We stayed two nights at anchor Between the Majors and then moved north to Shroud Cay. As we approached that anchorage, another boat put out the word on the radio that they were looking for a jack. Dan replied that he had one. The people from Cher-Ed (pronounced 'shared') Adventures immediately came over to borrow it once we'd set the anchor. Tirns out we'd met them last year here in the Exumas. Dan and I set out to do some snorkeling and when we returned, the jack was neatly laid on a bit of carpeting on our back deck, along with two beers. Whatever they needed to fix, we think they accomplished it.
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Tuesday, February 27, 2024
To Eleuthera
Friday, February 23, 2024
Starting the Trek North
I forgot to post a picture of the lobster Dan caught this year! It fed three people a hearty lunch and there was enough for Dan to have surf and turf when had steak a few nights ago.
We left Long Island on Sunday morning (Feb 18th) to head back to Georgetown. The wind was shifting to the west, which wouldn't be good for Thompson Bay. We found our same anchorage off Sand Dollar beach despite there being about a hundred more boats in this harbor. Last year the record was 390-something vessels. This year it's well over 400. Too many for us; we only spent one night there.
Saturday, February 17, 2024
Long Island
We came to Long Island on Friday Feb 9th and we're planning on leaving tomorrow (Feb 18th.)
Saturday, February 10, 2024
On to Long Island
We stayed in the Georgetown area most of the week, four nights anchored in front of the town itself, and when the wind shifted to the West-Northwest, we moved across the harbor to anchor of Sand Dollar beach, between the new mooring field and the shore.
Sunday, February 4, 2024
On to Georgetown
We ended up spending three nights at Allan Cay, and the wind just got a little stronger every day. I did swim - to check the anchor, and to do laps around the boat - with Dan on shark watch from the flying bridge. A nurse shark and I had a brief stare-down (it was between me and the swim ladder) and I guess I won, because it swam away. Neither of us went back in the water after that encounter, not just because of the shark. The wind shifted to a wind-against-current direction and things got mighty rough. Too rough to sleep; most of us were up on watch for most of the night on Sunday (Jan 28) and one of the boats decided to pull up anchor and move to another location. The rest of us watched him put his boat aground. It's such a helpless feeling to watch such a scenario unfold, knowing you can't do anything. We were too far away, and our dinghy too small and underpowered to handle the weather to assist the rescue of the nine people from that boat. The people were fine, the boat, not so much.