Wednesday, February 26, 2020

We did it again...

...we spent a week at one place waiting for things entirely out of our control.  When our credit cards were hacked I had new ones shipped to Riviera Beach.  After 6 days they hadn't arrived.  And there were gale force winds for two days.  Then the depth gauge stopped working.  The foot switch on the windlass stopped working.  But we're getting pretty good at chilling.

When everything was fixed and the weather was right and we convinced Mastercard to overnight our cards to Vero Beach, we finally left.  Great passage from Riviera to Vero on Monday.  58 nautical miles in 8.5 hours averaging 6.8 knots!  Tail wind and fair tides do it every time.

In Riviera Beach we chilled with some great food which is our norm.  Seafood linguini here.
I practiced on my conch/horn.
Because the sunset always has to be acknowledged.
We did anchor among the derelict boats and derelict people and were nervous about someone coming down on us in the gale.  But our trusty spanker sail did it's job.  We stayed into the wind without fishtailing and the derelicts, which seem to have been here for generations, held station.
The voltage meter was flaky on the way to Vero so now I've pulled the alternator/regulator and brought it to a local electrical wizard, which I am definitely not.

We can't tell if Lacy recognizes the places she's already "marked" as we backtrack.  But she's doing great. 

Northward! Slowly.  Follow the lilacs.



Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Crossing

Our crossing was beautifully benign.  Soft wind flowing in the same direction as the gulf stream.  Minimal waves.  8.5 hours in the middle of the deep blue sea.  Daylight.
We traveled well south of our rhumb line until we hit the Current and then headed for the Lake Worth inlet with the Current.  Wow.  Over two hours at 7.5-8 knots, topping out at 8.9.  That'll clean the ol' barnacles off!

Back in the U.S. at Riviera Beach where we'll get a new or rebuilt alternator and other chores.
America is both convenient and disgusting.

Bahama parting shots

Bahamas are great and we learned to slow down.  Here's Kathleen doing one of her favorite activities, shell seeking on the beach.
This pretty much tells you where I was.
But I was also productive.  Kathleen found an unharvested conch shell on the beach, which means it doesn't have a hole punched in it.  They make great conch horns to blow at sunset once you saw the tip off and clean it up.  This is a gnarly old fella but makes a beautiful sound.
So we'll leave West End on Monday morning.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Not so fast!

If, dear reader, we have portrayed this voyage of Rosie as a sequence of umbrella drinks and white sandy beaches, we have seriously misled you.  Shit happens.  Almost every day!  We just deal with it.
Like the day before we are to leave for Florida we are notified that our credit card has been hacked and we have to get a new one.  They mailed it to Riviera Beach City Marina which we hope to get to someday.

We bid adieu to Lucaya and headed to Florida on Friday.  Said good-bye to Fabian, our dockmaster and friend.


Got an escort from the Bahamian Navy (NOT!)


Travelled about 1.5 hours and the alternator stopped charging the batteries.  I headed into shore so we could anchor.  I climbed down into the engine room with my trusty multi-meter to figure it out,  in some pretty rough seas, and immediately got seasick.  But couldn't find the problem so we motored into Knowles shipyard which was nearby.  They pulled the alternator, bench tested it and said it was fine.  They couldn't find the problem.  But as long as we had our generator to charge the batteries we could go on.  So we went to West End, the western tip of Grand Bahamas to wait for the next weather window which was Monday.  But on Saturday the generator wasn't pumping seawater.  So this morning I spent the day, my birthday, in the engine room again.  After many explorations I found a hunk of rubber from a previous impeller stuck in the outflow pipe.
And Wesley Eldred, the previous previous owner of Rosie, left her stocked with so many parts.  Of course we had a new impeller to put in.  Thank you Wesley.




Thursday, February 13, 2020

Cabbages and Kings

The time has come the Walrus said...

A great weather window presents itself tomorrow for crossing the Gulf Stream.  We'll leave at 0400  and hope to be in Palm Beach for sundowners (that's Carib-speak for cocktail hour). 
We're ready.  Shipshape is us.  Everything lashed down.  The dinghy and kayak are on deck.  Mr Beemer is rarin' to go.  Water topped off.  Batteries ful.


We've enjoyed our time in the Bahamas.  Weather has been mostly great although constantly windy.  Last night we were dancing at the Taino Beach fish fry.
And there's the pool for Kathleen and the Tipsy Turtle for me.
Life is just so much easier in the States though.  So we're ready.  Our absentee ballots for Town Meeting/Primary will be at Riviera Beach for us.  And some new credit cards cuz ours were hacked.
And we'll start back-tracking familiar ground with planned R&R stops at Cumberland Island, Savannah and other cool places.  Stay tuned.  Much more to follow.

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Dolphins

I don't like zoos or any animals held in captivity so people can make money.
There is a tourist attraction here called the Dolphin Experience.  For $85 you can watch the dolphins to tricks and then get in the water with them and scratch their backs or something.  We weren't going to do that.

But we discovered a "back door" to the place we could reach by dinghy.  Of course they are very friendly and curious.

I spent a lot of time with this guy.  He proved to be a very good listener.
I told him I would set them all free if I could.  When I stood up and said good-bye he raised out of the water and "squeeked" good-bye to me!
Today I learned that they're not really captives at all.  Their handlers/trainers lead them into the ocean all the time and they just follow the boat.  They parade them down the channel and they go back to their "home."  I guess three squares a day is worth a lot to a dolphin.

I love them.  They are so smart and so gentle.


Pump!

The seawater pump is installed!  I got my hands on it yesterday after 4 hours of Bahamian brokers, Customs and UPS agents.  Oh and $130 in fees.
Put it in this morning.
I decided to get the new pump because I had a consistent leak.  Could have ignored it but on examining the old pump I'm glad I didn't.  One aft seal was completely gone, exposing the bearings.  Losing the seawater pump in the gulf stream would not have been good.

We are good to go and getting anxious to get back on the...water.