Jan 19th Titusville – Walkabouts and Wanderings

The presence of so many derelict boats at the boatyard and marina is sad, so many dreams gone for naught. The 1st photo at the yard has an open companionway so it must be a mess below too.Peter figures that about 20% of the boats in the boatyard are derelict. Probably doesn’t pay the yard to destroy them.

The others are boats at the marina. Expensive to maintain at a dock when the boat itself is not usable nor worth much.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan 11th Saga Update

The satellite view shows Westland Boatyard on the far right, where Finnish Line was trucked to and launched. The long docks are Titusville Municipal Marina, Finnish Line is the blue dot. The first leg of Finnish Line’s 4 month sojourn began with a 680 foot (.11nm) trip from the boatyard to the marina on January 5th.

Ah – the well laid plans of mice and men and sailors. The three sailors and the ground crew are still in sunny warm Titusville at the Titusville Municipal Marina as unfortunately a couple of the crew tested positive for Covid. Everyone feels just fine having had minor symptoms. The crew has to wait for 12 days after their positive test before they can leave here and enter the Bahamas – lots of adminstrivia to plough through, but we have the time to do it 😊.  Last night was a bouncy one, reminiscent of Jemmetts – bow in – in a north wind, blowing in the 20s all night but nice and calm now.

The Whereabouts of Finnish Line 2.0

at Westland Boatyard

Saturday Jan 1st to Jan 15th 2022

Good morning from Titusville Marina in Florida. Apologies for our being remiss in getting posts going for our trip but we have been very busy and there have now been complications, read on.

A very special thanks to our friends, Linda Schmalz and Chris Walmsley for hosting a wonderful farewell dinner for us. A nice send off, indeed.

As per plan Bob and Tarja picked up Peter and Wilma at 6am on Jan 1st and we had an easy border crossing with little traffic all day. We overnighted in Stoney Creek, Virginia south of Richmond. The second night we were in Ormond Beach. That left only an hour to get to the boat location at Westland Boatyard in Titusville. We stayed safe by always masking when near others which we limited but taking our own lunches and ordering dinner in. Hilton check-ins and check-outs are now all online with a digital key delivered to one’s phone to open the room door.

We arrived at Westland just before 9am, found the boat and quickly set to work getting the boat ready for its early afternoon launch. Having accomplished that our next big job was to prepare the mast for raising on Wednesday morning. BUT we couldn’t find key pieces like the backstay but after a lot of searching it turned up in another plastic tub in a different part of the boat. Well, at least it got the adrenaline flowing!

The logistics are quite an ordeal. Because our boat was trucked here vs. arriving under its own power, we can not obtain the usual cruising permit. Instead, we must report to US customs and Border Patrol to receive a Leaving Permit that is only good for 72 hours. Thus, we can’t get that until we get our Bahamian Health Visa which we can’t get until we get the currently required COVID PCR test. At 6:15am we left to line up for the tests in Cocoa Beach near Cape Canaveral. Arriving at 7am we lined up and had our tests about 9:30 with the results about a half hour later. Unfortunately, some crew tested positive, not picked up in the US but due to close contact at home shortly before we left. We found out the second day on the road that several people back in Kingston had tested positive. So Finnish Line crew can’t land in the Bahamas for 14 days. Not great news but everyone feels ok, the few minor Covid symptoms are pretty much gone. Tarja didn’t get tested yet, but she feels fine. Meanwhile, we are working on getting the boat ready, inside and outside, for the crossing in less frantic timelines which is not a bad thing. After all, we are on a boat in January so how bad can it be? And tonight (Jan 6th), we’ll be watching a rocket launch – Titusville is really close to Cape Canaveral!

Tarja – aka ’the ground crew’ (thanks Linda Schmalz) is staying here until the boat leaves to head off. She’ll get her Covid test the day she leaves to drive home.

We are in touch with the Bahamian Heath people to help figure out what the new protocol is for entering the Bahamas. Things are changing fast – one can now enter with a Rapid Antigen Test. This just changed yesterday and is significantly cheaper than the USD 200 we had to pay yesterday.

In the meantime, we are juggling moving slips at Titusville Marina as this is a busy time of year. Because we don’t yet have the Leaving Permit we must remain in this area. We may have to anchor out a few times while we wait for slips to become available.

A note to boaters about mast stepping here. Westland Boatyard does not offer mast services other than storing. We brought in a rigger who was really great. In fact, due to getting our tests that morning, Bob was not here for mast up, a first for his life with this boat. The riggers did a great job BUT they do not own a boom truck nor does the boatyard. So they brought in a 30T crane (four hour minimum) to do the deed. Final bill, USD 890! Everything else at Westland was great and there are so many boats on the hard with masts up that they don’t feel the need to have such a service. But it sure was a kick in our USD reserves. :-/

More news to come when something is worth noting.

 

Finnish Line 2.0 Trucks Out

The Adventure Begins – Finnish Line 2.0 shipped out Monday morning December 3rd on its way to Titusville FL. On January 3rd Peter, Wilma, Tarja and Bob will catch up with the boat to begin a winter cruise of the Bahamas. They will cross into the Abacos, head to Eleuthera to visit Brad Strawbridge before heading down the more remote Bahamian islands to the Turks and Caicos. They will return to the Bahamas at Great Inagua before heading up the Exumas and over to Bimini by April. They hope to post articles of their progress along the way.