Thursday, January 29, 2015

Gulf Crossing - Photos to Follow


There will be more to come, including pictures, but we wanted to post this before we untie Midas Touch from the mooring ball in Sarasota Harbor and continue south, hoping for warmer temperatures. The adventures continue.

Mike's recollection:
St. Catherine’s Island - Carrabelle connection?  Sometimes the phrase “It’s a small world” does seem to fit for some of the events that happen to us on the Loop; maybe “It’s a weird crazy world” would be more accurate.  I know you have experienced these same types of small world events, but sometimes after this happens to me, I start thinking maybe there are multiple universes. In 2012 Marian and I took the Midas Touch from Richmond Hill south down the ICW to Darien to get her bottom painted. I vividly remember this trip because we followed Tropical Depression Beryl, which made for a very rough crossing of St. Catherine's sound.

We made it into an anchorage before dark, but we had a hard time getting the anchor to hold (Mike's first lesson on anchoring a 23 ton boat). We finally hooked the bottom - or so we believed -  and hit the sack.  The next morning we discovered the anchor had come loose as the tide rose during the night; we floated across Wahlburg Creek and had grounded against the bank on an outgoing tide. This meant we were going to be there for the next five hours, with the boat tilting to a 45-degree angle. Luckily the St Catherine's Research center's dock was only 50 yards away.  The staff that came to work from the mainland stopped and invited us to wait for the tide to turn at the research center. They were more than good to us, suggesting we add a stern anchor, offering the use of bathrooms, letting us settle on a breezy porch with rocking chairs where we could read, and later giving us a tour of the center.  We saw ring-tailed lemurs up close and met a pair of African hornbills. One of the people welcoming us to the research center was a man named Tim

After the tide came in and our boat was again afloat, their boat captain helped me pull the anchors and bring the boat back to the dock.  By then, it was late afternoon, and he suggested we stay the night, tied up safely to their dock. Then they offered us the use of showers in one of the staff houses, a beer, and some home made pizza.  They even offered to put sheets on a bed in the house – tempting because it was air-conditioned, but we decided to sleep on the boat. We were so thankful for the kindness that we sent a gift of some fudge from Dahlonega’s Fudge Factory for the staff to enjoy. 

So what is the connection to being delayed here in Carrabelle, FL?  Keep in mind that it’s 340 miles from here to St. Catherine’s Island. Shortly after arriving in Carrabelle, I took a walk to look over the town, and came to the Carrabelle History Museum (http://www.carrabellehistorymuseum.org/)
I went in and met the director Tamara, a very nice person who has a wealth of knowledge about Carrabelle and this area of Florida.  Tamara’s legs are her electric scooter, and when she told me about having trouble getting the city to take down the museum’s Christmas lights, I told her I would take a look at them, and ended up taking them down with little time or effort involved. Even so,  Tamara was very thankful.  We ended up going to dinner at The Fisherman’s Wife (a must visit if you come to Carrabelle) with Tamara and her husband Cal, and they offered to take us up to the Walmart in Crawfordville if we needed a ride.  A few day later we were up “on the hard,” a term for a boat being on land and on blocks at a boat yard for repairs. We heard a knock on the side, and I opened our side door to find a man, who looked vaguely familiar, standing down below. “I think I know you,” I said. “I met you on St. Catherine’s Island when you were grounded,” he replied.  “Tamara told us you were over here.” My gosh, what a small world.  Tim went on, “The real reason I’m over here is to lend you our truck. I know you can use one while you’re stuck here.  We’re heading back over to the research center on St. Catherine’s Island in a couple of days, and we won’t be needing it.”

A constant theme of our Loop has been one random act of kindness after another, from the dentist who would not accept payment for a tooth extraction to fellow Loopers who walk Midas when we left him on the boat while we visited the St. Louis Arch to the loan of a truck.  We now have good friends in Carrabelle that we will always be thinking about; we will be thinking about them, and wishing we could see them.

The Great Jump:

Sea Fever
I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by;
And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,
And a grey mist on the sea’s face, and a grey dawn breaking,

I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,
And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,
To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife;
And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,
And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.

After some hasty repairs to a bow mishap at Dockside Marina, I said, “Richie, that’s good enough, we’ve got a weather window we must make.”  A good weather window for a Gulf of Mexico crossing is something you must take or be prepared to wait weeks for the next one.  By 2:30 pm we had fired up the Lehman engine, pushed back from the dock, and headed out the six miles to the end of Dog Island, our jumping across spot.  We had filed a float plan with friends and family, but in retrospect it is best to find a fellow Looper or boating buddy to be your main contact. They would call the US Coast Guard if we didn’t show up at the appointed time in the designated spot on the other side.  For part of the Gulf crossing, boaters are out of cell phone and VHF radio range. Luckily we had Andy and Jamie on Raptor.  We reached them on the VHF radio about 20 miles from our destination, when we knew we would arrive soon and land was again in sight.   
When we reached Red Marker # 2 on the south end of Dog Island at 4 pm, we were in the Gulf and on our way, following a heading 140 degrees.  We slowly watched the shore behind us become smaller and smaller until we had nothing but water as far as we could see on all sides of the Midas Touch.  The Midas Touch does not move fast – she is not supposed to, but we were surprised to find her doing 7 knots (almost 9 mph) into a wind.  One thing I took care of while we were at Dockside was to check our RPMs, and we found that our tachometer was off. The tach was reading higher that the actual RPMs. This means we could bump up the throttle a little more.  However, a trawler has an optimum hull speed; any more throttle than that, and you are just burning more fuel.  As time went by we watched an already low sun sink into the water, of course in the Western sky.  No sizzle, because a few clouds hid that, but an orange flame to black.

I must admit that watching the sky grow darker and darker is a little bit of a lonely feeling, especially when you know you must wait all night until dawn before the light comes back.  With out an autopilot, I found it easer to pick a star as a reference point, and glance at the compass heading, that is until the star climbs up too high to see through the bikini top.

Sometime in the middle of the night the tachometer quit on me, but I knew why immediately. “We need to kill the engine, Marian, “ I said and down into the engine room I went to tighten up on the alternator belt.  The next bit of anxiety comes when you restart the engine.  What a beautiful sound it is when that Lehman fires up again.  On through the night, and you know what, that day light did come back hours later.

Marian's Great Loop Forum post, published January 21st:
The Dreaded Gulf Crossing - We Did It!
As far as we know, we were the only Loopers in Carrabelle ready to cross the Gulf on Monday. After two weeks at Dockside Marina getting a new shaft log installed, we were eager to get back on the water. We said good-bye to Byron, Cynthia and Toots (Bright Angel - also at Dockside for hull repair).   Robby and Brenda on Crazzy Nufff had use of a vehicle and came over from C-Quarters to wish us well.  FedEx delivered our rental EPIRB about noon; Marian met the truck leaving as she returned from IGA with lunch (it was spaghetti Monday, and we knew we wouldn't do much cooking on the crossing). By 2:50, everything was ready, including a last minute bow repair after the low tide dropped us on the corner of a concrete dock, and the GREAT crew from Dockside untied our lines and gave us a push.  We were on our way.  We knew Monday would be our best weather window, although we didn't see Monday's Forum before we left.
Our crossing was smooth and beautiful - light wind, calm seas (waves were one foot or less most of the way), and a star to steer by. Mike had set up our route on the chartplotter and in Navionics, and once we cleared the markers leaving East Pass, it was simply a matter of maintaining a heading. Midas Touch is 29 years old and has no autopilot. We took turns at the helm, although Mike did far more of the driving while Marian played solitaire on the iPad and made coffee, and Midas, our Golden Retriever, snoozed on his usual port side bench location, rousing occasionally to stretch or turn around.  He woke up long enough to share a snack of cheese and crackers, then went back to sleep. 

We had one glitch, a loose alternator belt. When our RPM meter suddenly dropped to zero, Mike knew exactly what to do. We cut the engine, Mike quickly tightened the belt, and we were back underway.  Monday morning was overcast as we approached Dunedin, so we didn't have the sun in our eyes as we traveled east-southeast toward Marker 1 and the north entrance to St. Joseph's Sound, between Anclote Key and Three Rooker Bar. (The great crew at the Wharf Marina in Orange Beach had printed out a Marker1Marina brochure including a detailed chart with the route and turns clearly marked. These excellent marinas are owned by the safe company.)
Don, the dockmaster, was waiting for us when we cleared the causeway bridge to Honeymoon Island, and after a pump out, we tied up on the face dock, showered, and sacked out.  (Midas was very glad to go ashore for his own pump out.) 
The crossing took just over 20 hours, and we are all proud that we did it. We'll take a day or so for boat cleaning and laundry, then start south toward Marathon, with stops along the way. We're hoping to reconnect with Looper friends and make new ones on this last phase of our Great Loop adventure.  

Sunset as we crossed the Gulf from Carrabelle to Dunedin


 Midas at his post, ready for a long ride.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Mid America IL & MO on the river

We're not sure what Marian did, but as she was working on a new post (to be added soon), she accidentally deleted the most recent, including our trip down the Mississippi, going aboard a tow, and visiting Shiloh Battlefield before our engine gave out.  These are some of the photos from that entry, which seems to be gone forever. Stay tuned for more in a few days, when we next reach a marina with good wi-fi.

Grafton, IL is located where the Illinois River joints the Mississippi, just above St. Louis, MO. We took the ferry across from Grafton, IL to eat at a old established farm restaurant called Wittmond Hotel & Restaurant. Better go hungry and take a wheelbarrow to haul you out. http://www.wittmondhotel.com/

I was surprised by the high limestone cliffs above the river around Grafton, IL and on the Mississippi River.  

Above these cliffs in Grafton the Aeries Winery came down and gave a few of us Loopers a ride in small four wheel vehicles up to enjoy their wonderful wine and view of the Rivers.  http://www.aeriesview.com/winery/#aeries-winery. Sylvie, a fellow Looper from Canada, took this picture of us.                                                      


Another shot of cliffs along the Mississippi between Alton and Grafton, Illinois.
Sailing by Our Lady of the Rivers at the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. http://ourladyoftheriversshrine.org/
Hoppies Marina just below St. Louis on the MO side of the Mississippi River.  Just a bunch of low barges tied together.  A river full of logs came by here each day. It was also the start of a dying engine. You had better attend Fern's daily briefing on the river ahead of you. She knows every mile from the marina to Green Turtle Bay, where to anchor and - more important - where not to anchor. There are no marinas between Hoppie's and GTB.



The Blue Owl restaurant in Kimmswick is famous for its desserts, including the Levee High Apple pie. We indulged there twice during our two-week stay at Hoppie's. 





Another highlight of our stay at Hoppie's was an acapella barbershop   concert at the hippotherapy farm next 
door. These gentlemen could sing!

Cloud formations warn of an approaching thunderstorm, and we headed for Livingston Creek on the Cumberland River to anchor and wait it out.

The small historic town of Kimmswick, MO is just on the other side of the railroad track from Hoppies, and their the smells of the Blue Owl restaurant will pull you to into a wonderful dinning experience. A you wonder why I've gained 10lbs on this trip.  If you are near St. Louis, you had better take time to visit the Blue Owl. http://www.theblueowl.com/

Midas: "Are you kidding me! How long till I get ashore?"  Midas waits patiently on the aft deck for us to launch the dinghy.
Heading back to Midas Touch after taking Midas ashore. 
We visited the St. Louis Arch, Gateway to the West, with our Fruitcakes friends Andy and Julie. Several days later, we cruised past it on our way to Hoppie's.  We were surprised to learn that there is no place to dock in St. Louis to visit the town. We rented a car and drove there from Grafton, IL and later drove up from Hoppie's to get a replacement starter for Midas Touch.
 One of the unexpected and totally unplanned high points of our Loop was being able to go aboard a tug, the powerful boats that push as many as 15 - 18 barges along the Mississippi, Ohio, and Tennessee Rivers. We met this tow on a foggy morning on the Tennessee River and tied up to it to wait for the fog to lift. Their galley has more cabinet space than our kitchen at home, and we didn't get a picture of the two huge upright freezers holding steaks, roasts, ham, pizzas and more.


                                                         
Marian with the two skippers.  Randy, on the right, gave us his phone number and has kept in touch. We met their tow again as we cruised south on the Tenn-Tom.  Below, the two crewmen who helped us tie Midas Touch to the tug, then helped us climb aboard for a memorable visit.                                                                                           


Thursday, November 20, 2014

On the Move Again - We're Finally on the Move Again


 


With apologies to Willie Nelson for paraphrasing his classic "On the road again," we truly are delighted to be on the move again - in a boat that has a rebuilt engine, six new pistons to fit six re-bored cylinders, six cleaned and rebuilt fuel injectors, a new coat of paint, and - finally - new front and side windows for the upper helm!
Since the micro-burst that became a tornado in Edenton, NC back in April, blowing our aging isinglass windows away along with a two-year old bimini top, we've been cruising without an upper helm enclosure to protect us from the rain and wind. From time to time, as we traveled up the east coast, across the Erie Canal. along the Trent-Severn Waterway, through Georgian Bay and the North Channel, down the west coast of Michigan, and through the inland rivers, we looked for canvas shops to make a new set of windows. Every time we asked, we heard, "I can't even come measure for two weeks, and making the windows will take another two - three weeks" until Mike called a marina in Mobile. Bill's Canvas Shop could meet us in Demopolis, AL, about halfway down the Tenn-Tom Waterway, measure and make the patterns, then install the new windows when we reached Mobile.  Our Christmas present, thanks to ACE Recreational Marine, is a new set of curtains, installed on December 18th. Midas Touch is "fully dressed" once again.
The new windows are nicer than the ones that blew away, and they're made of Strataglass, a real improvement the vinyl ones Midas Touch wore when we bought her three years ago. They were cloudy and scratched, and these are clear and scratch resistant. They fit perfectly, too. 
The last step is adding fasteners that line up with the posts on the boat, and Bill and his team made that happen quickly on a beautiful December day while Mike watched.
We spent Sunday - Thursday at Turner Marine Services on the Dog River in Mobile, where our friends Beth and Ray Wolf joined us on Wednesday after they crossed their wake in Fairhope, on the east side of Mobile Bay, on the way from their final night as Loopers at the Convention Center.  When they texted us to let us know they'd reach TMS within the hour, we decorated the boat to welcome them. 

Wednesday evening, we celebrated Beth and Ray's accomplishment with a potluck dinner, two bottles of champagne, and lots of laughs. Their Loop covered 8,950.97 nautical miles, with several side trips.  We first met them in Hobucken, NC at R.E. Mayo Seafood Company, and had not seen them again until they reached Demopolis the day after we arrived. The "Texas Wolves" prove that the best part of the Loop is the people you meet and the friends you make along the way.   
"But wait," you may be saying.  "How did you get from Pickwick Lake to Mobile? What about the trip down the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway? And when did you get back to the boat?"  As it turned out, Lee Spry's original estimate of two to three weeks to rebuild Betty, our faithful but ailing Ford Lehman diesel engine, was optimistic. We left Iuka, MS on October 28th, and Mike's brother Phil generously drove us back on Monday, December 1st. We enjoyed the family Thanksgiving in Pendergrass at nephew Chris Warlick's home, including Marian's traditional spinach-potato au gratin and an America's Test Kitchen Italian Cream Cake plus all the usual Thanksgiving favorites.  Mike was so busy talking to family that he forgot to take pictures, and Marian's photography leaves a lot to be desired.  You'll just have to take our word for it that everyone had an enjoyable time, dominated by football and naps.  
When we reached the boatyard after a rainy six-hour drive, Midas Touch was still "on the hard" and not quite ready to drop back into the water.  We loaded as much of our luggage as we could - returning with more than we had when we left, including five 2.5 gallon bags of dog food - by climbing the somewhat shaky ladder beside the boat or by stacking items on the swim platform, then bringing them up the swim platform ladder. The entire salon floor was open as the mechanic finished installing the engine, which had been pulled out of the boat to have the cylinders re-bored.  Tuesday morning, we arrived early, unloaded Phil's car, then watched the 100-ton travel lift pick up the boat and s-l-o-w-l-y move it over to the tracks, ready to lower it. Once it was safely on its way down, Phil headed back to Georgia.  Wednesday morning, we were off the dock by 9:00 and headed south down the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway, six weeks or so behind most Loopers and happy to be cruising, with no rain.  The 234-mile long Tenn-Tom, which links the Tennessee River to Mobile Way was built and is managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and was a larger dig than the Panama Canal. The idea was to provide a shorter water route from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico to transport bulk goods like coal, rocks, mulch/wood chips, and chemicals like benzene and ethanol. We were lowered through 12 locks, with drops (if you're down-bound) or rises (for up-bound vessels) ranging from the 84-foot Whitten Lock to 25 feet. All locks on the Tenn-Tom are 600 feet long and 110 feet wide. We were often the only boat in the lock, but we shared the Stennis Lock with one tow and two other PC's (pleasure craft) when we left the Columbus Marina early one morning.  Unlike the Erie Canal and the Trent-Severn Waterway, locks on the Mississippi, at Barkley Lake to reach Green Turtle Bay, and on down the Tennessee River to the Tenn-Tom have floating bollards.  Marian had to master a new technique to secure Midas Touch to the lock wall - tossing our line over the bollard, about deck rail level, then holding on until she could "dog it, dog it, dog it" to the cleat. Mike would come down from the helm to help keep our 23-ton trawler next to the wall but not too close.  Bumpers have to be placed in the right position, and sometimes the wind is blowing us away from the wall. When the lockmaster is ready for us to proceed, a traffic light turns green and we hear a loud siren. 

Midas always wants to help, whether we're locking, docking, or undocking.  

We watch for the exit gates to begin opening, start the engine, then wait for another siren. Once the gates are almost open, Marian pulls the line off the bollard and we ease away from the wall.  We traveled through all ten locks on the Tenn-Tom without incident, and we're now finished with locks. Once Marian perfected her Erie Canal line snagging/ Trent-Severn cable catching/Tenn-Tom bollard lassoing skills, locks were a fun part of the trip.  
 Above and below: moonlight on Briar Creek, our last anchorage before Mobile.
Mike gets very creative when he sees sunrise through the early morning mist.

 As we cruised down the Tenn-Tom, Mike spotted this brave little fella swimming for all he was worth to get from the west side to the east side of the river. He made it and scampered off into the grass before we could get another shot.
Above, we had plenty of clearance to cruise under I-65. Below, looking back at the Dolly Parton Bridge.
 Midas Touch anchored in Briar Creek, just off the Mobile-Tensas Cut north of Mobile. We had taken Midas ashore to a nearby sandy beach, where an ultralight buzzed us.
Below, Chiefly Driftin', a fellow Looper we had met in Demopolis. Kevin is making the trip on his own before beginning work on his MBA at Dartmouth.  Kevin later joined us for dinner when we reached Turner Marine Services on Dog River in Mobile.
Aristarcus crossed their wake near Fairhope, AL on December 17th at 11:47 am local time after cruising 8,950.97 nautical miles, then joined us at Turner Marine Services in Mobile. That's Beth in the brown skirt. Midas was glad to see his friends again.
Ray's on the stern as he and Beth work smoothly together to secure their lines. As we left Dog River a couple of days later, Aristarcus was in the travel lift well to have her mast re-set. It had traveled as seen below from Chicago because the mast is too high to fit under some of the fixed bridges on the inland rivers. Sailboaters either have to ship their masts from Chicago to Mobile or Demopolis or build frames for them as Beth and Ray did. 
 Midas and Mike watch while Beth and Ray settle in and secure the boat.
We didn't quite have the sign ready when Beth and Ray arrived; Marian was taping it to the side as Aristarcus entered the harbor, but we finished it anyway, then celebrated later with champagne, spaghetti by Beth and our favorite Italian sausage/squash/potato dish by Marian. Dessert was peppermint sugar cookies, baked in our galley, which we found at Walmart when we used the courtesy car for a Walmart/Lowe's run.
 The clouds and sky are endlessly fascinating and often spectacular. These photos are sunrise as we crossed Mobile Bay on our way east.


 This section of the GIWW (Gulf Intracoastal WaterWay) is called the Grand Canyon - miles and miles of dunes and cliffs, with no place to stop along this stretch. There's just barely enough room to squeeze by if we meet a tow.

Leaving the Grand Canyon and entering Pensacola Bay. We reached Pensacola from Orange Beach in late afternoon, had an early dinner at the Oar House, then spent Sunday at the Naval Aviation Museum.  It has the third largest collection of aircraft in the country, with only the Wright Patterson Air Force Museum and the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum ahead of it. The museum is entirely run by volunteers. One of the best exhibits is Home Front U.S.A., with a replica of a typical World War II general store, home, barber shop, and more. See more at www.nationalaviationmuseum.org.

 After two rainy, windy days at Fort Walton Beach, we left early Christmas Eve morning for Panama City Marina, where Midas met Boudreau, a Golden Retriever rescued after Hurricane Katrina. They had great fun playing together, and Boudreau is clearly a lover.

 We've said it before, but it bears repeating: one of the best parts of the Loop is meeting fellow boaters. This was especially true in Panama City when Robby and Brenda, both retired from the Air Force, invited us to join them for a true Southern Christmas dinner - turkey breast, cornbread dressing, green beans, corn, mashed potatoes, deviled eggs, cole slaw, and warm strawberry cobbler. Their 44 foot Hatteras Crazzy Nufff has a much bigger galley than Midas Touch, with a dishwasher, bigger refrigerator, and lots of cabinet space. We had a wonderful time, and have enjoyed traveling from Panama City to Apalachicola and now to Carrabelle with Robby and Brenda, Bob and his Husky Duncan on El Nido, and Byron and Cynthia on Angel Magic.  To make Christmas even better, our friends Ross and Barb on Attitude Changer had just docked when we returned to the boat after stuffing ourselves. We knew that they had crossed their wake and had seen their boat at Turner Marine in Mobile, but we were delighted to re-connect with friends that we had last seen in Trenton, Ontario. 
We'll be in Carrabelle until after the New Year, waiting for the right weather window to cross from here to Steinhatchee. 
We'll celebrate New Year's Eve by sharing a potluck dinner with our Looper friends, once Midas Touch is back in the water after having a leak repaired. That should happen tomorrow morning, once the patch has dried completely. 
Midas Touch in the travel lift, hauled out to enable the skilled folks at Dock Side to locate and fix the leak. 
 They had the propeller off and other parts removed not long after the boat was out, and Eric, boatyard owner, quickly found the area around the shaft where the plate that holds the shaft in place had weakened. Eric knew exactly how to fix this, and we'll be back in the water on New Year's Eve Day.
 Believe it or not, we'll sleep aboard the boat - in the sling - again tonight. We'll be connected to shore power, and the sling is solid.
We'll close with wishes that all of our readers will have a safe and joyous New Year.  Our Loop adventure is coming to its close, and what an adventure it has been.  We've had many more ups than downs, we've made friends we'll never forget, and despite the setbacks, we would not trade these last nine months for anything.  Until next year, may you have gentle winds, fair skies, and calm seas.