From 22 December until 4 January we had our first set of
visitors for the year!!!! Our visitors were the West Coast members of our clan.
They were:
·
Daughter - Lisa,
·
Her husband - Dave,
·
14 YO Grandson - Trent,
·
18 YO Granddaughter Maddy and
·
18 YO Grandson Nik
(Collectively, they will henceforth be referred to as “the
kids”). The kids arrived at Marsh Harbor on Sunday 22 December after about 20
hours of time in airports and on airplanes. Dave is a Marine stationed in
Twentynine Palms, CA so they started the trip at the nearest airport – Las
Vegas – then they flew to Houston and Fort Lauderdale, and finally to Marsh
Harbor. That’s what happens when you start from the Left Coast!
Dave and Maddy I told you we let them rest |
Nik and Trent: I didn't know we let them rest THAT much, thugh |
Mom - Lisa. As you can see, it is true that mothers never sleep. (They take pictures of people taking pictures) |
We let them rest on the 22d, but were on the way to Treasure
Cay shortly thereafter. Treasure Cay, as you will remember, is one of the most
beautiful beaches in the world – azure waters half-surrounded by clean, cool
sand. Just as the beach was beautiful, the trip from Marsh Harbor to Treasure
was picture perfect. The water was like glass and you could look through the
ten to fifteen feet of water and see the bottom of the sea. You could see
starfish as well as finned fish swimming away. It was really great.
We arrived at Treasure and anchored. We could choose
anyplace we wanted because, for the first time ever, we were the ONLY boat in
the anchorage. A sailboat came in shortly after we arrived and anchored … well
… a little bit closer than we would have preferred, but it was okay. The next
boat was even closer. Now look, the anchorage is about 1000m x 500m; and
everybody wanted to anchor near us! Actually, in boating they have a term for
it – snuggling. Why people want to snuggle is beyond me, but they do. Oh well,
no one was so close we had to move. We just gave them dirty looks and drove on.
We went ashore and the kids seemed to enjoy the restaurant
(Coco’s), the beach, and the swimming. The swells were about six inches and
everyone could get wet and stay cool. I do love beaches so … .Plus, Maddy
turned into a serious shell collector and found some pretty ones over the next
several days. Ann made sure that we
washed them and kept them outside long enough to ensure there were no little
creatures growing inside them. We have made that mistake before.
We couldn’t stay at Treasure very long and had to leave the
next day. Anybody? Does anybody know why we had to leave? You might be thinking
we had to be somewhere else – Nope. Maybe someone got sick – Nope. Maybe we ran
out of food, drink or soda – Nope. Nope. And Nope. It was the generator … The friggin’ generator went on the fritz …
AGAIN! I wanted to get back to Marsh Harbor so our friend, diesel guru
and generator savior, Martin, from August
Sun could take another look at the *$%^&*thing.
In the event, it took two more “looks” by Martin before we finally
got it fixed. It turned out to be the same solenoid that failed last summer and
that we had Rudi (another generator guru) replace. We did, however, discover a
work-around that makes the system work without hunting for a new solenoid in
the Bahamas; if we jump two of its external terminals it starts right up. To
make sure we weren’t damaging the system, we e-mailed Rudi, told him what we
were going to do and asked him if he thought it was okay. He told us, “yep,”
just to make sure we used 10-12 gauge wire for the bridge. We are going to
order a new one (actually, we’ll probably order two), but not until we get
someplace where we trust the delivery system (which we don’t here in Marsh
Harbor).
Christmas
Festivities.
Santa at the anchorage at Treasure Cay ... He goes EVERYWHERE! |
Anyway, our daughter, with moral support from her father,
insisted that we have pizza for dinner. Ann made individual pizzas so each
person could craft his or her own. They were scrumptious! The next day we
headed back to Marsh Harbor so we could be at the marina for Christmas dinner
where the owners hosted a Christmas dinner. They furnished ham and turkey while
the boaters provided side dishes. I convinced Ann to make her patented macaroni
and cheese. (Actually, I had a great deal of help in this from Maddy who is
also a mac and cheese fan.)
Great Guana
After Christmas we headed to Great Guana. There, we visited
the “world famous” Nipper’s Bar and Grill as well as some lesser known
establishments. Nipper’s overlooks a nice, clean beach on the Atlantic side of
the island. The kids thoroughly enjoyed the beach on the Atlantic side which
had some relatively serious waves that could knock you down and were (almost) big
enough for body-surfing.
The soon-to-be, kinda-semi-official SCUBA divers. The only problem was that Dave has more muscle than fat -- which means he sinks to the bottom. |
Hopetown
After Treasure Cay and the dive, we went to Marsh Harbor for
a day or so to catch our collective breaths and then headed out to Hope Town.
Hope Town was kind of fun for everyone. It was more decorated than Marsh Harbor
with the Lighthouse – as well as many of the boats – still adorned with
Christmas lights. We ate twice at Captain Jacks and had a drink or two at the
marina bar. (The kids over 18 and under 30 were allowed to drink, but preferred to take a sip or two from mom or
dad’s cocktail and let it go at that – a very mature approach. I just hope they
can keep the same attitude at college next year.) Everyone went up to the
lighthouse, into Hopetown and over to the Atlantic beach on the other side
Elbow Cay.
After Hope Town it was back to Marsh to prepare for
departure. Everyone got out of Marsh Harbor easily enough, but if you will
recall, there was a cold snap in the States and all the airlines were
cancelling flights. The kids had their flight cancelled, too, but they were
lucky in that they were only delayed a day or two. Anyway, everyone is now back
in Twentynine Palms, wishing, I suspect, they were still in the Bahamas!
I must say that Traveling Soul did rather well with an extra
five people on board, even with generator problems. I must thank the kids for
being so accommodating when it came to taking showers; whenever possible they
went to the marina bath house and took their showers. I know that does not
sound very important but when our boat only carries two hundred gallons of
water and seven people want to take showers, the fresh water tank can empty
very quickly. We also had to share Wi-Fi time and we worked that out rather
well also.
The Christmas holiday was different and wonderful. The pizza
on paper plates continues and our tradition of having family to share the
holiday is also safe. We all enjoyed the
small table top Christmas tree decorated with my hand-made sea shell ornaments.
We also had a Skype session with Tim, Carrie, Caylin and Gavin which we all
enjoyed. A few phone calls to and from Dave and Joan, Michael`s mom, and my mom
and sister made the day complete.
We have become very good friends with Martin and Kathy on Autumn Sun. Martin has been so very
helpful with solving generator problem and Kathy and I just became instant
friends. She and I can just sit and girl-talk for hours. Martin is about ready
to retire and Kathy is still working via computer and a few trips every once in
a while. They plan on staying in Marsh Harbor for a year and see what happens
next. It turns out they are good friends with Lee-Ann and Jerry from Bella. Jerry was the Ortho surgeon that
we meet last year in the Exumas and advised Michael on the Achilles tendon
surgery he had done at Walter Reed. We plan on seeing them later this session
in the Exumas.
We did not send out a Christmas newsletter this year but we
want you to know that you are in our thoughts. We wish you a very Happy 2014,
full of health, happiness and new adventures. Blessings to each and every one
of you…
Traveling Soul….OUT
Traveling Soul, I found you when looking for info on our Jefferson Marquessa and I have been enjoying your blog. You do a very good job. We plan to take ours from the Florida Pan Handle to the Bahamas later this year. Can you tell us a little about how she does at sea. IE what you feel comfortable in and what you will not go out in. Crossing the Gulf Stream can generate some big seas so I was looking for a go/nogo point. Thanks much, Please email us at roghenn@cox.net
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