On Monday, May 9th we tossed off the lines and
began with the first (short) leg of our planned voyage. Since it was such an abbreviated run (just down-river
to Sanibel) we had a lazy morning of preps, finally getting underway around 1300 local
time. We fought a bit of an incoming
tide current, so didn’t make Sanibel until around 1540, but it was a beautiful
day and we really didn’t care about pace – this was just a short shakedown to
test major systems before we got too far away from home port.
Punta Rassa Anchorage Location |
At Anchor at Punta Rassa |
So we backtracked to the north side of the Sanibel causeway
(Punta Rassa) and found a good spot not far from the entrance to Port Sanibel
Marina where we had kept our Grady-White for years. While somewhat close to the ICW, Monday
evening traffic was minimal, so it was quite comfortable. It wasn’t an anchorage listed on Active
Captain, but we found it as good as or better than the ones over by St. James
City at the south end of Pine Island, with good wind protection from all
directions and depths from 7 to 12 feet.
However, it would likely be too lumpy on weekends. The location was 26-30.010N / 82-00.642W,
will try to figure out how to post it to Active Captain.
Boat stuff: all good,
everything performed ops normal with no new issues.
On Tuesday, May 10th,
we pulled up the anchor just before 0930 and headed south to Marco Island. Weather-wise it was another beautiful day in
south Florida...mid 80’s, tolerable humidity, with a fresh breeze out of the
south at 10-15K. Sea state was also
comfortable with variable 1-3 footers at 3 second intervals. And as with Monday’s leg, we drove this one
entirely from the fly bridge.
Along the way we got some chores done – testing the new
discharge pump switch (ops normal); re-testing the wing engine stuffing box
(again….damned thing still overheats); plus some admin & cleaning
chores. And Rick successfully reacquainted
himself with navigating using only the Furuno NavNet2 units (vs. our primary
Nobeltec system…proving that the Chivas scotch hasn’t destroyed all of the older brain cells.)
Additionally we got smarter with the nifty computerized
Murphy Powerview display – that’a a digital readout of a long list of
parameters reported by the main engine’s ECU.
While its display of exact engine RPM, coolant temperature, oil pressure
and fuel flow rate are always of primary interest, another parameter we’ve come
to recognize as critical is the engine load factor – diesel motors do not like
to be run at light loads, and in the case of our continuous duty Lugger L1066T,
it craves load factors at or above 40%.
Cheerfully we’re able to report that at our normal cruise setting of
1700 RPM the engine load reads between 45 & 50%, and at WOT (wide open
throttle) it reads exactly 100% --right where it should be. That means we have a healthy motor & fuel
filters, and a good match on prop pitch & diameter. Love it.
View of Factory Bay |
Tomorrow is mostly a down-day here in Marco, then we head to
the Everglades (Shark River) area on Thursday, with some SSB practice there
since that is otherwise a dead zone when it comes to connectivity. More to come after that.
Looks like you're off to a great start.....looking forward to keeping up with your adventures.
ReplyDeleteWe arrived in Bowling Green around 1600 local time and anchored the GMC in the garage.
Started on our chore list of weed and leaf removal. Lol...