Combined: Adventures of Louise Michel

Started by bladedancer, August 13, 2010, 10:44:37 AM

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w00dy

BTW, where is your boat anchored in Boot Key? We're going to be hauling out on the other end of the island soon, but it would be neat to meet up. Give me a call if you'd like. 3-6-1-2-3-5-1-3-3-4

w00dy

Hey Bladedancer
Rachel and I took a ride around the east end of the harbor today and I think that we found your pretty, colorful boat. It takes panache to step outside the traditional "blue and white" that most boats sport and I think your boat looks great and unique. Awesome job.

hearsejr

 common tell us the colors! lol. I was thinking of doing a bright orange scheme on my boat one day..lol.

JWalker

its easy to add weight to the bow....a few more blonds in bikinis!  ;D

maybe a redhead....... 8)

bladedancer

Blondes, brunettes sounds good. Could repaint boat to match bikinis. Perhaps they'd like to sail with me to western caribbean...see my my post in SB/LD section.

w00dy

That's the best suggestion I've heard yet! Grog to you JWalker!

JWalker

Be very careful adding brunettes to use as ballast.....

As everyone knows....the head of a blond weighs less than a comparable brunette...due to the excessive o2 contained inside.

With a brunette you really have to get it right....but blonds you can add and subtract until you have it right  ;)

Frank

You guys have it ALL wrong.Blondes-Brunettes..... Look up Bruce Springsteen's "Redheaded women" song on youtube. Having once dated one...nothing more I could add
Side benifit could be an appropriate marker or running light?  ;D
God made small boats for younger boys and older men

w00dy

Best of luck to you Mikael. We look forward to meeting you again and will be following you here on SailFar. Perhaps we'll even see you in the Bahamas, though I hope you can find crew to make it to Honduras after all.

bladedancer

We are in the Bahamas... finally.
Madeline arrived over a week ago. We were looking at a good weather window a couple of days ago, when our two kayaks-- our only way to get to shore? were stolen. Even worse, Madeline's was brand new; she's only paddled it once. This was a serious setback, not just financially but also in terms of time.
We decided our best bet was to buy an inflatable dinghy and a small electric motor and battery. We found an inexpensive model on sale at a West Marine south of Miami. Had to take a bus, then a train, then another bus. Then carry back the giant box on a tiny hand cart, plus the battery hidden in a plain brown bag in case Miami public transport considered it dangerous.(Back in Mattituck I disguised my propane tank as a bag of laundry on the local bus, so I'm no stranger to illicit transport of hazardous materials.)
From the bus stop in Key Biscayne it's a mile walk to the harbor and by then we were exhausted. A young couple in a van kindly gave us a ride from the park gate.
The motor-- a small electric trolling motor-- came via UPS and one of the park rangers delivered it to the dock.
We spent a day testing our new ride, listening to the weather forecast and studying passageweather.com. It looked like there would be another, short, weather window, but it would entail an overnight passage. Crossing at night has some advantages-- you leave and arrive in daylight, there's usually less wind, the waves are smaller, and there's no hurry. There was a blustery wind leaving Cape Florida but we could fetch our course. The wind slowly eased and we soon had to motorsail. We had to steer a little into the current which cut our speed over the ground to three knots. With a small, slower boat like ours, leaving from further south-- for example, Key Largo-- would have been better.
We could still see the glow of the lights of Miami when we saw the lights of Bimini, neither of which would have been visible in the daylight; we found this reassuring. There was some shipping but less than in the Straits of Juan de Fuca.
Neither of us had slept much on the crossing and the dock we tied up at in north Bimini was hot, noisy and had lots of wake from passing boats. To our consternation, we then discovered there was going to be a band playing at right next door. We had forgotten it was Saturday. Both of us like to dance and it was a reggae band, but we were so beat that we slept right thru it.
We had planned to cross the banks today but the wind was on the nose and blowing strong. The marina we are in tonight on south Bimini is a total contrast-- an artificial harbor surrounded by condominiums-- a gated resort for well-to-do white people.
There's another, stronger cold front coming in a couple of days, so tomorrow we have to hustle across to the Berry Islands. It's 80 miles so we will anchor overnight somewhere on the banks, in ten feet of clear turquoise water out of sight of any land.

JWalker

glad to hear our over!

keep us posted  ;D

CharlieJ

 ;D

Deja vu all over again!

Sounds like you stayed at Weeche's and the band was at Brown's.

We did the same, then jumped to the Berry's. But we spent time in Bimini. Really enjoyed the place. We anchored off the police station for 3-4 days. Alice Town is a neat place. We were there at Homecoming! WOW!!!

Have fun and get some conch off Frazier Hog in the Berries.
Charlie J

Lindsey 21 Necessity


On Matagorda Bay
On the Redneck Riviera

Capt. Tony

Congratulations!  Boy do I love threads like these.  Folks like you are the inspiration I need to get busy and get that plan into action.  Please keep on posting and feel free to add pictures if it's no problem :D

I am truely sorry to hear about your kayaks.  The editing board may take offense to this but Mean People Suck!!  I got the sense you didn't let it ruin your day and that's the way to roll.

Looking forward to hearing more about your cruise.

Quote from: CharlieJ on February 28, 2011, 08:03:03 AM

We were there at Homecoming! WOW!!!

Does mean they really whoop-it-up?

LauraG

Lol-yep they do. Food booths all over, marching bands, parties. Population virtually doubles.  Held over Easter weekend.

Motto is "once is not enough" I'd love to go back. We thourougly enjoyed Alice Town.

And by the way- we are in Isla Mujeres, Mex at the moment and the water is MUCH clearer in Bimini. Grin

bladedancer

Mike and Madi's Big Banks Bash

If we'd had the energy it might have been smart to keep going when we reached Bimini but we hadn't slept much crossing  the Florida Straits and needed to rest. And even though we'd slept through the reggae music at the dock there was still Alice Town to explore. No homecoming parades. And the choir in the Anglican church was a bit old and dry so we ducked out before the sermon and went  for a succulent, secular conch and fries at Bob's.
In the afternoon we tried to sail down to Gun & Cat Cays to have a better angle on the forecast southeast winds, but with wind and tide against us, we soon realized we weren't going to make it. Still, it was a lovely sail, in beautiful blue green water and a stiff but warm breeze.
Passageweather.com, which is our main source for weather, predicted an easing of the 15 to 20 knot winds by the next afternoon. This meant that if we left late morning we could get part way across the banks before dark, anchor for the night and continue the next day at a leisurely pace, arriving at Bullocks harbor well before the front.
The main question was, would we have wind-- and waves-- on the nose once we rounded North Rock and headed east for seventy miles. With another, stronger cold front coming in a couple of days we knew we had to go for it even if we did get ?beat up.?
As it turned out we got a good slant and it was another glorious, if wet ride. The Ariel loves a good thrash to weather and even reefed down we were doing 5 knots without burying the rail, with our trusty bungee at the helm. As forecast, the wind eased then died altogether and we had to resort to the motor and tiller pilot.
When the sun went down we dropped the hook. It felt strange: there was no land in sight in any direction but everyone we had talked to said ?no problem, just anchor anywhere out of the traffic lane.? Within an hour we were underway again. Stopped, the motion was sickening; by the time I had supper made we were both feeling too queasy to eat.
No moon this time, no long-lasting city glow, just pitch black night with a few stars thru the clouds. Not a boat or a buoy or sight of land anywhere, steering by GPS. Sensory deprivation made the stars dance and nonexistent dolphins chatter. Madeline sang to drown out the dolphins and stayed tethered to the cockpit as spray washed over the cabin top and along the side decks.
Fortunately it was dark because when it got light and we could see how big the waves were we felt very glad to be back in sight of land. We had covered 50 miles in ten hours!
So here we are in Bullocks Harbor in the Berry islands. We are at a marina along with several other cruisers  sitting out a stalled cold front or whatever this weird weather is. We have found that we can handle 15-20 but 25-30 is no-go for us.
The weekly mail boat came in the day after we arrived, so we've got fresh veggies, some interesting canned goods and Maikel's favorite British digestive biscuits. A thin slice of banana bread at the local bar costs $7, so we were inspired to break out the solar oven to try making our own treats. If it works we'll move on to homemade yeasted bread-- a plus, since the best available in the small groceries is ?roman meal? balloon bread.