Cool Change

Cool Change

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Christmas and Beyond in Punta Gorda

 

December 15th-31st

And We Have A Winner!

Aha! Someone is listening out there.  Our friend, Hal Bloom in Charlotte, correctly identified the strange tree we posted a photo of on our last blog.  It's called a South African sausage tree (Kigelia pinnata).  What an appropriate name.  Congratulations, Hal.


Meet the winner, Hal



















In Case You Don't Know Where We Are
 Punta Gorda is about 20 mile northeast from the Gulf of Mexico shoreline on Charlotte Harbor. The first Europeans to explore this area of Florida were the Ponce Deleon expeditions in the 1500s.  Ponce Deleon did not find gold as he wanted; he did however conclude that this area would be ideal to establish a new colony.  On his second voyage here with 200 settlers the local Indian population drove the settlers back aboard their ships after a short stay.  Ponce Deleon was wounded by a poison arrow and went to Puerto Rico where he subsequently died. 
Charlotte Harbor along with Tampa Bay are the two largest natural harbors in Florida. The bay encompasses more than 270 sq. miles.   Charlotte Harbor was a major shipping point for cattle in the 1800s before railroads reached Florida.  Timber was shipped from this area also.  The Myakka and Peace rivers feed the bay with fresh water and this area is one of Florida's great fishing spots.  The tarpon fishing at the Boca Grand pass, the Gulf inlet to the harbor, is some of the best tarpon fishing in the world.  Charlotte Harbor is mainly for pleasure and fishing boats today.  The area thrives due to its beautiful beaches, great fishing, and its mild winter climate that attracts many winter inhabitants.  Retirement communities abound here.

Cool Change sits way up in Charlotte Harbor, just to the right of the first big bridge you
see in the upper right corner.  That bridge is really two one-way sections as you see
below in a shot taken from the waterfront park.



 
Waterfront walkway view north to Port Charlotte with a morning fog rolling toward us.

 
Christmas in the Tropics


City tree at the Friday art and music walk that we attended in downtown Punta  Gorda.
This 10 year old girl was making her sidewalk music debut, according to her father.
Such a young girl and she did a remarkable job singing 60s rock.




You won't be seeing this up north.  Notice the shorts and jacket attire.  Some mornings we strike out for a walk
in the chill and are shedding clothes within fifteen minutes as it begins to warm up outside.

Boat Sewing Projects

Christmas came upon  us in a rush as it always seems to do but we managed to get all of our shopping and shipping done in time.  The deconstructed quilt I told  you about in the last blog became three Christmas table runners, two of which were given as gifts and one decorated our own table.  For better or worse, I still have four blocks left.  That's a project I am glad to leave behind at this point so I have no idea when those blocks will find a life in another sewing creation.

I also finished two quilt tops and I'll try to find a big space to lay them out and prepare them to quilt at some point.  Not photo ready yet.


Christmas pajamas for two of the grandgirls and their American Girl dolls
In North Carolina I made a quilt top for my neighbor and
friend, Sandy.  It is queen sized so she hired a professional
to quilt it.  She has shipped it to me here to bind and that
part is underway.  Next step - hand sew the folded binding
 down around the quilt's 450 inch perimeter.
This is a microwave pot holder.  My friend Dottie shared the
pattern with me.  You put your bowl into the middle and put
both items into the microwave, then lift it all out, saving your
fingers from burns.

Wayne's World of Sewing and Repairs

 Wayne began making canvas bags to supplement the expensive bag that we like so much to carry laundry and anything else to and from the boat.  Some of the bags were made for friends.

This bag was made for Colleen's friend, Marla.

  You can get an idea of the size here.

 
We replaced the window blinds last summer but found we couldn't
reach the shade adjustment.  Wayne first tried repositioning the shades
but that wasn't totally successful.  No problem.  Mr. Fix-It removed the upholstered bolsters
from the side of the window, took them apart, cut a few inches off and put
it all back together



Fifty or so staples later
 
Another bag was made for our friends Jann and Gary aboard Tie a Knot.
We met them in 2010 when we were in the mooring field in Marathon.

 

OK!  More canvas replacements.  This is a rollup side curtain for the flybridge.
The old one was becoming hard to see through and the zipper was failing.

It all starts with the cutting of all components.


This is the new corner side curtain

New entry curtain that Wayne made.




Last fall Wayne cut a queen sized mattress topper to fit
our forward cabin which has an odd-shaped berth.  Then he remade
king-sized sheets to create a custom fitted bottom sheet and top sheet.
Here he is attaching Velcro straps that he designed
to snug down the sheets from the back.
  
Repairs to the boat have been almost nada.  Wayne replaced the faucet washers in the master shower and has been unsuccessfully chasing a small water leak in the front hold.


So, What do You do in Punta Gorda?

We stayed on the boat for Christmas this year.  Merritt Island, FL friends Roger and Marcy came to spend a few days with us before the 25th.  I imagine you all feel that you know those two by now.  We were so happy to see them and the growing lettuce bowl they brought as a gift.  Of course, Marcy and I worked on a sewing project together.  Paper piecing is kind of like a paint-by-number picture except you "paint" with fabric, sewing different shades of colors onto a pattern with different numbers corresponding to the fabrics.  Easy but also tricky as everything must line up perfectly to make the pieces fit and you have to watch not to mix up the colors.  I'll be redoing two sections that have messed up colors. I admit, Marcy, all my fault.

Salad, anyone?
Colleen and Marcy



Eventually the pieces of this fractured picture will be
 joined together to make some handsome paper pieced sunflowers.
 
While Colleen and Marcy were sewing, Roger and Wayne relaxed.


We invited Jann and Gary over one night too and the six of us had North Carolina Bar BQ.  Then on the 24th we were happy to have a visit from Lani and Don and Tina.  Lani and I went to elementary and junior and senior high school together.  The three of them made a major detour from their Boca Raton destination that day in order to meet us for lunch.  Thanks again, guys!


Colleen, Lani, Tina, Don, Wayne

On Christmas Day about eleven other boaters and the two of us got together on a boat down the dock (that's like "down the block" in landlubber talk) and had pot luck Christmas hosted by Harry and Joan.  What a meal!  The guests included two Brits and an Australian.  We enjoyed mashed rutabagas and potatoes, heavenly seasoned with lots of cream and butter, known as punchnep in the British Isles, roast turkey and ham, a fancy dressing and homemade cranberry sauce concocted by Harry, several vegetable dishes and Wayne's mom's ambrosia.  It was quite a feast.

Punta Gorda Sights


A handsome rendering of Ponce Deleon sits on the harbor


Miniature '57 Chevy we found on our morning walk
Three houses sit in a row here.  The yellow one is labeled Yellow
House; the Orange one is labeled Orange House and the purple one is.........
 
 
Who lives here?  Obviously, a large family of elves.

I thought this lady looked so picturesque as she walked on the pier that I asked her for
permission to take her photo.  Look at the shadows of the palm trees, the curve of her hat,
 her black-and-white outfit and the angle of the rails.



Jann and Colleen
We've really enjoyed our time here in Punta Gorda with Jann and Gary.  These two
intrepid explorers live fulltime on their boat, Tie a Knot, and have journeyed
all over Florida, up the US east coast, across the Great Lakes
 and down the Mississippi.

 And, just in case you think life is way too easy for us here in sunny Florida - yesterday Wayne got the worst haircut of his life and Colleen dropped and broke her cell phone.  Oh, well, the hair will grow back and the cell phone still works.

Happy New Year to you all!




  





Sunday, December 14, 2014

Gulfport to Punta Gorda

November 26-December 13

Thanksgiving, 2014

We enjoyed Thanksgiving and the day after with old and new friends.  Our North Carolina friends, Dave and Barbara, invited us to Thanksgiving dinner at Mission Inn in Howey-in-the-Hills, FL.  Barbara's good friend, Shirley, got together about fifteen friends for this event and we were happy to be part of it.  Afterwards we had the chance to visit Shirley’s vintage old Florida home and the attached cottage and gardens in Mount Dora, all of which she has lovingly restored.  Talk about an impressive DIY project!!  We traveled on from there to the home of Jim and Shaula, who are old friends from our Florida boating days and we spent the night there, catching up and reminiscing about the good old days and some of our exciting boating adventures together.

Slightly out of character in our limited
dress-up clothes


Dave and Barbara











We posed Jim and Shaula in front of the pies at Bob Evans
because we couldn't resist the after-Thanksgiving 2 for 1 sale.


Back to Gulfport

We wanted to show all of you what we meant when we commented last time about the funky Gulfport houses.  We have never seen so many cute little pastel homes and we never did get a photo of the house with a huge metal dragon on the roof.



Wine bottles line the front walk with lights strung
inside them.  I'm sure it's quite a sight at night.



One stupendous sunset; like a rainbow of pink clouds
This Winter’s Journey Begins

Cool Change pulled away from the Gulfport docks on December 1st.  We spent three days slowly cruising down the Gulf Intracoastal, stopping for two nights to anchor in scenic settings.

The Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay
This is the bridge that was knocked down by a errant freighter during a violent rain storm 30+ years ago.


The city of Sarasota from the water as we passed



A steady hand on the controls

 
The people who live on Manasota Key travel to and from work by ferry.  We waited while two ferries, one from each shore traded sides of the waterway loaded with cars and trucks


Bridge opening to let us and several other boats pass
A beautiful anchorage in Lemon Bay.  We stopped for lunch
and liked the spot so much we stayed overnight.


Rain all around but we only got a few drops
 
Traveling south  this was the scenery on the port side


and this was on our starboard side

 
Settling in Punta Gorda
 
Our intention was to travel to Fort Myers and stay at the city docks for a month but our friends Jann and Gary promoted Laishley Marina.  Punta Gorda, where Laishley is located, is a charming little town, across Charlotte Harbor from the city of Port Charlotte.  Punta Gorda has been around since 1884 but its most recent history is tied to Hurricane Charley, a category 4 hurricane that hit this side of the state ten years ago.  After the 150 mph winds had their way with the town the city fathers and mothers began what they term “urban renewal by disaster.”  The result is a charming rebuilt downtown, within walking distance of the marina, beautiful murals detailing the town's history, good restaurants and a wonderful waterfront hiking/biking trail along Charlotte Harbor.  So we’re settled here for a month and will be here through Christmas and beyond.  Jann and Gary are here and we’ve also had the chance to reconnect with John and Kay, whom we met in Vero Beach three winters ago and who now live in Fort Myers, 30 miles further south.


The view from our back door, Punta Gorda

 
Laishley is a friendly marina, clean laundry facilities and showers,
once-a-week pot luck dinner with the marina residents and
 the bluest water and skies you can imagine.


One of many historical murals around Punta Gorda


A representation of an early Native American Floridian


During a morning walk we found this tree.  It had bright red flowers and pods the size of baking potatoes
hanging from vines coming off the branches.  Identify it for us
 and we'll mention your name in the next blog.


This is a blossom.
Seed pod??

















Sewing Projects

Of course, lots of sewing has been going on and, unfortunately, also some unsewing.  On this trip I’ve been trying to finish some projects that have been languishing in my sewing room for several years.  One was to be a Christmas quilt made with 13 different 12-inch blocks I sewed in a class five years ago.  They needed to be set with carefully measured triangles and I thought I had figured out the math to do it.  I got the whole top together and realized it was seriously cattywhompus.  Enter the seam ripper – for hours and hours.  Now I’ve regrouped to use the blocks for something else. Thanks, friend Dottie, for the phone app to calculate weird triangles.

 
An easy fleece hat



A boat dinette is not the best place to maneuver when quilting.


An easy fleece scarf.  The sides are crocheted to make
a braided look.

No longer a messed-up quilt - now reconstructed to make
 a Christmas table runner

I’ve begun to learn a new hobby – pine needle basket making.  My friend Jann is a right hander trying to teach this southpaw how to coil the needles around a base and sew them so they build into a beautiful basket.  Not easy but she is making a valiant effort.


Some basket making; lots of goofing around.  Can you
 tell by Jann's body language that she holds little hope
of Colleen mastering this skill?


Time to repair something!


This is the disintegrating transom plate where the outboard motor mounts on the dinghy
 
The transom plate on the stern of the dinghy is made of some sort of plastic and it needs to be replaced.  A thicker material is needed as the new 8hp outboard motor is gouging into the top of the top of the transom and chipping away the fiberglass.  I found a hatch door made of "Starboard" material at a marine surplus store for $12.  I cut it down to the right size and shape with a jigsaw and then hand sanded and bevelled the sides to the needed shape. 
 
It required a whole lot of hand sanding as I did not bring my electric sander this year - dumb decision!



The new transom plate



OK let's do some more dingy repairs.  Back in Gulfport we squirted a leak sealer ($55 a quart - boat stuff is always very expensive - it looked like milk) into the port side tube on the dinghy.  Some sealant bubbled out and sealed two leaks on the tube where there were deep scrapes from years gone by.  I cut patches to shape from hypalon material in our dinghy repair kit and glued into place on the two leaks.  Hopefully the slow leaks are now permanently sealed.
Patch #1

Patch #2
We have a new navigation tool.

Sorry we cannot get a photo that is not fuzzy.  It is an iPad app that holds Garmin NOAA charts that we can call up and view.   The charts coordinate and display information from "Active Captain", a boating information data bank.   Look closely and you can see green anchors for recommended anchorages,  red icons for marinas, blue icons for bridges, red and green navigation markers, and more.  Clicking on an icon brings up all manner of info on the item.   This has proven to be a great asset aboard. 



A new boat design

We have never seen a flats fishing boat like this tunnel hull model.  It is made in Texas and runs in 4 inches of water.  It will do 65 mph according to the owner who customized it to his needs.  Look at those seats!  He can hydraulically jack up the engine on its transom mount so just two of the four propeller blades are in the water at cruise speed over the flats.
 




Christmas is Coming


Tree decorating on the back
deck in progress

And the result. Ta Da!!



Cool Change is ready with lots of lights but.....




Not as many as this guy, preparing to
enter Sunday's boat parade. In addition to
the lights they later added a giant blow-up polar
bear at the back, a blow-up Santa in camo fatigues on
the front and a snow machine.
 
Happy holidays to all of our followers

Wayne & Colleen