Wednesday, December 16, 2015

"Bienvenidos a Miami"

That's right we are Miami bound! Let the maxing and relaxing finally begin. We left Cocoa Village Marina three days ago and it feels wonderful to be on the move again. While we were there James' parents were able to come and visit us - it was great to see them and that they could check out the boat! We spent a lovely morning exploring the town of Cocoa and sampling some seasonal local honey.

Miss Kelly, my favourite Marina Manager
It was a throughly exhausting month at the marina but well worth it - we finally love our boat and it feels like home :) The list of what we accomplished in the month was pretty impressive - no wonder we're currently sleeping 10 hours a night! We attended a marina potluck a couple of nights before we left and everyone rushed over to us when we arrived to comment on the "twenty hour" days we had been working. I think people thought we were crazy. Many nights people wandered over to the boat saying "you guys are gonna kill yourselves you need to rest"! I've included a list of what we did simply because it makes me feel good to look at it ;)

  1. Waterproofed, taped, and stiched back together our canvas enclosure so now when it rains we stay dry - how novel! We tried to get the whole thing replaced but there was a 6 month waiting list everywhere we tried.
  2. Changed out all our sanitation hoses and installed a new septic tank - smells like a dream in here now.
  3. Re-bedded the hatch above our bed so now when it rains it doesn't leak and we can still sleep in our bed!
  4. Removed the old name from our boat and put our new name on! Goodbye maroon and mustard yellow cursive on our transom and goodbye to all the Highland Light problems - we are officially NOMADS now!!  
  5. Cleaned the dingy and applied our Transport Canada Registration number so we are now legally driving that thing around. 
  6. Fixed our captains chair so we no longer take our life in our hands when we hit a wave.
  7. Sanded down the teak around the cockpit rail so it's no longer cracked and multicoloured - just need a coat of finish on there now
  8. Installed screens for all our hatches - the Georgia swamp inspired this.
  9. Painted our cowling vents white
  10. Used an actual deck cleaning product and scrubbed the hell out of the deck - it looks clean for the first time.
  11. Replaced the blower for the engine so we don't have to motor with the engine room doors open and can now hear each other speak when the engine is on
  12. Installed a new starting solenoid so we don't have to start the day by hitting the engine with a screwdriver
  13. Replaced the automatic bilge pump - now if we spring a leak the pump will automatically come on like it is supposed to and alarm to let us know it's pumping water
  14. Replaced the manual bilge pump
  15. Rebuilt the fresh water pump and tightened all the connections and replaced some of the hoses meaning the pump can now pump water from our water tanks so we have a reliable source of fresh water - very important
  16. Replaced the faucets in the galley (kitchen) and both heads (bathrooms). They all leaked and were very ugly. Unfortunately this "simple" project turned into four days of hell.  The Endeavour is one of the boats that were built with polybutalyne pipes - a product that is no longer on the market and the company has long since been out of business since many home owners sued them. Basically the pipe fittings cracked as we took the faucets off and we had to buy new pipe and run them in some impossible to reach areas.
  17. Became Amazon Prime's best customers for a couple of weeks. We fully stocked this boat with supplies, home decor, material to repair almost anything and lots more!
  18. Had our "New York Storm Night from Hell Ripped Jib" fixed! 
  19. Changed all the bathroom accessories from yellowed plastic to chrome - not sure how long that will last in the salt air but it looks pretty now. Hung shower curtains and towels and made a real bathroom.
  20. Finally attached our swim ladder so we can have guests over without worrying they will break limbs.


The "GuestBathroom"

Guest Shower  

New Bathroom Fixtures and Freshly Oiled Wood



We finally have our own Identity!!


There were honestly so many other little things I can't even remember them and I'm sure you all stopped reading at bullet point three anyway. There are many, many, many other things we have on our "to do list" but the pressure is off and we can whittle away at that list when we need a break from the beautiful beaches in the Bahamas ;)

Manatee at the Marina 

Fellow Nova Scotian's Waving us off from the Marina:)

Leaving the marina - no more dodger vinyl blowing in the wind
Relaxing Boat Dinner

Early morning fishing


Swimming at Fort Pierce
The plan now is to spend a couple of days in Miami: yoga, beach, shopping and gorging ourselves on Cuban food are all on the agenda.  We were hoping to reach Miami this evening but the current has been against us the past two days and we are making terrible time so we may not arrive until tomorrow. We ordered some new cockpit cushions online and we are picking them up when we arrive - very curious to see how they turn out! From there we are just waiting out some favourable winds and weather to make the crossing to Bimini, Bahamas!


Clouds and sunrise near Melbourne, FL


Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Back in Business

Now I know many of you will have un-bookmarked me (Tracy) or may fear we have sunk so just a quick post to allay your fears. Since our last blog post we spent a wonderful few days in Charleston - walking around admiring the architecture, eating delicious foods, and doing a little shopping.
Charleston, SC

St. Simon Island, GA

From there we headed down the ICW to Georgia
ICW, Georgia
where we went back onto the Atlantic and headed to St. Simon's Island: An old English colony that used to have rice and cotton plantations and is today a very pretty island full of touristy shops. We then headed to Savannah where we ran out of gas in a swamp and had to spend the night anchored barely off the ICW channel being eaten alive by all sorts of bugs. After we finally figured out how to bleed an engine all way through when there is absolutely no fuel in it, we headed to a fuel dock to fill up and then onto San Fernandina beach which meant we made it to Florida!!! We spent James' birthday here going out for some of the best pizza we've ever had and eating it in a beautiful courtyard.
When your birthday morning is spent in a swamp the decorations get a little shady 

The Birthday boy enjoying lunch

Not a bad way to spend a birthday!
We had hoped to go back into San Fernandina the next day but the weather was so rough and the waves were so big that we got in our dingy and immediately realized it was a terrible idea and got back on the boat!

Cummberland Island, Georgia 


St. Simon's Lighthouse


We spent two nights at the city mooring balls in St. Augustine which I think must be the coolest city in Florida. It was founded in the 1500s by the Spanish and feels like you are in Spain! Tiny streets with cobblestones, massive Spanish inspired fortress-like buildings, and great food! I spent the whole time craving massive espresso based beverages and pastries which James pointed out was because it felt a little like you were in Europe. Except in true Florida style it has a definite Disney feel to the place - the old school house has a dressed up, talking mannequin inviting you in!
St. Augustine

St. Augustine Sunset
Then we finally made it to our Florida destination - Cocoa!!! We are here at the Marina for a month to get lots of jobs finished and make some improvements to our boat and make it feel like it's ours. The whole way down from New York our mantra has been "we just need to make it to Florida" and now we have!!!


I guess our blog wouldn't be our blog without an embarrassing story so here it is... Our first day when we arrived at the marina we were exhausted. We'd been pulling some really long days to get here and our supplies were pretty low. We arrive and are greeted by really friendly staff and fellow boaters who inform us that there is a potluck that night at the marina. We thought it would be a great way to meet some new people so we headed into town in search of something edible to bring - which was a dozen donuts since everything was either closed or needed to be preordered. We got back to the marina and headed to the showers in the main building to get ready. At the end of our dock is a massive old style paddle steamer. I go off to the shower and have this glorious hot, high water pressure "land shower" and am in a bit of a happy daze when I'm finished - I'm clean and I'm looking forward to our pot luck dinner.  At the gate back to our dock is a bridal party - the bride, the father of the bride, some bridesmaids and the wedding co-ordinator. I say "congratulations" and smile and then say excuse me to get around them and back to our boat.  As I'm walking down the dock the paddle steamer is at the end and it suddenly dawns on me that the dock is acting as an aisle and I have interrupted the bridal procession walking back to my boat with a towel on my head!! The photographer stopped taking photos and the paddle steamer is now full of guests who are all staring at me like "what the hell is this girl doing"?? To either side of me are all the boats at the marina who are getting ready for the potluck and have come out on deck to watch the procession. I can't turn back because the bride is behind me so I just put my head down and made a beeline for my boat. At first I felt terrible and then I thought ... why didn't ANYONE say "can you wait a minute the wedding has started"?!?! To whoever that bride and groom are I'm sorry and congratulations!
Our home for next couple of weeks

Well we've been at the marina for two weeks and have already accomplished a lot! Now as you know our boat has had some terrible smells and James and I agreed it was time to put an end to that. We ripped all the old sanitation hoses out and replaced them and installed a new septic tank - it was a throughly revolting 4 days but it is so much nicer in here!!! As an aside did you know that saltwater and urine make shale - as you cut the pipes to get them out rocks falls out. Disgusting. We found someone to repair our badly ripped sail! He had to cut the side off that was ripped and resize it but we're back to two headsails! We have also become Amazon's best customers as we have been busy procuring lots of boat supplies and some creature comforts - thank you IKEA Orlando :) We now have bedsheets, plates, glasses, bowls, even a carpet and a few Christmas decorations. Once the boat is all fixed up I will share some photos of where we live.

We took a little break from the renos and went to visit friends for Thanksgiving. It was delightful to be around friends that feel like family and have many home cooked meals - Thanksgiving was a little too good to us we need to get back on the water and burning some calories. While we were visiting our friends we went to a "resort" which I think was just a massive hotel with lots of activities but we had a very relaxing swim and pool side nap and got rejuvenated for the rest of our boat improvements.
Thanksgiving Feast
Thanksgiving Dinner
Taking it easy at Gaylord Palms Resort

We are are the marina for another two weeks if anyone wants to send fan mail, gifts, monetary donations to keep the blog (and us) alive, please let me know and I can give you the address.
Boat Baby Gabe

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Mile Zero



Being out on the ocean has given me a new appreciation of the sky. It is so vast and colourful, both in the day and the night. I love seeing the sunrise and set everyday and seeing how it makes the ocean pink. Last night we were the only boat in our anchorage and we lay on the back of the boat under the milky way and watched shooting stars. I’m becoming so fascinated with clouds - the patterns, textures, and colours are beautiful.  


Since our last blog post we have travelled through the Chesapeake, the Delaware Canal, Virginia, North Carolina, a large part of the Intracoastal Waterway (ICW) and are in South Carolina. We have encountered some very interesting anchorages. Several of the most memorable were: in Cape May outside a Coast Guard training base where they yell military-style songs ALL night long, a military base in NC where you are not allowed off your vessel and where you can hear them detonating explosives after dark and a small creek in South Carolina where a massive casino sails past several times a night taking people off shore to legally gamble. This was the same anchorage where a shrimping boat screamed at the boats anchored there to "get out of the channel" everytime he sailed past despite no boats being near the channel and there being plenty of room to sail past us all. There is definitely some animosity towards pleasure craft vessels. 

Norfolk Military Base, Virginia


We’re doing better with breakdowns - I can’t tell if they’re happening less or if we’re just becoming more adept at dealing with them but either way they feel less dramatic. I basically don’t expect our engine to turn on in the morning so when it does I’m quite pleasantly surprised. I think our starter will need replacing or the solanoid cleaning (not sure if this is a thing??) as there are surely only so many times one can hit it with the end of a screwdriver and be successful.  But for now that seems to do the trick to start her up! 


We continue to meet the most incredible people. A couple of weeks ago we were in Maryland - which I think has been my favourite state - near Annapolis and we met Paul and Rosemary. We had anchored our boat in Harness Creek and were aching to get off the boat for a bit. We went for a dingy ride around the creek - it was so peaceful and the trees were changing to beautiful fall colours. The houses were stunning - it looked like a magazine spread from Architectural Digest. Each house had a private dock with at least two boats. There we were putting around in our “vintage” dingy with old smokey our engine making a lot of noise and smoke. This man kayaks over to us and I thought “oh here we go, we’re getting kicked out”. I was sure we were going to be told that our boat was too big for the little creek or that we weren’t supposed to be using our engine there so I pretended to be utterly absorbed in taking photos. Boy was I wrong - the guy was inviting us over for dinner!! He comes over to the dingy and starts chatting with us about our boat and where we were from and says why don’t you come over for a drink later or just come for dinner? And we said oh that would be great but we really need to go grocery shopping and don’t want to walk home in the dark. So he says “oh no problem we can take you”!  We said bye to Paul and went over the State park for a trail walk. Later on we got cleaned up (as best we could) and headed to Paul’s house for a drink. We met his lovely wife Rosemary and their best friends who were visiting from Scotland - Joan and Gordon, as well as their son and his girlfriend. We chatted over drinks and snacks and then Rosemary announces dinner was ready and they had already set places for us at the table! We stayed for fish and shrimp and fresh vegetables (these are gold when you live on a boat). By the end of dinner it felt like we had known them for years. They told us to come back in the morning and they would drive us to the grocery store, as well as to bring our laundry! We went back the next morning and they made us coffee and breakfast and were very disappointed that we hadn’t brought our laundry (we felt like we would have been taking advantage) and they offered us showers! They took us to the grocery store and offered to take us to some sailing stores if we needed anything. When we got back to their house they gave us beach towels and started brainstorming of who they knew along the East Coast who we could “mooch off of”! They said they were coming to Charleston and their son lives in Savananah so if there was anything we think that we need to just let them know and they could bring it to us. Before we left Rosemary said to me “well you’re family now whether you like it or not” - I like it very much! We were both quite sad to say goodbye to them. We’re really hoping to catch up with them again.

The Dismal Swamp


Harness Creek, Anapolis


From there we headed to the Chesapeake Bay. For a novice, sailing the Chesapeake in 20-25knots of wind was done with my heart in my throat for most of it! But James was insistent that I could do it and stood back. It was exhilarating. The world famous Annapolis Boat Show was just ending and there was more than one person sailing their shiny new $500,000 boats home. We looked completely out of place with our ripped falling apart bimmini and shabby dingy hanging off the back. We crossed the Delaware Chesapeake Canal and over to Virgina. There is one crazy big military base in Norfolk! It’s so strange to hear on the VHF “This is US War Ship …”. Once the Railroad bridge in Norfolk Virginia opened we were at Mile 0 on the ICW!! 



There are so many bridges and locks in the ICW. The first lock we came to the bridge tender was such a friendly character - he told us a brief history of the ICW and he played a conch shell like a trumpet - notes and all! The first night in North Carolina was spent rafted to another boat as there was no more room for docking - we woke up the next morning and there was ice on our boat - not impressed. Happily the days of layering in everything you own and dressing up like Bonhomme seem to be behind us! 

In the ICW we took the “Dismal Swamp” route which is a little slower and windier than the “Virginia Cut” route but apparently more scenic and lots more wildlife - sadly we only saw one turtle but it was very scenic. While we were motoring through the swamp, which is very shallow (5.5ft in places) and narrow, James comes up to the cockpit to tell me something is leaking and our bilge is full and our bilge pump isn’t working.  He then yells “shit watch the mast” - in my panic over the full bilge and no working bilge pump I neglected to see an overhanging branch and hit it!! It made a god awful crack and branches came flying down into the water and all over the boat. For a dreadful second I thought it was our mast falling into the water. Other than a very dirty, messy, buggy boat we came out unscathed.  I worked at throwing the tree pieces overboard and James discovered the source of our leak - the boot on our heat exchanger had split and was spraying sea water into the bilge. The split was caused by the pipe being too short and the tension eventually was too much and pulled the boot until it split. We wedged an empty soup can under the pipe to change it’s angle and lesson the pull on the split. I then went to work on gorilla taping the hell out of the boot and the pipe and was able to stop the leak. James was most impressed with my taping skills and I informed him it was from trying to tape IVs in place on furious 3 year olds. We then set about bailing out our bilge! We coasted into Elizabeth City, NC “The Harbour of Hospitality” held together with duct tape, gorilla tape and an old can in classic Highland Shite style. 




In Elizabeth City you are met by Gus - an old guy who spends everyday in the park and greets all the boats arriving with the noon bridge opening. The city offers free two day docking! So we lassoed (like actually lassoed) ourselves to piling and settled in for 48hours. First things first - we had long hot showers - it was heaven. We met up with our friends Larry and Shannon who have the same brand of engine as us and were able to tell us where we could order a replacement boot cap. We called the company who had the part sent to the public dock the next day! Now nothing on our boat is simple so of course replacing it was a right pain in the arse but at least that leak was fixed. Turns out there was another leak contributing to our full bilge. Our sea water pump was leaking like a hose on full power. We realized we couldn’t leave with a leak and no functioning bilge pump so we said bye to Larry and Shannon but our friends The Joyces arrived that day. It was so great to catch up with people. The Joyce’s made us dinner and got us rather drunk as they said it would make us “forget about our engine trouble”.



The Harbour of Hospitality is an odd place. It was an incredibly smart business move to provide somewhere with free docks and clean hot showers along the ICW. Boaters stay the 2 days and eat in the restaurants, do laundry in the laundromat, buy groceries, go out for coffee, and buy supplies at the hardware stores. The city has a “Rose Ceremony” where the retired mayor comes and does a little schpeal on the city and encourages you spend money while the tourism beaureau plies you with free beer and wine and presents you with a rose. Meanwhile the city is a complete food desert (over an hour each way on foot to anywhere to buy food) where you walk through “the other side of the tracks”; A completely segregated black public housing area where I tripped over an insulin syringe that may or may not have been used for insulin. Not sure the tourism dollars were trickling down there. 

Again though a town with super nice people. James and I were walking to the laundromat bogged down with almost everything we owned. A lady reverses through four lanes of traffic to ask us if she can drive us anywhere! After dropping all our stuff at the laundromat James headed back to the boat as our part was being delivered. I hung out with the old dudes who worked at the laundromat and bought them breakfast as they gave me the tips for the best consignment stores in the city - $9 got me a rash guard, a denim shirt, a handwoven angora blanket from Scotland, a JCrew t-shirt, a fitted sheet for our bed, and a long sleeved local baseball t-shirt. The laundromat guys were bang on!  On my way back to the boat with all our clothes a man pulled over and said "Darlin' I just can't watch you struggle with all that, can I please help?" Southern manners are impeccable. 

While in Elizabeth City we met Al, a high school shop teacher from Bathurst, NB who is my new hero. The leaking saltwater pump was completely seized and we could not get it off - like a pro he used a hammer and a screwdriver and got it off in no time and had a workshop on his boat that allowed us to clamp the part down to open it. There is no way we would have been going anywhere with out this man! He helped us get the old seal out and reassemble it with new seals and impeller. Getting it off and reassembled and back on took the entire day. James then took the automatic bilge pump apart and it decided to work. We left the next morning! 


We had some bad weather a few days ago and rode it out in Wrightsville, NC. A fun friendly beach surf town. Coming into Wrightsville you have to wait for a bridge to open but the distance between two bridges and their opening times is too far to make in a sailboat so you have to wait almost an hour for the next bridge to open. The current is so strong that we turned off our engine and drifted down the river towards the bridge - we still went too fast so us and about eight other boats spent a harrowing 40mins dodging each other in 2+ knot current waiting for the bridge to open. Once the Wrightsville bridge opened there was a Sheriff boat waiting. It followed us for a while then turned it’s lights on and “pulled us over”. Getting pulled over entails their boat matching our speed with three heavily armed United States Coast Guard agents actually running and jumping onto your vessel. We were nervous about getting boarded since our vessel is registered but we haven’t yet changed the name or the port on the stern of the boat. The coast guard didn’t care about that at all. They were very nice chatty guys who did a full safety inspection and advised us where to anchor for the night! 


We had read a lot and heard a lot about how your personal hygiene really slips while living on a boat and man is it ever true. It feels impossible to keep everything clean and using potable water to shower is a real sacrifice. Plus it's been too damn cold to shower in cold water! We also have a tempramental water pump and often just don’t have enough water pressure for a shower, which is shocking since everything else on the boat is in perfect working order ;). We have become experts at “showering” naked on deck after dark in a lifejacket with the salt water anchor wash down - we like to keep things classy.  So we were desperate for a freshwater shower but the marinas in Wrightsville don’t let non members use the showers so desperate times as they say… we showered on the beach! You know the showers put in to rinse sand and salt off your surfboards or off your feet before you put your shoes on? Yeah we showered there shampoo and all! We got some dirty looks. When we were leaving Wrightsville a dolphin came right up to our boat and swam along side us for at least five minutes! It was incredible, it just kept going from starboard to port so close we could have touched it. It was a massive dolphin with a curly fluke. A definite highlight for me! 


Yesterday we decided we needed a break from the ICW and made our way back out the ocean. The ICW is an incredible thing - a waterway that essentially links the country top to bottom. However, it is busy and narrow and shallow and private sport fishing vessels really like to do Top Gun style flybys that generate a lot of uncomfortable wake. It’s also impossible and illegal to sail in portions of it so you basically motor day after day waiting for bridges to open. We’re on the Atlantic again today planning on Halloween in Charleston - shrimp and grits here I come! 


Saturday, October 10, 2015

The Tow of Shame

Okay, first things first ... we have LEFT Port Washington!!! We are finally in a different State from where we purchased this beast - we're in NJ!
Cigarette Boat Race - Port Washington
A bunch of boats, who were all stranded in Port Washington waiting on weather, went out one evening a couple of weeks ago to a raw bar for drinks. It was great to meet some more people and have an evening out. Some of those same boats we have continued to see on the way and there is a real sense of camaraderie amongst us.      

The reason for the lengthy hiatus between posts is that we have been dealing with an awful lot of shit - both figuratively and literally. I honestly can't even remember all the things that have gone wrong so I'll just give you the highlights. 

Let's start with Hurricane Joaquin, who at least had the good grace to bugger off into the Atlantic Ocean. For a while we were directly in his path and as we sat studying our "Hurricane Plan", previously mandated by our insurance company, we thought "you have got to be kidding me - we haven't even had the boat a month and we might be hit by a hurricane  W...T...F?!" It was surreal to be obsessively tracing the hurricane's path on numerous websites. Little did we think in August sitting in my mum's living room writing out our "Hurricane Plan" that we might need to use it in September! While we were very thankful that Joaquin left us alone we did have some incredibly nasty weather with Gale Force winds gusting well into the high 40 knot range. I wish I could say our boat came out unscathed.  At 4am on October 2 we were laying on the setee in our living room (we slept in the living room because the bedroom hatch still leaks like a faucet and because the waves and wind was so intense we thought the center of the boat would be a little smoother) neither of had slept much due to the crazy weather - the boat was being rocked around and the noise of the bridal ropes on the mooring ball sounded like the soundtrack of Titanic when it was sinking (creepy creaking and cracking noises).  Then I heard another noise - a very distinct noise - the noise a sail makes in the wind. I shot up and looked out the hatch praying I was wrong - I wasn't - our storm jib had been pulled loose in the wind and I could see the top of it ballooning out of it's furling. I thought I was going to throw up. James and I put on our PFDs and went on deck, it was terrifying. We were freezing within seconds as our PJs got soaked and were plastered against our skin. While sliding around on the slick deck in the intense wind we tried to no avail to refurl the sail. It was so twisted we couldn't get it in and the wind was far to strong to let it out and start again. Our boat was heeled far over and the bridal was pulled to it's max - we both feared we were going to get ripped from our mooring ball. We tried to turn on the engine incase we did break free - it wouldn't start. It felt like a scene from the "Perfect Storm" - I was honestly terrified. We looked around and a few of our neighbours had heard what was going on and were on deck with flashlights - it felt so good to know someone was watching us. Then the jib shredded in the wind. While it sucked to lose a three thousand dollar sail, the ripping relieved the pressure on the boat and we felt much safer which is really all either of us cared about.  

After a terrifying night of no sleep in a wet cold boat (it was only 13 degrees inside) with no sign of the weather letting up we abandoned ship. We spent the night of October 2 in the Holiday Inn - it was the BEST decision we ever made! We had hot showers, cranked the heat, drank coffee in bed and binge watched Law and Order. We slept 10hours and woke up to a buffet breakfast. We felt like we had hit the reset button and felt much better heading back to the boat. 

In hindsight we probably should have tightened our sail lines before we went to bed that fateful night but something had utterly usurped our attention that day... we had raw sewage leaking into our cabin. Now everyone who knows me knows I don't do well with bad smells so there was a lot of gagging. We had tried to get the "Pump Out" boat to come for two days but discovered he just randomly takes days off. We couldn't deal with the smell anymore and the fact that we had zero operational toilets (peeing in a bucket on deck in a storm takes an awful lot of balance FYI, thank you yoga).  So we braved an incredibly difficult docking maneuver. We have a 42' boat and the pump out dock was maybe 25' with a mooring field full of boats about 30' away. We had to wait to go at high tide but the water was very rough. James brought us in like a champ! We were at the dock for ages while we tried to figure out why our tank wouldn't pump out - we cleared the vent and finally got it to work. By this time the weather had dramatically declined. The wind speed picked up and the direction did a complete 180 and was driving us into the dock. Not the best conditions for someone who has never reversed the boat to take us out. However, I wasn't strong enough in that weather to get the dock lines off in time to jump back on. I totally crashed the boat - into both a mooring ball and the dock - the wind and lack of space was just way too much to get a boat that big out. I gave the all the people at the dock one hell of a show! Minus a few minor scrapes the boat is fine. And most importantly we have one working toilet! 

So after our little hotel hiatus we still couldn't get our boat to start. One of the captains from another boat came over and confirmed our suspicion that it was an electrical issue. Our starter battery was too low to start the engine and the house batteries were too low to jump the starter. There had been no sun on our solar panel for days and the wind was so strong that we had to tie up our wind generator so nothing had been charging our batteries. Once the wind died down a little and we could let the wind turbine run it charged our starter battery enough to start the engine! We were back in business - or were we??

We planned to finally sail the East River on October 6 with a couple of other boats. However, the day before departure our friends Larry and Shannon came over with an update from BoatUs. Apparently BoatUs were advising people to wait at least one day to head south as there were still over 10ft swells and that some of the buoys on the New Jersey coast couldn't be trusted as the shoals had moved with the weather. They also said they "were busy cleaning up shipwrecks and some areas were impassable" - that was all we needed to hear to hold off one more day. What the hell, we waited this long! So on October 7 a convoy headed out at 6am for Hell Gate. What an incredible day!! We crossed just after slack tide and still had 7-8 knots of current and some white caps - what a ride! Even crazier than the current is all the visual and auditory stimuli flying at you. We passed Riker's Island, The UN building, almost every bridge in NY (well not really), The Empire State Building, Coney Island, Staten Island and much more. As soon as our boat neared the city center all the noise of a downtown core hit us - sirens, yelling, honking, engines idling. There were numerous helicopters flying overhead, a plane leaving La Guardia every 30seconds, a man ROWING in the river, NYU Ferry, the Wallstreet Ferry, Staten Island Ferry and others. There are cruise ships, tug boats, pilot boats, barges, and other mammoth sailing vessels all over. There was even a gondola overhead passing from one side of the river to the other.  It was amazing seeing NYC from New York Harbour and sailing past the Statue of Liberty. 




That evening we anchored at Sandy Hook, NJ. It was such a peaceful area with a secluded little beach. We went for a walk on the beach with Scott and Lynn who had been keeping an eye on us during the storm and on our boat when we headed for the Holiday Inn. We wandered along and helped Lynn collect Sea Glass then drank brandy on our boat and watched the sunset.  We got up at 4:30 the next morning and after trying our engine a couple of times set off for Atlantic City - about a 12-13 hour trip. We were feeling great - we had made some headway, got our first sailing in the dark and on the open ocean under our belt, anchored, and found out our windlass (i.e. electric anchor raiser) worked (always a surprise when something works on this boat). We motor sailed for about 8 hours when the gauges on our console that have never moved all started climbing. James and I just looked at each other and both knew our engine was going to die. So we just calmly sat in the cockpit and waited for the inevitable and sure enough all of a sudden - silence. The engine just cut out. I sailed for about an hour and half while James trouble shot the engine. He changed the fuel filter which was very dirty. I tried the engine and we were back to "click, click, click" - dead batteries. Our friend Larry had very wisely suggested getting a membership to BoatUs so we called them. They came and towed us
The Tow
to "Little Egg Inlet" and into Beach Haven Yacht Club. If you are ever in New Jersey you have to come to Long Beach Island - it is beautiful and if you are sailing here this is the marina to come to. We were greeted by Jim who I have come to discover is the kindest man. He tied up our boat, advised us to grab a hot shower and recommended a restaurant for dinner. He told us he would be back at 7am and would call the mechanics at the neighbouring marina first thing so that they would fit us in before they started their day. He said they try to get people who have broken down and are in transit seen to so they can be on their way. He then said "let me know if you need anything at all, I'll bend over backwards to help you". I could have cried. And he has bent over backwards ... discounted our marina stay, lent us HIS car to go grocery shopping, and advised us where to see in Beach Haven. Last night some rather nasty weather moved in - the tow boat driver knocked on our boat to make sure we knew the weather was going to be bad and checked our dock lines. Jim then says "I live just there I'll leave the back door open in case it gets too rough or if you get scared you can just come in and there are couches you can sleep on". Where are we??? The kindness is incredible. The boating community is just that, a community, and it looks out for each other. 

We had a diesel mechanic, Mike, look at our engine yesterday and it was dirty fuel that made the engine cut out - there was  also some water in the fuel tank so he made a new plate to cover our tank. So when James changed the fuel filter when the engine cut out we should have been on our way. It was the batteries that prevented us restarting. The mechanic tested our batteries (like we had done) and said they were fine. He tested our alternator and that too was good (huge relief). So why weren't our batteries charging properly? Some f*#k monkey hadn't wired the starter battery to the alternator - yup the starter battery never charged when the engine was running. No wonder we were having so much trouble. Mike also tightened the belt on our alternator so hopefully the house batteries also charge better. 

We had hoped to set out today but Little Egg Inlet is shallow and has incredible currents. Coming here we got towed through waves I wouldn't even surf in so when we saw how rough it was this morning we decided trying to make our way back to the Atlantic wasn't smart. Two other boats we had been moored with and had travelled to Sandy Hook with had gotten stuck and one had to be towed twice yesterday. This weather is nuts! So today we made a nice breakfast (with the shore power of the marina we have a cold fridge again!) and went for a beach walk. The beach here is beautiful - warm soft powdery sand for miles. The seagulls here however are predatory - I had a hard time defending my bagel sandwich while getting dive bombed by seagulls that have evolved to hunt as a pack.
Long Beach Island, NJ


While this was an expensive detour (next career move for me might be a marine diesel mechanic at $115/hr no nights or holidays)  we are feeling much more positive and relieved that a professional we trusted looked at our engine and has sorted out our batteries. We feel like we are finally getting to know our boat and are once again excited to get going! Next stop Cape May (so someone can fix our depth sounder)! Hoping that means I can say bye to balancing on the pulpit with a handheld depth sounder Gorilla taped to a flag pole dragging through the water while I yell out readings to James. Man our boat is ghetto! Maybe we should have gone with one of our ghetto fabulous boat names? "Yeah Buoy" "Gybe Yo" "Where My Beaches At"

Lighthouse en route to the East River

Sunrise heading towards the East River

Sailing under the Brooklyn Bridge

Riker's Island