Hi Bob and Hollie: Enjoyed reading the blogs and looking at the photos. I am jealous. Can't wait to retire so I can enjoy some sunsets in the south! Looks like fun! Enjoy yourselves and stay safe. Keep us posted on your journeys. Andrea
DuBignon Family Sold the Island to the Jekyll Island Club
Crane Cottage
Most Expensive Cottage
Fishing Off Our Port Side
Shallow Water!!
Tailgate Fishin"
Drinkin' Beer, Fishin', and Hangin' Out
New Smyrna Beach Dock Walk
Nothin' Bitin'
The Dredger - Just Before We Went Aground
Fouth Watch and Great Catsby Ahead of Us
Another Dolphin Companion
Daytona Beach Bridge
Dolphin Ceramics on Pilings
Dolphin Companion
Finally - A Photo Op!
Mansions and Megayachts
The Venice of America
Water Taxis
Fort Lauderdale
Fort Lauderdale Mansions
For Mile After Mile on the ICW
Bob and John
Boca Raton
Dolphins Under Our Boat
Sunrise March 29th
Leaving Hawk Channel
Hawk Channel - "SuitsUs"
Friends From Boca Chica
Marathon Marina Boot Key Harbor
260 Mooring Balls!!!
Drying the Sail
... And the Cabin
Keys Fisheries Restaurant
The Resident Egret
Enjoying the Day
Crab and Lobster Pots
Fisheries Wharf
A Storm We Found Before NOAA
One of the Many Cells We Encounter
Florida Lobster
They May Be Related, But They Don't Look Like Maine Lobsters!!
Florida "Pink Shrimp"
Fresh Off The Boat!
Unloading the Shrimp
Fishbusterz Wharf
Fishbusterz's Wharf
Stock Island
Dolphin at Boca Chica Marina
One of Three
Boca Chica Sunset
Boca Chica Sunset
Conch Blowers From "A" Dock
Jim, John, and Dave
Boat From Great Island Boat Yard
Walkabout - 28' Cape Dory 1980
Shrimp Boat at Sunset
From Hogfish Bar & Grill
Hogfish Bar and Grill
The Hogfish!
Returning to Port on WindStar
Jim and Bob
Light Winds on WindStar
Carl and Patty's Catalina 35
Birthday Party Horns
Carl & Bob
Party Animals
Carl and Jim
Gailard - A Friend From the Past
From the Rickover Days
A Birthday Toast
Gailord and John
Key Lime "Birthday Cake"
Bob's Birthday
Sheila, Jim, and Bob
Beginning of US Route 1
The Tourist Thing - Key West
Boca Chica Conch Blowers
Winner of the Womens Division
Angie Cordts
Conch Blowing Contest
The Youngest Winner
Mangrove Mama's
Carl, Patty, Sheila, Jim, Bob and I
Mangrove Mama's
Island Style Cuisine
Sunday Night Cruisers Dinner
Luke and Jan
Key West Yacht Club
Carl and Patty
Key West Yacht Club
John and Nelly
Key West Yacht Club
Key West Yacht Club
The Butterfly Museum
Liam Exploring The Cannons
Fort Zachary Taylor Park
Key Lime Pie Factory
Amie and Bob
No Name Pub
Fun Place With Great Pizza
Portuguese Man-O-War
Fort Zachary Taylor Beach
Mallory Square
Liam's Balancing Act
The Aquarium
Amie, the Conch, and Sean
Mallory Square
Sean, "The Captain," and Gram
Amie and The World's Tallest Man
Ripley's Believe It or Not
Eric and Windi
On DeLaMer
The Social Pelican
Taken Beside Our Boat
The Resident Egret
Perched in the Mangroves
The New Air Chair
Picture Taken By The New Camera!
Barracuda Bob
Swimming Under Our Dock
Sunset Celebration Key West
After the Storm
DeLaMer
Finally Our Sails Are Up!!!
Sunrise at Rodriquez Key
Two More Days To Key West
Hyatt Regency Pier 66 Resort
Taken From Marina
Pier 66 Marina
DeLaMer Can Hardly Be Seen
Pool At Hyatt Regency
One of Seven
Palmer Johnson Megayacht
At Bahia Marina
Millionaire Row
Fort Lauderdale
Millionaire Row
Palm Coast
Looks Different Offshore
St Lucie Power Plant
Captain Bob Remembers
First Mate on Watch
Offshore on Palm Coast
Sailfish Resort Marina
Harry and Bob
Offshore
Jacksonville to Fort Pierce
Dolphin at Sunset
Blount Island Anchorage
Apparition - Key West
Bill and Bob on Swan 42
Jupiter Lighthouse
Jupiter, Florida
Harry and Hollie
Jupiter Inlet
Apparition - Palm Beach
Atocha Cargo
Items From the Atocha
Mile Zero of US Rt 1
Whitehead Street
Margaritas and Lemonade
Kelly's Bar
Key West Cock
Roam Wild in the Streets
Sunset Celebration Performer
Winds Were 20-25 Knots
Approaching Dry Tortugas
Fort Jefferson
Fort Jefferson Moat
Inside the Fort
Dry Tortugas
Pristine, Beautiful, and Isolated
Cuban Immigrants
Chug from Cuba
Sunset At Key West
Mallory Square Sunset Celebration
Best Act at Mallory Square
Amazing Gymnasts!
Street Performers
The Kodak Moment
Cruise Ship in Key West Channel
Taken From Navy Beach
Rafted Up At The Bight
Regatta Sailboats
Swan Racing Boats
Returning to the Dock - Stern First
Astronaut Space Suit
International Space Station Model
The Space Shuttle
Extravehicular Space Suit
Used to Assemble Space Station
T-38 Astronaut Training Plane
Fuel Tank & Solid Booster Rockets
Vehicle Assembly Building
For Space Shuttles
Apollo Mission Control Room
As It Was During Moon Launches
Apollo Command Module
Apollo 14
Mission Edgar Mitchell Flew
Lunar Rover Training Vehicle
Apollo Missions
Saturn V Rocket Thrusters
Apollo Missions
The Captains
Ed and Bob
St. Augustine
Spanish Influence
Oldest Wooden Schoolhouse in America
Built by The Spanish
Fort Castillo de San Marcos
Built of Coquina from 1672 - 1695
Last Night in Jacksonville
On Board Mike and Diane's Boat
Birthplace of the Blue Angels
1946 Jacksonville Naval Air Station
Jacksonville Cruising Friends
Diane and Mike
Another Couple From Our Group
Pete and Stephanie - Sailed From Greece
Another Friend Who Circumnavigated Solo
Ed Circumnavigated in a 29' Boat
More Cruising Friends
Captain Pete (without Annette)
Gavin's Snowman
December in Maine
Amelia Island Sunset
Amelia Island Yacht Basin
Fernandina Downtown
Peg Leg Pete
Famous Pirate From Amelia Island
Fernandina Downtown
Trident Nuclear Submarine
Kings Bay Submarine Base
Navy Patrol Boat
For Trident Submarine
Fresh Baked Bread
Back in My Bread Phase!
Shrimp Boat
Pelicans in Pursuit
Kilkenny Plantation House
Circa 1836
Kilkenny Marina
A Crooked Dock
Kilkenny Marina
Bob and Bob
Low Tide In The Swamp
9 Feet 6 Inch Tide Today
High Tide Georgia Swamp
Nothing For Miles
Pelican
Lucky Shot - Tomorrow A Dolphin!
Bill and Cheryl Hooper
"Blue Frontier" On Florida Delivery
Visit from Capt. Bill Hooper
40' Able "Fox" - Built in Maine
Fog Beginning to Clear
Fourth Commecial Vessel
Entrance to Savannah River
Zero Visibility
Dolphin In Bull Creek
At Least I Caught the Fin This Time!
Thanksgiving Group
Bob & I, Mike, Angie, Lynn, & Bob
Port Royal Marina
Angie, Hollie, Lynn
Thanksgiving Dinner
One of the Cooks
Charleston Aquarium
Jellyfish
French Quarter
On the Waterfront
St. Michael's Episcopal Chruch
A Charleston Historical Landmark
Sweet Grass Baskets
I Bought A Basket From Her
Slave Market, Charleston
Sweet Grass Baskets
The Rice Museum
Originally an Open Air Market
A Back Porch
Front of House Faces Harbor
Kaminski House
One of Many Historical Houses
Prince George Episcopal Church
Built from Ballast Brick
Colonists Avoiding Taxation
Built House With Side Facing Street
A Heron Named "Gus"
Resides at Independent Seafood
Harborwalk Georgetown
Georgetown Harbor
Gondolas and Golf
On Pine Island Cut of ICW
Gondolas Carrying Clubs Not Skiis
Carrying Two Golf Bags
Socastee Swing Bridge
South of Myrtle Beach
Waccamaw River
Cypress Trees
The Rock Pile Shore
Narrow Channel
The Rock Pile
A Narrow Channel
Indian Trail Tree
Bent As Marker to Fishing Grounds
DeLaMer Aground
Mott's Channel Wrightsville Beach
Figure Eight Bridge
A Long Line of Boats
Mile Hammock
A Popular Anchorage
Palmico Sound
Shrimp Boat
Dowry Creek Marina
DeLaMer - Sunrise
Wilkerson Bridge
A View From the Deck
Alligator Pungo Canal
Inexpensive Advertising
Alligator River Bridge
Entering Alligator River Marina
Sunrise on the North River
Coinjock to Albemarle Sound
Tate's Marina
Coinjock, NC
Our First Lock
Leaving the Lock
Motored Past Nauticus Museum
USS Wisconsin Retired There
Virginia Air and Space Museum
Apollo Re-Entry Capsule
Bob's New Haircut
Naval Style
Norfolk Shipping Channel
Up Close and Personal
Nobeltec Fails
Bob Uploads Routes Manually
Sunrise at Mill Creek
Dream Time in Foreground
Solomons Island Sunset
Sailboats Docked Bow Out
St. Thomas Lighthouse
South of Annapolis
Cruising Anecdotes
LAUNDROMATS
As I thought about the charm and adventure of live aboard cruising, laundry didn’t appear on my radar screen. At home I never considered my washer and dryer a luxury. Wearing something once constituted “dirty clothes.” Living aboard, we have resorted to “the sniff test” to determine dirty. Amazing how long a shirt can be worn before failing my olfactory screening!
My most interesting Laundromat experience occurred as we were getting ready to leave Maine. I had been doing our laundry at Steve and Stephanie’s home all summer and hadn’t had to contend with commercial Laundromats. The day before we cast off, they were under the weather with a 24 hour bug. So, I headed to Cook’s Corners with two large mesh bags filled with towels, sheets, and dirty clothes.
The last time I remember being in a Laundromat was at least two decades ago. Laundromats have gone high tech! Reading the numerous signs on the walls, I must have looked perplexed. The attendant, well into her 70’s, came to my assistance asking, “Do you want a single, double, or triple load machine?” Explaining the difference she said, “The triple load costs $4.50 a load, the double $3.50, and the single $2.50.” Looking at my large mesh bags she took things into her own hands, determined I needed two double loads, and led me to a row marked “Double Loads.” Next she questioned, “Are you going to sort your laundry into colored and whites?” I nodded yes, and thought “Doesn’t everybody?”
She was in control. Pulling out a tray at the top of the double machine, she read the directions to me, pointed out the slots for the coins, and led me to the coin machine. Feeling her mission accomplished, she left me to load the clothes by myself and returned to watching the movie channel on TV.
Shortly after my double loads started, a local couple came in. They had the triple load routine down to a tee and obviously, from their conversation, knew the attendant. It was difficult not to listen, especially since I am particularly skilled at and entertained by eaves dropping.
Just as I was settling in for some local gossip, a scruffy looking old man came with a bottle wrapped in a paper bag. He was halfway through the Laundromat, headed for the restroom, before the attendant spotted him. She was after him in a flash, shooing him back out the front door with both arms flying. “Get out of here you! Get out of here! You’re not going to pee on all over my bathroom! I’m not cleaning up after you! Get out of here!” Knowing he wasn’t going to win this battle, he retreated with the retort, “You don’t have to make such a scene!” If there has been a contest for repetition, this attendant would have won hands down. The next ten minutes were devoted to peeing, drunks, cleaning bathrooms, and indignant comments concerning the fact it wasn't her responsibility to clean up after him.
By now my two double loads were ready for the dryers. I thought I could handle that by myself. Silly me. I had the dryers set for medium heat. My self appointed mentor informed me, “You’re towels will never get dry on medium. Set it to high.” I obliged, and deciding I had had enough local color for one day, retreated to the front of the Laundromat to read my book. The next thing I know she’s in front of me saying, “Do you smell your laundry? Your clothes smelled like they were burning! I opened the dryer for you – you should have had it on medium.” I refrain from saying the obvious.
As I’m folding my overheated very dry clothes, I overhear her say to the local couple, “That dryer overheats. I’ve reported that machine to my boss for weeks. One of these days they’re going to have a fire.”
The moral of this story – don’t look bewildered when entering unfamiliar territory.
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