet) tied up to the other side of the pier. Both the sailboat and the pier helped protect us a little from the winds coming from the northeast, as well as the waves which were coming across the marina from the breakwater which was about 1/4 mile away. The tidal range was 4-5 feet, so we sometimes had quite a step from Sanderling’s rail up to the dock. With the northeast winds came tides which were higher than normal, and one high tide nearly came up to the top of the dock. Being on the lee side of the dock meant that Sanderling was being blown away from the dock rather than into it, but we had our fenders and fenderboards out nonetheless.

By Sunday afternoon (November 15th) the marine forecast indicated that the storm would be passing to the north of Sandy Hook soon, and we anticipated getting underway at first light on Monday morning to continue our trip south. Andrew’s barometer watch indicated rising pressure, and we felt fairly certain that the low front was passing. We had filled our diesel tanks on Thursday when we entered Atlantic Highlands, so all we had to do was to ensure that gear was stowed away and check the engine oil and transmission fluid levels.

We were up at 5:30 Monday morning, ate a quick breakfast, and were underway by 6:15 heading out of the protected waters of the marina and into the bay to the west of Sandy Hook. We came abeam of Sandy Hook about 7:00 and were out into the Atlantic. Tom’s prediction was right on the money – the ocean was relatively smooth, even though there was a bit of a wind from the northwest and a moderate following sea. The sky was fairly clear and sunny. As we proceeded down the coast the following sea smoothed out and the ride was quite pleasant. We literally steered from buoy to buoy almost parallel with the coast, from one to two miles off the coast. We set the watch at 8:00 with the same watch teams as we had earlier in the voyage.

Since we were so close to the shore, we seldom saw any large ships of any kind, except on the horizon far to the east of us. There were a few pleasure and fishing boats running along the coast, and another trawler (Whispering Gull) behind us. That trawler had pulled into Atlantic Highlands on Sunday and tied up near us. The owner and one crewman were taking it to the Bahamas for the winter. They left Sandy Hook half an hour or so after we did, and we could see her for an hour or so before she disappeared from view behind us. We could hear her on the VHF radio from time to time for the remainder of the day. We also saw “head” boats with their fishing passengers from time to time.

We passed many small towns along the Atlantic coast of New Jersey, and the entire coast seemed to be lined with houses and other buildings. Vic and I had the watch when we passed Ocean City, New Jersey, and it’s obvious huge Ferris wheel (it must be at least as big as the one at the Prater in Vienna). Atlantic City was also very obvious, with its ostentatious buildings right on the ocean!

Andrew and Tom relieved Vic and me about 6:00 in the evening, and it was dark. Tom estimated we’d get into Cape May shortly after 8:00, and he was right, again. I awoke when I heard the engine RPM decrease. I looked out the windows of the aft cabin and saw several fishing boats (fishing trawlers) fairly close to us with all their lights on; some with nets out, others apparently heading back to port. We were obviously close to Cape May! Then I noticed one boat which seemed to be following us rather closely off our starboard quarter. It had it’s booms extended to the sides, and it looked rather ominous. Suddenly Sanderling started turning to port, and we did a complete 360 degree circle while the trawler took the lead. We then followed it into the breakwater for Cape May. Tom later told us he didn’t want the trawler overtaking us in the channel into Cape May, so elected to get behind it instead. At about the point where we had to bear off to the port to head toward the coast guard station and an anchorage Tom had in mind, another trawler passed us proceeding out to the ocean. It, too, had the booms extended, and we had to maneuver to avoid passing too closely to the booms. The crews of those boats must put the booms out as soon as they leave the dock – in doing so they create a real hazard for other boats.

Once inside the breakwater at Cape May, New Jersey, the channel zigs and zags a few times, and the day markers (triangular shapes on poles driven into the bottom) are not lighted for the most part. We broke out the search light in order to identify the markers, and made our way down the channel until we reached the coast guard pier. Then we went a short distance past the pier and into shallower water, lowered the anchor, turned off the engines and the running lights, and turned on the anchor light (at the top of the radar mast) to identify Sanderling as a boat which was anchored. The time was about 8:30 PM.

After making everything secure about the deck and upper steering station, we settled down to eat the beef stew which Helga had sent along with Vic (it was still frozen when we left Sandy Hook in the morning and put it in a pan on the stove to thaw during the day) and some biscuits baked in Sanderling’s oven. It wasn’t long before we were in bed reading and going to sleep.

On Tuesday, November 11th (Veteran’s Day), we were again up before dawn, brewing coffee and heating water for hot chocolate and oatmeal. Tom always found the first cup of coffee as soon as it was ready, and then went about reviewing the sailing plans for the day. Vic and I checked the oil and transmission levels, and Andrew turned his bed of the night into the settee for the day. Once the engine oil was topped off, Tom started the twin diesel engines to get them warmed up and ready for the work of the day.

We were underway at 6:25. This time we had to raise the anchor in the process, and discovered that the windlass had decided to quit working. So Andrew heaved on the anchor line while Tom nudged Sanderling ahead slowly. When the anchor line was straight up and down, Andrew secured it to the stanchion while Tom drove slowly ahead to loosen the anchor from the muddy bottom. Then Andrew hauled in the rest of the line and chain, and “washed” the anchor in the water to clean off the mud as the boat moved slowly back to the channel and headed toward the Cape May Canal and Delaware Bay.

Sanderling was one of a number of boats going through the canal that morning. There was quite a procession of power and sail boats ( mostly pleasure boats) heading to various places in the Delaware Bay. Our goal was the entrance to the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal (C&D Canal) just south of Wilmington, Delaware, about 50 nautical miles away (7 nautical miles equals 8 statute miles). We were proceeding up the Delaware Bay, and through the C&D Canal to within about 1 mile of the Chesapeake Bay to a small town of Chesapeake City. This was a milestone, of sorts, for several reasons: (1) we had to change to a different chart book; (2) we were going to be heading north for the first time in the voyage!

We cleared the Cape May Canal at 0700. The weather was scattered clouds with strong north wind and a rough northwesterly sea. We were pitching heavily at times while heading on a course of 321 degrees (magnetic).

The entrance of Delaware Bay is known for its stormy weather, tricky currents, and shoals. It’s also wide enough that it is difficult to see either side from the middle of the bay. When we left the canal and set on our course to the first buoy, we had to travel about 21 nm before we would get to the mark where we would change course to head more northerly in the main shipping channel. It was quite windy, with 2-3 foot waves bouncing Sanderling around. Vic and I took the watch at 8:00, and by 0920 we had passed Miah Maull Light House and were in the shipping channel heading up the bay. We only saw a few large freighters after entering the main channel, and a few pleasure boats, some fishing on the shoals, others heading up the bay with us. Sanderling is not a race horse, and that is what appealed to me about her. She keeps plugging along at a nice pace, hour after hour, and lets those of us onboard enjoy relative peace and quiet compared to her faster sisters.

On the way up the Delaware, we saw a moth-balled navy cruiser being towed down the bay, probably from the “moth-ball fleet” at the former Philadelphia Naval Shipyard on the Delaware River. One large tug was pulling, and another was made fast astern, to act as a rudder, I suppose! The hull number had been painted out, and no flag was flying.

 Other than a few boats, and passing the nuclear power plant, the trip up the Delaware was uneventful. The sea was fairly calm once we got up a ways, and the sky clear, with light wind.

Andrew and Tom were on watch when we entered the C&D Canal. Tom pointed out the superstructure of a freighter which had sunk on the starboard side of the shipping channel just south of the entrance in the 60’s. From the area of the entrance to the canal, we could see the first several highway bridges over the canal, as well as the big bridges at Wilmington over the Delaware River which one takes in a car from I-95 to join the New Jersey Turnpike when heading north along the Atlantic seaboard.

The C&D Canal was longer than I had anticipated, about 10 nm in all. We passed under numerous bridges and power cables. Tom and Andrew heard a sailboat skipper on the VHF saying he was aground at the entrance to a marina on the north side of the canal near the Delaware entrance, with the marina operator telling him he must be out of the channel. About 3/4ths way through the canal we passed that sailboat and another motoring together through the canal to Chesapeake Bay. The boat which had been aground was a fairly large ketch, and after we passed them and told them where we were heading, told the smaller sailboat with them that they were going to follow us into the anchorage at Chesapeake City. Tom gave them very specific instructions about how to enter the anchorage on the south side of the canal, just opposite Shaeffer’s Dock and Restaurant – he told them specifically to stay wide to starboard, as the port side of the entrance had shoaled. They wanted to follow us, because our draft was about the same as theirs (4.5 feet) and we could “dig out” any muddy bottom.

The trip through the canal was uneventful, with one exception. Just as we were approaching one of the curves to starboard in the canal, we noticed this thing ahead which seemed to be blocking the entire canal. The “thing” turned out to be a huge commercial freighter heading the toward Delaware Bay. I’d never seen anything like it – it seemed almost rectangular in every direction, with straight sides down to the waterline. I’ll have to wait until I get my pictures back to identify the line, but I remember that it was German. We passed port to port (normal passing situation) without difficulty, but I can’t imagine being the captain of a boat that size going through such a restricted area.

About 4:30PM (still in daylight for a change) we came to the anchorage at Chesapeake City on the south side of the canal. We entered without difficulty, and tied up starboard side to the wall on the west end of the anchorage provided by the city free of charge. We moved forward to allow enough space along the wall for the sailboat we knew would be arriving shortly. About 10 minutes later, we saw the masts over the north wall, and knew our “partner” would be arriving shortly. We watched, as the man at the helm cut directly into the port side of the entrance (just what Tom had told them not to do), and then make way toward the space behind Sanderling (fortunately for them, they didn’t go aground). When it was obvious they weren’t going to get into the space behind us, they circled, to try again. On the way around, I heard someone telling the person at the helm how to approach the wall behind us. When they headed toward the large sailboat behind the space we had saved for them, Tom and I knew they were in trouble. We looked at each other and we both opined that perhaps we shouldn’t have left room for them! The other boat already on the wall had some protruding davits astern, and sure enough, the “partner” almost hit the davits while avoiding the hull of the other boat. Luckily for them we were there to help them get into the space we had saved for them after someone onboard tossed lines to us. The smaller sailboat which at one point was accompanying our “partner” came in about 15 minutes later and had to anchor out in the anchorage for the night.

I later learned that the boat had had a number of difficulties. There were only two people aboard, the owner and one crewman. After going aground trying to get to the earlier marina on the north side of the canal, the crewman aboard had called for a towboat using his cell phone. When he was put on hold by the towing company, the batteries of his cell phone went dead. They eventually got themselves off their grounding point. Prior to that, wherever they were staying the night before (along the New Jersey coast, I think), the boat’s batteries were dead and they couldn’t start the engine in the morning. The owner had to call his son to come to the boat with a car battery to get the engine going using jumper cables to the engine. Seems that everything that could go wrong, had gone wrong! They were using candles that night at Chesapeake City in order to conserve their battery’s power.

The next morning (Wednesday) as we were about to get underway, they asked if we had jumper cables, which we didn’t. Although the owner’s son had left a car battery aboard as a backup, he hadn’t left the jumper cables so there was no way to get the boat’s engine going. I know they eventually got going, because two days after we arrived at Patuxent River, I heard them on the VHF talking with another boat after leaving Solomon’s Island, heading south! I hope they make it to wherever they’re going.

My friend from Baltimore (the same one who had taken me to the airport the previous Tuesday) met us at Chesapeake City with a delicious meal she had made the night before. Andrew’s friends from Bowie, Maryland, came to the boat later in the evening, and they left to take him to BWI Wednesday morning so he could catch a flight back to Salt Lake City in time to go to his class at the University Wednesday afternoon. Andrew was disappointed that he couldn’t complete the trip with the rest of us. After our meal, and everyone’s departure, the three remaining crew members turned in to get a good night’s sleep.

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Part III Written in Annandale, Virginia

The Deck Log shows the following information for the passage from Atlantic Highlands to Cape May:

Total time: 14H-12M dock to anchor

Steaming time: 13H-32M breakwater to breakwater

Distance: 114 miles dock to anchor

Steam/Distance: 111 miles breakwater to breakwater

Average speed: 8.22 knots at 2000 RPM

The Deck Log shows the following information for the passage from Cape May to Chesapeake City:

Total time anchor to dock: 10H-15M

Total distance: 63.2 miles

Average speed 6.2 knots (against tides)

(I have yet to compute the same info for the passage to Patuxent River.)

We got underway as soon as it was light in order to go across the canal to fill our fuel tanks. The day before was Veteran’s Day and Shaeffer’s Dock was closed, but we were told that they would be open for fuel at 6:00AM. We were at the dock at 6:30 and ready to take on fuel. Tom went looking for someone to operate the pump, and finally found a man whom we believe to be the owner of Shaeffer’s. He was unable to get the pump to work, blaming the problem on the computer. Eventually, he told us that he had called the pump man and that he was on his way. About 8:00 the pump man arrived; he had no better luck getting the pump to work. Finally, at 8:30 we got underway for another marina. Our fuel supply was getting critically low, and we knew we wouldn’t make it too far. Tom knew of a marina on the Chesapeake about 10 miles away, and that’s where we headed, hoping we wouldn’t run out of fuel on the way!

We had lost two hours waiting for fuel at Shaeffer’s Dock. We knew then that we wouldn’t complete the trip south until well after dark.

As I checked several books I had brought along dealing with cruising the ICW, I noticed that there were several other marinas closer which might have fuel. I called Shaeffer’s on the cell phone, and they confirmed that a marina just beyond the canal in the Chesapeake would have fuel. We made our way into that marina through some extremely shallow water marked by buoys. We tried to raise someone on the VHF radio, and when that failed we blew our horn and yelled toward the fuel pier. Suddenly, a person stood up right on the dock – he had been there all along. He told us they didn’t have any diesel fuel, but the next marina just over the hill (around the bend in the Chesapeake) did.

We motored back out to the Chesapeake, turned south for a few miles, and went into the Bohemia River where the marina was located. That marina answered up right away on the VHF to our request for information about fuel, and confirmed that they had fuel and would send someone down to help us as soon as we were at the fuel dock. The person on the radio also gave us directions on how to find the entrance to the marina and then to the fuel dock. He was extremely helpful and a much welcome relief. We were all fast at the Bohemia Bay Yacht Harbor fuel dock at 9:54, topped off with 142 gallons of diesel fuel (tanks only hold about 150 gallons, we think), filled the water tanks, washed the salt spray off the windows, and were underway at 10:15 and back in the Chesapeake at 10:33 heading south.

The wind was still from the northwest. The far upper Chesapeake is fairly narrow, and consequently somewhat sheltered from northerly winds. However, as one proceeds south, but Bay opens up and becomes quite wide, allowing the winds to build fairly high waves and rough seas from all directions. We had to fight a beam sea from the very beginning, causing the boat to yaw from side to side and to roll, a motion that is not very comfortable. As we headed south, the yaw and roll became more extreme and more uncomfortable.

With Andrew’s departure, we were down to a crew of three. Because of the rough conditions, we decided to conn the boat from the inside steering station, and that one person would take care of everything while the other two rested. Because it was our last day on the boat, all of us were up and helping navigate. Eventually the seas became so rough and the motion of the boat so uncomfortable, that it was almost impossible to get any rest laying down.

At one point in the upper bay we came upon an Army Corps of Engineer’s boat keeping station to the north of a very large dredge. We tried to raise it on the VHF to ask about a safe course around the dredge, but when they finally answered they just referred us to the dredge operator, who simply told us that we should avoid his rig! As we approached closer, we were aware of a long line of floats that seem to extend most of the way across the bay, certainly across the main channel blocking it off entirely. The floats ran from the dredge to the west. We changed course several times trying to find a way around the floats, through safe water. We finally went around to the west. We wondered what large boats were doing about the impediment. The floats were supporting the discharge tube, which ran into shallow water where the material the dredge was picking up from the bottom was dumped.

From the area of Poole Island south, the bay becomes quite wide, and that is when we began to encountered the roughest seas.

At 1:37PM, Tom recorded this weather information in the Deck Log: Northwesterly F-6 wind – Rough sea – Pitching and rolling heavily at times. Compass course 210 magnetic.

The person steering the boat had to more or less wedge himself into the wooden seat in order to keep from being thrown about. Anyone standing had to hang onto the overhead hand rails. We ate sandwiches, but soup wouldn’t have stayed in the bowls very long!

At 2:52 we passed under the William P. Lane Memorial Bridge from Annapolis to Kent Island. Tom noted in the log: Weather and sea moderating as we gain a lee under the west shore.

By the time we passed Annapolis, just south of the bridge, our course took us along the west side of the bay. Then we gained some protection from the wind which was still northwesterly and the waves.

There was nothing unusual about the journey down the Chesapeake Bay, except having to deal with the wind and beam seas in the upper stretches. Once we passed Annapolis, our passage became more routine. We did sight a submarine (presumably OUR navy’s) heading north about 1 mile off our port beam at 3:55, presumably on its way to Annapolis for an orientation for the midshipmen at the Naval Academy. The sub’s decks were awash, with the conning tower and upper tail fin sticking out of the water; the watch crew was in the conning tower.

Vic had programmed all the buoys along our course into the loran, and as we passed each buoy, we would bring up the next waypoint on the loran and be able to keep track of the course and distance to the new waypoint, and the course and speed over the ground. It proved to be reasonably accurate, usually within 1/2 mile of the actual location of the waypoint.

Sun set occurred while we were still several hours from our destination. We began the process of picking out the buoys which marked our course through their light characteristics and bearing. We also kept a sharp lookout for other boats and ships, particularly since we had passed a number of large vessels and tugs with tows during our trip down the Chesapeake. About the time we were off Calvert Cliffs, a tug with tow which we had been tracking on the radar and visually for over an hour and which was on a reciprocal course approached to within a mile. We changed course slightly to starboard in order to pass it port to port (the standard passing procedure). When it was about 1/2 mile away, we could still see the red and green running lights as well as the mast-head lights – meaning it was coming directly for us. We continued to alter course to starboard, and although the tug would initially appear to be passing to our port side, it would suddenly be heading right for us again. This continued several times. Finally Tom raised the tug captain on the VHF and suggested a port to port pass; the captain agreed. The tug swung to port, but then came back at us again. I began to have visions of something from “The Twilight Zone.” Eventually it swung back to our port. We passed within 1/4 of a mile of each other, and Tom speculated that the tug itself was probably yawing from side to side while pulling it’s tow and that’s why it would seem to head toward us while we were turning away. That’s the kind of excitement you don’t need.

After we passed Calvert Cliffs and the abandoned oil off-loading station just south of Calvert Cliffs, we started looking for the buoys which would take us into the Patuxent River and then to our marina at Patuxent River Naval Air Station. The buoys just inside the river all have similar light characteristics, but Tom eventually sorted them out and with Vic and I spotting them visually with the search light and binoculars. By this time we were all outside, with Tom steering from the upper station. We headed west until the Cove Point Light was off our starboard beam, then headed on course 230 magnetic toward the entrance to the marina. One of the lights marking the entrance to the marina wasn’t working, so it made the job a little more difficult, but Tom was able to spot the opening as we got closer. We pulled inside the marina, turned right and found a slip against the quay large enough to get into, and made Sanderling fast bow in to the slip.

The voyage was over! But not the fun!

We ate dinner in peace and quiet on the boat, rechecked the lines to ensure they were holding, and went to bed.

Thursday morning we talked with the marina manager about the slip Sanderling would be in, then checked it out to make sure it was wide enough. We then left the temporary slip of the night before, and moved Sanderling to her “permanent” slip. We gathered up our things, and I drove Tom and Vic to BWI where they caught flights back to their homes. I drove home to Annandale from BWI, took a quick shower and grabbed some clothes, stopped at a marine supply store to buy some new dock lines, and returned to Sanderling to spend the night and watch the lines during the high winds which had been forecast. On Friday I made a few adjustments to the lines to allow Sanderling to ride easier in her slip. On Friday morning, as I was checking the marine forecast, I heard a call on the VHF from our “partner” who had had all the difficulty at Chesapeake City – they had left Solomon’s Island and were in the Chesapeake heading south.

My friend from Baltimore and I decided we should get in some practice leaving and returning to the slip, so on both Saturday and Sunday we took Sanderling out for a two hour cruise around the Solomon’s Island area. The wind was still from the northwest, but it had moderated considerably. To my great surprise, we were able to cast off lines and back out of the slip without difficulty, turn Sanderling to starboard using the two engines in opposition, and head out of the marina. The first day we went up the Patuxent River under the bridge connecting Lexington Park and Solomon’s Island, and then took a quick turn around the small island inside the harbor at Solomon’s Island. Sunday we cruised slowly up all the inlets that form the harbor area at Solomon’s, looking at the beautiful homes and boats. We also saw six swans fly past Sanderling – I don’t think I’d ever seen swans in flight before. Most surprisingly to me, we got Sanderling back into the slip both days without causing any structural damage to the hull or the slip! Both cruises were good confidence builders.

Sanderling is going to be my home on the water, something I’ve always hoped for. I often think how fortuitous it was that I walked onto the dock at the Crosby Boat Yard last June and ran into Bob Gill working on Sanderling. As we talked, I told him that I wanted to buy a trawler, and he told me that he was planning on selling Sanderling at the end of the summer. We agreed to keep in touch, and we did. Bob Gill got a lot of enjoyment from sailing Sanderling, and took several long trips with her. I hope my relationship with Sanderling will be as good.

The name Sanderling, by the way, refers to a small starling-sized bird whose habitat is ocean beaches, sandbars, occasionally mud flats and is found on linland lakes and river shores, as well. It is a member of the Sandpiper family. It’s range is worldwide. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds (Eastern Region) describes sanderlings as follows:

Practically every day of the year these birds may be found on any ocean beach. As a wave comes roaring in, the birds run up on the beach just ahead of the breaker, then rush after the retreating surf to feed on the tiny crustaceans and mollusks stranded by the outgoing water.