Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Cocoa to Titusville to the Orlando Airport



On another rare beautiful day we sailed from Cocoa to Titusville, my jumping off point. We noticed a boat anchored next to us was filled with water and the Coast Guard came to check it out. The next morning Gilles went to help the owner bail it out and met Annie (also helping to bail) who was anchored nearby with her husband Neville on Peace. It was a fortuitous meeting... earlier we had run into Dickie and Helen on Harmony. Our trip was coming to a close with a meeting of Peace and Harmony.

I'm at the airport in Orlando which is full of kids (as opposed all the people in wheel chairs on my outward flight), most of whom I'm sure have been to Disney World and so are happy and cheerful. I'll be home in a few hours. Gilles has about 2 weeks to get the boat to Palatka and drive home.



Thursday, March 25, 2010

Vero Beach to Cocoa Village





We're finally getting Florida weather, warm and sunny with a good breeze for sailing. A two day stop in Vero Beach turned into five days, testament to why it's called "velcro" beach... it's hard to leave. The Vero Beach Museum of Art has some nice sculpture in the garden and a special exhibit of marine paintings. There were some incredible sunsets and a double rainbow after a rain shower.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Stuart to Peck Lake


We made a detour south to Peck Lake where Gilles tried to feed a ham sandwich to these pelicans who were not at all interested. We walked the beach at Hobe Sound Wildlife Refuge, home to scrub pine and sea turtles, and picked up a few shells. The harbor was full of sailboats. The weather has been great, sunny and warm with a nice wind and we decided to go next to Vero Beach.


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Across Lake Okeechobee


We made a run for Fort Myers from Boca Grande, where incidentally we heard the Republicans were meeting, in an effort to cross Lake Okeechobee before bad weather set in again. The forecast called for a few days of good weather and we didn't want to waste any time. We spent the night at Ft Myers Yacht Basin, did laundry, and stocked up on groceries and left the next morning. The day was glorious and warm (rare this winter) and when we went through Franklin Lock we saw Sam docked at an Army Corps of Enginneers campground nearby so we stopped and hung out with him and a couple who were once boaters, now RVers.

Another stop at LaBelle and then Clewiston for the night (tied up to a dolphin--wooden piles at the side of the channel) before our one-day window for a smooth crossing of the Lake. Despite the alligators, Gilles got in the dinghy and dropped an anchor to minimize swinging. The air was filled with the sounds of birds. The lake was smooth as silk, Port Mayaca Lock was open, and soon we were back in Indiantown. A few days were spent on anchor in a loop of the St Lucie River as another storm with 5 inches of rain passed and today we are back in Stuart waiting for another weather window to head north.


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Fort Myers to Boca Grande


It was sunny and warm when we left Fort Myers and headed toward Sanibel Island. The wind was too strong for a good anchorage near Sanibel but we found a good spot about a mile north, off the southern end of Pine Island. With news of a storm brewing in the Gulf of Mexico with gale force winds coming our way, we made a run as soon as the weather permitted for a protected anchorage at Boca Grande, north of Captiva, where we met up with a good cruising friend from previous years, Sam Blue. According to the guide, Boca Grande is home to the very rich and famous (Katherine Hepburn had a home here) and the homes are grand with beautiful landscaping. Gilles spent two hours looking for treasure on the beach and ended up with 30 cents, 2 bottle caps, and a magnetized name tag. I read Lost on Planet China by J. Marten Troost (funny and must reading for a first timer's trip to China) and started The Everglades: River of Grass by Marjory Stoneman Douglas in anticipation of our return crossing of Lake Okeechobee. Looks like tomorrow will be a good day to start the trip back home.