Balls in the Air – Ramrod Key, Florida, USA, February 27, 2025

Balls in the Air – Ramrod Key, Florida, USA, February 27, 2025

Well, we made it!  Ron has done nothing but battle logistics of trying to get all the work done and pick up all the items we needed to launch.  In addition, we have battled the weather once again.  Since we took possession of Mariposa on February 10th it took us 16 days to overhaul the boat into something we can actually sail to the Bahamas.  In that time, we have completed the shockingly long list of projects:

  • Acid washed, sanded, and painted the new bottom job
  • Buffed the entire boat
  • Fixed the fiberglass issue for the crack we found on the port side
  • Attending the boat show in Miami
  • Bought and picked up a new dinghy, dinghy engine, and life raft in Miami.  The only rain we saw in Key West was when we arrived back to Key West from Miami and needed to unload our provisioning, dinghy, dinghy engine, and life raft.  Imagine here we come with a pickup truck 110% loaded up and Key West got 6’ – yes 6’ of rain and completely flooded. Not only did we drive in it we got to unload in the rain too.  Top that off with traffic which instead of a 3-hour trip from Miami to a 5-hour trip from Miami.  It was a very very long day.
  • Tested the windlass and remarked the anchor chain
  • Completed registration of our new dinghy, picked up our running papers, and transferred the title of the old dinghy to the new owner
  • Sold the old dinghy, stove, grill and house batteries.
  • Overhauled the kitchen, wired and installed a new induction cooktop, air fryer oven, and new outdoor grill
  • Defrosted the fridge and freezer and completed multiple provisioning trips to prepare ourselves to not buy much food in the expensive Bahamas
  • Wired up the washer space and made it ready for when we pick it up (not here yet)
  • Cleaned and organized the entire boat
  • Serviced the sail drives and Yanmar Engine
  • Added 1400 hours of lithium batteries replacing and reselling the old AGM batteries which increases our power ability by a factor of x5
Standing tall
Much nicer and cooler than a propane stove.

Not too bad for a couple of weeks but to get this much lined up and complete (all of which was DIY) has been nothing short of a miracle!  The only thing we have left to do is fix some rigging and complete a solar arch.  We need to outsource both items and will not do in Key West.  The rigging must be done before we head to the Bahamas (since we cannot sail at all until we do so).  The solar arch we are going to save for a future date and likely not complete til we get to the Chesapeake where it can be done much cheaper than either Florida or the Bahamas. 

Splash time.

So, after all of this, we launched yesterday!  After living on the hard in the boatyard, it is so nice to be back on the water.  It was an early launch, which gave us time to move out of Key West (very shallow, poor holding on anchor, expensive, and crowded).  Moving a couple hours north gets us closer to Marathon, Florida (where we hope to get our rigging done) and we are in a nice little calm anchorage with no one else around. It’s been a wild ride so far!

Home at last.

Bullseye – November 10, 2022, Vero Beach, Florida, USA

Bullseye – November 10, 2022, Vero Beach, Florida, USA

Going to be a direct hit it appears
Not a sign you want to see. Hurricane watch

And just like that, we have been through two hurricanes in the last month.  Hurricane Nicole is the first hurricane to make landfall in November in over 40 years and only one of three in the last 100 years.  The odds were in our favor when we launched the boat to catch a crossing window and we expected to be in the Bahamas by now.  Clearly, we are not.  It started out likely to be a tropical storm so we prepper the boat for the high winds by adding more mooring lines, removing as much windage as we could (removing the dodger are made for starters), and lashing down the main sail.  We made a quick run to the grocery store since it was the last time we would be able to go for a while and we came across this on our dinghy ride.  It was inoperable but interesting none the less.

As the storm got closer, it was clear we were in for worse conditions than originally thought and Sailing Hubby decided it was time to get off the boat since there was nothing more we could do and the conditions on the boat would be very unpleasant at best.  We headed to the local Holiday Inn on Tuesday to wait out the hurricane.

Lines lines and more lines
Wrap that sucker up tight
Chafe protection is more important then lines.

We walked to the boat, pouring rain or not, twice a day. Good way to get our walk in since the marina was only about a mile and a half away. The finger docks were flooded, coastal flooding had started, but as of today, our boat & dinghy survived the worst, which was 75 mph winds with gusts closer to 85. The last time we experienced this type of wind was our first real squall in Royal Island, Bahamas and it was rather terrifying! I am glad we are on land.

Lots of water

The coast was hit pretty hard, and I am grateful we were in the intercoastal and dodged this bullet. Ironically it isn’t our first hurricane together and one of our friends who is weathering the storm in the Bahamas said “Gee, you guys are in great spirits since you almost lost everything.” I hadn’t thought of it quite that way til he said it and our perspective was we really didn’t want to lose the boat, but we had each other, insurance, and our passports. All is well.

Crazy surf!