Wednesday, December 20, 1995

Bahamas Adventure Part 2 - MacGregor 26X

Any successful trip begins with the planning. The plans for this trip began with the arrival of M-26X hull #9. Right from the start I knew I wanted to duplicate last winter's M-65 trip to the Bahamas. I thought it would be interesting to compare the two trips, if possible, in terms of effort required, expense, entertainment value, sailing pleasure, or whatever. So I set out to equip the 26X specifically for the trip, adding options to duplicate or improve on what was on the 65.

A partial list of improvements would include: depth finder, knot meter, vhf radio, am-fm stereo w/inside and outside speakers, 12v fan, compass, extra interior lights w/ red & white bulbs (for night vision), additional shelves, bins, racks, etc., Bimini top, swim ladder, 50 hp motor w/ power tilt, pressure water system with 15 gallon tank and both inside and outside showers, mainsail luff slides, roller furling jib, racing spinnaker w/pole, trapeze w/harness (what?), custom pedestal guard w/ table, boom vang, 1 man mast raiser system, GPS, EPIRB, shotgun and about 800 lbs. of personal gear, an inflatable dinghy w/ 2hp outboard. Almost all of these items are now available as options on a new MacGregor 26x.

After all the effort to prepare for the trip, the actual drive to West Palm Beach went smoothly and with rigging, launching, and last minute provisioning readily accomplished we (my longtime friend and sailing companion Mark Svenson and me) were at last ready to depart.


Day One - Depart WPB Lake Worth inlet approx. 0930 course 105, speed 13-15 kts. Making good time in favorable conditions. Fuel consumption 6 gph, noon GPS fix 16 miles to go. Unfortunately, We are out of gas and the wind is on the nose, 5-10 kts. Now making 3-4 kts, sure wish I had brought 2 more 6 gal. tanks, but then we would have missed a pleasant if somewhat tedious sail to West End, arriving 6pm. After putting out the fire in the alcohol stove fuel tank cover, (remove cover before lighting), we fixed a killer dinner of steak, potatoes, onions and cheese noodles. Mark and I had planned to diet and lose a few pounds on this trip, (starting tomorrow).

As the anchorage was a little rolly, we deployed the "flopper stoppers", a device that looked like two stacks of witch's hats and hang over the side into the water. They worked somewhat like that, but better when we suspended one from the boom and the other from the spinnaker pole, as far out as we could swing them. All this fiddling was a pain, and we never bothered to use them again. It was much easier to simply anchor in shallow protected water, or even beach the boat if we wished.

Day 2 - (12/3/95) Motored into nearby West End marina for customs clearance. It felt a little strange to be back just 11 months after the 65' trip. Mark enjoyed the tour of the defunct Jack Tar Village resort, with its beautiful but deserted beach. I felt a bit like a tour guide. After clearing customs we attempted to sail to Xanadu but quickly were reminded we were not in the 65. The 20 kt S.E.wind slowed our vmg to 2 kts under reefed main and partially furled jib, turning the 20 miles into a potential all day ordeal. A quick about-face put us on a comfortable broad reach back to West End, where we tackled the protected but shallow northern coast of Grand Bahama Island. With about a 4' tide, the shallow areas get very tricky at low tide, and we found ourselves scraping the bottom with the prop several times. A spare prop would have been a good idea. We made it to the middle of nowhere and anchored, (Crissy-swash, an area of mangrove islands with no beaches). Enjoyed a bottle of white wine and spaghetti dinner w/ salad. (Tip - cook up all the hamburger at once; it will keep for days and you can add it to almost anything).

Day 3 -
We sailed off our anchor in the early A.M., enjoying our coffee in the cockpit while Crissy- swash became a memory. Seems we got some bad advice andski.jpg (26251 bytes) went 10 miles past the canal yesterday. No matter. The wind petered out so we stopped and swam/ snorkeled in the clear greenish water. It was perfect conditions for water-skiing, so we took turns until Marks two hundred plus pounds broke the tow rope. It did appear long overdue for replacement. We sailed wing and wing for awhile, then hoisted the spinnaker for a nice 10-mile run, with no water ballast. Just be careful! We sailed right up to the canal entrance. The Grand Lucayan Canal was an interesting and scenic boondoggle that cost somebody millions. The hundreds of inland and canal front lots were never developed, and a huge abandoned hotel stood in mute testimony to the folly of man. There was one bridge where we had to lower the mast a bit to get through, no problem, mon!

Exiting the canal, we motored over to Peterson Island (part of the Bahamas National Park) for some excellent shallow coral snorkeling. Lots of fish! Had a great sail 2 hours to Port Lucaya, where the friendly folks at the Port Lucayan Marina offered us a free night's dockage. It was a brand new marina with beautiful showers and heads, (greatly appreciated after several days with primitive facilities). The free water taxi ran every 30-min. across to the quaint tourist area of Port Lucaya, with 21 restaurants and a casino. A Bahamian fish dinner w/ complimentary rum punch sure hit the spot after a busy day. The sounds of the bandstand faded as we nestled into our bunks.

Day 4 - Decided to rent a car and do the usual tourist stuff. Did 157 miles of not much. Read about three neat sounding restaurants. Two were closed and we couldn't find the other one. Visited two Bahamas Nat'l Park sites, both a 3 on a scale of ten. Wallace Groves Park (named after the founder of Freeport) was a beautifully landscaped area of 11 acres, well worth the visit. Had an unusual dinner of Southern ham hocks at " Fat Man's Nephew " restaurant in Port Lucaya. Foolishly gambled away $1.50 at the International Bazaar. Ended up watching a movie at "Cap't Kenny's, the local " meet market ", while Mark endlessly and fruitlessly chased women.

Day 5 - Lots of telephone calls to make further plans. Time consuming. Checked into shipping the boat back from Nassau, which would give us more flexibility. Bureaucratic BS and $800- $1700 est. Checked out of Port Lucaya Marina and into Lucayan Village Marina, across the harbor. Much nicer, with a beautiful pool w/ hot tub, and direct access to the beach and "mall" area. After the hassle of driving yesterday I was ready for some beach time! After a mediocre dinner at the "Caribe Club", we set sail for the Berry Islands (about 9pm) with a following breeze and full moon. Slow and lumpy, making 3-4 knots, saving gas, but not sleep.

Day 6 - Sailed all night, little sleep. Tried auto pilot, not good in the sloppy conditions. It worked O.K. motor sailing until winds got lighter, and then fluky winds caused problems with slatting sails etc. Finally gave up and hand steered. We saw several ships but no close calls. Beautiful sunrise, one of the most enjoyable facets of night sailing. Amazed by the sight of breaking schools of fish. Tried trolling for an hour but no luck. Arrived at Great Stirrup Cay @ 10.30, 62 miles from Grand Bahama.

There is a really nice beach in Bertram's cove, with good snorkeling. The cruise ships stop here regularly, and I stopped here with the 65'. This time we went right up to the "dinghy dock". The friendly caretakers invited us to stay, but after a short swim we flogged on across the shallow (2') inside route to Bullock's Harbor on Great Harbor Cay. The outside route was deep enough for the 65'.

Bullock's Harbor was the residue of a large, defunct, golf resort. The gorgeous beach on the other side of the island was just a short walk. This was one of the prettiest beaches I had ever seen, with a rustic snackroom to get a beer and burger at. A deserted beach house beckoned Mark and I to set up housekeeping. You could happily spend a week there, but we spent two hours, then back to the boat to cross the banks on a falling tide to Little Harbor Cay. Didn't make it. Too shallow even for us. So here we are, 4-5 miles from anywhere in 18" water, anchored next to a "sand bore", a sand ridge normally underwater, that dries at low tide. Although it's breezy, there is little wave action due to lack of water, so hopefully we'll get a good night's sleep to make up for last night.

Day 7 - Great night's sleep. We drifted with the rising tide toward Little Harbor Cay while fixing breakfast. Drifting is a most relaxing if somewhat sluggish mode of travel. After a quick visit to Chester at "Flo's Conch Bar", we found an ideal small beach with overhanging palm trees (a rarity) and had our morning swim and snorkel. Continuing on in the wake of the 65', we stopped at Frozen and alder cays (another swim, just couldn't resist the beautiful water), tried to sail (1.7 kts max.), and eventually motored to Chub cay. Our arrival at flank speed created a stir among the cruisers there, and quite a few comments about the boat, where we had been, etc.

The reef off Mama Rhoda rock is a popular snorkeling spot, and we joined several other dinghies anchored there. Of course, our "dinghy" was a little better equipped than most, and after our snorkel the fresh water shower, change to dry clothes, rum punch and stereo, did elicit an envious comment or two from the wet and cold rubber-dinghy yachties. Small boats do have their advantages.

While snorkeling Mark spotted two lobsters, almost invisibly tucked into crannies in the shallow reef. A woman nearby came over and speared one for dinner (her dinner). It seemed a shame because the lobsters are so neat to look at underwater, but they are too tasty for their own good!

We gassed up ($2.25/gal.) and looked around the small marina. There was a splendid sunset, and I took photos of two men sitting on lawn chairs in the water. The no-see-ums were vicious so we headed out for a rum punch and rock n' roll party (and dinner) aboard our boat in the anchorage. All in all a great day!

Day 8 - We departed Chub Cay under sail bright and early for Andros, about 18 miles away. The boat self-steered in 10-15 kts perfectly at 4-5 kts speed, about 60 degrees off the wind. In about 3 hours we spotted the island and confirmed our position with a quick GPS fix. Heading in the channel, a water tanker from Nassau was gaining on us from behind. A short burst of throttle quickly opened the gap back up, no doubt surprising the ship's captain as we had sails up at the time.

Morgan's Bluff, named after the pirate, was a quiet place with a decent beach with weird sand like quicksand along the water's edge. We sank in 12" walking in it. We motored inside the reef (Andros has the third longest barrier reef in the world) about 12 miles to the largest town, Nicholstown, but a nasty surge prevented us from docking at the town dock, and waves breaking on the beach discouraged us from beaching the boat. Besides, the town looked like dirt.

Back out through the reef we headed for Nassau but wind on the nose at 15-20 kts was too rough to make decent headway. The M-65 could go through pretty well, but most 30 -40' boats would have a tough time. After a bit of punishment I elected to head back to Chub, about 30 miles, which we did in 2 hours under jib and motor. The jib seemed to steady the boat, and may have provided some drive. Back at Chub we gassed up again (thirsty bugger!) and rented bicycles for a tour of the small one road island. Walking out to a rocky point, I felt the wind had dropped and when the no-see-ums descended at dusk and we escaped to the outer harbor, I decided to take advantage of the improved conditions and continued past the anchorage towards Nassau. Mark just laughed when he realized what I was doing, and 3 hours and 36 miles later we were drinking White Russians at 'Cudas bar.

Day 9 - After breakfast aboard, we gassed up (again) and found the M-65 I sold last spring which had been sailed to Nassau by a delivery crew for the owner. We rafted alongside and convinced the marina not to charge us, as we were the "dinghy". We had permission to use the 65' but after Mark and I looked at the work it would take just to get underway, decided against it. We just took off in the little boat and spent the day sailing around Paradise Island, anchoring at various beaches off Rose and Athol Islands, snorkeling, drinking rum punch, you know, the usual.

One of the boats at the Chub Cay anchorage, a 39' sloop, had left with us, heading for Nassau, the day we went to Andros. So we were a bit surprised to see them and learn that they abandoned the Nassau trip due to rough seas and poor headway, and anchored at Whale Cay, some 6 or so miles from Chub. When the wind shifted to the west overnight, they had a nice sail downwind to Nassau. We chided them a bit about making 6 miles in their 39' boat the day we made 95 miles in our 26'. I don't like to wait for better weather, but most of the cruisers refuse to sail upwind, and in the Bahamas the wind direction changes often so it's usually not necessary if you're not in a hurry.

We had dinner at the "Poop Deck" restaurant, then enjoyed watching a video movie on one of the M-65's two color TVs. Mark abandoned ship for the comfort of the larger boat, while I "toughed it out" alongside.

Day 10 - Much halyard slapping and a little dockline jerking but an O.K. night's sleep. (helpful hint: use bungie cords to pull docklines from their center towards the boat. This greatly reduces dockline jerk) Looks like a good day to stay put! Worked on M-65 in the morning and shopped for return trip to Fla. after lunch. About 3pm, with 25-30 knot winds, we ventured bravely (or stupidly) out the inlet. It was a wild ride in 6-8' waves with rolling whitecaps. Too much! Returned to port with one knockdown and some damage to shelf in galley (screws pulled loose). The boat handled much better under power than under sail, not surprising, as maneuverability and speed control are better under power. We saw no other small boats go out. Later that evening we walked over to Paradise Island for a tour of the "wonderland" and had hot chocolate aboard the bouncy M-26 to warm up when we got back. We both bailed out to sleep in the 65', much calmer! Hopefully tomorrow we can make it back to Chub.

Day 11 - Nice breakfast of pancakes. We took our time leaving Nassau. There was no rush and we weren't too anxious to repeat yesterday's adventure in the inlet. Happily the wind was down to 20kts with somewhat more favorable direction (more broad reach then dead down). The ride back to Chub was like " Mr. Toad's Wild Ride " at Disneyland. Some roundups in the 6-8' waves, some 15-20 knot speeds zooming down waves (but mostly 9-10). Took 41/2 hours, 36 miles. Our compass course and speed estimations were a little off and I had to do a GPS fix to find Chub as we were a little south of our course. I always feel a little guilt when I do an electronic fix, as if my seamanship is somehow faulty.

Gassed up at Chub and motored 7 miles to tiny Rum Cay, the only lee between Chub and Bimini, where we fixed another memorable spaghetti dinner, with Nassau coconut bread and a salad and dessert. We thought of having "Desert First" in honor of friends we had met with a boat of the same name. Tomorrow Bimini or Bust!

Day 12 - Lots of rain last night. The boat has been surprisingly dry, with no noticeable rain or spray leaking in. I had done plenty of caulking before the trip. We departed at 7am under reefed main and partially furled jib, wing and wing, making 5-7 kts in the breezy conditions. Passed real close to a nasty looking breaking reef. Brrr! Hit max. 12.8 kts 2x surfing down big waves. We needed to sail about 15 miles to get within fuel range of Cat cay, but we were making such good time that t we sailed about 20 miles before " shifting gears" to power.

Arrived Cat Cay at 2pm for a combined avg. speed of 10 kts. Had we sailed the whole way our ETA would have been around 9pm, a nervous nighttime approach, or an uncomfortable night anchored on the " Banks". As it was, after gassing up at Cat cay, we enjoyed a visit to "Honeymoon Harbor" where we inspected the hulk of an Islander 30 that had come to grief due, no doubt, due to anchor dragging in a storm. Then it was off to the " ferrocement ship wreck", a popular snorkeling place that boasts thousands of fish and colorful corals. You can actually swim right through the sides of the ship, where the concrete has disintegrated. We headed into Bimini about 4:30, in time for a leisurely stroll around town. The sunset, accompanied by a tasty snack of Island wings, was spectacular. After dinner at the "Red lion", we paid a short visit to "The Compleat Angler", Hemingway's hangout in the 30's.

We anchored in the narrow channel at South Bimini, and, since it was after dark, assumed no one would be out and about. So we were startled when a large dive boat appeared, whose Captain informed us that it was unwise to anchor there. (An understatement). He went directly over our anchor line, and I cringed at the thought of those huge twin props and my 3/8" line, but by some miracle he missed the line. We quickly moved to a nearby abandoned marina "slip". And our dive buddy, upon his return later, thoughtfully slowed down as he passed us, before resuming his full throttle pass down the narrow (75') ecologically fragile canal. Dats de Bahamas, Mon!

Day 13 - Up at 4.30 and underway at 5:00. I tried to sneak out with Mark still in bed, and nearly lost our little outboard as I pulled out of the slip when we bounced off a piling, snagging the dinghy motor a bit. The outgoing tide was moving us sideways faster than I could get to the controls after releasing the dock lines. You always have to be careful, and crew is helpful even on a small boat.

We blasted towards Ft. Lauderdale at 15-18 kts, passing a couple of other boats that had left just ahead of us. We were lucky (again) on our Gulf Stream weather, as winds were 15 kts behind us. We soon had to throttle back, as the building waves began to exert their influence. We added the water ballast (after a near broach). No problem! Rock 'n roll to Ft. Lauderdale, arriving 10am. (47mi.).

After gassing up for thankfully our last time (and at a mere $1.25/gal.), we headed up the ICW toward West Palm Beach, some 45 miles distant. A couple of bridges later (and a mysterious malfunction in our VHF), we decided to drop the mast to speed up the process of passing bridges.

We also speeded up the boat, adding 3 mph to our top speed. There are many "no wake" and "manatee" areas where 6 kts is the limit, but even so we were back at Cracker Boy marina at 3pm, plenty of time to retrieve our van and trailer, pop on the boat at a nearby ramp, and return to their fenced storage yard before their 4:30 closing time. It was fun to pull the boat onto the trailer, then just drive off, because all the mast lowering and tie down work had already been done. Ramp time was less than 2 minutes! It was great to be back in "civilization" again (and $1. beer at the Crown and Anchor Pub).

Day - 14 - With the warm, sunny weather we didn't mind the part of a trip no one wants to talk about. Going home? no, cleaning up! The boat was a salt crust, and every surface, nook and cranny needed washing, rinsing, waxing, WD-40, etc.etc. There was laundry to do, misc. groceries to give away, fishing rods and foul weather gear to rinse and dry, engine and boat winterizing chores and more. We finished the final check at 3pm, and our rig was ready to tackle the most dangerous part of the trip, the 1000 miles of Interstate 95. All in All, it was a great fun trip, and the 26X came through with flying colors. With a modicum of common sense, (and more gas) I would not hesitate to explore all the Bahamas clear down to Great Inagua, where it's just 65 miles to Haiti, or 50 miles to Cuba, or...

The two weeks spent aboard moves the M-26X clearly into the "cruiser" instead of the "weekender" category. I wish everyone who buys a trailerable boat "to learn how to sail" would do a couple of real trips with it. They would feel sorry for the owners of larger boats, stuck in their expensive slips, instead of envious. Of, course, it was fun for Mark and I to fly back to Nassau and spend another week aboard the '65. There is something to be said for 32000 lbs. and a knifelike entry when sailing to windward. I wonder if MacGregor will ever build a water ballasted, accordion-hulled extendible/collapsible trailerable liveaboard???

Happy Sailing from Cap't Jim

Friday, December 1, 1995

DRY TORTUGAS BLITZKRIEG

Due to business time constraints the window for this trip was only 8 days, but because of the opportunity to cruise in company with another M-26X, I decided at the last minute to just go ahead and "GO". After quickly dropping the mast on Saturday, 11/30, I spent about an hour throwing some things into the van and then left for a dinner engagement. I was operating on autopilot from many previous trips and hoped I wouldn't forget anything important.


Up at 0330 and on the road at 0430, (early AM is definitely the time to travel), I pounded relentlessly down I95 @65mph, through constant rain and drizzle, past Jacksonville Fla. and after 18 hours driving was ready for a nap in the boat. Usually I make the bed in advance. This time I had to drag the blankets etc. into the boat from the van but eventually created a comfy nest and crashed for 4 hours. Up at 2am and back on 95 nonstop to the Keys, arriving Bahia Honda State Park @ 11am, after a nice breakfast in Key Largo. By 1:00 PM I was rigged, loaded, sorted, launched and ready to go except for provisioning. Where were the other boats? A short nap after lunch proved too tempting and soon I was making up for lost sleep big time. You can't cheat mother nature for long.

John and Allison Wikle from North Carolina on " Island Girl" came in from a great day sailing and snorkeling and we quickly reconfirmed plans to leave the next morning for the Dry Tortugas ( about 100 miles from Bahia Honda). We all went out provisioning, had dinner at a small local restaurant I couldn't ever find again, put up the mosquito netting and sacked out.

There was a small trimaran docked near us and we met the owner, in the morning. John Patterson is a boat builder by trade and avocation who had trailered his latest creation, a 20' trimaran weighing 750lbs from his home in Michigan. No matter how far you drive (1250 miles) and how far you plan to sail (100 miles) there is someone who has just driven further (from Michigan) and is sailing further (to Georgetown, Exumas, Bahamas @ 400 mi.) and in a much smaller 20' boat yet!

After a leisurely breakfast we set out into a beautiful warm, sunny morning with a light following breeze. I put up my "cheater" spinnaker so called because the M-26 is 3/4 rigged and the spinnaker is masthead rigged from a Catalina 25. With no support at the top of the mast it is a " light air only" sail.

Poor John had to motor constantly to keep up. Later the wind freshened and shifted north and John passed me with his 150 genoa while I was struggling to douse the spinnaker and unfurl the jib. After balancing the boat on a close-hauled course I took to the trapeze ( actually a bosn's chair ) for about 45 minutes, coming in only once for a course correction and a cold beer. We had a ball and sailed for 6 hours, almost all the way to Key West.

After gassing up in Key West amid a demonstration of U.S.Army Helicopter assault troops rappelling down from the helicopters onto a ship (very noisy) we were glad to be away from there and off to the Marqueses Islands, about 20 miles. We motored over at what I hoped would be an economical speed of 13-14 knots, arriving just before sundown to fix a bountiful dinner of steak, potatoes, onions, wine, and "gourmet" chocolate chip cookies for dessert.


Wed. Dec. 4 - Day 4 - Up at 0630, motored out into the calm morning and saw some birds diving on baitfish, so unleashed the trolling rods and began to circle. John Wikle puttered up a little later and went on ahead on a course of 280 degrees. No luck fishing so I flogged the Johnson and passed John. I ran out a six-gallon tank and then it was time to sail. The breeze picked up and a reef in the main became necessary. The course was a beam to close reach, so the boat balanced well. When John finally caught up he couldn't believe it. I was catnapping on the stern in 15 - 18- knots of wind and 3-4' seas while the boat faithfully sailed 280 - 300. Occasionally a larger wave would knock me off course and require a little tweaking of the wheel. John continued to motorsail alongside as we had only about 10 miles to go and he was a bit nervous about going on the tilting deck to hoist the main. This being their first open water passage they did well to stick it out.

After arriving at Ft. Jefferson John and Allison took the tour while I walked around and chatted with some campers. Ft. Jefferson must be the only National Park that allows free camping, and people bring over kayaks to get around between the islands.

The local fishermen sell their wares and will even cook them for you if you want, but we passed up lobster for Hamburger. Moral- don't take meat to the Dry Tortugas, take extra beer to trade.

We filled up, and the cookies were holding up.



Day 5 Said good-bye to John and Allison. The were concerned about getting back to work on time. Hey Mon! What could I do? It was too bad they left. The day started out calm and sunny and very warm, in the 80's. A nice day is exactly what you need after a rough passage, and really makes a difference in your attitude. I chugged over to Loggerhead Key, a "private" Park Service Island where you are supposed to request permission to land, Naturally I found all this out while basking on the beach at the tip of the Island. While basking I noticed a little movement, a small hermit crab scuttled along, and I scooped him up to be my companion on the trip back. Hermit crabs are quite lively and entertaining fellows, but I have never succeeded in feeding one although I have tried meat,cookies,cheese, crackers, apple, sea weed etc. They all die in a few days, so I decided to let this one go when I got back to Bahia Honda. The snorkeling was decent, and I saw a nurse shark, lots of barracuda and a loggerhead turtle.

The caretaker had mentioned a wreck only a mile away so off I went in search of treasure. Luckily the Ft. Jefferson Divers showed up and led me to it or I never would have found it, even though a teensy bit sticks up above the sea. It looks like a bird sitting on the water. After a fun snorkel around the wreck I was ready to head back but... the anchor refused to budge off the bottom. A fair amount of tugging and swearing later, I decided to let "Big John(son)" try. At about 1/4 throttle the anchor came up, somewhat the worse for wear. A black looking cloud was looming on the horizon so I scurried back to Ft. Jefferson.

Sure enough, the perfect day deteriorated to torrential rain by 4pm when a little squall blew through the anchorage, but I was snug and dry down below. Heated up some leftovers for dinner and turned in early in anticipation of an early departure for Key West.



Day 6 - Underway 0600. Followed a fisherman out the channel, chuckling to myself at what he must have thought when the little sailboat behind him kept up while he accelerated to flank speed.

Passed half-moon shoal at 0730. Out of gas at 8:10. Sailing, light air, no ballast making 3-4 knots. GPS fix says 11.4 miles to Marqueses. 1030, breeze increasing, time to fill the old water tank. Amazing, boat speed actually increased one knot. Saw several cruising boats taking advantage of the window to sail to the Tortugas in beautiful weather. Now doing 5.5 kts, course 90 degrees, boat balanced, stereo on, novel in hand, Bimini sunshade in position, cold soda and sour cream 'n onion potato chips. Is this Heaven or what? Heaven was short lived. Guess I was having too good a time, 'caus the wind proceeded to die and that was when I noticed a nasty little current about 1 knot west. At 6pm I completed the 11,4 miles. that I started at 8:10 that morning. That's right, 10 hours to make 11.4 miles. It was HELL!!

I moseyed over closer to the shoreline, casually checking the chart, Huuumm! Looks like some CLUNK! rocks hereabouts. The centerboard bounced over a brain coral head but happily the rudders missed it. I hit the only rock in the area! I noticed some cruisers anchored nearby and sailed over to investigate. Actually the hope of scrounging some spare gas was what attracted me to the other boats

Managed to beg some surplus dingy gas from some cruisers who were returning to Key West (Actually traded for rum and munchies). Thus fortified with 4 gallons, I putted economically back, tying up to a gas dock @ 9pm, too tired to be attracted by the sounds of revelry from downtown.


 Day 7 - Definitely the first customer at 0600, I filled two tanks and went out into the pre-dawn darkness. It was still quite calm and after the frustration of the preceding day I let 'er rip, 20 kts towards Bahia Honda key some 30 miles distant. It was still early as I passed Looe key reef, so I went over and picked up a mooring and fixed a fine breakfast while waiting for the sun to climb high enough for good snorkeling light. Unfortunately a rain squall came along and soon the exposed mooring area was choppy. Oh Poo! Well, may as well end this trip with a ten mile run in the rain. The rain is very local and on the way back I passed in and out of showers several times and raced alongside one where I could steer in and out of the rain along the edge of the shower area at will. Back at Bahia Honda ramp, there were the Wikles, just hauling out. They took the leisurely way back while I am more of the mad dash type. The sun broke out and soon we were all tidied up and ready for the trip north. Having different plans, we said our good-byes , they headed for the hiway and I headed for the shower, a nice long hot one. Some day I'm going to install hot water on the MacGregor, probably a small propane flash heater, or possibly some kind of solar heater. Before leaving, I remembered the little hermit crab "Hermie", who was still in the boat in a bowl in the sink. I got him and found a nice spot for him (her, it) in the sand near the beach. It was slow going back up I95 past Miami and after driving through more rain I stopped at Riviera Beach ( near West Palm) at one of my favorite restaurants, on Rt. 1, the Holiday House where a complete family style buffet is served, a real feast including triple layer cake for $7.99. After that, I couldn't make it much further so a dark lumberyard parking lot beckoned. It's great to be curled up snug in your bunk in the rain, and the trailer is as secure an anchorage, as you are likely to get.


Day 8- In the morning I got the bright idea of leaving the boat in a storage lot in Stuart Fla. ($1/day). As I planned to return over the Christmas Holidays I figured the gas savings would pay for the storage, with less wear and tear on the tow vehicle (and me). Rai Aubrey did this last year with his boat Stuart is right at the cross Fla. canal the goes through Lake Okeechobee to Ft. Meyers, and I thought that would make a fun trip. Then it was back to pounding out the miles on I95, relentlessly pushing on, fortified with coffee at a surprisingly crowded waffle house midnight, arriving home at 2:40 am, much to the "delight" of my spouse.

-Cap't Jim

Sunday, August 20, 1995

Great Lakes Adventure August 13 - 19, 1995

Thousand Islands New York. Who wouldn't want to visit a place with a thousand islands? Don Gearing started it with a trip to Lake Ontario, launching at Point Breeze State Park just east of Niagara Falls. He came back smiling. Then Larry Blair, recent MacGregor 26X purchaser from the St. Lawrence area said he planned to trailer his new M-26X to eastern Lake Ontario for 2 weeks and offered to give me all the charts of the area.

There is something magical about charts. I find myself staring at them imagining private little coves and undiscovered beaches, wide rivers with wooded cliffs, historic towns with charming walks... Anyway, I was hooked so off the family went.

Day 1. The drive up I-83 to I-81 took us through Syracuse, NY straight to Watertown and was exceptionally scenic and mostly uncrowded: 500 miles of rolling farmland spiced with an occasional junkyard. A much more pleasant drive than south to Florida. Some of the hills slowed us down to 45, but it was 70 going down hill. The M-26X towed well. I added a small sway bar to the hitch and should have emptied the fuel tanks before setting out (for a little more tongue weight). Stopping for gas in Frickville, PA, we were lured to Grandma's Restaurant by the 30' tall statue of "Grandma" outside. Turned out to be a neat, antique filled place with player piano music and terrific food. Back in the van, the newly replaced (3 day old) transmission seemed reluctant to move us. A quick check of the fluid level showed none on the stick. Three quarts later we were moving but the remainder of the trip (1300 miles) took 1 quart per 100 miles. At least the oil covered trailer will be well protected from rust! (See "Selecting a New Tow Vehicle" in a future issue) Our destination was the town of Henderson with a quiet free ramp and vehicle storage area recommended by my M-65 purchaser who lives near Rochester and plans to take the M-65 up the Hudson, through the Erie Canal to Rochester next spring. (See "Cap't Jim's Erie Canal Adventure in a future issue) The nine miles from I-81 to Henderson were "under construction". Down here that means bumpy asphalt, up there it means no road . Eventually, we found the "town" ramp and were surprised to find a Lightning Regatta underway. Over 100 19' Lightnings converge for an annual 5 day regatta.lake.jpg (25975 bytes)

Day 2. After spending our first night aboard, Steven and I rigged the mast, sails, etc. while Joyce and
Janet unloaded the van and packed the boat. Normal rules of packing prevailed: about 5 times too much stuff. I never seem to learn. We took fishing rods, snorkeling gear, foul weather gear, heavy hiking boots and enough supplies for a month. We ended up wearing shorts or swim suits, flip-flops, T-shirts and eating almost all meals ashore starting with a great breakfast in nearby Henderson Harbor at an inn overlooking the water. Fresh Raspberry and Blueberry pancakes...mm-mm! Nearby Henderson Marine Service provided a convenient spot to purchase a local chart and port guide book. Charter sailboats were available (for those who can't take their own boat) and bed & breakfasts are plentiful for an auto trip.

Back at the ramp, launching was quickly accomplished, thanks to the 9" draft of the M-26X and soon we were on our way, in light winds under power, to Sackett, a small historic town about 7 miles up the Black River and best remembered for its role as defender of the U S Coastline during the War of 1812. Sackett is a beautiful old town with a great natural harbor (free docking for visitors), quaint local taverns and historic fort. After a sumptuous lunch and walking town tour, we departed at 5 p.m. Still no real wind, although plenty for the Lightning sailors heading back to Henderson. You can imagine their surprise as we blasted past the fleet at 20 mph. I should have brought the water skis to make the shock complete. Janet and Steven have skied behind the M-26X with no problems. We picked a likely looking island about 12 miles away as our destination and were soon anchored and swimming in clear, but very grassy 7 - 10" water. Using snorkel equipment and mini wet suits, it was like swimming in an aquarium, through and around the green tendrils that extended to the surface. Holding was poor, and when 15-18 knots of breeze came up it took 3 anchors to stay put.

Day 3. Explored a nearby rocky "island" that used to be a peninsula before a recent storm severed the thin connection with the main island, stranding several old buildings and wharves (complete with rotting barge.) One wonders what was there years ago, as concrete foundations with chimneys standing like sentries were discovered under a tangle of weeds and fallen trees. Probably a grand old house. After our morning walk we set sail for Cape Vincent a few miles away right at the mouth of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Most of the small towns along the St. Lawrence seem to have had their boom in the late 1800's and were forgotten by the '20's except for a colorful history of rum smuggling. Cape Vincent had its share of 1812 action, but the N Y State Fisheries station with displays and aquariums we found more interesting. Lunch at Aubrey's, whose owner recently died, reminded us to party hearty--life is so short. The beckoning breeze drew us further down river: 13 miles mostly wing and wing at 5 knots with 1 knot current. The Bimini top was a lifesaver as the sun was very warm. Daytime temperatures averaged 85%, about 7% cooler with less humidity than home. Nights required a sheet with a blanket by dawn except for one warmer night where our 12v fan was used for several hours.

Tying up at the town dock at Clayton at 50c per foot (suddenly 26' instead of 65' helps out!) we were right next to the wooden power boat museum. The family elected to stroll around town while I feasted on shiny varnished "rum-runners" and various other small and large historic craft Closing time came too soon and we met for dinner at the "Thousand Island Inn", originator of the salad dressing recipe. We bumped a bit at the town dock with local boat traffic well into the night.

Day 4. The family refused to budge so I walked into town for a hearty breakfast including venison sausage and some conversation with a lively young lady of 75 or so who entertained me with tales from her 50 years in town. Back at the boat sleepy heads were still in bed so in the early morning calm I flogged Mr. Johnson 11 miles downstream in 35 minutes to the town of Alexandria Bay, a shameless tourist trap which capitalized years ago on the narrow river for whitewater canoe trips and fishing. This is the heart of the Thousand Island area with many beautiful old homes, some covering the small island rocks upon which they stand. Some are open for tours or are B & B's. The river is placid now. The completion of the St. Lawrence Canal/ Seaway project in the 60's included several locks and dams to control the river and increase navigability. Some homes and islands were lost to rising water levels. We enjoyed motoring around and through a never-ending wonderland of quiet coves, waterfront homes and old boats.

We enjoyed a late breakfast buffet on a floating barge with a scenic view of Bolt Castle directly across the river on Heart Island. As the story goes, in 1904 4 years of work by up to 300 workmen at a cost of $2.5 million stopped suddenly upon the death of George Bolt's beloved wife, Louise. The 127-room extravaganza with two other smaller castles was never completed. It made a fascinating tour and was the highlight of the trip. Escaping from Alexandria Bay with its 7 disco nightclubs nestled among hotels of long faded glory, we motored over to the Canadian side, stopping for a swim near Wellesly Island State Park. The boundary line zigzags along the river around the islands to accommodate the then residents who felt Canadian or American. Wellesly Island formerly belonged to George Bold, part of his vast farm holdings used to supply meat and dairy products to his N Y city hotel, The Waldorf Astoria. The shallower river water was warmer than the lake providing a very refreshing swim. Despite spotting more fish here while snorkeling I never did break out the fishing gear I had brought along. The Canadian town of Ganaoque (Gan-an-ock-way) 20 miles west of Alexandria Bay had a well run municipal marina and a local waterfront fine dining inn provided dinner. Being early birds we got away with our casual attire. A festival was underway with a rock concert on a nearby point of land next to the marina. Janet and Steve went while Joyce and I fended off mosquitoes in the cockpit.

Day 5. The Blinkbonnie Inn, a fine old mansion turned hotel, provided an outstanding breakfast, and we set out through the Admiralty Islands about 10:30 a.m. for Henderson, 40 miles away. The wind is fluky in the Thousand Islands area. Some little bays had boats heeled over, others 2 to 5 miles away were flat calm. We did some sailing, then stopped in a rocky cove for swimming and lunch where a large power boat wake dislodged our anchor leaving us scurrying to get underway after retrieving the children and avoiding a collision with an inhospitable shoreline. Back through the Lightning Fleet we went (Yes, they were still sailing in the light breeze). Dropping the mast and pulling the boat out on the trailer at 4:30 went quickly. In 6 hours we had covered 40 miles including time for sailing, swimming, island exploring and retrieving the boat on the trailer. The freedom a little extra speed offers is amazing. Driving back to Syracuse we took highway 20 West which parallels I- 90 but at a slower pace, and ended up at a campground in Waterloo ($15/night).

Day 6. Leaving the boat at the campground, we hit I-90 and were among the first visitors to the country's oldest National Park, Niagara Falls. We bit for the whole deal: Maid of the Mist boat trip, Cave of the Winds Falls drenching, scenic movie, garden tour and a walk to the Canadian Horseshoe Falls. The hydroelectric demands have cut water flow over the falls in half halting the erosion at the falls to an acceptable foot a year. The falls are still very impressive, well worth the trip. Driving into Canada, we followed the Niagara River Park along the shoreline all the way to scenic Niagara-on-the-Lake to a sandy beach for a break. The Niagara River below the falls is a sailing Mecca for boats heading out onto 50 mile wide Lake Ontario which was at its most beautiful in the late afternoon sun, sails dotting the horizon as far as the eye could see.

Cutting diagonally back to our Waterloo campground, we stopped briefly along the banks of the Erie Canal in Lockville where we were tempted to take a 2 hour boat tour, but vowed instead to do the whole Hudson River, Erie Canal, Lakes Ontario, Erie, Michigan, Superior, Huron . . . "one day".

The drive home was pleasant: we just kept adding transmission fluid to "Old Faithful" and laughed when we saw Larry Blair towing his new 26X north bound to his "Great Lakes Adventure". I leave you with Cap't Jim's formula for good times: north in summer, south in winter, spring and fall on the Bay. Happy Sailing!

Capt. Jim

Great Lakes Adventure - MacGregor 26X - August 13-19, 1995

Thousand Islands New York. Who wouldn't want to visit a place with a thousand islands? Don Gearing started it with a trip to Lake Ontario, launching at Point Breeze State Park just east of Niagara Falls. He came back smiling. Then Larry Blair, recent MacGregor 26X purchaser from the St. Lawrence area said he planned to trailer his new M-26X to eastern Lake Ontario for 2 weeks and offered to give me all the charts of the area.

There is something magical about charts. I find myself staring at them imagining private little coves and undiscovered beaches, wide rivers with wooded cliffs, historic towns with charming walks... Anyway, I was hooked so off the family went.

Day 1. The drive up I-83 to I-81 took us through Syracuse, NY straight to Watertown and was exceptionally scenic and mostly uncrowded: 500 miles of rolling farmland spiced with an occasional junkyard. A much more pleasant drive than south to Florida. Some of the hills slowed us down to 45, but it was 70 going down hill. The M-26X towed well. I added a small sway bar to the hitch and should have emptied the fuel tanks before setting out (for a little more tongue weight). Stopping for gas in Frickville, PA, we were lured to Grandma's Restaurant by the 30' tall statue of "Grandma" outside. Turned out to be a neat, antique filled place with player piano music and terrific food. Back in the van, the newly replaced (3 day old) transmission seemed reluctant to move us. A quick check of the fluid level showed none on the stick. Three quarts later we were moving but the remainder of the trip (1300 miles) took 1 quart per 100 miles. At least the oil covered trailer will be well protected from rust! (See "Selecting a New Tow Vehicle" in a future issue) Our destination was the town of Henderson with a quiet free ramp and vehicle storage area recommended by my M-65 purchaser who lives near Rochester and plans to take the M-65 up the Hudson, through the Erie Canal to Rochester next spring. (See "Cap't Jim's Erie Canal Adventure in a future issue) The nine miles from I-81 to Henderson were "under construction". Down here that means bumpy asphalt, up there it means no road . Eventually, we found the "town" ramp and were surprised to find a Lightning Regatta underway. Over 100 19' Lightnings converge for an annual 5 day regatta.

Day 2. After spending our first night aboard, Steven and I rigged the mast, sails, etc. while Joyce and Janet unloaded the van and packed the boat. Normal rules of packing prevailed: about 5 times too much stuff. I never seem to learn. We took fishing rods, snorkeling gear, foul weather gear, heavy hiking boots and enough supplies for a month. We ended up wearing shorts or swim suits, flip-flops, T-shirts and eating almost all meals ashore starting with a great breakfast in nearby Henderson Harbor at an inn overlooking the water. Fresh Raspberry and Blueberry pancakes...mm-mm! Nearby Henderson Marine Service provided a convenient spot to purchase a local chart and port guide book. Charter sailboats were available (for those who can't take their own boat) and bed & breakfasts are plentiful for an auto trip.

Back at the ramp, launching was quickly accomplished, thanks to the 9" draft of the M-26X and soon we were on our way, in light winds under power, to Sackett, a small historic town about 7 miles up the Black River and best remembered for its role as defender of the U S Coastline during the War of 1812. Sackett is a beautiful old town with a great natural harbor (free docking for visitors), quaint local taverns and historic fort. After a sumptuous lunch and walking town tour, we departed at 5 p.m. Still no real wind, although plenty for the Lightning sailors heading back to Henderson. You can imagine their surprise as we blasted past the fleet at 20 mph. I should have brought the water skis to make the shock complete. Janet and Steven have skied behind the M-26X with no problems. We picked a likely looking island about 12 miles away as our destination and were soon anchored and swimming in clear, but very grassy 7 - 10" water. Using snorkel equipment and mini wet suits, it was like swimming in an aquarium, through and around the green tendrils that extended to the surface. Holding was poor, and when 15-18 knots of breeze came up it took 3 anchors to stay put.

Day 3. Explored a nearby rocky "island" that used to be a peninsula before a recent storm severed the thin connection with the main island, stranding several old buildings and wharves (complete with rotting barge.) One wonders what was there years ago, as concrete foundations with chimneys standing like sentries were discovered under a tangle of weeds and fallen trees. Probably a grand old house. After our morning walk we set sail for Cape Vincent a few miles away right at the mouth of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Most of the small towns along the St. Lawrence seem to have had their boom in the late 1800's and were forgotten by the '20's except for a colorful history of rum smuggling. Cape Vincent had its share of 1812 action, but the N Y State Fisheries station with displays and aquariums we found more interesting. Lunch at Aubrey's, whose owner recently died, reminded us to party hearty--life is so short. The beckoning breeze drew us further down river: 13 miles mostly wing and wing at 5 knots with 1 knot current. The Bimini top was a lifesaver as the sun was very warm. Daytime temperatures averaged 85%, about 7% cooler with less humidity than home. Nights required a sheet with a blanket by dawn except for one warmer night where our 12v fan was used for several hours.

Tying up at the town dock at Clayton at 50c per foot (suddenly 26' instead of 65' helps out!) we were right next to the wooden power boat museum. The family elected to stroll around town while I feasted on shiny varnished "rum-runners" and various other small and large historic craft Closing time came too soon and we met for dinner at the "Thousand Island Inn", originator of the salad dressing recipe. We bumped a bit at the town dock with local boat traffic well into the night.

Day 4. The family refused to budge so I walked into town for a hearty breakfast including venison sausage and some conversation with a lively young lady of 75 or so who entertained me with tales from her 50 years in town. Back at the boat sleepy heads were still in bed so in the early morning calm I flogged Mr. Johnson 11 miles downstream in 35 minutes to the town of Alexandria Bay, a shameless tourist trap which capitalized years ago on the narrow river for whitewater canoe trips and fishing. This is the heart of the Thousand Island area with many beautiful old homes, some covering the small island rocks upon which they stand. Some are open for tours or are B & B's. The river is placid now. The completion of the St. Lawrence Canal/ Seaway project in the 60's included several locks and dams to control the river and increase navigability. Some homes and islands were lost to rising water levels. We enjoyed motoring around and through a never-ending wonderland of quiet coves, waterfront homes and old boats.

We enjoyed a late breakfast buffet on a floating barge with a scenic view of Bolt Castle directly across the river on Heart Island. As the story goes, in 1904 4 years of work by up to 300 workmen at a cost of $2.5 million stopped suddenly upon the death of George Bolt's beloved wife, Louise. The 127-room extravaganza with two other smaller castles was never completed. It made a fascinating tour and was the highlight of the trip. Escaping from Alexandria Bay with its 7 disco nightclubs nestled among hotels of long faded glory, we motored over to the Canadian side, stopping for a swim near Wellesly Island State Park. The boundary line zigzags along the river around the islands to accommodate the then residents who felt Canadian or American. Wellesly Island formerly belonged to George Bold, part of his vast farm holdings used to supply meat and dairy products to his N Y city hotel, The Waldorf Astoria. The shallower river water was warmer than the lake providing a very refreshing swim. Despite spotting more fish here while snorkeling I never did break out the fishing gear I had brought along. The Canadian town of Ganaoque (Gan-an-ock-way) 20 miles west of Alexandria Bay had a well run municipal marina and a local waterfront fine dining inn provided dinner. Being early birds we got away with our casual attire. A festival was underway with a rock concert on a nearby point of land next to the marina. Janet and Steve went while Joyce and I fended off mosquitoes in the cockpit.

Day 5. The Blinkbonnie Inn, a fine old mansion turned hotel, provided an outstanding breakfast, and we set out through the Admiralty Islands about 10:30 a.m. for Henderson, 40 miles away. The wind is fluky in the Thousand Islands area. Some little bays had boats heeled over, others 2 to 5 miles away were flat calm. We did some sailing, then stopped in a rocky cove for swimming and lunch where a large power boat wake dislodged our anchor leaving us scurrying to get underway after retrieving the children and avoiding a collision with an inhospitable shoreline. Back through the Lightning Fleet we went (Yes, they were still sailing in the light breeze). Dropping the mast and pulling the boat out on the trailer at 4:30 went quickly. In 6 hours we had covered 40 miles including time for sailing, swimming, island exploring and retrieving the boat on the trailer. The freedom a little extra speed offers is amazing. Driving back to Syracuse we took highway 20 West which parallels I- 90 but at a slower pace, and ended up at a campground in Waterloo ($15/night).

Day 6. Leaving the boat at the campground, we hit I-90 and were among the first visitors to the country's oldest National Park, Niagara Falls. We bit for the whole deal: Maid of the Mist boat trip, Cave of the Winds Falls drenching, scenic movie, garden tour and a walk to the Canadian Horseshoe Falls. The hydroelectric demands have cut water flow over the falls in half halting the erosion at the falls to an acceptable foot a year. The falls are still very impressive, well worth the trip. Driving into Canada, we followed the Niagara River Park along the shoreline all the way to scenic Niagara-on-the-Lake to a sandy beach for a break. The Niagara River below the falls is a sailing Mecca for boats heading out onto 50 mile wide Lake Ontario which was at its most beautiful in the late afternoon sun, sails dotting the horizon as far as the eye could see.

Cutting diagonally back to our Waterloo campground, we stopped briefly along the banks of the Erie Canal in Lockville where we were tempted to take a 2 hour boat tour, but vowed instead to do the whole Hudson River, Erie Canal, Lakes Ontario, Erie, Michigan, Superior, Huron . . . "one day".

The drive home was pleasant: we just kept adding transmission fluid to "Old Faithful" and laughed when we saw Larry Blair towing his new 26X north bound to his "Great Lakes Adventure". I leave you with Cap't Jim's formula for good times: north in summer, south in winter, spring and fall on the Bay. Happy Sailing!

Wednesday, February 1, 1995

Bahamas Adventures Part 1 - MacGregor 65

Sitting around at work one afternoon last November one of my friends asked me when I planned to take my MacGregor 65 south for the winter. I had thought about it but couldn't seem to quite get organized, but I told him, "Maybe tomorrow." This set in motion a frantic series of phone calls to various previous crew members so that by 8 p.m. when I set out to shop for provisions the plans were set.

My friend and employee of 4 years, Mark Talbott agreed to sail as far as Solomon's, old sailing buddy Gordon Rutkai met us there and helped sail to Hampton (a great day! --one long close reach 80 miles down the Bay). Racing partner Fritz Wray jumped on from Hampton, Virginia to Charleston, South Carolina.

Fritz and I had light winds and a variety of sailing, motoring and motor sailing along the Virginia shore. Past Cape Hatteras the wind increased from the south and a close reach took us to the cape behind which is Beaufort, North Carolina. The decision to go inside is not easy because it is 20 miles in and 20 miles back out, but as it was raining and rough we bagged it in favor of a good night's rest and walking tour of the quaint Beaufort waterfront. Departing early in the morning we had an upwind slog to Cape Fear where shortly the wind died and we motored to Charleston. Along the way I tossed a lure overboard. It must have been the right spot because in 5 minutes I had a "whopper" pulling on the line. The 40 lb. Wahoo took 15 - 20 minutes to get aboard and an hour to clean and carve into five 5-lb. bags of fish steaks. These steaks were so good when we baked them for dinner we had extra portions for dessert!! (Chef's tip: Bake covered 350 deg. for 12 - 13 minutes with salsa and butter. If it looks underdone, it's perfect.)

Fritz flew out from Charleston leaving me stranded with no crew and I had about made up my mind to single-hand it to Jacksonville when I lucked into the son of an old acquaintance who was living aboard at Charleston Marina and who volunteered to sail with me. I wonder if he had second thoughts when the engine quit as we motor-sailed out of the harbor jetties into 20 knots of east/north-east wind and Cap't Bligh Jim ordered the staysail hoisted and engine be damned. In 20 knots we can sail 10 - 15 knots and don't need an engine! Later that evening, slatting on a calm sea, I purged the diesel of air in the line and we motored to Jacksonville stopping just up the St. John River at Mayport, a somewhat neglected old fishing village where every restaurant featured "Mom's Home Cooking." After early dinner and diesel fill up (198 gallons) we headed off for West Palm Beach (250 miles) arriving two days later around noon where we tied up at the Rivera Beach Marina. Total distance about 900 miles and 7 days with several stops. The same trip towing takes 18 hours driving time or 2 days for most folks, but we would have missed the Wahoo. Plans call for bringing the family down to West Palm Beach at Christmas for a Bahamas adventure.

With the Dodge van fully loaded, the family of four, Jim, Joyce, Janet (20) and Steven (15), set out December 22, 1994 for a long anticipated Bahamas adventure. I actually planned this trip while on the original delivery of the M-65 from California. Because the delivery schedule was tight we averaged better than 150 miles per day for 36 days. During the somewhat grueling trip I fantasized about loafing along in the Bahamas sailing maybe 20 - 25 miles for 3 - 4 hours per day.

On our way south we stopped briefly in Williamsburg for a candle light tour of the colonial city, then on to Hampton to drop off some sails and equipment borrowed for the Annapolis to Bermuda race. (We dropped out due to light winds and a desire to party in Bermuda.) Arriving in West Palm Beach around midday on the 24th, we readied the boat for the Gulf stream. Wasting no time, we cast off at 7:00 am Christmas day. This was to be our second Christmas day Gulf stream crossing. The first was in 1991 aboard MacGregor 19 #002. We did feel like we had improved our boat a bit! It was an easy and comfortable crossing with 10 - 15 knot NW winds a bit too far aft for maximum speed but 8 hours and 57 miles later we were docked at the West End of Grand Bahama Island.

The beautiful beach was deserted. The empty hotel rooms with the gaping sliding glass doors were mute testimony to the shift of tourism to more modern facilities elsewhere.

Day 2. After checking into customs the next morning we quietly departed and enjoyed a swift broad reach at 8 - 11 knots to Lucaya. Steven and Janet took turns steering, occasionally reaching 10 - 11 knots boat speed. We negotiated the narrow entrance canal of the Xanadu Hotel and Marina and were soon enjoying happy hour in the cockpit. While the family hiked along the beach I commandeered an abandoned lounge chair and watched the sunset. Later we went to downtown Lucaya for dinner and toured a luxury hotel, the Lucayan Princess, with walkways, waterfalls and lighted pools in a beautiful tropical forest setting.

Day 3. By 7:00 am we were underway towards Great Stirrup Cay, northernmost cay of the Berry Island chain, a 62 mile distance. A great sailing day: a beam reach in 10 - 12 knots, boat speeds of 7 - 9 knots. We set one "false alarm" reef when the boat was temporarily overpowered but the reefed mainsail slowed us down and we eventually decided to shake out the reef. A speck on the horizon became a Tartan 37 sailing along nicely. They arrived two hours after we did at the anchorage. That two hours was prime windsurfing time: Steven and Janet both tried it out.

Day 4 was "relax in the islands day" and we intended to set still the whole day, but by 2:00 pm the inviting breeze beckoned us to a leisurely 20 miles sail to Frozen Cay and anchorage off another beautiful white beach with just enough time for windsurfing before dinner.

Day 5 Steven and I took the dinghy and motored into a small manmade harbor that had a canal through the island into a lagoon. We circled the island and were about to land on the beach when YIKES! --a large guard dog bounded into the water and started swimming furiously towards us. I yanked the starter cord and headed back out. Dogo got within 30 feet and I thought he was going to follow us all the way back to the 65', but he eventually turned back and proceeded to watch us from a rock jetty. We were thankful he didn't jump us in the narrow canal. It could have been "Cujo" all over again. Beach combing thwarted, we motored 1 cay north to "Flo's Conch Bar", a true island hangout, for cold beer and picturesque vistas. The proprietor told us the bar was named for his mother. Hurricane Andrew had wiped out his new house, but the old house/bar, which his father had built in the 40's, withstood the blast. They don't build 'em like they used to. We snorkeled over a large ray in our tiny anchorage. Three anchors kept us off the rocks 20' away. We headed south, intending to curve around to Whale Cay but with the MacGregor self-steering on a close-hauled course to Nassau, we sat back and let it take us there arriving at the harbor entrance at 9:00 pm. It was a little confusing, what with the bright lights of the coast glaring and half the marker buoy lights not functioning. I noticed a large powerboat standing by the entrance, which then followed us in. Just chicken, I guess. We spent Day 6 at the downtown beach, Day 7 touring the island with a rented VW beetle, and Day 8 at Paradise Island Beach. The renovated (20 million) casino was unbelievably landscaped to look like walking through a theme park with underwater tunnels, huge aquariums, multiple pool and waterfall areas, several bars and restaurants, all lit up at night. We went back several times, but avoided the casino, which we suspected somehow paid for it all.

Day 9 we motor sailed over to Rose Island only a couple of miles away with a deserted beach and good snorkeling. Carelessly anchoring in 8' of water we returned from the beach excursion to see a bit more bottom paint than normal. Yep--hard aground. What goes down comes up, so a few hours later I was able to reposition into somewhat deeper water. This was a great windsurfing place.

Day 10 we motored back to Nassau, stopping to snorkel at a popular wreck off Athol Island. Imagine my surprise when the dock master at the Nassau Harbor Marina berthed me next to another MacGregor 65! The owner was aboard and helped us get tied up. Turns out he only had the boat a month, had never sailed except casually with friends, and this was his first sailboat. The family had tickets out that afternoon back to BWI, so after they left with a few hours to kill before my replacement crew arrived, I went out for a sail on the other 65 with the new owner and some other folks at the marina he had met. We had a great time and were busily drinking it up at the marina bar ($1 shots at happy hour) when longtime sailing buddy Wally Szot walked in fresh from Maryland. "What do you want to do tomorrow?" I asked Wally. "Head for the Exumas," he said.

Day 11, after a quick reprovisioning trip to the local liquor store, Wally and I departed for the Exumas, approximately 32 miles away. Another great sail: 32 miles in 4 hours on a beam reach to Ship Channel Cay. We attempted to enter the small harbor shown on the chart and bumped bottom for the 4th time of the trip. Anchoring in the lee of a small island, we launched the dinghy for a little exploration. The pattern for the next few days was to sail south 20 - 25 miles in the morning, anchor by 12 or 1, swim, snorkel and windsurf 'til Happy Hour, fix dinner (Wally was quite a chef!) and B.S., listen to tapes, or read until bedtime. Day 12 we visited Highborne and Hawks Bill Cay; Day 13, Bell Island and Staniel Cay where we snorkeled at the fabulous "Thunderball Grotto", a natural hollowed out island used in the filming of the James Bond movie. I had visited some of these places in 1981 and again in 1986. Day 14 at Rudder Cut Cay we found the home of a drug smuggler who was busted and left behind a beautiful abandoned home with airstrip, paved road and Cadillac limo, all awaiting his return.

Day 15. After departing Rudder Cut Cay for Georgetown, we tried a little impromptu sharp shooting of wine bottles with a new 12 gauge stainless steel Winchester marine shotgun that I saw in a pawn shop and had to have. Accuracy was not too good, and the noise was deafening! Target practice was interrupted by the whine of the drag on the fishing reel. We had a strike! A few minutes of struggling later, we had a large Barracuda with BIG TEETH! Carefully extracting my line, we dropped Mr. Barracuda back in and he swam off. That was enough fishing for me, temporarily. At last we arrived at Georgetown Harbor around 3 pm, checked out the many yachts anchored at nearby Stocking Island, and anchored ourselves outside of, but near, Georgetown Harbor. We were soon ensconced at the bar of the "Two Turtles Inn".

Day 16 (January 9th) A perfect day, sunny and breezy, for exploring Great Exuma Island in a rented jeep! The 50 mile long Great Exuma is the largest island in the Exuma chain. Roads varied from O.K. to primitive. Outside of Georgetown, the former plantations were gone and overgrown. The surviving town was populated by descendants of slaves who commute to jobs supporting the tourist industry. We stopped into some nice resorts and a couple of local hangouts for a cold Kalik (Bahamian beer) and a great view of the island chain from the highest point on the island. Dinner at the Fisherman's Inn in Bassoterre seemingly materializing from nowhere. The inn was deserted when we stepped inside, but a smiling bartender/waitress soon appeared and I think the cook was summoned from her nearby residence. We were soon munching on a seafood platter spiked with the hottest hot sauce on record! One taste took 2 Kaliks to quench! Evening found us again at the Two Turtles friendly outside bar.

Day 17 was a big breakfast day aboard: pancakes, sausage, fried apples, etc. Then Wally departed for the airport, leaving me alone with 3 1/2 days to fill before the next crew arrived. I pulled up the anchor and motored over to the Peace & Plenty Beach Club on Stocking Island, did some boat chores, windsurfing and beaching. Being a bundle of nervous energy, it was hard to loaf around for three days, but there were no nearby destinations.

Day 18. I decided to sail 25 miles to Long Island out the back way, southern exit, of Elizabeth Harbor. There was a nice breeze blowing from the east, so I reefed the main and stared sailing slowly, 4 - 6 knots south. The charts showed some coral heads but the intermittent sunshine was OK. The trip almost ended in disaster. Distracted by a huge private yacht anchored near the unmarked channel and momentarily "blinded" by a huge cloud, I got a little too much to the right and collided with a coral head. The depth finder read 12'-4'-8'-12' in quick succession. An attempt to turn slightly towards the center of the channel caused the rudder to strike either the same or the next head a pretty good whack. I regretted having no one on the bow for better guidance and also felt foolish for being under sail in unfamiliar and unmarked waters. Fortunately, the sun reappeared and illuminated the way so I was able to exit onto the ocean without further difficulty. After setting the staysail I began to sail towards Long Island, dead upwind in about 15 - 20 knots of wind. Being worried about the rudder, I decided to bear off and enjoy some faster sailing back to Georgetown via the northern "marked" entrance, thereby circumnavigating Stocking Island, about 10 miles. The self-tacking staysail made beating back to the Peace & Plenty Beach anchorage fun, and over all too soon. After lunch, a quick dive over the stern told me the story. Scrape marks on the keel and a fist sized chunk missing from the lower forward rudder corner. No serious damage but a humbling experience.

Days 19 and 20 were spent goofing off, beach combing, windsurfing, snorkeling and reading in a 65' completely self-contained little world. I did meets an unusual fellow who sailed a 20' 1968 Newport Sloop from Florida to South America, leaving in 1990 to "take a year off". Dismasted in 30 knots near St. Lucia, he had traveled all the way to Georgetown under jury rig and no motor and was planning to sail the remaining 300 miles back to Florida the same way. His damaged mast was lashed topside and his boom was rigged as a small mast. He sailed mostly downwind at 2-3 knots and stayed anchored during unfavorable winds. He seemed to be enjoying what most of us would consider the trip from Hell! I was a little embarrassed to tell him what boat I was on when he asked. After re-anchoring that evening in Georgetown Harbor, I chanced upon the Two Turtles Friday night Feast--all you can eat buffet ($8.95) The 10 pm dinghy ride back to the 65 was memorable in 30 knots of wind as rain pummeled down filling the dinghy with water. I was momentarily jealous of folks in a Gemini catamaran snugly anchored in calm shallow waters much closer to the dinghy dock. It was a very soggy sailor who gratefully stepped into the hot shower. Tomorrow, day 21, will bring new crew and new adventures.



Day 21 brought longtime friend and sailing companion, Mark Svenson, down from the frozen north. Mark is Paul Svenson's youngest son and has been sailing with me for 20 years. He co-captained the 65 delivery from Newport, California to Jacksonville, Florida. But that is an even longer story. With Mark's help I moved the 65 to a berth at the one marina in Georgetown, and we enjoyed being "land based." While Mark did the usual tourist routine in G-town, I attended to some routine chores and maintenance. Later that evening we walked up to the Peace and Plenty hotel and into a romantic scene. A young man was on bended knee, his proposal was accepted, and it was free drinks for everyone at the bar. What timing! By the time we staggered out Mark and I had been kissed and hugged by the bride-to-be (who later collapsed and had to be hauled off) and felt like old friends of the family.

Day 22, Sunday January 15. Two more crew arrived, friend Bill Thompson and his friend Josile. Bill had sailed with me out of West River and owns a 22' sailboat. Together the four of us found a terrific resort with big screen TV and watched the football division championship game. The cozy beach with palm trees provided a picturesque foreground for the rising full moon. It really did seem like a tropical paradise. (Typist's note: some people go out for dinner on their birthday; Jim goes out of the country!)

Casting off Day 23 it was back to Stocking Island's Peace & Plenty Beach Club Bar for a relaxing day. Mark windsurfed and Josile showed off her cooking prowess. Day 24: Heading north again. All the windy weather of the previous week, E, ESE & S, was replaced by NW 5 - 10 so it was upwind all the way back to Nassau. Stopping first at Rudder Cut Cay (again) I was starting to feel a lot like a tour guide.

Day 25 Rudder Cut to Staniel Cay. Lunch at a Bahamian institution, The Happy People Marina Restaurant, with the best conch chowder of the trip. Of course, another snorkeling trip to the Thunderball Grotto. Mark, Bill and Josile were suitably impressed. Josile had never snorkeled before so it was fun to introduce her to the sport. We really appreciated the M-65 stern steps and hot shower. We pushed on a few more miles to Rocky Dundas. We anchored behind a large rock island and were content to stay there, not going ashore at all. I always wondered what it would be like to have a boat so long when you wanted to go for a walk you just walked to the bow and back. By then it was time for a refill of rum punch.

Day 26. A calm day motor sailing on the inside in 15 - 20' of beautiful emerald green water. The inside, or banks passage is calmer but there are more shallow water hazards such as the coral reef outside Allen's Cay. That one we missed, and we anchored between Allen's & Leaf Cays in a narrow channel. Upon checking the anchor I discovered the bottom was as hard as concrete and the anchor was just laying there, so I wrapped the chain around a rocky lump and hoped for the best. Leaf Cay has a large population of iguana lizards. I was familiar with them because my daughter, Janet, had a big one for awhile. Josile was apprehensive and it didn't help when Mark threw bread crumbs at her feet. All the iguanas rushed her and she nearly fainted. I was afraid there would be no dinner in retaliation, but being a cheerful person, she quickly recovered from her fright. There were foundations of old houses and one could but wonder what had been there in years past.

We ran into a German sailor I had sailed with briefly in Nassau on the other M-65. He and his friend were heading south and joined us for some rum punch and conversation in the cockpit.



Day 27. Early a.m. departure for Nassau in good NW winds on a close reach, 30 miles in 3 1/2 hours, about 1 1/2 hours ahead of a 48' ketch which left Allen's Cay moments ahead of us. After lunch at the "Poopdeck" Restaurant the "tourists" went downtown while I returned to tidy up the boat. Surprise! My niece, Diane, came walking up. I thought she was coming Saturday. But she came a day early and hoped I would be there! While Mark stayed downtown, Bill, Josile, Diane and I went to dinner at the Paradise Island Casino and enjoyed a Las Vegas type show. Very entertaining and quite a change from the iguanas of yesterday. The Paradise Island Casino had recently undergone a multimillion dollar renovation and the landscaping was unbelievable, combining Disneyland with "Fantasy Island". An underwater clear glass tunnel through shark infested reefs led to an "Atlantis" styled bar. Courtesy lighting on steps slowly changed color as you walked by, a neat touch.

Day 28. Bill and Josile said good-by Saturday morning. Mark took Diane to the beach. More crew arrived in the form of Doug Freeman and his friend, Rosemary. In the small world department, I had once sold a Tartan 27 to Rosemary and another man several years ago before she met Doug. I told her customers with complaints would track you down anywhere! Returning to the Paradise Island Casino once more for dinner (there were four restaurants) I reminded the new crew to "eat, drink, and be merry" for tomorrow we sail!

With all new crew, the MacGregor 65 aptly named "MacGregor 65" departed Nassau, leaving Mark Svenson behind on the dock. He was flying out the next day and would pass overhead while we were making our way home. But first a stop at Chub Cay, the westernmost cay of the Berry Islands. We had trolled our fishing lines 35 miles since departing Nassau and Bingo! A large bull dolphin (the green variety, not a bottle nosed). Poor Diane, being a vegetarian, was not prepared for the gore that the 25 lb. fish liberally splashed around the cockpit. She retreated to the bow to suffer in silence while the rest of us cleaned up the boat and Doug cleaned the fish. Diane was also a snorkeling novice, but took to it quickly, spending about 3 hours in the water. It was a lovely calm anchorage and we enjoyed a spectacular sunset.

Day 30. Wind shift to the south--yes! We started out with great sailing with the wind gradually dropping and shifting northerly that soon put us back under power. We anchored in Bertrams Cove on Great Stirrup Cay about 1 p.m. Norwegian Cruise lines owns the beach and has facilities there for 800 to 1000 people with a full time staff. There being no ship that day, we had the run of the place: Hammocks, beach chairs, good snorkeling and we broke out the windsurfer and the rum punch! Around 4 p.m. there was a sudden wind shift and soon it was a struggle to get back to the boat. The unprotected harbor had a noticeable chop in it by the time we pulled out. One thing about small islands: if it's windy on one side, it's calm on the other side. We motored around to the other side and anchored for the night. About 3 a.m. Doug woke me up and said he could hear the anchor dragging. I checked and sure enough we had dragged 1/4 mile. Luckily we were dragging toward a sandy beach and not towards a reef. We set a second anchor and went back to bed.

Day 31. Windy and rough, 62 miles upwind to Grand Bahama in 25 - 30 knots on the nose. What had been a pleasant 8 hour sail going south became a crashing, banging, 14 hour struggle heading north. The dinghy was bouncing around on the stern prompting us to deflate it. Quite a job in a rolling, tilting cockpit to remove the outboard, seats, and floor and put them below. It should have been done before we left that morning. Arriving in the lee of Grand Bahama at 10 p.m. we crept into 20' of water and anchored. Some left over spaghetti sure tasted good after a tough day.

Day 32: A great sail on a close reach for 40 miles along the reef beside Grand Bahama Island with beautiful water color and calm water. There are moorings for boats next to the reef for divers and snorkelers. Originally I planned to stop in at West End again, but since it was after noon we voted to push on across the Gulf Stream 57 more miles to West Palm Beach. In 18 - 22 knots and somewhat rough but a fast and fun 6 1/2 hour run. We were tied up back at the Riviera Beach Marina in time to go out to dinner. But the adventure wasn't quite over. In order to avoid transient overnight charges of $4 per foot we moved out to the anchorage and anchored 100' in front of a large powerboat. At 3 a.m. there's this yelling as the powerboat is across our stern and bumping. I looked around. All the sailboats were pointing the same way, the one powerboat was perpendicular. Weird! The current from the tide shift seemed to affect the powerboat more (or less) than the sailboats (There was no wind.) I obligingly stepped on the anchor windlass switch and moved the boat up, intending to re-anchor but the anchor would not budge. It seems we had snagged some kind of cable. Fearing all the lights on shore would go out if I pulled real hard, I just left a little tension on the hook and turned back in. Problems are always easier to solve in the morning.

Day 33. After breakfast the plan was to drop some slack in the anchor, about 30 feet, and motor straight forward, hoping the anchor would pull out from under the cable. It worked! Free again, we checked into Cracker Boy Marina and made arrangements for 3 p.m. haul out. We had 5 hours to wash the deck, wax the stanchions, clean the interior, remove and wash the Bimini and Dodger, change the oil and filter, pack our clothes, unload the dinghy, outboard, and windsurfer, clean the galley, defrost and empty the fridge, hoist, wash and sun dry the staysail before folding and stowing it, remove the backstay, barbecue grill, life sling, mob pole, fishing rods, etc. Whew! We probably averaged 1 day of work on the boat per week, but spread out over the week. This was a tough day, but the 80% weather helped us work on our tans some more. By 5 p.m. we were heading up 95. All in all, a great trip: 750 miles in 32 days for a 23 mile per day average. That's cruisin'!

Happy cruisin' to all.

Cap't Jim

Post script: Macgregor decided to discontinue the 65 in 1995, and my boat was put on the market that spring, eliciting inquires from far and wide. (Hong-Kong, New Zealand, etc.) I hoped to sell the boat in West Palm Beach, but no buyers arrived in time so, with the able assistance of Rai Aubrey and Mark Talbott, We set sail 30 min. after Rai's arrival for a quick (4day, 6hour) trip back with generally favorable weather and no problems. The Chesapeake delivered its usual wind on the nose for the final leg up the Bay. Joyce, Steven and I spent 2 days unloading and cleaning the boat. It was a great 18 months, 11,000 miles, Cabo, Acapulco, Panama, Cancun, Key west, Annapolis, Bermuda, Nassau, of course there's still the Atlantic crossing, the Med, England, etc. I can still dream. Hawaii, Tahiti, Australia.........