We are on the launch pad for our Italy 2013 planned tour. To study the trip and locations, we have made a detailed Google Map. This map is available here:
Thanks for traveling along.

Sailing between Maine and the Caribbean Sea
We are on the launch pad for our Italy 2013 planned tour. To study the trip and locations, we have made a detailed Google Map. This map is available here:
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| We are so blessed to be able to share both of these worlds…….. |
We have been at home and off our cruising boat for over 2 weeks now, still adjusting to life on land and the many contrasts we observe. It may sound crazy, but we are really noticing the differences of life afloat vs. life in a house. No longer are we certain which is the “REAL LIFE” as we honestly are not sure what real life is or is supposed to be. We do know that we like this option of coming home as an interesting counterpoint to the cruising life. Living between these opposing worlds will certainly make us appreciate both worlds more!
Here is a comparison: Boat vs. Home
| Living on a Boat | Living in a Home |
| Water Manage water usage, trying to conserve. We used about 5 gallons per day for two of us. We think about water constantly. |
Water Unlimited water flow, we have a well that delivers 38 gallons/minute! Our showers heads deliver 3 gallons/minute. Take a 10 minute shower and use 30 gallons! WOW! |
| Electricity Electricity running on 12 volt power. Create and make your own electricity and hot water via solar panels or by running the diesel engine and alternator. Lights are all LEDs, which are low power. Router and network are turned on only when needed. |
Electricity Power company delivers endless electricity to the house! The water heater is maintained at 130 degrees F. Lights are left on, network is on. Cable boxes powered, routers powered, all these items are on 24/7. |
| The Refrigerator Refrigeration is run on 12 volt and is very efficient. Freezer is small and holds minimum amount of frozen foods. Temps in the frig are around 45F and in the freezer around 25F. This is the biggest drain of electricity. Refrigeration takes about 75 amp hours per day at 12 volts, which is about 75% of our total usage. |
The Refrigerator Refrigerator with a large freezer. Temps are held very cold with the freezer around zero, refrigerator around 40F. Do you have any idea of the amount of electricity your refrigerator uses? I don’t! |
| Space On a sailboat, space is limited, especially on a 35 foot boat. Two 6 foot sofas, two double beds, kitchen, bath w/shower, outdoor seats in the cockpit and on deck. Small for two people to be sharing this space. |
Space: Crazy large, even if the house is modest like ours. We have about 1800 sq.ft. with family room, kitchen, dining room, sunroom, 3 bedrooms, two bathrooms, large deck and a two car garage. We each have our own places to work in. You never seem to be in each other’s space, like on a boat. |
| Outdoor Living On a cruising sailboat you are always living in the outdoors. You know exactly what the weather is doing. You know if it is windy or not! You observe nature at its best. You watch and enjoy sunrises and sunsets every day. You live and love the outdoors. This is one of the true beauties of cruising on a boat. |
Outdoor Living In a home, you are inside much of the time. You rarely ever worry about the weather. You don’t even know if the wind is blowing! You spend more time online. You may work on the lawn and landscaping beds, but you rarely take time to watch a sunset or a sunrise. When was the last time you sat on your deck or lawn and watched a sunset…the entire sunset? |
| The People In the boating community, everyone helps everyone else. If you see someone in trouble, you call or stop by and offer your help. If you hear someone on the radio who needs help, everyone rushes over. People in the cruising community really care about one another and look out for each other. |
The People Life in a community seems more private, more secluded. People do not go out of their way to help others. People tend to shy away from helping others, as they feel too busy, too rushed. Land life people can really learn some lessons from the cruising community. |
| The Car On a cruising boat, the car is your dinghy and the dinghy is your way to shore around the harbor. And then, you walk! We have not driven a car in nearly a year. We walked for our groceries and our sightseeing. We walked 3 miles for a store, that would be normal, and even to go to the movies. Life is slow, easy, and peaceful without a car! |
The Car This is the number one most stressful aspect to land life. You get in the car to do everything. Run to the store for groceries. Pick up more items for house repairs. Drive to the store that has a sale on stuff. Run out for a coffee….because you can! Drive to the gas station because you need more gas to run around more. Drive to go out to lunch when you have food at home. Drive, drive, drive…..this is CRAZY! |
These are a few observation after being home for two weeks living in a house vs. living on a cruising sailboat. It is not that we haven’t enjoyed this time at home, it is just more stressful and more rushed than we are used to. Is life better at home? Some aspects are, but it is also very wonderful to be cruising and traveling and exploring on a sailboat.
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| …boat is there, we are here… |
With our boat trucked to the Island Packet Yachts Refit program in Largo, FL, we hit the road to drive home! Lucky for us, we have great friends and family along the way home, so we leaned on them to take a break, enjoyed their kindness and hospitality, and began life on land in a BED, in a HOUSE, with unlimited water and power! WOW, we have been out of the “normal land life” for a bit and these simple aspects of living on land are a real treat.
One of the reasons we decided to move home was the fact that our terrific house sitter was moving out and our beautiful home would be available to us. We had moved out of our house two years ago and the thought of spending a SUMMER at home sounded great. This would be a first in 22 years, as we are usually sailing the Chesapeake or New England! So, off the boat we moved, rented a mini-van, and drove home! What a dream….six months living in our house!
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| Larry, Gerri, Radeen and Hayden |
Along the way, we were so fortunate to have a lovely lunch near Charleston, SC, with fellow Island Packet Yacht owners, Larry and Gerri. owners of IP37 Galileo. It was so kind of them to go out of their way to intercept us on I-95 as we were passing by. This is the great aspect about our IP fleet of owners. We are so connected and we all love to meet up to share stories and visit.
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| Greg, Kate, Radeen and Hayden on the Beaufort waterfront |
Our next stop was at our great friends and gracious hosts, Greg and Kate, who are located in the Beaufort, NC area. Arriving late at 9:30 pm, Kate presented us with hot chicken picatta, green beans, spaghetti and red wine! OMG. did we die and wake in HEAVEN? No, we were at Greg and Kate’s home!
After dinner, we moved into our beautiful massive bedroom suite on the second floor where we passed out on a king sized sleep number bed. That night, we did not even move. I awoke the next day in exactly the same position I feel asleep in. It was great to be in a home with endless water, power and light. We lounged around their beautiful home for a few days, enjoying great meals and loving their Doodles, Gracie and Lucy.
Even Radeen, who is not a great animal lover, enjoyed having Gracie climb up on her lap. Lucy and Gracie are Australian Doodles and they are really wonderful pets. each so different and very fun to play with, walk, and simply pet. If we ever get a dog, this would be the breed. They are lively, well-behaved and so very smart!
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| The van, loaded with stuff to move home |
You will notice we were living out boxes in the mini van as there is no room for luggage while living on a sailboat. When we moved off the boat, we simply packed our clothes in liquor store boxes. This required going to the van for changes of clothes, shoes and socks, and simply trying to find our stuff. This was not part of the plan, but it was how it all worked out. Life on the road in a mini van is NOT for us, that we have learned. Living on a cruising sailboat? Now that is EASY.
Here is a great photo of Kate and Radeen, enjoying a class of Champagne
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| Radeen, Baby Brea and her proud aunts, Heather and Allison |
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| Hayden, Baby Brea, Aunt Heather and Aunt Allison |
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| Radeen, Allison, and Sherry, who is Norah and Brea’s Grandmom |
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| Brea’s big sister, Norah, with her mom, Kristin, and Radeen |
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| Thane Hayden with his Grandmom Diane and his Great Aunt Sherry |
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| Diane and Thane Hayden (a family name used for many generations!) |
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| Norah teaching school |
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| Thane Hayden, Norah and Baby Brea…the next generations of cousins! |
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| Paul, Radeen, Sherry and Hayden |
The next day, we sadly departed the DC Cousins, excited to move back into our own house!
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| Saltbox 13….there it is…what a beautiful home. We designed and built this in 1984. It is cozy and simple, with passive solar, and it is our very own design! |
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| Radeen gives a “WE DID IT!” We moved HOME…..at least until Oct/Nov, when we set sail again |
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| Welcome to the JUNK MAIL, a table full of mail |
So….good bye to the cruising life for a break. Hello to land life for several months. We are so looking forward to this time where we can live in our home, relax, drive a car, have barbecues and share some dinners with the friends and family we have missed so much. We can also run all the water we want because WE HAVE A WELL with 38 gallons/minute capacity! This may spoil us, but I doubt it. We already miss the boating life a bit….the peace, the calm, and the friendships. We will return to that in late October, when we rebuild the boat after the factory refit is complete.
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| Radeen says goodbye to the Gulf of Mexico at Bradenton Beach |
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| …there is our boat as nearly as big as an auto carrier… |
Today we hauled the boat at Snead Island Boat Works and loaded it onto a Joule Yacht Transport Tractor Trailer. The truck driver drove it up to Largo Florida via route 75 then route 4 and 275 because the boat was too wide to truck across the Tampa Bay Skyway Bridge! This was really an exciting process and a relief after months of planning, emails, and this massive final week of offloading.
Now, Island Spirit, our 1994 IP-35, is back where she was designed and built! Imagine if you loved a classic car and you could send it back to the car manufacturer 20 years later and ask then to refurbish and upgrade the car to modern standards. If you can imagine that, then you have an idea of the excitement we are experiencing!
Many IP owners do not know that the factory has started an extensive refit program. If you are interested in this program, please contact the Vice President of IPY, Bill Bolin, for your refit needs. See this page for the email link.
Here are photos of the delivery process….
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| At 0830 am, we moved the boat into the haul out slings |
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| Terry is driving the lift via a remote control which gives a better visibility |
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| The travel lift is driven over the special yacht hauling trailer |
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| I wore my HOPE TOWN shirt…hoping that next year, we will sail her back to HOPE TOWN |
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| That is an IP-35 (39′ 6″ plus 5′ dinghy davits) on a 53′ yacht transport trailer |
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| We followed the truck onto the road…the dinghy davits are hitting the trees! |
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| Notice the width of the yacht, 12 feet on the road |
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| Driver takes route 4 to Tampa because the boat will not fit the Skyway Bridge |
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| Several times, it looked like she would clip the bridges, but she was just close…..maybe a foot |
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| Next we took route 275 where they were doing road shoulder work |
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| SAFE ARRIVAL at 1979 Wild Acres Road, Largo, Florida The Island Packet Yachts Facility |
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| The truck driver did a GREAT JOB, here is his co-pilot and navigator |
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| Island Spirit is backed into “Assembly Building #5” where she will live for 5-6 months! |
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| Hayden and Radeen turn their yacht over to good friend and VP Bill Bolin Mission Completed…..we DID IT…..we trucked our yacht back to the factory for Refit ! |
Now, it is time to refine the work order list and the scope of jobs for our factory refit. We will take the summer off from boating and drive home to our house in PA. In late Oct or early Nov, we will truck the boat back to the water for our third winter exploring the Bahamas.
Thank you Bill Bolin and Island Packet Yachts for taking on my factory refit program!
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| …there she is empty and with no mast… |
This has been a monumental task, requiring 8 days with two of us working all day off loading our 35 foot Island Packet Yacht. We thought we had a fairly empty boat, and when people visited our boat, they always asked “Where is all your stuff?” and we would say, we really don’t have that much stuff. …. WRONG on THAT….we have tons of stuff loaded on this boat, or at least we HAD tons of stuff. It is all now in a 5′ x 4′ climate controlled storage space. Now we know exactly what we have and how much of it there is.
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| 5′ x 4′ storage, filled |
I challenge anyone who lives aboard their cruising sailboat to try to empty it. You will be amazed at how much you have stored. We are now at 24 boxes plus items in bags, plus a mini van full. But then again, this is our home, we have lived here for the past two years. Imagine if you could store your home in a 5′ x 4′ closet…if you could, then you really don’t have that much stuff.
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| Steve, the yard manager rigs the crane lifting point |
After 5 days of work, we were ready to have the mast pulled. We wanted to pull the mast as it has been 11 years since she was last removed and inspected. The Snead Island Boat Work employees had the mast off in 45 minutes and taken to their storage yard. While there, we will rewire the lights and install new standing rigging and replace the sheaves. We plan to rebuild the boat in November after her factory refit.
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| Craig, Debbie, Radeen and Hayden visit at Pier 22, Bradenton |
The most fun aspect is that we are near our great friends, Debbie and Craig, so we were able to have dinner with them for one more visit before we follow the boat on the truck to the factory.
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| We rentedI a mini van and it is filling up with stuff to go home, like our clothes, etc. |
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| First step, we removed the mast collar at the deck and accessed the pin |
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| Below the base of the mast, I disconnected all the wiring runs in their junction boxes |
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| All the electrical wires were pulled from the side of the mast below the floor |
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| A crane mounted on a truck lifted our 50 foot mast up and out, while Terry guided the bottom |
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| Once lifted clear of the boat, the crane swings the mast to the ground cart |
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| The yard workers help to guide the mast onto the cart as the crane operator lowerd it |
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| There it is, our sailboat mast on the cart, ready to be wheeled to storage |
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| Next job….wash all bedding and towels and store in sealed bags for November |
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| Dinner…nothing left but a sip of Stoli |
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| Island Spirit on the bulkhead at Snead Island Boat Works….ready for the truck with no mast |
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| Impressive Florida clouds billowing late in the afternoon |
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| …this is what a sail locker can hold… |
It has now been 4 days of work de-rigging our boat and we are amazed at the amount of stuff we have moved into our 5′ x 4′ storage unit…10 boxes and about 5 large garbage bags of lines, life jackets and gear. We have made 6 runs with the mini van to storage and now are down to pulling the mast and boom. On Wednesday, May 22, we are trucking to Largo returning our yacht to the Island Packet Yachts facility where she was built in 1994!
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| A van full of dock lines and life jackets |
With nearly 20 years of continuous use and 25,000 nautical miles on her ship’s log, we feel it is time to have the factory give her a SPA treatment. We also have not had the mast pulled since 2002, so we will rework the mast with new standing rigging and wiring and a full inspection. The factory recommends that owners have their structural chain plates replaced after 15 years. The chain plates are the point of steel where the mast rigging connects to the deck. These are fiberglassed to the interior structure of the hull. We feel that no one is better skilled than the Island Packet Yachts team for replacing and rebuilding this integral part of the yacht. That is the key reason we are trucking her back to the factory.
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| We live here….while we are packing up…this is our HOME |
Here is a current SHORT list for our refit
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| Van full of seats, boxes and cockpit cushions |
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| Hayden in the 5 x 4 climate controlled storage space |
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| The first 6 boxes, tools, spare parts, safety locker and cushions |
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| The whisker pole and battens do NOT fit in a mini van at 10 feet long |
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| At Snead Island Boat Works, we can park the van next to the boat |
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| This is a 4 panel solar array on top of a fixed bimini….it must come off for clearing bridges while on the road |
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| Canvas off and panel one off, 3 more to go |
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| All solar GONE….next, remove the SSB antenna and stainless steel frame |
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| Stainless steel frame off and solar panels on the ground |
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| Solar panels safely in storage along with snorkel gear and grill! |
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| Whisker pole, canvas, sunshades, battens, dinghy gear….so glad to have a 16 ft. high storage unit! |
Really crazy when you think about taking apart your “home” and placing it on a truck to send it back to the people who built it. This is the Island Packet Yachts Factory Refit Program and we are taking full advantage of upgrading our wonderful “home” ……today……pull the mast and boom….
We have decided to send our yacht back the Island Packet Yachts Factory in Largo, Florida, where she was built 20 years ago! We will have the factory upgrade her and refit her with newer fittings and better systems. But first, how we got here…
Our last days on anchor for this second year of full time cruising were in Sarasota Bay and then at De Soto National Memorial. While in Sarasota, we spent another great night with good friends, Debbie and Craig.
Then we moved on, as scheduled, to Palmetto where we planned to prep for trucking to the factory. That is right, we will be hauling out our boat onto a tractor trailer which will then drive it over the highway 34 miles to the factory. This is no small feat, but first we need to prep it for trucking. That will be another blog post…
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| Good friends, Debbie and Craig met us at Marina Jack’s IP440 CHARMED former IPY owners |
I may begin to sound like a broken record, but…..THIS PLACE (Sarasota, FL) IS GREAT! We really like this town and the waterfront facilities. Sarasota has worked hard to create a beautiful waterfront center based around Marina Jack’s and O’Leary’s. Up the hill from the waterfront, you will find a really vibrant main street with cafes, pubs, investment houses, salons, Whole Foods, library, public transit hub and more. Radeen and I always say that if we move anywhere, then the town must have a nice town center and a massive modern library.
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| The Selby Public Library of Sarasota |
Ever since we earned our new master’s degrees online via Drexel University, I gained a new love of and respect for public libraries. We worked on these degrees from the boat, as we traveled up the AICW in the spring of 2008. Along the way, we spent many full days in public libraries from Vero Beach, FL to Rock Hall, MD. We really enjoy spending time in nice public libraries and Sarasota has built one of the best.
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| The Mooring field and the no anchor area, Sarasota, Fl |
Sarasota has also worked hard at ridding the harbor of derelict boats that ruin a waterfront. To accomplish this, they have installed a large mooring field (phase 1 now) and they have marked off a no anchoring section in the rest of the harbor. The remaining area for anchoring is far away and is in 4 foot to 7 foot water depths. If you ARE anchored, you have a very rocky shore line for landing the dinghy.You are not allowed to dock at their dinghy dock because you are NOT on their moorings!
So there are a few challenges to the cruising boater if you want to anchor. If you move in and take a transient mooring, of which there are only four, then you are directly up against the high speed channel leading boats into Marina Jack’s. The obvious solution to this, is to move the NO WAKE ZONE out beyond the mooring field.
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| Town Center and the Whole Foods Market |
Overall, Sarasota is really a great town, even with these small cruising challenges. Marina Jack’s is a top notch facility with a beautiful waterfront restaurant.
I can see spending much more time exploring and learning about the Sarasota area…..
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| …Sarasota Dolphins and Water Fountain… |
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| Our view from Mooring Ball #1 with Jack’s Marina and Island Park off our stern |
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| Jack’s with the Dolphin Sculpture and Water fountain |
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| Those palm trees are on the BOAT….a big tour boat |
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| The No Wake Zone needs to be expanded! |
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| Where we anchored in the center of the harbor, before we were asked to move |
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| Radeen handled this officer’s notification of our anchoring error FAR BETTER than I would have. I was working in the bilge on B&G wiring issues…. |
We motor-sailed 52 miles from Cabbage Key to Sarasota, Florida, by going out Boca Grand Inlet to the Gulf of Mexico and then back into the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway at Venice Inlet. The Waterway above Venice is interesting and easy, so this was a great section to enjoy. The homes along the waterway here are beautiful and some are almost “New Englandish” looking with peaked roofs, cedar shakes and colonial style shutters.
Along the way, we had a tiny green bird take a break from flying the ocean. He landed on the dinghy and then walked all around our deck. Once he saw land near Venice, he took off. It was nice to give this bird a much needed break 4-5 miles offshore!
It was a surprise to find an unusual type of swing bridge at Blackbyrn Bay, where the bridge tender must walk out onto the bridge to operate it! In the photo below. look for the bridge tender wearing her bright yellow and orange safety vest. During the opening or swing, the bridge tender is actually “stuck” in the middle of the bridge while running the controls. Very interesting to see this for only the second time in all the bascule bridges we have traveled.
We reached Sarasota after a 10 hour motor sail and dropped the hook near several other sailboats in what we thought was the approved anchorage area of Sarasota Bay. Well, the next day, we were visited by the marine police in a very large boat with twin 300 hp motors. The officer was wearing a different kind of vest – a bullet proof one! We were told, very politely, that we needed to move because were were encroaching on the mooring field. WHAT? So, we moved to the other side of the anchorage area, which is further away from the fast fishing boats. All in all….Sarasota is a beautiful location and a great place to visit….
Time to explore Sarasota and spend time with our good friends Debbie and Craig. Then it will be one final push up to Bradenton, Fl where we will take a dock at SNEAD ISLAND BOAT WORKS.