Willymakeit?  Sure hope so!

The Everglades Challenge has been on Jim’s bucket list radar for a few years. It is a 300 mile race from Fort De Soto, St. Petersburg to Key Largo. It is put on by the Watertribe… A group of adventure paddlers and sailors in small boats that can be launched off the beach.

This is Jim’s first kick at this adventure racing thing so here we are, at Fort De Soto, prepping little Leftovers for tomorrow’s 7:00am start. Jim’s boat has passed inspection meaning all of his safety gear is in place, he knows how to use it and all of the captains have gone over the rules again at a meeting.

It’s pretty windy but nothing outrageous for the sailboats. There are about 65 masts that I counted but many belong to Hobie type kayaks. There may be 100 boats total? Not sure.

More info on the various classes of vessels at Watertribe.org or Watertribe.com.  You can Follow Jim’s progress on the Tracker Map on the Watertribe site. He is in Class 5 and his tribe name is Willymakeit… We know he will!

If you follow him on their Tracker Map, you will see how he is doing vs the other competitors. I know he’s excited to beat the guys with the Pink Flamingo named Fred on the bowsprit!

We know he will do well…afterall, he’s got our buddy Sailor Mike’s Cracker Jack box Compass aboard to show him the way. Thanks Mike! Looking forward to seeing you and the FYC crew on the beach soon.

Paul and I will follow him on shore with the trailer.

IMPORTANT!! Paul and I are his shore crew. We and the organizers all have Emergency plans in place should Jim need help. NOBODY following his progress is to call the Coast Guard unless WE ask you to in person.This is very important please! Thanks.

My cell will be on most of the time once he starts so you can text or even email me with questions. Voicemail is OK too as I may not hear if the phone rings!

Jim says thanks everyone for all the good wishes.

Here are a few pics from the beach. I will load more tonight.

And…more pics

Mike Morris from Fanshawe Yacht Club, wife Margo and daughter Morgan came to support Jim all the way from London!

 for Doug and Steve!

The FYC gang with Bob Magill joining us at left. Thanks for coming everyone!

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Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium

The Mote Lab and Aquarium is awesome! They have marine life hospitals as well as research labs, all of which we couldn’t see but I’ve heard they are doing a lot for marine mammals and other sea life.

I’ve also included pics from our drive along Longboat Key where we saw a big dolphin in the ICW, as well as a few shots from our restaurant The Seafood Shack last night in Cortez. Yes, it has a slightly sunk vessel from 1870 at the dock!

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Loxahatchee to Englewood

Some pictures of scenes from our drive across south Florida.

Peace River between Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte

Heading to the Lemon Bay shoreline at Cape Haze Marina

The Intracoastal Waterway at Cape Haze Marina

Cape Haze marina. Site of Everglades Challenge Checkpoint 1, just south of Englewood.

Supper at Farlow’s. Delicious.

Driving north on Manasota Key.

Blind Pass beach.

Lemon Bay from Blind Pass fishing dock.

There were tons of mullet schooling… Not sure if you can see them. They were being chased by some bigger fish!

Gopher Tortoise 

Love the Manasota Key drive.

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More pics from the Southern Palm B and B 

From our lovely stay at Southern Palm in Loxahatchee a few days ago. Our 31 (which you can see through the palmettos if you look carefully) will stay there until Jim’s race is done. Then Jim and Paul will drive her home. I will drive the little tri home with Mom at end of April with Jim’s Civic.

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1-800-Welcome to the USA?

We all know about 1-800 numbers right?  Did you know that a Canadian cell can’t call a US 1-800 number?  I didn’t either!

As Canadians boating into the US,  we are supposed to fly a yellow Q flag until we are cleared in.  So upon our arrival into US waters on Saturday, we dutifully hoisted our Q flag (the Bahamian courtesy flag came down when we left Bahamian waters as we were enroute to a new country). By the way, never fly a courtesy flag over your own flag or vice versa as it means the country on top is making war against the one below!!  Our Canadian flag was flown at the stern which is appropriate for our kind of sailboat.

When we were close enough to Port Everglades to make a call, I had no signal on my US cell. What??  It had worked before we left for the Bahamas! No problem, I thought, I’ll just use my Canadian cell to call the 2 different 1-800 numbers for US Customs….Nope.  Didn’t work. What the heck?  So I chewed through some Rogers roaming data (!) and tried every number I could find. But it being later in the day,  nothing was open. Ok…as Scarlett O’Hara said “Tomorrow is another day.” We had tried.

As you know,  we tied up at the Hyatt Regency Marina for the night. We were safe and in excellent company. If only someone were to have played that grand piano down the dock,  it would have been perfect!

The next morning: Sunday,  February 26.

We quietly slipped away from our swanky slip (that we probably couldn’t afford anyway) .. One does tire of looking at stainless steel anchors and gleaming wood after all.

I kept trying various ways to contact Customs. No luck Until finally I got a hold of one fellow who said we can come to the Customs office but we must call one of the 1-800 numbers. We stopped  in at a fuel dock to see if they had a phone we could use since i still couldn’t figure out what was wrong with my US Cell. The guy couldn’t let us use his business phone but he did print off directions to Customs…which was only a mile or two away as the crow flies. But he also said we could tie up at the fuel dock but for 1.50@ft per hr. The Value Conscious (ie frugal) crew decided to go to the state park.  It was free and had two good ramps to pull out at,  lots of parking.

We noticed that the cruise ship docks were all full again… Really full! I think I counted 7? The largest two were docked next to the Intracoastal Waterway which made that channel seem very narrow.

Customs opened at 8:00 am. We were at the park by 7:30 so we started taking gear out of the boat, getting her ready to haul out.

Based on some past experiences, we thought only the Captain needs to go to Customs with all of our passports. So we decided to call a cab for Jim. And we waited, and waited… And waited some more.  We called the cab company two more times.  No dice.  Then we tried a different a company and finally a fellow said he’d be there shortly. Sure.

During this time we kept stripping the boat. At one point a cargo ship pushed by  tugs passed by in the waterway. We were happy that we weren’t in the channel when that came by! Not much room there.

Finally around 10:30 I called the cabbie again.  He asked me what the name of the park was again. On my chart and map it was called the John Lloyd State Recreation Park.  He asked me again for the address,  which of course, I didn’t have. By 11:00 he finally showed up and off Jim went.

Here is Jim’s story at Customs. He and the cabbie,  who was from the Sudan originally, arrived and Jim was told they couldn’t help him until he spoke with someone in Miami on the 1-800 numbers! And he couldn’t let Jim use a phone. So the really nice cabbie kindly let Jim use his own cell. After 45 minutes, he finally got a human! He was asked for our boat info and crew info then got our Arrival number. This precious number meant that Jim could finally speak with the Customs officer.

The Officer cleared Jim in ahead of someone who he was already working with! He asked hardly any questions but did ask where the rest of the crew were? Back on the boat said Jim. That’s no good said the officer, they have to be here in person! Oh man. So Jim and his best bud the cabbie headed back to the dock where Paul and I proceeded to go to Customs in the cab.  Now off to the airport  to pick up the truck and trailer.Yes,  the meter was running the whole time.  $150 in cab fare later we were legal!!!

By now it’s 2:00 and we need to get out of the park by sundown. And… we’d never taken a 40′ mast down without  a crane. That’s a big stick! 

The tri came with heavy duty mast raising and lowering bars and a gin pole rig. The wind had come up but was blowing from behind us. The guys figured out how it all worked as the time ticked on.

Also,  the cruise ships were loading all day so you’d hear announcements etc. We were told that there were actually 9 ships loading passengers,  which was unusual. That translated to about 30,000 people all trying to get to the port in cabs!!!  I must say our cabbie from the Sudan was awesome. Without him we might still be here illegally. Thanks guy from Sudan.  We wish we knew your name.

All ended well! As the Princess ship leaving port blared out the Love Boat theme (!), we got the mast down and all tied up with about an hour to spare. 

Luckily, we had spotted a motel near Dania Beach and had booked a room earlier. Rooms fill up quickly around dusk. So we pulled into the motel 6 with great relief. There was lots of parking and a recommendation for supper at Anthony’s just down the road was spot on. Get this, our server was a really nice guy named Mackenzie who lives on his 22′ Bristol sailboat!!  And…he works in a boatyard by day. We were talking boats so much with him that we hardly had time to eat. Great food as well.

Despite the crazy logistics of the first part of the day,  it ended great.

Pics below show where we tied up at the Hyatt Regency marina and the mega yachts there, the cruise ship port, our state Park and ramp, where the truck and trailer were stored over at the Executive airport, and taking the boat out and de-rigging her all by sundown with the biggest cruise ship beside us, and finally our celebration at Anthony’s, Dania Beach.

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Westward Ho! 

Mini post: yesterday we stored the big boat at the B and B, picked up the little tri in Lake Worth and headed west to the Gulf Coast.

We stayed in Englewood at the Sun Coast Inn which has huge rooms! Had a fantastic supper at Farlow’s on the Water across the street. Paul and I had flounder and Jim had Bourbon Chicken. I have stayed in this area often and Farlow’s is a favorite spot. They have nice gardens and a verandah overlooking the canals and the mangroves. We watched some fish hang out by some lights they placed underwater.

Today (Wednesday) we are travelling north to Bradenton. We spent the morning beachcombing at Blind Pass state park. I found lots of sharks teeth. Checked Out the fishing dock where the mullet were schooling.

Now going to visit the Mote Aquarium in Sarasota.

 

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Southern Palm B and B

We have more to tell about our day with Customs and getting the boat on the trailer but for now here are some more random pics and a few videos below. 

By the way, we are staying at the Southern Palm B and B west of Lake Worth. Ours is a big room with a day bed which Paul assures us will “be fine”. Our hosts have an elderly dog which looks a lot like our late dog Dixie. They are really nice and there is ample parking for the truck and big boat. 

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No grand piano but we do have a bar aboard!

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Play me that Grand piano…

Ok so much to tell about finally crossing the Gulf Stream from Bimini to Fort Lauderdale.

Saturday February 25. Enjoyed a pretty leisurely crossing…. The wind even lightened so much that we ended up motor sailing for about 20 nautical miles. All we saw out there was a few big cargo ships, and some flying fish nearer to the Florida coast.

We were able to sail the last 5 miles and flew into Port Everglades at 9 knots under main and jib. Just missed helping at a Mayday call  outside the harbour by a couple of minutes. A guy radioed that his boat was sinking! 3 people werevon board and they ended up in the water but the PD boat got to them quickly and the TowBoat US vessel was there quickly too.

We also dodged 6 cruise ships which all left port one after the other, some heading east, some heading south.

As we entered the channel into Port Everglades, we passed by the webcam above one of the hotels and Mom and brother Ed watched us head in and take the sails down. We made it!!!

Now what? We motored to a dock at a nearby state Park but we couldn’t stay as it was day use only. (Dr. Von D Eula Johnson Park, bug screens on immediately as the sun was going down, noseums are insane here). We turned and went north up the ICW to go under our first bridge. All kinds of questions: what is the vertical clearance of that bridge?  Why won’t Customs answer the phone? Why isn’t my US Cell working? Dammit. Where can we tie up for the night?  Is there any rum left? Important questions these…

So I checked our Navionics program. The bridge clearance was supposed to be 55′ and after some quick math, we passed  safely under it with lots of room to spare. No need to wait for an opening.

We hung a right at the first Mega Yacht we came to into the Hyatt Regency Spa 66 Marina. Yeah, this looks like a place for us! We tried to call ahead but at 6:30, there was nobody there so someone at the hotel suggested we tie up and deal with it in the morning. Cool.

We motored along docks overflowing with 150′ multimillion dollar motor yachts. One, which we saw later, had a full-sized grand piano…with the lid up. Hmm. Yup, we belong here because we also have a lid that lifts up….in the head.

We tied up between two massive cruising catamarans. We were happily helped by the young paid crew from the cat ahead of us who took our dock lines. Then they kindly pushed a button and raised their dinghy (18’tender) on its  platform to give us a little more room. How nice.

Whew! We were secure. No answer at all from Customs. So we decided to take down our Q flag (the yellow flag which we have to fly before we are checked in to a new country) and go get dinner. Screw it. We’re Canadians! What could possibly go wrong?

We walked about half an hour to a restaurant near the beach. It was packed but we found an outside table. We started with conch fritters since we were suffering from fritter withdrawal (Gino’s in Rock Sound were better. Lighter batter) Paul enjoyed some chicken (which he hadn’t previously stepped on or wasn’t questionable since it had been thawed for two weeks) Jim had ribs and Carleen had grouper. Yum!

Then we stumbled to the nearby shoreline drive where it was bar upon bar for half a mile. The guys spotted a self-serve ice cream place. You pay by the pound and all of the bowls were huge…like a quart. It was delicious once they smothered the soft scoops with fixins like chocolate sprinkles, Reece’s pieces and maraschino cherries, etc

We watched a kind of flamenco performance at one bar. A guy played 12 string guitar and sang. A girl danced. It was magical. A happening place down there on the beach.

It was a long walk back to the Hyatt Regency but it was worth it. What a great crossing and what a nice night out to celebrate this leg of our journey.

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We made it!

Left Bimini @8:30, arrived Fort Lauderdale at 6:00pm.  Even had to motorsail in the middle. Dodged 6 cruise ships on the way in. Made it! Yay!

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