Friday, June 8, 2012

UPDATE: What’s This Dark Cloud Over Our Heads?


To cruising sailors, weather forecast and conditions are a big concern. Knowing what’s coming is critical to and directly proportional to how much fun you have on the water. If you sit around not paying attention or caring about the weather Mother Nature will soon send you a little reminder of who’s Boss. Hopefully the reminder is not too severe.

While in the Bahamas, we have to constantly keep an eye on the major cold fronts as they roll across the United States. These cold fronts can drastically affect the weather in the Bahamas and especially in the Northwest Bahamas (Abaco). This season we have been hiding from fronts about every three to four days as they roll through. This year the fronts seemed to penetrate deeper into the Bahamas than other years.  Some really “Rocked the House” with winds sustained in the Gale Force range. Some lasted for days creating uncomfortable and or sometimes downright dangerous conditions to get off the boat. That’s when we break out the books or movies for a marathon ride out the blow party.
Last season we didn’t spend much time in Green Turtle Cay, so we decided to catch up this year. We took advantage of a special offer from the Bluff House in White Sound called “Docking for Dollars”. This is a program where you get food and beverages equal to your docking fee. For example, if your dock fee was $50 you could eat and drink $50 worth of food and beverages at their restaurant without paying. It’s a great deal and especially at the Bluff House where the food is excellent.

We sat out two fronts at the Bluff House and one strong cold front on the hook across the Sea of Abaco from Green Turtle, where we saw our 1st water spout. We staged our crossing back to Florida on our second stay at the Bluff House. The weather pattern we were dealing with had winds coming out of the south, which was good for a return trip to Florida. The downside,  south wind brought with it lots of moisture. Chris Parker (Forecaster for many Cruisers) had been saying the unstable patterns may create conditions favorable for Tropical Cyclones the last two weeks of May. 
The Face of the Wind
With Chris’s red flag and mild conditions forecast for crossing the Gulf Stream, we planned our departure for Monday, May 14. High tide was around 4:30 pm and we needed as much water as we could get to transit the White Sound Channel. The Bluff House allowed us a late checkout and our plan was to leave the dock around 1:00 pm and drop the hook until the tide was higher. As it turned out, a nasty set of thunderstorms came in around 12:30 and lasted for a couple hours. During that wait, we met Bill and Ann on s/v “Wind Spirit” a 38’ Island Packet who were heading to Ft. Pierce too. I discussed our plan with Bill and he liked our approach, so we became instant cruising buddies for the crossing. While we have made the crossing alone several times, it’s nice to have a buddy boat for the long trip back.
1st Water Spout over Green Turtle
Once the rain and wind settled a bit, we shoved off the dock just after 2:00 pm. I made the decision to try to transit the White Sound channel instead of waiting another 2 hours for maximum tide. It was a good decision and we were on our way to our 1st anchorage early. As we exited the channel “Wind Spirit” called to let us know they were through the channel and ready to hit the road for our 180 nautical mile trip to Vero Beach (207 statute miles). 

This may not seem like a long trip especially if you think about it in terms of highway miles. Our average cruising speed is 6 knots (6.9 mph), so were looking at a 30 hour trip, with the last 60 nautical miles crossing the infamous Gulf Stream.
Since we got an early start out of White Sound, we pushed on another hour to Crab Cay and dropped the hook. Crab Cay provided protection from the ESE wind and we had a good night on the hook. The next morning we weighed anchor and headed for Great Sale Cay. Our plan was to drop the hook at Great Sale around 2:00 pm and get a few hours rest before shoving off for Ft. Pierce, around 9:00 pm. The plan would have us crossing the Little Bahama Bank at night and hitting the Gulf Stream around dawn and into Ft. Pierce around 3:00 pm with a rising tide.

The passage to Great Sale was rainy and overcast with a light ESE wind. About two hours out of Great Sale, a set of nasty squalls came at us from the southwest. As one of the squalls approached, we watched a huge water spout form. This was the second water spout we had seen form in a week. Behind us were a parade of boats that seemed to be in the path of the water spout. As it developed, the VHF radio exploded with chatter of the spout and evasive action needed. Most sailing vessels lowered their sails as we did and continued on course. Some of the power vessels pumped more fuel through their engines to try to get the hell out of dodge. As luck would have it, no vessel was hit by the powerful water spout. It was a close call.

2nd Water Spout forming east of Great Sale Cay
2nd Water Spout fully formed
We were listening to the chatter of the water spout on the VHF radio when the drag on our reel went off. Crap, we caught a fish. Not exactly the best timing when you are running from a water spout. Since it appeared we had dodged the spout, we chopped the throttle and reeled the fish in. As I reeled the fish closer I 1st thought I had caught another Mahi. A minute later, I realized I had caught a 3 and a half foot Barracuda. One look at those teeth and I said no way am I bringing him on board. So we dragged him behind the boat to the anchorage.

We anchored on the west side of Great Sale, instead of the south anchorage, so we could save an hour or so off the trip. On our approach with “Wind Spirit” there were no other boats in the anchorage. After setting the hook, I went back to remove Mr. Cudda and he was gone. It was ok with me, cause those teeth can do some real damage if the fish is playing possum.

Within an hour or so, we went from 2 boats in the anchorage to over twenty. We took a nap for a couple hours and when I woke up there was a trawler sitting over our anchor. Can’t even begin to believe there’s some idiot with enough money to buy a 60 ft. Fleming trawler but not enough sense to anchor outside of our swing radius. Our plan was to weigh anchor around 8:30 pm and now this A-hole is sitting over our anchor when there’s enough room to anchor fifty battleships here. I flagged this guy down when he got in his dinghy and told him he was over our anchor and we were leaving in three hours. No problem Captain he says, the wind is going to shift to the north in an hour or so and this will swing our boat off your anchor. If not, he says he will move up on his anchor. Not sure where this idiot got his weather report from but I’m pretty sure it’s the same place where he learned to anchor. Every weather report this side of China was calling for south wind and this idiot is saying just the opposite. If he thought the wind was going to shift north, why did he anchor here? I guess maybe I should just chill and bite my lip, let the blood trickle down my chin until I pass out and get some much needed rest. NOT.  

The guys who anchor on top of you (when there’s a world to anchor in) never want to move.  These buttheads seem to come from the same place and speak the same language and it’s not English. They have a huge reputation (in the cruising community) for not knowing how to anchor and always wanting to anchor too close to other boats who were there first. (Note to Self) Develop a weapon that will ward these bastards off.

Anyway, after the wind shifted from the east southeast to the southwest (earlier than forecast and not from the North) it was enough to swing “Wind Dust” over the buttheads anchor. If we didn’t have to get back to the States I may have sat there just to piss this guy off when he was ready to leave. After a couple of light squalls passed, I could see a seam in the thunderstorms coming off Florida (on our XM Weather Radar) and we shoved off for Ft. Pierce with our buddy boat around 8:30 pm.

We had 55 nautical miles (9 hrs) of the Little Bahama Bank (in the dark) ahead of us. We planned to hit the exit point around 5 am. I was not looking forward to this portion of the trip home, as our autopilot died before we started back. This meant 19 hours of hand steering “Wind Dust” to Vero Beach. We chatted with our buddy boat “Wind Spirit” throughout the night on the VHF and they hung about a quarter to half mile off our stern quarter as we motored all night through calm seas. Most of the night we could see lightening off to the south, southwest and west towards Florida. The thunderstorms rolled off south Florida towards our position however dissipated before reaching us as we thought they would.

Around 4:30 am, we began to see white lights off our starboard bow. We could not pickup the vessel on radar or on AIS, nor were they displaying running lights. As we approached our Little Bahama Bank waypoint, we could begin to see the vessel which appeared to be a Trawler anchored just inside of the bank. A few minutes later, I saw a cargo ship pop up on our AIS system. I queried the system for the ship’s status and it contained conflicting information. We looked for the vessels running lights and could not see any. The ship “Pacific Pearl” was steaming towards us at 12 kts and our CPA was 1 nautical mile. I began hailing “Pacific Pearl” on the VHF to insure they could see us and our buddy boat. No response. I waited a few minutes and hailed them again. No response. What concerned me was the ship was not displaying any lights, would not answer their radio, and was steaming towards us at a pretty good clip. This is the first time I have encountered a commercial vessel with AIS (underway making way) without running lights (or any other lights) that did not respond to a radio call. I called our buddies on “Wind Spirit” and asked them to hail the ship. I figured if there was something illegal going on that at least the US Coast Guard would hear two of us hailing the ship. On “Wind Spirit’s” second try “Pacific Pearl” responded and acknowledged that they could see us both and were changing course to pass our stern. As sunrise approached, we could see “Pacific Pearl” approaching us and we confirmed no running lights. Very odd, odd indeed. As stated, they passed to our stern and we were glad the light of day was upon us.

An hour or so after dawn the wind picked up from the south and we were able to put up sail for most of the morning. The sky was overcast with mild squally conditions. I kept an  eye on the XM Weather Radar as there were some significant thunderstorms off of Jupiter Florida and others just to the north of our track. Around 11:00 am, a large cargo ship crossed our route approximately three miles off. As they moved north, we could see a fairly large squall developing, but it seemed to be stationary on the radar. A few minutes later I heard an unfamiliar voice hailing “Wind Dust”. It was the ship which had just passed a few minutes before. He got our name from our AIS. The captain said he wanted to warn us of the squall and told us it looked pretty ugly and was coming to get us. I thanked the captain and proceeded to closely monitor the radar. Yep, the captain was right. The squall had started to move our way and it was building into a storm we wanted to avoid if possible. We first dropped the sails and while doing so the third water spout of the week appeared. It’s part of the squall that’s headed for us. Ok it’s time to take evasive action if possible. We determined we could turn southwest and if lucky miss the worst part of the squall. I radioed “Wind Spirit” to tell them what we doing. By this time they were several miles behind us. They took the same evasive action and the worst part of the 12 mile wide storm missed both of us. Heavy rain did pass over but we missed the heavy wind. The rest of the trip to Ft. Pierce was uneventful and comfortable.
Around 3:30pm with a southwest wind and halfway through the flood tide we transited the Ft. Pierce inlet at 10 knots. The water was as smooth as a babies behind and we were hauling some serious butt. Not often does “Wind Dust” hit 10 knots over ground and it's always fun to use mother nature to your advantage. As we approached the ICW we hailed the Ft. Pierce North Bridge and requested an opening. Perfect, the tender opened the bridge and we barely had to slow down. With the rising tide giving us a nice push we moved north towards Vero Beach at 7.5 to 8 knots. We arrived at Vero Beach City Marina around 5:30 pm. We picked up our assigned mooring, promptly had several celebratory drinks and hit the sack for some serious sleep. It was good to be home. Another safe crossing behind us and ZZZZZZZeeeeee.        


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

UPDATE: Taking it on the Chin from Tropical Storm “Beryl”




Holy crap "Beryl" has Reverse - We are the triangle on left-Beryl's path is dotted line.
Ok we were minding our own business heading up the Florida ICW to Jacksonville from Vero Beach. Tuesday night we anchored in the Indian River just south of Cocoa Village. Wednesday night at New Smyrna Beach where we saw our friends Jeff and Cindy on “Salty Dog”. Thursday night at Palm Coast where we relaxed and planned our weekend in Jacksonville with the Kids. Our plan was to take advantage of the free dock downtown Jacksonville on the St. John’s River and enjoy the “Jazz Festival” and Scotland vs USA soccer match with the kids. I spent some time planning the route to take advantage of the swift currents of the St. Johns River arriving at the dock at slack tide on Saturday afternoon. I checked the weather before retiring and there was mention of a possible Tropical disturbance forming over the weekend. The Low Pressure System was off the coast of the Carolina’s and there was a slight chance it could track southwest towards Florida. We hit the sack Thursday night with a plan. As usual I was up around 5:30am Friday morning to check the weather and low in behold now the slight chance had changed to a 70% chance of a Topical Storm affecting NE Florida by the weekend. I checked all the sites I normally trust for weather and crap we really need to change plans. Jacksonville it will be, staying at the well protected Beach Marine Marina. We called, made reservations and quickly made preparations to shove off.
The Bridge of Lions St. Augustine, FL
With our new plan we needed to head straight for Beach Marine and bypass anchoring. Our ETA at Beach Marine was 4:00 pm Friday. All went well until we reached our beloved Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine, Florida. Mind you this is a pretty bascule bridge. It was refurbished between 2006 and 2010 with the construction causing all kinds of headaches for boaters, pedestrians and drivers alike. The untold accumulated wasted time and aggravation this project caused would be astounding if calculated if terms of lost revenue of the people who had to wait for one reason or another. Not to mention the untold volume of fuel spent by cars and boats waiting for either the bridge to open or the bridge to close. Couple this with the additional cost to refurbish the bridge(5 years and $80 million) verses building a new one (3 years and $20 million)  and it’s enough to really piss off taxpaying citizens who have to deal with it now, when it could have been an aggravation of the past. 

Hang on the rant is almost over. Don’t blame FDOT though, they declared the bridge structurally deficient and functionally obsolete” in 1999. A new taller bridge with the same architectural beauty was planned by FDOT however there was an uproar to refurbish the old bridge and these butt-heads won. They are the same people who complain like hell when they have to wait an extra minute for a boat to pass. Well the aggravation and delays continue. On Friday we were within two minutes of reaching the bridge as it opened for a sailboat on the north side at 11:30 am. As always, I hailed the tender to request passage. He responded by saying “Captain you ain’t gonna make it” and  began closing the bridge. Now mind you he knew he was not opening the bridge at 12:00 noon and his decision not to wait an extra minute or so would cause us to have to wait an hour for the 12:30 opening. And so it was, this S.O.B. wouldn’t wait an extra minute and we sat for an hour waiting on the 12:30 pm opening. We have passed through almost every draw bridge on the east coast of Florida numerous times over the past three years of cruising. They have discretion cause we have experienced it. Florida has the most courteous bridge tenders we have found except for “The Bridge of Lions” and the “Boca Raton” bridges. The hatefulness and arrogance of these bridge tenders just ooze down the sides of these bridges. These guys need to find other forms of employment  and I’m going to do my best to make it happen.  Well enough ranting for now and back to “Beryl”.

Chris and Nikki
Chris and Ginny
We arrived at Beach Marine and shut down the engine at 5:00 pm Friday May 25. The wind had been hawking all day and we were glad to have a slip for the evening. Saturday brought prepping “Wind Dust” for Beryl and enjoying our grandson’s (Zak) baseball game with Chris and Nikki. The afternoon we shopped for needed supplies. After a late lunch with Chris, Nikki, Skye, Jake and Zak on Sunday we all walked the beach to see the pre-storm rage. It was pretty impressive and we heard the local lifeguards had saved over one hundred people whose IQ seem lacking when it come to danger. Anyway we were back at the boat around 4:00 pm and hunkered down for the head on assault of Tropical Storm “Beryl”.
JP, Zak, Chris, Skye, Jake and Ginny before "Beryl", Nikki is behind the camera

Never Mind the Wind Flags They were off by a factor of 4 to 5
I checked the wind velocities of a couple offshore buoys and confirmed the wind speed was in the 40 kt range and from the northwest. We dialed in a local FM Station on the radio and had our VHF Radio on.  We also had our Chart plotter with XM Weather and our Autohelm Anemometer on to measure wind velocities.  With our XM Weather Service on our chart plotter we could see “Beryl” as she made her approach. We were going to take her best shot head on. Not exactly what one would want to do, but with the hand we were dealt that was the way it was going to be. 
As the eye wall came on shore

78 knot gust (89.7 mph)
We chose Beach Marine because it is a well protected marina and we had a good slip assignment so we felt ok. If things were to get too bad we could always go ashore and wait the storm out. As we listened to the Radio, the forecasters kept changing their wind velocities higher and higher for “Beryl”. According to our trusted weather source “Accuweather Premium” we would experience sustained winds in the 60 to 65 mph range with gust in the low eighties. We had received this forecast on late Friday and it stayed pretty much the same until the storm hit. Other sources forecast winds in the 40 kt (45 mph) range when “Beryl” came ashore. What we experienced was almost verbatim to Accuweather Premium’s forecast from late Friday. When the eye wall hit us just after 8:00 pm Sunday the sustained wind speed was 50 to 60 kts (57 to 69 mph) with a maximum gust of 78 kts (89.7 mph). Needless to say the 78 kt gust sat us one our ear. Wind Dust heeled over in the slip as the dock lines groaned from the strain. The wind howled through the rigging with a shrill eerie pitch.  This went on for several hours until the eye move onshore. 

More Rain
That’s when I had a good chance to tighten the dock lines as they had stretched due to being wet and the pressure on them. For the rest of the night we experienced winds in the 40 to 50 kt range and finally gave up the ghost and hit the bed. We woke Monday morning to a southeast wind which was mostly blocked by several adjacent buildings. Rain at that point had been relatively light and the wind was relatively tame. I inspected Wind Dust and found no visible damage. We had a fantastic dinner with Chris, Nikki and the grand kids and returned to Wind Dust before the heavy rain hit. Most of the night we had bands of rain come through along with several severe thunderstorms. Tuesday morning we woke to lots of rain and reports of flooding in Jacksonville. The wind is still kicking this afternoon and there are more severe thunderstorms in the area as “Beryl” works its way to the northeast and out of Florida nearly 48 hours after first hitting.
Tuesday Morning May 29, "Beryl" still kicking it up. Please leave!
We have experienced many hurricanes in the past and “Beryl” was not in the same league. However, she did have her moments and she was unique in her longevity and path. Being a early season storm and an “Home Grown” storm (developing just of the east coast) certainly will make her remembered here in Jacksonville, Florida for a long time. We heard this afternoon “Beryl” will go in the record books as the strongest preseason tropical storm to hit the east coast of the United States.





Wednesday, May 2, 2012

UPDATE: Our Hope Town Visit is Complete – Lookout Green Turtle


Well we briefly left Hope Town and headed over to Treasure Cay. We had planned to stay a week or so and come back to Hope Town to visit our friends from Raleigh, NC who come the last week of April every year. Wednesday we sailed in light east winds from Hope Town to Treasure Cay and had to lay off shore a couple hours until the tide was high enough to get in the channel. 

Around 5:00 pm we started our run through the Treasure Cay channel and made it without parting mud or sand with our keel. What a disappointment to find the anchorage pack to the gills with mainly Sunsail Charter boats and a few cruisers.  Crap, all this way to have to turn around and find another anchorage. The forecast was for light winds 10 kts or less until the next nasty cold front approached on late Friday into early Saturday. Guess what? As we left the Treasure Cay channel the wind was kick’n a good 25 kts from the east. It had been building all day but really picked up quickly in the late afternoon. I’m thinking where did this come from and where do we need to be in case the forecast is screwed up. We decided to head for Water Cay which is about 6 nautical miles east of Treasure Cay and about  9 nm west from Marsh Harbor. The anchorage would give us good protection from a clocking NE->E->SE->S wind. We pounded our way east for about an hour and found a great anchorage waiting for us in the lee of Water Cay. Only one other boat anchored there and we had a great star lit evening on the hook. 

We weighed our options on whether to head back to Treasure Cay or do a quick provisioning stop in Marsh Harbour and head back to Hope Town for the Blow. The forecast was for some really ugly weather late Friday through late Monday so everybody and their brother was looking for a safe place to hide. We decided we would try the new docks at the Hope Town Inn and Marina. Friday morning we weighed anchor and headed for Marsh Harbour. The hook was down by 11:00am and we hit Snappers for lunch before the provision stop at Maxwell’s. We had just sat down when our friends Ellen and Erick from m/v “Westwind” came in. They were meeting friends who were flying in and staying on their boat for a few days. We met Ellen and Erick in Stuart, Florida last year and spent almost a month there with them and many others cruisers waiting out bad weather. It was great to see them again. After lunch we hit the bank and Maxwell’s and hung out on the boat until the tide was sufficient for us to head for Hope Town. We pulled into slip 219 by 6:30pm and were glad to be on a dock for a few days.

As predicted the strong cold front brought some ugly weather. Sunday morning around 4:00 am we clocked a 51 knot gust and recorded sustained winds in the gale force range for several hours. We always keep our VHF radio on at night and especially when bad weather is forecast. Around 5:00 am in the pitch black darkness with the wind howling 35 to 40 knots we heard a call for help from m/v “Second Look”. “Second Look” was on a mooring in the harbor. A large Great Harbor Trawler (that should have been at a dock) drug their mooring block past several other boats and slammed into “Second Look”.  Now you have a big mess. Two large vessels tangled together in almost total darkness slamming into each other with the wind blowing like stink. If they stay tangled who knows how many other boat they will take out before going aground or into perimeter shoreside docks. Truman Majors to the rescue. Truman owns the fishing vessel “Lucky Strike” and also owns the green moorings in the harbor. We always use Truman’s moorings because he maintains them very well and his mooring blocks are massive.

“Second Look” was safe on one of Truman’s moorings until the big Great Harbor trawler who was on another companies mooring slammed into him. Truman came out in the howling wind and managed to get the two boats free of each other before a bigger problem happened. The Great Harbor trawler left Hope Town as there were not many options for them in a very tight harbor with the wind blowing like hell. I spoke to Mike on “Second Look” several days after the incident and he told me those a-holes never called him about taking care of any damages. They simply skipped town. What a bunch of jerks. 

Everyone knows you are responsible for the damage your vessel causes. You take a mooring at your own risk. If it breaks which this one didn’t (the guy improperly short tied the mooring pennants at low tide and the wind hit at high tide causing his trawler to float the mooring off the bottom) you are responsible for the damage.

Anyway around day break the radio lit up again with a call from someone land side reporting a sailboat either aground on the reef or anchored on the Atlantic side (windward side) of Elbow Cay. Not a good place to be with the dangerous seas and wind. Truman Majors to the rescue again in less than 2 hours. Truman and one of the other BASRA (Bahamas Search and Rescue Association) men braved the sea conditions on an Albury 23 to have a closer look and determine if anyone was onboard who needed assistance. Once they were on scene they requested BASRA contact the Bahamian Defense Force as something didn’t appear quite right. There were apparently people onboard. Truman and the other gentleman towed the vessel to safety around the north end of Elbow Cay to the lee shore where the Defense Force apparently took over. The last we heard they moved on the next day. They were apparently just scared sailors who got caught in a Blow that everyone on this side of world knew was coming a week in advance. These guys were very lucky they didn't lose their boat or lives.

All I can say is God Bless Truman Major for selflessly helping others in need of assistance.

We enjoyed staying at the Hope Town Inn and Marina resort. Arron, Sam and the bar staff were great. While not yet complete, this place is really shaping up be an awesome destination. The architect Michael Myers is very talented and has created a spectacular design for the resort. 

We met several new boats and had a great time getting to know Tom and Linda on WindSwept. After the blow we moved to the mooring field and have enjoyed hanging out with walks through town and walks on the beach. We ran into our friends Corbett and Robin on “Cookie Monster” and they invited us over for Sundowners where we met Graham and Valerie on s/v “Bonnie Lass”. Turns out ‘Bonnie Las” stays in Brunswick for hurricane season too.


Our Hope Town visit would not be complete without seeing our friends, Debbie and Lance and Jeff and E.A.  These guys come every year and we have a blast drinking and listening to their tall tales. The weather gods haven’t been real nice this year but we got in several good visits with them and feel our Hope Town visit is now complete. So tomorrow we will head out for Green Turtle Cay where we are to meet up with Sandy and Ray on s/v “Megerin” and start our track back to the U.S. 

Friday, April 20, 2012

UPDATE: Our "Lazy Do Nothing 2012 Bahamas Cruise Recap (for now)"


What a spot to think about absolutely nothing. 
Well we have been here in Hope Town for a week and are prepping to move on to another of our favorite spots here in the Abacos, Treasure Cay. So it’s time to share a little of our adventure here in Hope Town and recap what we did in the Exumas and Eleuthera.


Let's see, where do we begin? Well let’s start by sharing how much fun we have had buddy boating with Sandy and Ray on s/v Megerin. These guys have been awesome to cruise with. It started in Brunswick, GA back in November, 2011 and has continued off and on throughout this season. 


There were a couple of breakaways, Megerin in Ft. Pierce for the Holidays while we were in Vero Beach and then Ft Lauderdale for Christmas and New Years. Since Megerin rendezvoused with us in Miami, we have been joined at the hip so to speak. We go our own ways when we get to an area, but have made all the major crossings together. It's good to look out and see a buddy boat when you are making a crossing or sitting out nasty weather on the hook. These guys have been great company and friends and we are fortunate to have had this experience with them.  


We were also blessed to have had other buddy boats along as well for parts of this years adventure. Old friends Mike and Barb on s/v "Goose Bumps"; Art and Ann on s/v "Discretion"; Bill on s/v Memento Mori; new friends Ward and Richard on m/v "Baggerra"; John and Marilyn on m/v "Carolina" ; Russ and Carol on s/v "Zivelli"; Rick on s/v "Feral Cat".  It's been a good year so far. How can one complain having some of the most beautiful water on earth as your backyard for 7 months of the year.


Anyway a short recap of our basic "Sorry-Ass Do Nothing 2012 Bahamas Cruise" has gone something like this: Miami; - Nassau; - Highbourne Cay, Exuma - Hawksbill Cay, Exuma; -Warderick Wells Land and Sea Park, Exuma; - Sampson Cay, Exuma; Black Point, Exuma; - White Point, Exuma; Little Farmers Cay, Exuma; Big Majors Cay, Exuma; Rock Sound, Eleuthera; Governors Harbour; Eleuthera; Alabaster Bay, Eleuthera; Hatchet Bay, Eleuthera; Royal Island, Eleuthera; Spanish Wells, Eleuthera; Lynyard Cay, Abaco and Hope Town, Abaco. There will be a few more stops before we head back to the US and we will keep you posted on our "Do Nothing Adventure". In the meantime here are some of the wonderful things we have seen here in the Bahamas.


Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco

Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco

Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco

Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco


Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco


Hope Town, Elbow Cay, Abaco


Hope Town Inn and Marina, Elbow Cay, Abaco
      
Hope Town Inn and Marina, Elbow Cay, Abaco

Hope Town Inn and Marina, Elbow Cay, Abaco


Spanish Wells, Eleuthera


Ginny walking the line in Spanish Wells.


Spanish Wells, Eleuthera

Spanish Wells, Eleuthera

What's de porpoise?

Spanish Wells, Eleuthera

Spanish Wells, Eleuthera




Some People Have all the toys. A three story water slide in the middle of Rock Sound Eleuthera.

Rock Sound, Eleuthera


Rock Sound, Eleuthera

Ginny and JP getting ready for Thunderball. Look out 007.









Fresh Bahamian Lobster - OMG is it good. No we didn't eat Chicken Noodle with the Lobster. It's to show size of the Lobster Tail.



Stone Crab off the boat in Spanish Wells. Thanks Terrance.



OK Miss Ginny where's my treat.



Barb and Mike on "Goose Bumps" (on the Left)

Capt. JP's Stuffed Acorn Squash Recipe.


Rocky wanting to know "Where are all the chicks?"

Porky and Hoof looking for a handout.