Spent the night at Barefoot Landing Marina, along the ICW at
Myrtle Beach. The "marina" is
really nothing more than a floating dock about 10' wide and about 300' long
that runs parallel to the waterway on the east side. The dock master was very helpful and even
drove us to the NAPA store for oil in the morning. Not much for amenities but right next to a
large shopping center with lots of restaurants etc. As we approached the dock, Ollie's friend
Chuck was waiting. He jumped aboard and
had the problem isolated in 20 minutes and repaired in about an hour. Then, the 5 of us went over to Ollie's house
for a fantastic pasta dinner (and, for me, shower, and laundry). Thanks Ann and
Ollie!! Phil and Dan and I came back to
the boat for the night. This morning, we
did boat work till around noon - changed the engine oil, cleaned, tidied up the
new VHF power wiring, ate breakfast, planned our trip for today and tomorrow. We only motored for 3 hours today. The
current was with us and we made 20 miles to the Ocean Isles Marina - a very
nice marina, primarily for small boats. They have inside storage for over 400
runabouts and docks for only about 20 larger boats. Very nice staff and
facilities. After an
"exhausting" day, all but Dan had fallen asleep by 8pm and we were
all in bed by 9:30.
Sea Log of trip from St. Thomas USVI to Baltimore Md from 1/22/2014 to 3/15/2014.
Friday, February 28, 2014
Thursday, February 27, 2014
One of these days, I'm going to document all the options and
challenges that exist with communications and data transfer on the trip. We
have an amazing number of devices and methods for both but 90% of the time, we
don't have internet and only about 50% of the time, we have phone service.
We were late getting into an anchorage last night (it was
almost dark and rainy) at a little after 6pm.
We had hoped to make it to Georgetown but were 3 hours short because of
the tug/barge event yesterday. We must
make it to Myrtle Beach tonight (Ollies wife is preparing a hot meal for us) so
we were up at 5:30am this morning and underway in the dark at around 6am. We expect to make it to some marina around
6pm. The temp this morning was 37 which
made hauling the anchor, and motoring for the first two hours lots of fun. We MISS the Caribbean! It's now almost 10am and the sun is out so it's
much better. A nice breakfast of
scrambled eggs and toast helped a lot with morale.
It's 5:30pm and we are at the marina in Myrtle Beach. I'm
sitting in a little hut about 1/4 mile from the boat because the wifi doesn't
reach there. It turned out being a nice
sunny day but cool all day. Tonight is supposed to be cold and tomorrow a high
in the low 50s. I believe we will be motoring up the waterway
until we get to Norfolk.
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Had a nice motor up the ICW today. After a nice pancake breakfast, weighed
anchor around 8:30am. Some of the rivers
and cuts in this area are a little tricky but we have never touched bottom
yet. Came into Charleston and are at the
Mega Marina on the south side of the historic district. It's a huge marina with hundreds of very huge
boats (in the 80 plus range). Went out
for a great dinner and am back at the boat now.
The skipper and the rest of the crew turned in at 9 so I'm up top
pounding this out before calling Joan (she works tonight) and then off to
bed. Tomorrow we are off to Georgetown
SC. It's a town I've seen on the
maps/charts and always wanted to go to.
Monday, February 24, 2014
I had trouble sleeping last night. Went to bed later than normal (10:30pm vs. 7
or 8) but woke up at 5 and was up making coffee at 5:30. Fortunately, Dan is an early riser and didn't
mind being awaken. Soon, Captain Phil
was up and dashed the plan of leaving at 10 (waiting for a favorable current)
and, instead opted for weighing anchor ASAP to get out of the very narrow canal
we had anchored in the night before. So,
we left the Hilton Head area before 7am.
We motored up the ICW all day and made just under 50 miles before
dropping anchor somewhere in the middle of no where (Raccoon Island) about 30
miles south of Charleston. It was a
beautiful, sunny day with little wind until about 2pm when an East wind around
10 knots came in. Tomorrow night we
will be staying at a nice marina on the South side of Old Charleston.
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Up at 6 this morning and weighed anchor at 7. Motored out Doboy inlet and headed
north. Weather was mostly cloudy till
about noon when it started sprinkling and getting a little foggy. Had planned to only go about 40 miles but
decided early to make it to Hilton Head (around 65 miles). Came into the Savannah River past Tybee Point
at around 5:30pm and to our anchorage around 6:45 (after dark). So, it was a somewhat boring and dreary day. On the bright side, Captain Phil did boat
work and made good progress replacing some of the parquet flooring that had
delaminated in the forward cabin. I
began work on replacing some of the broken sail slides. Tomorrow, we plan to leave here around 10am
(to be with the current) and head up the ICW.
Our current plan is to make it to Charleston Tuesday night.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
What a great day yesterday, last night, and this
morning. It's almost 1pm on Saturday.
It's sunny and around 60 degrees and we are motoring at about 6 knots up the
waterway, north of Brunswick. Our
destination for the night is only about 25 miles north (about 15 miles north of
our current position). We will be anchoring just south of Doboy Island, just
inside Doboy inlet. Tomorrow, we plan to
go outside and will likely motorsail up to the inlet at the south end of Hilton
Head.
Coming in yesterday, we ran head into a huge (Maine to
Florida) line of thunderstorms that produced headwinds in excess of 60 knots
and driving rain. Thank goodness for the
Pintita's sturdy enclosure. It lasted
about 30 minutes and we were very fortunate to be inside the inlet so the seas
never had much of a chance to build.
However, we had the engine at 3,000 rpm and were still doing only a
little over 4 knots. We docked at
Brunswick Landing Marina about 1pm. What
a really nice marina. The dockmaster,
Sheri was a real gem. It was nice to get
in early and take somewhat of a break since we had just finished a 3 day
passage. Later in the afternoon, I did a
load of laundry and downloaded my Plan2Nav chart plotter app onto Captain
Phil's smart phone (see below). We went
to dinner at Foxy's Pizza in downtown Brunswick. It was a 6 or 7 minute walk from the
boat. It was the only place in town that
showed any kind of life but it was lively and fun. Good beer (Tarripin Mo Hoo) and pizza
(buffalo wing and blue cheese) made it great.
Captain Phil has been coming along at erasing his
"analog captain" label given by Dewey a couple weeks ago. Over the last two weeks, he has been asking
more and more frequently to use the charting app on my phone to get into and
out of a number of tight inlets and reefs.
Last night, I downloaded the app and charts onto his LG phone with a
6" screen. Today, he beginning to
concede that there is some considerable usefulness to the device (other than as
a phone and to look at photos of his new granddaughter).
It's now almost 6pm. We pulled into an anchorage on the
south side of Doboy island on the west side of Doboy inlet. A strong ebbing current is pulling us out
toward the inlet and the wind is trying to blow us the other way. it's a pretty weird sight - small breaking
waves blowing from the stern to the bow.
The plan is to weigh anchor at around 7am and head outside (offshore)
for a 50 mile motorsail up to Ossabaw inlet (about 15 miles south of Savannah).
Friday, February 21, 2014
2/21/2014
Notice of blog format change.
Readers may have noticed that I've not been - up with the
"Photos" tab. Instead, I've been putting a limited number of photos
under the Daily Trip Summary tab. I've
decided to just delete the photos tab to eliminate the redundancy. Also, our new crew member, Dan (a computer
expert) encouraged me to post my videos on You tube - which I have figured out
how to do. I've inserted links to the
videos in the blog text. If you are
interested, you can scroll down through the text looking for the links. They should be easy to find.
It's now 7:45am. It was
a long (and chili night). We left the
gulf stream sometime before midnight and the temperature started dropping. I came on watch at 1am and the wind had
picked up to South at around 25. Captain
Phil had just made the decision to reef the main. It seems almost absurd to be on the foredeck
of a 45 foot boat in 6 foot seas in total darkness to do a maneuver like
this. In retrospect, we should have set
the reef just before dark when we dropped the mizzen. Oh well, it had to be done. Ollie and I were on the foredeck as Phil
rounded the boat up into the wind. Of
course, the sail began flogging like thunder, making our adrenaline pump even
harder. It took about 10 minutes and the
flaking job looked awful but the reef was in and the boat handled better. By 3 or 4am, the wind had died to around 15
and the seas began to calm. At this
point, we are about 10 miles east of the outer buoy off Brunswick GA. We motor sailed all night and are currently
under a reefed main and staysail only, doing about 5 knots. We expect to enter the inlet about 10am and
be docked around noon. I think we are
ALL looking forward to the FREE laundry at the marina.
It is now 11am and we just sighted land for the first time in 3 days. Hooray! The weather stinks. It has been cold and foggy for the last 2 hours. We just got a cell signal so we're able to use the AIS app on my phone to look for ships. More later.
2/20/2014
Back in the US of AIt's now 1am Thursday morning. We have sailed since yesterday morning (having left from Freeport). We saw the last of the northwestern tip of Grand Bahama (West End) at around 4pm. Since then, it's been the open sea. We had distant encounters with 2 or 3 cruise ships and 2 or 3 other commercial vessels during the night. It seemed like we would never hit the gulf stream but we finally did at about 1 or 2am. Our speed (motor sailing) went from 6.5 knots to the mid 9s. The wind overnight couldn't have been more favorable for a "crossing" of the gulf stream. I had read lots of articles about how treacherous it can be but it has been a piece of cake so far. The winds are currently SE around 15. It is supposed to shift to the south. With all this working in our favor, we have decided to "skip" Florida and hope to make landfall in Brunsick GA - entering into St. Simon's Sound. We have verified there is a customs office there and have made reservations at the marina (right in the town of Brunswick). Joan and I traveled there 2 years ago ago, on the way to visit my Dad in Florida and loved the place. Great French Toast for breakfast this morning.
Our newest crew member, Dan is a 26 year old, very fit
bicycle racer who works for Martin Marietta as a cyber intelligence analyst. I
think that means he spends most of his (working) time looking for foreign
countries trying to break into and steel our military design secrets. Much of their work is for the Department of
Defense. He grew up sailing at the
Baltimore Sailing Center off Back River north of Baltimore and crewed on the
Pintita during high school. He lives in
downtown Baltimore and commutes to
Gaithersburg Md every day. Having Dan to
help with the watch rotation has been very nice. Getting 2 good hours of sleep between watches
overnight is a real treat.
It's now 4:40pm and we are happily motoring along in the
center of the gulf stream doing around 9 knots.
The wind has clocked around to the south so it is directly behind
us. We are motoring because if we
weren't, we would have to bear off and we would be heading further out to sea -
away from our destination onshore. We
have the main and mizzen out fully and locked in place with lines (jibe
preventers) and both jib and staysail hauled in tight so they don't flop around
(which is hard on the sails). We are
currently about 80 miles offshore. In
about 2 hours, we plan to jibe over to a port tack and head for Brunswick
GA. After jibing, we will continue to be
pushed to the north by the current but in 2 or 3 hours we expect to be out of
it and will then be on a direct path for St. Simon's Inlet. We expect to make the inlet around noon. From the inlet, it will be another 5 or 6
miles up the rivers to Brunswick. Needless
to say, we are looking forward to being back in the US.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
It's 8am on 2/18. We
just finished an overnighter from Eleuthera to Freeport - about 150 miles. It blew E at 20 most of the day yesterday and
we had a great sail. We started out on a
port tack for about 2 hours and jibed over to a starboard tack that we were on
for the remainder of the day and night.
Going through Flemming Channel at the far West end of Eleuthera was a
little exiting. We were sailing with a 3
knot current through the channel with the wind at 90 degrees to the
current. It created a very steep chop
that lasted for about a half hour. We
dogged the hatches after taking on a couple quarts of salt water into the
salon. The wind finally died off around
9pm as we sailed into the lee of Great Abaco Island. We were still 20 miles off shore so the seas
were a little rough. We ended up motor
sailing all night. I'd say we have
gotten into a routine of motorsailing at night because having the engine
running keeps the batteries charged and the auto pilot (Fred) uses a fair
amount of power. Hand steering at night
in seas of any size is a pain so running the engine allows us to have Fred
steer - making watch standing much more pleasant. During the night, we must have seen 15 or 20
ships (freighters, cruise ships, etc.).
Only one came close enough that we changed our course for several
minutes. At 1am, a cruise ship passed us
and we could see a large screen TV on his upper deck (over a mile away). We are currently about 15 miles from Freeport
on Grand Bahama. We will be stopping to
pick up Dan Kotowski (another long time Pintita crew member) and will stay over
at a marina. We have had great weather
for our direction in the last week. It
has truly been fair winds and following seas.
But the forecast is for a major front to come through in about a week
and our plan is to get to the Florida coast ASAP. I expect we will be picking up Dan, provisioning,
and heading out tomorrow for a Gulf Stream crossing tomorrow and tomorrow
night. When we leave Freeport and where
we head will depend on the weather (primarily wind direction and strength). Coming into Freeport now (12 noon). More
later.
Sunday, February 16, 2014
It's almost noon. We departed Cape Eleuthera this morning
about 9am after saying so long to our friends and shipmates Mary and
Dewey. The wind went from W at about 20
yesterday evening to zero this morning.
We are motoring up the west coast of Eleuthera to Governor's Harbor to
pick up Ollie. He got in last night and
stayed over somewhere in town. We plan
to pick him up at Government dock at about 1:30 and then take off for Hatchet
Bay which is another 20 miles north.
Hatchet Bay is VERY sheltered and a better anchorage than Governor's
Harbor. It will also get us a little
closer to the cut at the west end of Eleuthera that will get us to Freeport in
two days. Both harbors are supposed to
be beautiful so will try and get some good photos. After an hour of motoring, Captain Phil did
his first laundry since Providenciales in the T&C. I expect pulling into Government Dock to be a
little embarrassing (with all the laundry hanging out to dry - see photos - but
Captain Phil assures me that he won't be the least bit bothered). Captain Phil ended up removing his laundry
and donning a shirt for the Ollie pick up that we timed almost perfectly. We sailed on a very nice close reach from
Governor's Harbor to Hatchet Bay.
Hatchet bay has about the most unusual entrance I've ever seen (see
photos).
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Today was a really great sailing day. We left our anchorage
behind Compass Cove at 8am and sailed 35 miles on a single (port) tack to the
western tip of southern Eleuthera. The
wind was out of the west all day blowing between 10 and 25 (mostly around
20). We got into the marina at Powell
Point at 2pm. Did laundry in a bucket
and made several calls on Google talk/voice.
This is the first internet connection in 3 days. Tomorrow, Mary and Dewey will be flying out
and Captain Phil and I will take the boat north about 30 miles to pick up
Ollie, who is flying into an airport at the north end of the Island.
Friday, February 14, 2014
Happy Valentine's Day Joan!
Happy Valentine's Day Dad and Quinn and Jaylen, Mike and Jody and
Jeannine and to all my other loved ones.
We came into a beautiful anchorage just inside the north tip
of Compass Island. We motor sailed most
of the way. We got an early (8am) start
into a 10 knot NE wind. We headed out
East for an hour and then tacked over to a starboard tack. The wind picked up to about a little over 15
kt. from about noon till two then died off to zero as we came into the cut
north of the island. I told Captain Phil
I was proud of him for anchoring in our shallowest depth yet. He is so used never anchoring in anything less
than 10 or 15' that depths showing 1 meter on the chart makes him very
nervous. So, here we are, anchored in 1
meter with (on the chart). Within 2
minutes of dropping the anchor, Phil was the first in and I was the
second. It is the clearest water we have
seen yet. From 10' in front of the boat,
we could easily see the rudder over 50' away.
Tomorrow it will be up early to be off for Eleuthera where Mary and
Dewey will depart for Nassau and then Denver.
Thursday, February 13, 2014
This morning was decision making time. Mary and Dewey are scheduled to fly to Nassua
from Eleuthra on Saturday. With the
progress we have been making and the bad weather forecasted, we had to decide
whether to forge on and reschedule their flights and return home or to fly out
of Georgetown on Great Exuma. We decided
to forge on. They made some calls and
got it worked out. We were late leaving
- after provisioning twice and taking on water and fuel - left about
10:30am. Our plan was to make if about
45 miles to Farmers Cays. After the
first 2 hours of a really nice westerly beam reach, the wind picked up to
around 25. We dropped the mizzen and
reefed the main. The wind was forecasted
to clock around to the NW so we decided to stop short. We went through Adderly Cut (at about 4:30pm)
and into an anchorage with about 8 other boats, in the lee of Norman's Pond
Cay. Dewey swam a quarter mile to shore,
I sun showered. Had coctails and them
Captain Phil fixed burgers on his George Foreman burger grill. They were great. Had a huge thunderstorm at 10pm that lasted
about 30 minutes with lots of rain and winds that sounded like 50 to 60
kts. Happily, our single anchor (delta)
held.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Sailed about 25 miles from Long Island to Georgetown on
Grand Exuma Island. Now THIS is the
Bahamas. Beautiful aqua blue water, lots
of little cays with beautiful beaches and many great anchorages. Got into Georgetown around 2pm after a 5 mile
motor through coral heads and reefs.
Captain Phil's nerves are being tested but he knows there is much more
of the same to come since the central and upper Bahamas are mostly islands on
"banks" that are mile after mile of water just a little deeper than the
Pintita's keel. The banks are surrounded
by waters that drop off to over a mile in just a few hundred yards. As I type, we are running the "Silver
Bullet" - the boats AC diesel powered generator. Everyone has their cell phones, kindles, and
other devices plugged in for charging.
We are staying at a marina that is redoing all their shore power and
right now, we have none. Looking out
over the harbor (it's 9pm) is like star gazing. There must be over 100 boats in
site at anchor - all displaying their anchor lights. It's really a cool sight. We are expecting the first (for the Pintita)
in over 2 months. Fronts from the US typically don't make it below where we are
- the East Trade winds keep them from
pushing south. From this point north, we
will be getting a lot of influence from the US weather. We have read about all the winter storms
marching across the country (brrrrr!). Tomorrow morning, we will do some light
provisioning and take on fuel and be on our way up the Exuma chain. Will probably not be in contact till we
reach Eleuthera in 2 or 3 days.
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Started out at about 8:30am from Flying Fish Marina in Clarence
Town this morning with fairly good (15 kt) ESE winds. Wind dropped to about 10 knots so we motor
sailed the 70 miles from there up to the northern tip of Long Island. Motored around Santa Maria point and about 3
miles down the west side of Long Island to Calabash Bay. This is a very remote area - like much of
what we have seen for the last 3 days. Tomorrow, we will head to Georgetown on
Great Exuma. The plan is to get fuel
there and anchor out, waiting for a cold front to pass through. The west side of Long Island is the eastern
side of the Grand Bahama Bank, where, for a hundred miles, the water is only a
few feet deep. We are anchored in a
completely white sand bottom area and the almost full moon is shining off the
bottom making the water glow. It's
amazing. The downside of this anchorage is that it is a
bit rocky from the surge. The water is
very smooth but big swells come around the top of the island and find their way
into the anchorage.
Monday, February 10, 2014
Tomorrow, it's up early and on to the northern tip of Long Island and around to the West side where we will anchor and then proceed onto the Exuma chain. Should be two days in the Exumas and then on to Eluthra where Dewey and Mary will disembark and Ollie will arrive. Will likely be out of touch for several days. Had cracked Conch at "Rowdy Boys Restaurant tonight. Everyone else is in bed and I'm heading there now.
I'm behind on my blogging for a couple reasons. I've started reading a great book and I've
been enjoying chatting with our new crew member Dewey Dyer. More about Dewey and his wife Mary
later. Yesterday afternoon, we arrived
in Little Harbor at the south end of Long Island. We debated on whether to go a
little further north to Clearance Town but since we will be going there today
to spend the night at a marina we decided to "rough it" last
night. Little harbor is the prettiest
anchorage I've seen yet. It's very
deserted and peaceful. We have concluded
that most of the anchoring in the southern part of the Bahamas and to the south
east is in deep water. From here on, it
will be much more shallow. Arrived in
Little Harbor at about 2:30pm - plenty of time to snorkel and relax.
See the Charts tab for a discussion of the charts we are
using for the trip.
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Motor sailed overnight and most of the day today from the NE
tip of Aukins Island to Long Island. The
winds were light, around 10 kts. but seemed lighter since we were broad
reaching the entire day. Had great
breakfast (eggs, potatoes, sausage) and a fantastic cold pasta and lobster
dinner last night thanks to Mary and Captain Phil. Little sea life today but great weather. Seems like we have left the Caribbean squalls
behind us.
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Got a late (11am) start out of Abrahams Bay but there was no
rush since we had decided to do an overnighter to get to our next
destination. Had good 20 to 25kt ESE
winds all day with 6 to 8' seas. Our new
crew members are troopers and are handling the seas with no problem. Dinner was Captain Phils Dirty Rice and
sausage in a bowl (every try eating while riding a "mechanical
bull"?).
Friday, February 7, 2014
Left Turtle Cove at about 8am. In the end, Phil's interface with Customs
lasted only about 5 minutes. We has
Joeseph lead us out through the reef.
The day was uneventful with 15 to 20 knot ESE winds and 3 to 6'
swells. We arrived at the entrance of
Abraham's bay just after sundown which made entering the anchorage a little
iffy. We anchored about 1/2 mile behind
a reef that was a little awash making the night pretty rocky.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Because of the logistics of clearing out of the T&C, we
have decided to leave Turtle cove tomorrow - a day later than planned. Tomorrow morning, we will sail around 70
miles to the island of Mayaguana. It is
big enough to have an airport but is pretty small. We got provisions for over a week today and ate
lunch at a real "dive" - see photos.
Customs was to have met us at the boat at 3:30pm but never showed.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Rest day in Provo
At Joan's suggestion, I'm reversing the order of the photos
to put the most recent at the top - same order as the blog. I'll be leaving what is there now "as
is" till some later date.
Todays photos are of Captain Phil doing his laundry on the
dock and a short video pan of the marina. Tom left to fly home an hour
ago. We will miss him. We have finish several boat projects this
morning - patching a tear near the head of the yankee jib, swapping anchor
chains to put the 100' chain on the number 2 (starboard) anchor. The number 2 is a delta that holds better
than the number 1 (CQR). We will be
leaving (cab ride) to go provision next.
Will likely be out of any kind of cell/wifi range for the next 2 to 3
days. For those back home weathering
the snow, ice, and cold, I'm sitting here on the Pintita sweating profusely in
the AC. I know it's hard to
imagine.
If you click on this link and zoom out and in, I think you will
be able to see where we are now (Turtle Cove Marina in Turtle Cove).
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Welcome to the Turks and Caicos Islands. It took us 4 days
to get here - the longest single trek I will have taken on the Pintita's
voyage. She took almost 2 weeks to get
from North Carolina to St. Thomas so this was small by comparison. There , be one or two more single over
nighters before getting to Baltimore in mid March. Since overnighting is a lot different than
Island hopping, I'll give some details on what it's like.
Over the days, we were on a watch rotation (for the 3 of
us). It was more strict at night than during the day. We stood one hour watches and rotated on the
hour.
1.
Ron at
wheel, Tom on standby in the cockpit, Phil below asleep.2. Tom at wheel, Phil on standby, Ron below asleep.
3. Phil at wheel, Ron on standby, Tom below asleep.
The first night, it took 3 to 4 rotations before we were
able to sleep well (with all the banging and wind noise). We would begin sleeping at around 7pm. After a day or two, sleeping on standby was
no problem. During daylight, those not
at the wheel were free to roam about.
We certainly miss Bri's gourmet cooking but Captain Phil has done an honorable job of keeping the crew fed. Eggs to order and toast, French toast, for breakfast, great sandwiches for lunch, and tuna, pasta, dinners. A well fed crew is a happy crew.
Conditions from Puerto Rico to T&C
Generally, winds ENE at 25 with sea swells at 10 to 12
feet. Squalls every 4 to 6 hours
(usually when Tom had the wheel) - more frequent at night. Squalls had light to heavy rain and winds 30
to 50 knots. The stronger winds created
a big weather helm that made the boat round up into the wind and made it nearly
impossible to turn the wheel back down.
Fortunately, they were all short lived.
The seas had a fair amount of cross swells (waves coming from 2
directions) that made for very choppy and uncomfortable seas. Yesterday was a
welcome exception - the wind and waves moderating some and fewer squalls.
We left San Juan at 8am (dock at 7) Saturday. Captain Phil had cleared us out of the US on
Friday. Leaving the harbor brought
immediate rough conditions that persisted for the next 2 days. We were on a course of 310 to 340 degrees day
and night. We were broad reaching on the
same (starboard) tack for the entire trip.
We tied a boom jibe preventer onto the mainsail boom to prevent
accidental jibes. Depending on the swell
direction, steering a straight course was usually difficult. On the third day,
we sailed on the north side of three banks (under water plateaus). On the last day, the wind moderated and we
motor sailed for about 14 hours straight.
At 4am today, we shut off the engine and hove to about 20 miles north of
the Providenciales bight at the west end of the T&C. We had to wait till 8am for our guide boat to
come out and lead us in through the reefs.
Over the 4 days, we were greeted on two separate occasions
by schools of dauphins. On the second
occasion, Tom and I went to the bow and I'm certain the dauphins could see us
as the swam back and fourth across our bow - sometimes jumping out of the
water. They seemed to tire after about 20 minutes and would fall off behind. This morning, about 5 miles off our entrance
to the reef, we saw a hump back whale jump and clear the water making a huge
splash when she/he came back down. It
was an awesome sight.
We will be here at Turtle Cove Marina tonight and tomorrow
night. Tom will fly out tomorrow and
Dewey and Mary will arrive tomorrow night.
We will be off again on Thursday morning. The entrance through the reef was
unreal. I assumed having a guide was a
local money maker but after all the twists and turns, we were all glad we had
one.
The steering has held up well but the main sail keeps
breaking the plastic slugs that attach it to the track on the mast. Phil has tried finding slides at ports since
Antigua but has been unsuccessful. Coming in this morning, he noticed 4 in a
row that were broken. The plan is to
start removing slides from the mizzen sail to install on the main. Also, found another small tear near the head
of the jib that will have to be fixed before leaving.
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