Thursday, December 31, 2009

The Cruiser's Running Guide: Normans Cay, Bahamas

Location: Normans Cay, Bahamas
Distance: 4.6 nm
Customizable?: Yes
Overall Score: 5/10
Hilliness: 1/10
Variety: 2/10
Scenery: 4/10
Safety: 10/10
Stray Dog Potential: 0/10
Type: broken asphalt/packed sand
Time of Day: Sunset


NOTES: a nice out and back run that will take you on an old rural road through a mostly uninhabited island. Not a lot of opportunities for views, but if you felt a little hazzeled by the urban trip through Nassau, this is for you. A good trail surface to put some healthy miles in (potentially up to 8 nm on an out and back run). Enjoy!


START: From the southern anchorage of Normans Cay, dinghy to shore at the sandy beach next to the pier. Take the road up and to the right.

.35 - runway and MacDuff's off to the left, continue straight.

.56 - end of runway behind you. Continue straight, watch for planes

1.21 - top of first 'hill.'

1.55 - road down to the right takes you to a view of Normans Pond

2.25 - top of hill (my turn around point)

4.18 - if you hang to the right onto the runway, you'll find MacDuff's on the right. Stop in and make a reservation for lunch or dinner. Then cross the runway and take a right back onto the road.

4.60 - END


All distances are in nautical miles.
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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The Cruiser's Running Guide: Nassau

I can't run everyday, or even on some sort of a schedule. However, when I get the chance to 'get a run in,' I jump at the opportunity. Here you will find my first installment of my Cruiser's Running Guide to the World. All distances are in nautical miles.


Location: Nassau, Bahamas
Distance: 4.06 nm
Customizable?: Yes
Overall Score: 7/10
Hilliness: 2/10
Variety: 7/10
Scenery: 6/10
Safety: 8/10
Stray Dog Potential: 7/10 (but non-aggressive)
Type: Urban (pavement)
Time of Day: Sunrise


NOTES: a very nice run that will take you through retail, government, and residential districts. Plenty to see along the way, so be prepared for frequent 'stretch breaks.' Keep in mind, Bahamians drive on the left side of the road, so remember to run on the right into onto oncoming traffic. This route has sidewalks along all the busy streets. Cars and people were generally very accommodating. Enjoy!

START: Leave Nassau Yacht Haven, turn R onto Bay Street

.5 - BASRA on right

1.0 - Enter retail district of Bay St

1.5 - Museum of Slavery and Straw Market on right.
Take a L at the T, and an immediate R onto Marlborough St

1.6 - McDonald's and US Embassy on left

1.64 - Marlborough St veers right, continue straight down residential alley past International House on left and towards KURA KURA.

1.75 - After third speed bump, take a left before the blue two story building labeled 51 Capital House.

1.85 - Pass a large, old Catholic cemetery on your right. The St. Francis Xavier Cathedral will be on your left.

1.92 - L at the stop sign at the top of the hill.

1.98 - on the right, you will see some narrow warehouses behind a fence. This is the home of the Junkanoo gang "One Family." Stop by and say hello.

2.0 - Cross West St. and continue down the residential alley straight ahead. To the right on West St. Is the Junkanoo museum. To the left is the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas.

2.07 - At T, turn L.

2.13 - At T, turn R onto West Hill St.

2.21 - Cross Blue Hill St, turn L, and take an immediate R onto Duke St. The Government House is on your right.

2.31 - R onto Peck Slope, next to intersection with Market St.

2.37 - L onto East Hill near Providence House

2.56 - R on East St.

2.59 - First L onto Sands Rd.

2.71 - T at Elizabeth Ave. If you want to throw a stair workout in, the Queen's staircase is to the right. 65 stairs take you up to Fort Fincastle and a beautiful view of the city.
Otherwise, turn L

2.92 - R on Bay St.

4.06 - END at Nassau Yacht Haven

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Sunday, December 27, 2009

Helping Hands

You may have seen some people onboard the WTP other than Alan, Trevor, and myself. Although there are three permanent crewmembers onboard, we prefer to travel with four. The fourth, or Guest Crewmember helps spread the burden of labor while underway. Having the additional person means an additional watch cycle (more time off), an extra hand for boat work, and some added conversational variety. Despite the lavish lifestyle, the Guest Crewmember does not get their own berth, but rather sleeps on the settee.

You may have already gotten to know Liz back in November. Liz is a good friend from Newport News and was instrumental in helping us get off the ground and make our way south. Unfortunately, Liz had to leave us in Florida.

To help us with our next leg, we were lucky to have my good friend Deb onboard. She joined us right before leaving Coconut Grove and is with us until Nassau.

Thanks again to our Guest Crewmembers! Although they might not be as visible through the EYE of the World educational program, they play an important role onboard!
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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Sunrise In The Bahamas!

We entered the territorial waters of the Bahamas more than 50 hours ago, but it still took us awhile to get to where we were going.

Quick rehash of events since we left Cape Florida:

We had been watching weather and wave reports for several days, and sought advice from other cruisers, both local (there were about 15 other boats in No Name Harbor), and afar (thanks Richard!). Everyone had a different opinion on what defines a 'weather window.' One German couple that had already circumnavigated once were going to wait until after Christmas and the prevailing east winds settled back in. A French Canadian couple was going to wait until Thursday night and try to ride the southerly and westerly winds that precede storm fronts down here.

We were anxious to go. Everyone's advice was based on being 'uncomfortable' - itself a very qualitative measure. Wave height predictions were 4-6 feet with a north wind. Nothing we hadn't seen before, so we were wondering, 'is this crossing overhyped?'

Richard, our friend sitting in the warm southern Carribean, we figured would give us honest advice. After all, he wasn't trying to rationalize a crossing decision like some of the other cruisers in the harbor.

"When there's a northerly element to the wind, the crossing can be pretty rough; that part isn't overhyped. Will it be uncomfortable? Probably not with only 10 knots, but even 15 knots will start building very short period waves that will kill your speed, make you uncomfortable, and probably result in taking you further north than you'd like. Best bet is to get out there and try it; you can always come back."

With winds forecasted at 10-15 kts from the North, and our next possible window not until Thursday night, we decided to try it, and if anything, we could always come back.

We left at 2 AM and found the conditions and predictions to be much what we expected. Wave heights were probably a little less than 4-6 feet, the wind was 10-15, and the resulting stream-wind interaction did produce choppy conditions that tossed us around a little. The only downer was that the wind clocked around to the northeast, making the passage an upwind beat instead of a more pleasing beam reach.

By noon, we caught sight of land, the water turned a pastel blue, and our depth sounder quickly went from being clocked out, to reading 50 feet.

Crossing through the cut at Gun Cay, we entered the Great Bahama Bank. We still had another 26 hours of sailing to go (courtesy of our destination being directly upwind), but the water here was consistently between 8-15 feet deep the entire time.

Now we're outside Great Harbor Cay eating breakfast after a very restful night's sleep. Today is Christmas Eve (we'll be celebrating in true Polish fashion with Wigilia) and we're all excited and hopeful that Santa will find us here, many miles from home.

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Leaving Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida, and the USA

The hardest part about sailing is saying goodbye. Minutes after arriving in port, we meet wonderful friends, but within a few days or weeks, we find ourselves saying farewell.


Here in Coconut Grove, we have so many people to thank. There's no way to list everyone, but I can try:


At the club: Alyn, Nick, Lee, Peggy, Pat, Duane, Bill Beavers, Dragan, Kocky, Pepper, John, Kevin, Bruce, Terry, Rick, Commanding Officer Bondi, Jose, Mike, Geneva, Tom, Don, Ronnie, Daniella, and everyone else who has stopped by, said hi, and offered advice and encouragement (I know I've forgotten at least 25 people)!


The Piquette Family and Friends: Kirstie, Holly, Louise, William, Chris and everyone else who flew down to visit!


Ada Merritt: Ms. Forand, Ms. Padiernie, Mrs. Fletcher, Patrick, and all the other great students and teachers!

Thank you for everything! Goodbye and keep in touch!

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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Dead Horse Ritual

The other night we performed a famous and historical act known as the 'Dead Horse Ritual.' This goes back to times long past and is a celebration of a sailor's first month at sea.

Traditionally, a sailor would embark on a ship to earn money, and after a month, would receive their first paycheck. To celebrate the fact that the sailor was no longer in debt (their horse was dead), they would take a piece of old clothing and fashion it into a horse. They would then drag this stuffed horse across the decks and sing a sea chanty, and eventually burn the horse. We performed the same ritual to celebrate our first month at sea.

The chanty goes like this:


I say, old man, your horse is dead.
An' we say so, an' we hope so!
I say, old man, your horse is dead.
Oh! Poor old Man!

One month a rotten life we've led.
An' we say so, an' we hope so!
While you lay on y'er feather bed.
Oh! Poor old Man!

But now th' month is up, ol' turk.
An' we say so, an' we hope so!
Get up, ye swine, an' look for work.
Oh! Poor old Man!

Get up, ye swine, an' look for graft.
An' we say so, an' we hope so!
While we lays on an' yanks ye aft.
Oh! Poor old Man!

An' yanks ye aft t' th' cabin door.
An' we say so, an' we hope so!
An' hopes we'll ne-ver see ye more.
Oh! Poor old Man!
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Saturday, December 5, 2009

November 2009 In Photos

November flew by very quickly. We're always snapping photos of everything so I thought I'd pull together some of my favorites.

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Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Why Do It?



George Mallory (1886-1924) was a famous mountaineer. In the days before Sir Edmund Hillary, back when many of our planet's highest peaks remained unconquered, Mallory made a name for himself as a climber throughout Europe and Asia. The world had high hopes for him to be the first to climb Mt. Everest, the earth's highest mountain. This was in the early 1920s (the mountain was not successfully summited until 1953); before much of the safety and support equipment common today existed.

Someone once asked Mallory why he wanted to climb Everest. He replied with a three word response: "Because it's there."

This is probably one of the most famous, yet unsatisfactory responses to any question in history.


Since leaving Virginia, we've been getting constant e-mails from different teachers and students (here's a special shout out to Lindsay Middle, Kiln Creek, and Riverside! - keep them coming!). Besides all the great guesses for Name That Creature, we've also gotten a number of important questions, such as:


Do you guys go fishing on the boat and if so, what have you caught or when do you plan on fishing?

Have you seen any sharks yet?

Did you get a hotel while you're waiting out the storm???

What type of fajita was that?



However, the toughest question we've received is similar to the question posed to Mallory: "Why are you sailing around the world?"

I am in no way attempting to compare us to George Mallory, nor am I proposing similarities between sailing around the world and being the first to climb the highest mountain in the world. Mallory was a bold ground-breaker fully deserving of his fame, and climbing Mt. Everest is a far tougher feat than pointing a sailboat downwind in the tropical sun.

However, the question has a similar motivation: there are luxuries onshore not afforded to a cruising sailboat such as air conditioning, refrigeration, and beds long enough to support my 6'3" frame. Life onshore also has certain degrees of certainty, schedule, and distraction that do not exist on a 40' sailboat. With a qualitative list of pros and cons, it seems that life on shore wins hands down.

In my field of economics, it is common to observe the actions of individuals and attempt to reconcile the underlying motivations. We often use the abstract and relative term 'utility' to quantify those motivations. In its simplest form, an individual will choose one alternative over all others because it gives the decision maker the highest level of relative utility.

Each of us on the crew has chosen to sail around the world because it gives us the highest level of relative utility compared to all other alternatives. We each made a mental list of pros and cons (as does every person with every decision made), and sailing around the world won out. To each of us, there's something about this experience that outweighs air conditioning, refrigeration, and certainty. And thus, here we are.

Fundamentally, this is something that each of us wanted to do. Sailing around the world may not be everybody's dream, but it was ours. So we sat down, figured out what it would take to sail around the world, decided it was within reach, and then put in the time and effort to make it happen. Pairing up with EYE of the World made the experience even more appealing to us. This all of a sudden went from a dream to a mission that we all believed in.

Now we're in the midst of a circumnavigation. It's a lot of work, but this is not the highest mountain in the world, nor are we the first to do it.

However, it is unconventional and in its core, life on the boat is not as glamorous as it might seem. Our boat is not a toy, and sailing is not a game. As exquisite as our vessel may be, she requires constant care and attention. The sea is full of wind, rain, waves, reefs, and rocks ... and enough fog and night to hide it all.

And that brings us back to Mr. Draft's students' question: "Why are you sailing around the world?" In the end, my response is unfortunately as unsatisfactory as George Mallory's:

Because we can.
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Thursday, November 26, 2009

Sunrise In Miami

After getting in last night, we stopped on shore for some delicious pizza and to celebrate/mourn Liz's impending departure.
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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Fellow Adventurers

Sailing around the world sounds like a picnic compared to what some new friends of ours are doing. Yesterday we got the chance to meet up with Dan and Bethany Cox of Raleigh, North Carolina. Through some connections we have through the paddling community (www.watertribe.com), we were visited by Dan and Bethany as they paddled south through the ICW. They have been Kayaking from the US/Canada border in Maine since December of 2008. They have been traveling by human power and carrying everything they need (food, clothes, shelter) in their kayaks.

They are only about 2 weeks away from completing their incredible adventure. Check out their website at http://dbkayak.com/.

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

Daytona Beach Sunrise

Westerly winds filled in around midnight and have held strong, giving us a solid 5-6 knots of progress. We're taking a wide route now to clear the security zone around Cape Canaveral (there was a shuttle launch a few days ago and there is an Atlas V launch on Monday). We should clear the Cape by sundown tonight.
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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Florida Sunrise

After an exhilarating evening sail (running at about 7.5 knots), and an arduously slow and rolly night, we've now made it to Florida! The breeze is starting to fill in, and full sails make the boat less susceptible to the ocean swell. Ready for another beautiful day.
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Sunrise Off The Georgia Coast

Sailing through the night is always spectacular. Clear skies with no moon on a broad reach is icing on the cake. We had all of that last night ... and more. The dark sky gave us a clear view of the milky way and all the stars of orion.

Additionally, as we slid through the water, our wake disturbed millions of zooplankton. Individually, each would give off a short dim burst of light. Collectively, the gave the waters behind us a blue iridescent glow.

Most spectacular, however, were the dolphins. Seeing a pod join us and play in our wake is old news. Last night, however, as we sailed along silently, we began to hear the chirps of dolphin conversation below. As we stepped on deck, we saw that swimming dolphins disturb zooplankton much the way the WTP does. We saw about a dozen dolphins darting around the boat and playing in the bow wave, only a few feet away from us.

More accurately, we didn't see the dolphins; we saw ghostly glowing outlines and cloudy trails of faded blue light darting all around us. As the animals breached the surface to breath, the glow would disappear; replaced instead by their dark bodies. But as they dove, the waters would alight again.

We sat on the bow for almost an hour, mesmerized by the light show as Beauregard (our self-steering windvane) kept us on course. Trevor almost had to be tied to the mast, as these glowing sirens seemed to be calling him to join in the fun.
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Sunday, November 15, 2009

A City In Photo Captions

Through most of our visit to Charleston, I realize we had provided all of our followers with plenty of photos, but no stories, leaving each to piece the parts together on their own. I thus decided to put together a string of photo captions to briefly summarize our site visit, separate from our full set of program updates. Starting with "IMG00161-20091113-1537.jpg" :

Charleston Coast Guard Station (next to which we anchored),

Ashley River Bridge

First laundry in a week (since New Bern)

Apparently someone had started a fire in the past

A tribute to Charleston's trading history (and source of much of its wealth)

The Palmetto State

Charleston Market at Night

Fountain!

Residential Alley

Fountain in Waterfront Park

Bluegrass Band playing in a venue

The nearby marina in the morning

Bucksport Sausage! YUM!

Alan updating the Ship's Log

Alan playing with his food

Our boat at anchor, and our method of transportation to shore

A little to the right Alan!

Another yawl under sail

Downtown Charleston

Non-indigenous Multicolor Penguins

Historic Buildings

Comparing French Skillets

Novice Busker!

Riviera Theatre

Charleston Market

Inside the Market

Charleston Hat Store!

The Charleston Market 100 years ago

The Charleston Market today

Charleston Hat Man! (original sign from 100 years ago)

Many Tourist Attractions

Not a horse … not a donkey

Traffic Jam

More Bars in More Places

Old Guard House

German Cruiseship

Deutschland

Peering at the waterfront

Two Scoops!

Cooper River Bridge

Sunset over Charleston

Looking down the riverfront

Alan tightening the head nuts on the engine (standard maintenance)

Liz varnishing the toerail

Trevor and his sweet shades

A reworked sewage system with a new mercerator pump

The row

Old Charleston Homes

More traffic

Charleston is known for its churches

A standard city block

Steeple

Walking through downtown

The EYE Crew entertaining the crowd

Local Art

Apparently you need a license to play music downtown (although don't worry, no tickets or trips to jail, just a notice on how to get a musician's license)

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Head Of The Alligator River

We've run through the night on the ICW. I was on watch from 4 to 8 PM yesterday, and was on call for Liz from 8 till 11.

We run a watch schedule that divides the day into seven periods (4 hour shifts from 8 AM until 8 PM and 3 hour shifts from 8 PM until 8 AM the next morning). There are 4 different roles for crew members: watch, call, off, and cook.

The person on 'watch' is responsible for safe navigation of the vessel.

When we finish watch, we go on 'call'. That involves making yourself available to the watch to change sails, check charts, or spot navigation markers. If the watch does not need any assistance, this time also doubles as free/sleep time.

After being on call, we go 'off.'. This is pure free time. A chance to catch up on sleep, emails, reading, etc.

The final role is the cook. During meal times (defined as anytime the crew is hungry), the cook prepares a meal. This may be something elaborate (most likely combining Chris and Karen's spice kit with Big Daddy's Teriyaki sauce) or simple (PB&J on tortilla). During night, this counts as sleep time.

The entire cycle repeats itself every 4 days; thus giving everyone a chance to serve every role at every time of the day.

I picked up watch this morning from Trevor at 5, giving me a solid 6 hours of sleep. It's not the recommended 8, but I'll be off today at 12 PM when I can grab a nap if needed.
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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Sunrise On The C&A

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Sunrise At Mile Zero

It's early in the morning as we sit anchored in between Portsmouth and Norfolk, Virginia. Today we will begin our trek south into the ICW with the goal of making it to North Landing by the afternoon.
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Monday, October 26, 2009

Leaving Gloucester


Right now we are making our final preparations to leave Gloucester, Virginia. There has been a whirlwind of activity, but things are finally coming together.

This is a very common conversation I have been having:

Person: "So are you done with the boat?"
Me: "Well, there still a lot to do, but I feel like we're getting the major things out of the way."
Person: "Is your to-do list getting smaller?"
Me: "No, technically it's getting bigger."
Person: "What else do you have left to do?"
Me: "We haven't thought of it yet, but we'll have to do it."

Our major goal is to get underway. This adventure will be a combination of working on a boat, sailing a boat, and spending time away from the boat wondering if its still floating.

I can't wait.
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