We left Annapolis in late October in a rental vehicle I called "the beast" (a Dodge Grand Something) to rejoin Neverland where she had spent the summer at a marina in Brunswick GA. We will take Neverland home to Annapolis in the spring, hence a southern road trip with all our boat gear in a rental vehicle that we could drop off in Brunswick
One of the greatest joys of cruising is meeting up with old friends along the way and making new friends on the water. On the way south we spent a couple of days with Sunny, a friend we've known for many years. She has a beautiful home in Mount Pleasant outside Charleston and we stayed with her for a couple of days. Sunny had requested that I bring along my pasta maker. She has strong northern Italian roots and had learned to make pasta from scratch this summer in Italy. We had a hilarious time making dinner one night - I wish I could load a video or two into Blogger but I've never been able to get the damn thing to work for videos. Help, please, if you know how!!! Anyway, between the homemade pasta (from flour and eggs to excellent linguini) and Sunny's wonderful homemade sauce we had a feast one evening.
We spent one day in Charleston - a gracious and beautiful old city that was, unfortunately, built on the backs of slaves. A bittersweet city, to me. Here are some photos.
The second to last photo captures much of the spirit of the city - sun, steeples, wrought iron, the pineapple as a symbol of welcome. And the last is of Sunny and Jim under the arch of an old live oak.
The next part of the story is the rough part. It will be brief. We arrived at the boat on October 25 to find standing water in the boat under the stove, apparently from an opened galley port. There was fairly extensive water damage from that opened port to the teak and holly cabin sole, and a lot of other things wrong. We had had to have the diesel fuel tank replaced over the summer as it was leaking diesel into the bilge. This, and the fact that we had a concierge contract to have the boat visited frequently to make sure it was ok, necessitated marina employees coming into the boat to do work and check its condition. Many things were not done that should have been done, or were done wrong, and we were charged for faulty work or no work. We decided to seek the advice of an attorney and today filed a claim with the local Magistrate Court. We may not get much compensation for our losses, but we think it's important to do this on principle. We'll keep you posted.
One day, just to take a break from the issues with the boat and the marina, we drove to nearby St Simons Island, one of Georgia's beautiful barrier islands. Here is Jim standing by an ancient live oak, some live oaks that have been badly weakened by recent hurricanes, and the island's lighthouse.
Not everything was unpleasant at Brunswick Landing Marina. As always, the cruising community was terrific and we had a good time with new neighbors we met on our dock. Everyone was very kind and offered any help we needed with our issues with Neverland.
One young couple just starting out on their first trip aboard their new catamaran threw a dock party to celebrate their adoption of a kitten. I think the breed is called a Bengal. Very unusual and beautiful leopard-like markings. They had a cake made to celebrate, and there was lots of good food and large quantities of alcohol involved. Another couple is sailing to the Bahamas with their 5 year old son, Miles, and their 7-year old daughter, Lilly, both of whom are in photos here. Miles is the sweetest of little boys and Lilly is just a pistol. The kids are of course being home-schooled and one day Lilly came by with her dad to get ideas from Neverland to design and build a system to secure water and diesel fuel containers stored on deck (as you can see from the yellow containers in the photo of Neverland at the start of this blog). Once it was built, Jim inspected it and awarded her an A+ for her school project.
We left Brunswick on November 1 and made our way down the Intracoastal Waterway towards St. Augustine. Here are a couple of photos taken along the waterway. The white cliffs are at the north end of another of the Georgia barrier islands, Cumberland Island, seen as we crossed an inlet in about 26 knots of wind. Kinda bouncy.
On our way south we stopped for a couple of days in Fernandina Beach to visit with our friends Julia and Dennis who live there. As in the past, we spent a really fun evening at the Green Turtle where there's aways amazing live music and a friendly crowd. Took videos that I can't add here but I post videos on Instagram, so if you want, go to "cspsail" in Instagram. We spent a day roaming around town - here are some photos of windows in the historic district (some with old, wavey glass in them) and my favorite house, which has carousel horses galloping around the porch.
The recent hurricanes have again wreaked havoc with ICW shoals and the shifting sand in inlets affected by strong currents. We have run aground a couple of times already, along with many fellow travelers on the waterway. The charts simply don't always reflect the true depths of water in the waterway and some of the markers have moved significantly or are simply missing. Crossing the St John River we got stuck on a sandbar at low tide and had to wait a couple of hours, tilted at an uncomfortable angle, for the tide to rise and allow us to motor our way off the shoal.
Now we are in St Augustine for a few days. We've been here many times before and always enjoy the city and getting together with the many cruisers who pass through on their way north or south. There is a Cruisers Net on the radio every morning where cruisers share information about weather, who has arrived, who is leaving, what's happening around town, who needs help, etc. Here are four photos - the pirate ship at the City Marina, the lights of town along part of the waterfront, the lights on the Bridge of Lions behind a few motor yachts at the City Marina docks, and today's sunrise. Yesterday a Dockmaster told us that some monster yachts many times larger than those in the photo will fuel up with 1,800 gallons (at $4-5 a gallon) and that amount of fuel only lasts them for 5 hours of cruising at top speed. Obscene.
That's it for now. More eventually, when I have wifi. If you want me to stop sending you emails every month or so as a notification of a new post, please just let me knowing I'll take you off the contact list. I know that lots of you don't have much free time and get googobs of emails - I won't take it personally!! And if you can, let me know you're out there and what's new in your world - I really appreciate staying in touch with friends!



























Wow an adventure already! I will let Ike know to listen for you on the water net. He's there generally Monday thru Friday. Safe travels. Love your posts. Hugs to you both!
ReplyDeleteSo sad to hear of your troubles with Neverland in Georgia. I had high hopes based on good things heard about the Brunswick Marina. :-(
ReplyDeleteI'll never forget our good times and your great service to Kelly IV and me when we were all in St. Augustine together in 2014. Please stop by if you find yourselves passing anywhere within driving distance of Titusville, FL, we'll drive to see you. As you may know, we've sold Kelly IV and replaced her with a smaller boat, more appropriate for sailing the shoal waters of the Indian River. She's Irish Rover (https://captmurph.blogspot.com/p/captmurphs.html). Please continue posting your beautiful photos and wonderful logs of your travels aboard Neverland.