April 17th to May 2nd, 2025: Jacksonville to Hilton Head

Our first full day in Jacksonville was enjoyable.  Dick set off early to collect the rental car, while I made apple cake in anticipation of visitors.  Fellow gold Loopers Debbie and Steve dropped by to visit Nine Lives and share the apple cake.

Later in the morning the local harbor host came over to see if there was anything we needed.  I chatted with him, but Dick was tied up with the lighting project and didn’t realize we had a visitor.  I finished and published the next installment of the blog while Dick replaced the fluorescent light fixture in his bathroom.  This was another electrical project that required 3 hands and a certain amount of adult language to complete.  The bathroom is now exceptionally well lit!

Our dinner in the evening was at a French bistro, Restaurant Orsay.  It was an enormous place, and at first it looked as though we would be seated in a very crowded, noisy place with tiny tables and uncomfortable looking chairs.  However, our hostess led us through a rather dark concrete tunnel-like corridor (where the heck are we going!) past the kitchen, and out into a pleasant, spacious, and quiet area.  We were also delighted to be seated at one of the larger tables.

The meal was mostly very good.  I started with a smoked trout dip, served with interesting cornmeal biscuits.  Dick ordered escargots, that came in puff pastry with a lovely mushroom sauce.  I tried lobster pot pie for my main dish.  The lobster was absolutely delicious, perfectly cooked, not tough as it can be sometimes, in a delicate sauce.  The dish fell short because of roasted vegetables that were well overcooked.  It may be an easy option, but it really is time to get rid of the fashion for roasting vegetables!  Too often it is an excuse for using up produce that is past its prime, although that was not the case on this occasion, they were just burnt. The biscuit that served as the “pie” was a tasty traditional southern style biscuit, but the flavour was too intense, and it overcame the delicate lobster and sauce.  I ignored the biscuit and enjoyed the dish with French bread instead.

There were several favourite offerings for Dick to choose from, but he decided on cassoulet, which he enjoyed.

The restaurant has a dedicated pastry chef on staff, and it showed.  So often a meal is let down by mass-produced or frozen desserts.  Here, one could choose a small version of several of the dessert offerings, so we decided to share 3.  Dick’s favourite was a beautiful fruit tart, while I loved the raspberry mousse.  We both liked the éclair, unusually presented with key lime filling and glaze instead of chocolate.  It was a wonderful finish to an excellent evening.

Restaurant Orsay starters
Lobster Pot Pie at Restaurant Orsay
Cassoulet at Restaurant Orsay
Delicious desserts at Restaurant Orsay
Jacksonville sunset

Friday was a busy and interesting day.  Dick set off for groceries in the morning.  Shortly after noon we drove to Catty Shack Ranch Wildlife Sanctuary.  Their mission is to rescue large cats that have been seized by law enforcement or are made homeless by zoos or private collections closing down.  They have expanded to include other animals, and now have 2 bears and some coatimundi.

We enjoyed the visit, even though, as expected, most of the cats were sleeping as they do through most of the day.  It is possible to attend the night-time feeding, so we may consider a future visit for that.  These animals have spent their lives in captivity, some of them in terrible conditions, so they are used to being in enclosures.  There is plenty of stimulation, including giant plastic balls, that given their scratched condition, are popular for playtime!  The owner and volunteers get around in golf carts, and we were amused to see that if a golf cart stopped near an enclosure, the fast asleep kitty would immediately get up and come over to the fence, in anticipation of a little snack.

Even when the animals are elderly or infirm, they are looked after and provided with special ramps in their enclosures to allow them to enjoy a peaceful old age.

Catty Shack tiger
Catty Shack bear
Serval at Catty Shack
Serval expressing an opinion
Elderly and infirm animals are well looked after and allowed to live out their years in comfort

In the evening, we went to La Cena Ristorante, a well-regarded Italian eatery.  It was an odd experience.  Reservations are only taken by phone, and the owner stresses the first of many rules, no young children, and no strong personal scents.  A sign also repeats these requirements at the door.  The whole first page of the menu sets out more rules in great detail.  The rules are basically a push-back on the increasingly common practice of diners sharing just one appetizer and entrée.  You can share an appetizer, but if you share an entrée, the upcharge will be the same as if 2 entrees are ordered.  The same if you order a second appetizer instead of an entrée, you will be charged an entrée price.  The whole meal must be ordered all at the same time.  We fully understand why a restaurant may wish to make these policies, but we did notice that on a Friday evening, the venue was less than half full.

The meal was delicious, and we followed the proper Italian custom of a second, small pasta course between the appetizer and the entrée. A salad was included, as was the most delicious bread.  As we arrived early for our reservation, the whole restaurant smelled heavenly.  The bread is baked inhouse.  In response to our compliments, a whole loaf was given to us to take home, just as we were wondering whether we dared ask if we could order a loaf to go

Saturday turned out to be a quiet day.  After Dick completed the grocery shopping at a supermarket he had forgotten to visit the day before, I walked the docks in the marina and issued some invitations for docktails the next day.  After that, it was very hot and humid, so we decided we would not do the afternoon outing we had planned.  Either the heat or something I ate disagreed with me, so we also cancelled our dinner reservation for the evening.  Dick’s wallet was happy for the reprieve, but we were both sorry to miss the venue – a steakhouse in a historic former bank building in downtown Jacksonville.

Sunrise in Jacksonville

On Sunday we went for a short drive through some very attractive neighbourhoods near downtown.  The housing is all different styles and sizes, at a guess, most date from between the wars.  We also drove across the bridge over the Ortega River and through another attractive suburb.  Here, the houses on the shoreline are much larger, many of them with imposing gates, while the homes further inland are smaller as the cross-streets get farther from the waterfront.

Late afternoon, we hosted docktails.  There were just 5 of us, as we were competing with a marina pot-luck gathering.  George joined us, he is a solo Looper from Texas.  We enjoyed meeting him and sharing stories.  It was great to spend time again with Sandy and Frank, and afterwards we went for pizza together.  Their boat has just sold, and they are moving to a larger one with plans to go through the Panama Canal and up the West Coast.  It is good news that higher-priced boats are still selling, gives us hope that Nine Lives will soon find a buyer.

Docktails spread

Leaving the marina the next morning, we had to wait a few minutes for the railway bridge downtown.  Then, as we passed the highway bridge, a gentleman in a waterfront high-rise took pictures and posted them on Nebo, wishing us safe travels.

Jacksonville downtown railway bridge
Nine Lives leaves Jacksonville
There she goes!

East of downtown, the Saint Johns River is an industrial port.  We met a huge vehicle carrier making its way upstream.  Further downriver was an even bigger one, maneuvering into dock with no less than 3 port police boats hovering to direct other boat traffic if needed. Our timing was good, and their docking was completed before we got there.

Car carrier entering Jacksonville Port

The next excitement was two Coast Guard boats practising something, tearing back and forth, apparently chasing each other.  The one doing most of the chasing had a gun in the bow.  I decided that it would be prudent to take my pictures from inside the cockpit, rather than going out on deck as I usually do.

Coast Guard boats practising in Jacksonville Port

We are certainly back in the “Low Country”, with a lot of shallows and the channel meandering back and forth.  We have to pay close attention to both charts.  We passed the railway bridge, and the very narrow channel to one of the marinas on Amelia Island.  In 2017, we tried multiple times to get into that channel with zero success.  Although dredged, it was V-shape rather than U-shape, and Nine Lives with her two well-spaced hulls simply did not fit.  It was our first really tough setback on our maiden voyage to bring Nine Lives round to Hilton Head.  We had to continue on, into the inlet, and up the St Mary’s River with a small craft warning and very difficult dockage at the end. We shuddered as we passed that channel, which looks no better today than it did in January 2017!

We docked without incident in downtown Fernandina Beach, one of our favourite towns.  As we enjoyed our early evening cocktail, we noticed a young woman with a skateboard.  The docks here are only secured at night, and as we have seen in other places, it is a common thing for people to walk around and look at the boats.  This young lady had the kind of skateboard with a large ball or wheel in the middle.  Research suggests that they are highly controversial and quite dangerous.  She was clearly wobbly, still learning how to use the board, and we wondered whether she and her skateboard were about to enjoy an unplanned swim.  Sadly, it was a lot more serious.  She hit the cover that goes across the dock (ironically, it’s there so people don’t trip on boat power cords and hoses), and she came off at speed onto the concrete dock.  A nearby boater with medical training helped and medics were called.  It was a reminder that NO wheeled vehicles of any kind should be ridden on docks.

A barge moves a dredge in Fernandina Beach. We called this the wedding cake barge!

We enjoyed a lovely walk around the town the next day.  We bought some nice things, paused for a refreshing beverage at the famous (or infamous) Palace Saloon, and then we ate lunch in the form of some excellent ice cream.  After that, a nap was required.

Fernandina Beach downtown from the marina
Fernandina Beach County Courthouse
Downtown shops in Fernandina Beach
Lesesne House
Fernandina Beach Post Office
Shopping in Fernandina Beach
Drinks in the Palace Saloon

In the evening, we walked down a road with beautiful old homes to David’s, a restaurant we had visited a few years ago.  It was a day early, but a lovely birthday dinner for me.  There was even a candle on the dessert!  We returned to a pretty sunset and enjoyed a postprandial glass of whiskey in the cockpit.

Bailey House, Fernandina Beach. Note the carousel horses on the porch.
David’s Restaurant starters
Dick’s surf and turf was filet steak and a lobster tail
My surf and turf was filet steak and lobster risotto
A birthday candle on the dessert at David’s Restaurant
Sunset at Fernandina Beach

We left very late (after 11am) the next morning, because we only had a little over an hour to travel to St Marys.  Even then, when we arrived our slip was occupied.  They untied quickly and our docking was accomplished without drama.  After we had time to settle in, the dockhand took us on a golf cart tour of the town.  It was an interesting, and very opinionated tour!

A shrimper in St Marys River

In the 1700’s the Acadian diaspora took place in 3 waves, beginning in 1755.  The British had been ceded what are today the Maritime provinces in Canada and some parts of Maine as part of the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.  Over the next years, some of the French residents at the time, the Acadians, participated in French military operations against the British.  By 1755, if the Acadians refused to take an oath of allegiance, they were removed.  Initially, they were sent to the 13 colonies, and the more troublesome the individuals, the farther south they were sent.  500 were sent to South Carolina, and 300 were sent to Georgia.  Families were split up.  Keep in mind that these would have been large, farming families, with grown sons and daughters.  In some cases, women were sent to one place, fathers to another, and the children to a third destination.  Some of the women are buried in the St Marys cemetery.  What I found amazing when I researched the story was how determined the Acadians were.  Many of them simply returned to their homes in Acadia, and were deported again.  The second wave were sent to Britain and France, and even then, they took ship and tried to return.  Many were shipwrecked or died from other causes.  Ultimately, although none were sent to Louisiana by the British, it became a destination for the displaced Acadians, and they made their way there from the various places they had been sent.  They became the Cajun people, and contributed to the rich heritage of Louisiana.

The land for laying out the town was purchased in 1787, and the City of St Marys was incorporated in 1802.  It was the County Seat, twice, finally losing that status in 1923.

St Marys is the jumping-off point for visits to Cumberland Island.  I have stayed in the very characterful Riverside Hotel twice.  It was both eccentric and comfortable, and I am sure the dust on the stairs dated back to the 19th century!  According to our guide, much of the commercial property in the town has been bought up by a billionaire.  Most of the restaurants and shops are owned by him, although some are leased back to the previous owners.  He built a huge marina (still partly under construction) to accommodate his 100-foot yacht.  The docks appear to be fully functional, but there is no marina business there and no docked boats. We stayed at a small marina at the other side of town.

Nine Lives in the marina in St Marys

The town has always been quirky, and in the 8 or so years since I have been there, I saw definite improvements.  We are told there is a huge housing tract of over 3000 homes about to be built nearby, but at the moment, there are no jobs or local industry.  20% of the current residents are below the poverty line.  The nearby Kings Bay Submarine Base apparently does not provide much employment for outsiders, even though there are over 9000 people working there.

St Marys downtown
Orange Hall, a historic home in St Marys

We ate on board, then participated in a Loopers’ Zoom docktails session.  We chose the “Misadventures on the Loop” section, and were able to regale the participants with several of our mis-judgements and “I told you so” stories.  It was fun hearing other scary tales, although I suspect the lady who is just a few days into her Loop came away considerably more worried than amused.

We enjoyed a pleasant day in St Marys.  The farm to market shop was a bit of a hike, so Dick took his exercise and came back with some interesting goodies.  He also visited the small submarine museum.  In the afternoon, we explored the shops.  What looked like two similar home goods stores turned out to be something like an antique mall, but with lots of crafts and bric-a-brac as well.

Another part of downtown St Marys

We continued on to Locals Dockside, a waterfront seafood restaurant.  We had a good meal with great service, perfectly cooked shrimp and fish, and piping hot fries.  The side salads were very fresh and extremely generous in size.

Cheese sticks at Locals Dockside
Grilled shrimp at Locals Dockside
Grilled seafood and vegetables at Locals Dockside

After the sun was low enough on the horizon to not be shining in our eyes, we sat in the cockpit for an evening whiskey.  The Thermocell gadget was required, there were far too many no-see-ums!  It did work well, so we will certainly be buying refills and using it on our balcony in Hilton Head.

In the morning, the bugs were impossible, so I had to give up my usual peaceful coffee hour in the cockpit.  We wanted an early start anyway.  The previous day, another large (Looper) boat had arrived and docked behind us, so getting out of the marina was going to be tricky, and best done at slack tide. For our landlubbers, that is the time when the tide changes, so the currents are at their least strength.  We had about 10 feet in front of us for Dick to maneuver away from our berth.  Good help from the dockmaster and his helper was needed to keep the stern and the dinghy from running into the dock, but it all went very well and we looked like pros!

We listened to the Coast Guard calling boats near the Amelia Island Inlet.  There was a nuclear submarine about to enter the channel and make its way to Kings Bay Submarine Base.  Several small boats were not paying attention and required multiple calls.  When it became clear that the sub might be catching us up as we made our way past Cumberland Island, Dick speeded up so we didn’t have to heave to and wait, or possibly be asked to turn around.

Wild horses on Cumberland Island

Kings Bay Submarine Base is the largest construction project ever undertaken by the United States Navy.  It was started in 1980, took 9 years to complete at a cost of $1.5 billion, and employs over 9000 people.  As we passed, a gunboat eased out and hovered with its bow (and gun) pointing at us.  Just making sure we were proceeding on our way and not getting any closer to the base.  I did NOT step out on deck to take pictures!

Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base

As we arrived in St Andrew Sound we had wind opposing tide, giving us a roll on the bow.  Dick cooperatively sped up for me.  It didn’t really help with the motion, but it meant that it was only a few minutes before it was time to make the turn up the sound and the waves were off the stern.  St Andrew Sound is one of several ugly inlets in this part of Georgia.  It is wide and shallow, and shoaling means that you have to zigzag across rather than taking a direct route.

The channel that passes Jekyll Island is notoriously skinny, and we went through it at low tide.  This may have been a misjudgement! After passing the marina and the public dock, both with extremely shallow water, even bare mud, on the land side, we came into a particularly shoaled section of the channel.  Suddenly, Nine Lives was going uphill!  We were in the mud.  We were only slightly to the west of Bob’s Tracks, but for a few minutes it seemed as though we might run fully aground.  We gently pushed through the mud, and eventually it got slightly easier and we were back in the channel.

Shallow water in Jekyll Creek. The inside of the dock is mud with just a few inches of water!

Bob’s Tracks is an app you can download to your charts.  It is crowd-sourced, created by a number of boaters who travel back and forth along the ICW each year, and record their exact tracks.  These are then combined to produce a single best recommended routing.  Much of the time, the tracks are pretty much where the regular magenta line is, but it is in areas of continuous shoaling that it comes into its own.  When we last passed through this area, there was no such app to help us.  What’s more, we didn’t even have the contour features that are now part of Navionics on the chartplotter, nor did we have Aquamaps on our second, iPad-based charts.  It has taken us a bit of adjustment to work out how I can best convey where we need to be for Dick at the helm. Bob’s Tracks are on my iPad, not the chartplotter that Dick has in front of him.

Later, Dick read the Waterway Guide advice for the Jekyll Island Creek.  It says, “Do not go through Jekyll Creek at anything less than half tide rising.”  We did it at dead-low tide, which was also a foot lower than normal because of spring tides!  Might possibly have been a good idea to read that section before we arrived, rather than afterwards.

After that excitement, the rest of the journey to Brunswick went well and we docked without incident shortly after 1pm.  Our friend Bob arrived to welcome us, just as we were adjusting the lines, so we roped him into helping (pun intended)!  Later, we carried the makings of cheese and charcuterie across to their boat, because Asea is recovering from a mishap that resulted in a broken leg.  It was great to spend time with them again.  We always laugh a lot when we are together!

Nine Lives in the marina in Brunswick

The next morning, Dick visited the farmers’ market, and then explored the town.  The no-see-ums were impossible, so I stayed below and did some work on the blog and photoshop.  This is not a good time of year to be living “outdoors” in the Low Country.  When we are at home in Hilton Head in late spring, we stay inside.

Brunswick is a city with a somewhat checkered history. It was very prosperous in the mid to late 1800’s.  During the mid-20th century some of the beautiful old buildings that remained from earlier, more prosperous times, were allowed to become derelict and were pulled down and replaced with mid-century modern establishments.  The 14 fine leafy garden squares had nobody to save them, and roads were built through the middle of some of the ones that remained. Only 2 of the squares today retain their original size and shape.

Brunswick downtown shops
One of the remaining squares in Brunswick
Former City Hall in Brunswick
Hanover Square fountain
City Hall, Brunswick
Ritz Theatre
Another of Brunswick’s lovely squares
Mary Ross Waterfront Park

During WWII the Liberty Ships were built in Brunswick.  There were steel hulled ships, 447 feet long, weighing 3500 tons.  They served as cargo vessels and troop carriers.  99 were built for the U.S. Merchant Marines with the shipyard producing about 4 per month.  In 1944, the Navy asked for 6 ships to be built, and the shipyard managed to build 7 of the vital ships in a single month. 

Replica Liberty Ship

Both Virginia and Georgia claim to have developed Brunswick Stew.  It is traditionally a tomato-based stew with beans, vegetables, and originally small game meat such as squirrel or rabbit.  Today it is usually made with chicken.  Georgia’s claim includes the original stew pot!  One story says that the stew was invented by a group of hunters.  One man was left to look after the camp and make dinner.  He was lazy, and simply threw all the ingredients into one pot.  When the hunters returned, cold, and tired, a delicious stew was ready for them.

The first Brunswick Stew

Today, Brunswick is a major seaport, one of two in Georgia, and its economy is mainly based on tourism and logistics.  In the afternoon we walked into town to have a look around.  There are a surprising number of restaurants, and it seems to be something of an antiques destination.  Karen drove over from St Simons and joined us with Asea and Bob for dinner at Reid’s Apothecary.  It was a great evening with good food and congenial company.

America Liberty, a 100-passenger cruise ship, was docked downtown.  We saw her again later, passing us on the ICW when we were docked in Isle of Hope.  As we approached the Highway 17 bridge, we could see the casino boat.  Also, there were 3 car carriers docked in the South Brunswick River.  It’s a busy port.

A barge collecting debris including derelict boats
Car carriers in the port
Highway 17 bridge. We have see this from I-95, many times!

It was a long day, initially boring, but with areas of extreme shoaling where we had to pay close attention to the hazard warnings on the charts and follow Bob’s Tracks meticulously.  In the charmingly named Old Teakettle Creek, we passed some markers that were high and dry with the spring low tide.

Markers high and dry on the ICW north of Brunswick

As we turned into Sapelo Sound, we could see whitecaps, so Dick decided to run fast until we were back into South Newport River.  It was like stepping through a door – one minute it was very calm and very hot, and then we were in strong winds and cloudy skies to make me shiver.  It even rained a little.  Not enough, we decided, to need the windows rolling down.  In hindsight, we should have rolled them down and swapped out the screen doors!  As we entered St Catherine’s Sound, the waves got higher, and soon we were plunging up and down, and spray was coming over the bow like a giant green wave.  Salt water came right over the cockpit and washed over me and everything on the starboard side of Nine Lives.  Naturally, Dick was completely dry.  As the huge waves crashed over the bow, Nine Lives slammed down into the troughs.  Dick had already speeded up, and it helped somewhat, until it didn’t, and he had to slow down to keep control.  Some waves threw us sideways.  Fortunately, that part of the trip, although scary, nasty and wet, was short, and even as we made the turn into the Medway River, the waves were never quite broadside.  As we made our way up the river, the waters gradually calmed, and we heaved a sigh of relief.  This was probably our worst experience with waves, surpassing even our awful memories of the Neuse River from 2017.  Our no-go criteria is 2-foot waves and 15 mph winds.  This was 4-to-5-foot waves, and 20 to25 mph winds.

The excitement was not over.  We were nearing the part of the river where we were to turn off, cruising in the centre of the channel as is prudent, with both charts showing 27 feet of depth. I looked over at the depth sounder, and said to Dick, “That’s odd.”  That is one of the worst things you want to hear on a boat.  The depth sounder was showing just 6 feet under us.  Suddenly, we came to a juddering halt.  Aground.  Dick was right on it, and immediately put the engines into neutral.  We were lucky, the high winds, and waves coming from behind, lifted us and we floated free.  We can only conclude that the shoal marked on the charts has encroached far into the channel since the last time the Army Corps of Engineers passed this way.

After that, we were happy to have an easy docking with good help and the wind blowing us onto, rather than off, the dock.  Once we were in, we could see the mess our adventure had made.  Fortunately, we have good discipline and keep the cupboards latched, so nothing had fallen out inside the boat.  The salt water that drenched the starboard side of Nine Lives came through the screens, which were quite dirty after weeks of travel.  All of that dirt, plus the salt, was deposited on the windowsills, cushions, and even onto the back door, right up to the ceiling!

Salt water through the screens made everything filthy!

We ate at the rustic Sunbury Crab Company.  We had been there once before (by car), so we knew that the food would be good.  Great service, and a very chatty owner, made for a pleasant evening.

Sunbury Crab Company
Sunbury Crab Company marina
Commercial boats docked at Sunbury Crab Company
Queso and chicken wings at Sunbury Crab Company
Caesar salad with grilled shrimp

There were heavy thunderstorms during the night, so everything was soaked in the morning.  The side of the boat that faced the dock was coated with an amazing variety of insects.  We debated whether the forecasted rain and wind was such that we should stay put for another day, but the next day was going to be even worse, albeit sunny.  The no-see-ums buzzed around us as we untied and got underway.  We timed our departure so that it would be slack tide when we got to St Catherine’s Sound.  The plan worked, and the waves were not as bad as the previous afternoon.  The period was also shorter, that is, the waves were closer together, so Nine Lives was not riding up and slamming down as she had the day before.

The next challenge was Ossabaw Sound, which is in two parts, joined by a channel called Hell Gate (really, even on the charts!)  This is extremely narrow and shallow, and subject to wind tides.  That means that a sustained wind can actually blow the water out of the channel.  Fortunately, the wind was in the “right” direction, and we were still only a little after high tide, so the passage, much dreaded by Loopers, was uneventful.  Once through Ossabaw Sound, the rest of the journey was pleasant and smooth, just the way we like it!  We arrived at Isle of Hope Marina, our last stop on our Loop voyages, by 1pm.

There are incredible numbers and variety of bugs in this part of the world.  Not only no-see-ums, which are as tiny and sneaky as the name implies, but also the large greenflies that give a very painful bite.  Annoying, but fortunately not biting, are strange long-legged spider-like things, and of all the unexpected pests to find on a boat, grasshoppers!

The heat and the bugs kept us inside for most of the day on Isle of Hope, but we ventured out in the marina courtesy car to stock up on beer and to have a late lunch.  The Driftaway Café has earned TripAdvisor’s highest accolades, and the food was certainly very good.  The venue was decorated throughout by sea creatures painted on the walls and ceilings, and quirky tchotchkes.  There were plants everywhere, and the decks and garden were lined with an amazing number of small pots with colourful flowers.  Cleo, the customer support feline was dozing on one of the outside tables, waiting with the menu to greet the next diners.

Driftaway Cafe Customer Support Feline, Isle of Hope
Colourful interior of Driftaway Cafe
The terrace at Driftaway Cafe
Garden steps at Driftaway Cafe

The bugs were awful in the evening and first thing in the morning.  We headed out at 9am for the final leg of our 8-year voyage.

We passed Thunderbolt Marina. Nine Lives will come here for new bottom paint and when a new buyer asks for a survey.

Crossing the busy ship channel of the Savannah River and going through the shallow Fields Cut were uneventful.  We followed a gorgeous 100-ft yacht.  Her name was the engaging, and slightly disrespectful Waddle We Do.  As we came into Calibogue Sound we were surprised to see not one, but two cruise ships anchored off Harbour Town.  One of them was American Liberty, who we first saw in Brunswick and again when she passed Isle of Hope.  The other was American Eagle.  Both are 100-passenger coastal cruising ships.

American Liberty anchored off Harbour Town, Hilton Head
Busy Harbour Town, Hilton Head
We have never seen a Coast Guard boat towing an ATON before!

We arrived at the lock at Wexford, where we departed from in April 2018.  Somehow the channel leading to the lock seemed narrower!  Once in the lock, with only inches to spare on each side, Nine Lives looked huge!  We were soon tied up on the guest dock, and had time to relax and watch the construction.  Wexford is building a new, much larger harbour building and is also doing a major renovation to the clubhouse.

She fits with inches to spare!
Nine Lives has returned to Wexford for a final visit

Later, I was able to join my bridge friends, even filled in for a hand, before the traditional wine and gossip afterwards.  We spent a quiet evening (blessedly with many fewer no-see-ums) and woke to a pretty sunrise over the golf course.

Sunrise over the golf course and the harbour in Wexford

For the eagle-eyed, and mathematically inclined readers, you might notice a slight disconnect between some of our stated statistics.  We collected Nine Lives in January of 2017, in St Petersburg.  So we technically finished the Great Loop, and earned the gold burgee, this February when we passed under the bridge in Tampa Bay.

AGLCA awards the BaccaLOOPerate degree when we complete the Great Loop

In 2017, we spent a few weeks bringing Nine Lives to Hilton Head, where she was based in Wexford, behind our house, until April of 2018.  During the summer of 2017, we went on a 3000-mile shake-down cruise (yes, 3000 miles, only Dick would call that a shake-down cruise).  We went north, following the traditional route of the Great Loop, as far as Oswego on Lake Ontario and then returned.  We had a decent boating resume before we bought Nine Lives, but we had never owned a large boat, and much of our most relevant experience was on sailboats and narrowboats.  We did not know what we did not know!  So we sailed off into the wild blue yonder, ever so slightly unprepared, but full of confidence. There were adventures and misadventures, and it was on this cruise that Tucker-cat decided that he is NOT a boat-cat, and prefers to remain on dry land.  The following year, having added Nine Lives to the annual AGLCA fleet t-shirt, we set off on the first of our 7-year segments of the Great Loop.

Nine Lives leaving Wexford in April, 2017

To resume this year’s story, the next morning, Dick rode his bike to our friend’s house to retrieve his car, which he then parked at Palmetto Bay Marina.  I spent the morning cleaning, including polishing the outside railings and cleaning the cockpit of accumulated salt grime. This was the day of our big party to celebrate Nine Lives and the completion of our epic journey.  Perhaps it should be referred to as a pawty?  Or, given that Nine Lives is a cat, we could talk about the purrrty.

Then there was nothing to do for a few hours, since the party was to be catered!  In due course, a huge table arrived and was set on the dock.  There was a certain amount of concern because there was a gusty wind blowing.  We decided that drinks would be on the dock, and food on the boat.  Five enormous trays of an amazing variety of hors d’oevres arrived next.  Sausage rolls, quiche, cheese and charcuterie, shrimp, tiny flatbread slices, and a whole tray of beautiful macarons and fruit were spread out in the cockpit and downstairs in the salon.

We can certainly say that the party was a success.  37 people managed to fit themselves onto Nine Lives, spreading out between the cockpit, the salon, the foredeck, and even on the back platform.  The food was excellent, and our serving helper kept the wine and beer flowing.  Most of the guests had not been on Nine Lives before, so it gave them a chance to see what our floating home looks like.

Guests and food for the Nine Lives Pawty
More of the purrrty guests

In the morning, we took Nine Lives around the whole of Wexford Harbour for a last look at the lovely homes and gardens, and then out through the lock and the very short trip down Broad Creek to Palmetto Bay Marina.  Nine Lives will stay there until she finds a new owner to take her on new adventures.

Nine Lives in Palmetto Bay Marina
A Green Heron welcomed Nine Lives to Palmetto Bay Marina

As the helpful dockmaster assisted with our arrival and tying up, he commented, on seeing the gold burgee, that we were finishing the Great Loop, and he made the assumption that we had taken the usual one year and travelled the traditional 6,000 miles.  We explained that in fact it had been 8 years and 20,000 miles, and his exclamation was “Did you get lost?”  So yes, we got lost by seeing all but one of the Great Lakes, by going up the Mississippi, by venturing up the Ohio, the Monongahela, and the Cumberland Rivers, and this winter by following the Gulf Coast all the way around the Florida Keys.  And let’s not forget, we also went through Lake Champlain and the Chambly Canal, followed by the Rideau.  We visited places that most Loopers don’t see, including Lake Huron and Detroit, Cleveland, Sault Ste Marie, Minneapolis St Paul, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, and Nashville.  And all the wonderful small towns in between.

This is the close of the Nine Lives Voyages story.  We anticipate that soon Nine Lives will sail off into the sunset with new crew, who are sure to love her as much as we do.  There will be new adventures, and perhaps she will revisit many of the places that she has been with us.  Thank you to all of you who have been with us on this journey.  I am continually surprised and so grateful to hear that people are reading this story.

Our friends Sherry and Shel gave us this lovely plaque to celebrate our Great Loop

We are going to do other things, travel more and farther, visit friends far and wide, play some golf, and take some time to enjoy all that Hilton Head has to offer. One of the party guests left us some advice, that is entirely apropos:

Advice from a Sea Turtle

Swim with the current

Be a good navigator

Stay calm under pressure

Be well travelled

Think long term

Age gracefully

Spend time at the beach!

April 2nd to 16th, 2025: Stuart to Jacksonville

We made an early start to catch an opening of the railway bridge.  There is a handy app that supposedly lets you know exactly when the trains are expected.  We had a bit of a wait.  The passage was made a lot more exciting by a problem with the road bridge, which had only one span working.  There was room for Nine Lives, but it was disturbing to see the lowered span so close as I stood on the foredeck!  As soon as we were through, the railway bridge closed again, so it would seem that there were more trains than expected.

A narrow space to squeeze through in Stuart

We arrived in Fort Pierce shortly after noon.  It was a windy day with whitecaps, but the waves were coming from behind us, which Nine Lives handles beautifully.  In spite of a strong current and winds, the docking went well with a good dockhand and plenty of cleats on the dock.

Ft Pierce Marina. Notice the racing trimaran!

We walked to one of the on-site restaurants, the highest rated eatery within walking distance.  There was live music.  The musician seemed to be pretty talented, but the sound system was so muddy that all of it was noise.  We were surprised to find that the whole restaurant is a glorified tiki hut, so no inside seating per se.  If you like warm wine and dirty glasses, cold fries and barely warm entrees, this is your place!  To be fair, the food was quite tasty, and Dick was delighted to be given a bill that was under $100 for a change.  The waiter replaced the cold fries immediately, and he brought a glass full of ice for the wine without being asked.  We expected similar experiences at the next few stops, so planned to eat on board more than usual. As I added ice to my wine, not my usual practice for various reasons, I thought about the long history of watering wine.  The Greeks and Romans certainly watered their wine, which they drank at any time of the day, because water alone was generally unsafe to drink.  Watering your wine was seen as a civilized and sophisticated practice.  Drinking wine neat, was barbaric.  Not sure whether those folks added ice to their wine as well as the water!

Cobbs Landing, cheese curds to start
Beef stew and grilled shrimp at Cobbs Landing, delicious, but served barely warm.
Salted caramel cheesecake at Cobbs Landing

Although there are Loopers in most of the marinas we have stopped at, we are somewhat behind the main Looper pack.  Anyone planning to attend the Spring Rendezvous in Norfolk is already on their way north.  Boaters who went to the Bahamas had mostly returned, but those who were still there were going to have to stay put, with high winds and ugly seas expected for the following week at least.  We are also among the flight of Snowbirds, the folks who spend winters in Florida and summers in northern climes.  There are several species within the family.  Mid-westerners head to Arizona and Nevada. Easterners like Florida.  There is a sub-species who are boaters, and travel up and down “The Ditch”, that is, the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, in spring and fall.  We are seeing many of them in boats of all sizes, as we journey north.  What does surprise me is the number of boaters heading south, including quite a few gold Loopers.

An Endeavourcat heading south
Another Endeavourcat. This one is heading north!

We spent a quiet day.  I made bran muffins while Dick fixed one of the window screens.  It was damaged on our shakedown cruise in 2017.  One of those “should that be there?” “It will be fine.” moments, and then it wasn’t.  Dick had the bright idea of replacing the broken screen, which was in my bathroom, with one from the unused third bedroom.  This was a smack upside the head moment – why didn’t we think of this 8 years ago?  Dick has been able to source several screen replacements from some obsolete stock, so the broken one will be fixed before Nine Lives goes to her new owner.

Project 2 was to see what is wrong with the horn.  It was sounding increasingly anemic, deteriorated to a feeble squawk, and then failed entirely.  Dick took the horn off the cockpit roof and cleaned away rust.  He even checked the fuse, all with no effect.  We still comply with regulations because we also have a canned air horn on board, plus the intermittent fog horn that is also required is broadcast through the loudhailer rather than the horn.  Next plan was to take apart the whole assembly to see if the problem can be fixed.  This is actually one of Dick’s favourite things.  His first foray into the how things work aspect of engineering was when he was 5 years old.  He took apart his father’s alarm clock.  Unfortunately, he did not put it back together, so the cows were late milking the next morning.  We enjoyed a quiet evening on board with pasta and sausage for dinner.

Diagnosing the problem with the horn

Ft Pierce has a Farmer’s Market just outside the marina gates every Saturday.  Dick set off early to check out the offerings.  After wandering for ages around a large area with crafts, he was about to leave when he discovered another section that was all food.  He returned from the outing with baked goods, including some excellent croissants.  He also failed to resist a beautiful steak from a farmer who produces his meat from start to finish.  The croissants made a great beginning to the day before we headed for our next stop at Melbourne.

A pair of ospreys tend their chicks on a nest built on an ATON.

We passed a sailboat under sail, heading north on the ICW.  It looked like a liveaboard.  I have never seen Spanish moss hanging from the stays on a boat that was not derelict!

We passed this sailboat, it had Spanish moss dangling from the spreaders.

As we approached Melbourne, we could see dinghy races.  It was certainly a test of sailing skills.  Some of the boats were one person with a single sail, others were two-man with a main sail and a jib.  When they came to the part of the race where the wind was suitable, the two-man boats unfurled their spinnakers.  Did they move!!  With the winds gusting to 25mph, a number of the little boats went over.  Most of them managed to right themselves, another test of sailing skills.  There were plenty of motorboats with instructors on board to keep an eye out and help anyone who was in trouble.

Dinghy racing, Melbourne. Two boats have tipped over but the instructors will help if needed.

When I see dinghy races, I have fond memories of the dinghy sailboat that we had at our cottage on a lake when I was growing up.  My dad bought a Mirror Dinghy, a small sailboat named after the Daily Mirror (a British newspaper) as a boat that anyone could afford.  They could be ordered as a kit and built at home, but I seem to recall that Dad bought ours second hand.  It had a single mast and red sails.  For the sailors among us, the early Mirror Dinghies were a very simple design with a daggerboard instead of a centreboard, and a Gunter rig with a gaff that doubled the height of the mast.  All the spars could easily be stored in the boat for transport, and it was also simple to row as well as paddle.  We sailed our dinghy all over the lake, and we certainly learned how to right her when she went over as we sailed too close to the wind!

Coming into the marina in Melbourne was a test of our skills.  The waves were broadside, with the current trying to push us out of the channel.  The depth below us was a little as 2 feet, probably the shallowest we have seen.  Our t-head was slightly shorter than Nine Lives, and had only 2 cleats.  Fortunately, although it was a fixed dock, there was just 4 inches of tide, so we were able to close-tie and we thought we could manage without a bow line.  The dockhand was a willing helper, but as often happens, he could not understand why he needed to cleat us as tight as possible, so a bit of extra maneuvering was needed.  Once tied and settled, we both had concerns, so Dick got out the long boat hook and succeeded in getting a bow line around the somewhat distant post.  It is a long line, but it was barely long enough to cleat the end!

A long reach to get a bow line around the post.

Later, an 85-foot Fleming arrived in the harbour, at the same time as one of the sailing dinghies came in with their spinnaker still flying.  The Fleming, with a much deeper draft than us, was certainly churning up lots of mud from the bottom.

An 85-foot Fleming is passed by a dinghy with the spinnaker flying in the narrow channel.

In the evening, we walked to the nearby Chart House.  This is part of the Landry’s chain of restaurants and entertainment complexes.  It is prom season, and among the diners there were several couples dressed to the nines and wearing corsages.  For a change, most of the people in the restaurant had made an effort and dressed up.  We enjoyed our dinner, beginning with very attractive and creative starters.  Dick had a beet salad, and mine was shrimp, mango, and avocado.  Dick’s seabass on lobster risotto was delicious, as was my shrimp and lobster carbonara.  The meal was sadly let down by the dessert, the restaurant’s specialty chocolate lava cake, served hot with ice cream.  It should have been good, but the lava cake sat around and was no longer hot (in fact it arrived with a distinct list to port). The other dessert specialty was a drink that was prepared individually at the table.  The four people at the table across from us all ordered it.  Each drink took a full 5 minutes to prepare, thus taking our waitress out of service for over 20 minutes.  I am sure our dessert was not the only casualty.  There are better ways to do a tableside dish (or drink, as in this case).

Chart House beet salad
Chart House shrimp, mango, and avocado salad
Chart House seabass on lobster risotto
Chart House shrimp carbonara
A rather sad lava cake at Chart House

Shortly after 11pm we were able to see a rocket take off from Cape Canaveral, about 20 miles north of us.  It was very interesting to see the fiery cylinder cross the sky until separation, when the fire winked out and the payload continued into orbit with a smaller engine.  We had hoped that there would be a launch when we were in Cape Canaveral, but unfortunately the next one was scheduled for our day of departure.

We enjoyed our day in Melbourne.  It is a lively boating community, with the yacht club running dinghy sailing lessons on weekend mornings, as well as races on weekends.  There is also a rowing club based in the harbour.  It was again a very windy day, with sustained winds of 20mph by the afternoon.  Given that the winds are generally calmer first thing, I suggested that we make a point of leaving by 8am the next day.

Dinghy sailing lessons in Melbourne harbour

In the afternoon we took a walk around the area.  Dick also explored the downtown.  He said there were mostly bars and restaurants, few shops.  There are interesting murals around the town, including one that is creatively painted on the pillars underneath the highway bridge.

An interesting mural under the highway bridge in Melbourne
A flowering shrub in Melbourne
A beautiful Bird of Paradise in flower

Dinner on board was our favourite shrimp sandwiches.  It can be difficult (and potentially disastrous) to try to improve on perfection, but having found an interesting recipe, I decided to risk it.  The new recipe included bacon and sliced tomatoes, and the mixture was mayo-based with Old Bay seasoning and dill (which I substituted for basil.  Cook gets to decide if there is an ingredient they don’t care for). The sandwiches were outstanding, and in future it will be difficult to decide which recipe to prepare.

Shrimp sandwich

We had few minutes of concern first thing in the morning, about 30 minutes before our planned departure.  Dick received an email to say that our reservation for that night was cancelled, as there was a boat with engine trouble, unable to leave the slip that was booked for us.  Fortunately, even at that early hour, Dick was able to immediately confirm a slip at the marina that is literally next door to the one we had planned to stop at.

We were away by 8:05, just 5 minutes later than planned.  A dolphin followed us out of the harbour.

Port Canaveral is at the end of a long, narrow barge channel.  Just before the port is a lock, so Dick and I had to review our locking procedures! Lines and fenders ready, life jackets and headsets donned, and we were ready.  This one is quite different from most locks.  Instead of walls, it has aluminum beams with a black coating and small cleats on the top of the beams.  The lock fills and drains by opening the door.  You have to take care that the fenders don’t get caught between the beams.  We managed it without incident, accompanied by a dolphin.

Canaveral Barge Canal lock

Safely through the lock, and under a bridge, we arrived at our marina.  We went first to the fuel dock to get a pump out.  It is located next to dockage for commercial fishing boats (shrimpers).  I was amused to see that St Peter was docked next to Forgiven.  Our slip was one half of a t-head, but we had good help and managed it without difficulty, in spite of high winds.

St Peter is docked next to Forgiven in Port Canaveral

It was a very entertaining afternoon.  I watched Disney’s Wish cruise ship prepare and leave the dock, the 4th cruise ship to head out that day.  There was a large sailing cat that made 4 tries to dock before giving up and stopping at the fuel dock overnight.  Then another sailing cat arrived to dock in the slip behind us.  No less than 5 people came out on the dock to help, and the dockmaster tried to coach him in.  It is admittedly a tight fit, and there was a strong wind, but we have never seen anyone make 4 attempts and do everything wrong every time.  Eventually the dockmaster jumped aboard and managed to get it in, but even he made several mistakes and eventually the boat was just manhandled into place by the crowd of helpers.  I have always thought that sailors have superior boating skills.  How any sailor can fail to understand how the wind is going to affect the boat is mysterious.

Cruise ships in Port Canaveral
The Disney cruise ship is taller than the 5-storey parking garage

We didn’t see the rocket from the other night return, but we watched the Space X barge being towed out of the harbour to get into position to retrieve the rocket from the upcoming scheduled launch.

We had a very pleasant day in Port Canaveral.  It was rainy in the morning, but cleared up and stayed cool and dry.  The local Harbor Host dropped by and we had a most enjoyable chat, sharing stories of our exploits on the Illinois River, getting beaten up on the Neuse River and other adventures at various points on the Loop.

Sunrise in Port Canaveral

We had planned to eat on board, but the menu at Fishlips was intriguing, so we decided on a mid-afternoon foray to try it out.  Essentially casual, Southern cooking, the food was delicious. Slightly odd presentation, as everything was served in a large bamboo basket. I had thought about salted caramel cheesecake but there was no room by the time we had each had an appetizer and a main course.  On the way back we stopped at a seafood market and bought a couple of pounds of fresh local shrimp.  It is always a good sign when the shrimp boats are docked right outside the market.

Corn and black bean dip at Fishlips
Gumbo at Fishlips
Entrees at Fishlips
The marina fence is decorated with found objects. We spied a gold looper burgee, still attached to its flagpole!

We made an early start in the morning, with an ugly forecast for wind and waves for our passage to New Smyrna Beach.  Two dolphins accompanied us through the lock this time.  Once out of the east-west Barge Canal and back on the ICW, we kicked it up and ran fast, both to shorten the duration of the trip and smooth the passage.  We passed gold Looper Inshallah, who we met at docktails in Canada in 2019!  Going under the NASA Skyway Bridge was interesting.  There was a workboat taking up half of the available space, and they did not answer the radio, so we had to just assume they would not move, and we could go through.

Another look at the Canaveral Barge Canal lock, taken inside the lock!
We met a group of kayakers in the Barge Canal
NASA Skyway Bridge under repair. Not much room to pass the work barge.

It was a very rough day with high winds (20mph) creating a lot of chop in the wide-open areas we travelled for most of the day.  The wind had shifted and was on the bow, but Nine Lives handled it very well, both at 17 knots and when we had to slow to trawler speed or less.  About half of the unfortunately named Mosquito Lagoon was minimum wake, but we managed the journey in 5.5 hours because we were able to run fast for part of the way.  The worst was docking.  Our slip was in an awkward spot, and initially, Dick expected it to be farther into the harbour.  At the last minute I saw the slip number, and he turned, but the wind was pushing us right off the dock and there was no way to catch a cleat.  We circled around, and I took the helm for the next attempt, with zero success.  Third time lucky.  Two men came down the dock to help, and once I had thrown a line to them, they were able to pull us in and get us tied up.  Final arrangements (spring lines, stern line across) took a little longer than usual, but eventually we were settled.

A pelican watching the harbour at New Smyrna Beach
Pelicans and Egrets nesting in the harbour at New Smyrna Beach

We walked into town and poked around the interesting little shops.  A wonderful large wooden bowl set with polished stones caught Dick’s eye, but just as well, the $1500 price tag was off-putting and we did not buy it!  In another shop, we were intrigued by the colourful ladies’ tops in the window.  Better luck there, I tried a knee-length floaty kimono top that reminds me very much of Mackenzie Childs designs.  Dick likes the garment, but I am pretty sure that buying a matching teakettle would be pushing it!

Downtown New Smyrna Beach
Antique store with a pretty garden in New Smyrna Beach

The pizza destination was a sad disappointment.  Touted as “the best pizza I have ever tasted”, by a fellow Looper, our only thought is that the person needs to get out more.  We started with Mike’s Forbidden Breadsticks, which sounded intriguing, but they turned out to be simply a sheet pan pizza sliced and served with two dipping sauces.  We each ordered a large pizza, as we like to take at least half of it home.  They were also sheet pan style instead of round, and had the unusual feature that the fresh tomato on mine, and the so-called fresh mozzarella (it was just ordinary block mozzarella) on Dick’s, were uncooked and plunked on the top after the pizza was baked.  No question, the pizzas were okay, but certainly not as good as those I make at home.  For reasons that escape us, they had only 10” boxes, and their bags would fit only one box.  We ended up using the bags from our other purchases, or Dick would have had to carry a teetering stack of boxes home.  We enjoyed visiting the town, but see no need to return for the pizza! In fact, the pizzas reheated well and tasted better than they had in the restaurant.

Not quite “the best pizza ever”

It was a short trip to Daytona Beach, so we could have a leisurely start.  The marina is huge.  The dockmaster gets around with a dinghy.  Once you call on the radio and get a slip assignment, if you need help with docking, the dockmaster will motor over and help.  We docked without help, and later, during a break in arriving traffic, the dockmaster stopped off with a package with marina and town information and security cards.  Although the marina is huge, for a change the docks are well-marked.  When you book, they send a welcome email with a printable marina map with all the slip numbers clearly shown.  There are well-spaced bathhouses with good facilities.  The dockmaster even offered restaurant suggestions, including a warning to avoid the one that is on-site!  We had already seen appalling reviews for that one, and he also confirmed that the place we had chosen is excellent.

Dick cooked on board that evening, the last of the frozen burgers with some delicious trumpet mushrooms.  He also added some bacon slices and very nice sliced tomatoes.

Saturday was designated cleaning day for Nine Lives. After vacuuming, Dick decided that it was a good day to change the oil and filters (of far more interest than cleaning).  It wasn’t really time, the next one should have been just as we arrived back in Hilton Head.  Dick thought it would be perfect timing, but our broker advised against that.  Apparently, if you change the oil just before a survey, it can be taken as a sign that there is something to hide, so doing the job a few weeks early is a better plan.  I took care of the rest of the cleaning and washing bed linens and towels while Dick was occupied with the engines.

Taking away the used oil and filters

As I watched the boats arriving and the dockmaster buzzing about, a 95-foot San Lorenzo yacht arrived.  This is not everyman’s boat brand.  For example, the first yacht for sale on their website comes in at $73 million.  We think that the 95-footer might be for sale, as her name has been removed from the transom.  The captain referred to “the event” during the docking process.  The next day I watched preparations that took the entire day.  They included changing the colour of the outdoor pavilion roof and covering up the restaurant sign.  As we walked to dinner in the evening, we could see banners with the Ferrari logo, in orange that matched the pavilion roof covering.  One wonders why Daytona Beach would be selected for such a high-end sales event, but we suppose the racetrack has something to do with it.  We did not receive an invitation, but never mind, our next vehicle will not be Italian, and we are not in the market for a superyacht either.

Interesting architecture in downtown Daytona Beach
A pretty pink house in Daytona Beach

Dinner was an interesting experience.  The Italian fine dining restaurant is located in the historic home of President Warren G Harding.  Aptly named “The Cellar”, the lower level of the restaurant is wonderfully characterful, with a tin ceiling, interesting stained glass “windows” and wine racks and boxes scattered everywhere.  The evening did not get off to a good start.  The front door is guarded by a well-dressed gentleman whose sole purpose appears to be keeping away any riff raff who have failed to make a reservation.  After we were seated by the guard dog, our waiter introduced himself.  Water was brought, specials recited, and he then disappeared.  After a wait that was too long, he finally returned to take our order for drinks (a half bottle of Prosecco).  When he also tried to take a food order at the same time, Dick told him quite clearly that “we never give a food order until we have our first drinks”.  After that, the service improved.

There were wine glasses already on the table.  The waiter brought the Prosecco, and started to open it, and Dick asked where the glasses were.  The waiter told us that the large red wine glasses on the table would be fine.  Dick’s comment that we have never been served Prosecco in such a glass sent the waiter over to the bar to enquire, and he came back to say that “She said that those glasses would be fine.” I told him that we said they were NOT fine.  Off he trotted and returned with flutes.  After that, the meal was excellent, perfectly paced, and very enjoyable.  One could order half portions of the pasta dishes, including the risotto, which was perfect for me.  Dick was very pleased to see rabbit on the menu, which he loves and is rarely offered.  My comments about “poor, poor Bunny” were ignored, as was my remark that it is nearly Easter too!  The waiter heard me say that and was highly amused.  The older woman (the owner, we presume) dressed all in black, who stopped at each table to welcome the diners and ask if they were enjoying the food, did not bother with us.  Clearly, we offended her when we insisted on different glasses for our bubbly.

The Cellar prosciutto with melon and pear
The Cellar shrimp and crab salads on avocado
Oh poor, poor bunny!
Shrimp and crab risotto at The Cellar
Desserts at The Cellar
A lovely old house, now a B&B in Daytona Beach
There was an art fair in Daytona Beach. The fair closed before dark, but one piece of “art” was left on display.

We made a slightly early start in order to get a pump out on exit.  It was a long, but interesting day.  Many nice-looking houses, interspersed with parks and natural areas.  We were part of a parade of boats, both power and sail, all heading north at different speeds.  Lots of polite requests on the radio to pass.  Of course, all those good boating manners count for little when small craft go screaming by at speed.

The river, and the ICW channel in the river, meandered back and forth like a drunken sailor.  It was necessary to pay lots of attention to the charts and also the position of the channel markers, especially the floating ones.  One positive aspect of following other boats is that you can watch where they go in the tricky, shallow areas.  If they come to an abrupt halt, you know there must be unexpected shoaling!

Our arrival at the municipal marina in St Augustine was uneventful.  We had been told that the “Blessing of the Fleet” was scheduled until 3pm, and that no arrivals would be processed until after the ceremony was finished.  We planned to get there at 3:30.  The harbour is notorious for tricky currents, and the wind had come up, but Dick brought Nine Lives in, stern to, with complete aplomb!  This despite two wave runners that were illegally parked at the dock and were somewhat in the way.  Later, I saw the dockhand attach a ticket to them, and so had the amusement of watching the “What the heck?” moment when the owners returned to their craft.  I was pleased to see that they did take the tickets down the dock and paid the fines.

Nine Lives on the dock in St Autustine

The marina is large, and has two large mooring fields on each side of the Bridge of Lions as well.  There is an extensive, free, dinghy dock, alternatively, boats on mooring balls can call for a shuttle pickup.  The dockmaster was brusque but very efficient.  Interestingly, he will not reveal your slip assignment until after you confirm that you have lines and fenders ready and on the correct side per his instructions.  Given how many boaters we have seen fiddling with tangled lines and putting out fenders as they arrive at the dock, this seems to be a very sensible policy.

The busy dinghy dock in St Augustine

Our dinner was at a local winery, about a mile walk.  We left early, but stopped for a long chat with the folks on a large sailing cat down the dock, so a leisurely stroll was no longer on the cards.  The meal was very good, and we were surprised at how few diners there were in the highly rated restaurant.

We have been looking forward to our return to St Augustine ever since we were here with Nine Lives on her maiden voyage in January of 2017.  Our visit lived up to our expectations!  We took the hop-on-hop-off Old Town Trolley around its full circuit on the first morning.  The commentary was excellent.  St Augustine downtown is a wonderful mix of very old houses and larger buildings.  Some date from the early 1700’s.  Modern hotels incorporate older buildings or are designed in a complementary style.

Avenida Menendez
Avenida Menendez intersection
The lions guarding the Lion Bridge in St Augustine
The Governors House
Villa Zorayda
A former hotel, then the city hall, and now a museum
A walled garden in the old town
Aviles Street

The fort was built by the Spanish in 1672.  It has never fallen in battle.  It is a masonry, star shaped fort, built of coquina, a material that is carved from the sea floor and then dried to become an extremely hard type of building material.  The star shape was designed to be resistant to cannon fire, and the rising ground and dry moat ensured that attacking soldiers had to cross a killing field to get to the walls.  The story goes that when the fort was under attack, after the day’s bombardment was concluded, soldiers would descend to the moat and collect the cannon balls, which were then loaded into the defender’s cannons and fired back at the enemy. 

Castillo de San Marcos dry moat
Attacking soldiers had to come up this rising ground before the moat when attacking the fort
The fort was well defended from the inlet as well as the land
Cannon used to defend Castillo de San Marcos

Years before the fort was built, the Spanish king discovered that the French had built Fort Caroline on land belonging to Spain near present day Jacksonville.  Adding insult to injury, the colonists were Huguenots, Protestants, instead of Catholic.  In 1565, Jan Ribault sailed from France with 600 soldiers to resupply Fort Caroline.  General Pedro Menéndez de Aviles was charged by Philip II of Spain with capturing Fort Caroline and removing the French.  In September of 1565, the Spanish came ashore and named a new settlement St Augustine.  St Augustine claims to be the oldest city in North America, although Fernandina Beach disputes this and makes a similar claim.

The French sailed south to attack the settlement, but were blown off course by a hurricane and shipwrecked south of present-day Daytona Beach.  Meanwhile, the Spanish sailed north and found no soldiers in Fort Caroline, so it was easily captured.  Some of the remaining men escaped and were able to return to France, and the women and children were spared and sent to Havana.  The shipwrecked French soldiers were trying to return north to Fort Caroline, but were blocked by an inlet.  Menéndez discovered that they were stranded there and marched with 70 soldiers to intercept them.  The French surrendered, and most of them were killed and thrown into the bay.  Only the few Catholics and an artisan needed at St Augustine were spared.  Later, another group of the shipwrecked French arrived at the inlet, surrendered, and most were killed.  Since then, the inlet and its associated bay, formerly called The Bay of the Dancing Dolphins, has been called Matanzas, which means Slaughters, in Spanish. Ick.

Another fascinating story was about the Solla-Carcaba Cigar factory. Research confirms that the factory produced up to 5 million cigars per year during its heyday.  I always enjoy the anecdotes told by city tour guides.  This one said that one million cigars per year were hand-rolled in this factory, exclusively by women.  No men were hired for this tedious but exacting job, because women have smaller hands and roll the cigars more tightly.  However, the factory did employ men.  They were tasked with keeping the women from getting bored.  They sang, danced, and read from current novels and newspapers.  Certainly a unique way to keep your workers happy!

After the trolley tour, we walked around the shops and galleries.  In one, we found work by Harlan, the artist who created the print that we bought for Nine Lives’ salon before we even owned her.  The gallery where we made that purchase is still there in Ft Lauderdale and still carries his work, but it was interesting to find another venue in St Augustine.  In another gallery, we found that the artist who created our salon lamp is still showing his glass works, along with work from all three of his sons and one grandson.  What a talented family!

After hours of sightseeing and shopping, we felt both hungry and weary, so we stopped for a long break at a wine and charcuterie garden.  The venue was lovely, with beautifully tended plantings and charming furniture in leafy shade.  Our cheese and charcuterie platter was the best we have had since Saugatuck in 2021 (excepting of course the spread we put out for docktails on Nine Lives).  After the wonderful feast, a nap was required, so we staggered back to the boat and enjoyed some quiet time until it was time to head out again for dinner.

Casa de Vino 57 in St Augustine
Cheese and charcuterie at Casa de Vino 57

Our reservation for dinner was at a small restaurant called Collage.  The chef presents food from a variety of international cuisines.  After our late lunch, I decided that two starters made more sense, so I began with delicious grilled beef tenderloin on pieces of toast.  Instead of an entrée, I enjoyed a spicy dish of shrimp in a tomato-based broth.  Dick’s starter was a creative concoction of large scallops wrapped in prosciutto and served on a cauliflower puree.  His main course was veal scallopine with mashed potatoes, an interesting sauce, and two grilled shrimp.  A very civilized palate cleanser of sorbet was served between courses.  We shared an excellent raspberry cheesecake to complete the meal.

Grilled beef at Collage
Scallops wrapped in prosciutto at Collage
Shrimp in spicy tomato broth at Collage
Veal scallopini at Collage
Raspberry cheesecake at Collage

Our second day in St Augustine was quieter.  I worked on the blog while Dick went to the Post Office.  Each time the oil is changed, samples are sent away for analysis.  This looks for things like fuel, seawater, antifreeze, and wear metals.  Different wear metals will show where to start looking for a problem.  For example, if there is evidence of water and copper, it is likely that you have a tube leak in one of the heat exchangers on the engine.  The important thing is not so much the absolute numbers as the trend, you are looking for things changing.  Dick has always had this analysis done after every oil change.  After dropping the packages off at the Post Office, and scouting the best walking route to the restaurant, Dick did some sightseeing.  He retraced some of the routes covered by the trolley tour and took lots of pictures.  After he returned, it was my turn to head out and explore a few galleries and shops that we had missed earlier.  I also picked up the interesting gourmet treats in the foodie shop that I had made note of the day before.

Dinner was at a very authentic French restaurant in another lovely old house.  We had an excellent meal, accompanied by a bottle of our favourite Pouilly Fumé.

La Cocina desserts

We made an early start the next morning, as it would be a fairly long journey to Jacksonville.  This is our last side trip, and the last time in unfamiliar waters.

A last look at Castillo de San Marcos as we leave St Augustine

On a bend in the river, part of a parade of 6 boats, we came up on a group of men with hoverboards.  They were not very good, kept falling in, and were right in the channel, all but impossible to see once they fell off.  I went out and shouted to one of them that we can’t see them and they should stay out of the channel.  His response was “okay okay”, and immediately one of his buddies went straight across our wake, whoopin’ and hollerin’, and fell off, again in the middle of the channel.  So dangerous.

We are back in the Low Country! A line of sailboats heading north.

As we passed under a bridge near Jacksonville, we saw power line pylons with Great Blue Herons nesting.  I have never seen them in such high up and exposed nests.

Herons nesting on a pylon

After an interesting trip up the ICW and then west on the Saint Johns River, we passed through Jacksonville, first the port, and then through the downtown area.  The Ortega River bridge opened immediately for us, and we were tied up in our slip at Port 32 Marina by 2:45, somewhat earlier than we had expected.

Jacksonville skyline
We were surprised to see what looks just like an English manor house, complete with formal garden, on the outskirts of Jacksonville.

We will stay in Jacksonville for a few days, and then return to the ICW and head north. We expect to arrive in Hilton Head on the 30th. We will return to Wexford Harbour for a couple of days, to truly complete the circle where we left from in 2018.

March 19th to April 1st, 2025: Florida Keys to Stuart

Our first full day in Stock Island was busy with laundry, getting the blog out, and as usual, Dick did some exploration.  He returned from his walk with a box of huge croissants – American size, but authentic, from a bakery run by a French expat.  Dick also scouted the route to the pizza restaurant we planned to walk to for dinner.

It was finally cooler and less humid (although that did not last long), but still more than I would have preferred to walk just over a mile in the sun.  Stock Island is the industrial centre for Key West, with a large military presence.  The housing is functional and uninteresting, and the rest is mostly industrial parks.

A Navy jet flies over the marina on Stock Island

The restaurant was very busy.  We started with very nice breaded and fried mozzarella pieces with marinara sauce.  Dick’s pizza was excellent, very hot and clearly just out of the oven.  Mine had been sitting for a while and it was just warm.  I expected that it would be tasty when reheated (sadly, it wasn’t).  T-shirts worn by most of the staff proclaimed “Legalize Marinara”.  Amusing, but misread by more than one person reviewing the restaurant.  At the bar the next day, the T-shirts read, “Write drunk, edit sober”, a quote attributed to Hemingway, but in fact he never said that, quite the opposite.

Deep dish pizza

The walk back to the marina was more pleasant after sunset, and we paused to watch a pickup game of soccer.  The players were all very serious and competitive, but there were no angry words or behaviour, and no need for a referee, everyone was there to have fun. 

Soccer game on Stock Island

Once at the marina, we paused to admire an unusual powercat, a Maine Cat.  As we were pointing out the interesting features, the owners arrived and we had a lovely chat.  They have only had it for 3 months and are still doing a lot of needed repairs and upgrades.   Only about 8 of these were ever made.

Boat chores the next day, finishing the laundry for me, and Dick replaced the latch on the back door.  He did a “temporary” repair a few years ago, replacing the spring.  It was obviously a good job, because it lasted for years.  The spring was still good, but the rest of the latch had simply worn out.  The other project was replacing one of the small fans that are used to keep air circulating inside when AC is not needed.  These fail regularly, so we keep replacements.  They are a pain to install, requiring a certain amount of colourful language and at least 3 hands before the job is completed.

Replacing the door latch

In the afternoon, we went over to the hotel bar, looking forward to the live music and a light supper.  The music was truly awful.  The woman took songs from our era, and mashed the melody and timing until they were completely unrecognizable unless you knew the words.  Every song sounded exactly the same.  It was so awful that we changed our plan and went to the restaurant inside the hotel.  Different menu, but the food was fine.

A cocktail to expunge the memory of the awful music on Stock Island

We were signed up for AGLCA “Virtual Docktails” at 7pm.  Dick joined the chat about catamarans, while I participated in the “Ladies on the Loop” group.  It was a mixed group of future Loopers, a few in progress, and only two of us completed.  I was very pleased that several of the ladies commented on our podcast on Segment Looping, saying how much they enjoyed it and how useful it was.

The next “outside” voyage was to Marathon.  We ran fast, 15 knots, again, so it took just over 3 hours, but it was quite unpleasant.  The swells were on the starboard quarter, and we had the rolling corkscrew effect, even though we were running fast.

On arrival at the marina, we went first to the fuel dock for a pump out and some diesel.  Not the worst dockhand ever, but for sure in the top 5 (or would that be the bottom 5?)  Dick was filling with fuel, so he was busy and the dockhand did the pump out. He seemed to think it was a big deal and implied that there should be an extra tip.  He wouldn’t take the cloth Dick used to prevent diesel spill, instead he sent me around to the hazmat bin at the back of the building.  His advice on the length of the finger pier at our slip was incorrect, so we backed in and tying up was a challenge, with no help and the cleats in the wrong places.  About an hour after we were finally set, Dick got a phone call from the marina to ask when we expected to arrive!

Sunset on our first night in Marathon

Dick went to the airport to collect the rental car.  On his return, his comment was, “What a crap place!”  After a drive the next day to explore the area and about 20 miles south, I had to agree.  We finished the excursion with a stop at West Marine for another cabin fan, and Publix for a few groceries. 

A huge stack of crab pots with floats

On our arrival back at the boat, we had a near tragedy.  As Dick was handing me the groceries from the cart, the cardboard handle on the box of beer broke, and the whole carton went splash! into the water.  Dick quickly jumped aboard and grabbed the boathook, then (prudently) handed me his phone before stepping down to the bottom of the swim platform.  Disaster was averted as the boathook brought the carton near enough to get hold of.  Plus, Dick did not, on this occasion, take an unplanned swim.  The whole episode was watched with great interest by the elderly couple on the sailing cat next to us.  In fact, the lady reached for and was ready with their boathook just as Dick completed the retrieval. I was not sure whether she was expecting to use her boathook to rescue the beer, or Dick.

Marathon appears to be a mixture of apparently nice hotel complexes, government offices, medical facilities, cheap eateries, and industrial units.  None are vacant or broken down, but the whole impression is one of ugly practicality with no thought to civic pride or beautification.  Only the government and hospital buildings have any lawns or plantings apart from the hotel complexes.  Boaters rush through Florida’s Panhandle and west coast with its charming towns and stunning beaches in order to get here and spend two months in a marina at double the dockage fees.  Go figure.

Dinner was at one of the highly rated local restaurants.  The starters were interesting and very tasty, if far too large for one person.  I have noticed lately that the price of appetizers is increasing to the point that it is pushing the entrees.  Probably because so many people share these days, and complain if the portion is not big enough for 2 or even 4 people.  I found the main course disappointing, although Dick’s duck was very good.  Mine was very much “home cooking” with mashed potatoes and gravy.  If I wanted home cooking, we would have it at home.  For a change, bread service and a side salad were included in the meals.

Crab Puffs at Barracuda Grill
Escargot and portabella mushrooms at Barracuda Grill
Dick enjoyed the duck at Barracuda Grill
Steak at Barracuda Grill

We did the “Keys” thing the next day, and just relaxed on the boat.  In the evening, we headed over to the Hilton resort for dinner.  The décor was, quite frankly, weird.  The gardens had huge bright blue balls as pots for palms and large shrubs.  The small, battery-operated table lights fall into the category of “what were they thinking?”.  The food, while better than the previous evening, had some odd ingredients and combinations, as if the chef was trying too hard to be avant garde.  Given the clientele eating at the other tables, mostly vacationing families, it was all very strange.

Table lights, best described as “unfortunate”
Faro Blanco Marina. The pelican does not care about the No Fishing sign!

In the morning, I noticed a rather oddly dressed young man on the sailing cat next to us.  He had not been there when the boat arrived.  He was wearing a Robin Hood hat, complete with feather.  Shortly, he reappeared with another man and the captain of the boat.  Apparently, one of the jib sails was stuck and could not unfurl.  The young Robin Hood climbed up to the top of the mast, and was able to fix a shackle that had become twisted.  He did not remove his hat.  He did the whole operation with great confidence, but the impression was rather spoiled when I heard him ask his colleague to take a picture of him at the top of the mast so he could show it to his Mum.

Robin Hood at the top of the mast

We went for a Sunday drive, north this time.  Miles and miles of nothing much except bridges linking keys that progressed to the 1960’s and stopped.  Eventually, we got as far as Islamorada, a slightly more salubrious island, but still very much a land that time forgot.  We had lunch at the highly rated and long-established Green Turtle Inn.  It was very busy, and the food was pretty good.  The bartender, a middle-aged lady, was dressed in a black t-shirt.  When she came around the bar, we could see that the rest of her ensemble was a brilliant blue net ballerina’s tutu, and light blue knee socks.

The Green Turtle at Islamorada

There were four Looper boats on the other dock that night, for a total of at least 6 in the marina, but no attempt was made to get together for docktails.  In fact, while we have received notice of several MTOA (Marina Trawler Owners Association) gatherings arranged in the last few weeks in Marathon, there has been nothing from Loopers, in spite of large numbers in town.  Just another example of how different things are since we began in 2017.

As we sat enjoying the sunset, we chatted with our slip neighbours, 3 friends on a break on a sailing cat, from Pensacola.  Later, the couple who owned the beautiful 75-foot Fleming that had arrived late in the marina, came by and we chatted.  They had just joined AGLCA and are planning to do the Loop (in a smaller boat) in 3 years when their children finish high school.  They are interested in power cats, so we enjoyed showing them Nine Lives and exchanging boating stories.  I can’t imagine that downsizing from a 75-foot yacht to a 44-foot catamaran is going to work for them, so I hope they find another option.

Another pretty sunset in Marathon

After a quiet day we joined Beth and Calvin and another Looper couple at the onsite restaurant for dinner.

We planned an early start, but it was nearly 8:30 before we were underway.  As we sorted out power cords, water hose, boarding ladder, and lines, we were eaten alive by no-see-ums.  One more reason never to return to the Keys!  In fact, that fairly brief experience has convinced both of us that we will forego the delights of the planned St Johns River side trip.  Although it is reportedly a wildlife paradise, even its most ardent fans warn that the mosquitoes and no-see-ums are terrible.  Thermocell and insect repellants can only do so much, and neither of us are willing to put up with small biting insects at the best of times.

We ran fast part of the way to Key Largo, then normal speed for the last hour.  We were at the fuel dock by 12:30, unfortunately, just missing the dockhand who had left for lunch.  We sat watching the boats coming and going from the fish market.  The channel leading to the marina and the fish market is both narrow and winding, and most boats make a securite call before entering the channel, as there is not enough room for larger boats to pass each other.  It is also quite shallow, although Nine Lives had no problem.  When we finally got to our slip, we were greeted by a manatee!  They really do look like a clay sculpture that is just being started.  We knew they like fresh water, so Dick got his water bottle and poured.  It seemed to be appreciated!

The narrow, and shallow, channel into the marina at Key Largo
A drink of water for our manatee visitor

We were next to a houseboat liveaboard.  They had at least 4 cats, each of whom felt it necessary to sit in a window and pretend not to look at us.  We spent a quiet evening with Dick’s great burgers for dinner.

One of the cats in the houseboat on the next slip, pretending not to watch us

We made an early start the next morning for a fairly long step to Fort Lauderdale. We began fast, getting to the Miami Ship Channel before noon. The weather was forecasted to kick up considerably in the afternoon, and, to be honest, travelling “outside” is very boring.  The only interest is watching for crab pots and adjusting for wakes as fast cruisers go by.  The forecast was correct, and we could hear a small craft warning broadcast by the Coast Guard.

Miami was fascinating, and since it was not a weekend, there were very few yahoo boaters about.  We only needed 1 bridge opening, and were lucky to get there just in time, as it opens on a half hourly schedule.  The rest of the bridges were high enough for Nine Lives to pass through the centre, although Dick had to lower the antennas for one of them.  We enjoyed overhearing a highly amusing dispute between a bridge tender and a powercat.  The lady wanted an opening, and the bridge tender said she was low enough to go through without an opening.  There is a posted $1000. fine for demanding an opening if you have not lowered antennas.  The discussion became heated, with the lady demanding “Just open the bridge!” and the attendant responding “We will see”.  Eventually, the bridge opened for a sailboat.  You can be sure that the other bridge tenders will have heard the discussion, noted the name of the boat, and will delay them as long as possible for every opening!

Miami, as we approach the ship channel
We passed the beautiful sailing cruise ship Sea Cloud Spirit. She will make her last cruise this year before having a refit to become a charter yacht.
One of the bridges with the sign promising a $1000 fine for asking for an unnecessary opening.

We arrived at the marina associated with the Hilton at Port Everglades by mid-afternoon.  By this time, it had become clear that Dick’s hope to tie up for 2 nights on the Riverwalk downtown was not going to work out, so he increased our stay at the Hilton from 1 to 3 nights.

Fort Lauderdale’s Port Everglades is a cruise ship terminal with nearly 4 million cruise ship passengers travelling through per year.  The city of Fort Lauderdale is known as the “Venice of America”, with 165 miles of inland waterways across the city.  It also considers itself the yachting capital of the world, with over 50,000 registered yachts and 100 marinas.  My thought is that if the many yachts of all sizes that are registered elsewhere (Caymans, Bermuda, Panama, etc) were included, the numbers would be a lot higher.

Port Everglades Cruise Ship Terminal

In the 1830’s there was a settlement of just 70 people, living along the New River.  An attack on one of the farms by a band of Seminoles resulted in all the farmers fleeing as far south as Key West, and the settlement was abandoned.  The area was essentially unpopulated until the 1890’s.  Completion of the Florida East Coast Railroad was a significant improvement, and the city began to be developed.  It was incorporated in 1911.  I am continually reminded of just how young this country really is, compared to Europe and Asia.  Our house in Yorkshire was built in the early 1800’s, years before much of this country was settled by the white man.

We walked to a nearby waterfront eatery, Boatyard Restaurant.  It was a huge venue, and noisy as so many Florida eateries seem to be.  Once again, we were seated beside a table with a loudmouth.  The food was good, and by the end of the meal we had heard all about the salesman’s exceptional security software, although I gather it still has a number of bugs that need to be worked out but they are releasing it anyway.

Grilled octopus at Boatyard Restaurant
Smoked fish dip at Boatyard Restaurant
Surf and turf, parmesan fries, and paella at Boatyard Restaurant
Key lime baked Alaska at Boatyard Restaurant

The weather continued to be unseasonably hot and humid.

Our favourite boat tracking app stopped working, for us and most other Loopers, following an update.  In typical tech-guy fashion, users were blamed for the problems they were having.  Instructions were given (and followed) with no resolution for 2 days.  Eventually the tech department admitted there was a problem and released another update.

We spent an interesting and enjoyable afternoon in Fort Lauderdale.  There is a hop-on-hop-off water taxi that takes you all over the city, and conveniently stops right outside the Hilton.  We started with the stop at the Las Olas shopping area and Riverwalk.  It was fun to look around the various art galleries, including the one where we bought our beautiful metal print that hangs in the salon on Nine Lives.  We also found some lovely and unusual salad servers made from shells and horn.  I’m going to have to start serving salads again!

A vending machine dispensing champagne instead of soft drinks in a Las Olas coffee shop

Next, we took the free, tiny water taxi that goes further up the river.  It was interesting to see that there were a number of vacant spaces where we could presumably have tied up.  However, since there is a reservation system (the one we could not access), there would be no way of knowing whether you would get kicked out of the space at some point.  Also, the dockage is on the far side of the river, so not particularly convenient for the shops and restaurants.  I would have had major concerns about security, although Dick would not have worried.  He never does.

We arrived very early for our dinner at an Italian restaurant.  The food was excellent.  It was interesting that after so many packed restaurants, this one was nearly empty, even at 6pm.  It was a nice change to be able to converse without shouting, although the selection of background music (I can only describe it as make-out music) was so intrusive that Dick asked if it could be turned down.

Branzino and lobster ravioli at It! Restaurant

We had a window table that offered great people watching.  The number of women walking their designer dogs by carrying them was fascinating.  Clearly, the concept of “exercise” is understood, but not for the dogs.  The next day we watched a man walking a much larger dog, some sort of doodle, by holding the leash up so that only the dog’s back legs were actually on the ground.  Of course, everyone has earbuds and is listening to music or talking on their phones.

After dinner, we got back onto the water taxi and took it all the way to the farthest stop and back.  Looking at the multi-million-dollar houses was interesting.  It would seem that $35 million will get you a nice waterfront property.  There are some really beautiful older mansions from the early 20th century, but a surprising number are bought purely for the lot, and are pulled down and a modern glass and concrete structure is put up.  One of these apparently cost $35 million to build, and then the owners parked their $35 million yacht in front, completely obscuring their view of the water.

A beautiful classic home in Fort Lauderdale
From left to right, an older single storey home, a modern mansion, and a now vacant lot about to begin construction, a common sight on the Fort Lauderdale waterways.

There are so many of these 100-foot plus yachts in the city.  I wonder how many of them even go out, or are they all dock queens?  Apparently, you can charter one, with crew and staff, for $345,000 per week.  One also wonders how many of these actually get chartered.

Coral Ridge Yacht Club, only owners with yachts over 60 feet in length need apply for membership.

As the sun set, we could see how many of the waterfront properties were occupied.  Fewer than half, although we thought that a higher percentage of the smaller homes that are a little farther out had lights on inside.

After a quiet day (Dick rode his bike to Fresh Market), we set off at 5:30 to have dinner at a nearby Indian restaurant.  First, we stopped at an International Wine and Food market that I had found on google.  We expected that they might have maybe 1 aisle of imported canned goods, and we hoped to find the tiny pickled sweet peppers that make a great addition to any cheese and charcuterie board.  What a treasure trove there was!  They had our pepper drops, but also an amazing variety of fascinating goods.  We have limited storage on the boat, but we still find space for a variety of interesting and unusual items.  I have never seen so many choices of pastry cups, as well as chocolate dessert cups in so many sizes.  They had balsamic pearls, which are a lovely addition to a composed salad, and also pearls of other flavours, including simple olive oil, garlic oil, and truffle oil. There was even raspberry, and we failed to resist buying that one as well as the balsamic.  There were also fridges and freezers full of unusual foods, but we had to limit ourselves to a couple of packages of charcuterie meats.

Special groceries

The evening continued to go well as we arrived at the Indian restaurant.  We don’t normally order starters in this type of restaurant, but we tried some crisp battered and fried prawns, and some spicy fried cauliflower, both of which were delicious.  Our main course dishes (lamb chops masala and shrimp rogan josh) were also excellent.  Only the dal (lentil stew) was a mistake.  It was tasty, but far too liquid for our preference.  After an amazing feast we waddled back to the boat and enjoyed a quiet evening.

Dal, lamb chops, and prawns with naan bread and steamed rice at Indian Harbor Restaurant

The next day we were only going a couple of miles, so we planned a late start for 11am.  As we were getting ready, 2 Sea Tow boats arrived to remove the sailboat in the slip beside us.  It would have been interesting to watch, but our departure certainly made everything easier for them.  Apparently, the sailboat was supposed to have left a week earlier (and presumably the owner had stopped paying for the slip).  It is interesting how quickly a marina is permitted to have a boat towed away, compared to how long it takes for a derelict boat at anchor to be allowed to be removed.

Our arrival at Bahia Mar Marina was not our best docking effort.  We were assigned a slip beside another boat, and between a strong wind (small craft warning for the area), and a tidal current, plus backing in, it was a bit of a shambles.  It was made a lot worse by a dockhand who was worse than clueless.  As they often do, he refused to cleat the midships line tight, so we drifted into the boat beside us.  Fortunately, the owners were not on board to notice when we nudged them, and no harm was done.

In the afternoon, a plane went past with a banner, XIARA. WILL YOU MARRY ME? (not sure why someone thought a period was required after the name).  Another plane advertised a place with a “full liquor bar” Saturdays and Sundays.  Interesting juxtaposition.  Next, we saw a panel truck with full LED screens on all sides advertising a nightlife establishment.  It was followed a few minutes later by another truck advertising medical screening.  The third one offered fruit juice, and the fourth suggested you try a local strip joint.

I noticed on the plan that our next stop was only one night, and with plans to eat on board.  When asked why, Dick answered that he just wants to get out of this “stupid rich” area.  Given what we have seen on the water and walking around, the adjective fits, however you interpret it.

We planned a mid-afternoon meal at Coconuts, a Fort Lauderdale institution, according to our water taxi guide the previous day.  Unfortunately, the time that the heavy rain and thunderstorms were supposed to stop kept moving later and later.  Eventually, we would have been fighting the crowds and standing in line, and with no certainty that we would not get wet on the walk back, so we gave up on the idea and stayed on board.

Loopers who had been in two previous marinas at the same time, but we had not met them, arrived in the middle of the heaviest storms.  They had planned to take a mooring ball, but all the floats on the pennants were missing. They were able to get a slip in the marina.  Later, they dropped by for a chat and to hear about Hilton Head Island.  We hope to coincide with them again as we head north.

We managed a fairly early start and enjoyed a delightful day travelling up the ICW (Intracoastal Waterway).  We loved looking at all the interesting houses.  We had to ask for openings for 6 of the bridges, but the timing worked very well, and we were never held up for more than a few minutes.

A bridge opens for us in Fort Lauderdale
An attractive bridge in Boynton Beach
Remember When, an Endeavour Skylounge in Boynton Beach. We met them in 2017 on the Alligator River in North Carolina, and again at the marina in Stock Island.

At Palm Beach, we passed a certain well-known mansion and exclusive golf club.  Fortunately, the owner was not in residence, as when he is, one of the bridges across the ICW has limited or no openings, so that “visiting dignitaries” are not impeded as they access Palm Beach.

We arrived at Palm Harbor Marina and had a somewhat tricky docking, due to maximum tidal current and a windy day.  Two dockhands showed up to help, but it was a bit chaotic.

Shortly after our arrival, a 62-foot Princess yacht arrived and backed into the slip beside us.  As he was arriving, an army of cleaners (four) came bustling down the dock with an amazing assortment of cleaning equipment.  Two hours later, they gathered up their paraphernalia and headed off, leaving a show-ready boat behind.

Dick had decided at the last minute that we would have dinner out after all.  There is a well-known Italian restaurant next to the marina (although the sheer size of the marina meant a ¼ mile walk!)  It was a great evening.  We loved the retro style of the huge venue, and, for a change, even though the place was full and with a line of hopeful diners waiting to be seated, it was not so noisy that you had to shout, you could actually have a normal conversation with your dinner companion.  I started with a delicious skewer of grilled shrimp, and Dick’s grilled calamari was also excellent.  The mushroom and pepperoni pizza I ordered was one of the 5 best I have ever eaten.  I usually eat half and take home half, but it was so amazing that only one slice remained for taking away.  Dick had a most interesting pasta dish with a ragu sauce, meatballs, and an surprising variety of different shapes of short pasta, all in the same dish.  Dessert was out of the question for me, but I enjoyed a chocolate laced cappuccino, while Dick rounded out his meal with a scoop of excellent gelato.

Elizabetta’s Ristorante decor
Pizza and pasta at Elizabetta’s Ristorante

We were lucky to fit the excursion in between thunderstorms.  The rain began again just minutes after our return.  On a hot and humid evening, the last thing you want to do is wear waterproof jackets!  Dick has just seen a news item that temperatures in Florida are approaching record highs in advance of a cold front expected next week.  Bring on the cold I say!

One would think that a marina designed for 60-foot yachts up to mega-yachts would be easy for a little (!!) 44-footer to get into and out of.  Not so.  Basically, the cleats are all in the wrong places, making it all but impossible to close-tie for the initial arrival and for departure.

I noticed that this marina has far more security than we have ever seen before.  There is a guard at the parking lot gate.  There are the expected key card gates for each dock, but also 24-hour roving security guards.  As we arrived, I could see a police boat patrolling up and down the area.  Clearly, the rich are different.  The slips in the marina are smallest at the north end, and each dock has larger slips as you move south.  The most distant yachts in the picture will be the largest.  I looked it up, and the suggestion is that a superyacht is over 100 feet in length, and a mega-yacht will exceed 200 feet.  We have seen a great many superyachts in the last couple of weeks, and quite a few mega-yachts.  They are often flying a foreign flag and show a hailing port of Georgetown (Cayman Islands) or elsewhere.  There will need to be special permits, and probably they will have to leave the USA after a certain amount of time, and can then return, but when you are wealthy enough to own and crew a mega-yacht, you can easily send it to another destination, without having to go yourself, as it will have full-time crew.

Palm Harbor Marina in West Palm Beach. The yacht beside Nine Lives in the second row is 62 feet long. Superyachts and mega-yachts in the back rows.

In the morning, the bridge opened for one of the biggest sailing cats I have ever seen.  She had a pilot boat in front, with a red flashing light, much as a wide load has an escort on the highway.

We congratulated ourselves on getting an early start, but then we had to hold up and wait while a cargo ship arrived from the Lake Worth Inlet.  It was fascinating to watch.  He turned completely around in the channel and backed into the wharf.  Nearby is a beautiful old property that Florida Power and Light has turned into a manatee eco-discovery centre.  A great use of a lovely building that, being next to a gas-fired power plant, would otherwise be uninhabitable.

A freighter turned fully around to back into the slip (left side of the image) in the ICW channel at Lake Worth Inlet.
Manatee Discovery Center

We enjoyed passing Jupiter Island, with its large lots, and beautifully landscaped and secluded houses.  Interesting, while many of the houses are large, they do not seem to be the sprawling mansions that we saw further south.  This is probably an area that we would like to live in (except for having to live in Florida).  There is also the minor detail that some of the wealthiest individuals in the United States make Jupiter Island their home, so it is unlikely we could come close to affording it!  Tiger Woods’ estate is there, but not visible from the ICW.  Other notable residents include several other well-known golfers, Serena Williams, Celene Dion, Alan Jackson, and various members of the Bush family.  On second thought, while we love the look of the properties, we would most certainly not fit in with that community!  North of Jupiter, the properties are more modest, with fewer large yachts, although there is evidence that even there, smaller homes have been torn down to make room for big mansions.

Beautiful homes on Jupiter Island
More beautiful homes on Jupiter Island
This is not the first time we have noticed that the boat is as big as the house. No view from the expensive waterfront property.
The golf course on Jupiter Island
Historic lighthouse at Jupiter Inlet
Osprey on the nest in the St Lucie River. Note that the speed limit in the narrow, shallow, channel is 25 mph. There are many shoals, and a big wake could easily knock you out of the channel.

Travelling up the wide and very shallow St Lucie River was interesting, can’t imagine what it would be like on a weekend as fast boats go whipping by at speed.  The voyage finished with an exciting set of bridges.  Heading west, you first pass under the highway bridge, with a fairly narrow space between the pylons.  Then there is a relatively small basin, that was already full of smaller boats and one sportfish, waiting for the railway bridge to go up.  This track used to serve only freight, and the bridge was up most of the time.  With the introduction of the Brightline, an east coast Florida passenger service, with about 18 trains per day, this bridge is now down more often than not.  Behind the rail bridge is a road bridge, with a bridge tender, that has to be raised for all but the smallest boats.  Fortunately, the bridge tender was very clued in, and the passage through the two bridges was smooth for us.  Behind us was a huge 80-foot power cat, and the bridge tender did a great job, holding up the oncoming boat traffic to give him room to get through the narrow openings.

Looking back at the 3 bridges at Stuart. Note how little space there is for the big cat to get through the highway bridge pylons, even less at the railway bridge!

We are again with the big boys in a huge marina, but not quite as enormous as our slip neighbours of the previous few stops.  We chatted briefly with the owner of a big Hatteras, after I noticed that he was flying a burgee that depicted a lighthouse that looks remarkably like the one in Harbour Town, Hilton Head.  He confirmed that it is, and told us that the boat is generally in Shelter Cove most summers.  We agreed how much we like Hilton Head, particularly the miles of safe bike paths! 

Dinner was a mixed bag.  We started with the best spinach, crab, and artichoke dip we have ever tasted.  I wanted to order some to take away and keep in the freezer, but Dick vetoed the idea.  The main courses were disappointing, basically, they lacked flavour and particularly salt.  We realized too late that we should have taken our slip neighbour’s advice and ordered sushi.

After dinner we strolled around the charming town.  There are lots of little boutiques and restaurants.  However, most of the boutiques are beachwear type ladies’ shops, and the couple of art galleries were just not interesting enough to walk over there in the heat and humidity when they would be open.  Instead, we will stick with Plan A, and Dick will ride his bike for groceries and other errands while I do a minimal laundry and finish this issue of Nine Lives Voyages.  The weather is going to continue to be unseasonably hot and humid, getting warmer over the next week.  The humidity is at 90%.

Stuart calls itself the Sailfish Capital of the World
Downtown Stuart
Nine Lives Voyages during the month of March

March 6th to 18th, 2025: Sanibel Island to Stock Island

Wednesday the 6th was a busy, social day.  Early in the morning, I met our slip neighbour just as the harbourmaster delivered fresh, hot, blueberry muffins to our boat.  Our neighbour had just taken possession of a 15-year-old Back Cove, and was preparing to take it across Florida and then north to his home in Cape Cod, after some much needed work in a couple of boatyards along the way.  Dick took MOKE for a final run to stock up on heavy grocery items, while I worked on getting the next issue of the blog completed and published.

Sanibel, the canal at sunset

Local Harbor Hosts Mike and Deb came over from Fort Meyers and we had a pleasant lunch at the onsite restaurant.  Later in the afternoon, we enjoyed a great reunion with Jim and Marilyn, who we met in 2021 on Lake Michigan.  We all tucked into cheese and sausage and exchanged stories of our various boating experiences, as well as interesting international business travel stories.

A Snowy Egret visits Nine Lives

Very high winds and waves were forecast for the next day, so we stayed put.  It was a good day for boat chores.  In the afternoon, we took a walk to have a look at the beach – we were very glad we weren’t out in that weather!

The seas were rough, so we stayed put!
A few of the fun mailboxes in front of Sanibel homes

Our voyage to Naples was straightforward, with relatively smooth seas, although unfortunately in a direction that gave us a certain amount of corkscrew motion.  Not enough to require medication or wrist bands, but I certainly was not going down into the cabin in those conditions.

Naples is reached by turning into a very narrow and shallow channel with a lot of shoaling.  We could see breakers on one side of us, and an optimistic surfer waiting his chance.  I can’t imagine a more dangerous place to surf, one miscalculation could put you right into the path of an oncoming boat.  Once you are through the cut, the waterway opens up and winds north for several miles.  The shores are lined with beautiful homes.  Here again, the speed limit in the channel is 30mph, and outside is a no wake zone.  This is to protect the manatees, but it makes things difficult for slower boaters, as they are subject to wakes they can’t avoid or turn into.

Beautiful waterfront homes in Naples

On arrival at the city marina, we went straight to the fuel dock for a pump out.  Staff were efficient, answering the radio when we called, and helping to tie up.  I would not call them friendly, as some reviewers have experienced, and as often happens, the man who took the midships line refused to cleat it tight, making it difficult for Dick to bring the stern in. Our overnight dockage was just along the dock, but it required slotting between two large sportfish boats, so Dick had to go out, turn around, and then maneuver back in.  This time the dock hand was more understanding of how Nine Lives ties up, having seen what is needed.

Our spot on the outside dock meant some motion from passing boats, but it was worth it to be able to watch the traffic.  There is no security in the marina, and it seems to be a “thing” to walk around the docks and look at the boats.  One man was explaining, quite loudly, to his family that we obviously bring Nine Lives from Hilton Head and stay for the winter.  When he saw me looking, he asked how long it had taken us to get to Naples.  I was amused at the look on his face when I told him, 8 years!  Explanations were then offered, but it’s always fun to be able to correct mansplaining.  There must have been at least 50 people wandering around and commenting on the various craft.  I have never seen so many tourist boats, all doing a roaring trade.  There were lots of tiny floating tiki bars with just 4 or 5 people sitting on bar stools while the vessel puttered around the harbour.  There were the usual dolphin watch pontoon boats, also at least 2 very large sailing cats as well as monohull sailing boats heading out for cruises in the Gulf.  There were also the expected sport fishing boats, and a large dinner cruising yacht.

Naples City Dock on a misty morning before the traffic starts

Dick took time to explore the town, finding a couple of very interesting shopping precincts that we would plan to return to later with a rental car.  In the evening, we walked to the nearby Bleu Provence, another outstanding French restaurant.  Service was excellent, and the food was delicious.  Once again, the noise was incredible, it seems to be the main downside of dining in Florida.  Dick commented that it has been our luck lately to be seated at a table next to one with a particularly loud man who holds forth at length on topics that are of zero interest to nearby diners.

Bleu Provence pork shank
Bleu Provence seabass
Bleu Provence desserts, profiteroles and a crepe

We didn’t have far to go to Marco Island, so we left at 11am.  It should have been an enjoyable trip through the Naples channel, looking at all the beautiful houses.  Sadly, because of the 30mph speed limit and the huge number of Saturday boaters, it was just an unpleasant half hour of being thrown around by wakes.  Not the fault of the boaters, they are doing the speed limit that they are allowed, and looking forward to getting out onto the Gulf.  Once we got out there, it was unpleasant in a whole different way.  Long, rolling waves on the bow meant that wristbands were required, and I was very unhappy.  The official trip planner, when questioned, indicated that the sea state was not at all as predicted.  Fortunately, it wasn’t a long trip, and once we were into the channel for Marco Island everything calmed down.  All the waterways around the Island are strictly minimum wake or no wake, so travel is much more enjoyable.

Naples, busy channel

We arrived at our marina, and our slip neighbour offered to catch our lines.  For a change, when asked to cleat the midship line tight, he did!  Docking was very quick and easy with such great help.  Dick checked in with the dockmaster, and then walked over to the other marina on the bay, hoping that one of the two would have had a cancellation and we would be able to avoid some or all of the expected nights at anchor.  No luck.

In the evening, we walked to a nearby steakhouse.  They have very good reviews, but sadly, our experience did not live up to expectations.  My steak was charred on the outside, and the asparagus was yellow and bitter, should never have left the kitchen.  The dessert we shared looked gorgeous, but it did not taste very good and neither of us wanted to finish it.  It was a very pricey meal for what it was.

Steakhouse dessert, attractive, but only the strawberry tasted good!

Next morning, Dick checked again to see if we could remain in the marina.  He was offered an 18-foot-wide slip, and thought we might just squeeze into it (one thinks about a large lady and a corset). At the waterline, we are less than our 18’8” width at the widest point, our rub rail.  We untied and made the attempt, but sadly, we couldn’t fit as the dock was just that bit higher than we had hoped.  Instead, we anchored just outside the marina, between 2 sailboats as planned.  We spent an interesting afternoon watching boats to-ing and fro-ing.  There was a small cruise ship in port (100 passengers).  Some of the passengers were taken on a dolphin cruise, and their boat got into trouble and had to be rescued and towed back by Sea Tow.  An interesting experience for the passengers, if not quite what they were expecting.

Sea Tow rescues the dolphin watching tour boat
American Glory leaves port in the evening

After a quiet night, we re-recorded the podcast we had done earlier for AGLCA.  The topic is “Segment Looping”, that is, doing the great Loop in segments rather than all at once as is more usual.  We were asked about how we chose our boat, how we decided on the length of the segments, where we put the boat when we were not aboard, and of course, the advantages and disadvantages of segment looping. 

We dropped the dinghy, and Dick set off to collect the rental car he had arranged.  The weather in the afternoon went from interesting to exciting.  We started with heavy rain and some rumbling thunder.  After the rain stopped, the wind really came up and we began to swing from side to side.  There was a small craft warning for the entire west coast of Florida.  The wind howled, and we swung faster through 180 degrees.  Earlier, Dick had chatted with the couple on the sailboat anchored next to us.  They were having a bad week.  They had gone out in rough weather, and were lifted by a big wave and slammed down on something, debris, sand bar, possibly the broken marker off the Marco Island Channel?  The impact was enough to bend their floorboards, so they had concerns that there was serious damage to their hull.  A haul-out was scheduled for later in the week, and meanwhile, they were anchoring while they waited for their appointment.  Next piece of bad luck, their dinghy motor died.  Dick gave Bill his card, and offered a ride if needed to shore the next day, to save them having to row.

A couple of hours later, the phone rang, it was Bill to say that their dinghy had broken free and was floating away.  Fortunately, it was floating into one of the canals rather than out into the bay.  Dick quickly donned life vest and shoes, and headed out.  He managed to capture the runaway, not without some challenge, as it had slid under the only open dock on the canal.  He returned it to the sailboat, and in due course it was pulled up onto its davits, instead of just being tied.  Everyone then settled back to what they were doing, and listened to the wind howl.

Dick rescues the neighbour’s dinghy
Dick’s dinghy delivery service!

The afternoon excitement was not over by any means.  I looked over at our sailboat friends, and realized they were dragging their anchor.  As I tried to work out the best way to get their attention, they noticed the situation, and started their engines.  They began the process of resetting their anchor.  Dick decided to check ours, and saw that one of the lines of the bridle had come off.  Life vest, headsets, start engines, and we began a little resetting of our own.  It didn’t take long, and once we were set again, we poured well-deserved adult beverages and sat watching.

A small trawler that had come into the bay, and anchored behind us, decided to relocate for the second time that day.  Meanwhile, our sailboat friends seemed to be set, and put on their snubber (this is a line that functions as our bridle does, taking the weight of the anchor chain off the anchor roller).  Within a few minutes they were in motion again, and trying to get the anchor to set.  We suspect a couple of issues.  The type of anchor they have does not appear to swivel like ours, so as the boat swings back and forth it is less likely to remain set.  We also suspect that they are backing down too hard and too soon, and then not putting out enough rode (that’s the chain, rope, or combination of the two that goes between the anchor and the boat).  Dick and I always put out at least 7:1, that is, 7 times the depth from the bridle attachment points.  We have seen advice for 5:1, or even 3:1, but 7:1 was what we were taught for an overnight stop.  Ultimately, they were unable to get their anchor to hold, but meanwhile, Dick left a message to tell them about the vacant slip we couldn’t fit into, or the alternative of tying up at the fuel dock, since it was now after hours.  They chose to head for the fuel dock.

Just to finish their rather sad story, Bill let us know later that after the haulout and inspection by the insurance adjuster, it is certain that their beautiful Oceanis 45 will be written off, as it cannot be repaired.  They are selling everything portable and fortunately had an “agreed value” insurance policy, so they will get back what they paid for the boat.  An object lesson, reminding all of us not to go out in conditions that are worse than we should be in.

Eventually, the chop subsided, but the wind was still high, so Dick had to cook the burgers on the frying pan in the galley.  The wind would have blown out the flame under the grill!  As it happens, the burgers were delicious, and perfectly cooked, and in my opinion, we should always do them in the frying pan in future.

Tuesday turned out to be a busy and interesting day.  After a leisurely start, we got into the dinghy and motored over to the fuel dock, which doubles as a dinghy dock.  There is a $10 plus tax charge, which is pretty unusual, although it does allow in/out privileges.  The biggest issue is that after 6pm, you are supposed to have left, because the dock is behind the security gates and they do not provide the code to dinghy owners.  Fortunately for our plans, we already knew the code, although we kept that quiet and told the cashier that we had friends in the marina who would let us in.

Our first stop was a high-end shopping center at another marina.  Dick’s sources for marina selection had suggested that it was not suitable for boats of our size, and that the access was too shallow, so he had not tried to get a reservation there.  Having seen 2 Looper boats in there this week, we could have fit.

The shops were disappointing, with the exception of a jewellery shop that offered unique pieces of shells and marine glass, set in silver.  We would have bought something there, but the saleslady was unable to help us while a couple dithered over their purchase.  After a very long wait, we gave up.

Next, we drove to the end of the island, marvelling at the sheer number of high-rise condo buildings.  Assuming that each unit has one vehicle, the traffic jams must be horrendous, and we now know why the restaurants at that end of the island are fully booked.

We parked in another shopping centre that happened to have a branch of my favourite ladies’ shop, as well as being the location of our (early) dinner reservation.  Having bought two nice things at Chico’s, I was delighted to discover that there were more shops with very unusual, and flattering, clothes that just had to be added to my wardrobe.  Dick can occasionally be a good shopping buddy, and this was one of those rare times.  He selected several garments that subsequently found their way into shopping bags.  Exhausted by our efforts, we fortified ourselves with ice cream before heading out for some grocery shopping.  It was late enough by the time we finished that we decided not to return to the boat, instead we went directly to the restaurant.

Da Vinci’s is a huge venue, that was completely filled by shortly after 5pm.  Many of the diners appeared to be family groups, grandma and grandpa, parents, and grandchildren on vacation.  Dinner was excellent, and service was also very good.  It just shows that having enough staff makes a big difference to success, especially in restaurants that cater to families and vacationers.

Da Vinci’s ravioli trio
Da Vinci’s osso bucco
Da Vinci’s desserts, Napoleon and a Spanish coffee

Returning to Nine Lives was accomplished without drama, and we had a very peaceful night.  We suspect the anchor had dragged a small amount with tide changes, but it always dug in again and we remained within the circle I set for the anchor alarms.

Nine Lives at anchor in Factory Bay

The next morning we were fascinated watching TowBoatUS retrieve the derelict sailboat that had been anchored beside us.  Derelict boats left at anchor are a huge problem in southern US, especially in Florida.  Wealthy homeowners don’t want to have to look at deteriorating vessels outside their expensive properties.  We find this completely understandable.  The problem comes when communities and counties try a shotgun approach and put forward legislative bills to forbid anchoring entirely.  There are already laws and procedures in place to deal with the situation, but instead of following them, a draconian approach is proposed again and again in the form of new and ever more restrictive laws.  Concerned boating organizations do their best to counter the proposals but are not always successful.  We were happy to see the derelict retrieval, as it shows that measures can be taken to handle the problem.  It took less than an hour from the time the towing company came out to dropping the derelict at the dock and heading out on another job.

TowBoatUS retrieves a derelict sailboat

We were able to get into our slip across the bay a little early.  The anchor took a while to come loose from the mud – three days of wind and fetch with almost continual swinging back and forth meant it was well dug in.

Two Endeavourcats at Factory Bay Marina. Nine Lives is the further of the two.

As soon as Dick had retrieved the rented vehicle, we set off for Naples.  Another successful shopping day!  I said to Dick, we have made up in just 2 days for 3 years of scarce shopping on the inland rivers.  This extravaganza was a little more even, 2 shirts for Dick, a necklace and an outfit for me, and a very nice silk flower arrangement for the condo.

Naples
Naples

Next stop was Bha! Bha!, a Persian restaurant.  The food was beautifully presented and absolutely delicious.  I started with gravlax, while Dick had lamb meatballs.  His main course was the Persian chef’s interpretation of paella, which he loved.  I had a wonderful dish of beef tenderloin pieces with tomatoes, eggplant, and red peppers in a spicy sauce.  The desserts were also beautifully presented, but sadly they were too sweet for our taste.

Bha! Bha! Persian Restaurant gravlax and lamb meatballs to start
Bha! Bha! paella
Bha! Bha! beef tenderloin
Bha! Bha! beautiful, but very sweet desserts

On our travels to and from Naples, there was a road sign warning about panthers crossing.  I would have loved to have seen a panther.  Instead, I saw two wild pigs foraging along the verges. I suppose they would make a good lunch for a panther…

Naples

The next day was another full day.  We returned to Naples, to the second upscale shopping precinct that Dick had scouted earlier in the week.  We found a couple of very interesting, eclectic boutiques with things for the home.  The clothing shops were less interesting, probably just as well!  Lunch was at Alberto’s, an Italian restaurant.  We chose the cauliflower soup to start, which was delicious.  We both ordered salads, Dick’s with mixed seafood, and mine with lobster and shrimp.  They were excellent.  Desserts were interesting.  Dick enjoyed a parfait made with limoncello, and I ordered Grand Marnier crème brulee.  It was a bit startling, as it arrived with 5” of flames creating the sugar crust.  I can’t remember a dish being delivered on fire before.

Pizzas on display in a window
Seafood salads at Alberto’s
Limoncello dessert at Alberto’s

We returned to Marco Island, and after Dick returned the rental car, we spent a quiet evening.  We hoped to have an evening drink with our slip neighbours, fellow Loopers, but it didn’t work out, so we made plans to get together in Key West.

It was an early start for our second Gulf crossing.  This one would be daylight only, with plans to shorten the duration by running fast.  We ran the whole way at about 85% of WOT (wide open throttle, that is, the fastest the engines can go), giving us between 13 and 15 knots.  This was partly for comfort, but also to make sure that a prolonged journey at this speed was fine for the engines.  One unexpected challenge was the crab pots.  We did not expect them so far off shore and in water depths of 50 feet.  The pots are marked by floats, each about 6” to 8” in diameter.  Here they were mostly in groups of 3, but they were still very difficult to see.  They bob up and down in the waves, and between the sun glinting on the water and the small whitecaps, they were practically invisible.  Dick’s chair is further forward than mine, and of course he is taller, and with the bow slightly elevated at the speed we were travelling, I had no hope of seeing them except through the side window.  By then they are pretty close for Dick to find the next in the line and maneuver around it.  These crab pot floats are not something you want to just run over.  If you cut the line or damage the float, you are hurting the fisherman’s livelihood.  Also, you risk damage to your hull and running gear.  Get the line wrapped around the prop and you are instantly dead in the water.

Nine Lives leaves Factory Bay at dawn
Nine Lives speeds up and makes a rooster tail!
Crab pots are hard to see!

We arrived at the marina in Key West by 3pm.  The basin is huge, but there are 4 separate marinas, and it is both crowded and higgledy piggledy.  Nine Lives was salt encrusted after her fast run, so Dick’s first order of business was a washdown of all the decks, railings, and windows.

In the evening, we joined fellow Loopers Beth and Calvin for dinner at a local steakhouse.  The food was very good, as was the service, and they were great company.  Their boat was behind us in Marco Island, and they made the same crossing a couple of hours after us.

We set out to explore Key West the next morning.  Dick booked 2 days for the hop-on-hop-off trolley tour, so we began by taking the full 90-minute round-trip tour of the island.

Key West Mallory Square
Key West Old City Hall
Shotgun House in Key West. The front and back doors are in line, for ventilation.

The Saturday before St Patrick’s Day is a big celebration in Key West, so students on spring break, cruise ship passengers, and hundreds of other tourists wandered the streets, in and out of the many bars, and generally enjoyed a raucous good time.  Crowds and drunks are never my thing, so I was reminded of being told by friends that you either love it or hate it when speaking of Key West.  I was well on the way to the latter until after dinner, as we walked back to the boat along quiet, leafy streets of gracious old houses with lovely tropical gardens. 

Key West celebrates St Patrick’s Day with enthusiasm
A St Patrick’s Day display of rubber duckies
Taking a break from celebrating

There were some interesting stories on the trolley tour.  One must always assume part fantasy, I have heard the most outrageous lies told by tour guides!

One story goes that in the mid 20th century, the island was populated by the navy and the shrimp fishermen.  These groups hated each other, but there was only one bar on the island at the time, so they found themselves drinking together after hard days at sea.  The bar, The Red Doors Saloon, was also known as “The Bucket of Blood”.  Fights broke out regularly, and brawling was a way of life.  Apparently, when you arrived at the bar, you were searched for weapons before being allowed to enter the premises.  If you didn’t have one, they gave you one – just to ensure that everyone had an equal chance. One can look up the true story.  Research shows that the building dates from 1868, and was at various times, a cigar factory, a ship’s chandlery, a grocery and hardware store, and a bar.  It was always a shrimper’s bar, and its reputation as a place of beatings, stabbings, assaults, and even quiet murders was well earned.  By 1972, the regulars had moved on and the bar was no longer viable and closed its doors.  Today it is an upscale lady’s boutique. There is another story about this building’s colourful history.  At one time, the upstairs was used as a bordello.  When the building was renovated, inside one of the upstairs walls were found a great many mens’ wallets.  Apparently, the ladies of the evening would rob their patrons and toss the empty wallets into a cavity in the wall.  The tour guide commented that given the clothing sold today in this shop, men are still leaving without the contents of their wallets.

Red Doors Saloon, or The Bucket of Blood, today a more genteel ladies shop.

In the 19th century, many Cubans came to the island to avoid troubles in their own country.  They brought with them their culture and cuisine, and also their chickens.  These ran loose, and inevitably multiplied.  Early in the morning, while I sat in the cockpit enjoying coffee, I could hear roosters crowing all over town.  I imagine that would not help much with the inevitable morning-after hangovers suffered by the St Patrick’s Day revelers. The chickens are feral, and are considered a nuisance by residents, but they are an important part of the island’s history and are now protected.

Chicken family

The southernmost part of USA is supposedly on the south side of the island.  There is a marker to designate the spot, and it is considered obligatory for visitors to have their picture taken in front of the large painted concrete buoy.  The queue was a block long.  We decided to pass on that particular experience.  In fact, the marker is not at the southernmost point of the US, it’s not even the southernmost point of Key West.  It is also not the remains of the Key West lighthouse that was wrecked in a hurricane.  It was set up as a tourist attraction in 1983 by the city.

Southernmost marker (picture snapped between tourists, the queue was a block long).
Southernmost House. It has only one bedroom. The owners loved to entertain, and much of the house is a ballroom, but guests slept in one of three other houses nearby, because the owners did not want their company overnight.

When the navy first arrived, with the mission to clear out the pirates in the Caribbean, Key West was a one mile square island.  The navy needed more space, so they started dredging, using the coral they dug to fill in the wetlands and increase the size of the island.  By the time it had grown to 4 miles square, it became clear that they were dredging faster than the coral could renew, and doing irreparable damage to the only coral reef in United States waters.  The expansion stopped, and that end of the island is called “New Town”, as distinguished from “Old Town”, the site of the original settlement.

Sloppy Joe’s Bar officially opened in 1933, the day that Prohibition was repealed.  In fact, the island was full of speakeasies, the Island being a bastion of free-thinkers who considered that Prohibition was an amusing exercise dreamed up by the government.  It was Ernest Hemmingway’s favourite bar, and while it originally had several other names, Sloppy Joe’s was the one that stuck.

Sloppy Joe’s, Hemmingway’s favourite bar. Note the guy on a bicycle wearing a green beard for St Patrick’s Day.

Dinner was at Café Marquesa, a beautiful, elegant restaurant that is part of a very upscale hotel, spread over several historic homes.  The owner (manager?) met every guest as they entered, and checked back with them during the meal to make sure everything was as expected.  The restaurant offers what is described as “gourmet coastal cuisine.”  The meal was excellent, starting with an interesting amuse bouche, a small beignet, filled with cotija cheese, resting on a lightly spicy chili sauce.  The courses and portions were designed to put together a 4-course meal, so Dick enjoyed what was very similar to a tasting menu.  I decided to try the salad to begin, and Dick had she crab soup.  After a small pasta dish with crawfish tails, Dick’s main course was duck breast, while I had filet mignon Oscar, topped with a small crab cake and served on a perfectly executed roesti potato cake.  We shared a dessert trio.

Cafe Marquesa amuse bouche
Cafe Marquesa she crab soup
Cafe Marquesa duck breast
Cafe Marquesa filet mignon Oscar
Dessert trio at Cafe Marquesa

As we walked back along the beautiful streets of the residential part of the old town, we saw a hen shepherding her chicks across the road, watched by an interested golden retriever, fortunately well secured on his leash.

Why did the chicken cross the road?

We sat in the cockpit and enjoyed a nightcap.  Clearly, the Key West spirit is contagious, because we decided a second glass was called for, and we stayed up long past Looper midnight!

We set off the next day to repeat the trolley tour – different guide, different stories, and sitting on the opposite side to get different pictures.

Green Iguana
Tarpon
The tarpon and the pelicans are waiting for the guy in the red shirt to toss them the scraps as he cleans the fish caught that day.

From my perspective, we probably couldn’t have chosen a worse week to be there.  It was hot – between temperatures over 80F and high humidity, it felt like 90F, and the sun beat down on the concrete sidewalks.  The St Patrick’s celebration and spring break combined to create my most disliked scenario, crowds and drunks.  The next week might have been a perfect time, cooler, quieter, but we are not there then.

The tour driver had a great sense of humour, but he was clearly hungover and did not have as many interesting stories as the previous day.  Afterwards, we did the Key West thing, and repaired to a bar for tropical beverages.

Better Than Sex, a dessert only restaurant
Mile Zero on US Highway 1
Pause for a tropical beverage
A foolish tourist tries to feed a pelican

Our dinner plans were for a late meal at Hot Tin Roof, having reserved one of the coveted outside tables.  It was still hot and muggy, and on arrival we realized that the outside tables are on a balcony overlooking a popular bar with live music, all very loud!  We were able to get a table inside instead.  The meal started with delicious and unusual garlic toasts with Manchego butter.  Dick’s choices for the meal were good, but I found that my food was overwhelmed by the sauces.  The key lime pie for dessert made up for everything.  It was delicious and nothing like what we have had before.

Key Lime Pie at Hot Tin Roof

We were not able to stay longer in the marina in Key West because they had a previous booking, and we don’t fit into the slips that were vacant.  Dick booked 3 nights at Perry Hotel Marina on Stock Island, which is across the bridge from Key West.  It would take just an hour, especially if we ran fast, to get there from Key West.  We knew that conditions would be bad.  The wind was howling.  Calvin helped us untie, if he hadn’t been there, we would have had trouble.  Dick had spoken with a couple of fishing boat captains, who confirmed his expectation that the worst would be just outside the harbour, with the wind coming from the north and the waves directly on the beam.  Once in the lee of Fleming Key, it would be better, and then as soon as we rounded the point and were on the south side of Key West we would have greater protection from the wind.

The “adventure” unfolded pretty much as predicted.  Dick was pleased with the way Nine Lives handled the conditions, although he commented that we have never had the waves splash the roof of the cockpit before.  Later, after we were safely tied up, the Coast Guard issued a small craft warning for the Florida Keys (by definition, Nine Lives is a small craft).  The winds were predicted to get worse through the day, hence our 8:30am departure in 25 knot winds.  On arrival, I felt that a large whiskey was required, but given that it was not even 10am, I settled for coffee.

We travelled through part of Hawk Channel, the passage that connects the Atlantic Ocean with the Gulf.  The Florida Reef Tract, the only living coral barrier reef in the continental USA, lies along the channel and helps to protect the Keys (and us) from heavy surf.  Pink shrimp are caught by shrimpers anchoring between the reef and the shore.  These shrimp are nocturnal, that is, they move around at night, and bury themselves in the sand and mud on the bottom during the day.  The story goes that they were discovered by accident, when a shrimp boat captain left his nets down in the water overnight, and when they were lifted in the morning, they were full of a new species of shrimp.  A nice story.  As we made our way along the south shore of Key West, we could see the fishing boats anchored, with their nets out but not down in the water.  One presumes that they had already lifted the nets and were processing the catch.

Shrimp boats on the horizon as we make our way to Stock Island
Shrimp boat, anchored. Note the nets are out of the water.

In the harbour we saw a saildrone, a very interesting unmanned vessel that Dick had read is being used by the Navy and by NOAA.  The Saildrone website is very interesting, these vessels can be used for infrastructure on oceans (think undersea cables), offshore energy surveys and development, ocean monitoring and climate science, and of course national security and defence.

A Saildrone

We arrived at the Perry Hotel and Marina, quite relieved that we were there as planned and without extra drama.  It is a nice facility, with many features including swimming pool, fitness center, onsite restaurant and a bar with live music nightly, laundry, bath house, captains lounge, etc etc.  They even have an hourly shuttle to Key West Old Town, that runs until 10pm, so all of the restaurants of Key West are easily accessible.  We saw as we came in that there was an Endeavour Trawlercat Skylounge called Remember When.  The name was familiar, Dick thought we had met them on the Alligator River in North Carolina in 2017.  When we looked at our filed boat cards, there was their card, and Dick was quite right.  He chatted with them later, and they remembered us too.

Hosing off the salt after a rough passage

We are planning a quiet few days here before leaving for Marathon.  A good time for laundry and boat chores, and a rest from the hustle and bustle of Key West.

February 18th to March 5th, 2025: St Petersburg to Sanibel

Our trip across Tampa Bay to St Petersburg was uneventful and far more pleasant that the previous crossing.  We encountered a huge tow that took up the entire shipping channel, but there was plenty of water depth in the Bay, so we simply moved out of the way (the law of gross tonnage trumps all questions of right of way!)  As we neared St Petersburg, we saw several groups of dinghy sailboats, some racing, some obviously practicing their turns, but they were well off the channel.

Dinghy racing on Tampa Bay
Approaching St Petersburg

The marina is in the centre of downtown St Petersburg, a huge facility that occupies 3 large basins.  High rises line the waterfront, and there is a great choice of restaurants of all styles and price points within easy walking distance.

The marina is very well run.  The dockmaster called in the morning to confirm our arrival time, our slip assignment, and to make sure we had all the information we needed.  This is very unusual, Dick normally has to phone to confirm and ask the pertinent questions.  When we arrived at the pump out dock, they were ready to help tie up, and while we pumped out, the dockmaster went to our slip across the basin so he was waiting to catch our lines.

The facility is still recovering from the hurricanes, and their main building was destroyed, but they have adapted well and the dockmaster had all the paperwork and key cards ready to hand us, rather than making Dick walk the ¾ mile each way to the temporary office.  The docks are wide, sturdy concrete with good pilings, but as they are fixed rather than floating, it is necessary to take the tide into account when tying up.  The dockmaster warned us that there “is a pretty good tide here”, telling us that the change is about 2 feet.  We chuckled and told him that we deal with 9-foot tides in our home waters.  In fact, we always tie up with spring lines and lines across that can account for change in water levels, even on rivers.  Many Loopers whose boating experience does not include tidal waters have to learn some new skills and procedures when they arrive in the Gulf.

Our friend Kim was unable to meet us for dinner as planned, so we cancelled our reservation at a rather trendy eatery at the end of the pier, and opted for Doc Ford’s.  The story of the restaurant is interesting. It is owned by the writer of a popular series of books that feature the character Marion “Doc” Ford, a marine biologist and environmental consultant.  Dick always enjoys calamari, and my Tomlinson’s Taquitos were a delicious concoction of spicy shredded chicken in corn tortillas.  One was plenty, so the second made a great lunch for Dick, the leftover king.  For main courses, Dick’s paella was very good, and I loved my wrap with spicy grilled shrimp accompanied by some of the best fries we have eaten.  Even though the restaurant was incredibly crowded and so noisy you had to shout to be heard, all the food was piping hot and timely, and the waiter made a point of not neglecting his smaller tables while looking after the very large groups in his area.  We would certainly return.

Doc Ford’s Tomlinson’s Taquitos
Doc Ford’s Paella
Doc Ford’s Spicy Shrimp Wrap with Fries

Beside the restaurant is an interesting sculpture to commemorate the world’s first commercial airline flight in 1914 on a Benoist Airboat.  The stainless steel sculpture is a full scale replica of the airboat.  St Petersburg considers itself the birthplace of commercial aviation, and the sculpture is on the site of the hangar used for the airline.  That first flight was to Tampa, taken by the then mayor of St Petersburg, at a cost of $400, equal to about $12,624 today.

Benoist Airboat, sculpture to commemorate the first commercial airline flight
St Petersburg Municipal Marina and Skyline
Stormy sunrise in St Petersburg

The next day Dick shopped for party food and ingredients, and also some disposable champagne flutes.  I did part of the preparation, including making up a delicious dip, appropriately called “boat dip”.

In the evening, we donned our bright yellow, waterproof jackets and got ready to walk over to a very nice Italian restaurant to meet Kim.  Dick paused to make repairs when we discovered that one of the lines to the fender board had snapped, so I was first at the restaurant.  Shortly after I was seated, Dick arrived, and just said to the hostess, “I’m the other canary”.  She knew immediately who he was with!  Kim arrived after finding scarce parking, and we had a great evening catching up on each other’s news.

The next day I continued with party preparation, while Dick took the dinghy across to the fuel dock to fill the tank.  The plan was to anchor one night, and then we would be 4 nights on a mooring ball in Sarasota, so the dinghy was about to play an important role.  The battery was flat, but Dick has a charger on board, so that problem was soon solved.

Dick checks out the dinghy

Kim arrived mid-afternoon, and helped me set out the special nibbles on various platters.  The boat dip was spooned into tortilla scoops.  This was a new recipe, and is definitely a keeper.  Sour cream, a can of chopped tomatoes with peppers and onion (Rotel), an envelope each of ranch dressing mix and taco seasoning, and a bag of shredded cheddar jack cheese combine to make a spicy and very moreish dip.  I also mixed smoked salmon with onion chive cream cheese to fill tiny pastry cups.  We had brought frozen bite sized quiches and raspberry brie parcels, and I had made spiced palmiers.  Dick bought cooked shrimp, that were served in a large bowl with cocktail sauce for dipping.  I scattered Marconi almonds and tiny pepper drops around the platters, plus some chopped snacking buffalo sausage.  Having prepared and set out enough food to feed the entire marina, I was happy that the guests munched and enjoyed the food, along with beer, wine, fizzy drinks, and of course the champagne for toasting Nine Lives and our shiny new gold burgee.

Party food for the wake crossing celebration

The guests were some of our oldest friends.  Three were at our renaming party in 2017 when we began the Loop.  The group included some of Dick’s former colleagues from Toronto and Calgary, a friend he played ice hockey with, and a slightly more recent colleague from the times after the joint venture.  Julian helped us out in a big way by receiving a bunch of Amazon orders, as well as the critically important gold burgee, and bringing it all to us for the party.  Marina offices will receive mail and parcels, but it can be somewhat hit and miss, so we were so glad to have a friend to accept important deliveries.

Our shiny new gold burgee
Friends came to celebrate

After a quiet day, (Dick rode his bike to Fresh Market to pick up a few groceries), we walked over to Cassis for a very nice dinner.  The only downside was that they were having their outside doors repainted, so the large double entrance doors needed to stay open.  It was quite chilly outside, so there was a tremendous cold draft that took all the heat off the food very quickly.

Anhinga drying his wings on a dock in the marina
A boater heading out to go fishing. Note that he has two avian passengers!
Bouillabaisse at Cassis
Pizza at Cassis

We left St Petersburg at 11am.  It was lumpy again in Tampa Bay, but once we passed under the Sunshine Skyway Bridge it smoothed out.  From there until we anchored, we only had to deal with wakes from weekend pleasure boats.  The anchorage Dick had chosen had poor and out of date reviews.  I looked at every possibility south of that one, and we chose Whale Kay, off Longboat Key and across from Sarasota.  We crept into the anchorage very slowly, seeing less than 5 feet under the keel before it got a little deeper (8 feet) in the middle of the bay.  It felt as though we were out in the middle of Sarasota Bay, but in fact it was a very protected area.  Just one derelict boat, clearly dragged onto a sand bar from the hurricanes, and a few crab pots were present in the wide anchorage.  There was a glorious sunset to begin a very peaceful night.

We passed under the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in 2017 on our first voyage. It was too lumpy to take the picture from the deck this time.
Sunset at the Whale Key anchorage

We were only 5 miles north of Sarasota, our next stop, so there was time for Dick’s signature full English breakfast.  On arrival at Sarasota, we were reminded of the reason why it is best to stay put on weekends, as a guy in a large cruiser whipped past us very close and at high speed to beat us to the fuel dock, his wake throwing us from side to side.  After a long wait it was our turn on the dock, so we topped up with fresh water, then collected our key to the restroom and security gates, and our mooring ball assignment.  We were delighted to learn that we were number 1 (not that we ever doubted).  This meant that we were the closest ball to the marina, with the smallest wakes and an easy distance to watch the comings and goings of the busy harbour.

Damage to the marina in Sarasota. The only transient space until it is repaired is on mooring balls.

Although it is some years since we have used a mooring ball (not since our sailing days with my parents), we were very pleased to accomplish the maneuver without drama.  Dick caught the pendant with the boathook on the first pass, and he was ready with two lines to pull through the eye and back to Nine Lives.  Another day I watched people on a sailing cat fail to catch the pendant, requiring a big reposition and two tries to catch it.  One generally expects greater expertise from sailors.  Of course, stuff happens, and until we are done with mooring balls, I should touch wood and stop gloating!

Sarasota, the mooring ball, our gold burgee, and the waterfront

We had an early dinner reservation at a restaurant called Rosemary and Thyme.  It was a mile walk on a hot afternoon, but it was definitely worth it.  The restaurant is in a beautiful, sympathetically renovated old building, with a huge outdoor patio area.  By 5pm it was nearly full, testament to the excellent food and impeccable service.  I was charmed by the mismatched old china they use instead of new and matching (or, horrors, slates and bits of wood as were trendy a year or so ago).  Dick started with a fish chowder, and I enjoyed a delicious shrimp tostada.  Dick chose the halibut special for main course, while I opted for a second starter, sliced beef filet, breaded and fried, served with pico de gallo on a crisp tortilla.  Desserts were also excellent, and a reasonable individual portion-size for a change. The walk back to the marina was interesting, taking a different route through downtown.  I was surprised at the numbers of people in the many restaurants, on a Sunday night, almost every table in their outdoor areas was full.

Shrimp Tostada at Rosemary and Thyme
Halibut at Rosemary and Thyme
Beef tortilla at Rosemary and Thyme

We spent the next, rainy, day on board.  I baked a batch of bran muffins, and Dick worked on reservations for the next couple of weeks for marinas and restaurants.  We also prepared responses to questions for a podcast on segment looping for AGLCA.  In the evening, as we sipped our pre-dinner cocktail, we found we were surrounded by pelicans fishing by diving.  It is amazing to watch.  They soar over the water, about 30 feet up, and suddenly, they dive straight down into the water, 80% of the time coming up with a fish.  They pause with their bill in the water.  I am guessing this is to orient the captured prey in the right direction, and then they lift their heads up and swallow the fish whole.  We watched this behaviour for the first time more than 20 years ago on a sailing trip in a remote bay in the Caribbean, but we have not seen it since.  After less than an hour, the fishing session was over, and the pelicans disappeared at dusk.

Splash! The pelican dives for his dinner.
Got one!

As the evening progressed, the rain became heavier.  Later, the wind came up, and Nine Lives transformed into a flamenco dancer, sliding back and forth through 180 degrees, and bouncing on the pendant of the mooring ball with loud noises, accompanied by rhythmic slapping of the waves and rocking from side to side.  Soon, the rotating became so fast that it was making me dizzy, so I retired early to bed and spent the night listening as the storm came up and retreated several times.  The rain was biblical, and with the strong wind, water leaked through some of the tiny gaps in the cockpit enclosure and there were small puddles here and there in the morning.  We were very glad we were on a secure mooring ball instead of at anchor.  Even our trusty Rocna  might have had difficulty holding as the wind blew us back and forth.

The next day was quieter and mostly sunny, but still a bit rough, making it exciting for getting into and out of the dinghy.  We met Betty and Cathie for lunch at the marina restaurant.  It was great to see them and be able to wish Betty a Happy Birthday in person, just a few days early.  After dropping me back on Nine Lives, Dick walked to Whole Foods with his Burleigh cart, so he could stock up on heavy items like sparkling water and potatoes.

The hunter gatherer heads out
An interesting sculpture in Sarasota

The next morning, we launched the dinghy again and toured around the mooring field and the marina.  Some boats have clearly been there for some months, even since the hurricane, given the amount of marine growth on the hulls and the torn sails.  There are one or two boats stranded on the shore, but no wrecks in the harbour, so either they have been lifted, or none sank.  Dick walked to Publix while I watched the boat traffic.  I was fascinated by a couple who anchored beside us and then proceeded to race all around the harbour on e-foils.  These are like a small surfboard, with a long keel with wings at the bottom and a motor.  One stands on the board and the motor pushes the board (fast).  The board lifts right out of the water like a hydrofoil, using the wings on the bottom.  The rider holds a remote that controls the motor beneath.  When the pair returned to their boat after more than an hour of whizzing about, I was surprised at how large and obviously heavy these things are.  Clearly a lot of skill and good balance are required.

E-foils

Around 4pm we launched the dinghy and headed out to dinner.  I will be quite happy if we don’t need to do this again on the voyage. It is hard enough balancing in calm waters, but with the dinghy dancing around it is a recipe for an unplanned swim.  The first time we did this from the mooring ball, Dick stood in the dinghy to help me get in.  A wave lifted it, and he adjusted his balance suddenly, nearly throwing me overboard!  After that, the procedure was for him to sit down, and I kept one hand on a fixed part of Nine Lives until I was safely in the dinghy. (for those of you that wonder, we do both wear life jackets when using the dinghy)

Nine Lives on a mooring ball

Dinner was incredible, unquestionably our best meal so far.  Antoines is a tiny French restaurant located in an unprepossessing strip mall, owned by a Belgian gentleman (a real character, with a Hercule Poirot mustache!) and his chef wife.  The food is amazing.  Before our appetizers arrived, we were brought tiny amuse bouche bowls of delicious pureed vegetable soup.  These were accompanied by fresh rolls and butter that was carved into an exquisite flower shape.  My garlic mushrooms were perfect, as were Dick’s authentically garlicky escargot.  I ordered the evening special lobster ravioli in lobster sauce, and Dick chose a delicious black grouper.  Desserts lived up to the rest of the meal, my chocolate mousse was excellent, as was Dick’s favourite profiteroles.  We accompanied the meal with a very good bottle of Sancerre.

Amuse bouche at Antoines
Bread, and an exquisite butter sculpture at Antoines
Escargot at Antoines
Garlic mushrooms at Antoines
Grouper at Antoines
Lobster ravioli at Antoines
Desserts at Antoines

Our return to Nine Lives by dinghy was accomplished at dusk without incident, in spite of all that wine and good food!

Sarasota’s John Ringling Causeway at sunset
Murals on the canal in Venice

Crowsnest Restaurant in Venice operates a marina.  Only a few slips have been repaired from hurricane damage so far, and it is quite tricky to get in because the slips sit perpendicular to the strong current from the outlet to the Gulf.  Two dockhands help with tying up, in fact they came on board and handled the lines for us.  I was a bit insulted at first, thinking they were assuming that I was incapable, but as we watched other boats arrive it was clear that they do this for everyone.  In fact, getting into a slip is so tricky that one boat made several approaches and ultimately chose to tie up on the fuel dock overnight instead, in spite of the requirement that they would have to leave before 7:30am.

Soon after we arrived and were set, our friends from Pittsburgh and the Monongahela River arrived for docktails.  Valerie and Chip are staying in a condo nearby for the winter.  Valerie brought several interesting cheeses, a dip, and some strawberries, plus some flowers, so it was a reversal of our usual roles as hosts!  Nine Lives loved the flowers, artfully displayed in a special flat vase that expands when water is poured in, and fitting perfectly in one of the cockpit cup holders.  It was great to catch up with our friends, and dinner at the restaurant was most enjoyable.

Flowers for Nine Lives
Dinner with Valerie and Chip at Crowsnest in Venice

Mangroves provide storm protection.  How many homes that were destroyed by flooding would have been saved if the mangroves had been left along the shorelines?  Our observation as we travelled south was that there were a lot more repairs required on the Gulf side of the GICW, but most of the mangroves are present on the land side, and there appears to be less hurricane damage.  Some wrecked docks and boat lifts, but the houses, even the single-story bungalows, look okay.

Mangroves help protect from storm surge along the shore.

For reasons that make sense to somebody, the posted no-wake zones are outside the fairly narrow dredged Intracoastal channel, meaning that all the shallow draft center consoles can wake us all the time.

Busy day on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway

Dolphins followed us a for a couple of miles, switching from one side of Nine Lives to the other.  We also heard them clicking and whistling, first time ever.  Dolphins are quite fast, they can travel at 18mph.  We were going at our usual cruising speed of 8mph, but apparently they like to ride in the slipstream of boats.  The reasons for this behaviour could include ease of travel, playfulness, or something else, nobody knows.  Dolphins use echolocation to orient themselves and to determine the size of objects they encounter.  I was surprised that they chose to dive beneath the boat as they moved from side to side, clearly, they were not concerned about being caught by our propellers.

Dolphins swimming beside Nine Lives

Our next destination was Boca Grande, on Gasparilla Island.  The area was originally inhabited by the Calusa people, arriving about 800 or 900 BC.  They predated the Seminoles, and had died out by the 18th century due to European diseases, slavery, and warfare.  Spanish and Cuban fishermen settled in the 19th century, operating fish ranches, catching mullet and other fish for salting and shipment to Havana and other markets.  Although the commercial fishery is gone, some of the current full-time inhabitants are descendants of these early settlers. In the 20th century, phosphate mining turned the south end of the island into a major deep-water port.  Phosphate was brought south from the mines near Punta Gorda by rail and was loaded onto schooners at the port and shipped worldwide.  In 1969, Port Boca Grande ranked as the 4th largest port in Florida.  By the 1970’s the phosphate industry started using alternative routes for shipping, and the railway and port were largely abandoned.  During this period, the island was discovered by wealthy American and British sportsmen, for hunting, and fishing, particularly tarpon. The Gasparilla Inn opened in 1911, serving the wealthy elite from Tampa, Fort Myers, and New England.

Check-in time at Boca Grande Marina is 2pm, we arrived a little early.  We were asked to stand off in protected deeper water in the harbour while the dockmaster wrangled boats.  Several had docked for lunch at the onsite restaurant, and 2 larger yachts were also expected.  It was organized chaos as the dockmaster and his two dockhands directed, tied, and untied boats in a well-practiced dance.  Normally, I would not choose to be on the fuel dock, but in this case, the location gave us a prime view of the golf course across the channel as well as the wildlife on the spit of land that protects the harbour.

Boca Grande harbour entrance and golf course

There were a couple of very large yachts berthed in the marina.  One (120 feet) had its own center console tender tied up like a baby elephant beside its mother.  The one next to it, in a private slip, is Hilarium, a stunning blue-hulled yacht with classic lines, built in the Netherlands in 1986. It is 134 feet long, and accommodates 8 crew and up to 10 guests.

Boca Grande marina at dusk

Golf carts are available for rent, so we collected one and headed out for a brief reconnoiter around the town.  There are just 1001 full-time residents, with a median age of 68.7, but of course, the population is swelled by huge numbers of visitors.  The town prides itself on its old-fashioned, laid-back lifestyle, with no traffic lights, fast food outlets, or nightlife to be found apart from church functions (seriously).  That said, my impression is that it is a lot like Marie Antoinette playing shepherdess, given that a building lot in the area is priced at $2.5 million.

The beach at Boca Grande
Homes on Boca Grande

We had dinner at the onsite restaurant.  It was a mixed bag.  My truffle parmesan shoestring fries were so good that Dick suspended his objection to fried food and helped me eat them.  His oysters Rockefeller were not very good at all.  I ordered shrimp and grits, that came with just 4, tasty, but slightly overcooked shrimp and a few small chunks of andouille sausage on a mass of red peppers and grits.  On the other hand, Dick’s seafood medley was excellent, as was the chocolate mousse cake that we shared for dessert.

Seafood medley at Eagle Grill
Shrimp and grits at Eagle Grill
Chocolate mousse cake at Eagle Grill

The golf course looks stunning, but the only way for non-members to play is to stay at the Gasparilla Inn.  Dick proposes a birthday weekend there for me so that he can play the course…hmmmm…

We enjoyed an interesting day exploring Boca Grande.  We went to the Strawberry Festival, but it was quite disappointing, essentially a church social that took up part of the town.  There were offerings on silent auction, some used toys and children’s clothes, a tent selling brats in buns, strawberries and strawberry shortcake, and a quite respectable garage band made up of locals of retirement age.  There was apparently more to see inside the church, but we didn’t bother.  In every shop in town, the ladies asked excitedly, “Did you get your strawberry shortcake?”  So, a big deal in the town, but of little interest for us as visitors.  We looked around most of the shops, but didn’t buy until we found one with interesting specialty foods, homewares, and upscale takeaway.  Dick decided that we would have a large container of lobster salad for our supper the next day.  He choked when the bill was rung up.  Let’s just say that we could eat lunch out with wine for the same money (including ordering lobster rolls).  That said, the salad was delicious served on French bread with crisp butter lettuce.

Boca Grande Strawberry Festival
The lobster salad (we ate it the next day)

After dropping our purchases off at the boat, we took the golf cart to the southern end of the island.  Like highway 98 on the Panhandle, it is miles and miles of new-build housing.  It does seem to be built to “hurricane proof” standards, that is, constructed of concrete and elevated so that a storm surge can flow through below.  It was possible to climb the lighthouse, but Dick decided this time that it would be very hard on the knees coming down, so he passed on the opportunity.

Boca Grande Lighthouse
A shiny red TR6. Dick has always wanted one of these.

In the early evening, we dressed up and went over to the Gasparilla Inn, a wonderful old Florida hotel, for drinks in their bar.  This was touted as a see-and-be-seen opportunity to hobnob with the great and the good of the town.  It was a lovely lounge with superb snacks and perfectly prepared Manhattans, but there was nobody hobnobbing at that time, just a fierce game of backgammon going on, played between some guests.  We enjoyed the experience anyway.

The lounge at Gasparilla Inn
The bar at Gasparilla Inn
They make excellent Manhattans at Gasparilla Inn

After our drinks, we went to dinner at Scarpa’s Coastal, a blend of modern Italian and local cuisine.  It was a good meal, but the food was not as hot as it should have been.

Stuffed mushroom and burrata salad at Scarpa’s Coastal
Rack of lamb and grilled shrimp at Scarpa’s Coastal
Desserts at Scarpa’s Coastal

We made a leisurely start with an easy passage to Sanibel Island.  Here we finally left the route we travelled in 2017 when we collected Nine Lives, and everything is new again.  The marina at Sanibel is unusual in that it is not on the bay, instead, a narrow channel gives access to the marina as well as a network of canals with homes.  There was some damage from the hurricane, but it is mostly repaired, and we are on a newer, floating dock.  There is a restaurant on site that we will try later in the week.

We ate on board the first evening.  Next morning, Dick arranged to rent a golf cart for a few days.  He decided to upgrade to a Moke.  It is sort of what one might expect the offspring of a golf cart and a jeep to be like.  Ours is bright red, easier for cars to see us on the roads.  Mokes are electric, so quieter than a gas driven golf cart, and fully fitted for roads, with seatbelts, lights, proper signals, speedometer, etc.  The seats are also a lot more comfortable than a golf cart would have been.  You can even snap on a canvas cover if it rains or for sun protection.

It’s a Moke!

We went for a drive around the island.  We were able to find the old, converted motel that we stayed at on a timeshare exchange more than 25 years ago.  It is undergoing major renovation, but it is not being torn down.  We also visited a couple of interesting galleries, finding a nice piece of art pottery to take home as a reminder of our visit.

Colony Inn, under renovation

Sanibel has clearly had a large influx of new residents since our last visit.  There are a great many condos, and a few areas with some very large houses, but mostly it seems to be more down to earth than Boca Grande, with real people instead of the very wealthy playing at being ordinary.  We also noticed that while there is almost no evidence remaining of the hurricane on Boca Grande (we could see a lot of obviously new landscaping there) here on Sanibel there is still a lot of dead vegetation and trees, and many homes are still waiting for repair.  Less money to effect repairs, and probably further down the priorities list for government help, not to mention further down the priorities list for contractors doing the work.

Our dinner was at Bleu Rendezvous, a very authentic French bistro.  It was so authentic that our table for 2 was exactly 2 feet by 2 feet.  Very typical in Paris, not usual (or comfortable!) here in America.  The din was incredible, everyone had to shout to be heard.  Excellent food, with the exception of the crepe I ordered for dessert.  Hard to say whether we would return.  The restaurant is very popular, there were a large number of people sitting waiting outside for their tables to be free when we left.

Bleu Rendezvous mushrooms. Note how close together and small the tables are, look at the upper left corner of the picture!
Bleu Rendezvous salmon rillettes
Bleu Rendezvous veal marengo and trout almondine
Bleu Rendezvous desserts

We are certainly here in the high season.  Not only are restaurants full, even on Monday or Tuesday evenings, Dick is finding it quite difficult to get dockage as we move south.  We are behind the Looper pack, so are not having to compete with them, but there are few or no slips available for us.  We had hoped to stop in Naples for a few days, and then Marco Island, but we can only book one night in Naples, and we are going to have to move from place to place, and anchor part of the time, for the week we plan to be on Marco Island.  Plans are also weather dependent, as we have to travel outside in the Gulf between the next two stops, and then a crossing (daylight, but expected to take 10 hours unless we go fast for part of it) to Key West.

A piece of advice for everyone who is charmed by the youthful excitement of a Moke.  If you are female, don’t wear a dress or a skirt!  Leaving aside the large amount of leg that goes on show as you climb over the sill to get into or out of the vehicle, once you are on the road, it is exceedingly cold and drafty!  Trying to hold onto a hat and keep your skirt from blowing up and revealing the lace on your undies, is a feat requiring at least 3 arms.  It is a lot of fun to try the Moke out, but there is no temptation to regress to carefree youth and put one into our garage.

Louise getting into Moke. I thought the front of the vehicle looked like a happy smile, but now I think it is more like a smirk as we fold ourselves up getting in and out.

I have been looking forward to visiting the J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge.  Years ago, we rode bicycles through the refuge, and my memory is of an amazing place, teeming with wildlife.  Well, history did not repeat, and I am sorry to say that this visit was a great disappointment.  Whether it was the time of day, or residual effects from the hurricanes, there were few birds and certainly no alligators to be seen.  A couple of iguanas zipped into the brush as we passed.  Resting in the shallows we saw pelicans, both brown and white, gulls, and a cormorant, all of which we have seen many times in other locations.  Further along we did see a Reddish Egret displaying their typical fishing dance.  They jump around, scratching in the sand to stir up the fish, and occasionally spreading their wings, creating a shadow on the water that lets them see the fish below. A godwit stood nearby, perhaps waiting for leftovers.

J.N. Darling was a pioneer of conservation in the United States.  His editorial cartoons drew attention to the plight of wildlife, and helped to educate the public that natural resources are not unlimited, and that unhindered use of these resources is not a God-given right.  He was the founder of the National Wildlife Federation, and the chief of the U.S. Biological Survey, now called the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  He helped conceive the Federal Duck Stamp Program, drawing the first stamp, and since 1934, hunters have been required to purchase a Federal Duck Stamp in order to be allowed to hunt waterfowl.  These purchases have supported the acquisition of millions of acres of wetlands for feeding, breeding, and migration of waterfowl.

There was an interesting plaque about the salt marsh mosquito.  When the natural flow of water is impeded, the mangroves die, and mosquitoes breed in the still water.  Ding Darling brings in engineers to dig culverts to restore the flow of water and reduce the need for pesticides.  While mosquitoes have an ecological niche, being incidental pollinators, and also providing food for numerous predators, the sign also mentioned that too many mosquitoes can be a major stressor to both humans and wildlife, through biting and the spread of disease.  This is not news to me… small biting insects are my least favourite aspect of any warm climate!

Shorebirds at the Wildlife Refuge
White Pelicans. They are migratory, so we saw them on the Tennessee River, and now here they are enjoying the winter sun in Florida, just like Loopers!
Reddish Egret performing his fishing dance

After our visit to the Wildlife Refuge, we stopped at one of the small shopping malls and looked at a few shops before joining the incredible queues on the main road to return to the marina.  We think traffic is bad in Hilton Head!  The tailbacks on any of the main roads that lead to the causeway on Sanibel are unbelievable.  Traffic wardens are in place all day, and it really doesn’t seem to matter whether it is morning or evening.  I looked up data for vehicles crossing the causeway. The latest I could find was November of 2021, when 3.2 million vehicles crossed during that single month.  The current traffic issues will continue until 2027, as the causeway is repaired after being damaged in the hurricanes.  Eventually we were able to turn off and go around the other side of the island to avoid the queues.

Dinner was at the number 2 rated restaurant on the island.  The food was not particularly good, the service slapdash, and overall the restaurant has little to recommend it.  We would not return.

We are looking forward to continuing our exploration of Florida’s Gulf Coast, followed by a visit to Key West and Marathon before eventually heading north on the Intracoastal Waterway up the east coast of Florida.

Nine Lives voyages for February 2025

February 3rd to 17th, 2025: Port St Joe to Tampa

We rented an unexpectedly large Penske truck to bring our stuff and the bikes back to Port St Joe.  It was an uneventful drive, although somewhat longer than anticipated.  We arrived and turned on the fridges and freezers and put away the perishables.  Checked into the hotel and then went to Joe Mamas for outstanding pizzas.  The hotel is brand new and was very nice for a quick overnight stay.

Everything that we carried home in our own vehicle plus the bikes fitted into a very small part of the large truck
Dick posing beside the rented truck

After a MacDonald’s breakfast, we started the unpacking, but Dick spent the day working on the bathroom plumbing problem.  He had ordered various parts (these are obsolete, so hard to source), from an RV supplier, but some did not arrive, or were substituted.  Multiple trips by bike to the local plumbing supply house, and all-day efforts ended with a leak problem that was much worse than before, so the whole bathroom; sink, toilet, shower, and laundry, were unusable, and a bucket was required to catch the drips.  I got on the phone and began phoning plumbers.  The one that Dick had consulted in January was unavailable for 2 weeks despite assurances at that time that he could fix it in a day.  It took several conversations before I struck lucky and had a highly recommended (by other plumbers) very helpful gentleman committed to come out the next day.

Before the repair. The grey fittings are obsolete and were leaking (hence the bowl to catch the drips).
Dick works on the plumbing. He spent at least two full days, possibly three, trying to fix it. And that does not include all the time he spent earlier, before we left the boat in December!

This is why we have a “plan”, not a schedule.  We made the decision to wait and leave for Apalachicola on Thursday, thus allowing plenty of time for the plumber.  Dinner that evening was at Keepers Bistro, probably best to just draw a line under that one.  The food was acceptable, but too many substitutions and not enough staff suggest that they may not last too long as a business.

Dick left at 8am the next day to return the truck to Panama City, and was back by 10, much better timing than originally expected, because he was able to get an Uber right away.  The plumber was somewhat later than planned due to heavy fog, but he did a great job.  He completely replaced the faulty manifold with current standard fittings, and everything now works perfectly and no leaks!  He also fixed the wobbly kitchen tap.  That was an easy fix, but it required a special tool that Dick (surprisingly) does not have in his arsenal.

The plumbing after the final repair.

The extra night in Port St Joe meant that we could have dinner at the White Marlin.  This was an outstanding meal, one of the best this voyage.  The lobster tacos were fantastic.  More of a crepe than a taco, with delicious lobster claw meat and a maque choux accompaniment.  Dick enjoyed a perfectly prepared steak, and I had sliced beef filet on fettucine noodles with cognac sauce.  Desserts were a perfect finish to a wonderful meal.

White Marlin lobster taco
White Marlin steak
White Marlin sliced filet with pasta and cognac sauce
White Marlin cheesecake
White Marlin bread pudding

We made a very late start on Thursday, as it was a short trip, and we allowed time for the morning fog to lift.  On arrival in Apalachicola, there were a few moments of confusion, when one of the charts put our intended dock at a narrow part of the channel and nowhere near the area Dick was expecting.  All became clear when I found a new, post-hurricane, marker on the chart in exactly the right place and with good reviews attached.  The consensus was that the location is unequaled, but that $2 per foot is outrageous for dockage with no water or power.  It was also a tricky dock with large pilings and a very big gap to jump across to get off the boat.  No problem for Dick, but I was not happy.  As the dock is in a waterfront park, we had something of an audience for the docking maneuver, and I imagine some of the onlookers were amused at me trying to reach around the hefty piling to get the line around and back to the boat.  Eventually I had to sort of toss it and hope it actually went around far enough that I could grab it.

Apalachicola

The location really was fantastic, right in the middle of the charming town.  We walked all around in a couple of hours, popping into interesting little galleries.  Dinner was at a restaurant just a block from the boat.  After the previous evening’s exceptional meal, this rather suffered in comparison, but Dick enjoyed his alligator bites to start.  He offered some to me to try, “tastes just like chicken”, but my position is that I don’t eat reptiles (or apex predators for that matter).  The restaurant was in a lovely old building, with original ceilings, brickwork, and floors.  Apparently, this building had been many things during its time, including a house of ill repute.

Alligator bites

Today, a small, sleepy, tourist town, there was a time when Apalachicola was a thriving business centre.  In 1860, the town sent a memorial to Congress, advising that they had in that year done $14,000,000 worth of business, more than all other areas of the state put together.  An extravagant claim indeed!  In the early years of the town, it was a centre for receiving and shipping cotton.  The cotton came down the rivers from inland farms by steamboat, and was then weighed and compressed into shipping bales.  After enough was stockpiled in warehouses, it was sold and shipped overseas.  By 1836, Apalachicola was the third largest cotton port on the Gulf of Mexico.  In time, as happened elsewhere, the challenges of river shipping meant that the cotton business was taken over by the railroads, and the cotton era ended for the town.  Lumber came next, but it took a few years, and then the sponge industry became important.  By 1879, there were 16 small schooners in the sponge fleet.  The schooners went out for a month at a time.  Each one carried a few small dinghies, that were worked by two men, who used sponge glasses to view the sea floor.  These were wooden boxes, often worn around the neck, with a glass bottom, that when put on the surface of the water, allowed a view of the sea bottom.  The sponges were then brought up with a long handled, three-pronged iron hook, and taken on board the schooner to be sold later on the wharf to a sponge dealer from New York.  In 1900 there was a worldwide demand for Florida sponges, but within 3 years, the market had collapsed.  Today, the industry has started again, and is being operated in various ports on the Gulf, including Tarpon Springs.

We waited until after 11am for the morning fog to lift, and even then it closed in again as soon as we got into the bay and radar was required to see other boats and a dredge.  The late start allowed time to prepare the chicken for the slow cooker for dinner.  We saw more dolphins in the calm bay than we have seen for years.  Some of them seem to enjoy swimming alongside the boat for a spell.

Nine Lives crossing Apalachicola Sound

After passing Upper North, another Looper who Dick had chatted with on the dock before leaving, we arrived in Carrabelle.  Their fuel price was the lowest we have seen this boating season, so we decided to top up the tanks.  Upper North arrived, and we invited them to join us later for docktails.  We enjoyed the evening very much, and hope to meet again along the route.

After a quiet night, I took my coffee up to my usual spot in the cockpit, and began to catch up with news and emails.  I felt a small nip on my ankle, followed by itching.  Soon after, another, and I became aware of a small insect flying around.  Noseeums had arrived!  Time to get out the Thermacell gadget that we had bought on recommendation of several Loopers at the Rendezvous.  It took a bit of figuring out (starting with how the heck are you supposed to get into the box?) but eventually I got it started and within the promised 15 minutes there were tiny carcasses all over the once clean cockpit.  Definitely a great product to deal with small biting insects.

Our subscribed personal forecast for the Gulf crossing arrived, and everything was go for our 4pm planned start.  Fog was expected at various times during the 20+ hour crossing, but winds and waves were predicted to be the best we could ever hope for.  I took the precaution of emailing 3 friends to ask them to set the Coast Guard in motion if we failed to appear in Tarpon Springs on time.  “You have my full attention” said one, “We’ve got you covered” said the second, and the third downloaded the NEBO app and worked out how to see our position.

Dick researched how to set the horn for the periodic blasts required for boating in fog.  While he figured it out, he asked me to step out and go to the bow of Nine Lives to listen.  On the step outside the door, I found a generous pile of scat and a couple of incriminating footprints.  Research showed that we had been visited by a raccoon!  Since the masked bandits have history of getting into Looping boats while the occupants are sleeping, we were very glad that possible rain in the forecast had ensured that we had closed all of the hatches overnight.  The marina owner confirmed my raccoon identification and also mentioned that they routinely see bears swimming up and down the river.  While I would love to see a bear, a close, personal visit on our swim step would not be welcome.

Incriminating footprints!

Dick’s next research project was how to set the autopilot for a direct line to our destination.  We do not normally use the autopilot with what are called waypoints, instead we use it to steer and we follow the route we want on the chartplotter.  Using autopilot on open water ensures that you stay on the correct heading, regardless of wind or waves pushing the boat off course.  With no channel markers or land masses for reference, this is a required feature for our crossing.  Armchair sailors may scoff, and point out that Christopher Columbus did not use autopilot (or even a chartplotter) but I will remind them that he was looking for a passage to India, with a distinct lack of success.  We will take advantage of any and all technological advancements available to us.

The voyage started out somewhat less salubrious than I had been led to expect.  Waves were on the starboard quarter, so not on the beam, but not on the bow either.  This meant we had an unpleasant corkscrew roll for about the first quarter of the trip.  Finally, it smoothed out.  The nearly full moon was very bright.  When it set, it became very large at the horizon and turned the colour of a new penny.  Once it set, we truly understood the expression “darkest before the dawn”.  Sunrise brought the fog.  Dick set the horn sounding every 2 minutes, and we could only see a very short distance in front of the boat.  Although we did not have a “buddy boat” to talk to, it was comforting to hear the Coastguard broadcasts on the radio, albeit completely static and unintelligible until we were about 30 minutes from shore.  I went below and slept for an hour, but Dick mostly stayed awake, allowing himself to doze off briefly, a couple of times while we were both on watch.

Last sight of land as we head out across the Gulf
Sunset over the Gulf
With daylight came the fog

We saw our first crab pot float at about 8 miles out.  Fortunately, the fog lifted enough that we could see and maneuver around them.  It was important to pay attention and avoid them, but it was not nearly as difficult as we had been led to believe.  We wonder whether those Loopers who have trouble are the same ones who use autopilot with waypoints and so are not steering with the same attention. Dick had set the destination, and that gave us a line to steer to, but we retained full control of the steering during the entire crossing.  We enjoyed seeing pods of dolphins, and there were also large areas where big fish were roiling the waters.  They were never close enough to identify, but research suggests that they were probably mullet.

A dolphin swims alongside

Eventually we reached the cut into Saint Joseph Sound, and made our way through the very narrow channels to Anclote River and Tarpon Springs.  It was interesting to have to reverse in and tie up “Med style” in the marina, because the finger pier was so short that we could not use the ladder to get off the boat.  The floating docks were in a good position to use the swim steps.  It was also a challenge to get a line around a tall piling near the bow, but I managed the first one, and later Dick used the boat hook and I tossed a bow line to get a second line around the piling.

Nap time.  We had a much-needed four-hour sleep, and after showers we were awake enough to enjoy the evening at a local Greek restaurant with Julian and Candace.  We hadn’t seen Julian since 2018, so it was a wonderful reunion and chance to catch up.

Dick ordered grilled octopus at Hellas Restaurant in Tarpon Springs

Late afternoon Monday we hosted docktails with our slip neighbours.  Two couples from Looper boats plus one from a sailboat gathered for cheese, sausage, and conversation.  Our sailing neighbour brought over some of his home-made mead to try.  It was quite amazing, not sweet, very clear and delicious.  Joseph told us all about how he makes it, a very precise and time consuming process.  Altogether, it was a delightful couple of hours with a very interesting and diverse group of people.

We walked to Tarpon Springs second “downtown” area for dinner.  The food was good, some dishes quite unusual, including the fried burrata in a tomato sauce.  Dick enjoyed his red snapper, and I had an interesting pasta dish.

Currents Restaurant red snapper

The next morning, Dick checked the weather as usual, and realized that to avoid some strong winds and heavy seas we should leave Tarpon Springs a day earlier than planned.

We took an hour to walk along the main street and check out a few spice and food shops.  As you walk, touts push brochures for local restaurants at you and offer dolphin watching boat trips and excursions to the beaches for shelling.  It reminded me very much of some of the Greek and Turkish towns we visited when we went sailing with Mum and Dad.  Tarpon Springs is a working fishing port.  At a seafood shop on the commercial docks, we bought some frozen local shrimp and some interesting smoked cheese.

Gulf shrimp at the Seafood Market
Snapper at the Seafood Market
Everything you could possibly need to cook seafood
Dick buys shrimp at the Seafood Market

Tarpon Springs was settled by farmers and fishermen around 1876.  In the 1880’s the area was developed as a resort for wealthy northerners to spend the winters.  The town also became a centre for the sponge business. In the 1890’s, Greek immigrants began to arrive to work in sponge operations, and by the early 1900’s the industry became one of the most important maritime businesses in Florida, generating millions of dollars a year.  In 1947, the sponge fields were wiped out by a red tide, and the fishermen turned to shrimping for their livelihood.  The sponges recovered, and in the 1980’s, a disease killed Mediterranean sponges, and the local industry experienced a revival.  The Greek heritage of the town is celebrated, and over 10% of the town’s residents are of Greek ancestry.

Tarpon Springs is a working fishing port
A traffic circle in Tarpon Springs
A charming group of sculptures occupies the centre of the traffic circle

The marina manager was kind enough not to charge us for the night we were not staying, and Clearwater confirmed availability for the extra night.  We were out by 11:30, with a relatively short passage to Clearwater, made much slower by no-wake zones and narrow, winding channels.  We surely know that we are now in Florida, the land of exceptionally rude boaters.  Both pleasure boaters and commercial tour boats threw huge wakes as they crisscrossed the channel, so we rocked and rolled our way out to Saint Joseph Sound.

We arrived at Clearwater and were tied up by 2:30.  I have never seen as much bird life in a downtown marina.  Snowy Egrets, Great Egrets, pelicans, grackles, and even a blackbird perched and sang on our railing.

Boat-tailed grackle
Brewer’s Blackbird
Snowy Egret and a pelican
Great Egret
Snowy Egret

The marina is right downtown, with a large park and an outdoor music venue on the waterfront.  We would just miss a concert by Willie Nelson. Coachman Park is huge, and it is clear that much effort has been spent on recovery from the hurricanes.  It is popular for walking and cycling, and there is a splash park and playground that makes one wish they were a child again! 

Coachman Park
Clearwater at night

There was a large catamaran docked next to us.  In the afternoon a group of people boarded and they went out for a short cruise.  I noted that the captain had trouble getting off the dock, coming far too close to Nine Lives and having to back up and start over to avoid running into us.  When he returned, we both went out onto the dock to help catch lines, as courteous boaters do.  The owner had tremendous difficulty getting close enough for his passengers to throw lines.  Eventually some marina workers arrived and managed to coach him in.  Dick continued to help with tying up.  There was no acknowledgement at the time, but a couple of days later the owner was back, and he introduced himself and thanked Dick for his help.  He told us that this is the first big boat he has owned, so it is taking some time to get used to handling it, especially in the admittedly tricky swirling water under the bridge where he is docked.  He is sporting a Looper burgee, and told me that he would be heading out on Monday on the Great Loop.  He has been delayed in his plans because their house was trashed in the hurricane, as were so many in this area.

Clearwater Memorial Causeway

In the evening, we took an Uber across the causeway and had dinner at SeaGuini.  We were fascinated by the beautiful menus, that featured a modern acrylic semi-abstract fish on the front.  The style, colours, and texture were reminiscent of some of my Mum’s acrylic ink paintings.  We shared a cheese and charcuterie board, that looked attractive, but had some issues.  Mainly, it was the crackers, just 4 very hard flatbreads and some breadsticks, an entirely inadequate quantity, and unsuitable for the cheese and meat.  What they thought we should do with large piles of whole grain mustard and fig jam with so few crackers I do not know.  We ordered some focaccia, which was delicious but was surprisingly expensive.  The rest of the meal was very good.  Dick’s choice was pasta Bolognese and I had penne alla vodka with shrimp.  Dessert was a tiny individual cheesecake, rather small for a sharing dish!

SeaGuini menu
SeaGuini cheese and charcuterie platter
SeaGuini bolognese
SeaGuini penne alla vodka with grilled shrimp

The next morning, as I sat with my coffee, I heard the sound of thrusters, and saw that the large motor yacht that had docked on the other side of the marina, under the bridge, was coming across to dock behind us.  Dick got out onto the dock to catch the lines.  It was very difficult, with both wind and current causing problems in controlling the boat.  Eventually, the captain pointed straight at the dock, and his crew tossed a line to Dick, which he quickly cleated tight.  That allowed the captain to use it as a spring to turn the boat alongside.  It was a tricky maneuver and well executed.  The guy thanked Dick for his help, then, and again the next day.

Dick helps with a tricky docking maneuver

Apparently, Tom Cruise lives in the apartment block that we could see from our dock.  He is very involved with the Church of Scientology, which has a large, multi-building campus right there.  We were surprised to learn from Zillow that a condo in the building, of similar size to ours in Hilton Head, sells for quite a bit less than ours.  Perhaps having a big movie star as a neighbour is not particularly desirable, or possibly the large Church presence in the area is off-putting.

Downtown Clearwater. Tom Cruise lives in the penthouse of the shorter condo block in the centre of the picture.

Two days were spent cleaning and “decluttering” Nine Lives for the photography for her listing.  Although we intend to continue the voyage until we return to Hilton Head Island in April/May, it may be that someone will want to make an offer subject to a survey in May.  Decluttering is an awful word.  It implies both untidiness (which we are not) and having a lot of unnecessary possessions.  Nine Lives is kept tidy, but anyone who has spent more than a few days in a small space like a boat, knows that not everything can be put away out of sight.  Anyway, this exercise meant taking 2 carts full of our things off the boat, plus the bikes, and hiding them around the corner of the dock so they didn’t show up in the video.  I polished surfaces that I had never seen before (quite a few useful books and other items were left on board for us by agreement with the seller).  Nine Lives sparkled after our cleaning efforts at the Rendezvous in the fall, but today she is positively blinding!

Michael, our broker, seemed pleased, and we are now sporting For Sale signs when the marinas we stop at allow them to be displayed.  After all the work, we were happy for a night spent on board with leftovers for supper.

Nine Lives in Clearwater
She looks great!

Our trip to Tampa started out fine, passing interesting houses of all sizes and styles.

Indian Shores

Once we got out into Tampa Bay, it got lumpy.  I had planned to take a picture of the marker as we crossed our wake, but there was far too much motion to step outside the cockpit.  It was quite a momentous few minutes anyway.  Crossing your wake means returning to the place where you started the Great Loop.  For us, this was just past the Sunshine Skyway Bridge that crosses Tampa Bay.  Here is the notice of our wake crossing:

Nine Lives Has Crossed Her Wake

Dick and Louise crossed their wake on their Endeavour TrawlerCat 44 Nine Lives in Tampa Bay on February 15th, just over 8 years after heading out from St Petersburg in January 2017.

In that time, we travelled 17,168 statute miles, bought 9,397 gallons of fuel, transited 423 locks, and were underway for 2,183 hours, averaging 4 months of cruising per year.  We made lots of side trips and followed several alternatives to the conventional Loop route.

We saw all of the Erie Canal, Lake Champlain, the Thousand Islands, the Rideau Canal and the Trent Severn (twice).  We spent time on each of the Great Lakes except Superior, enjoying both sides of Lake Michigan and Green Bay, the Canadian side of Lake Huron, Lake St Clair, and the US side of Lake Erie.  Nine Lives travelled north on the Mississippi to Minneapolis and then back to Pickwick Lake one summer, followed the next summer by a trip up the Ohio to Pittsburgh and beyond to Morgantown. The Cumberland River to Nashville and beyond was one of many highlights that year, as was the Tennessee River to Knoxville this past autumn.

On the journey we met many charming Harbor Hosts, and enjoyed docktails with Loopers from every fleet from 2017 through 2025.  We are looking forward to a few more months on Nine Lives, heading south to the Keys and then north to finish our voyages at our home port of Hilton Head Island.

Continuing across Tampa Bay, we could see several sailing races in the distance.  As we got into the middle of the Bay, we found ourselves caught in the middle of one of the races.  Sailing vessels have the right of way unless they are using their engines, plus we would never want to interfere with a race, so Dick made a couple of turns to get out of the way.  It turned out that we were right at the buoy where they were making their turn.  We realized that they were now heading directly towards us, and were putting up spinnakers (making them a lot faster), so Dick sensibly decided to put the throttles down and “get out of Dodge”!

A bit too close!
They made their turns and were heading quickly towards us!
Harbour Island as we approach downtown Tampa

By the middle of the Bay, the waves were nearly broadside, so we speeded up again.  This always smooths out the ride, so we ran fast until we were well within the channel leading to downtown Tampa.  The marina at the Convention Center is relatively small, and has no services apart from electricity and water, but the floating docks are sturdy with adequate cleats.  A kind young man interrupted his lunch to catch our lines as we came in.  I was particularly grateful, because the docks are very low to the waterline, and I would have found it tricky to catch a cleat.  Being in front of the Convention Center, right on the Riverwalk, means great people watching and lots of choices of restaurants close by.

Seddon Channel and Harbour Island. Note the cruise ship heading into Tampa Bay in the distance.

Dinner at Harpoon Harry’s Crab House was about as expected.  Dick enjoyed conch fritters, and helped me finish a very nice spinach and artichoke dip.  I chose fried shrimp for a main course, and Dick had an excellent seafood risotto.  The venue was incredibly noisy, and the waitress was very busy.  The hard wooden benches in the booth we sat in were so high that my feet did not touch the floor, so it was very uncomfortable, although something of a change from all the times that the seats are low and the tables high!

Harpoon Harry’s conch fritters
Harpoon Harry’s spinach and artichoke dip

Nine Lives is sitting on a dock with 4 large motor yachts.  There is no security (a sign slung across the gangway that says Private is hardly a deterrent), but the area is well lit, and I console myself that anyone with theft on their minds would target the larger, and clearly unoccupied, yachts first.

Nine Lives on the North Dock

Our first full day was occupied with laundry, and cooking an interesting version of shepherd’s pie in the slow cooker.  Dick took a walk and explored the local area.

Tampa sunset

The next day we discovered too late that there are golf cart tours of the old town, so we contented ourselves with a walk along the waterfront and later a bike ride for Dick.  There is a girl’s volleyball tournament in the Convention Center, and when we stopped in, it smelled strongly of sweaty teenagers!

Tampa Convention Center
Cotanchobee and Fort Brooke Park

The bird life is again interesting.  Soon, I will get out the big camera and take some proper pictures, but for now the phone works.  Each morning at sunrise the empty dock beside us is completely full of seagulls.  Through the day it is mostly gulls, with a few cormorants standing sentinel.  Early evening is the time for herons and egrets.  Little Blue Herons and Tricolor Herons are joined by Snowy Egrets.  I have never seen so many members of the same heron species so close together except in a rookery.

Herons and Egrets on the dock in the evening

In the evening, we walked along the Riverwalk to Malio’s, a steak house.  There was some confusion as to where we would get off the Riverwalk, resulting in adding about a quarter of a mile to our walk.  At first, we were shown to a table at the top of the stairs, that would have had us in the path of every guest and all the wait staff.  We asked for a different table.  Throughout the evening, we noticed that several other guests also refused that table.  Dinner was very good, with excellent wines.  I started with something called Lobster Escargot, essentially pieces of lobster tail in a garlicky butter, served with toast.  Dick enjoyed the best carpaccio he has ever been served.  The prime rib (for Dick) was perfect, and I enjoyed my petit filet.  As with most high-end steak houses these days, all the accompaniments were an extra charge, and offered in sharing portions.  We opted for asparagus and mushrooms, and since we could not agree on a starch, we contented ourselves with the delicious bread that was complimentary for a change.  Desserts were just right, berries with ice cream for Dick, and salted caramel gelato for me.

Malio’s lobster escargot style
Malio’s carpaccio
Malio’s, steak for me, and prime rib for Dick
Malio’s desserts

By the next morning, all but one of the other boats had left our section of the marina, so it was a good time to leave.  For some reason, the other part of the marina has a security gate, but the town has not bothered to replace the one that should be at the section we were in.  Add to this, no showers, and a considerable walk to rest rooms, and the review will not be overly enthusiastic.  Location is fantastic however, so we would probably return.

Tampa waterfront
Our voyage this segment, note the lovely straight line across the Gulf!

November 17th to December 2nd, 2024: Pensacola to Port St Joe

Repositioning the car for the last time on this trip was uneventful, and the return journey was quite interesting.  We took the rental car and our vehicle from Pensacola via I-95.  That Interstate drive along the Panhandle has to be one of the most boring drives in America.  We are both depressingly familiar with it from travelling back and forth between Houston and Hilton Head a few years ago.  Eventually we turned south and arrived at Port St Joe. After a quick visit to the marina office to make sure they were aware that our vehicle would be in their parking lot for a couple of weeks, we got back into the rental car and set off for Pensacola.  This time we took the coast road all the way.  It was quite a change from our last trip 24 years ago.  It is that long since we were last in the Florida Panhandle.  Dick’s Mum and Dad used to winter in Panama City Beach, and Dick and I stayed at a timeshare in Sandestin one Christmas.  Today, with the exception of the environs of two Air Force bases, the entire coast is either fully built up or in the process.  Even the devastating hurricane of 5 years ago has not discouraged people from rebuilding the lost homes, and developers are building whole new tracts of housing.  Apart from the towns, and of course the glorious beaches, there is nothing except miles and miles of houses.  Most new buildings are designed to resist hurricane damage, but neither of us would be tempted to live in the area.

Pensacola Palafox Pier Yacht Harbor entrance with commercial shipping behind
Palafox Pier Yacht Harbor

Our restaurant back in Pensacola that evening had a lot of promise, but was a great disappointment.  Dick had been looking forward to the octopus starter, and that was about the only success.  My specialty fries, loaded with sausage and mushrooms, was so cold that I sent it back.  Both main courses were merely warm.  The fries were not charged, and they comped one dessert, but no manager came to apologise and one would have thought that after the fries were returned they would at least have made sure that the main courses were served hot.

George Bistro octopus starter
George Bistro loaded fries were stone cold
George Bistro shrimp and pasta, barely warm

Dick spent the next day running errands and seeing if he could fix the water issues under my bathroom sink.  Eventually, he had to give up, so for the rest of this trip I have had to dump water out of a strategically placed bowl every few hours, rather than letting it seep into the bilge.  The problem is that the assembly under the sink is made of polybutylene, a material now banned from plumbing applications because it fails.

In the evening we walked over to Jackson’s, a really good steakhouse.  All our choices were excellent, and piping hot!

Jackson’s, an excellent scallop starter
Jackson’s key lime phyllo purse for dessert

The next day brought hours of rain. About 5 inches fell in 24 hours, most of it between dawn and 3pm.  I enjoyed preparing a spread for our planned docktails that evening.  We expected 10 guests, but 6 showed up, so there were a lot of leftovers!  It was an enjoyable evening anyway, and we will persevere with invitations.

Docktails spread in Pensacola

Every year’s Looper pack has a slightly different character.  This year we are seeing far more 2 to 5 boat groups than previously, who travel together and tend not to socialize outside their group.  Since we prefer to make our own decisions and don’t “buddy boat”, we are finding it harder to meet people this year. This is also not the first time that this year’s Loopers have accepted our invitation and then not arrived.

We took a walk to Pensacola’s historic main shopping street.  To be honest, there are far too many restaurants and not enough shops.  We had fun looking around a home shop that was all ready for Christmas.  Well, I enjoyed it, Scrooge waited outside after a quick whip through.  There was an interesting chocolate shop, where we tried chocolate coated pretzels (yummy) and ate some ice cream.  The highlight was being directed upstairs when we stopped at an oil and vinegar shop, to discover a wonderful array of kitchenware, gadgets, and cheeses.  A gentleman from Italy offered wine tasting.  Dick loved chatting with him, and trying every one of his offerings, while I filled my basket with treasures that I never knew I needed.  I tasted the Chardonnay, while the nice man tried to teach me how to cook like a true Italian “in 3 minutes”.  We only had space for 3 bottles of the wines he was selling, but altogether it made for a very enjoyable hour!

Brown Pelican swimming in the harbor

The history of Pensacola began in 1559, with a Spanish settlement of 1500 colonists that failed following a significant hurricane and was abandoned after just 2 years.  Spain decided that northwest Florida was too dangerous to settle, and they abandoned attempts for 137 years.  When the French began exploring the lands to the north and west, Spain decided that their territory was threatened, and they established another settlement near present-day Pensacola.  In these early years, the Spanish encouraged escaped slaves to join the colony, and there was intermarriage between the mostly male Spanish members of the fortified trading posts, native American women, and the escaped slaves who were given freedom in exchange for conversion to Catholicism.  The multiracial heritage of the city lives on in the local creole and Cajun cuisine, and in the ornate wrought iron balconies of the downtown buildings.

In 1763, Florida was ceded to Britain and Pensacola became the capital of the new colony of West Florida.  The colony remained loyal during the War of Independence, but it was never a priority for the British, and was handed back to Spain as part of the Treaty of Paris in 1783.  The War of 1812 brought Florida into the possession of the United States, and it became a state in 1845.

Downtown Pensacola
A few shops and mostly restaurants in downtown Pensacola
A pretty garden beside one of the historic buildings
Interesting murals in downtown Pensacola
A beautiful historic high-rise building in Pensacola

The history of Pensacola includes stories of the struggle for civil rights for black people.  During the 1950s and early 60s, African Americans in Pensacola began sit-ins to protest against “whites only” lunch counters in stores.  They were verbally and physically harassed, and some were arrested on trumped up charges.  The African American community raised bail money, and the peaceful protests lasted 702 days.  These protests included the sit-ins, also marches, picketing, and a selective boycott of stores.  During this time, downtown stores lost 80% of their business.  The lunch counters were integrated in 1962. 

Pensacola is also associated with the presence of the Naval Air Station, the first one commissioned in the United States in 1914.  The Flight Demonstration Squadron, The Blue Angels, is stationed in Pensacola, but their winter training takes place in California.  They return to Pensacola in March, and can be seen practicing through the show season.  We heard a few jets while we were in the area, but did not see the Blue Angels.

At the downtown park in Pensacola, you can teach yourself how to dance the Cha Cha

Aging plastic seems to be our theme for November.  After the various plumbing issues, all caused by failing plastic, Dick was disappointed when his venerable bike helmet fell apart.  Investigation at a bike shop revealed that parts are available (who knew?) but they didn’t have any in stock, so Dick bought a new helmet.  This one is larger, heavier, and all white, and the comment at the bike shop was that he looks like a Storm Trooper (Star Wars).  He does.  Just a couple of days later, after an excursion in Pensacola, the part that clips the bike lock to the crossbar fell apart.  Also plastic.  Fortunately, Dick also has some cable locks, so he can continue his rides and order the broken piece from Amazon.  Clearly, this is a part that fails often, according to Amazon, there were 50 sold on the day I put ours into the shopping basket!

Dick enjoyed a great bike ride through a waterfront park in Pensacola.  He also found a completely deserted public marina.  Sadly, it is restricted to boats under 27 feet, and no overnight dockage.  Possibly there would be pushback from the owners of the local private marinas if the City decided to allow overnight stops or set themselves up in competition.  Bruce Beach Park was very interesting.  Reclaimed land was the site of lumber mills from the 1890’s until a hurricane swept them away.  In 1917, the Bruce Drydock Company was granted two blocks along Pensacola Bay.  A dredging project reclaimed 15 acres, as enough sediment was removed to allow vessels of up to 6000 tons to dock for repairs.  The business closed in 1939, and the area became a popular, if somewhat unsafe, swimming hole.  Later it was a segregated beach for black people, with a purpose-built swimming pool because the bay waters were polluted and treacherous. In the 1990’s, environmental restoration began to reverse the devastation of the 19th and 20th centuries, and the present public park and restored wetlands area opened in 2018.

A great looking marina, but only smaller boats and no overnight dockage
Pensacola, Bruce Beach Park
Pensacola Bruce Beach Park

After being behind for a couple of weeks, our friends on Proost caught up with us in Pensacola, and the next day Spring Fling arrived.  We all went to dinner at Global Grill, had a great time and good food.  We don’t know whether we will see either couple before we leave the boat in Port St Joe (doubtful), but you never know.

We left Pensacola at a leisurely 10am, for an easy run to an anchorage in Santa Rosa Bay, arriving by 1pm.  It is a good spot for protection from north winds, but there was quite a lot of chop until the late afternoon, as well as wakes from passing boaters.  There was a brilliant sunset, and I am told the sunrise was also lovely, but I was dealing with a situation at our home in Yorkshire, UK.  While we woke up to a sunny, but slightly chilly morning in Florida, England was blanketed with snow, and our cleaner could not get in to turn around the house for incoming guests.  Once it was all sorted out, I was able to resume my regular post in the cockpit and enjoy the peaceful morning and a very necessary cup of coffee!

Santa Rosa Bay sunset

The anchor came up easily, and we had a straightforward morning run to Baytowne Marina in  Sandestin.  This is certainly a location of contrasts.  The marina charges over $5 per foot, a huge price compared to others, and out of budget for most Loopers, and yet they are AGLCA sponsors.  The marina is part of a resort, with hotels, shopping, golf, and a beach.  I had hopes for the shopping, but sadly, the nearby “upscale boutiques” are definitely not.  Instead there is an abundance of t-shirt and souvenir shops and arcades, with noisy bars and take-out restaurants.

Baytowne Marina in Sandestin

Our first night’s dinner was in the restaurant in one of Marriott’s Autograph Collection hotels.  A few months ago, the menu had lots of familiar choices, but now it is trendy “farm-to-table”, with a preponderance of bitter greens, beans, sweet potatoes and squashes.  There was little, in fact nothing, on the menu to tempt me.  Dick was convinced that I should order the sweet potato, andouille, and kale soup.  As two of the 3 ingredients are in the category of “most disliked foods”, I passed and settled for a salad.  Dick had octopus again, followed by a pork shank, both were excellent.  I chose Australian Prawns, which came with heads and shells intact.  They were tasty, but somewhat tough, and undercooked beans were the accompaniment.  One wonders why it was necessary to go to Australia for prawns when the bounty of the Gulf is right outside the door.  So much for the whole farm-to-table and seasonal produce mantra!

Ovide Pork shank served over beans
Ovide Australian Prawns, more beans, undercooked

The next day was a highlight. You can rent a golf cart for a day (at the same price as a rental car!), so we explored the local residential areas, very similar in concept to Hilton Head.  There is a broad mixture of townhouses and single-family homes, many in separately gated communities, plus a few condos and hotels. All are built around golf courses and lagoons. We then visited the big shopping mall, which has a number of the higher end chain stores, some restaurants, and a supermarket.  We always enjoy browsing in cookery shops, and seldom come out empty handed!  We agreed that this was one of the best Williams Sonoma shops we have visited.

A Brown Pelican at Baytowne Marina

In the evening, we returned to the mall for an excellent dinner at a steakhouse that is part of a very small chain.  My burrata and tomato salad with prosciutto was probably the best interpretation of a caprese salad I have ever had.  The steaks were perfectly cooked, and everything was nice and hot.  The apple galette was a perfect finish.

Fleming’s Caprese Salad
Fleming’s steaks and accompaniments
Fleming’s Apple Galette

We were supposed to stay another day, and Dick was looking forward to exploring more by bicycle, but a deteriorating weather forecast suggested that it would be a good idea to move on to Panama City before the winds and waves were set for an uncomfortable journey.  The Gulf Intracoastal Waterway is different from that of the east coast, in that it is mainly large sounds and bays with relatively short connecting stretches of canal.  The large, open bodies of water are quite shallow, which means that the waves can really kick up and it gets very bouncy and unpleasant.  Our friend Pete calls it “sporty”, and I tend to be pretty miserable in those conditions. It was disappointing to walk away from what we had paid for one more night, but we already knew there was a policy of no refunds.

We travelled through the cut called the Grand Canyon, one of the man-made sections of the Waterway.  It is about 20 miles long.  The book said to watch for bald eagles, but as Dick said, it would seem that the eagles didn’t get the memo.  We did see a collection of large plush animals looking out at the channel.  A note on Google Earth says that it is called The Welcoming Committee, and the collection has grown considerably in the year since that marker was posted.  I cannot find any information, and there are no houses, schools, or other structures anywhere in the vicinity, so we have no idea who the committee is welcoming and why.

The cut known as The Grand Canyon
An enterprising person has turned a derelict sailboat into a home. Note the tin roof and the solar panels
This is the Welcoming Committee

As we crossed West Bay, we heard a loud splash beside the boat.  First one, and then three dolphins swam beside us, about 3 feet off our starboard pontoon, for quite a while before they dropped back and went about their important dolphin business.

It was a bit lumpy crossing St Andrews Bay because of the inlet to the Gulf, but for the most part the waves were not on the beam and it was fine.  We arrived at Emerald Bay Marina by 4pm.  This marina is quite a contrast to Baytowne, isolated in a somewhat industrial and down-market neighbourhood.  Apart from the oyster restaurant, any outings require Uber, and there are no interesting shops.  The marina is mostly occupied by sailboats, we have not seen this many for some time.

Emerald Harbor in Panama City
Sunset over Watson Bayou

The next evening, we walked to Gene’s Oyster Bar.  It is a local institution, having been in business since the 1930’s.  The interior is two long counters, with wooden bar stools that must be contemporary with the building.  They offer various fresh oysters every day, but since neither of us like them, we chose other options.  Dick’s gumbo was good, and he followed it with a grouper po’ boy.  The fish was delicious, with a light and tasty batter, and the bread was just right.  I opted for a shrimp basket, lovely hush puppies, crisp, hot fries with 3 cheeses melted over them, and some of the most delicious fried shrimp I have ever had.  The only jarring note (or call it all part of the atmosphere) was seeing that our friendly, jolly waiter, wore a holstered gun to complete his ensemble of Gene’s T-shirt, slightly grubby jeans, and a truly filthy baseball cap.

Gene’s Oyster Bar in Panama City
Gene’s Grouper Po’ Boy
Gene’s Shrimp Basket

Dick went for a long bike ride to downtown Panama City, just to see what we were missing.  (Emerald Harbor is a few miles from downtown).  There is major redevelopment underway, including the historic downtown area, with many beautiful buildings, and a brand-new marina with surrounding condos.  Unfortunately, the town has decided not to complete the marina, only the fuel dock and the breakwater are in place.  One might speculate that they are hoping that private enterprise will take over and complete the docks.

Panama City unfinished marina
Only the fuel dock is operational at Panama City’s marina

The history of Panama City did not begin until the early 1900’s, when a number of unincorporated settlements in the area were amalgamated.  Dick noticed that unlike Pensacola, the historic downtown buildings of Panama City date from the early 20th century and lack the Spanish and French influences of older Florida cities.  The name was intentionally chosen to associate the city with the Panama Canal, which was under construction at the time.  Supposedly the name was chosen by a local real estate developer who hoped to spur interest in the area.  The port is the closest port in the US mainland to the eastern Caribbean entrance to the Canal.  Two military bases in the area mean that the US government is the largest employer.  Commercial interests include shipbuilding and tourism.  The city was devastated by Hurricane Michael in 2018, and is still rebuilding.  Hurricanes are frequent visitors to the area.

Redevelopment in Panama City downtown
A beautiful Art Deco Theatre in Panama City
Panama City Arts Center
The historic clock in Panama City has survived devastating hurricanes
Many buildings in Panama City have these interesting old doors

In the evening, we called Uber and went to the Grand Marlin, a seafood restaurant in Panama City Beach.  The food was good, and the service excellent, but it probably wasn’t worth the ½ hour drive.

Our Uber drivers were interesting to chat with.  Outbound, our driver came from Montenegro.  It was interesting to hear his perspective on living in America.  The return trip was with a local lady who could talk the hind leg off a donkey.  She told us all about her childhood and how different it was from that of her grandchildren.  It wasn’t really a conversation, more of a stream of consciousness monologue, and we felt quite exhausted by the time we arrived back at the marina.

An osprey has a favourite perch overlooking Emerald Harbor. He brought his breakfast fish to consume while he watched the Bayou.

Thanksgiving Day was a bit lonely.  We had read in previous years about Loopers sharing the day, but being in a location with only one or two occupied boats, it was unlikely.  Dick cooked a traditional dinner of turkey breast, mashed potatoes with gravy, and green beans.  We ate in the cockpit after a beautiful sunset, and enjoyed a nice bottle of wine.

Thanksgiving turkey dinner
Sunset Thanksgiving Day
I didn’t have to wash up every pan and dish we own after Thanksgiving dinner, but it was close!

Late the next afternoon, the dockmaster came over to ask if we would be willing to move along the dock and make room for another boat.  Blue Moon had been booked into the sister marina, but had found on arrival that she just didn’t fit.  That was the marina that Dick had hoped to be in, but the owner had explained when he called to make a reservation that we wouldn’t fit.  The docks at Emerald Harbor are still under renovation, and the end pier that we were on, while easily long enough to fit both us and Blue Moon, had only pilings and a single plank instead of proper walkways.  Only the centre section is a normal dock.  This meant a lot of balancing on 12” planks, and inching around the pilings.  Very unsafe for all concerned!

Dick was able to help the dockmaster with getting Blue Moon onto the pier.  We were happy to see fellow Loopers.  They went to the famous Oyster Bar for their supper, while we ate on board, but afterwards they came over and we enjoyed a very convivial couple of hours with a bottle of wine.  They are just at the start of their Loop, having begun in Indiana.  Interestingly, because they were already familiar with most of the rivers, they chose to come down the Lower Mississippi to Baton Rouge and New Orleans.  They had interesting stories about scarce anchorages and mega-tows.  We certainly hope our paths will cross again.

We left by 9am to head to our final stop for this year at Port St Joe.  While we motored through East Bay we passed a small boat with oystermen, pulling up oysters with large rakes and piling them into the open boat.  Oysters have been eaten by humans for more than ten thousand years.  They have been cultivated in Japan for at least 4000 years.  Romans farmed oysters in the Thames Estuary east of London, and the town of Whitstable still uses those historic oyster beds.  In Victorian England, oysters were popular snacks in pubs to accompany a pint of beer.  In the 19th century, oysters were cheap, and they were mainly eaten by the working class.  At that time, oyster beds in New York Harbor were the largest source of oysters worldwide.  Sadly, by the 20th century disease, pollution, and sedimentation, as well as overfishing, had destroyed most of the New York oyster beds.  Today, wild oyster stocks are depleted due to overfishing and other causes, and now they are considered a treat for the wealthy.  There is a movement to use oysters to filter polluted water.  This can be very successful, but as always, man cannot be trusted.  Oysters from reefs that are used for pollution cleanup are not safe for consumption, but there is a high risk of unscrupulous poachers harvesting them and selling them as edible.  For the most part, Dick and I do not enjoy oysters, and are happy to leave them for the aficionados.

East Bay oystermen

We passed through a long cut, and then a 5-mile canal to arrive at Saint Joseph Bay.  It was quite an interesting journey, with some wildlife to be seen, including osprey, a bald eagle, and Dick saw a muskrat.  Shrimp boats dock at the mouth of the canal.  We saw a number of derelict boats thrown up on the shore, testament to the frequent hurricanes that come through the area in summer.

The 5-mile canal leading to Port St Joe
A derelict shrimp boat
Shrimp Boats at the commercial dock in Port St Joe

We arrived at Port St Joe by 3pm, and were tied up in the space where Nine Lives will be for 2 to 3 months.  Point South Marina is a newly rebuilt marina with excellent docks and good facilities.  We took some time tying up and placing fenders to be sure that everything would be safe and secure while we are away from the boat.

While we enjoyed our traditional wind-down after getting settled (beer for Dick while he fills in the logbook, and fizzy water for me), we saw a new center console catamaran arrive.  This monster was about 40 feet long, and sported no less than 4, 400 horsepower outboard motors on the back.  Dick found out that they had travelled across the Gulf that day from St Petersburg.  They had 6 foot waves, and had to slow down from 40mph to 25mph.  The boat had 4 guys on it (Dick speculated that one is likely to be the new owner, and one a delivery captain).  It is being delivered to Galveston.

A new 40-ft center console on delivery from St Petersburg to Galveston

In the evening we went to a local restaurant.  Port St Joe is a nice little town with what appears to be lots of interesting shops and a surprising number of restaurants.  We are looking forward to exploring more of the town when we return in February.

Port St Joe sunset

We spent part of Sunday getting a few things packed up and into the car, but most of what is needed can only be done at the last minute.  There is a Florida rule that if your boat is staying for more than 90 days, you need to pay for a special permit.  Dick had filled in the form, but weirdly, not every local government office knows what it is or how to accept payment and issue the sticker!  Dick tried to get it done in Pensacola, without success, so we had to stay in Port St Joe an extra day so Dick could get this done before leaving.  Fortunately, the local office here does know how to process the permit.  The extra day also gives Dick enough time to discuss the work that needs to be done while we are away with the next-door boatyard.

Nine Lives will snooze at the dock in this very nice marina until February.  By late January we will be watching for a “weather window” that will allow us to cross the Gulf overnight and have calm waters.  Unfortunately, there are not many days that this will be possible, Loopers may wait as much as two weeks before the right opportunity comes.  Hilton Head is just a 6-hour drive, and we will make sure we are ready to leave at a moment’s notice to catch the right weather window.

Nine Lives at the dock in Port St Joe
An osprey, and CCTV, will watch over Nine Lives for the next few weeks

We hope that the next issue of Nine Lives Voyages will be published in mid-February.

Nine Lives November voyage

November 3rd to 17th, 2024: Columbus to Pensacola

The night before we were due to leave Columbus, the clocks went back an hour, so everyone was awake early.  A couple of boats left before 7am, but 7 of us arranged to leave together, shortly after 8am.  We had to wait a bit while a tow locked down ahead of us.

Loopers waiting for John C Stennis Lock
Boats in the lock

We passed the Drax Aliceville Pellet Plant.  They turn wood into pellets and ship it all over the world to be used as biomass fuel.  Plants fueled by biomass make a claim of green energy because of the assumption that forests will regrow.  The claim is controversial, but several countries give subsidies to energy companies that use biomass instead of fossil fuels.  One such plant in UK has been found to use wood harvested from old growth forests in Western Canada, according to reports by investigative reporters.  I presume (but do not know this for certain) that there are no old growth forests left in this part of USA.  On the rivers we passed many tracts of pines that were being grown as a crop. In a pelletisation plant, wood that is unsuitable for other products is chipped, heated to reduce its moisture content, and then reduced to a fine powder.  This is then pressed at high pressure to form a small, dense pellet.  Biomass pellets produce 80% less CO2 emissions than coal, and there are lower levels of other pollutants.  Coal fired generating plants can be converted to burn biomass pellets.  Using wood pellets is considered to be carbon neutral when the wood is taken from sustainably managed forests.

Drax Aliceville Pellet Plant

We were anchored by 4pm in a quiet oxbow off the waterway.  I was much happier than I was at the last anchorage!  Firstly, although we were still in 20 feet of water, the area was wide enough to have full confidence that there was more than enough space to swing 360 degrees.  Secondly, we both felt a distinct pull when the anchor set, so no concerns on that score either.  The wind came up during the night and we swung back and forth about 60 degrees, always being stopped by the well-set anchor.  My anchor alarm shows a track, so we can see where Nine Lives meanders while we sleep.  At 7:15 we lifted the anchor in quite a stiff breeze, but all was well, and we set off down the river.

Peaceful anchorage south of Columbus

We passed a stretch that was an interesting lesson in geology and canal construction.  Later, we came to the White Cliffs of Epes, also known as White Bluff, or Ecor Blanc. These spectacular cliffs are formed of chalk that was laid down at the same time as the White Cliffs of Dover, about 145 million years ago.  The cliffs are 80 feet high, but they are in a difficult spot for most travellers to admire them, as they are best seen from the river.  Chalk was formed by layers of marine organisms, and these 80-foot cliffs would have taken about 1.4 million years to be laid down.  This chalk underlies the fertile Black Belt that cuts in a crescent through Alabama. Apparently, an underlying chalk base is impermeable and leads to very rich soil above, making the Black Belt area a perfect place for growing cotton.

Geology and construction of the waterway
White Cliffs of Epes
White Cliffs of Epes

Now that most of the cotton is gone, the chalk underlying the land means that it is particularly suitable for landfills.  15,000 tons of trash per day, originating from 33 states, arrives at just one of these landfills.  The same landfill was used to bury more than 4 million tons of coal ash slurry from the TVA Kingston Spill in Tennessee that I wrote about earlier this trip.  Further down the river there were more white cliffs, not quite as extensive and bright, and so not as famous.

Nine Lives

That day was one of the prettiest and most interesting days on the Inland Rivers.  The copper colours of the bald cypress and their twisted roots above the water, the geology, egrets and herons, and the sun shining through the trees in their fall colours all combined to make an exceptional day on the water.  Seeing a large cat swimming across the river was a highlight, although I could not get a very clear picture.  We believe it had to be a bobcat, as there are no cougars in this part of Alabama.  Male bobcats can be up to 40 pounds, so we are pretty sure that is what we saw

A bobcat swims across the river

We crossed 3000 hours on Nine Lives’ engines.  We also moved into the Black Warrior River, the lower part of the Tenn Tom Waterway.  The river is named after Tuscaloosa, a Maubilian chief.  The river rises in the Appalachians, and flows for 169 miles into the Tombigbee River, draining 6228 square miles of the watershed.  Its dams and reservoirs allow use for hydroelectric power, drinking water, and transportation.  The basin that it flows through is still important for mining coal and methane, although we saw fewer coal-carrying barges here than we did last year on the Ohio River.  Mobile is still the largest coal port in the southern United States.  There are 50 active coal mines on the river.  The Black Warrior has also been an important waterway for shipping iron and steel.

Fall colour above Demopolis

Reading about the Black Warrior River and its early history, we find yet another ugly chapter in the region’s history.  The Muskogee Indians, including the Creek tribes, lived in this area, with the Maubilians occupying the farthest south areas with the Tensaw tribes.  An estimated 2,500 to 5,000 Maubilians, under the leadership of Tuscaloosa, the legendary Black Warrior, were slaughtered by Hernando de Soto in 1540.  The Spaniards effectively wiped out the Maubilian culture, but their name lives on in the city of Mobile.  Mobile comes from a French variant of Maubilian.

We arrived at Demopolis and were tied up by 2:15. They put us on the fuel dock because there was a 97-foot Marlow coming in that would take up the whole of the long T-dock where we would normally have been assigned.

Kingfisher Bay Marina at Demopolis

In the evening, we were happy to welcome Sandy and Frank from Proost on board for dinner.  It was Nasi Goreng.  Frank is originally from the Netherlands, and the dish is a favourite for all of us.  We enjoyed a very congenial evening, swapping stories and comparing how Nasi Goreng should be prepared, and which condiments should accompany the dish.

The group of boats that planned to leave in the morning included the big Marlow, but their appointment at the lock was 6am, which would have meant leaving before sunrise.  Dick decided we were not going to do that.   Unfortunately, the lock had later scheduled maintenance (we suspect that the early group knew this and failed to share that information).  We were able to go to the lock shortly after 10am, but then we had to wait an extra 15 minutes while a towing boat with a disabled sailboat maneuvered out of the lock.  We were finally on our way downriver by 11am.

The spillway below Demopolis Lock
A chemical plant
Dredging the Black Warrior River
A steel rolling mill on the Black Warrior River

I was surprised and disappointed that after a day of lots of wildlife and very pretty scenery, our first look at the Black Warrior River was not nearly as nice.  In fact, it was long hours of boredom, with mostly scrub growing along the banks, no houses, and only the occasional wood products plant to look at.  There are very few anchorages along this stretch, and even those are simply in a shallow area in a wider part of the river.  I was not happy, looking at any of the choices.  We had departed Demopolis with 4th Dimension, another Endeavourcat, that we have been leapfrogging on this journey.  Kip and his wife have been around the Great Loop 4 times, and we knew that they planned to stop at the same anchorage as Dick had chosen.

There were two places to anchor on the bend, and Dick eased into the upstream area, trying to leave space for 4th Dimension.  He soon discovered that the river shelved rapidly, and with just 4 feet of water under the boat there would be no room to swing.  We absolutely don’t want to be putting out a second anchor to hold us in place, although many boaters do choose that solution.  At this point, it was clear that Kip was heading towards the downstream section of the bend, so we followed.  Dick got on the radio and asked if we could set our own anchor alongside, and then raft up.  That way we would swing together.  Kip was dubious.  His concern was that if we swung 180 degrees, our anchor chains would twist together and be a heck of a mess to untangle.  The forecast was for the wind to stay in the same direction, but drop overnight, so it was decided there was little risk.  It was a great advantage for us, because Kip has broadcast-AIS.

Automatic Identification System, AIS, is a feature that all commercial vessels must have by law, and that is available for pleasure craft.  Pleasure craft can have broadcast-and-receive-AIS as part of their radio setup, or receive-AIS only.  Way back in 2016, when we had to replace our secondary radio due to a lightning strike, we would have preferred to have the full AIS transponder, that is, both broadcast and receive.  At the time we were told that a new radio with broadcast-AIS would be several months before it could be delivered, but receive-only was available immediately.  Dick felt that it was more important for us to be able to see the commercial traffic, than for them to be able to see us.  Interestingly, so it has proved.  What’s more, in 8 years of voyages we have never once heard a tow call a pleasure craft because of the pleasure craft’s transponder, and the one time we were called by a tow it was because he saw us on radar.  So, Nine Lives cannot broadcast AIS.  Our position in that anchorage put us out in the river, disturbingly (for me) close to the sailing line.  With Kip broadcasting AIS, we felt that we were far more visible to tow traffic than our anchor light alone would have allowed.

The tow that passed us shortly after dark threw us around with its prop wash as it powered through the bend, but our anchors held us in place.

We were able to reciprocate a little, because our location had poor cell service and Kip was unable to watch the election night results come in using his phone as a hotspot.  Our mi-fi was doing a sterling job as always, even with just 1-2 bars of reception, it gave enough bandwidth for up to 5 devices, and we were able to share it with 4th Dimension.  We all passed a peaceful night, especially as there was no more tow traffic.

Autumn colour below Demopolis

We needed an early start, hoping to get well below the next lock that day, a 100-mile step.  We were untied and up anchor and on our way by 6:10am.  The water was incredibly still, with mirror reflections.  Even though it was the same relatively ugly scrub, in the morning sunshine and clear water it was very pretty.  Except for the stretch below a water treatment plant. We could see the outflow bubbling up and about 2 miles of foam sitting on the water.

Still water and reflections
A pretty stretch of the river
Foam on the river from a water treatment plant outflow

Although not too obvious, there was some wildlife other than birds.  In addition to the cat we saw swimming a few days before, and the deer on the beach, Dick saw a bear in some bushes, and we saw our first gator swimming near the shore.  As I read about the area, I discovered that alligators once were found as far north as Missouri, and that a few still live in Wheeler Lake in Tennessee.  They were on the list of Endangered Species in 1973, but have come back and are now in the category of Least Concern.  Today they are gradually expanding their range back towards northern states where they were previously extinct.  Alligator farming is now a big business, producing both meat and hides.  Dick will order alligator in a restaurant, but I do not.

Deer on the shore

We passed the famous, or rather infamous, Bobby’s Fish Camp.  It is a character place, the only possible stop for Loopers who must have fuel and/or water on this stretch of the Loop.  Only the first 3 boats to arrive fit on the dock, the rest must raft up, and do not get power.  Regardless, all pay the same $2.75 per foot (compared to $1.25 at Columbus and Midway, both of which are proper marinas).  Bobby used to be a real character, but he died, and the subsequent owners apparently lack his charm.  I say no more.  We did not plan to stop there, as we did not need fuel or water, and feel it is better to leave spaces for those who really need them.

Bobby’s Fish Camp with a single long dock that has space for just 3 boats

We were able to catch up to a group of 4 Loopers who had already contacted the Coffeeville lock, so we were through with no delay.  Just as well, with a further 3 hours to our planned anchorage.  That was our last lock until we travel all the way around Florida and arrive back at Wexford!  We have done 421 lock transits in total on the Loop.

Leaving Coffeeville Lock, our last lock on the Great Loop!

We anchored in a bend in the river with about 7 feet under the boat.  There was no wind, and a bit of current, but plenty of room to swing, since we only had about 80 feet of chain out.  Later, after dark, a tow passed us.  It was interesting to see their searchlight sweeping back and forth, and it was very comforting to see how far to the other side of the river they passed by.  We also felt no wake or propwash, since they were so far away and had to go very slowly around the series of bends in the river.  Overnight there were other tows passing, but Nine Lives did not even rock as they passed by.  The river is tidal at this point, and overnight we did swing 180 degrees, but we were still in deep enough water and well off the sailing line.

As we raised the anchor, there was a disturbing moment when the clutch (part of the electric windlass that pulls the anchor chain) began to slip.  “Shit!” said Dick.  However, he did not immediately expand on his remark.  When prompted (remember that we are wearing headsets for communication), he said that the clutch was slipping.  Further muttering, followed by the comment that the anchor must be snagged.  I moved the boat forward to see if we could move past the snag, and Dick then took hold of the anchor chain and was able to lift the anchor off the bottom with no difficulty.  That is, no difficulty apart from manually lifting a 55-pound anchor and accompanying 3/8-inch chain.  Once the anchor was well off the bottom, I eased Nine Lives away from the anchorage and into the river while Dick figured out what had happened.  It turned out that the clutch slipping had been doing its job of protecting the windlass, because the chain had piled up and jammed in the locker.  Once freed, everything worked smoothly, and we were underway by 6:35.

A passing tow with an unusual load

This was again quite a long and mostly boring stretch of river.  We did see 4 brown pelicans fly past us, quite a while since we have seen those.  They are a strictly coastal breed, and feed by diving from above and scoping up the fish.  The larger white pelicans that we have seen for the past few years are migratory on the Inland Rivers, and feed by scooping up fish from a floating position.

Brown pelicans on a bridge abutment

There is quite a change in vegetation in a fairly short stretch of river.  Palmettos, Spanish moss, cypress and loblolly pines begin to dominate.  In addition to the herons and egrets, we also saw kingfishers and osprey as well as seagulls.  We were now definitely in the bayou.

Celebrate our last lock of the Loop and our arrival in salt water

We anchored in a creek off the Tensaw River that feeds into the Mobile River.  It is 12 miles north of Mobile, and 25 miles from our next day’s destination at Fairhope, on the east side of Mobile Bay.  Notwithstanding previous reviews of the anchorage, the current in the creek was not enough to hold us in place against the change of the tide so we woke up to find ourselves facing the opposite direction from when we went to bed.  After more than 6 years since we anchored in tidal waters, I had forgotten to set the alarm to allow for the swing.  We were up in the night checking to see that the anchor was holding and that we were where we should be.  There was debris that had to be cleared from the bridle and the pontoons before lifting the anchor, and it came up with quite a lot of black mud.

The track showing where Nine Lives meandered overnight
Muddy anchor
Interstate 65, we passed under it, and then later we drove across it.

We arrived in Mobile Port.  We haven’t seen that many barges since Cairo (at the junction of the Ohio and the Mississippi Rivers).  There was an oil tanker docked, we haven’t seen those big boys since the Great Lakes.  We felt very small as we made our way through the port traffic towards Mobile Bay.

Arriving in Mobile Harbor

Mobile is the second-largest city in Alabama.  Its position on a protected saltwater bay has been the key to the success of the city from its founding by the French in 1702, when it was the first capital of Louisiana.

We passed the Convention Center, where you can dock, for a fee, with no power or water.  Some Loopers stop there, but it is reported as not particularly safe to leave your boat there, so it seems somewhat pointless.  We were very lucky with the big ship traffic.  The only ship that was underway had already slowed down for the harbor entrance, so we did not have to deal with the kind of wake the big fellas create.  A passing boater in a 44 ft trawler told us that cargo ship had passed him in the bay and had thrown him around “like a rubber duckie”.

Mobile Convention Center
Following a tug through Mobile Harbor
Drydocks for shipbuilding in Mobile
A container ship loading in Mobile Port
Container ships and Mobile downtown in the distance
A cargo ship arriving in Mobile Port

Although the wind was stronger than expected, thanks to a hurricane passing across the Gulf, it was still not too bad, and it was an easier crossing once we were out of the ship channel and no longer heading due south with the wind on the beam.

We arrived in Fairhope Marina by 11am.  Our side tie was at the end of the last dock, nearest the bay.  At the entrance to the channel, we lost the 5G T-Mobile signal, so our mi-fi router did not work, and neither did my phone, although Dick’s was working.  It turned out that his phone receives only 4G.  After a long conversation with T-Mobile and a change of setting on my phone, my access was restored, and we had instructions for changing the mi-fi.

Pelicans at the Fairhope Marina entrance

Dick took Uber to collect the rental car.  Enterprise advertises that they pick you up, and about half the time they do, but not in Fairhope.  Although the town claims to be “bike friendly”, that applies only when you are in the downtown.  To get there you have to ride for several miles on a narrow road with no shoulder.

Sunset on our first evening in Fairhope

We drove to an interesting French/Southern cuisine restaurant, R Bistro.  It was very crowded, with several large groups, including a birthday group of 8 women who were right next to us.  The noise in the restaurant was unbelievable.  The food was delicious though, and we would certainly return if we lived in the area.  Dick started with gumbo, and I tried their crawfish beignets.  My shrimp and grits were served on a grits cake, an unusual presentation, and Dick had blackened grouper.  None of the desserts appealed to me, but Dick loved his carrot cake (I had a tiny taste and thought it was awful!)

R Bistro
Shrimp and Grits at R Bistro
Blackened Grouper at R Bistro
Carrot Cake at R Bistro

The next day we went first to a local Publix, quite simply the best supermarket we have been to in years.  After returning to the boat and putting away the food, we set out to explore the town.

People enjoy fishing on the docks at Fairhope, here is a catch of mullet

The city of Fairhope was founded in 1894 by a group of colonists who supported the economic theories of Henry George, who believed that there should be no taxes other than a single tax on land.  The idea was popular, and colonists and financial backers flocked to the area.  From its beginning as an optimistic utopia (and before you get all excited and think about relocating, today they do pay all the usual taxes), Fairhope grew as a resort area, with people coming across Mobile Bay to enjoy the quiet and the scenery.  It became a popular place for artists and intellectuals to spend the winter.  Today it is a resort area and a bedroom community for wealthier commuters from Mobile.

Fairhope Welcome Center
Downtown Fairhope
Downtown Fairhope

In Fairhope we found some of the best main street shops we have enjoyed looking around for a long time.  We bought a hand made leather tray in an antique shop, and at the other end of the spectrum, some exotic potato chips and a few chocolates in a specialty food shop.  Afterwards, I had been hoping for a cappuccino at one of the many coffee shops, but Dick had a different idea.

Our souvenirs of Fairhope

We drove a few miles out of town to the Grand Hotel, a historic hotel that is now part of the Marriott Autograph Collection.  There has been a hotel on the site since 1820, and by 1847 a large establishment had been built.  During the Civil War, the hotel was used as a Confederate hospital, and over 300 soldiers are buried in the Confederate Cemetery on the grounds.  The present hotel was built in 1941, and during World War Two it was used as a training base for US Army Air Force amphibious landings.  In the lobby was an amazing gingerbread and candy display depicting the hotel and the grounds, with a train running around it.  Children and adults alike loved it.  We enjoyed an excellent cappuccino and a cherry Danish in the lobby and made note that we will hope to come and stay there one of these days.

The Grand Hotel in gingerbread
The atrium at the Grand Hotel
The grounds of the Grand Hotel

Sadly, the dinner in the evening did not live up to the delights of the day.  Hope Farm is all about the trendy farm-to-table concept, and they boast about their own produce, but since they appear to grow mainly brassicas and mushrooms, it makes for some odd combinations in the dishes on offer.  Dick enjoyed his highly recommended mushrooms on toast for starter, but my fries with parmesan and truffle garlic aioli missed excellence because they were not hot.  I had the shrimp risotto, properly prepared rice, but if there were 5 tiny shrimp in there I would be surprised.  Dick’s tomahawk pork chop was delicious.  Dick was then persuaded to try some home-made ice cream that involved bacon.  He said it was good ice cream, but the flavour was just too strange.  I was tempted by the “duck fat caramels with sea salt”.  It was explained that the cream was replaced with duck fat, and our waiter considered them an amazing treat.  Amazing might be the operative word, but not in a good way.  It is a long time since I have consumed anything as awful that was not intended as a cure for illness.  They were too gooey to bite in half, so I ended up with this large, sweet, incredibly greasy lump of goo that had to be consumed (and no hint of the promised sea salt).  As I worked through getting the disgusting mass so I could swallow, Dick unhelpfully kept offering his weird tasting ice cream “to wash it down”.  Uggh.  I can still taste that greasy mess when I think about it.  I told the waiter they should give it all back to the ducks.  He was delighted to receive the remaining 5 of these so-called treats, and he also took them off the bill, which was a kind gesture.

Hope Farm starters
Hope Farm shrimp risotto. I couldn’t find more than a couple of tiny shrimp.
Hope Farm pork chop

The next day was entirely taken up with repositioning the car.  This involved driving the rental car 6.5 hours north to Aqua Yacht, and then turning around and driving back to Fairhope in convoy.  The northbound journey was not so bad, on roads that had little traffic and no trucks (it was Sunday).  Unfortunately, we did not want to return by the same route because half of the journey would be in the dark, and there would be a high risk of hitting a deer.  Instead, we took the Interstates, which are always busy.  The journey was made longer because of intermittent rain, sometimes heavy.  Dick was good, and drove more slowly than he normally would, partly because of the conditions, but also to make it easier for me to follow.  We left Nine Lives at 6:30am, and were back on board at 8:30pm.  Dick, of course, drove the full 14 hours, my part was just 7.5 hours and I was in our own, more comfortable vehicle.  Even so, this was not a journey I want to ever repeat.  We did another reposition a few days later, but that one was all done in daylight.

Another beautiful sunset in Fairhope

Monday was a day for regrouping and taking care of a few domestic chores.  Dick also traced persistent water leaks that we have noticed these past few weeks.  All three turn out to have slightly different causes, but all essentially are caused by aging plastic connections.  These are made of a particular type of plastic that has been banned in plumbing for some years.  Water is seeping, not a flood, but it does have to be taken care of.  Dick hopes to arrange for all the connections to be replaced when we are way from the boat in December/January.

Frosted up freezer waiting for Dick’s attention

In the evening, we had an early dinner at Gambino’s, a venerable Italian restaurant that gets top billing on TripAdvisor.  We enjoyed the meal.  Dick and I both started with the gumbo.  I had a delicious shrimp dish, while Dick tried the fish special.  The fish was tri-tail, a game fish that is also by-catch from commercial tuna fishing in tropical and semi-tropical waters.  We have never heard of it, but Dick said it tasted delicious. 

Gambino’s tri-tail
Shrimp at Gambino’s

Looking around the restaurant, we noticed a strange thing. A large group of adults arrived and were seated near us.  There were about 20 people, all couples.  As each couple arrived, they greeted the earlier arrivals, and then the men separated, and sat at one end of the table while all the women sat at the other.  We were amazed.  Later, I read a possible explanation from some notes on the culture of pre-Civil War Alabama.  According to the research, life in the Deep South was by no means all Gone with the Wind and Tara.  Before the Civil War, the vast majority of the population were independent landowners, working farms with typically less than 100 acres.  Assisted by a few slaves, they grew a variety of staple crops, and usually 10 to 15 acres of a money crop, such as rice, indigo, or tobacco and later, cotton, for export.    There were few slaves on these farms, it was too expensive.  Instead, most of the labour was supplied by family members.  In the evening, farmers returned to their houses, made up of two identical halves with a long corridor (known as a dog trot) down the middle.  When visitors came, they were segregated by gender, men and women sat on opposite sides.  Only the visiting dogs mingled in the middle.  We can’t help but think that the segregation of genders that we saw in the restaurant is a cultural norm that traces back to those early years.

Just to round out the story, above the yeoman farmers, were a small group of Southerners, the planters.  Legally defined as landowners with more than 20 slaves, most were yeoman farmers who had worked their way to the top through sheer force of will and practical farming techniques.   The average plantation had more than a thousand acres, and a slave population of 50 to 100.  The land owned was not necessarily all together, tracts could be widely separated. The work was supervised by overseers, who may have lacked the knowledge or the will to maximize and sustain a crop yield, while the planter applied himself to finding markets and transportation for the crops and balancing debts.  Most of the larger plantations operated heavily in debt.    According to this source, by the Civil War, the economy of the South was already crumbling, due to poor farming practice and soil depletion.  Fields and houses were abandoned and left to the weeds as the planters moved west.  As we travelled down the rivers, we saw trees grown as a crop for wood products, and we rarely saw fields of cotton.  In many ways the land has returned to the early years of the pioneers, with cattle and grassland alongside the tree plantations.

We left at 8:30am for the trip south through Mobile Bay and into the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway for our Orange Beach destination.  The morning began poorly.  The promised rain failed to hold off, and what began as a light mist, immediately became a downpour as we set about the untying process.  I had my jacket on, but Dick decided too late that wearing his would have been a good idea.  I had to kneel on the deck to undo the strap holding the power cord, so I was wet from the knees down.  Naturally, the rain stopped almost immediately after we were underway.  We saw our first dolphins in 6 years!  A pod of 3 swam alongside for a few hundred feet.  After that, it was just an ugly 3 hours until we were able to turn into the waves on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway (GICW) channel.  Mobile Bay is very shallow, and with a wind off our beam for most of the way, causing an ugly chop reminiscent of the Great Lakes, it was an unpleasant ride.  Dick adjusted our heading several times to try to improve the comfort level, but there was only so much he could do.  We saw shrimp boats out in the bay fishing.   We could see a number of other Looper boats on Nebo, making their way south.  Interestingly, several chose a route very close to the eastern shore, that Dick had rejected as too shallow.

Shrimp boat fishing on Mobile Bay

The marina we had chosen is unfortunately a long way off the main route and has quite a complicated entry.  On arrival we were told to tie up on the end of L-dock.  It took a lot of maneuvering, especially with the wind blowing us off the dock.  There were no dock hands to help until we were just about set and ready to connect the power cords.  Then the dockmaster arrived to tell us that we were in the wrong place.  We had to untie everything, go back along the narrow channel, turn around, and finally tie to the side of L-dock.  This time we had 3 dockhands to help.  After all the messing about, Dick did not, on this occasion, dispense the usual $5 bills for the help.

The marina is too far from town to walk, and we would not ride bikes after dark, so Uber it was for our dinner plans.  After a slight issue with the driver being sent to the wrong side of the channel to pick us up, we were soon at Louisiana Lagniappe for one of the best meals we have had on this trip.  It is a classic restaurant, with fresh white tablecloths for every dining party, professional wait staff and old-fashioned extras including a plate of hush puppies delivered as soon as you sit down.  Each entrée includes a salad and a twice-baked potato.  We started with lobster wontons, which were as tasty as they were pretty.  Grouper is the specialty, with many different options for preparation.  Dick enjoyed the one he chose, and I had the New Orleans style barbecue shrimp.  We shared a delicious multi-layer chocolate cheesecake for dessert.  There was one interesting moment. As usual, we ordered a glass of something bubbly when we arrived.  I had not finished mine before the waitress brought the glass of wine I had ordered to go with the main course.  She began to take away my unfinished glass of bubbly, and when I stopped her, she told me that Alabama law does not allow anyone to have more than one alcoholic drink in front of them at a time.  Clearly, this particular law is not always enforced, because I nearly always have a few sips left when the next glass of wine arrives!

Louisiana Lagniappe lobster wontons
Tuxedo cake at Louisiana Lagniappe

Our Uber driver on our return was again directed to the wrong location, and he thought we were just making conversation when we said we had passed the turning, as he drove us farther away from our destination.  He finally turned around with profuse apologies after I told him, quite loudly, “We really are going the wrong way!”

The next day was time to review our plans in light of two days of high winds in the area.  We decided to stay an extra day, and head for Pensacola a day later than planned.  Dick had to rejig the rest of the schedule, and we will not be back in Hilton Head as early as we had thought.  On the other hand, this will give us a chance to take a bit more time on the Panhandle, an interesting and enjoyable part of the Loop that we had been looking forward to.

After making adjustments to the plan for the next week or so, Dick set off on his bike for a 17-mile ride through Gulf State Park.  He reported that it was a wonderful park, and regretted that there was not going to be an opportunity to get my bike out and show me the excellent scenery and wildlife.

Map of Gulf State Park
Paved trails through Gulf State Park
Dick enjoyed his bike ride through Gulf State Park
Views of Orange Beach from Gulf State Park

In the evening we took an Uber to Zeke’s, a seafood restaurant, marina, and fishing port.  It was far more casual in style than the other night, but we enjoyed a good meal.  The incredibly decadent skillet brownie with salted caramel ice cream was a fantastic finish.

Zeke’s Restaurant
A display of fish and seafood at Zeke’s
A tasty salmon spread at Zeke’s
Delicious and decadent chocolate brownie at Zeke’s

We made a later than usual 10am start the next morning, to allow the waves in Pensacola Bay to settle down.  It was still pretty bouncy, but the waves were in the right direction, so it was not uncomfortable.  We arrived at the marina just after the attendant had left for lunch, so we had no help tying up at the fuel dock for fuel and a pump out.  Timing was good though, as soon as Dick had everything ready, the attendant returned and started fueling.  Dick then negotiated to stay a full week, rather than the four days that had been reserved.  The attendant was quite reluctant, but eventually agreed.  There is another hurricane brewing in the Gulf, and while it is expected to dissipate without making landfall, the wind and waves will be roiled up for several days, and we do not want to cross Pensacola Bay in adverse conditions.

Pensacola Lighthouse

In the evening we walked through the historic downtown to our first restaurant, an Italian eatery with a Southern twist.  We started with a cheese and charcuterie platter, which was authentic and delicious.  I chose the New Orleans Barbecue shrimp, and Dick loved his lasagna.  Both arrived piping hot!  We are sincerely hoping that now that we are out of the mid-west, hot food will be the norm rather than the exception.

The next morning, Dick collected another rental car, and we drove back to Fairhope, where we picked up our vehicle that was waiting for us at the marina.  On the way I was delighted when Dick agreed to stop briefly in downtown Fairhope, so I could have a look around a very interesting ladies’ shop that I had missed the previous week.  Very interesting clothing, bright colours, and a lot of embroidery.  It took some time to choose, but I was happy to leave with a new white blouse with very colourful embroidery.  Our car was safe and sound, and it was a fairly easy drive back to Pensacola.  The next day would be the final reposition, and a much longer journey, as we take both cars to Port St Joe and then return to Pensacola in the rental car.

Palafox Pier Marina

That evening we took advantage of having a car to drive to a restaurant several miles away.  It was an odd place, called O’Brien’s, but it is not Irish, instead I would call it French/Southern.  The décor was dated and very tired, and the menus were a bit grubby, but both the food and the service were excellent.  Their version of NOLA barbecue shrimp was served in a delicious cream sauce, and Dick’s seafood gratin bake was perfect.  Dick had rack of lamb for main course, mine was a Southwest Chicken Salad.  Dick was astonished, as I almost never order salad, or chicken!  The cheesecake for dessert was a perfect finish.  The owner came around to all the tables, to ask if everything was to their liking, always a great touch.

The next day required a fairly early start for the final repositioning of our car so that it is waiting for us at Port St Joe when we arrive there in about 10 days.

A map of the Tenn Tom Waterway. Nine Lives has travelled all of the waterway except for the last little bit of the Tennessee to Knoxville. Last year we went up the Cumberland to Nashville, and this year we have done the Tennessee River and the Tenn Tom Waterway.

October 16th to November 2nd, 2024: Scottsboro to Columbus

Our destination on October 16th was Goose Pond Colony Marina, near Scottsboro, Alabama. This marina is part of a large golf resort.  The entrance channel is narrow, but well-marked, and with lots of shallow areas there were interesting birds to be seen as we approached.  The grass is so prolific that the marina has a special machine to keep clearing the channel, and it goes out every day.  Our entrance was a matter of trust, because the grass fools the depth sounder and it suggests that we are about to run aground.  There were several other Loopers there, including some that we had already met.  Later that afternoon, Legacy, a smart Back Cove arrived on the other side of our slip.  We found out when they introduced themselves that they were just 8 hours into the Loop.  Unusually, the lady will be aboard one week in four, and for the rest of the time Don will travel solo.

Wildlife in the shallows at the entrance to Goose Pond Marina
The grass cutter goes out every day to keep the channels clear at Goose Pond

We were invited to join two couples who we had met earlier in Chattanooga for dinner at the onsite restaurant.  It was nice to sit and chat and get to know them.  It did remind us though, that while it can be rewarding, the idea of “buddy boating”, that is, travelling with another boat all the time, does make for a less inclusive experience than enjoying meeting all the diverse boaters if you follow your own agenda.  By making your own plans, you find that you are leapfrogging some of the Loopers you have already met, and continue meeting new friends as you go along.  The food at the restaurant was acceptable, but no need to return.

We spent a quiet day at Goose Pond.  It was a good time to do some laundry and for me to finish and publish the second issue of the blog.

Morning mist at Goose Pond

I tried a new recipe for Chicken Tikka Masala.  It was tasty, but we think that in future the recipe might lend itself to using lamb and doing it in the slow cooker.  We enjoy Indian food, and if I can collect western cooking-style recipes we can put together an Indian meal without using the foil packets of sauces.  One is never entirely sure (and we probably don’t want to know) just how many interesting chemical concoctions are in those packages that keep them “fresh” for literally years.  Better to make the dishes from scratch.

Chicken Tikka Masala

After our relaxing pause at Goose Pond, we headed downriver to Ditto Landing, arriving by early afternoon and happy to be greeted by our friends Cherie and Pete on Spring Fling.  They are segment Loopers like us.  Although Ditto Landing has no practical access on foot or by bike to nearby Huntsville, Cherie and Pete had a rental car and invited us to join them for dinner at a Japanese restaurant.  The food was excellent, and Dick even ordered, and enjoyed, some sushi.  My hibachi shrimp and chicken were also delicious.

Painted Bluff
Sunset at Ditto Landing

First thing next morning we began the big cleaning job, so Nine Lives would be spic and span for the boat crawl at Rendezvous.  As I scrubbed my bathroom, it was obvious that no cleaning had been done before we got on board at Aqua Yacht.  We haven’t been charged, so I suppose we were not cheated.  Dick took advantage of being in a slip, thus having access to both sides of the hull, to get some of the outside cleaning done.  It was nearly noon before we left, but already Nine Lives was starting to look spiffy.

Cleaning the hull at Ditto Landing

Behind Lehman’s Bluff is Redstone Arsenal.  The facility was established during WWII as a base for chemical manufacturing, and was then used as a research base for rockets and ballistic missiles.  Today it is still the centre for the Army’s missile programs for testing and development, and there are now over 75 tenant agencies, including NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.  The government and contractor workforce averages 35,000 to 40,000 personnel daily.

Lehman’s Bluff

We passed under the I-65 Bridge.  This Interstate connects Chicago, Indianapolis, Louisville, Nashville, Birmingham, Montgomery, and Mobile.  It is quite something to think that we have visited or will soon stop at almost all of those cities as we go through this western half of our Great Loop.

I-65 Bridge over the Tennessee River

Construction of the bridge was halted for a few months so that nesting birds in that part of the Wheeler National Wildlife Reserve would not be disturbed.  The NWR was created in 1938, after TWA (Tennessee Valley Authority) flooded the Tennessee River and created Wheeler Lake.  Backwaters were pumped dry in spring, thus eliminating mosquitoes.  When the water was returned in the fall, migratory birds were attracted to the abundant grasses and seed-bearing plants that had grown up.  Thousands of Sand Hill Cranes now overwinter in the refuge, and a few of the highly endangered Whooping Cranes have been seen in the last ten years.  We were too far from the grasslands to see cranes, but we were happy to see a Bald Eagle high in a tree.

Bald Eagle in Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge
A tow with a portable ferry platform waiting at the bank for a large truck
Guntersville Lake

We were tied up in the marina at Decatur by 2:30. It is a strange marina, mainly boat storage.  Dick spoke to the owner in mid-October, and he made a reservation, but would not take a credit card number.  There is nobody in the office on weekends, and the on-site restaurant is currently closed for renovations, so there was no way to pay.  We had a free dock with power and water in a very calm location.

We got down to serious boat cleaning.  More than one adult beverage was required when we were finished for the day!  We both hate cleaning.  My frustration was that arrangements had been made for the major cleaning, inside and out, to have been done before we got on board.  If it had been done, our job would have been only a touch-up.  Instead, we were dealing with a year’s worth of accumulated grime from the storage period.

There was a pretty sunset over the industrial skyline of Decatur.  We watched a fellow on the dock catch a large fish for his dinner, underneath the “No Fishing from the Dock” sign.

Decatur sunset

More cleaning in the morning before we set off. Nine Lives sparkled!

We waited 10 minutes for the Decatur Railway Bridge, as a long train of Amazon containers passed over.

Decatur Railway Bridge with Amazon containers on a long freight train

We arrived at Joe Wheeler State Park by mid-afternoon.  After a pump out that we suspected (rightly) was inadequate, we went over to our assigned slip.  A fishing boat was diddling around exactly where we needed to be, so Dick sounded the horn.  Our horn is LOUD.  No effect.  Horn again, in fact twice more and me making “get out of the way” gestures before they finally figured it out.  As a result, we had a great deal of help with docking, having announced our imminent arrival so loudly.

After some final touches to the cleaning, I put together a spread for docktails.  We had invited up to 12, but between regrets, no-shows, and a couple we already knew were unlikely to be able to make it, we were glad that we also invited our dock neighbours, giving us 7 guests.  More would not have fitted into the cockpit, so just as well.

The first day of the Rendezvous was quite busy, mainly because in the afternoon, over the two-hour period of the boat crawl, we welcomed at least 50 people onto Nine Lives to look around.  Some visitors were still in the boat-shopping stage.  Some had their boat and were interested in storage, and what adaptations they might be able to make on their boats.  Many people were simply curious, having never been on a catamaran before, and they were amazed at how much usable space there is on board.

Nine Lives ready for visitors
Nine Lives at the dock at Joe Wheeler
Even the cockpit was sparkling clean

That evening, we enjoyed sitting with a table of planners and a couple who were just two weeks into their Loop for dinner.  After the meal, we, and a few others, were presented with nice engraved wooden cheeseboards as a thank you for stepping in at the last moment to make presentations during the Rendezvous.

Looper boats at sunset at Joe Wheeler

The next day began the briefings part of the gathering.  We attended the presentations, advice and suggestions for our upcoming route from folks who have done the next part of the Loop multiple times.  This included preparation and advice for the Gulf Crossing, a 172-mile overnight crossing, well offshore. We will be doing this in February.

We had 3 busy days of briefings, socializing, and then the 3-hour boat crawl each afternoon.  This is an opportunity for Loopers, especially planners, to get onto all sorts of different boats, and see how they really look when Looping (as opposed to being all gussied up and decluttered at a boat show).  It was tiring.  Dick stayed up top and talked engines and boat handling, while I was below making sure the visitors saw everything, and demonstrating how we handle storage.

The final event of the gathering for us was our presentation on locking.  Dick ran over the time slot somewhat, but it was well received.  We had not expected that there would be so many people in the audience.  At the beginning, Dick asked how many had never been through a lock.  A surprising 100 out of about 150 in the audience raised their hands!  Dick did most of the presentation, while I took care of the humour with occasional interjections and comments.

The group photo at AGLCA Fall Rendezvous

Following the wrap-up lunch, there were various round-table discussions, and demonstrations, but we were both feeling quite tired and talked out, so we went back to Nine Lives and spent a relaxing afternoon and evening.

Docked sailboats at Joe Wheeler
Autumn colors at Joe Wheeler State Park

Shortly after we came through a few weeks ago, The Wilson Lock had to shut down for at least the next 3 months while repairs are made to the doors.  There is a much older (built 1925) auxiliary lock, that is actually a 2-chamber stair.  A reminder for new readers and those who have forgotten, typical commercial traffic on the Inland Waterways is handled by tugboats, called tows, pushing barges that are lashed together.  The old lock only has space for a single barge, that must be pushed into the chamber, then pulled into the next chamber, and finally pulled out at the top (or bottom as the case may be) and eventually lashed back into the rest of the barge train. It now takes between 15 and 24 hours for a single tow with its typical 15 barges to pass through.  On the day we left Joe Wheeler, there were 21 tows with their barges in the queue.  This is because each barge requires an hour to transit the 2 chambers, plus additional time for maneuvering the barges, and uncoupling and re-coupling them after the transit.

The lock infrastructure here in USA is failing.  At least 80% of the locks are 50 years past their design life.  The locks are maintained by the Army Corps of Engineers, which is chronically underfunded.  To put the importance of the canal and waterway infrastructure into context, here are some facts and figures.  One 15-barge tow carries the equivalent of 214 rail cars + locomotives, or 1050 large semi-tractor-trailers (articulated lorries for our English friends).  With respect to the environment, barges have the smallest carbon footprint.  In terms of tons of CO2 per million ton-miles, a barge is 15.1, rail is 21.6, and trucks are a whopping 140.7.  Barges move cargo 675 ton-miles per gallon of fuel.  A rail car is 30% less efficient, and a truck is 78% less efficient.  Speaking just of the Wilson lock, it is the gateway to 531 miles of upstream navigable waterways.  12,000,000 tons of commodities valued at roughly $4 billion pass through annually.  Just in case you think that the areas of Tennessee and Alabama that are served by this waterway and specifically Wilson Lock are of little national importance, the barges serve 3 nuclear plants, United Launch Alliance, Marshall Space Flight Center, and Oakridge National Laboratory.  Commercial entities include a number of large quarries.  The stone that is produced in those quarries may be used for cement.  Cement is an important building material for houses, and just about everything else that humans apparently need to survive.  The Port cities served include Decatur, Huntsville, Guntersville, Chattanooga, and Knoxville, all of which are industrial centres.

Another way of looking at it, a single tow (with barges) costs about $500 per hour, and most of the tows have waited about 7 days since the breakdown, about 150 hours.  Then factor in the factories and industries that are not getting chemicals, materials or shipping their output, and you have a serious economic situation.  Some of these plants must shut down and their workers are not paid.  How many of our readers have any idea how much of the economy of the area (and the country) is affected by the temporary closure of even one lock?  I am guessing none (except for those who have just now waded through my facts and figures above!)

The boats that were part of the Rendezvous came up in flotillas of a maximum of 5 boats per day, helpfully staged and organized at Florence Harbor, just a few miles below Wilson Lock, by the harbormaster.  Of course, everyone wanted to leave immediately after the Rendezvous!  Some planned to go upstream to Knoxville, but many, including us, hoped to go downstream through Wilson.  As often happens, one of the Loopers stepped up and offered to organize flotillas, so that the appropriate sized group would all arrive at the right place, on time, and only one person would be the spokesperson for the group with the lockmaster.  We were able to sign up for the second group on the Friday, and the Wilson lockmaster promised to let 2 groups through each day, so we were hopeful.  Somebody must have spoken to the formerly cranky and unhelpful lockkeeper at Wheeler Lock (the one between Joe Wheeler State Park and Wilson Lock), because he agreed to let all 9 boats in the Friday flotillas through at once.

We were up at 5am, in order to be sure we could have coffee, more coffee, and breakfast, before leaving the dock at 6:20am. It was a lovely sight, the lights of the boats behind us against the rising sun.  It became clear that someone was going to have to raft up in Wheeler Lock.  We are always ready, and happy to be the anchor, but it was a bit surprising that it was the largest boat in the flotilla, the 62-foot Halcyon, that was our companion.  They commented that this was also a new experience for them, as they are usually the boat closest to the wall that others raft to.  Wheeler Lock gave us all a gentle drop and we headed out, line astern, towards the next part of the adventure.

The flotilla leaves Joe Wheeler at sunrise
Tows and barges waiting above Wilson Lock

We arrived at Wilson Lock by 8:30 am and were advised to our great relief that the lock would take a break from commercial traffic, and the two parts of the 9-boat flotilla would be locked through, one after the other, starting at 10:30.  They began taking the first group exactly as promised.  Our group was right behind.  There are very few floating bollards on either side of the two chambers (and one is under a continuous heavy shower of water).  Unfortunately, the usable pins (bollards) are on opposite sides between the two chambers.  Nine Lives entered first, and took the pin at the front on the starboard (right) side.  Once secure, we called the next boat (Legacy) forward, and he rafted up to our port (left) side.  Then the other two boats arranged themselves in a similar fashion behind.  It was a day of firsts for our rafting partner.  His first solo lock-through at Wheeler, first time rafting up at Wilson.  After the gentle drop (thanks lockmaster!) in the first chamber, the doors opened.  We untied from Legacy, and I took Nine Lives slowly and gently across to the other, port side, while Dick quickly moved our big fenders across.  As soon as we were again secure, Legacy came up and tied up to our starboard side.  That was a little trickier, because Don does not have a door on that side of his boat, so Dick and I had to catch and hold Legacy until we could get lines tied.

Another gentle drop, and we could all head downstream, line astern, passing all the waiting tows and their barges.  We were tied up in Florence Harbor by 1pm, just ½ hour longer travel time than Dick’s original estimate that had not taken a broken lock into account!  I was glad that we did not have to do part of the exercise in the dark, as we had fully expected.  We were also glad that, having given a presentation at Rendezvous on how to go through a lock, with the expectation that after over 400 locks we are now experts, it all went well and we did not mess up, especially with an audience!

Looking down through the cockpit window at the tows and barges waiting below Wilson Lock
Tows and their barges waiting below Wilson Lock

After a quiet afternoon we took an Uber to Odette’s, the restaurant we had cancelled on our last visit.  The menu is very modern and unusual, but within that context, the food was both delicious and beautifully presented.  Next to our table was another couple, and he asked about the cornbread that I had ordered.  I offered, and he asked to try a piece (it was delicious).  His Venezuelan wife of 16 years was both amazed and horrified that strangers would engage in this way.  They were a lovely couple.  We enjoyed chatting with them, and he gave us his number, hoping that we will call next time we visit Florence and go out to dinner with them.  These chance meetings and engaging chat are some of the best experiences on the Great Loop.

Odette’s starter sampler plate
Grouper at Odette
Cornbread and a mushroom stew at Odette
Odette’s interpretation of Pot de Creme

The next morning, shortly before sunrise (we were already up), we heard counting, and looked out to see what must have been 100 fishing boats heading down the River for a fishing tournament.  I was just not quick enough to get a picture.

The quarry at Pride Landing

As we travelled downstream towards Aqua Yacht, we passed the now demolished Riverton Lock.  Riverton was the first major landing upstream of Paducah in the 19th century.  Shoals immediately upriver from Riverton prevented river traffic from getting to Florence for six months of the year when the water was low.  In 1891, George Washington Goethals developed a design for a single high lift lock.  He was able to convince the Army Corps of Engineers that his design was feasible and that the lock should be built to make travel possible and reliable all year round between Riverton and Florence.  The lock began operation in 1911, and at the time, was the highest lift lock in the world, with a lift of 26 feet.  In comparison, today, the lift in the main chamber of Wilson Lock to the south, is 100 feet, the highest single lift in any lock east of the Rockies, while Pickwick Lock to the north, has a lift of 63 feet.  Goethals’ success resulted in his transfer to Panama, where he was responsible for the design and construction of the Panama Canal.

All that remains of Riverton Lock, once the highest lift lock in the world.

We arrived at Aqua Yacht at the same time as 5 other boats.  We had hoped to be sociable, and to be either on the transient dock, or in a slip on D dock with many other Loopers.  Sadly, we were assigned E56.  After spending some time counting back to work out which slip we were supposed to be in, Dick turned Nine Lives into the correct slip, and it was very quickly obvious that someone’s measurement of 20 feet was faulty.  This was confirmed by a friendly boater on the dock, who could see that we were not going to fit, and that it was E56 as we had been directed to.  Dick called on the radio, and was given the new assignment of E47, just a few slips along, but definitely wider and longer.  After 3 years of practice getting into an identical slip on F-Dock, Dick had no problem easing Nine Lives in.  We already knew the best configuration for tying up to the posts.

Aqua Yacht slip E-47

Once settled, Dick retrieved his car keys and hot-footed out to find a replacement for our leaking drinking water filter hose.  Once again, he had to go farther than expected, because, for reasons known only to them, the local hardware store is closed on Saturdays, the day that most working people are off and can work on home/boat/car projects.  New (stainless steel instead of unsuitable vinyl) hose duly acquired, Dick spent the next ½ hour lying on the floor in the galley doing the installation under the sink.

I was struck by how very lucky we were the previous day in our transit of Wilson Lock, as I watched the next groups.  We use an app called Nebo, that shows where everyone is.  It is very useful to keep track of other Loopers, and can also be used by friends and family to see where you are.  On this day there was one group heading in each direction.  The downbound group left Joe Wheeler at dawn, as we did, and arrived at Wilson shortly after 8:30am.  However, a tow plus barges was in progress, so they had to wait until about 2:30 before it was their turn.  That meant they arrived at Florence Harbor at about 4pm, and one of the boats in the group had chosen to travel all the way to Aqua Yacht, arriving well after dark.  The upbound group was even less fortunate.  Their transit began after 3:30pm, and by the time they were through and close to the next (Wheeler) lock, it was getting dark.  Three chose to anchor, but two carried on through Wheeler and arrived at Joe Wheeler State Park long after all staff had left.  One hopes that the few remaining Loopers on the docks were there to help them get situated.

At last it was time to head to dinner.  Our final visit to our favorite restaurant.  Vicari’s was every bit as good as it was on our first visit 3 years ago.  Service was impeccable, and the food was outstanding.  We enjoyed our usual starters, then Dick had the prime rib and I treated myself to the fried lobster tail.

Our final dinner at Vicari’s, prime rib for Dick and fried lobster tail for me

Sunday was laundry day, blog writing, and Dick changed the oil and filters in both engines.  He also took apart the grill to see whether he could figure out what had been making the strange noise when he grilled the breakfast sausages and bacon that morning.

Dick changes the oil and filters. Two engines, the job has to be done twice!

In the evening we set off for Hagy’s Catfish Hotel, a venerable, family run (for 80 years) restaurant about 20 miles away.  Dick loves catfish, and it is seldom offered on menus outside these Southern states.  We passed the Shiloh Battlefield.  I would have liked to have stopped for some pictures, but the catfish were calling.  The restaurant was full of character, and bustling.  Servers and young women dashed about, taking and delivering orders and bussing tables.  Meanwhile, an elegant woman made the rounds, stopping at each table to greet regulars or welcome strangers, while her equally elegant (presumed) daughter showed arriving guests to their tables.  The food was very good, and for the most part, piping hot.  Dick loved his two grilled catfish filets, one with lemon pepper seasoning, and the other with Cajun spice.  I opted for shrimp two ways, grilled with Cajun spice, and popcorn (breaded and fried) style.  Both were delicious.  The accompanying hush puppies were hot and crisp.  The only criticism we had was how rushed everything was.  The waitress kept asking to take our main course order, even though we explained that we were not in a hurry and did not want the starters, salad, and main courses piling up together.  As soon as we put our forks down, the bill was delivered – no dessert was offered.  With all the people tearing about it seemed very hectic.

Hagy’s Catfish Hotel
Grilled catfish at Hagy’s
Shrimp two ways at Hagy’s
Don’t forget the hush puppies!

When we got outside, there were armadillos rooting in the flowerbeds.  Usually they are too shy and quick for photos, but there must have been something very interesting under the mulch because I was just able to get a snap.  Nine banded armadillos are native to South America, but they are gradually moving north, although they do not appear to be considered an invasive species as such.  I began to tell this to Dick as we drove back, but before I could get into my stride, he said, “I hear they are good eatin’”.  That certainly put an end to that conversation.  I did a little research, and here are some interesting things about the nine-banded armadillo that perhaps you did not know.  They can jump 3-4 feet in the air when frightened, which contributes to why so many are killed on the roads. They can inflate their intestines, and float across rivers, or alternately, they can sink to the bottom and walk across, being able to hold their breath for as much as 6 minutes.  They are nocturnal, and like to burrow, so they are not popular with gardeners.  In Texas, there is a small but well-established sport of armadillo racing, in which the animals scurry down a 40 foot track.  Most of the usual carnivorous predators like them, but their biggest predator is humans, who hunt them and harvest them for meat and shells.

An armadillo roots in the flowerbed at Hagy’s Catfish Hotel

Our last day at Aqua Yacht started with a scheduled haul out.  When metal is continually in the water, it starts to corrode.  On a boat, there are a number of places that have metal fittings that are always in the water.  To prevent corrosion, pieces of metal called sacrificial anodes are attached.  These will corrode first, due to a metallurgical process that I have no need to understand!  Nine Lives left salt water back in 2018, and since then, her anodes have been made of magnesium.  Now that she is soon to return to salt water, we had her hauled out and new anodes made of zinc were installed.  The whole process took about 2 hours, including the haul out and pressure washing the bottom.  Everything worked fine, and we were ready to start south the next day.

Aqua Yacht haul out
Back in the water at Aqua Yacht

We took advantage of having our own vehicle to check out a new grocery store in Iuka, and also stock up our critically low stores of Jack Daniels and other adult beverages.

In the evening, I made shrimp fried rice from a new recipe.  It turned out very well, and I will certainly make it again.  In fact it would also have been relatively quick to prepare if I hadn’t needed to peel and devein the shrimp first.

Next morning we said goodbye to Aqua Yacht (except for a brief visit in a few weeks to pick up the car).  It has been a good base for the past 3 years.  The yard does good work, the only frustrations being the lack of communication and getting the work done on time, and very little cleaning done despite many promises.

Goodbye Aqua Yacht

We set off south on the Tenn Tom Waterway.  This connects the Tennessee River at Pickwick Lake with the Tombigbee River at Demopolis, Alabama, and then joins the Black Warrior River to bring river traffic to Mobile and the Gulf of Mexico.  The first proposal for this waterway was made by a French explorer in about 1760.  In 1810, citizens of Knoxville, Tennessee, lobbied Congress to build the waterway, but the first engineering investigation took place many years later in 1875-76.  In 1913, another investigation took place.  Congress decided again that this would be too expensive and shelved the project.  More studies through the early 20th century, and eventually the project was approved in 1946.  There was strong opposition from key members of Congress from other regions, and again the project was shelved.  Money was budgeted in 1968 and in 1971 to build the waterway, and construction began in 1972.  There were more delays, due to lawsuits, but gradually the waterway was built, at a cost of nearly 2 billion dollars and it was dedicated in 1985.  Today, the waterway ships as much as 1.2 billion ton-miles of commerce each year.  We have been struck by the differences between these relatively new locks and those of the other waterways we have been travelling on for the past three years.

Map of the Tenn-Tom Waterway
The Tennessee Tombigbee Waterway
Meeting a tow on the narrow Tenn Tom

We anchored just above the first lock in a cove where there is a visitor centre.  There was already a boat in there – another Endeavourcat!  We set the anchor, and Nine Lives’ lady captain said, “I don’t think this is right, we are too close to the other boat, and we will not swing at the same rate and radius.”  The gentleman captain said, “It’s fine.”  Dick then spent a few hours replacing 3 cigarette lighter outlets (remember those?) with new USB ports.  I think there were some grownup words muttered during the tricky process.  After one and a half adult beverages on completion of the afternoon’s project, at dusk, the gentleman captain expressed the view that our location was not ideal, and now that the wind had dropped, we were at risk of bumping into the other boat.  Headsets on and engine started, and the whole pulling up and re-anchoring process to be gone through, as it got dark.  The lady captain was much happier in the new location, just wished it had not taken the gentleman captain quite so long to figure it out!

Another Endeavourcat anchored off Bay Springs Lake.

After a peaceful night we had arranged to coordinate with the other 2 boats in the area to go through the next locks together, and with one spokesman.  It all went well, and with no tows on this stretch of the waterway, we got through 3 locks and were tied up in the marina in 3.5 hours.

At the last lock of the day, there was a moment when we thought that all the extraordinary measures that we know about and have never had to use, might come into play.  The floating bollard that we were looped to didn’t float!  I was just about to hail the lockmaster when Dick gave the bollard a heavy push and it dropped down, protesting with metallic shrieks, and bouncing up and down a few times before it settled.  Definitely a good reason to have the strong man tending the pin, and what someone recently described as “the little lady” at the helm.  I would not have had either the strength or the reach to get that bollard moving.

Midway Marina is a strange place.  The marina itself is a mixture of very old docks with quite a bit of new wood going in to refurbish.  There are a number of near derelict boats in the slips.  However, there are some new and very attractive guest cabins, a huge, manicured park, and one of the best restaurants of its kind we have visited on the Loop.

Midway Marina at dusk

We were delighted to find our favourite cheese curds on the menu, and while we were waiting for those delectable treats, we were brought a loaf of delicious bread.  We both ordered Po’ boys, Dick’s was with grilled catfish, while I had fried shrimp.  It was an exceptional meal.

Po’ boys at Midway Marina

Next day was another 3-lock day.  Again, 3 boats were given the go-ahead to be at the lock by 9am.  We were very lucky with the tows (4 of them) as we met them either just before or just after the locks and were able to go through each lock right away.

We soon experienced our second “expect the unexpected” moment in 2 days.  I brought Nine Lives slowly into position at the pin we had chosen, and it suddenly became clear that the bollard had sunk and there was nothing there.  They are recessed in the lock wall, so you can’t tell until you are right beside it if there is a problem.  I had to back Nine Lives up to get to the pin 150 feet behind.  Since I don’t have eyes in the back of my head, it was a tricky maneuver, while Dick pushed off the lock wall and stopped the fenders from hanging up.

Domtar Chipping Mill at Amory

Our chosen anchorage for that night is popular, but reviews warn of a rocky bottom that means the anchor does not always set.  Usually I can feel it when the anchor grabs, but not this time.  I was not happy about the amount of swinging room either.  Reviews told us to expect 180 degree changes in direction.  I use two anchor alarms, and the one with the shorter radius went off several times.  Between a very slight current, and an opposing light breeze, Nine Lives swung all over the channel throughout the night.  We still don’t know whether the anchor ever dug in, or if just the weight of chain on the bottom held us in place.  Not an anchorage I would return to or recommend.

In East Lake, we passed large and small clumps of water hyacinth. This is a highly invasive species that is choking waterways all over the world.  In the United States it is a particular problem in the southern, Gulf states.  The plants reproduce by stolons, or runners, that create new plants.  The flowers produce thousands of seeds that are viable for up to 28 years.  Mats of water hyacinth can double in size in just one to two weeks.  Once established, the fish and native plants die, and the waterways become choked.  Harvesting the plants mechanically to try to get rid of them is a problem because they are extremely heavy, and then there is the problem of what to do with them once harvested.  Many different methods of eradication and control have been tried, including steam, hot water, acids, spraying with petroleum and setting fire to it, various chemicals, introduction of species of weevils that eat them, and harvesting.  In 1910 it was proposed to introduce hippopotamuses into Louisiana waters as a method of control.  The plan was for the hippos to eat the water hyacinth, and the animals could also be hunted for meat, which was in shortage at the time.  The proposal was lost by just a single vote, or we would have had a different problem in the southern states.  The pet hippos of drug lord Pablo Escobar escaped and are multiplying in the wild in Columbia, dangerous to both humans and the environment.  They are proving to be difficult to cull.  They can be extremely aggressive and will charge and attack small boats.  They also raid farm crops.  The solution to one problem can easily create another, as history tells us again and again.

Water Hyacinth

We arrived at Columbus Marina and were tied up by 1:10. It is a popular stop on this part of the Loop, so they have a 2-night maximum stay during this time.  We had hoped for several Amazon packages to be waiting for us, but USPS apparently found it too difficult to deliver on the due date, and did not schedule a second attempt for 3 days.  The next morning, we got the full explanation.  Apparently, USPS in Columbus has decided that any packages that do not fit through the mail slot will be held at the Post Office for pickup.  This information is not conveyed to Amazon (and thus the package recipient).  Then, when someone arrives to pick up their parcel, all the waiting parcels for the marina are handed to them at once.  Another boater had arranged for a Post Office run, and collected our two packages, so the issue was satisfactorily resolved for us.

On our first evening, we arranged for the marina courtesy car to take us to a steak house, and made a reservation at the restaurant.  At the last minute, fellow boaters Sandy and Frank from Proost decided to join us.  The courtesy car is quite something.  It has over 270,000 miles on it.  As you drive, there are interesting squeaks and rattles, and after a while the engine begins to make a sort of groaning noise, as if it is about to quit from sheer exhaustion.  However it got us to the restaurant and back to the marina.  Our dinner was very enjoyable, but mainly for the company.  We have decided that food served cold in restaurants in this part of the country is SOP, and we should stop accepting excuses.  The appetizer of deep-fried balls with broccoli, bacon, and cheese were properly hot and tasted very good.  Dick’s prime rib was fine, but Frank’s was cold.  My steak was reasonably hot, but the accompanying shrimp skewer was room temperature at best.  The bowls of grits that Frank and I chose as sides were less than room temperature.  Frank’s beef and the grits were sent back.  By the time they returned, the rest of the food had been eaten.  Oh, and the grits were still just as cold as before.  Meanwhile, Sandy’s wine flight never arrived and had to be removed from the bill.  We really enjoyed talking with Sandy and Frank, and hope that we will have a chance to spend time with them again.  We first met in Florence, some weeks ago, and have been leapfrogging ever since.

Our day in the marina was a chance for me to finish this issue of the blog.  Dick pottered about doing various chores, including a pump out.  Unusually, this marina has in-slip pump out outlets, so you just have to go and find the hose and get the machine started, no need to move the boat to the fuel dock as is usual.  We want to have everything ready before we leave tomorrow, as we will be anchoring for three nights in a row, unusual for us.  Water will have to be used carefully, navy showers for the next three days!

Dick also re-installed the lower supports for the dinghy.  When we replaced the original fiberglass dinghy a few years ago, Dick assumed that lower supports were not required, the dinghy could just hang from the upper supports because it is so much lighter than the original.  Also, he had seen that most other boats with such a configuration have the dinghy hanging from the upper supports.  We have noticed that when it is rough, or we cross a large wake, the dinghy swings wildly from side to side, to the extent that it nearly came off when we went through the turbulence at Ft Louden Lock. After reading on the Endeavourcat forum that the lower supports actually serve two purposes, Dick decided to put them back.  In addition to helping with sway, the lower supports allow the dinghy to slide past the swim platforms when it is being launched, requiring a lot less manual intervention (that is, heaving it about). I do remember that those supports used to behave in odd ways, engendering a fair amount of cursing, but perhaps they will not be quite so annoying with the new dinghy.

Restoring the dinghy supports
Nine Lives Voyage for October

October 2nd  to 16th, 2024: Chattanooga to Tellico Lake and back to Scottsboro

The last installment ended with something of a cliffhanger… would Dick’s bike disappear from the place he had locked it to the railings?  Well, no, the bike was still there the next day when Dick went to get it to go for a ride, however, important components were missing, namely wheels.  It had occurred to him at some point that perhaps he should lock said wheels, which have a quick release mechanism, to the rest of the bike, but he didn’t.  Fortunately, there is a Trek dealership within walking distance of the dock.  Yes, he could get the wheels, but they would have to be ordered.  We had already planned to stay much longer in Chattanooga, so arrangements were made to rent a car.  Of course, it is somewhat ironic that while the bike is about 30 years old, the wheels had been replaced just a few months earlier after an unfortunate encounter with a tourist’s vehicle in Hilton Head.

Oh dear!

After one of Dick’s special breakfasts, we set out to collect the rental car.  The depot was very close to the end of the electric bus line.  We went to the supermarket and stocked up on the heavy stuff that is less easy to transport by bike.  Parking in Chattanooga is inexpensive, just $11 per day.  There are lots of multi-storey car parks, including the one with the beautiful lighted façade that is nearest to our dock.

I am impressed by how clean the city is.  Unusual for an American city, especially one with such a large homeless population.  The electric buses are clean inside, no trash on the floors, and while I see people leaving rubbish on the ground under benches, it is always gone by the next day.  An army of cleaning fairies must be deployed around the city every evening.  Even the area under the bridge is kept relatively tidy.

A new improvement for Nine Lives. When we are staying in a marina for a few days we can now hook up to mains water and not have to keep filling the tanks.

We ate at a restaurant called Public House.  The smoked trout dip was tasty, but it came with incredibly hard toasts and rather too many crudites for my preference.  It made a good lunch for Dick later!  The pot roast was excellent, and I had the best shrimp and grits I have ever tasted.  Desserts were very rich, but altogether it was a good meal.

Desserts at Public House, Chattanooga

The next day we took a morning trip to the Incline Railway on Lookout Mountain.  It was cloudy, and too hazy for the really spectacular views, but it was an experience.  The railway is about a mile up the side of the mountain, with a maximum grade of 72.7%.  It is one of the steepest railways in the world.  I do not like heights. About 2/3 of the way up, I said to Dick, “The things I do for you!”  The lady in the seat ahead of us immediately said, “Oh I know what you mean!”  After we returned from the adventure, we stopped at Ben & Jerrys for ice cream.

Incline Railway on our way up
Incline Railway looking down the track from the top (Dick had to take this one!)
The machinery of the Incline Railway
The view from the top of the Incline Railway
Incline Railway return

Another Looper arrived in the late afternoon, so at last we were not the only boat on the dock.  They joined us for our planned visit to a rooftop bar called “Whisky Thief” in a nearby hotel.  The public areas of the hotel have beautiful, fascinating artworks on display, and Debbie and I would have liked to have had more time to study them.  The bar was quiet when we arrived, but grew increasingly noisy and crowded as the evening progressed.  The menu is limited to QR codes or, find the bar’s website online.  While they serve flights of various whiskeys, you have to keep going back to your phone to figure out what you are drinking.  Instead of a flight, I had a bourbon that we had enjoyed last year when we tried a (properly labelled) flight in a restaurant in Louisville.  We enjoyed the congenial company and will look forward to seeing them again at Rendezvous.

One of the beautiful artworks in the Edwin Hotel
The Tennessee River at night, Chattanooga

The next day, after working on the Rendezvous presentation all day, we were glad to go out and walk to the second of the top steakhouses in Chattanooga.  There was a bluegrass festival in the waterfront park, but it was very hot and crowded, and the music was not really our taste, although we do enjoy some bluegrass.

Dinner was quite good, with excellent service, but the ambiance was more like a large cafeteria than an expensive steakhouse.  It was very noisy and crowded, and most of the patrons were dressed for the outdoor festival.  Although the water had receded and uncovered the downstream walkway to our dock earlier, when we returned it was up again, resulting in wet shoes and socks.

Hennen’s Steakhouse starters
Hennen’s Steakhouse steaks for both of us

After another of Dick’s special breakfasts, we set off for some sightseeing.  I had found what was described in glowing terms as an art enclave with shops, galleries, an artisan bakery, and restaurants.  It was certainly an attractive area, but one of the galleries had limited days, and the other was not yet open on a Sunday.  No shops, and the artisan bakery was just pastries sold out of a coffee shop with a queue of at least 30 people.  Apart from the coffee shop, there was just one restaurant that we had been told was not very good.  So, we walked back to the Museum of American Art.  You could have knocked me over with a feather when Dick told me that was actually our destination for the morning.

Chattanooga Bluff View Art District
Chattanooga Bluff View Art District

Of the temporary exhibitions, one that featured art glass had just finished, we would have loved that.  Instead, there was an exhibition of graffiti.  Yes, the stuff that vandalizes public and private buildings and street furniture.  Dick walked around it, I didn’t.  Afterwards, Dick’s comment was that while he recognizes people’s right to express themselves, and even the talent of the artists, he totally objects to the defacing of public and private buildings, spoiling someone else’s architectural, engineering, or design efforts.

The permanent exhibitions were more interesting, spanning American art from the 1700’s to contemporary.

The Museum of American Art, Chattanooga
Chattanooga’s Walnut Street pedestrian bridge over the Tennessee River
The Zig Zag Walkway is an alternative to climbing one of the steep staircases up from the river

We went to Easy Bistro for an early dinner.  The venue was a surprisingly authentic French style.  I enjoyed the meal, quite unexpected, since there was so little on the menu for me to choose from that I ended up with a side dish as a starter.  Dick was in heaven, and had difficulty choosing from so many unusual options.  He settled on the rabbit rillettes, followed by pork hock, and profiteroles to finish.  My mushroom tagliatelle was very good, and worth taking home.  (and we remembered to take it, unlike the previous evening when we left the beautiful steak leftovers on the table by mistake).  The first glass of wine let me down.  I usually enjoy a Loire Valley white wine, but this one was awful.  It also happened to be the cheapest on the menu.  Dick’s comment, “The French hated it so much they sold it cheap to get it out of their country…”

Rabbit Rillettes with Garlic Toast at Easy Bistro
Pork Hock at Easy Bistro
Mushroom Tagliatelli at Easy Bistro
Profiteroles at Easy Bistro

We left early the next morning so we could go back to the fuel dock and take advantage of the excellent (and free) pump out machine.  We were properly underway before 9am, but there was a delay at the lock for a pleasure boat to lock down.  There are very few tows on this part of the river system, particularly given the delays at Wilson lock.

American Museum of Art from the river

We passed the Sequoyah Nuclear Plant.  This plant, and its sister plant at Watts Bar, has a special system that uses borated ice to help condense the steam in the case of a loss of coolant accident.  The system allows for a smaller containment building.  The reactor cooling water at the Sequoyah plant is mostly pumped into the Tennessee River at a rate of a million gallons per minute.  A maximum rise of five degrees F is allowed in the river as a result of releasing the cooling water.  Once the maximum is reached, the big cooling towers are used to provide the required extra cooling.  On both occasions that we passed there was no steam coming from the towers.  We noticed that the area is popular with fishermen, so the fish must like the warmer water too.

Sequoyah Nuclear Plant, Lake Chickamauga

Sequoyah was a Cherokee polymath.  His most well-known achievement was the creation of a Cherokee syllabary, enabling the Cherokee language to be written as well as spoken.  Within 25 years of adoption of the syllabary, the Cherokee Nation had almost 100% literacy.  Many things have been named after Sequoyah, including the giant trees in California, a mountain in the Great Smoky Mountains, and a yacht that was formerly used by American Presidents.

That night we stayed at a fellow AGLCA member’s dock on Lake Chickamauga.  They have built a beautiful house above the lake with stunning views.  Their boat is elsewhere for repairs, so Nine Lives was made welcome.  We enjoyed refreshments and nibbles and the wonderful views from their balcony.  Later we returned the hospitality with docktails on Nine Lives.

We saw our first Bald Eagle this trip on Chickamauga Lake
Autumn colours and pelicans

On October 8th we got an early start, expecting an 8-hour day, but the lock was ready for us when we got there, so we didn’t lose much time.  We were in the marina by 3:30pm in spite of a strong current against us.  The staff asked us to arrive before 5pm, so they could help us tie up, but after detailed instructions by phone for finding our slip, there was no help in sight.  Usually, this is just as well.  Not only does it save tipping a dockhand, but we do better ourselves.  This time it was a little more tricky than most because of very small cleats that are hard to keep a line around.  The onsite restaurant was closed for the season, so we had planned for shrimp sandwiches on board.  This year, instead of relying on frozen shrimp from the supermarket, some of which has been so awful it had to be thrown away, we bought several 1- and 2-lb packages of wild caught shrimp from Hudson’s in Hilton Head.  What a difference in flavour and texture!  Of course, it does mean that for shrimp sandwiches I have to cook them first, but the result was well worth the extra effort.

Shrimp sandwiches

We now have wonderfully cool nights and chilly mornings.  Long sleeves are good to start, and I am starting to think about the gloves that I have packed away somewhere that have full fingers.  We are beginning to see pretty fall colours and mist on the water in the mornings.

We passed under Interstate 75.  This highway starts at the Canadian border in Sault Ste Marie, and links Detroit, Cincinnati, Lexington, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Tampa, and Miami.

Passing under Interstate 75

In Loudon, about a mile of the riverbank was taken up by the Primient factory.  This plant used to be the familiar Tate & Lyle, but it was rebranded following ownership change.  Most of the factory is screened by trees from the river.  The smell is strong, and not particularly pleasant.  We thought we would not like to live in any of the houses across the river that must have the smell with them all the time.  Corn is delivered and turned into a variety of products including high fructose corn syrup, and fuel ethanol.  Something about those products being produced in the same facility….

Primient Plant, formerly Tate & Lyle, at Loudon
Fall colours on Watts Bar Lake
A farmhouse on Watts Bar Lake with the Smoky Mountains in the distance

A day that was a mix of interesting shoreline and long boring stretches became far more exciting than either of us liked.  Ft Louden lock was our last upbound lock on the Great Loop, and it was a doozie.  When we were about 30 minutes away, Dick made his usual polite phone call to ask about the queue, and request a lock up.  The lockmaster explained that he was about to lock down a tow that would take 8 hours, but that if we could get there within 20 minutes, he would take us up first.  Dick put the hammers down, Nine Lives leapt forward, and we arrived at the lock in less than 15 minutes.  Then the excitement began.

Nine Lives speeds up to catch the lock

In addition to some huge logs and pieces of debris, the water coming off the dam had created an area of rolling waves with whitecaps, that were broadside to the boat.  Dick fought his way through the mess, as we were flung this way and that.  We were very glad that we observe “cupboard discipline” and latch all cupboards and drawers at all times.  If we didn’t, the contents would have been on the floor.

Looking back at the rough water below Ft Loudoun Lock

As we waited for the lock doors to open, we could see 2 huge tree trunks, each about 20 feet long, blocking the lock entrance from each side.  The only way was to push through them slowly.  Finally set, with Dick tending the line on the floating bollard as usual, he looked up to see a whole bunch of people looking down at us!  Once again, we were the show, or at least the opening act.  The lock was conducting tours of 30 to 35 local people, and our adventure coincided with one of the tours.  The excitement was not quite over.  The waiting tow had moved into position, in front of the lock gates.  Fortunately, after his front barges were tied off, he backed up a little, so there was enough space for us to get past.  Once again, we had to push through a debris field.  Certainly there was lots going on for the watching tour group. Dick posted on the Looper forum that evening, advising Loopers not to plan to come through that lock until the high water had subsided.  Nine Lives managed the turbulence, but some boats would have real trouble.

Exiting Ft Loudoun Lock past the waiting tow and through the debris field

We arrived at the marina, which is immediately above the lock, and had no answer when Dick tried to phone.  This meant tying up at the fuel dock in order to get a dock assignment and the gate key.  Always a pain.  Our slip was very short, although thankfully wide enough, with very small cleats that were impossible to get a line onto from above.  Once in the slip, I put the stern line around a post, and took station at the helm while Dick half climbed and half jumped off in the middle of the boat and secured all the lines.  I was not required to jump down 5 feet to go to dinner, as the ladder fit!  We planned to eat at the onsite restaurant.

We walked over and had about ½ an hour to wait.  However, there was room in the bar, and while Dick enjoyed a beer, I felt the need for something a little more robust after our earlier excitement, and ordered Woodford Reserve.  It was a double, but (sadly) not what one would describe as a generous pour!

The restaurant won a National Rib Cookoff, and regularly wins “best of” in Knoxville.  This is a barbecue restaurant, which means that I now have to explain to our non-Southern readers just exactly what is meant by the term barbecue.  In Canada, UK, Australia, and much of northern USA barbecue is a method of cooking over direct heat such as charcoal or gas, generally quite quickly.  Southern barbecue however, is done with indirect heat, such as smoking or roasting and over a long time.  Most Southern barbecue will feature a tomato and pepper-based sauce with brown sugar and often quite hot spices.  There are literally hundreds of bottled barbecue sauces available to buy in supermarkets, and restaurants often have their own recipe.  Dick and I have learned to use the term “grill” to describe either the equipment or cooking method, in order not to confuse any guests who might be expecting something quite different from what we are preparing!

Dick ordered a trio of 3 dishes, BBQ ribs, fried chicken, and pulled pork.  I had a hamburger.  All were excellent, but I found that the seasoned fries had a sweet taste that I didn’t like at all.

The replica ships, Nina and Pinta, were visiting the Tennessee River when we were there

Next morning we set off up the Little Tennessee River.  We passed the earth dyke of the Tellico Dam, a highly controversial dam that created Tellico Lake.  TVA insisted that this dam was required to prevent flooding downstream, and also to improve the local economy.  Environmentalists, local landowners, fishermen, and Native Americans all objected for a variety of reasons, including the presence of the endangered snail darter (a fish).  Construction was halted just before completion.  Eventually it went forward by an Act of Congress.

Tellico Dam, essentially a long earthworks.

There are an enormous number of houses built around the Lake, all very large, over 5000 sq ft.  Certainly, the local economy was very much improved by the sheer amount of wealth that has migrated to the location.  What the snail darter thinks, we do not know, although the freshwater fish was relocated by TVA and is no longer considered endangered.  Later we saw the tops of drowned silos, a reminder that these lands had been farmed for generations and the landowners were forced out.

Some of the miles and miles of wealthy homes on Tellico Lake
Drowned silos are a reminder of what was lost and destroyed when the dam was built

We had thought to stop at Tellico Marina for the night, but repeated calls and emails had no response.  We went into the marina, and headed for the fuel dock, but it became increasingly shallow, so Dick turned around and we decided to anchor elsewhere overnight.  Shortly after leaving, the marina called to say they had space, but we told them sorry, too late, we already made other plans.

We explored about 26 miles up the river.  There were fine views of the distant Smoky Mountains, but surprisingly little fall colour in the trees.

View of the Smoky Mountains from Tellico Lake

Fort Loudoun was built by the British in 1756 to help keep the French out of the Appalachian region during the French and Indian War.  Just a few years after the war ended, there was a tragedy.  A breakdown in relations between the British and the Cherokee Nation resulted in 16 Cherokee chiefs who were being held hostage, being executed in South Carolina in 1759.  Fort Loudoun’s supply line was cut in the spring of 1760.  Once the food was nearly gone, the commander asked the Cherokee for terms of surrender.  Early in the morning on August 9th, the garrison of 180 men and 60 women and children left the fort by agreement and travelled as far as they could before making camp.  At sunrise the next morning, the camp was attacked, and 30 people were killed.  The rest were taken as slaves, although many of them were eventually ransomed.

Fort Loudoun reconstruction

Across the river from the Fort, the Tellico Blockhouse was built in 1794, with the primary purpose of keeping the peace between white settlers who were moving into the valley and the Cherokee who lived there.  The blockhouse became a thriving trading post and was an important centre for negotiation of treaties for some years.  Gradually the local Cherokee moved away from the area, trying to get away from the encroaching settlers, and the blockhouse lost its strategic importance.

Tellico Blockhouse reconstruction

Among the huge tracts of expensive houses lining the lake we saw a number of boat building factories.  Yamaha, Sea Ray, and others were represented.  Clearly, this is a popular area for boat building.

The anchorage we thought would work was too small and unprotected, so we went back up the river a little way and found a good spot in a deep cove across from an RV park.  It was well protected.  The strong winds died down as soon as we got into the cove.  We had a very quiet night, and temperatures are now quite low, so the generator was not needed.  In the morning, the anchor came up easily, but covered in sticky red mud, so cleaning was required the next time we had dock water supply.

The return transit through Ft Loudoun lock was not something we were looking forward to.  There were some huge tree trunks we had to push through to get into the lock.  The ride down was smooth and easy compared to going up!  The debris field inside the lock raised our hopes briefly, as it appeared to obligingly move away to the side, but then the hopes were dashed as it spread itself back across our bows.  Dick did a masterful job of using bursts of the engines to move us forwards and then neutral to glide through.  Unfortunately, there was an even worse mess below the doors.  Eventually, I had to stand at the bow and direct, while Dick maneuvered forwards, backwards, and sideways, to shake the trees, and even planks of wood off the bows and avoid getting them caught in the props.  We only heard the distinct crack crackle of chewing lumber once.

Cormorants at Ft Loudoun Lock

Debris navigated, there was the roiling water of the dam outflow to negotiate.  Although it was still more exciting than we would have liked, it was definitely easier with the current behind us even though the waves were still broadside.  Nice and friendly though the staff were, we are well glad to see the last of Ft Loudoun lock!  Later that day the lockmaster posted a video on their website of Nine Lives gliding up to the floating bollard with me at the helm and Dick waiting to lasso the pin.  We were quite chuffed, it all looked very professional!

Debris in the Ft Loudoun Lock

As we headed downriver, we had a helping current, and made 9 and even up to 11 knots at our normal engine revs, compared to 5 on the way up.

We could see the stacks of TVA Kingston Steam Plant, also known as Kingston Fossil Plant.  It was built between 1951 and 1955, and at the time, was the largest coal-fired power plant in the world.  In 2008 a dyke ruptured at a coal ash pond and 2.7 million cubic yards of fly ash spilled, burying 400 acres 6 feet deep and filling the Emory/Clinch Rivers, that flow into Watts Bar Lake, in sludge.  The dangers of using wet storage ponds for fly ash was known at the time, and TVA had found leaks in the levees and seepage into the soil at the sites of many of its storage ponds.  Instead of switching to dry storage ponds, small repairs were made to reduce costs. This was the largest industrial spill in US history.  The cleanup was declared complete in 2015, but many residents of the area still do not drink the water or swim in the river.

Distant stacks of TVA Kingston Steam Plant
Historic image of the wall of ash after the spill at Kingston Steam Plant (courtesy Wikipedia)

We went into a deep bay for our marina for the night. Caney Creek Marina does not appear to be well known to transient boaters, but we had a good stay.  Our neighbours on the dock had seen the Ft Loudoun lock facebook video that featured us entering the lock, and they came out to help us tie up as soon as they saw us arrive.  We were then invited to drop over for some beer and chat.  A most enjoyable encounter.

Fishing in the early morning mist
Tennessee National Golf Course
Whitestone Inn, an upscale B&B
An unusual rock formation and fall colour

We were out by 9:30 the next morning, a little later than planned, but Dick took the time to wash the mud off the anchor from the previous day.  After transit through the lock, we passed the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant.  It is unusual to find a nuclear power plant and a hydroelectric generating station in the same location.

Approaching Watts Bar Dam
Cormorants at Watts Bar Dam
Watts Bar Nuclear Plant. That is just steam, not pollution, from the cooling towers.

As on the way up, we had a day and a half of mostly boring travel.  Chickamauga is a large lake, so you don’t generally see much of the shore.  There was a brief excitement when an ultralight swept low over the river, and further south there were some lovely autumn colours in a row of bald cypress trees.

An ultralight flying low over Chickamauga Lake
Bald Cypress on Chickamauga Lake
Wisps of clouds made a nice sunrise at the marina near Dayton

Our transit through Chickamauga lock was interesting.  We were locked through with a small runabout.  Given that it was a Sunday, and close to Chattanooga, the lockmaster was asking all pleasure boats if they had been through a lock before.  This fellow said he had, and then proceeded to tie up to one of the fixed pins – that would have been completely useless and very dangerous once the water started going down in the lock.  An explanation was provided, and they moved forward to the floating pin.  The guy chatted with Dick, he was a very pleasant fellow, laughed at himself, and said how obvious it was once he was shown.  We told them to go out of the lock first, as they would be faster than us, and they were very considerate, no burst of speed, and no wake.  We could certainly wish there were more boaters like that.

Later, after tying up at the familiar Bluff Dock in Chattanooga, we helped with a large cruiser coming in.  They spent the entire approach tying fenders all along the vessel, and only when at the dock, went to get out coils of line (and untangle them) to tie up.  If they had seen as many fenders roll up on docks and catch in the cleats as I have, they would change their preparation priorities.

We walked up to Mellow Mushroom for a pizza fix.  Amusingly, it is rated the #1 restaurant in Chattanooga on TripAdvisor.  We assume this is due to the large numbers of people visiting the Aquarium and the Chattanooga waterfront.

Pizzas at Mellow Mushroom

Our full day in Chattanooga was reserved for Dick to retrieve his bicycle, now sporting shiny new wheels, and he took advantage of being mobile again to use his trolley and pick up enough groceries to get us back to Aqua Yacht after Rendezvous.  I did several weeks’ worth of laundry.  Fortunately the clothes dried quickly on hangers in the very breezy cockpit.

Bicycles and groceries taken care of, Dick was able to get on with some forward planning for the next stage of the voyage.  He secured a 3-month booking at a newly rebuilt marina at the eastern end of Florida’s Panhandle.  With the whole of the Looper pack in panic mode after the devastation of 2 hurricanes, we feel it is prudent to nail down some of our options.

To our great disappointment, Dick had a phone call late in the afternoon to say that the restaurant we had been looking forward to for weeks had to close that evening due to maintenance issues.  It was purportedly the best fine dining restaurant in Chattanooga, but they had just moved to new premises and were clearly having teething problems.  We decided to give the steakhouse in the Read Hotel another chance.  The décor and ambiance was beautiful, and the meal was much more successful than our previous visit.

Sauteed shrimp at Bridgeman’s Chophouse
Rare steak for Dick at Bridgeman’s Chophouse
The hamburger at Bridgeman’s Chophouse was delicious in spite of the squishy bun
Creme Brulee at Bridgeman’s Chophouse

Tuesday was the day to travel through The Gorge, billed as Tennessee’s Grand Canyon.  We were hoping for more fall colour.  There were some pretty stretches, but an overcast sky meant very little photogenic scenery.  Naturally the clouds broke up and the sun came out after we were docked.

A barge is being loaded with scrap metal south of Chattanooga
Baylor School south of Chattanooga
Lookout Mountain from the river. The Incline Railway goes up this mountain.
The Gorge

We tied up at Hales Bar Marina, with a view of the very unattractive but historically significant former hydroelectric facility.  There was only one useful cleat at our end of the assigned dock.  The whole place looks very run down, how anyone would consider coming and staying in one of the tiny floating cabins I do not know.  The distillery that occupies the former power house is only open weekends, so we did not get to tour or try their offerings.  There were some very colourful geese floating around the marina, but I can’t identify them.  I suspect domestic geese have encountered their wild relatives, with interesting results.  There are also goats wandering around.  Altogether a strange place.  We have no plans to return.

Floating cabins and the Power House at Hales Bar Marina
The distillery is located in the haunted Hales Bar Power House
Unusual geese at Hales Bar Marina

We had crossed into the Central time zone, so woke up an hour early the next morning and were underway shortly after 8am.  Dick had been told by the folks that tied up behind us that we could go out of the marina by another, shorter, but unmarked way.  We duly headed out, passing and waving to the occupant of one of the cabins on the way, but at a certain point the grass/weeds in the water fooled the depth sounder, so Dick could not tell where the channel was.  He backed around and we returned the long way, waving again to the bemused watcher.  Crossing over the submerged sandbar along the approved route was worrying, as the depth got shallower, but eventually we were through.

We had an easy transit through Nickajack lock, with no wait, but there were large mats of floating grass and weed to try to avoid.  Some boaters think it’s clever to proclaim “We were here!” by sticking stickers with their boat name on lock floating bollards. It is annoying to see, because those have to be cleaned off by lock maintenance staff in a time of tight budgets.  Defacing public utilities with stickers is just another form of graffiti.

Stickers deface the floating pins in many locks
Advice for new boaters, wear gloves for line handling! Imagine what Dick’s fingers would be like without them.

Our plans for the pre- and post-Christmas boating season have been revised in the wake of two devastating hurricanes affecting the Gulf Coast of Florida.  We originally expected to arrive in St Petersburg around mid-December, and then take about 4 weeks off to go home to Hilton Head for the Christmas/New Year season.  We are now booked to stop at a small place called Port St Joe, at the eastern end of the Florida Panhandle, on about November 22nd.  We have a reservation in the marina for 3 months.  After Christmas we will know how far along the various marinas and towns are with recovery and will be able to plan accordingly.  A big part of Florida’s economy is tourism based, so as soon as possible the towns will reopen and welcome tourists again.  It is likely that we will be anchoring more than originally planned, and we will spend less time in each place.  Our return to Hilton Head will probably be late April or early May.  It means that we will be boating in much warmer temperatures than Louise is happy with, but considering that so much of the Loop has already been too hot for my comfort, it is what it is.

The track of our first 3 weeks of voyaging

September 20th to October 2nd, 2024 Pickwick Lake to Chattanooga

Nine Lives and her crew are cruising again!  From September until March, we will be visiting Tennessee, Alabama, Florida, and eventually Georgia and return to South Carolina.  During this final portion of the Great Loop, we will “cross our wake”, that is, cross over our original starting point in St Petersburg, Florida, and in spring we will finish in our home of Hilton Head.  We hope you enjoy the recounting of our voyages.

The first challenge, as always, is to get the crew back to Nine Lives.  From Hilton Head it is about 9.5 hours’ drive to Aqua Yacht on Pickwick Lake.  Unfortunately, the air conditioning on Dick’s vehicle broke down just a few days before our departure, and there was not enough time to get the replacement compressor shipped and installed before we left.  It was hot!  The maximum temperatures were 97F near Birmingham, AL, but it was not below 90F for most of the trip.  We arrived at 4:30pm local time.  We took the bikes and the new salon cushions to the boat, and set things up to shock the fresh water tanks so they could sit overnight with the bleach solution.  We also turned on the fridge and the freezers, so they would be ready for the next day.

Once again, we stayed in a cabin at Pickwick State Park for a couple of nights while we got the boat ready.  The cabins have a full-size fridge and freezer for all our food.  In spite of the long, hot journey, all the frozen food was still fully frozen.  We checked in and immediately had dinner at the lodge restaurant before going to the cabin.  We were so tired and hot that we knew we would not want to go out again once we got into the cabin!

The food was much better than Dick’s memory.  He was able to ask for his favorite catfish to be grilled, a great improvement over the usual deep fry.  I had fried shrimp, which were superb.  We shared cheese curds to start.  There won’t be many opportunities for that delectable treat after the next few weeks.  We have never seen them offered in Hilton Head or in UK.

The next morning at breakfast, while I waited for the pancakes I had ordered, I idly looked at the ingredients list on the packet of syrup in the basket on the table.  One of the first ingredients was ethylene glycol.  If you never knew, or had forgotten, that’s anti-freeze.  A cruise around our friend google suggests that we never, ever want to ingest this stuff.  Not even on pancakes.

After breakfast we were at the boat by 8:30, and began the process of trekking all the stuff 1/3 mile along the dock to the boat.  Well, Dick did the trekking, I sorted and put away as it arrived on board.  Division of labour…

Everything has to be put away

Dick finished the water process, changed the drinking water filter, put the chlorine tabs into the AC system, and stowed spare parts, and 2 dozen bottles of wine and other drinks.  He also put up the burgees on the bow.

Changing the drinking water filter requires some contortions

The boat was supposed to have been cleaned for our arrival, inside and out.  It is always a bad sign when cleaning equipment has been left on the dock, in this case a bucket of soapy water and a long-handled brush.  While the hull was sparkling, the deck had minimal attention, and the cockpit had not been touched since we left.  The smears from Dick’s enthusiastic destruction of marauding bugs last fall were still on the windshield. Inside was better (a different cleaner), but not as immaculate as the lady who did the job last year.

I prepared the clove bags that keep insects out of the galley drawers and cupboards, while Dick stowed 4 dozen beers and the fizzy water.

The big shopping excursion to the supermarket in Corinth took longer than Dick had expected, making us late for our much anticipated favourite restaurant, Vicari’s.  Dinner was every bit as good as always, a nice change.  So many of our favourite restaurants over the years seem to lose their mojo and the food ends up being pedestrian and bland.

We checked out of the cabin after breakfast, then Dick had to schlep all the food up the path to the vehicle, and then of course the whole lot had to be dragged to the boat, along with all the food and dry goods from the grocery shop.

One thing about having done this for so many years, we know where everything goes!  Mostly.

I sorted out the groceries, including chopping celery and bagging it into portions for the freezer.  I also recharged the “dry tops” from the storage jars in the microwave.  These are a Chinese product that was only available briefly, but they work fantastically well at keeping things like pasta, biscuits, nuts, and even brown sugar in perfect condition.

These are the tops of the plastic canisters. They are dehydrated in the microwave and are amazingly effective at keeping contents fresh.

After a brief rest and recovery from all the to-ing and fro-ing with stuff, Dick started on his chores.  He changed the fuel filters from the main engines and the generator.  Vacuumed the cockpit and laid down the carpet. Put the new registration sticker on the dinghy.  Installed the sunscreens on the windows.  Checked the hydraulic steering reservoir for fluid level.  Prepare to launch the dinghy to check that everything was working correctly… and came to a grinding halt.

Launch the dinghy to make sure all is well.

The service department had put the dinghy up very high on the davits after they did the 50 hour service on the engine, and one of the two motors would not work to lower, only to raise that end of the dinghy.  After battling spider webs (my spray the day before had barely discouraged them), Dick had to get out the broom and have a really good sweep before even starting to try to diagnose the problem.  Naturally, more sophisticated troubleshooting was attempted before the simpler solution of wiggling the contacts for the plug.  Dinghy was duly launched (with the suitable precaution of keeping the rear hanger attached.  Dick evicted a staggering number and variety of 8-legged squatters, along with their webs, then followed the proper startup procedures, turned the key, and nothing happened.  The battery was absolutely flat.  The service men had not bothered to remove the drain plug when they returned the dinghy to the supports, and since there is an automatic bilge pump, every time it rained, the battery was drained a little more.  Dick set off to find a hardware store that would be open on Sunday and have a battery charger for sale.  He had to go all the way to Iuka, but he found one!

Battery set to charge, we walked out to the onsite restaurant for dinner.  Dick had checked that they were open on Sunday.  Sadly, not this Sunday.  A notice on the door said that they were closed indefinitely due to “unresolved plumbing issues”.  So we continued our Sunday stroll back to Nine Lives, and dug out the makings of sandwiches for dinner.

Next morning we were up early, and after taking time for coffee, Dick was pleased to find that the battery had charged and he could make sure the dinghy motor started and ran without issue.

We were finally away from our slip before 10am.  We had an uneventful day of cruising; a civilized 5.5 hours dock to dock.

The marina at Florence AL is supposedly open 7 days, but no radio response, and no phone was answered.  To be fair, Dick discovered later than he had the wrong number for the phone, so it was not surprising it wasn’t answered!  The 2 boats already in had spread themselves along the dock with gaps too small for us to easily fit into.  We docked at the back, but pulled up enough to leave room for the 50-footer that we knew was coming in behind us.  We spoke to them over the radio and were there to help with their lines.

They were a very nice couple, fellow Loopers, and we ended up going to dinner with them and then having drinks on Nine Lives after.

There was a hurricane brewing in the Gulf.  The forecasts were uncertain of its path, and there was a lot of concern for us and fellow boaters as to how much it might affect our plans.  We decided to look again in the morning and make some decisions.

Tuesday was a day that exemplifies the need not to have specific plans when boating.  We had volunteered, and our offer was accepted, to fill in for a veteran Looper for a presentation on locking at the upcoming Rendezvous of Loopers.  The various deadlines for submitting outline, bio, and introduction were already past, but we spent the morning starting work on the project.  We also untied and moved over to the fuel dock for fuel and a pump out.  Fortunately, one boat had left earlier, or getting back into our spot would have been quite tricky.

While Dick prepared bullet points for the presentation, I went through 7 years of photos to find those that are of locks and locking.  At this point, we discovered that our reliable workhorse, ten-year-old printer on board, while still operational, no longer speaks to our laptops, and could not be upgraded.

We kept a lookout for the marina courtesy car, and just managed to be first when it was returned.  Office Depot had a printer that would fit into the 12” space in the cupboard, and we also made a run to the supermarket for a few things that were missed earlier.  The rest of the afternoon was spent setting up the new printer.

We both felt that getting dressed up, then arranging for the courtesy car or uber to get to our planned restaurant, was just too much trouble, so we cancelled our reservation and walked along the dock to the onsite restaurant.  Basket food, but tasty.

A very tasty burger at Florence Harbor
My choice was the shrimp prepared 3 ways

Later, Dick chatted on the phone with the lockmaster at Wilson lock, 5 miles up the river, and arranged to call again at 5:15am to find out the status of the lock.  It is always better to speak to the person who is starting his 12-hour shift, rather than the one who is finishing, who may be wet as well as tired!

There was a split tow in progress in the morning, so we had time for showers and breakfast before our expected 7:30 departure.

So early, you say?  This particular lock had an approach wall collapse into the river a couple of years ago.  This means that the tows have to wait their turn from a long way up or down river, thus slowing down all operations.  Pleasure craft will be locked through only early in the morning, midday, or late, plus or minus, depending on existing tow traffic.  Not wishing to take a chance on the midday slot, we hoped for the early transit.  We were through Wilson lock at a very reasonable 9am.  Considering that this is the lock with issues, and a reputation for multi-hour holdups, we did well.  What was unexpected was the experience at the next lock.

A line goes around the bollard in the lock wall and is held, then the bollard floats up (or down) as the lock fills or empties. Being held secure means we won’t be thrown around by turbulent water.

The tow ahead of us (the same one that was going through Wilson at 5am), refused to allow the pleasure boats to go through ahead of him (there were two of us), even though he would, in fact, have lost no time by letting us through, as he had more than an hour required to approach the lock from where he was waiting.  So our two boats waited a full 8 hours instead of 4 (there was a downbound split tow that had to come through first).  Our fellow Looper boat anchored, but we held back with a combination of floating with the engine off and occasionally repositioning.  I did the early prep for our planned dinner on board later.

Our fellow Loopers on this part of the journey turned out to be a Dutch fellow, who emigrated to Canada in the 1990’s.  We will look forward to meeting again and spending some time in person!

We were in Joe Wheeler State Park by 5:15pm.  There were still concerns about the developing hurricane, although it was expected to be purely a rain event, with no significant wind at this location.  Some “conversation” between Nine Live’s two captains resulted in a compromise that would have us stop just 3 more nights before Chattanooga, but all in marinas rather than at anchorages or free town walls.  No locks the next day.  Even though there had been only two that day, a break was needed!

The first proper meal to be cooked onboard was a definite success.  The new recipe for scalloped potatoes complemented the pork and mushroom fricassee.

Preparing pork fricassee
A new recipe for scalloped potatoes
Our first dinner on board this cruising season

Thursday the 26th was the day for the hurricane (Helene) to make landfall, so we would know a lot more that evening, and even more the next day, as it was a fast-moving storm.  We planned to stay two nights at Ditto Landing to wait out the worst of the expected rain.  As I write this from my notes a week later, I know just how huge and devastating this storm was.  It was one of the largest ever to hit the United States, and loss of life and devastation to property extended from Florida to Georgia, Tennessee, and the Carolinas.  Our home in Hilton Head was fine, but our friends just a few miles away in Bluffton had trees down on their property and power outages.  Friends in Florida fared worse, and are still evaluating the damage, as are friends in Asheville, in the mountains of North Carolina.  We were lucky, more about our experiences later.

We left at 8:45 with an ETA of 3:30.  I spent an hour prepping a beef and mushroom stew for the slow cooker.  We passed TVA Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant.  This is the 3rd most powerful nuclear power plant in the USA.  It produces about 20% of TVA’s entire generating capacity.  There was no steam visible, so Dick wondered whether it is currently operating, although I can find no suggestion that it has been shut down. The stack is 660 feet high.  We were amazed at the number of additional low cooling towers on the site.  We delayed about ½ hour waiting for the Decatur Drawbridge, a railway bridge that is too low for Nine Lives to pass under.  The bridge tender was very pleasant, and kept us informed of the train movements.

Tennessee Valley Authority Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant
Some of the many cooling towers of TVA Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant
Pelicans and cormorants on a sand bar at Decatur
Decatur Drawbridge after opening for us.

It was a pretty boring stretch of river after Decatur.  We are too far from the banks to see any birds.  We passed Redstone Arsenal, a very interesting site, but the interesting bits are completely screened by trees.

We arrived at the marina, but our assigned slip proved difficult to get into with a slight breeze, and at only 20 feet wide there would not have been room for a fender between Nine Lives and the black rubber on the dock.  We were able to tie up next to our originally assigned slip below a launch ramp, which the dockmaster blocked off so trailers could not use it while we were there.  There were two more launch ramps available for day boaters to use.

Dinner was ready in the multi-cooker, and only the rice and vegetables needed to be prepared before we could sit down to enjoy our beef stew.

Preparing the side dishes for the beef stew
Beef stew with mushrooms

We were west and south of Hurricane Helene as it roared through Florida and Georgia and into Tennessee.  We didn’t even find out until later that it also had devastating effects in the Carolinas.  In northern Alabama we had heavy rains all night, but in fact, the noise of the fish eating the algae off the hull was louder than the rain.  It is an extraordinarily loud sound, as if someone is tapping hard on the hull!  Dick could not believe it was fish, and got up in the middle of the night just to check all around the boat.

The next day was quiet, as southern USA started cleanup and assessment of the damage.  Sadly, Tennessee and the Carolinas were just at the beginning of their problems, as water poured through areas that never expect hurricane impacts.  Our own plans would have ongoing impacts that only reveal themselves a few days at a time.

September 28th, we were out by 8:30am.  It was dull and cool in the aftermath of Helene, and the lines were soaking wet, but at least it wasn’t raining.

Nine Lives is happier now that she is flying 2 burgees again.  It was not appropriate to fly the Wexford green after we moved away, so last year we always felt a bit lopsided!  We now have an Endeavour burgee for the second flagpole.

It was a very long and boring day, and the weather was too dull to appreciate the emerging fall colours.  We passed Guntersville and through Guntersville Lake, seeing many large and expensive homes along the shoreline and up in the hills.  I cannot find any information as to why this area appears to be so much more prosperous than the rest of the Tennessee Valley.

Developing fall colours north of Guntersville

Painted Bluff is a famous landmark overlooking the river.  It features over 130 prehistoric Native American pictographs and petroglyphs.  The striations in the rock are certainly beautiful, especially with the developing autumn colours, but we were mystified that unsightly power lines were permitted to cross right over one of America’s beauty spots.

Painted Bluff

The Bellefonte Nuclear Plant began construction in 1975.  In the next 40 years over 4 billion was spent, and yet so far the plant is not operational and may never be.  It stopped construction in 1988, and moveable parts were sold off, then the site was auctioned in 2016.  Regulatory permissions were not obtained, by the new owners, and the whole thing is now tied up in the courts with lots of finger-pointing and accusations of malfeasance, including bribery and corruption.

A glimpse of the cooling towers of Bellefonte Nuclear Plant

We had planned to tie up for the night on an old, decommissioned lock wall.  After a very long day of cruising, we arrived at 6pm to find that it was just not suitable for Nine Lives.  The distance between bollards along the flat part of the wall was too great to tie up, and the two places we could have reached had metal protrusions and a cut out section of the wall.  We had to back out and carry on to an anchorage further up the river.  The location is in a wide chute behind an island.  We could see a Yamaha Plant on the shore, and it has what appeared to be a very respectable marina, complete with lit power pedestals, and not a single boat.  If the anchor had not set, we would have gone with the principle of “easier to ask forgiveness than permission” and availed ourselves of the facility.  In fact, I can’t even imagine how one would ask for permission!  We were anchored by 6:45, a very long day, finishing just as it was getting dark.  Most days are good on a boat.  This was not one of them.  Dick’s steak dinner prepared on the grill was a welcome treat after a hard day.

Setting the anchor at dusk
A well-earned steak dinner prepared on the grill

After a very peaceful night with just a few feet of movement from where I set the anchor alarms, we were ready to pull the anchor and get back onto the river for another long day.  I woke up very early (5am), because my phone was absolutely convinced that Bridgeport AL was in Tennessee and thus in the Eastern Time Zone.  We decided to head out early.

As the procedure began for pulling the anchor, Dick discovered that the bridle lines had caught an incredible amount of floating weed.  It was the highly invasive hydrilla, that infests waterways from Florida to California after escaping from aquariums in Florida in 1950’s and 60’s.  It costs millions every year to try to control it.  Dick had to shake it off with a boathook, then lift the lines a little bit and shake off the next clump.  The picture shows only one of the smallest clumps, there was enough of the stuff for several bales!  There was more weed on the anchor chain itself, but once that was cleared, the anchor came up smoothly and clean and we were away by 7:30am.

Hydrilla on the anchor chain

We passed the somewhat unprepossessing structure that is the historic Hales Bar hydroelectric plant.  Construction of the dam began in 1904, and took 8 years to build, with many accidents and several deaths.  On completion in 1913, it was the world’s second largest hydroelectric plant.  Only Niagara was larger.  The book tells me that there was a huge celebration, with bands playing, dances, banquets, speeches and fireworks.  From the beginning the dam leaked.  The area was cursed by a Cherokee warrior in 1775, and it has apparently been unlucky ever since.  The dam is considered to be one of the most haunted in the USA.  The dam was half a mile across and 60 feet high, and contained what was at the time the highest single lock lift in the world.  TVA acquired the dam in 1939, and continued the ongoing efforts to seal the leaks, but they were in vain.  By 1960, the dam was leaking at a rate of 2000 feet per second, and it became clear that the leaks were joining together inside the dam, with an increasing risk of complete (and sudden) failure.  A new dam and lock was build down the river, and as soon as the Nickajack Lock and Dam opened in 1967, the Hales Bar Dam was decommissioned.  Today the historic building is used as a private event space, and is also the home of Dam Whisky and Moonshine Distillery.  Although we plan to stop at the marina there on our return down the river, the distillery is only open on weekends, so we may not be able to tour and partake.

Hales Bar Hydroelectric Plant

The outflow for the Raccoon Mountain pumped storage facility can be seen from the river.  During times of low power demand, water is pumped from the river to a reservoir on the top of the mountain.  When demand is high, the water is released through a tunnel and drives generators in the underground power plant.  It takes 28 hours to fill the reservoir.

Raccoon Mountain Pumped Storage Facility
Autumn colours in the Gorge

Williams Island is passed just a few miles before Chattanooga.  In 1862, James J. Andrews, a Union spy, led 21 men through Confederate lines and managed to steal a railroad engine in Marietta, Georgia.  They headed north to Chattanooga, destroying telegraph communications as they went.  A Confederate force in another engine followed them, and caught up with them and imprisoned the spy in Chattanooga.  Andrews managed to escape, and got as far as Williams Island before he was caught.  This time he was taken to Atlanta and hanged.

Misty weather obscures most of the views in the Gorge

We arrived in Chattanooga by 4:30, and had help from a neighbour on the dock, who had stayed for 10 days waiting out the hurricane and the high water.

Nine Lives arrives in Chattanooga

We had dinner at one of the top steakhouses in Chattanooga.  We walked up many steps to get to the depot for the free downtown electric bus service.  It is very popular with the homeless.  The restaurant is in a gorgeous historic hotel.  The service was excellent, and the food was tasty, but unevenly heated.  Parts of the meal were piping hot, other parts (especially the potatoes) were barely warm.  After dinner we walked back to the boat because the bus does not run after 8pm on Sundays.  We were glad that it had stopped raining.

A beautiful building facade with lighting that changes colour. The building is a multi-storey car park!

In the morning, Dick went for a long walk to explore the downtown.  Unfortunately, while there are many interesting restaurants and the beautiful old buildings are being renovated to provide downtown living and shopping, it is still very much a work in progress.  In the afternoon, we enjoyed our first docktails on Nine Lives this season with Maggie and Bruce, the local Harbor Hosts.

Waterfront park on the north side of the river

We took the bus again to our dinner destination.  Alleia was an excellent choice for an Italian meal.  We shared a cheese and charcuterie platter.  Dick had the halibut, which was delicious with an excellent pomodoro sauce.  He was less enthused about the accompanying vegetables: summer squash, zucchini, and okra!  Dick loves most other vegetables, so this was quite a miss from his point of view.  I chose a mushroom and preserved truffle pizza, one of the best I have had in a long time.  Nothing on the dessert menu caught my eye, but Dick enjoyed his favourite panna cotta.  We returned by bus, as it runs late on weekdays.  Unfortunately, the usual ramp to the dock was under 5 feet of water, so we had to come down the steps at the other end.  They are in an unlit area much favoured by the large homeless population of this city, so not a comfortable way to have to go back and forth to the dock. 

Halibut at Alleia
Mushroom pizza at Alleia
Panna cotta at Alleia

The effects of Helene are still manifesting, and we were advised by the Knoxville Harbor Host not to venture that far up the river.  Apparently, TVA regulates the water being released by the dams on the system to limit flooding in Chattanooga, which explains why the walkway is periodically under water but the town is not flooded.  We extended our stay by 6 more days, and will reassess next weekend.  We hope to be able to travel up the river, but we will not go as far as Knoxville. As I write this, 4 of the locks on the Tennessee River are closed because of the very high volume of water flowing over the dams.

There is also great concern over the status of Wilson Lock, which the majority of Loopers must pass through to get to the site of the Rendezvous.  This gathering has been fully booked for months.  Since our passage, the main chamber of the lock has had to be closed for several months for repairs.  The auxiliary chamber is in fact 2 smaller steps, requiring a tow to lock through just one barge at a time.  With a typical tow on this river being made up of 15 barges, the transit takes 15 to 24 hours per tow.  Pleasure boats are not a priority, but it is hoped that it will be possible to arrange flotillas to fit between the commercial requirements.

We had concerns about the effectiveness of the pump out we had at Florence Marina.  The rather feeble pump had not seemed to have done the job properly, and a quiet afternoon seemed like a good time to untie and head over to the fuel dock.  Both the fuel pumps and the pump out machine are self-service, so there are no helpful dockhands to assist with operations or tying up.  In spite of the fierce current, Dick maneuvered Nine Lives into the quiet water in front of the dock, and I was justly proud of my skillful capture and double wrapping of the midships line around the dock cleat.  The pump out took just a few minutes with the robust pump, and we were back retying on our dock in less than half an hour.

Nine Lives on the dock

As we walked to the bus station we looked down at the waterfront.  You can see in the picture that the fixed docks are completely submerged.  Those light lines in the lower right are the handrails along the walkways, more than 5 feet under water.  At the base of the concrete lights in the top left are small white boxes.  These are the power outlets for the dock.  Theoretically the power has been cut off, but I did see the lights on the other night! The dock we are on is floating, so at least it moves up and down as the water rises and recedes.

The waterfront at Chattanooga is under more than 5 feet of water.

Chattanooga’s history began in 1815, when Cherokee descendant Chief John Ross established a ferry service across the river.  He also built a boat landing and a warehouse, and began trading with the local Cherokee Indians.  The settlement grew, and was incorporated in 1839.  It was in a strategic location, and metal industries ensured its continued growth.  It was fought over during the Civil War, and is still today an important manufacturing, wholesale, and retail centre.  It is also a popular tourist destination.  Ross’s Landing was located where the steps at the end of our dock are, our only access to the town when the ramp at the other end is flooded.

In 1854, the East Tennessee Iron Manufacturing Company built a blast furnace on a site overlooking Ross’s Landing.  A few years later the blast furnace was converted from charcoal to use coke, and was the first in the South to use coke in the primary reduction of iron ore.  Just a few years later, in 1863, Federal troops occupying Chattanooga demolished all the buildings, leaving only the stack, which was used as a lime kiln.

The Chattanooga Choo Choo building (yes, it’s a real place), was a Beaux Arts Classicism building built by the Southern Railway and completed in 1909.  It had the largest brick arch in the world. An 85-foot freestanding dome spanned the waiting room.  The last train arrived in 1970, and the beautiful building was boarded up and threatened with demolition.  It was rescued and refurbished and is now a hotel and restaurant complex.

Chattanooga Choo Choo
The station entrance
The dome and former waiting area

The song, yes, the song.  If it isn’t running around your head yet I am surprised.  See if I can remind you of this particular earworm!  The song tells the story of train journey from New York to Chattanooga, where the singer’s sweetheart will be waiting for him, and he will settle down and never leave. The passenger asks a shoeshine boy, “Pardon me, boy, Is that the Chattanooga Choo Choo?  Yes, yes, Track 29. Boy, you can give me a shine.”  The song was written in 1941, and first performed as a big band/swing number by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra.  It was a huge hit in a time of war, speaking to soldiers who wanted to look forward to the day that they could go home and be met by loved ones and parties.  It also referenced the heart of America, and the prosperity and industry that depended on the railways.

We went to dinner at Elsie’s Daughter, a somewhat unusual restaurant that is part of Hotel Chalet, that in turn is part of the Choo Choo complex.  The hotel features modern “chalets”, but the alternative, if you are willing to pay an additional $100 per night, are beautifully converted passenger cars, formerly part of the rolling stock of Southern Railway.

Converted railway cars of the Chalet Hotel

Dinner started well.  There is a very limited menu, and all plates are meant to be shared.  We began with a tomato and cucumber salad in a delicious dressing, and a plate of smoked trout spread accompanied by crisp pieces of toast.  Dick chose the crispy half chicken, which was also delicious.  I know this because my mushroom tartine was so tasteless that I gave up on it after a few bites (copious additions of salt and pepper did not help), and instead had some of the chicken.  The service that had been so bright and solicitous fell apart in the middle of the meal, as the single waitress tried to cope with a full restaurant.  We decided that the only dessert choice on offer was not of interest, so we paid and left.  We would consider returning, but not after 6pm.

Sharing plates at Elsie’s Daughter Restaurant

Earlier in the day, Dick had carried his bicycle up multiple flights of steps to go grocery shopping, because the walkway at the other end of the dock was under 5 feet of water.  He didn’t want to have to repeat that effort, so on his return, he locked the bike to the railings at the top of the steps. As we passed the bike, I commented that I thought there was about a 50% chance that it would be there when we returned from dinner.  The bike was there.  We passed a fellow standing on the pathway, with a suspiciously familiar water bottle at his feet.  I pointed it out to Dick, and he asked the guy, “did you take that water bottle from my bike over there?”  To my vast surprise, the guy laughed, apologized, and handed it back!  One hopes the bike will continue to be safe, but from now on the water bottle returns to the boat after each excursion.

A Chattanooga Choo Choo