Saturday, June 20, 2015

Hilton Head > Charleston

At Hilton Head, we got up nearly at the crack of dawn for long day in the ocean.  We were happy when the wind picked up in the afternoon and we turned off the engine!  We actually sailed for the first time in THREE weeks.....yeeeha!

The highlight of the day was a pod of dolphins that swam with us for a long time.  I edited down my 280(!) dolphin shots and just posted a few here.  What beautiful animals.  Wow.  At one point, I could almost reach out at touch the ones swimming next to our hull.

Sunrise leaving Hilton Head, SC
Leaving Skull Creek and heading to Port Royal Sound

Lots of dolphins coming in with the morning tide

Pelican perch.......leaving Port Royal Sound and heading to the Atlantic

Sails up. Oh happy day!

Lots of dolphins. They were swimming along at 7.5 knots.













Do you see two dolphins?  One is to the left of the anchor, barely visible.

Storm clouds brewing to the north.  Thought we might make it overnight to Southport, NC, but we ducked the storms and entered at Charleston.

Front edge of storm

Thankfully, the storms didn't hit downtown Charleston.

Fort Sumter at the entrance to the harbor

A freighter leaving as we were entering

Almost at Charleston City Dock
It's 94 degrees today with a heat index of 104.  These sailors inflated a pool next to their boat!

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Thunderbolt to Hilton Head

Let's see, between the Bahamas and Hilton Head, we've replaced the starter battery (Port Canaveral) and the starter relay (Fernandina Beach), had the alternator rebuilt with a new voltage regulator (Hinckley Yacht Services, Thunderbolt), and installed a new digital echo charger for the starter battery (also at Hinckley).  We hope we're good to go for a LONG time now!  Enough electrical schmetrical!

We timed today's trip so that we crossed Fields Cut and Wall Cut at high tide.  Both are just north of the Savannah River and we made it through just fine.

Traffic on the Savannah River

We "made circles" in Elba Island Cut to allow three freighters to pass before we crossed the river.

HELLO, South Carolina!

:)

So tiny!

Short trip up to Hilton Head today (25 nm).  If the weather is favorable tomorrow, we'll jump out to the ocean and run up to Charleston.
Epic fail for me......I didn't take a single picture when we hung out with David's cousin and her family on Tuesday night.  DRAT!  We had a fun time visiting with Debbie, Harry, and Nickie, and enjoyed some tasty Mexican food at Tequila Town in Savannah.  I *will* take photos the next time we roll through!

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Marina life

It's another hazy, hot, and humid Georgia day with a health advisory as the heat index is expected to reach 109 today.  While we wait for a new echo charger to arrive tomorrow, I'm catching up on the blog and David is fixing a winch (not very exciting news to report today).
100 degrees in the shade on Sunday

There is a ~10' tide change on this portion of the ICW (Wilmington River).  This is high tide just before sunset on Sunday evening.  Water was spilling into the parking lot to the left.  To view our exact location, click here.

Same view at low tide the following afternoon.  The docks float with the tide so we don't have to constantly adjust dock lines.

We had a delicious dinner and fun evening on our neighbor's boat the other night.  Pictured here are two Michaels, two Lisas, David, Bill, and Susan :)  We missed Julie!  Michael & Susan and Michael & Julie both had lightning strikes on their sailboats :(  Photo courtesy of Michael Baumgarthuber.

Martin getting to the bottom of our electrical mystery

While we wait for a new part to arrive tomorrow (Tuesday), David decided to disassemble, "unfreeze," and clean the port winch on our mast.  Mission accomplished!

Scrubbing pieces with a wire brush

I usually opt for blogging in the air-conditioned comfort of our salon.
Another aspect of "home life" on a boat is that we don't have a washer and certainly not a dryer on board.  Some of you may know that my absolute FAVORITE chore is doing the laundry.  Back home on land, dirty clothes never piled up and we always had Fresh Sheet Friday and Towel Tuesday.  David starting referring to our laundry room as the Magic Room -- clothes go in dirty and quickly appear clean, dry, and folded :)  Accessing facilities at marinas really messed with my OCD laundry "problem," but I am adjusting.  Prices vary from as little as $3.50 per load ($1.75 to wash and $1.75 to dry) to as much as $11(!) per load (in the Bahamas).  My satchel of quarters weighs almost as much as the laundry itself ;)  We often hand-wash items that dry quickly on our lifelines, but I do like the absolute clean from machines and don't mind hauling our clothes to and fro.

Sheets, towels, lights, darks all ready to go

Some places, like Fernandina Harbor Marina pictured here, even have wagons or trolleys.  The ramp from the dock to land is steep at low tide.

And I had the place all to myself.....bliss!

Tonight, we're looking forward to getting together with David's cousin and her family for dinner!

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Bonaventure Cemetery, Savannah

We are spending the weekend in Thunderbolt, GA, waiting for our new part to arrive tomorrow (Monday).  Yesterday we rode our bikes through Bonaventure Cemetery, made famous in the movie "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil."  The temperature is in the 90s and the heat index in well into the 100s.  For the most part, we are hunkered down in Virginia Dare and are thankful for her central air conditioning.  We've played several cribbage "tournaments" and read a few books.

Loved the details and beauty....
Welcome

It's a huge cemetery.  Some roads are paved.  Others are not.  Spanish moss hangs everywhere.

Part of the Jewish cemetery

Fannie Cooper (no relation)

American Legion




Lots of magnolias and Spanish moss







Virginia Dare at Hinckley's face dock.  The two sailboats in front of us have been hit by lightning and are having major repairs :(  We've met some great people here!
We hope to be heading north Tuesday morning and are already calculating departure time with high tide at Fields Cut just north of the Savannah River.  The Port of Savannah is very busy.....I lost track of how many freighters we saw in January.  We'll be darting across the Savannah River once again and working our way up to Hilton Head.  Then on to Charleston (might have some good wind!) and points north.  Stay tuned!

Friday, June 12, 2015

Fernandina Beach > Wahoo River > Thunderbolt

After two electricians worked on Virginia Dare (Port Canaveral and Fernandina Beach), we are still plagued by a baffling mystery <sigh>  We're now tucked into Hinckley Yacht Services in Thunderbolt, Georgia, where an electrician greeted us when we arrived late yesterday afternoon.

Scenes from the last few days:

This poor guy is missing his left rear leg.  After watching him for an hour, I took him to the bushes near the marina (yes, that is a drop of bug poo by his leg).

After the second round of electricians fixed our issue, we celebrated.  Turns out, we jumped the gun :(  Problem not yet solved.

Motoring north in flat calm

As we creep north at 7 kts, planes zip past :)

David estimates this bonito weighed 15 pounds.  It put up quite a fight before being released back to the ocean.

Storms to our south
HUNDREDS of these jellyfish were bobbing in the ocean.  We saw lots of turtles here, too.  As we learned at the Sea Turtle Center in Florida, turtles love to eat jellyfish.

And rays must like them, too!

And away he goes!

Anchored in the very peaceful Wahoo River on Wednesday night.  Storms skirted us.

Heading north on Thursday in the ICW.  The tide prevented us from getting back to the ocean.


Brackish water of the ICW -- mixture of salt and fresh water.  The dolphins seem to love it.

We skirted the storms on Thursday as well!

Rain off our stern in the Isle of Hope, GA.

Osprey nest as we neared Thunderbolt.