Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Lake worth to Fort Lauderdale down the ditch

 Heading from Lake Worth to our home port.

The weather on Monday Morning was forecast as Wind from the South and as it had been a bumpy Sunday evening, we opted to go down the ditch ( I know, Kick me! ) from Lake Worth to our Dock in Fort Lauderdale.

We were awake a couple hours before our 6:30am alarm, so it was an early breakfast of Cereal and Fried Bread and the, so needed, cup of coffee.


As we were preparing to drop our mooring lines, Summer Wind was doing the same thing and were also heading down the ICW.

Really no issues heading down the ditch. We spotted Alebrije at anchor off of the city docks in down town Palm Beach and later heard them calling the bridges we had passed an hour earlier. We motored in company of Chris & Kelli on Summer Wind. 

Still feeling the left over of Heat Exhaustion from the Trip up on Friday, it was peaceful heading south. Just after passing Ocean Bridge, south of the Boynton Inlet, we heard a change in noise from the engine/prop. Temperature was fine ( 147ºF ) Speed was still good but the noise was unsettling. I went below while Peggy shut the engine down while we were in a straight section of the waterway, I checked the Raw Water Filter - dirty but certainly not clogged and the engine temp ruled that out but always worth checking.
With the engine stopped and the prop now slowing down, there was a definite 'Swishing' sound that slowed as the prop slowed and we came to a stop in the water. My diagnosis was that the Shaft Zinc had slid down the prop shaft and was rubbing against the cutlass bearing. The forward edge of the bearing was perpendicular to the shaft, so I figured, at worst some of the bearing forward edge might get rubbed a bit.

Stay Calm and Carry on

I had informed Chris of our problem and my diagnosis, so Chris kept us close company for the next few miles.

A couple of bridges later, we had to increase our RPM and heard a loud Bang! It was almost certainly the sound of the zinc breaking off of the shaft and hitting the hull. The noise stopped.   

It's not unusual for our monthly dive team to put on a new zinc without removing the old, so I figured we might have a second zinc further up the shaft.   Pretty sure we 'did' because it too started making a noise but then it too fell off. Now just the normal noise from the shaft and we were back cruising at our normal speed without a worry.  ( I send an email to our dive team and asked them to remove any remaining zinc and replace it with a new one, we keep one at the dock just in case they ever find the need to replace it.)

Other than a brush with the bottom before Spanish river bridge, the rest of the trip was easy but Really Really Busy! There was a line of boats waiting to get past Spanish River and the Palmetto Park Bridges.  Soon we were past Lake Boca and down to our usual neck of the woods. Summer Wind called us on #9 to go to #68 and advised that they were about to turn off the ICW to their dock and thanked us for being buddy boats for the trip back. It does make a huge difference when you really do have a buddy for a buddy boat. Thanks Chris & Kelli.

The wind was blowing off the dock but we managed to put the boat, port side too, alongside. The next half hour, or so, we unloaded the boat and loaded the truck. We here home by 15:30, exhausted from the weekend.

Good to be home.

Looking forward to our next trip. Peggy also hinted that we should do a longer trip, to the Dry Tortogas next year ( April / May 20256 ) so I'll start planning that one.

See you on the water.

Paul

Monday, May 26, 2025

Jensen Beach to Lake Worth- Outside.

Having recovered from exhaustion we basically took the evening off and missed the hugely successful Picnic on Saturday afternoon. We set the alarm for 06 double bubble for the trip back to Lake Worth. 

We were rewarded with a beautiful morning. I made us toasted Bagles with Cream Cheese and Salmon, a big pot of Coffee and untangled the mooring lines all in time for a 07:15 departure from the Jensen Beach Mooring Field.

1The route from the mooring is littered with shallows, so Peggy eased us sSE to the ICW channel the South under the Causeway bridge, easy-peasy. The local fishermen traffic was no big deal and we hugged the deepest part of the channel according to Bob423. Really no wind, and the water was mirror like until the can only go fast boats zoom past.
The turn towards the St Lucie Inlet is possibly confusing, it's around the area marked as "Great Pocket", but scanning in all direction helps the routing.  As we approached the breakwater and jetty on the outside of the inlet, a powereboat overloaded with testosterone passed on our stbd side , called out to the "sailboat" and mooned us as the flew past. Must admit, I had a brief picture of them flipping their boat, but I just smiled.
Not quick enough to capture a Pic of the Crack o doom. 

The route I followed from here was the reverse of the route we had planned to take on Friday.  Lesson learned!
The route from Lake Worth to the St Lucie Inlet was set to take advantage of the Gulf Stream Northely current. Reversing the route did not work in our favor. 
Two and a half nm out, we felt the push against our Southerly course, that was 2.5nm Northely. 
When I realized my error, I turned to the Southwest to get closer to the shore and out of the current. When you're only doing 6 knots through the water, it costs about 20 mins of travel. Grrr.

Even when we were only one half mile off shore, we still had 1.7 knots against us.

Summer Wind had left shortly after us from the mooring field and we pretty much stayed less than a mile apart all the was to Lake Worth. 

The going was smooth until about 90 minutes from our destination, then the seas picked up and it got a little bit exciting even though we were under motor for the entire trip. We had spray coming over the deck frequently but thought nothing of it.

I had reached out to the mooring owner in Lake Worth asking if there was one available for tonight. We had already booked one for Monday night. He was able to accommodate with the same ball that we had Thursday night.

I updated our route to the known location and we turned into the inlet happy to get out of the growing seas.
With Peggy at the helm, we picked up the ball first time.
With boat secure, I went below to freshen up just as Summer Wind arrived to pickup their mooring adjacent to us.

That's when I found that the hatch under the dinghy stowed on the foredeck was not fully closed.

Guess what I spent the next hour doing. Yep, Hoisting the mattress out of the boat to dry, hanging up the mattress cover  and the bag of laundry.
Surprising how quickly one can man handle a mattress out of the boat and up on deck. I just hope nobody was out with their video camera. 

OK, get on with boat life. Peggy took a hot shower and I made dinner. A real Sailing Brothers dinner: Baked beans, ham, fried bread and fried eggs. DELICIOUS! 

Time left to write up tonight's blog entry, shower, and put the v-berth bedding back together. 

Last job of the evening is to prep for our departure home in the morning.  Looks like we'll take the ditch with an early start hoping to beat the crowds out for Memorial day 2025.




Saturday, May 24, 2025

Up the ditch -Lake Worth to Jensen Beach

Not the best route.
There were threats of storms around the time we would arrive at the St Lucie Inlet, and the coin toss came up The Ditch, commonly known as The ICW. Won't do that again. But that's schedule's on a sailboat.

We dropped the mooring ball before eight am, just as Summer Wind was already heading out.  They turned towards the Lake Worth Inlet while  we turned to the west side of peanut island.

I was surprised at the number of boats at anchor to the NW of the island,  most looked like they were headed towards being derelict,  sad, but it's a thing here in SoFla.

We followed the channel of the ICW and headed under the Blue Heron, fixed bridge. We really didn't do any route planning but I did use Garmins Auto Guidance to plot a route to the Jensen Beach Mooring field.

A quick note about Auto Guidance: First, it does not pass the route to our Auto Pilot, no bigger but it woul be nice.
The second issue is more of a user interface issue. To explain it let me describe how we use the chart plotter when navigating the ICW, which we do a lot.
Our practice is to put a mark at the next bridge that opens on a schedule, then we adjust our speed to arrive at the bridge when it's due to open. That way, we don't get there to early and have to turn a few donuts till it opens.
In short it's nice to know the eta at the next bridge.
When using Auto Guidance,  we have to scroll the view on the chart plotter to show the next bridge and the tap the track line to find out the era.
There is an option to edit the Auto Guidance track, but I haven't played with that yet.
What would be nice is if the Auto Guidance feature would show the time to the next significant points on the route. Obviously this would require us to indicate those significant points.

OK, rant off.

So we headed up the ditch. First bridge was Parker bridge which opens on the 15 and 45 minutes of the hour. We had to wait a whie,( see the note above about Auto Guidance) but it opened on time. While waiting we looked up the next bridge and time. It's the PGA Blvd bridge and opens on the. 00 and 30 minutes. We got there on time. This area is wealthy, the homes look more like hotels, that's saying something as Fort Lauderdale is not exactly a low cost community. 
Next up is the Donald Ross bridge 00 and 30 mins.
We arrived at the bridge for the 10:30 opening, but it was down for maintenance.  It opened at 11:00. Glad they maintain the bridge, but why today? 
Onwards. Indian town bridge was next and was ready to open. We had a while to wait and advised the bridge tender that we would do some donuts as the  current was pushing us to the bridge. While waiting, the tender called and advised that the next bridge,  the Jupiter Federal bridge, was permanently down due to construction. OS! We asked and he advised that the holding by his bridge was not great. There were a few boats at anchor to the south of the bridge but the depths were pretty skinny there. He asked if we still wanted to pass his bridge.
I figured we should see what options were like nearer to the Jupiter bridge, so we continued North, thanking the tender for his assistance. 
We dawdled up towards the Jupiter bridge and called the tender.
He was really helpful stating that there was a significant electrical issue that only allowed one span to open.  My reply was, we'll take it. He then informed us that the new bridge had four spans, so we would only be able to pass one half of the bridge.  DUH!
Asking the tender about any place to anchor and got the expected reply...no.
So we looked over the chart for somewhere to drop a lunch hook ( short anchor and chain ) and found a good spot void of any cables and just outside the channel.
Just as I was about to go forward, the tender called.
He advised that they were going to try a test raise and if successful he would confirm we could pass. OK, get the boat nearer to the bridge. I noticed the traffic control bars had lowered so we pushed the throttle forwards. Eximius will turn in here own length when asked. The Southern spans both started to rise, we continued forward. Fully up, we confirmed that we couldn't pass and headed under the open bridge. Note! Only the southern spans open but the spans on the northern side stick out beyond the fenders. 
Luckily but more like good practice, Peggy was watching our passage from the port side and realized we risked catching the northern spathere's . 

The next bridge is known h our mast shrouds. She urged me to to move the boat to starboard, the kind of urgent urging, like "DO IT NOW" I did and we were good. 

Now for the tricky part of the route. Navigation through the junction of the Jupiter Inlet and the ICW.
IT'S REALLY SKINNY WATER THROUGH THERE !!!

We had already decided to pass to the south and east of the shallows in the middle of that junction. The local authorities may have dredge the area but theres hint of that on the charts, So Beware. 
It's a long motor to the the next bridge. Pretty scenic but stressful as the channel is narrow and quickly gets shallow, but there are some places to anchor if needed. 

The last bridge before the St Lucie river is Hobe Sound bridge,  it opens on demand.
Then it's the long motor up through Peck Lake. Long!

Nearing the end of the trip, but not out of the stress zone yet.

Most of this passage we were following Bob423 routing. The point where the ICW joins the St Lucie River, the St Lucie Inlet is a very wide area littered with shallows that a dog could walk in, and we saw that! Locals seem to be up on the plane in their powere boats, but for us, with 6 feet of keel below the waterline, it was ... tread carefully. We did.

The shallow channel up to the 65' Causeway bridge took a lot of concentration  and ,after a long day of being focused on staying out of the shallows,  we're still in stress ville. 

We found our mooring easily and with Pegs ar the helm, we caught it first time. There was a strong current trying to to pull us away from the mooring while held onto the pennant for dear life. Peggy realized what was happening and put the engine in gear then steered to the ball.

A couple of minutes later we were secure.
Phew. We were exhausted. No storms in our area but a couple several miles south of us. 

Chris had arrived an hour earlier.  Several club member boats were also here. Alebrije invited us for cocktails. Commodore Barry & Jamie drove up and planned to stay on Hector's boat for the night.

Peggy and I were tired, but I didn't realize how much till the next morning. 
I did not sleep well and didn't feel good in the morning.  Peggy and I put the dink in the water and mounted the outboard hoping it would run. It didn't, not even after about an hour working on it . Did I mention that it was hot! I was suffering and Peggy was insisting the I rehydrate.  We had drank most of the bottled water in the last 48 hours, but I was leaking quicker than I could drink it.
By mid morning I was feeling sick. Peggy kept an eye on me and my fluid intake. Participation in the picnic this afternoon did seem doable. A couple of club members brought more fluids from ashore and I continued to hydrate. While the other club members were enjoying the picnic,  I set up our Generator and flashed up the air-conditioning then went back to bed after a lunch of bread ,cheese and ham. I woke up around 5:15 and Peggy got me back on dehydrating.

Starting to feel better but not up to going out for dinner at Conchy Joe's.

I made dinner from a planned meal that Peggy had prepared during the week. Feeling much better but we agreed to head South Sunday instead of staying here at Jensen Beach. 
After dinner and dessert of home made yogurt and apple sauce, I went up on deck and prepped the boat for an early departure. 
Stowed the Generator,  Topped up the Diesel tank, Stowed the lines we had used to launch and stow the dinghy and outboard, checked the deck was secured for some stormy weather this evening. Then down to freshen up for the evening. 

And brings me to the end of this day. Feeling so much better and so grateful for those club members that called to see how I was doing.

I'm good, thanks guys.
Setting the alarm for 06 double bubble. 

Good night. 


Fort Lauderdale to Jensen Beach

 Cruising with the HISC from Fort Lauderdale to Jensen Beach Florida

Ok, we're loaded up. Boat is prepped, Water tanks full, Fuel Full - Two more 5 gallons tanks ready to put onboard, 10 gallons of gasoline for the outboard and Generator, Fridges - both Full, Wine, Rum, Whisky, Meals for 5 days and more. Bedding, Towels, and more, all on the boat and stowed. New item- The Ice Maker is on board, but not plugged in, it makes Ice in 7 minutes so just plug it in when needed. We even stored our Tower of Bricks game for the Rendezvous on Saturday. The Navigation electronics are in place and tested. 

We both have our 'Bags' packed, toiletries too, Meds ready to pack first thing in the morning. Did we forget anything??? Of course but we won't find out until we need it.

Plan to leave the house at 05:45 to arrive at the dock at 06:15, close enough. We arrived at the dock at about 06:35.
That's a good start.
Unusually quickly,  we put the fuel cans on the stbd deck,opened all the through hulls and got the engine running.  I prepped the dock lines while Peggy prepped for leaving the dock. We were off the dock before 6:55. WooHoo

We had a minor issue en-route to Atlantic Bridge. Pegs thought we had picked up a bag on the prop but we were OK. Running the prop in reverse at highest rpmdid the trick. We did have some smoke coming out of the exhaust. But I put that down to unburnt fuel. It cleared by the time we arrived at the bridge.  Then easily on to 14th street bridge and around the corner to the HI Inlet.  Summer Wind arrived at the same time. Once out of the inlet we turned NE,  heading 3nm offshore for a pump out. That's when the 2nd issue appeared. We planned to do a pump out before arriving at Lake Worth. However,  gremlins snuck into the black water tank and into the Macerator pump.
I keep a spare onboard but did not relish replacing it with the tank half full. As I thought about it,  I noticed there was a slot on the end of the pump driveshaft. A few turns and try the pump again..... Another score for the day. 

It was an awkward sail, wind around 15° which caused us to take some long tacks and that before the forecasted pm storms.  Chris was about a mile ahead of us, gotta love AIS. We both agreed via #68 that it was best to motor the rest of the way to Lake Worth. I set an Auto Guidance route on our chart plotter and set the Autopilot on the bearing of the first leg. The Garmin will control the Raymarine AP, but not if the track is from auto Guidance.
It was a long, but uncomplicated run up to Lake Worth. 

I did splurge for this trip. Introducing my new Tilley Airflow Broard rim hat. It already has a story.
As we approached the lake Worth Inlet,  Peggy turned us into wind while I lowered the mainsail. Of course, my new Tilly hat decided to go for a swim. $87! Hat overboard !!! Peggy turned the boat hard to stbd while keeping the hat in sight. Great time to practice our MOB action. Pegs turned past the hat and headed back up to wind with the victim just off the stbd bow. The hat was easily reached with the boat hook and retrieved ,wet but no worse for wear.One of the features of the Tilleyhats is that they float. Cross that test off the list.


Chris, on Summer Wind, reached the mooring field a few minutes before us so we stayed out of his way as he picked up their mooring,then Peggy turned us towards our designated mooring and we caught it first time despite the fast flowing current.  We'll done Pegs ,good job at the helm.
A quick chat with Chris about the trip and the plan for the morning, then it was time for a break to cool down,  I heard a whiskey and ginger calling me and a glass of wine for Pegs. 

We ran the AC on battery for a couple of hours and we both had a hot shower,  the benefit of running the engine earlier.

Dinner was a meal Peggy had prepared at home, Shrimp Fetucini followed with Mango bread and some dark chocolate. 
As Luke on the sailing brothers YouTube channel says.... DELICIOUS. 

Chris and I texted about the lack of 'weather' tomorrow, Friday. Looks like we'll motor most of the way up to Port St Lucie. 

Time to clean up the galley and secure the boat for the expected rains this evening. 

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Mango & Date Bread

Mango & Date Bread Recipe

Bread for our Memorial Day Cruise

A Sailing Buddy, Chris, has a Mango Tree that causes gentle thumps when the fruits fall in the grass, yes, he's in South Florida and has nice Grass even during the current drought. He offered some Mangos in exchange for my Mango Bread recipe. So here goes.

Takes about 20 minutes to prep for baking and then about 45 minutes at 350º F.

Ingredients:
  • 300g APF ( All Purpose Flour )
  • 8-12g of Ground Cinnamon ( it's not easy to get that right, so it's a rough amount )
  • 12g of Baking Soda
  • 5g of fine salt
  • 50g of Granulated Sugar
  • 100g of Agave - Note! Not the watery 'Ogranic' kind. I use the 'Organic' that only has Agave Nector and nothing else! It's a easy flow syrup.
  • 2 Large Eggs
  • 3/4 Cup of melted butter 
  • 3 Cups of peeled and chopped Mangos - they should be nice and juicy.
  • A decent splash of Lemon Juice, just a quick squirt.
  • 300g of pitted and chopped Dates ( Raisins or Currents if you don't like Dates)

My Directions.
Mango & Date Bread

  1. Start by melting the butter, I put it in the Microwave for 50 seconds high and then let it cool.
  2. In a large bowl: Combing the APF, Cinnamon, Baking Soda, Salt and Sugar
  3. In a medium bowl or large measuring cup, beat the eggs and melted butter.
  4. Mix the egg & butter mixture with the flour mixture, just enough to pick up all of the flour.
  5. Add the chopped mangos ( and that delicious juice )
  6. Add the lemon juice and the dates ( or raisins / currents ) 
  7. Stir it all to mix well but don't turn it into a lump of goodness knows what it looks like, make sure it's just enough so that you can still see the ingredients.
  8. Prep the 2 bread pans, I use Avocado Spray, then scoop out the mixture into the two pans, that's about 600g to 650g in each pan.
  9. Mush the mixture to level it out just a bit, don't make a brick.
  10. Pop it into the oven and check it around 45 mins, I use my digital thermometer in place of a tooth pick to see if the inside is still sticky. If it is, then a few more minutes, normally they are good within the hour.
  11. BE PATIENT !!! Let them cool for at least an hour - at least try! If you cut them thick, then they toast pretty good but that's only if there is any left by breakfast time.
Hope you guys enjoy this one.
Total time about 1hour + and then an hour to cool, then don't blink, you'll just see everyone licking their lips.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Making Ice on Eximius

 We can make ICE on Eximius

At the end of a long day sailing, after push in the morning to get the boat underway, working the lines all day to get the most out of the winds towards where we want to be and then the last effort to get the boat secured - By Lines ashore, Anchor or a Mooring. At the end of that day - that's when a glass of wine or a shot of pussers rum poured over ice really hits the spot. We normally carry the Rum, but ensuring we have Ice to make it chilled is another thing.

Our sailing club has a WhatAp Channel for our club Cruisers, we use it to share our plans if heading out even if it's just to the local lake for a hang on the hook. On that channel, one skipper asked if we knew of a local store where we're planning to moor in Jensen Beach over the Memorial Day weekend. One response was to purchase an Ice Machine. That got me thinking - would that work for us on Eximius.


Two days later, my Ice Machine arrived from Amazon, after reading the manual and giving it an initial cleaning, we put it to the test!

Fill with tap water, plugged in the mains and then turned on, it began buzzing and the fan started whirring. Not too noisy!

Seven minutes later, 9 Ice Bullets popped out of the Ice maker and were scooped into the Ice Tray. How Cool is that! Yep, deliberate Pun.

Over the next two hours it produced about 2 Liters of Ice Bullets. Wow!

On the boat, we would not run it for 2 hours unless we were expecting guests. But it easily makes enough ice for a single drink with ice in just 7 minutes. 15 Mins and that's doubled.

I am impressed!

This week we'll take it down to the boat and let it try out. Plan is to strap it down in the V-Berth above the hanging locker. I've ordered appropriate hooks and buckles. The location is close to a 110v outlet and it's out of the way - I'll just have to put my clothing bag in another spot.

According to the Specs, the unit uses 1.8Amps at 110V or 198Watts or about 15amps from the Batteries. Easy!

See you on the Water and we'll be cool!

Paul

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Securing the Dinghy to the Foredeck

Storing and Securing the Dinghy on the boat

We don't have Davits, YET! So we store the dinghy on the foredeck. It's lashed down with a line that reaches across the inverted dinghy and tied at each end to the Stanchions.

Not an ideal situation, it's a trip hazard when trying to go forward to work on the Anchor, so looking at the options. 
Some boats have chocks to which the dinghy is secured, either upright or inverted. In our case, if the dink was upright, then it would severely restrict visibility forwards from the Cockpit. So we store it inverted and for the same reason, we don't have chocks on which to secure the dink.

Footman Loops

The simple solution would be to install a set of pad eyes or footman straps.

The benefit of using Pad eyes is that they could also be used for other things but the Footman loops are very neat and work great for webbing.

I envisage webbing straps passing over the front and over the aft end of the dinghy, both with tensioners, that would be an easy solution.






View from the cockpit.

Looks pretty straight forward. Total of 4 Footman Loops and two ratcheting Straps.

Just have to figure out where the best place to mount the loops, or the Pad Eyes.

I would like to get this done before our planned trip to Jensen Beach in a couple of weeks.

Keeping it safe and simple.

See you on the water.

Paul