Can You Hear the Jimmy Buffet? – November 17, 2022, En Route to Green Turtle Cay, Bahamas

Can You Hear the Jimmy Buffet? – November 17, 2022, En Route to Green Turtle Cay, Bahamas

With all the hurricane preparations stowed away again and a beautiful weather window upon us, we decided to do the crossing to the Bahamas.  We started Tuesday morning and left from Vero Beach, dropped anchor at Fort Pierce for a few hours waiting on the change in tidal surge, then left out the Fort Pierce Inlet at 3:00pm.  We had not been this route before since last year we went south through West Palm and out Lake Worth which is shorter but our weather window wasn’t long enough for us to make it down there then go out so we took the route we could fit in.

The first 4 or so hours were pretty choppy (thank you Bonine for keeping me from getting too seasick!) since we were heading south against the wind and current we hoped it would get better once we turned East, it got a lot better. It took us 28 hours, averaging 5.5 knots over 168 miles (yes, we move very slow & motored the entire way). Hitting the Bahama Bank (very shallow with debris) at dark was not high on our to do list so we scrubbed time to minimized the dark time. My sleeping quarters was the dining room table which drops down into a 5th bed on our boat. Now how many people get to say they slept on the table last night? I think Ron got 1-2 hours of sleep max and he was beat.

Happy place?

We dropped anchor at Great Sale Cay about 3:00pm which was just in time for burgers on the grill and a beer!  We were treated to being the only boat here and I have to say, I forget how beautiful the water, and everything is here.  It feels really good to be back and we really could spend the rest of our sailing days getting lost in the islands here if we didn’t have such itchy feet.  It was surprising the amount of debris after the recent hurricane.  There were lots of logs, a dock ladder, and crazy amount of seaweed on the bank.

GSC sunset

Since this was the first time Sailing Hubby let me do solo watches, I finally feel like a sailor.  In total I did three official watches:  one Tuesday from 5-8pm, 10-midnight, 4:30am Wednesday morning – 6:30am, then off and on over the course of the day when he needed a break.  He wanted to be on watch during the swiftest part of the gulf stream and when we hit the Bahama Bank, which required him to be on the longest watch from midnight – 4:30am.

After catching on up some sleep (yes Sailing Hubby went to bed at 6:00pm), we continued 8 more hours East, as our initial destination was Green Turtle Cay to check into immigration.   If we didn’t make it by Friday morning to check in,  we would be stuck in quarantine all weekend and wouldn’t be able to get off the boat.  Therefore, we were up early and headed out by 6:00am Thursday (but at least the dolphins came with us – a very good omen).  It didn’t hurt there was a small squall headed straight for us and we wanted to get going before it hit us.  But hey – we broke out the sails which helped us move a bit faster with the wind behind us.  Ah, the realities of sailing life.  Speaking of realities, I am a bit gun shy of Green Turtle since the no-see-ums were SO bad last time.  Especially after just getting eaten alive at Vero Beach.  Our mooring was right next to the mangroves, and they are vicious!  I swear I have Zika from those little suckers!  Let’s hope Green Turtle is better & we don’t get struck by lightning on the way there.  At least we were off to a good start with the double rainbow.

Not a bad way to start the day.

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!