On December 9th we left a beautiful, dolphin filled anchorage at
Carrabelle Beach at 5pm and crossed 170 miles to Clearwater Pass arriving in Marker
1 Marina around noon on Dec. 10th.
We crossed with a flotilla of about 10 other boats and I must say this
was easier than 2 years ago. Both of us
attribute this to the fact that it was warmer.
We did not have the full moon, nor the steady hand at the helm of Miss Lauren Grace that we had last time but we did have 6-7 boats
in front of us and 2 behind so while we could not really see any land we did
have the safety net of others. We had
batten down the hatches and prepared for rough seas but they never
happened. I had Gingersnaps and Ginger
ale in case we were queasy—never happened.
When we arrived in Marker 1 there
were Loopers galore. We had a sandwich, went
to bed, and at 5pm we awoke to the smell of docktails. We celebrated with our friends from Nearly
Perfect, Manana, LiLa Blue (Larry and Linda good friends from when we were here
before—new boat for them), Corkscrew, and many others. Then we went back to bed for a solid 12
hours. Gimmetime, as it turns out, made
a daytime crossing the same day from Port St. Joe into Tarpon Springs. Tarpon Springs is a 20
minute trolley ride from our marina so we went and met them for dinner on the
11th. Greek—Hellas—fabulous. Soooo…today—Saturday the 12th of
December we sit in 80 degree temps, finish catching up with sleep and will go
into Dunedin tonight for their Christmas Parade.
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Corkscrew and Sum Escape crossed behind us at about the same speed--they are anchored at Dog Island while we make our way to the East Pass and R2 to start our overnight journey |
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Sun Set at R2--cool to have the sun rise and set over the water--check that off the Bucket List |
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Sun rise as we come near the Clearwater Pass--this is where the trip starts getting long--you think you should be there and you still have 5 hours to go |
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Clearwater Pass |
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Up the ICW to Marker 1 at Dunedin--love the little sail boaters |