Cool Change

Cool Change

Saturday, December 25, 2010

December 18 - December 25, Merritt Island, FL

Merry Christmas to all of you.  We've just reached the end of a lovely, memorable day.  Thank you, Roger and Marcy and Marla and Al, for sharing your grandchildren and children with us this holiday season.  We have missed our families but you have welcomed us and fed us and gifted us and made this day a lot of fun.  We are stuffed with Grandma Dorothy's ambrosia, Marcy's quiche and cinnamon coffee cake, Marla's unique sweet potatoes, Cathy's yummy cake and Al's well-carved turkeys, to mention just a little bit of the foods on which we've feasted today.


The Glover's loaner truck.  We are so grateful to have this set of wheels while we're here!
 It has been a busy week.  Both of us have been ill with a horrible cold (yes,Wayne did share his wet, headachy, cough and sore throat "gift" with me - and I could not find a single store to which I could return it).  We made it to Orlando last week and enjoyed a long-time tradition of cookie decorating with Wayne's youngest brother, Harlan, and his wife, Patty, and also got to see our nephews, Kyle and Mark.  We attended a fun dinner party with old friends, John and Peggy.  Peggy and I taught together in 1976-77.  Guests at the party just happened to include a former math teacher of Patrick's and her husband who was a customer of Thrailkill Bike and Mower, our Orlando business from 1976-1997.  Small world.  We had planned to spend the day on Tuesday with daughter-in-law, Maria, and grandgirls Jackie and Kate but Colleen was sick and very contagious by then so we just got to give them a quick hello and good-bye.  So difficult to do : (

Boat news - Bow thrusters are repaired and working well; aft cabin sump pump has been replaced; hopefully we've diagnosed and cured the problem of water getting into the front berth by redirecting the drain scupper on the anchor locker in the bow.  So....when we're ready to move on in about ten days we should be in perfect working order.


Chocolate chip cookies made; sugar cookie dough coming up next


A soup fest at Roger and Marcy's just before the Cocoa Beach Boat Parade


Cookie ladies, Patty and Colleen


The view from our "back door" on a beautiful winter day in Florida


Friday, December 17, 2010

December 12th-17th Harbortown Marina, Merritt Island, FL

We've been here nearly two weeks and really feel at home.  We've "decorated" for Christmas, planned for traditional Christmas cookie making with my sister-in-law, Patty, purchased and made a nice assortment of gifts and put Christmas lights on the boat rails.  That last item was so much easier to do than it would have been on our house.

The weather has not been Florida's best.  We've had some record breaking low temperatures and it wasn't until today that we had an entire day of typical Florida winter warmth.  We are both hoping that it keeps up for a while.  Wayne has managed to pick up a cold which I think he plans to give me for a Christmas gift.  I might have to return that one.

A few boat notes - we decided to get the broken bow thruster repaired while we were in port.  The forward berth is dismantled for the repairman to get to the bow thruster and we thought it would be returned by today but it turns out we won't get it back until midweek next week.  Oh, well, we're not going anywhere yet.  Don't plan to come and spend the night with us yet unless you're willing to sleep on the dinette, which does make up into a bed.

We also thought we had a heater problem in the aft cabin.  We called a repairman to check that and when he came the heater worked perfectly.  Maybe it was temporarily traumatized by the super cold weather.

Another issue was the sump pump for the aft shower.  Mr. Mechanical, the captain, got up from his sick bed to diagnose that and thinks he's got it solved.  Yippee!  I don't want to give up daily showers just yet.

We're looking forward to seeing two of the grandgirls next week as our daughter-in-law, Maria, will be visiting her dad in Orlando with Jackie and Kate.  We'll also be catching up with Wayne's youngest brother, Harlan, and his wife, Patty, and seeing our friends Peggy and John and Jim and Shaula while we're in the Orlando area.


So we show up in Florida just in time for a record breaking cold snap.  We LIVED in Orlando in '89.  We do not need to relive that particular cold weather.


This is very cool.  It's a live salad bowl from Rockledge Gardens, a wonderful plant nursery a little bit south.  You pick the assorted lettuce leaves to make your very fresh salad and then it grows back.


Marla gave us this goofy dancing tree to start up our Christmas spirit.  He is a big hit around here.


What's Christmas without poinsettas?


The tree has a nautical theme, lighthouse ornaments and a shell garland.


Here it is!


Saturday, December 11, 2010

Monday, December 6 - Saturday, December 11 Harbortown Marina, Merritt Island, FL

We've been settled here in the marina for six days and are really enjoying ourselves.  We've had a visit from friends Pam and Richard from the Central Florida Cruise Club  we belonged to in Orlando and a chance to see Marcy's brother, Bim, and his wife and sister-in-law as well as many opportunities to hang out with Marla & Al and Roger & Marcy.  We celebrated a large-numbered birthday with Marla on Thursday and went to a Christmas party at her sister, Kathy's, house tonight.  This morning we called Roger and Marcy on the spur of the moment and said, "Let's go to breakfast" and they did!  We miss our friends in North Carolina but it is such a  pleasure to get together with these treasured  friends since childhood and to pretty much be living in the same neighborhood as they are.

Christmas is coming, as I'm sure you all know.  Before we left NC I did some Christmas baking and shipped presents to our three boys and their families.  Beyond that, we really hadn't considered what we would do about a tree (on a boat????), lights, gifts for each other (I guess that would be diesel fuel) or Christmas dinner.  I did take care of Christmas cards, composing our letter and addressing envelopes during the long hours we putted along at eight miles an hour through South Carolina and Georgia.  Since arriving here we've realized that we don't want to bypass Christmas so today we bought a TREE.......and ornaments.......and a tree skirt.......and lights!!!  Good grief!  How crazy is that?  We'll send a picture once we get it all decorated around here.

Thanks to those of you who have kept us updated on the wintery weather in Charlotte.  FYI - Wayne was in shorts and tee shirt and washing the boat on Friday afternoon.  We have had some cold weather here but our central heating system on the boat keeps us quite comfortable.

As for the boat, we are trying to find out how we were taking on water that was wetting our front berth as we were traveling.  We also want to solve the problem of a nonfunctioning bow thruster on the right side of the boat.

Wayne & Colleen relaxing at "home."


There are lots of things you are not allowed to do at Port Canaveral
Here's one.


And another


Yet another

And one more.


One of the Port Canaveral sights that we didn't expect to see.  He has GOT to be feeling a draft.


Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Marineland to Cocoa - Nov 5th

 
ICW at Palm Coast

We arose at 6AM to check the tide as our bow was beached to the shore and the boat was in a bow up / stern down position the same as I noted at my 3AM check.  High tide was to be at 6AM but at 6:45 the water was still flooding in from Matanzas inlet, just 2 miles north of us.  The result was to be a difficult undocking.  We would be pushed by the swift current into the dock or into John's boat as we departed.  A light drizzle had started and we had forgotten to zip closed the front vinyl curtains when we went to bed.  By the way, yesterday Dottie phoned from Charlotte and said that it as snowing there while we were walking to Publix with Pidge and John with no jackets and enjoying the warm FL sunshine.  So the little bit of wet on the flybridge was no problem to accept.  By 7:15 we made the decision to pull out.    As we backed off our bow was still beached on the bank.  We had no difficulty in pulling away, though, and John assisted by holding our bow off his dock.  We waved goodbye and headed south, not knowing how far we would get.   Our original destination from St. Augustine had been Cocoa and it was 95 miles away.  So we guessed our next stop to anchor for the night would be Titusville at the farthest. For those who don't know, Cocoa is just south of Cape Canaveral and Cape Kennedy NASA facilities and Titusville is just north of Cocoa.


Tugboat converted into a trawler parked at a home
We first passed Palm Coast, the monster development by ITT that has been ongoing for 25 years or so.  Right where the new Palm Coast Marina was recently dug out of the river muck, a "manatee zone" was marked with "Idle Speed - No Wake" from the start of the marina to the end of the marina.  It is obvious that the manatees know that they are to set up home in front of any new big dollar development of marinas and high priced homes and the state then installs the manatee protection signs.  We witnessed this phenomenon time and again as we headed south toward central Florida.  
Easy Livin' on the ICW - Daytona area
After Palm Coast we passed through the Daytona inlet area and saw many huge, beautiful homes as well as remote grasslands and tidal plains.  The flood plains

17 foot clearance and we are 17 ft 5 in tall.  No probleml
  that we have traveled these past weeks are certainly the fish nurseries for the Atlantic fishes.  With all the environmental restrictions of today, it is amazing at how much development has occurred on the waterway since my last passing 15 and more years ago.

1000 MILES !!!

1000 mile reward!
 Somewhere around the ICW mile 840 Wayne surpassed the 1000 mile mark aboard Cool Change.  This is for both  the trip from FL to SC and now the trip back south.  His reward , a kiss from the co-captain.
Lighthouse at Ponce DeLeon Inlet at Daytona

















The many bridges at Daytona


Hundreds of pelicans roosting.  What a stink!!
  After Daytona the ICW became more remote as we moved south.  We encountered no boat traffic the entire day except for a short span in the Daytona inlet area.  We were pretty much on our own as we traveled the 15 miles of the Mosquito Lagoon just north of NASA.  We could see the VAB building and the shuttle launch pad from the ICW 15 miles away.  
Looking out to Mosquito Lagoon, the VAB is in the distance 15 miles
Seeing the VAB made us feel that we had finally reached central Florida .  We stepped up our speed a bit to assure that we reached Titusville for anchorage in the deep water, 9 feet, just south of that  town.  We reached Haulover Canal about 3:30 and were closing in on Titusville so we chose to attempt to go on 20 miles further and anchor at Cocoa Village.  Haulover Canal was named thus because it was originally a narrow spit of land separating the Mosquito Lagoon from the Indian River.   People would haul their boats over land from one side to the other.   The canal was dug in mid-century as the ICW was dredged to allow for river traffic, especially the barges that served petroleum to Florida's growing power plant infrastructure.



Bridge on the Haulover Canal


Exiting Haulover Canal -Visibility soon got much worse!

Exiting Haulover Canal began a somewhat harrowing navigational experience that demanded careful coordination between the nagivator (note the play on spelling) and the pilot.  We take turns being the nagivator.  The 3:30 PM sun was directly in our faces and aligned in the most negative of possible positions to our course from the canal to Titusville.  I could not see the markers at all!!  If I looked at the water, I was blinded to the plot on our GPS plotter when I turned to look at it.  So our solution was for me to shade my eyes and to look at the GPS plotter to keep us on the right course and for Colleen to stare into the sun with the binoculars to pick out the channel markers that confirmed that the electronic course and our actual course were the same.  This was absolutely necessary as we had high winds to our starboard side that were pushing us across the channel and off course.  Also a major problem was that the plotter many times shows us more that 50 to 100 feet from where we actually are and the waterway is only 100 feet wide before you are in 2 foot water.  So while the plotter shows us in the dredged channel, we could actually be ready to run aground.  A major problem was that Colleen could not pick out the markers from the many signs warning of the manatee area outside the channel.  These signs were set back in the shallows maybe 100 feet from the channel and looked like channel markers with the bright sun on the water ahead of us.  If Colleen mistook one of these for a channel marker we would be aground in no time.  We kept comparing our separate observations.  Well, we made it without running aground but it was a harrowing 30 minutes and she still loves me I am told.



Titusville swing bridge - the last that we needed to have open
 Once we got to Titusville we realized the we could make Cocoa Village before dark if we kept the speed at 11mph and had no delays.  We did anchor at Cocoa Village for Sunday night about 30 minutes after sunset.  We had just enough daylight to position ourselves between the many boats already there at anchor.  We were one of the furthest anchorages and very close to the channel.  We were exposed to the wave action generated by high winds all night.  The boat swung back and forth in very wide arcs all night on the 60 feet of anchor chain that we had put out and the waves bashed us a bit.  We slept through it very well as we are now accustomed to the sounds of water just inches from our heads at night.  During our travels this day we discussed staying in the Cocoa area for the month of December.  We made calls to several marinas in the area and chose Harbortown Marina which is very close to Cape Canaveral.  Marla, Colleen's friend from childhood, and Roger, my friend from childhood, and their spouses, Al and Marcy, are all excited that we will stay here through Christmas.  We plan to have great times in December with the four of them as well as our family that still lives in Orlando.  Al and Marla have loaned a pickup truck to us for our use while here.  How generous is that?  Now we can get groceries without backpacking ashore or hiring a cab.  It was near freezing here last night --- Florida??   But it is far better than the low temps in Charlotte right now.  We will see 75 degrees on Saturday though and it will be welcomed.
Wayne

Our address until January 10th should you want to drop by:
Harbortown Marina
Slip D29 - Cool Change
2700 Harbortown Drive
Merritt Island, FL 32952

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Dcember 1, 2010 - December 4, 2010 St. Augustine, FL to just north of Daytona Beach and south of Marineland

We had a great time on our visit to St. Augustine.  We walked all over the city and enjoyed returning to some of our favorite places there - the living history tour of some old houses and the Spanish bakery, to name a few.  On Thursday the 2nd, our friend Nick joined us for the day and we had lunch together and wandered around the streets for the afternoon.  Thanks, Nick.  We both enjoyed seeing you so much! 

The weather was pretty brisk, with some temps that were unusually low in this state (low forties at night, fifies and sixties during the days).  We were taking the water taxi provided by the marina in to the dock so that made our trip in from the buoy field much easier than it would have been had we been using our dinghy but we still had to deal with lots of chilly wind.  It turned out to be a good thing we did not try to use our dinghy as the engine that has run beautifully for the many years we've owned it, decided not to carburate properly and was flooding.  Wayne took the carburator apart and cleaned it as best he could with acetone.  It ran great for ten minutes.

On Saturday morning we untied ourselves from the buoy and made a short fourteen mile trip just past Marineland to dock for the rest of the day and for Saturday night at the home of Pidge and John, the sister and brother-in-law of our good friend, Dottie.  Along the way we really began to feel that we had arrived in the Florida of some of our best memories on the water.  We saw dolphins and palm trees and were so close to the ocean that we could see the dunes.  The air was cool but the sky was that lovely light blue that is so much a part of Florida.

Pidge had been forewarned that we would enjoy a trip to Publix and one of the first things she said after we got the boat tied up was, "We can walk to Publix if you want."  You betcha.  Wayne and I walked to Publix with Pidge and John after lunch and, of course, we picked up a key lime pie.  I'm not sure if I've mentioned this before but the two of us are suckers for Publix' key lime pies and carrot cakes.  Wayne was able to get proper carburator cleaner from John's hardware store, redid the job and we'll test the dinghy engine at our next stop.  We enjoyed supper with Pidge and John and some friends of theirs and are looking forward to leaving in the morning and making our way down to around Titusville.  We’ll need to change the bedsheets and wash clothes soon.  No hurry, though.


Our family has always enjoyed getting our picture taken in front of this lovely little statue of Queen Isabella.  Unfortunately, it's fenced off now.


Cool Change was pretty much the last boat in this field of boats in St. Augustine's harbor.

Nick and us



Look close.  That ripple in the water is a camera shy dolphin.

Cool Change at a comfortable anchorage for the night at Pidge and John's.