Before
departing Legacy Harbour and Fort Myers we wanted to be confident that we had
(a) an adequate supply of maintenance-related spares parts and (b) a full load
of other provisions, including basic household supplies as well as food. So while Rick focused on supplies of fuel
& oil filters, impellers, pumps, belts and that sort of thing, Chelle
zeroed in on her “hotel load” spreadsheet requirements. Amazon and the local Publix loved her.
In
the course of that order-and-wait process Rick also got a few minor maintenance
items tended to, including replacing an erratic digital ammeter (related to
alternator output) on the pilot house DC electrical panel, drilling out bigger holes in a recalcitrant deck plate, and replacing a GFCI
outlet that went wonky back in the cockpit area. Then, shortly after we had completed the sea
trial for the dinghy we also took it for a spin up to the Fort Myers Yacht
Basin to top it off (along with our spare fuel cans) with non-ethanol gas; that
hopefully will sustain us for the upcoming weeks in the Bahamas. Rick also did the same thing with our two
propane gas tanks, being certain we had sufficient cooking fuel for the
foreseeable future.
Final
preparations included installing safety latches for the refrigerator and freezer
doors, and then changing out the Racor primary fuel filters for the main and
wing engines as well as the generator.
Some March Fun Distractions
As
usual we found sufficient distractions to give us some breaks from boat duties
and trip preparations. Legacy Harbor
Marina throws an annual “Boater Appreciation Party” where they provide lots of
free food and drinks, along with live entertainment on their large party
deck. It’s their way of thanking the
long-term winter “residents” that make up the bulk of their annual revenues. And yeah, it’s good marketing, too. And, just a few days before we were planning to
depart we finally got the chance to host Jim and Susan Hill aboard the boat,
returning all the great hospitality they had shown us the last few months. We had a nice happy hour on board and then
enjoyed a very good pizza at Capone’s in downtown Fort Myer’s riverfront
district.
Our Prized "Purple Heart Wood" Cutting Board, with Ghost Rider Logo Now Mounted in the Salon |
Lastly,
we spent a little time mounting a unique and beautiful “Purple Heart” cutting board
– a gift from daughter Suzanne – in the salon area. Pictured to the left you’ll note the center strip of purplish wood that comes from the Purple
Heart tree in the Brazilian rain forest.
You can read about the lumber HERE but it’s a plentiful tree and an amazingly durable
wood. And the Purple Heart motif holds
special meaning for our family. While it
is now mounted quite sturdily to survive rough sea conditions, it can also be
easily removed for practical use in the galley, too.
Tue 13-MAR…We’re Outta Here
On
the morning of Tuesday 13-MAR we made a final check of the weather and found it
good enough to go, and by 0930 we were underway and headed south towards Marco
Island, our first planned stop. While
our winter months in Fort Myers were enjoyable and productive, it was good to
be on the move once again.
The
weather forecast called for relatively cool but clear conditions with winds
around 15K from the northwest, and that’s pretty much what we got. That also gave us a 3 foot following swell but
at comfortable intervals and only a light wind chop on top, so it was a good
ride with ground speed averaging just over 8 knots.
A View of The Marina at Factory Bay from Ghost Rider's Boat Deck |
We
had planned to stay at the Factory Bay marina for two nights but extended it to
three due to an unexpected repair need (yes, another surprise.) We had noticed a pretty good water leak (visually
as well as per the bilge pump counter) in the forward bow thruster compartment,
and it tasted pretty salty, so it became a priority to track down. Eventually we traced it to the anchor locker,
which is just forward and above the bow thruster area. We had to dump a few hundred feet of anchor
chain on the bottom of the marina to inspect and gain access to the bottom of
that locker, and there we found a partially blocked drain hole and an encased
hose run whose caulking had cracked and aged well beyond its point of
effectiveness – giving water an easier path to inside the boat vs. the
thru-hull drain. Rick cleaned all that
up and then applied liberal beads of Rescue Bond XL1 Pro (super caulk!) That had to cure 18 to 24 hours before we
could cover it again with all that chain, thus the extra night’s stay. Once it had set Rick also covered the
caulking seams with protective strips of 100MPH tape (see footnote below) and
then we retrieved the chain the afternoon of 15-MAR. We also found several deck bolts in that
locker that were fairly loose and leaking water into that compartment from above,
so we also tightened those, although eventually we would need to completely
remove and re-bed those.
Inside the Anchor Locker After Removing All the Chain; the Leaking Cracks Are Easy to See |
While
hanging out at Factory Bay we took the opportunity to make the short walk to
one of our favorite eateries, Old Marco Pub, for dinner on our second night –
the seafood is fresh and the steaks are tender, juicy and tasty there. And as often happens in the cruising world we
made some new friends – Mark and Sandy Holtsclaw pulled into the marina and docked
right off our bow in their 42’ Kadey-Krogen, Karissa Leigh. They hail
from Michigan and are enjoying cruising in the relative warmth of south Florida
this winter. We toured each other’s boats
and enjoyed back-to-back happy hour sessions in the process.
Fri 16-MAR…Down to the Everglades
We
had yet another good forecast for our Friday departure and by 1000 we sortied
away from the dock, made our way through Gordon Pass and then pointed Ghost Rider south, initially towards the
mouth of the Shark River where we had planned to anchor. But the conditions were so good – temps
eventually got to 75F, seas were very tame, and we were seeing ground speeds on
the GPS between 8 and 9 knots – that we decided to press further south to Cape
Sable. We had noticed an anchorage
review in that area (via Active Captain) that was very positive for the
anticipated conditions there – a light southeast breeze and flat water.
Our View of the Sunset From the Fly Bridge While Anchored at Cape Sable |
By
1800 we had dropped the anchor in about 9 feet of water about 600 meters from
the shoreline, right at the southwestern-most edge of the Cape, and set the
anchor alarm. There was not another boat
or soul in sight throughout the night, and at this point we were “off the grid”
– there is no cellular service there. The
sunset was spectacular as was the stargazing that followed…the near total lack
of light pollution gave us unhindered views of numerous celestial features
(thank you Google Sky Map). We turned
off the genset and went with fresh air ventilation overnight (with
screens….there are bugs that will eat you here in Everglades National Park even
in March), and were pleased to see the house battery bank only down to 88%
capacity the next morning.
As
for “boat business” (see further below) we still have a water leak in the
forward thruster compartment, although at a slower rate and different location;
that will get more investigation later, likely after we dock up in Fort
Lauderdale later in the week.
Sat 17-MAR…From the Glades to Marathon
We
fired up the generator the next morning to charge up the batteries (it took two
hours to get them back to 97%, which is acceptable.) We had a lazy morning on the hook as there
was no rush to depart….it would be less than a 5 hour sortie to Marathon and we
wanted to wait for a higher tide since at this point we only had about a half
foot of water under the keel at low tide.
By 1100 we had retrieved the anchor and were motoring south at around 8
knots. Weather was perfect, with temps
in the 70’s, light breezes from the SE, and flat seas….an excellent St. Patty’s
day in the subtropics.
Chelle Piloting Ghost Rider Across Florida Bay in Flat Seas |
While
enroute we tested our reverse osmosis water maker – that would be a no-go item
for a Bahamas sortie if it wasn’t fully operational – and over a two hour span
we confirmed the unit will produce about 28 gallons of fresh water with
excellent quality; so we were quite pleased with that. (However: Rick learned a
lesson about opening the correct water manifold valves, e.g., do that before
you crank up the water maker unless you want copious amounts of RO product
water on the engine room floor around the fresh water manifold.) Apart from that exercise the day’s journey was
pleasant and mostly about dodging the numerous crab pots that dot the seascape
in these latitudes this time of year.
The Rebuilt Marathon Marina's Concrete Floating Docks |
After
passing under the Seven Mile Bridge (with a quick following current giving us 9
knots even at a reduced throttle) Rick steered Ghost Rider into Marathon’s Boot Key Harbor and the Marathon Marina
just after 1500. Their new floating
docks are quite nice, by the way, and it looks as if they’ve recovered from
Hurricane Irma damage quite nicely.
Coming in at low tide was a tad unnerving as the harbor’s entrance
channel has some serious shoaling on the south side, but we hugged the green
markers (north side) and kept the keel off the bottom.
Sun 18-MAR…From Marathon to Rodriguez
Key
Rick Hanging Out on the Fly Bridge with Cigar and Scotch at Rodriguez Key Anchorage |
We
waited for high tide before departing the next morning (around 1030) and that
made our exit through the harbor’s channel a lot less stressful than the
entrance the previous day. We also should
compliment Marathon Marina on the width of its main fairway – maneuvering in
and out of our slip was straightforward.
We
steered Ghost Rider south to get
around the Boot Key land mass and once clear of that then turned her east to
head up Hawk Channel in the general direction of Key Largo, where we planned to
anchor on the inside of Rodriguez Key. The ride up the channel was
delightful….smooth water, mild temps nearing 80F, and the crab pots weren’t as
numerous as the previous two days, with only occasional evasive action
required.
When
we arrived at Rodriguez Key the anchorage on the northwest side of the island
looked like a parking lot….we counted 12 boats, all sail, already anchored when
we arrived just after 1700. But there
was still plenty of room for us to find a good spot with more than adequate
swing room, and the depth – even arriving at low tide – was good. We dropped the hook, set it hard, and enjoyed
another wonderful evening at anchor.
Mon 19-MAR…From Rodriguez Key to Fort
Lauderdale
View from the Fly Bridge: Rodriguez Key Anchorage at Sunset |
While
it was a peaceful night the next morning we were a bit disturbed by our house
battery readings. While SOC was solid at
87% after inverting off the batts overnight, the voltage seemed mighty low at
12.1 volts. We didn’t have time to
troubleshoot at that point, so we just fired up the generator and let it charge
the house bank for the next 3 hours, and let the alternators take over from
there.
We
wanted to be underway by 0830, but when we said we had set the anchor hard, we
weren’t kidding. Judging by the amount
of sand, mud and shells that was seemingly glued to the topside of our anchor
once we had spooled it to the boat, we were thinking we should have had a
dredging permit. But Rick eventually got
the anchor cleaned and stowed, and Chelle drove us out of the anchorage,
pointing us north on our planned route to Fort Lauderdale. Initially seas were
mostly calm, and once again we were blessed with excellent weather, allowing us
to spend most of the day at the fly bridge helm. We also were now far enough north (relatively
speaking) that the crab pot dodging was drastically reduced, making use of the
“navigation mode” of the autopilot much more practical.
Passing Miami in Crystal Clear Waters Enroute to Fort Lauderdale....Before it Got Rough |
But
later in the afternoon the winds and seas picked up; while waves were only 2 to
3 footers quartering on the starboard stern, they were at 2 second intervals
and pushing the boat around. The ride
was smooth enough, but the autopilot struggled with holding the programmed
headings, yawing +/- 10 degrees. That
wasn’t a big deal until it was time for our WOT (wide open throttle) run as we
got close to Fort Lauderdale at the end of the sortie.
After
Rick firewalled the throttle he turned the helm over to Chelle and was headed
down to the engine room to make the usual WOT checks. That’s when a bigger wave hit Ghost Rider from the rear tossing the
boat’s bow to the starboard quite a bit, and the autopilot went bonkers,
throwing the rudder into a hard-over starboard turn. It’s actually pretty amazing how fast a
Nordhavn 50 can snap into a 180 degree end swap ends…in seconds we were suddenly
headed south instead of north. We
immediately throttled back and simultaneously disengaged the autopilot to
regain control, but it was disconcerting.
Rick made visual checks of the rudder post, steering ram and autopilot
pump / plumbing, but found all in order.
He also then made another short WOT run with manual steering and found
nothing amiss. So from what we can tell
at this point it was an autopilot computer screw-up, and we’ll change our WOT
procedures in sloppy following seas going forward. Full displacement trawlers aren’t intended to
be amusement park rides.
There Are Some BIG Boats at the Pier 66 Marina....Ghost Rider Was Among the Smallest Ones There |
Of
course we had the same sloppy seas as we entered the Fort Lauderdale (Port
Everglades) entrance channel; Rick manually steered Ghost Rider from the fly bridge, and it would have been mostly
uneventful except for all the other boats doing stupid things heading in and
out. Two cruise ships, approximately the
size of aircraft carriers, were headed outbound; a large sportfish towing its
tender barreled past on our port side; two sailboats bobbed almost motionless
in front of us; and then to top it off a small outboard-powered skiff dawdled
off our bow blocking our path for any maneuvering….it was the first time that
Rick made use of our very loud ship’s horn to warn a small craft we were about
to run over them.
Nonetheless
we were able to weave our way through all of that chaos and into the Pier 66
Marina for an uneventful docking. Ghost Rider got a well-deserved wash down,
as did we, and we called it a day.
Mon 20-MAR & 21-MAR…A Pause at Fort
Lauderdale
We
had a list of “boat business” things that required attention, but more
impactfully the weather forecast for the next few days looked lousy, with a
cold front bringing a squall line and stiff winds. So we decided to just hang out at Pier 66
Marina for a couple of days, and that gave us some time to tend to some more
“boat business” items.
More Boat Business
First
we did another water leak check on and under the foredeck with Chelle wielding
a pressurized hose above, and Rick down below checking for leaks and
drips. The only ones we could find were
a couple of the aforementioned deck bolts, so we removed those, cleaned them
and re-bedded them snugly with the Rescue Bond XL1 Pro caulk. Another leak check the next day confirmed we
had no more leaks from that deck area at least.
Three of the Six House Batteries (Port Side) Along with Our Testing Tools, the IR Temperature Gun and the Multimeter |
Next
up was a drawdown test of the house batteries to assess the apparent low
voltage condition we had witnessed after a night of inverting from batteries
while at anchor. Essentially we
simulated the same type of anchorage conditions while at the dock – removing
shore power and powering up minimal equipment.
Thankfully the cold front that passed overnight and strong northwest
winds that followed kept the boat comfy without the A/C being active. Every hour over a period of 6 hours Rick
recorded the key data points: DC draws, AC draws, SOC and voltage at the
LinkPro, then manual multimeter readings of battery voltages directly at each
of the six house batts, along with battery temperature.
The Other Three House Batts (Starboard Side); the Lifeline 8DAGMs Weigh About 160 Lbs and Cost Around $700....Each |
The
end result after those 6 hours running on batts / inverter was what one would
hope for….SOC was at 92.5% and house battery voltage measured by the multimeter
directly at the batts was at 12.78V (with 12.8V being the optimum, so not bad
at all.) The LinkPro reported 12.71V, so
that is reading a tad low, but only by a .55% deviation. Whether another 2-3 hours of testing would
have resulted in significantly lower readings is an unknown, but doubtful given
the consistent readings we saw. (But
we’ll still keep a wary eye on it next time we anchor out.)
The
other two main issues, although still relatively minor, included a reappearance
of the oil drip from the main engine’s oil pan gasket (forward end only), and
similarly a return of the grease seepage from the bottom of the stabilizer
hydraulic pump, and a new (currently just nuisance level) hydraulic leak on the
starboard stabilizer actuator assembly.
Rick was tired of dealing with these, so we phoned our friends at Yacht
Tech in North Palm Beach and told them we were headed their way to turn those
problems over to them. Thus NPB is our
new interim destination while we wait on our window to cross over to the
Bahamas.
Wed 22-MAR…From Lauderdale to North Palm
Beach
Typical Stretch Along the AICW.....Bridges and All Manner of Watercraft |
Departure
and arrival point forecasts were just about identical – sunny, low 70’s, with
winds down to 10-15K inland, but with gale warnings and 5 foot seas just off
the coast. Thus, we figured it was a
good day to cruise up the ICW to Palm Beach, even though that meant dealing
with 21 bridges, 14 of which we would have to wait on openings. That could make the short 45 mile journey a
good deal longer than the six hours the nav computer calculated, so we departed
FLL at around 0900 and hoped the crazy boaters stayed away from us.
They
did not.
The
inland waterway was mostly just plain whacky….big boats that did not know how
to time a bridge opening, small boats that had no clue they were sharing a
navigation channel and couldn’t judge bridge heights, and sailboats that
thought they had the right-of-way even when they were under power. Most with
port-of-call registrations well north of Florida. It was a circus.
Rick
manned the helm most of the day from the fly bridge….although not because of
pleasant weather – it was freakin’ cold up there with 15-20K winds from the
north, but when combined with our forward speeds much closer to 25K, and with
temps in the 60’s. But the better visibility and subsequent ease of maneuverability
trumped the environmentals. Chelle
camped out in the pilot house helm chair to control the wing engine when needed
for providing hydraulics to power the thrusters – which was often required as
we waited on bridge openings in brisk currents and winds – and to relay or
confirm upcoming bridge information.
Ghost Rider Tucked into Her Berth at Old Port Cove Marina |
We
would have much preferred to be offshore, but knew we would have been just as
disappointed with the ride conditions out there. It was a trade-off. At any rate, we made North Palm Beach and Old
Port Cove Marina around 1715, an 8+ hour sortie for the day, normally quite
acceptable, but lousy time for such a relatively short leg. We got the boat and ourselves cleaned up,
enjoyed hot shrimp gumbo for dinner and then crashed into our lounge chairs.
Next Up
We’ll
be hanging out in the Palm Beach area for about 10 days….it will take a while
to line up the needed Yacht Tech resources and a visit from Stabilized Marine
(the folks who service Naiad stabilizers), plus we have one more trip to make
back to Fort Myers (via rental car) for some administrative stuff. More on all of that later.
Footnotes
**
What is 100 MPH Tape? The commercial
version of it is generally called duct tape, but back in WWII the U.S. Army had
Johnson & Johnson manufacture the original version to milspec. It’s like duct tape, but is olive drab in
color and its weave it much tighter, plus its adhesive is stronger, and is
waterproof…not the stuff you find at Home Depot. The slang “100 MPH” tape came about because
American GI’s swore it could hold broken parts on a Jeep together even when
going 100 miles per hour. You can also
place it on a fabric tear, heat it (like with a clothes iron) and the stuff
will stick for years.
** What's a WOT (wide open throttle) run? The main propulsion engines on long distance trawlers, especially with Nordhavns, are continuous duty diesels (most, like ours, are Lugger brand, marinized by Northern Lights), designed for service lives in excess of 25,000 hours. But normal cruising is typically done at low RPMs and therefor, low loads....and these diesels don't particularly care for that. Carbon soot can build up in the cylinders, plus it will shorten oil life. So the standard practice is, once every day, to throttle up to max RPM and run it wide open for a period of 7-10 minutes to blow out whatever may have accumulated. We think of it like a thoroughbred horse that's been trotting for too long and just needs to enjoy a healthy sprint. Plus it turns out to be a great time to examine certain health metrics about the engine and fuel system....such as exhaust gas temperature (EGT), turbo boost pressure, various on-engine heat gun readings, and the fuel system's (Racor) vacuum gauge reading.
** Finally, a reminder on our tracking site, which you can HERE. It's the best way to know if we are on the move and to where. Note that we
have filtered the tracking map display such that it will only show our more
recent tracks (it was getting a bit cluttered.) Over the past week it looks like this: