Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Velcro Beach

Life at "Velcro" Beach is drawing to a close.  People call Vero Beach "Velcro" beach because many who are just planning to make a short stop here end up staying.  Not us.  Not this time.  We'll be off in a week or so and to be honest, as much as we've enjoyed our stay here, we're both chomping at the bit to get moving.  I guess we're tumble weeds at heart.

So, how have we spent our time?  Jeff got a surf fishing lesson under the superb tutelage of fisher extraordinaire Grant.  We spent the day with Grant and Cindy at Sebastian State Park.  It appears there are very many catfish in Sebastian Inlet...  OR the SAME one was determined to get caught.  Jeff even took it off the hook by himself (squealing like a girl, twice, three witnesses). Either way, the guys were kept busy and Cindy and I enjoyed some relaxation in the sun.



















Christmas 2015

On Christmas morning we were blessed to receive a Facetime call from my granddaughters as they were opening our gifts.  It was such a joy to be involved and to receive such warm thank-you hugs, even if they were through the computer.  Christmas away from home is just weird.  I don't know if I'll ever get used to it.


Fire!!



Today we had some excitement.  While we were happily engaging in our "morning chores" (Jeff organising the lazarette/me scrubbing the summer grunge off our water hose) we noticed a terrible smell.  We looked up to see smoke - lots of it and black - coming from a neighbour's boat. Jeff rushed to the scene and sure enough the boat was on fire and it was very quickly spreading out of control.  Luckily there were fire hoses on the dock and after smashing the glass to get them out of their stands, Jeff and a couple of other guys held things under control (barely!!) until the fire trucks arrived.  It was pretty dicey and could have quickly gone very badly.  Scary!  We feel so badly for the owners, fellow Canadian boaters who were fully stocked up and all ready to head off to the Bahamas in the next few days.  What a heart breaker.  We understand it was an electrical short that caused the fire.  They were out for the day and no one was hurt.

On a happier note, our friends Joe and Connie on the boat Chesapeake will arrive later today to spend a few days and help us bring in the New Year.   Fun!  It will be nice to catch up again.





Friday, 25 December 2015

Merry Christmas!!

Merry Christmas!!
Wishing you all a day filled with peace and joy!!!!

Thursday, 17 December 2015

Marina Life in Vero Beach



Marina Life in Vero Beach is pretty pleasant, I must say.  A typical day looks like this:  1) morning coffees, check the news/weather.  2) clean or fix something.  3)  afternoon at the beach, pool or some other touristy activity.  4)  dinner and cocktail hour  5)  an evening of cards, tv, or visiting with other boaters. Pretty laid back and easy-breezy.  I'm loving the heated pool! I'm up to a kilometer a day.  It's one of my favorite forms of exercise.




We needed to pick up our car from North Carolina, which is about 9.5 hours away.  We booked a rental car from Enterprise and as per usual, they were late picking us up.  With a long drive ahead of us we were not too impressed.  After a phone call to politely express our concern they finally showed up and low and behold, to make up for the delay, they gave us a FREE upgrade!!!  Whoo-hoo!!!! We've been lucky with the free upgrades!  We call this Nissan 350Z the "white streak" and it sure made the chore of picking up our car a LOT more fun!  Man, it flies!




Having the Mustang here at Vero Beach opened up more opportunities for us.  We took a road trip to Lady Lake, North of Orlando this week to visit friends Ken and Sharon.  They live in a 55+ community there.  Wow! I had NO idea such places existed.  Their community is close to what's known as the "villages", one of the fastest growing suburban areas in the United States and it's all for ages 55+.



This place is honestly like a Disney Land for seniors.
There are three "villages", each with their own theme.  One is a Spanish themed, one is designed to look like the old West, and the third is small town America, with picket fences and craftsman style buildings.  Each "village" has a central square with a stage featuring nightly entertainment and a walk up bar on each corner.  You just pick up your drink and carry it around with you.  Everything there is modestly priced, it's part of the attraction for the 55+ crowd.  Jeff and I had dinner for two with a beer and glass of wine for under $30.  We were there on a Tuesday night and the place was packed and just hoppin' with crowds of folks in their golden years up dancing, partying, enjoying a meal out or checking out the street vendor booths set up around the square.  There are well over 100,000 people living in the three villages with lots more living in the surrounding 55+ communities and most of them get around by golf carts.  There are golf cart highways and golf cart bridges.  It is quite the place (and I might add that rumour has it that The Villages has the fastest growing rate of STDs in the United States.  Yikes!)  https://www.thevillages.com/ 


Golf cart parking



Ken and Sharon took us for a tour of their community in their golf carts (they have a matching set). In their community the homes are modular and while they're not as high end as the villages (or as pricy!) the place is very tidy and well landscaped.  There are two large clubhouses with beautiful pools and hot tubs. This is a very active community and there are clubs and groups for just about any activity you can think of:  many golf leagues, softball (you should see these ladies whack a ball!), arts, crafts, billiards, bingo, quilting, shuffleboard, pickle ball, photography, etc. etc. etc.  You can be as active as you want to be...or not.  It is very social place and everyone seems so happy and friendly.


Have car will travel. Another day we took a much shorter road trip up to visit fellow loopers Grant and Cindy on the boat As the Crow Flies, which is docked about a half hour's drive upstream from us. We travelled with Grant and Cindy for a while last year as we made our way down the Tenn-Tom and then leapfrogged with them often along the way. We enjoyed a few Happy Hours, dinner out and a lot of laughs.  It was great fun catching up!


Today we dug our little foot high Christmas tree and lights out from it's storage spot under the V-Berth where I had fired it way to the back last January.  So now Gran Vida is decorated up and all ready for Christmas.  Christmas day we will spend the morning at the beach and then join other boaters in the Marina Lounge for a Christmas dinner.  

Thanks for checking in with us.  Warm wishes to you and yours for a Merry Christmas and nothing but the best of the best for the New Year.


And....Here's Jeff's two-cents worth:   This squirrel asked us if we had seen his nuts. (Photo taken in Ken and Sharon's lanai room.  He scared the bejeebers out of us when he landed there.)


Friday, 4 December 2015

St. Augustine to Vero Beach




Our next stop was St Augustine, where we stopped to hang out with our buddies Joe and Conne (M/V Chesapeake).  We spent a night at River's Edge marina and enjoyed dinner out at a local pub and good catch up visit.  They insisted on treating us out to a hearty breakfast the next morning before we shoved off.

With bellies full (thanks Joe&Connie!) and heavy hearts, we pulled up to the pump-out dock at River's Edge Marina in St. Augustine and said our good-byes to our good buddies Joe, Connie and their new dog, Chase.  We set out around noon.

As we left the river and made our turn onto the channel, low and behold, we found ourselves face to face again with friends.  There on a sailboat headed towards us was Jamie and Miriam from the sailboat Odyssey.  We met them way back in the North Channel at the beginning of this trip.  The first thing they shouted out to us from across bows was "WE STILL PLAY THAT CARD GAME!!"  One quiet night anchored in the Turnbull Islands in the North Channel we had taught them Jeff's family card game of Sixty-Five.  Funny.  The boating world is quite small indeed.




We stopped about twenty-five miles down "the road" and anchored in Matanza Inlet.  I understand  matanza means "slaughter" in Spanish. I'm not sure how this place got it's name but it sounds nasty.  Matanza Inlet is the next inlet off the Atlantic south of St. Augustine, a Spanish stronghold as the Americas were being settled.  The Spanish built a fort here to protect from a southern attack.  

Interesting history, but in the 2000's it sure makes a great anchorage!  We spent a couple of days here in the warm sunshine, dinghying over for long walks on the beach and exploring the fort.  In the evenings we enjoyed an amazing star show overhead while listening to dolphins blowing their blowholes while circling our boat, checking us out.  Quite lovely.







The next few days were overcast and rainy.  We just powered on through the rain, taking turns either on the helm or drying out downstairs in the cabin.  Not the sunny, pleasant boating days we like but a reality.  Nothing a couple of good raincoats, warm coffee and a cheery attitude can't handle.

We are now in Vero Beach on the first day of our month long stay.  The pool is heated and we've already been in for a dip.  It is overcast and in the mid-sixties but that didn't stop the Canadians!  The locals shake their heads at us.

Tomorrow we will rent a car and go get Moosie (our pet name for the Mustang).  It is parked in North Carolina, which is a nine and a half our drive according to google, so it will be a two day get-away.