Saturday, December 21, 2019

Capers Island ghost forest

From my last post, you may have pictured our adventures on Capers Island as mostly using Lucy as a tick and burr detector
but we found far more enjoyable things as well.

Cynthia spotted ibises! I've never seen these before, with their curiously curved bills, they remind me of flamingos.

And, hiking in hopes of finding the "beach where one can take a swim" (although we planned no such activity in the chilly weather), we finally left the grass and found a sandy wash, which we followed down hill
and found a ghost forest looming out of the fog.


Lucy loved the open sand, the large tree trunks to run along, and possible places her terrier instincts told her might hold prey..



Cynthia and I loved the hard, open sand to stride along and the beautiful, ghostly, and quite photogenic forest.







Pretty neat stuff!


Current status: Cynthia & Lucy in MI, I'm aboard near Cape Canaveral... and just watched the Boeing rocket launch pre-dawn yesterday (12/20). I saw SpaceX's Falcon Heavy launch a few days ago and, I believe, got struck by a little tornado (watched it approach as I sat at anchor: very brief and violent). Today I'll sail to Melbourne, FL and anchor for a rainy day tomorrow. 

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Things that can draw blood

I'm writing this from an anchorage in Mosquito Lagoon just north of Cape Canaveral. I actually got to watch Elon Musk's Falcon Heavy launch last night! Very very cool! I plan on doing some work on the boat here before moving farther south soon.

Cynthia and I sailed south from NC on favorable winds, then ducked into the ICW (Intra Coastal Waterway) when the winds became problematic. The strong north-east winds would have kicked up large waves and we would have rocked and rolled and been unable to walk about for days... and belongings would have worked loose and been tossed about inside the cabin. Ugh!

The ICW takes a far more sheltered route. The views are quite beautiful and there are chances to get groceries, ice, fuel, and showers.  Any issues? YES.
1) pilots need to pay close attention to the channel  or WILL run aground. A chance to take ten minutes to relax is rare.
2) Running at night thus seems unwise, so one might make 40 miles per day.
3) Wind and current are often unfavorable, so one burns much fuel and "enjoys" noise and fumes.
4) Finding a good spot to anchor can be tough as there is so much shallow stuff, strong tidal currents, and large tides.
5) temperatures this time of year are far colder than out in the open. We wore long johns most days... and were still darned cold.
6) if weather warms, out come the biting bugs! We found midges in abundance, mosquitoes.... and, on the only wild island we visited, numerous ticks. And that brings us to... Capers Island, SC.

We loved Capers Island. It offered a nice chance to hike to the ocean, stretch our legs, give Lucy a chance to exercise, and see some local nature close-up. It even had some plant identification signs that a Boy Scout installed a decade ago for a badge. One thing it did NOT identify was some horrible burrs that easily penetrate skin to catch a painful ride to a new growing spot. And one could not even pull them with fingers as they would puncture those as well! Lucy's cries were our first alert, but none of us enjoyed these and we tried to identify and avoid the non-descript patches of these burrs,

As we returned from our second walk, we noticed a brown tick on Lucy's black fur....and then another and then many more.
After returning to the boat we checked her well and found perhaps twenty or more on her the size of sesame seeds. And another fifteen or twenty on each of us in our layers of clothes! And, no, we did not discover them all, finding another half dozen over the next couple days. Ugh. We may visit the island again someday, but will use loads of deet to protect ourselves.

Finally, a creature that draws blood that we LIKE! We found dangerously sharp oysters in abundance! Along the shore of these marsh islands and many others grew huge mounds of oysters, each bonding to others to form a reef. We did not bother eating any, but I love seeing such healthy populations of such beneficial creatures, filtering excess algae from the water and improving the ecosystem. Very nice.