Season 24-25 begins: Antigua

Our little 35-footer has been stored in Jolly Harbor, Antigua, for six months. From May 2 to December 2, she was hauled, stripped down to bare poles, and strapped down to a concrete pad resting on welded-together jack stands! This is hurricane storage in Jolly Harbor, and it is not cheap. But after making three runs from Annapolis, Maryland, to the Caribbean Sea, we felt it was time to leave the boat down here and enjoy time at home off the boat.

Dec 2, we checked out our Girl…

Launch Day

Always exciting to see your 20,000 lb boat be picked up with a massive marine travel lift and driven across the land to the travel lift well at the fuel dock. Jolly Harbor Marina is a very skilled team and their goal is to make your time here easy and enjoyable, They are focused on customer service and it really shows. WE LOVE this place. They are the best of the best, hands down!

The skilled travel life operator runs all with a wireless remote

We Rented a Condo!

This has been the best situation for launching and preparing a yacht, a condo with a dock. Yes, this is what we found in Jolly Harbor where there are many many condos here and we found one in the North Finger with a nice 40 foot solid dock with cleats. The cleats are rare we have seen, so this was lucky. We booked this for a week and then extended it 3 more days because we loved it. After ten days of work, we had the boat rigged and ready for us to move aboard and anchor out.

Our boat docked at the rented condo, yes yes yes
Job one at daybreak, hoist sails in calm no wind
This may be the LAST time I take off this stack pack and main sail, so much work to rehoist this.
After many days of work, the boat is rigged up, dinghy, outboard, sails, running rigging, starlink, etc

Anchored out for the next 6 months!

Departing the dream condo air conditioned condo, we moved out to Jolly Harbor and dropped anchor where we have anchored ten times before. Now it was time to clean up the cabins and bunks and organize the yacht. You would think this would be easy, but it is crazy how much stuff we have aboard, so we have begun to load up bags of gear and stuff to give away. And we did.

Sunset shadows on the hull, always a fun shot

Of course we fixed some systems

Every yacht has systems that need to be upgraded or worse yet, repaired when they stop working. When we put this boat away 6 months ago, every system was working fine, but now, we had to address three systems. 1 the shower sump pump failed. 2 the propane solenoid was rusted and looking old. 3 the sewer pump was intermittent so lets install a new one. I was able to do all three of these systems while still at the condo dock, so that was great.

New macerator sewer pump
New propane solenoid
New bilge shower sump pump

Lucky for us, we had all these spare parts onboard and we need to buy nothing. We just needed to tear out the old non working gear and install the spare part. We have torn this boat apart fully 4 times so we know the systems and we have the tools to fix nearly anything that may break. Lets hope this is the end of this for this season.

Paradise Reached: Deep Bay and the Beach

One of our favorite places is the beach of Deep Bay, Antigua. Yes, there are jet skis here and yes the large cats bring over cruise ship quest, but it is still a dream beach location. By 3 in the afternoon, everyone is gone and you get the bay and beach to yourself. Nice.

Deep Bay Beach off our bow.

Neso Tent on the beach

Boat buddies, Mike and Jenn of sv HAPPY 420 introduced us to these beach shade tents. This was the second time we tried it and they are really cool. You fill the corner bags with sand and then pull and stretch the shock cord as tight as you can. Then you push two pole up under the fabric and you have a tent. We like to place the poles in opposite corners as then the fabric takes the wind better than a standard lean-to set up.  This was fun.

Radeen loves the beach
Locals ride by on their Uber 🙂
Neso Tent with pole in opposite corners
Our “car” the AB dinghy and our boat at anchor, Deep Bay Antigua

Thanks for sailing along

We are trying to bring back the blog, as our Facebook page has taken over top billing. But with decades of blogging here, we want to keep this going as a record for us as well. Thank you for sailing along. Please ALSO like and follow us on our PUBLIC sailing Facebook page here, that is always current content.

https://www.facebook.com/svIslandSpirit

Our Travel MAP, Follow here

We use the Garmin Inreach, and whenever the boat moves, we turn tracking on making a very cool archive map of our travels. For fun, click the VIEW ALL and then zoom back or zoom into areas like the USVI and BVI and you will see our tracks. Very interesting.

https://share.garmin.com/IslandSpirit

22nd IPYOA Calendar

This is the 22nd year of my sailing calendar. I create this for the Island Packet Yacht Owners’ Association, IPYOA.com that I created many years ago. Our IPY fleet of owners is very connected and is worldwide with thousands of owners sharing and supporting each other. These photos have been submitted by owners and I then take them and integrate them into my custom printable frame with text and captions. Here are the images, enjoy this 22nd edition!

The 22nd IPYOA Sailing Calendar

The COVER of the 22nd IPYOA Calendar
Jan 2025
Feb 2025
Mar 2025
April 2025
May 2025
June 2025
July 2025
Aug 2025
Sept 2025
Oct 2025
Nov 2025
Dec 2025

Bahamas Routes Abacos vs Exumas

We were hosted on Salty Abandon Podcast the other night as we talked about the routes into the Bahamas. There are two sections of the Bahamas that most people will sail to. One: and the easiest is the Abacos, the northern section. Two: the Exumas are more challenging to sail to and are the southern islands. Yes in the middle are the Berry Islands and some will make this area be their exploration. For us, we have made over 10 trips into the Bahamas and we prefer the Exumas and the far out islands like Cat, Conception, Rum, Long Island and Eleuthera.

Looking at the big picture below,  you will see route #1 east into the Abacos and then you can see route #2 heading down into the Exumas. We have done both many times. The two pages I published discuss and show each of these routes in details.

See the ABACOS ROUTE page here
https://svislandspirit.com/bahamas-abacos-route/

See the EXUMAS ROUTE page here
https://svislandspirit.com/bahamas-exuma-route/

You can also watch the video where we present and talk about these routes. Minutes 1-35 minutes is the ABACOS
Minutes 35 onward is about the EXUMAS

The Video is here….thanks to Tinsley!

Season 24 GA-FL-Caribbean Sea

Hayden & Radeen in Stuart Fl ready to sail to Caribbean Sea season #24

We plan to add some catch-up blogging posts now that our season #24 has ended. We sailed from Georgia to Florida to the Bahamas to the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico to USVI to St. Martin and then finally onto Antigua. We spent Thanksgiving and Christmas in Stuart Florida then moved down to Biscayne Bay and stagged there for the Bahamas.

Our Island Packet 35 ready to sail south

This year’s sailing was incredible because the winter had many strong cold fronts that came off the USA East Coast and these strong fronts pulled the tradewinds north or south making it a great sail to sail EAST! The run from Florida to the Caribbean Sea is 1,200 NM on a course of 120m. With the normal headwinds of 090m this places the winds 30 degrees off your port bow as you push southeast for a month!

So, with these fronts, we ended up sailing 9 legs from Miami to Antigua and we sailed 90% of all of these.  We had so many north winds that we sailed from Puerto Rico past the USVI and directly out to St. Martin. Then two weeks there, we turned around and sailed back to USVI on yet another north wind. Then two weeks later we sailed back to St. Martin. This is unheard of, but we enjoyed this all and will always sail east on any north winds the Caribbean Sea gives!

You hopefully are following us along on our public Facebook page for svIslandSpirit, that blog has been easier faster, and more current for posting. We have been using that page as our newer blogging platform for years. Yet, this platform has all our 13+ years of blogging, and tracking maps, so we need to resume this and update this as we have before. Thank you for checking in, I will try to post a summary of the legs we sailed to reach Antigua.

Here is a map overview of this season #24. Look at this run, we are very proud of our 5th Caribbean Season. We have stored the boat in Antigua and we hope to keep it based in the Caribbean Sea for a year or two. We will see….

Season #24 GA to Antigua, our 5th Caribbean Season

Interactive Tracking Map

If you look into this archive map you can zoom into and click on a point to see the date and time for that location. I use these archive maps to help me review times and distances.  See this link

https://new.spotwalla.com/trip/9d17-11d2708e-b11b/view