Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Maiden voyage

Underway-----but who's steering?
And so my friends....the two reformed ski-bum-turned-salty-adventurers began their new life away from the security of the nesting docks....heading south in search of warm waters.....it was another new beginning....something this last year had been loaded with.....no ruts, no reality, no regrets.

It was a year ago March 4, we sold the B&B....and each day since then has been a new horizon with a new brain twisting lesson....and we were ready.



Our original course plans had us heading out to the Gulf of Mexico from Tampa Bay and sailing an overnighter to the Boca Grande Pass north of Pine Island....but da weatherman said,
"Patchy fog and deadly lightening" ...at least that's what we took to heart more than the perfect  northerly-to-easterly winds and 2-4ft seas.  We were exhausted from getting-outta-Dodge, so we opted to stay inland and motor on the Intercostal Waterway instead of staying up all night undersail.
Our first night was in Sarasota Bay in an anchorage next to downtown (aka the Emerald City)...it was perfect to de-stress.  Day 2 on the ICW..... 30 miles, 8 more bridges in 7 hours
Swing bridge on the ICW
found us dropping our hook in about 8 feet water just off the ICW....again, perfect.

For our evening entertainment, we took a dinghy ride into the nearby mangroves where we spotted a bald eagle (but not before we ran aground in the dinghy....oops, sorry Speedy....*tsk-tsk)















Day 3 on the ICW----we arrived into an anchorage we had decided on over a year ago.....Pelican Bay just inside Boca Grande Pass next to Cayo Costa State Park....ok, now breathe.  This anchorage had about 30 boats of all kinds......and we stayed for 2 nights.


Our good friends the Captain and the Mermaid (aka Bob and Susan) power-boated up from their Florida home to spend the afternoon with us.





Lunch on Cabbage Key Island with it's Gopher turtles and the famous dollar bar



Chalie & Susan & Bob




















Our last night anchoring on the ICW was off of York Island on the south side of Pine Island.....where we rode the dingy up several canals to Chalie's & Denise's place (remember the crazy dude from the Upper Chesapeake in earlier blogs?  Yeah, he's just as crazy in Florida too)   Thanks guys for a great hamburger!





Our 5th night on the ICW....and the mosquitos finally found us.....and it was an total assault driving us inside the boat behind screens with DEET....a bloodbath ensued, but we won.

Into uncharted territory (for us anyway)
On the morning of the 6th day we listened in to NWS weather service on the VHF....consulted with a couple wind/weather apps on the cell phone----full moon, 15 knot winds, 2-4ft seas-----we left the ICW behind.....truly new waters now.  It looked good and we were going for it----120 miles---all day, all night and all the next day non-stop to reach Marathon in the Florida Keys.  We passed under our last bridge, Sanibel Causeway, hoisted full sails and felt the wind in our face.....it was good.  








Happy but tired

Good was the first day.....past Fort Meyers Beach....Naples.....and sunset off Marco Island....into the dark night off the coast of the Everglades....alligators, tigers and bears, oh yeah.  And for the next 12 hours not a single light or buoy or boat was sighted.  We recorded our position every hour on the paper charts, but we really love this age of electronic chart plotters.  We sailed under a double reefed mainsail-no jib and the winds were great around 15 knots with gusts to 20 knots.  But just to keep us alert, the seas got rough (for us newbies anyway) as we ran on a broad reach with the wind.  We rode on wild waves (4-6 feet plus some) that we couldn't see......because the full moon hid behind the unpredicted storm clouds.  In the darkness, we could see the darker outline of squalls around us.  We donned our foul weather gear and tethered ourselves in...taking turns while trying to catch an hour sleep here and there.  The hours actually flew by and when morning came, as it always does, the winds had shifted from the east giving us a more comfortable beam reach as we approached the turquoise waters of the Florida Bay off of Cape Sable.



The only casualty from being tossed around in the waves through the night, was Otto.....our autohelm.  Otto is truly one of our more valuable crew members....he can hold a course when the rest of us look like drunken sailors on a pier.  At this point in our journey, it was actually OK, because those shallow waters (6-10ft) in the Florida Bay between mainland and the Keys are a mine field of crab and lobster pots and it takes the finesse of a slalom skier to dodge them.  We did well, only a few thunks along the bottom of the hull told us we had hit one, but the beauty with a full keel is that there's a smaller chance of snagging and dragging one on the prop.
Only one crab pot of thousands to dodge
We arrived into the boat haven harbor of Marathon on Vaca Key around 4pm on Saturday.  We felt like it was another planet, as our less-than-alert minds were not in sync with this reality.  All in all, it was a good passage with more lessons to add to our growing experience.  Details of life in Marathon soon to come. 

3 comments:

  1. Next stop: the Canary Islands! ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Go Go Fiesta! Love you guys! -Elaine

    ReplyDelete
  3. congrads for getting to the keys-Kevin-martek

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