We returned to the boat in Panama City the end of July. After a few days we headed east to Port St. Joe, Apalachicola, and Carrabelle. We only spent a day in Port St. Joe, but we spent five days each in Apalachicola and Carrabelle. Diane continued her oyster experiment mentioned in the previous post. Our five days in Carrabelle were due to weather so we took advantage of this and retrieved our car from Panama City. The beaches near Carrabelle were used to train amphibious troops in World War II and there is an excellent museum there.
Our choices for the next leg of our trip were either an overnight passage across the Gulf to the Tarpon Springs area or multiple days going around the Big Bend. We chose the later. Did you know that the Big Bend is the spawning ground for most of the fish in the Gulf of Mexico?
Our trip around took us first to Steinhatchee, where scallop season was in full swing, then to Cedar Key and finally to the Anclote Keys off Tarpon Springs. On the way we passed the now defunct Cross Florida Barge Canal. This was a project begun in the 1930's to connect the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico across northern Florida. About 30% of the route was built before environmental concerns killed it in 1991.
We worked our way down the west side of the Pinellas Peninsula stopping in Dunedin and Gulfport and arriving at the St. Petersburg Municipal Marina in mid August. This is one of our favorite places to take our boat and we took a slip for a month. We retrieved our car from Carrabelle and on the trip spent a night at the Lodge at Wakulla Springs. Wakulla Springs is the filming location for The Creature From the Black Lagoon and other films of similar ilk. The lodge was built in 1937 and still has an original operational elevator and is still cooled by circulating cold spring water through radiators in the rooms. Highly recommended.
Down Time needed some repairs and upgrades so we took her to Endeavour's (the manufacturer) boatyard. It was then back to the municipal marina for another couple of weeks.
We left St. Pete on September 20th headed south with friend Ron Westbrook aboard. As mentioned in the previous post, our yacht club membership gives us reciprocity at other Florida yacht clubs and we took full advantage of this as we headed back to Marathon.
Our first stop after leaving St. Pete was the Field Club in Sarasota. The club was at one time the winter home of one of the Marshall Field family members now converted to a yacht club.
Next was Bird Key Yacht Club also in Sarasota where we met and had dinner with Judi Nofs, a long time sailing friend. We had met Judi and her husband Dave in 1991 when we were headed to the Caribbean. Sadly, Dave passed away just a couple of years ago.
On to Venice and the Venice Yacht Club and more boating friends, John and Bobbie Hanna. We met them in 2003 as they had just purchased the same boat we now own.
Another stop to visit friends of Jim at the St. Charles Yacht Club in Ft. Myers. Jim's first job out of college was at Chemical Abstracts Service in Columbus, OH. There he met Dave Haring and his wife Lou.. Dave and Jim reconnected via Facebook a few years ago, but had not met in person in more than 30 years.
Our last yacht club stop was in Naples. From there we headed to Indian Key in the 10,000 Islands where we anchored. Our last stop before Marathon was an anchorage in the Little Shark River. The mosquitoes were ferocious and we hooked the anchor on something and thought for a while that we were going to have to abandon it, but finally it came free.
The run across Florida Bay was the usual minefield of crab pots, but is was not as bad as it could have been because stone crab season had not begun.
We arrived at the end of our six plus year Loop at 1:40pm on Monday, September 28. We actually went back in the same slip we had left in May 2009.
When we have some more time we will post some statistics for the trip and some pictures.
Happy Holidays to all.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Back on the Loop
Well, we are finally back on
the Loop .
Down Time was at Dog River Marina in Mobile from November 2013 until April
2015. We visited her twice; once in July
2014 when she was launched and moved to a covered slip and once in October 2014
when we took her out for a few days.
We returned to Dog River
in early April and spent about three weeks getting her ready to go. From Mobile we
headed to New Orleans . On the way we anchored at Petit Bois and Cat Islands ,
both in the Mississippi Sound . We took a slip in New
Orleans at Pontchartrain Landing Marina and retrieved our car which
we had left in Mobile .
We had two sets of guests in New Orleans . First were Bill and Birute Fleck from Michigan and second were Walter and Margaret Boswell from
Cleveland . None of them had been to New Orleans before so we laid on the whole
tourist thing. Some of our activities
were:
·
A guided walking
tour of the Garden District
·
Lunch at Mothers
·
The World War II
Museum
·
Beignets at the
Café du Monde
·
Muffulletas at
the Central Grocery
·
Dinners at
Arnaud’s and Pascal’s Manale
·
A tour of Oak
Alley Plantation
·
Riding the
complete length of the St. Charles
streetcar line
After our guests left we took a
driving tour of Cajun country basing ourselves in New Iberia .
We visited sights from James Lee Burke’s books as well as the Tabasco factory and a
rice mill still using 100 year old equipment. We drove to Starkville , MS
for Jim’s 50th high school reunion.
We left Pontchartrain Landing
on May 19 headed east. We made one night
stops in marinas in Gulfport and Ocean Springs, MS and in Gulf Shores, AL
before spending the Memorial Day Weekend in Orange Beach, AL. We spent a week with Jim’s high school
classmate Bill Shook at his dock on Perdido
Key , AL . Jim’s sister, Melanie, drove down from Birmingham for a few
days.
Back in April we had rejoined
the Marathon Yacht Club which gives us reciprocity with yacht clubs all over Florida . So our next stop was the Pensacola Yacht
Club. We visited the National Naval
Aviation Museum
(twice) where we watched the Blue Angels practice We availed ourselves of the all you can eat boiled
shrimp and the all you can eat prime rib nights at the Yacht Club.
Our next stop was the Fort
Walton Yacht Club, and then on to the St. Andrews Marina
in Panama City .
Now it was time to return to Cleveland for medical
checkups. We left the boat at a friend’s
dock in Panama City (thanks Rich) and headed back to Ohio in our car. On the way we visited Jim’s sister and both
sets of grandkids.
We are now finishing our two
weeks of medical tests and getting ready to head back to the boat. Once back, we will continue east along the Florida panhandle with stops in Port St. Joe, Apalachicola , and Carabelle.
Since we left Mobile we have been
enjoying the Gulf seafood. Diane is
trying an experiment to see if it is possible to eat too many oysters. So far the answer is “NO”.
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