People, let me tell you 'bout my best friend.....
Monday, May 9, 2011
Back in USSA
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Crossing Back Over
SUNDAY EAST SOUTHEAST WINDS 7 TO 10 KNOTS. SEAS 2 TO 3 FEET. DOMINANT PERIOD 10 SECONDS. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. SUNDAY NIGHT SOUTHEAST WINDS 7 TO 10 KNOTS BECOMING SOUTH. SEAS 2 TO 3 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. MONDAY SOUTH SOUTHWEST WINDS 7 TO 10 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. MONDAY NIGHT SOUTHEAST WINDS 6 TO 9 KNOTS BECOMING EAST 5 TO 8 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. TUESDAY NORTHEAST WINDS 6 TO 9 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. TUESDAY NIGHT EAST WINDS 8 TO 11 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. WEDNESDAY SOUTHEAST WINDS 5 TO 8 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
End of the Abacos tour....
With a beautiful sunrise on a calm morning in Little Harbor, we now contemplate our return to the "Big Shopping Mall to the West" (a local reference heard on the daily Cruisers Net, CH68)
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Rescued Paella Pan
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Infatuation
Who doesn't like lighthouses?
a month in the Abacos
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Cool...
This lighthouse was a joy to sit under. After the sunset as the dusk settles in the lighthouse was darkening in the sky. Suddenly the whole lantern is aglow in a golden light as the lamp was lit. Another minute or two and the lens started rotating on its mercury bed.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
HOPETOWN
"However, because many Abaconians made a good living from salvaging (then know as 'wracking') the unfortunate ships that ended their sailing days on the dangerous shoals of this low archipelago of reefs, rocks, cays and white beaches, navigation aids were no friends of the 'wrackers.'
"Merchant sail flourished between 1820 and 1880 and the Bahama Islands lay spread-out along its way. The Bahamian wracking fleet stood ready to help, with almost 300 vessels licensed to cruise the reefs in search of luckless ships to salvage, employing half of the able-bodied men in the country and accounting for about half of this British colony's revenue. The records for 1860 show an amazing average of one wreck per month at Abaco alone.
"Wracking was a lucrative business. The system required that the salvaged cargo, considered to be imported goods, be shipped to Nassau for auction with the government taking 15%, the agents 15% and 40 to 60% going back to the wrackers. The ship owners received the 10 - 30% that was left, which doesn't' seem like much, but had it not been for the wrackers and the system they would have received nothing.
"In order to build the Elbow Reef Lightstation, the Imperial Lighthouse Service, Trinity House, London, brought in some outside help but also employed many Hope Towners to unload supplies, quarry the limestone rock for building foundations and cisterns, to mix the cement and carry out the myriads of other chores can are a part of a construction job of such magnitude. The locals were glad for the jobs but at the same time they wished that they were not building a lighthouse. There were reports by the supervisors that some locals sank a supply barge one night and also withheld fresh water from the workers.
"Despite the wrecking community's protests, the light station was completed in 1864: a fixed (non-rotating), first-order (of brightness) light, warning ships away from the treacherous reef extending a considerable distance to seaward of Elbow Cay
"Lighthouses ever silent sentinels and angels to the sailor along with the advent of steam replacing sail and more accurate nautical charts, combined to finally put the wracking industry on the rocks.
"Another economic bubble had burst for the people of Hope Town.
"In 1936 the Imperial Lighthouse Service realized that the light at Gun Cay was being 'used less and less . . . and so it was closed. At the same time the Service realized Elbow Reef's need for a beacon which could be more easily identified by ships at sea. The Gun Cay Lighthouse was decapitated. The iron lantern room with its dome, the petroleum burner equipment, the turning mechanism and the rotating Fresnel lenticualr panels with five bull's-eyes which had been going around at Gun Cay since 1929 (and may have been elsewhere before that) were brought to Hope Town to replace the 1864 standing wick-type light.
"The 'new' light source for Elbow Cay was built by Chance Brothers of Birmingham, England and is till sending out the light today from the top of the Elbow Reef Lighthouse. The hood petroleum burner is rated at 325,000 candlepower, a first order light. A hand pump is used to pressurize the kerosene in heavy iron containers in the service room, directly below the lantern room and travels up a tube to an atomizer which sprays into a mantle (a hood of network fabric) having been pre-heated before lighting. Some camping lanterns operate similarly.
"The beautiful Fresnel lenses concentrate the mantle's light into a piercing beam straight out towards the horizon. The eight thousand pound lenses and burner equipment float in a circular tub of lubricant thereby reducing friction so that seven hundred pounds of weight, when wound up to the top of the tower by a hand winch and using a series of bronze gears, rotate the four ton apparatus once around every 15 seconds and very smoothly at that. The keeper on duty has to wind up the weights every two hours. The smooth sweep of the turning lenses with their five swords of light cutting the darkness over the sea, while the light constantly glows between those beams, is know as the 'soul' of a lighthouse. Once seen and compared to an electric flashing light, it is not soon forgotten and the use of the word 'soul' is more easily understood.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Abacos weather
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Skid Marks....
This is a marked passage, albeit shallow! Clear waters abound!
Nippers and Grabbers....Big Guana
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Marsh Harbor
Monday, April 4, 2011
Better in the Bahamas
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Waiting on the weather window
COASTAL WATERS FROM DEERFIELD BEACH TO OCEAN REEF, FL OUT 20 NM- WATERS FROM DEERFIELD BEACH TO OCEAN REEF, FL EXTENDING FROM 20 NM TO THE TERRITORIAL WATERS OF THE BAHAMAS- 357 AM EDT WED MAR 16 2011 TODAY EAST NORTHEAST WINDS 6 TO 9 KNOTS. SEAS 2 FEET. DOMINANT PERIOD 4 SECONDS. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A LIGHT CHOP. TONIGHT NORTHEAST WINDS 10 TO 13 KNOTS. SEAS 2 TO 3 FEET. DOMINANT PERIOD 3 SECONDS. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A MODERATE CHOP. THURSDAY NORTHEAST WINDS 11 TO 14 KNOTS. SEAS 2 TO 3 FEET. DOMINANT PERIOD 4 SECONDS. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A MODERATE CHOP. THURSDAY NIGHT NORTHEAST WINDS 13 TO 16 KNOTS. SEAS 2 TO 3 FEET NEAR SHORE AND UP TO 2 TO 4 FEET IN THE GULF STREAM. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A MODERATE CHOP. FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT EAST NORTHEAST WINDS 14 TO 17 KNOTS. SEAS 2 TO 4 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS A MODERATE CHOP. SUNDAY EAST NORTHEAST WINDS 14 TO 19 KNOTS. SEAS 3 TO 5 FEET. INTRACOASTAL WATERS CHOPPY IN EXPOSED AREAS.
So, we will continue to move about this area and keep an eye to the weather!
Sunrise/Sunsets
Friday, March 4, 2011
March, eh?
Friday, February 4, 2011
Useppa Island Club
What is the date anyway? I don't seem to be getting the blogging done like in the past!
Friday, January 7, 2011
A spinning prop gathers no barnicles?
Here We Go Again
Wow, it's January 2011....time marches on like water rushing down the rivers to the sea!