Monday, February 3, 2020

Gulf Shores, Alabama

Gulf Shores, Alabama is a resort town on the water, bordered on the South by beautiful white sand beaches along the Gulf, and split in half by the Intra-Coastal Waterway (ICW). Their motto is "small town big beach" which pretty much sums it up. It was the perfect place to hang with friends in the evenings, and get significant piles of year-end bookkeeping work done during the daytime.



Red Sky At Morning, as seen from out campsite, the prelude to a particularly stormy day


The hotels along the waterfront, as seen from our campsite on a foggy evening
We are also taking a moment here to lick our boat shopping wounds, it's taking more of a soul toll than expected.


Stewie is sulking because I won't let him out to roam during the day, but he'll have to wait it out until we move on to the next spot - the neighbors are coming out of hibernation and are looking for breakfast.

Anyhoo... back to Gulf Shores, our January landing spot. Snowbirds are welcomed here. Most of them come from Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Indiana, with a few Canadians sprinkled in.

No self-respecting Gulf Shores camper would be caught without a koozie over their beverage of choice. When I told a circle of campers I had no idea what a koozie was they collectively gasped, and later that day we were presented with a pile of them. Whether this is an Alabama thing or a Michigan thing brought to the region by snowbirds is a mystery.

There's $1 minigolf, live music every night, oysters, and hot wings. I've been told it's off the hook for Spring break. Plans are already under way for assorted Mardi Gras celebrations around town, people have started decorating floats and selecting colorful costumes.

The Hangout is just a few blocks from our park. The list of Spring Break headliners is impressive. I've been told this outdoor venue can be heard for many miles around when it's in full swing.
A unique chotchky collection lines the walls at The Hangout

We exchanged our Florida flip-flop and swimsuit attire for boots and hoodies and embraced the bug-free cooler weather. The January storms that rolled across us were plentiful, windy and wet - during one particular storm we were grateful to be living in a heavy Class A, and I felt compelled to place the Mini between us and a nearby lightweight popup camper I was worried about blowing into us. Finding a body shop for the Mini is less hassle than settling Loretta into one. It seems the normal January weather pattern for this region is one day in the low 60's followed by a day or two of very wet and sometimes thundering storms. The snowbirds didn't seem to mind - their people were all shoveling snow at home after all, but it was a shock to us coming from the Keys so recently.

Beautiful white sand beaches are lonely in anticipation of the coming storm.
Sunset after an epic storm, as seen from my office window

You may remember Gulf Shores from the news in 2010 - it was hit with a huge oil spill that affected the town in many significant ways. As part of the cleanup and restoration process, BP funded several improvement projects, my favorite of which is the 60 miles of bicycle paths through the wetland preserve, easily accessible from our campground. Lance rode nearly daily while I worked, I joined him whenever I could escape my desk.

The bike path of Gulf Shores Park is beautifully maintained and equally welcoming for hikers, bikers, and dogs.

Shelby Lake in Gulf State Park
Shelby Lake as seen from the bike path in Gulf State Park
And Loretta got some lovin' - a new coat of wax! We were thrilled to find someone affordable to take on the job.


The old gal can still shine



White sandy beaches on a cool blustery day.
No trip to the area is complete without a tour of nearby Fort Pickens This fort was build in 1834 and saw action in the civil war and also protected against German submarines in World War II. Today only a few of the monstrously huge cannons remain on the beach, standing vigil among the lizards and seabirds.


Another great find was Joe Patti's Seafood, which has fish covered from catch to market to restaurant.


The fishing boat @ Joe Patti's

Crawdads can generally be found on every menu in Gulf Shores, although Alabama tips the spice jar quite a bit less than nearby New Orleans.

Tuna steaks carved right in front of our eyes, quickly and carefully with no morsel wasted
.
We were invited here by friends we met a couple of years ago in Mexico Beach, FL. We were there because friends we made in the Keys invited us to follow them there when we all left the Keys together. We were in the Keys because friends we made in Brookings OR in our first few months on the road recommended we join the Elks and the Elks hooked us up. So it definitely pays to make friends on the road. It's easy - just take a lap around the park with the dog. Or open your lawn chair and sit down in front of your rig. Or open a hatch on your rig and look puzzled - I guarantee you'll get more help than you may need.


The stage at the Flora-Bama awaits the next band

This park in Gulf Shores has a core group of snowbirds that return year after year. Their travel is different from ours in that they pretty much live in Wisconsin, Michigan or Minnesota half the year and live here at the park the other half of the year - their rigs travel only back and forth or just stay here and await their return. Classic snowbird behavior but so foreign to us. I can definitely see the allure in rejoining friends year after year. They welcomed us into their events, of which there were many ranging from a superbowl party to weekly mini-golf and bean-bag toss games (out here they call the game corn hole - the idea is to throw a bean bag into a box with a hole in it).

While we are still enjoying our life of travel, I find that the goodbyes are wearing on me. But it won't stop me from continuing to make new friends along the way, that is the point of all of this after all. Maybe a snowbird life is in my future - when I can enjoy good weather and look forward to seeing the same friends next year, making the goodbyes a little easier.

After the next adventure, maybe...


Internet Speed Comparison
Luxury RV Resort, Gulf Shores, AL
Sampled 1/6/20 at 6:57 pm

MB down
MB up
Calyx (Sprint)
55.2 (!!!)
3.66
Google Fi
32.6
10.7
Jetpack (Verizon)
21.1
8.62
Park wifi
Free wifi workig intermittently, there is a cabled paid version we didn't buy into

Friday, January 17, 2020

Ya Gotta Kiss A Lotta Frogs...

Two days before Christmas our offer was accepted on a beautiful 1989 Tartan 40 in Miami. We found her on Yachtworld. I drove from the Keys to Miami to see her on one of Shawna's work days.


It was love at first sight. A Sparkman & Stevens designed boat; she has a wide beam and a small transom with reverse shear, a destroyer wheel, a good size cockpit and all lines are lead aft. I could tell she had been sitting unloved for quite a while, but a diamond in the rough is what we're looking for. 

We made arrangements for Shawna to come and see her on her day off and I could tell right away she fell in love too. We decided on the spot to make an offer.




When we got back to the bus we looked at the Yachtworld ad again and compared it to the pictures Shawna had taken onsite. Right away we we noticed all the cruising equipment missing - it was listed on the ad and visible on the pictures, but not there in actuality. Disturbing.

We figured out what it would cost to replace all the advertised gear and made an offer. After several rounds back and forth with the seller we had reached an impasse, basically the cost of the missing gear. Then out of nowhere it suddenly became available - it had just been removed by the seller and put in storage. We adjusted our final offer accordingly, came to an agreement, submitted the contract with the down payment and started feverishly looking for a place to land our new boat for the transition period. The Miami Boat Show was scheduled for mid-February and there were simply no slips to be found so we hit the ground running to secure a spot somewhere, anywhere, for both the RV and the boat.

Buying a boat is a lot like buying a house, it's a process. The initial price agreement is reached pending the results of a survey (a thorough inspection by a marine surveyor or perhaps more than one if your boat has specialized concerns, very similar to the inspection process with a house). Part of the process involves sailing and motoring the boat, and hauling the boat out on a big sling to get a good look at the hull, prop, and rudder. The surveyor tests every system, pokes and hammers everywhere checking for soundness, flips every switch to make sure everything is working properly, and presents the buyer with a list of recommendations and concerns.

Finding a surveyor and a quick-haul-friendly yard were tricky around the holidays. We were scheduled to leave the Keys on New Year's day for our reserved January spot in Alabama. Finally all the pieces came together for a survey on January 3rd, and we were able to extend our stay in the Keys for a few extra days to wait.

Prior to making our offer we had decided on a list of deal-breakers; the engine, hull, keel, and sails had to be sound. Minor problems are OK, just nothing big. She has to have good "bones."

On the morning of the 3rd I left before dawn for Miami while Shawna packed up camp and started rolling Loretta towards Alabama.

The survey began with Marc (my surveyor) sounding the deck with an urethane mallet, no problems there. After about two hours at the dock she was ready for the out-of-water inspection. The owner was along to captain the boat. We headed from the dock up the Miami river to the boat yard  - a cool five drawbridge experience.

It was at the yard that the bad news started rolling in. First find: a 1/16 gap opened up when the weight was removed from the keel. It could have been loose keel bolts or it could be something much worse. Next, the rudder was full of water. Marc pointed out a poor repair in the hull at the water line. No deal killers yet, a bit more than I expected but doable. All of these might be easy fixes. Or maybe not.

Now back in the water for the best part, the seatrial. In Florida, you drive boats the same way you drive cars, like you have never seen one before. Chaos! From a McMansion on the water stopped dead in front of the open drawbridge, to a couple walking around the barrier to saunter across a drawbridge that only opens once in the next 3 hours, while 7 boats waited, it was insane. Finally we made it out of the river and out on beautiful Biscayne Bay only to discover the engine wouldn't turn more than 1800 rpm (3000 rpm is nominal) during a full power run, leaks oil from the starboard side, and overheats. Probably time for an engine replacement.

The autopilot was tested and functioned but without a display. The sails were raised, the jib looked good but the main was full of patches (where the rats ate it according to the owner) and had terrible shape - time for a total sail replacement. In spite of this she sailed like a dream, what a beautiful well-balanced boat. I took the helm for a tack or two and some beam reach sailing. 

It was a much quieter group than left the slip that morning. Back at the dock the gremlins just kept coming, an anchor light that seemed to be flashing S.O.S, no running lights, and the shore power breakers were tripping repeatedly.

In spite of all that I think she would make a great boat for a DIYer. For me however, I only get to do this once, and any one of these projects could have blown up, costing money and time. We discussed it at length and reluctantly let her go. Shit!

Friday, December 13, 2019

Florida: Land of Water

Water is everywhere in Florida. Even the most modest home can have waterfront property here.

Friends paddling in the Gulf, as seen from Islamorada in the Florida Keys on a calm afternoon

The seabirds are plentiful, so are the bugs; the worst of the biting bugs... no-see-ums. These nasty little buggers even manage to get past the window screens so our best self defense is to keep the windows closed and the air conditioning on, and layer on copious amounts of bug spray before venturing out. Everyone has their own answer for bug repellent; the recipes I've heard include vinegar, Vapo-rub, tea tree oil, lavender oil, and even some particularly foul-smelling blue Calgon perfume. I've tried it all and despite my concerns about wearing poison, I find the green Deep Woods Off with Deet works best. It smells like some demented chemist's idea of what a tree should smell like, if they had never actually left the lab and sniffed at a real tree. So I stink. Better than being eaten alive. For some reason they don't bite Lance at all. It's so unfair.


What ate the gators?

Speaking of being eaten alive... check out these gator eggs discovered within 100 yards of our campsite. We've been puzzling over these for quite some time and still are no closer to figuring out what could have drilled such perfect holes and slurped the baby gators.


The view from Sharky's patio in Key Largo - our favorite location for Taco Tuesday and live music

Our first stop in Florida was a Thousand Trails park in Crystal River Springs on the Gulf side. It was a lovely little resort town but we didn't get to explore much of it as we were boat shopping most every day. It's definitely worth circling back in the coming months if we can make it work.


Manatees resting on the surface in the Fort Pierce Marina.
They look like they are mooning us. This is as close as I've been to a manatee so far.


Our second stop was Jensen Beach where we caught up with some friends for Thanksgiving. Since Lance, Todd and Lorri aren't into traditional Thanksgiving fare we ate at a fish and steakhouse overlooking the ocean and it was lovely. Todd & Lorri know the area well so they took us along for local happenings such as live music and a farmers market hosted every weekend by the Fort Pierce Marina. Lorri and I even got in some swim time in the pool at her swanky mostly-adult resort.


Stone Crab Claws at Conchy Joe's, Jensen Beach FL
The crab claws are harvested from the still living crab and he/she
is returned to the water to regenerate a new claw.
I sure wish we could develop this technology for people feet.

Our third stop in Florida was the Elks Lodge in Tavernier, where we were warmly greeted by friends and it felt like home.


Mother Ocean is a second-hand boat stuff store, similar to Minney's in Southern California. A gal could wander around here for days.

On Key Largo we discovered Mother Ocean, a store for used boat parts. If I ever turn up missing, start the search there because I've likely gotten lost in some pile of small parts in the back 40 somewhere. I love this place, and if we end up finding Miss Right on the East Coast I expect we will spend a lot of time here in the future.


Now that's a helluva cascade system! Air, anyone? Everyone?


Internet Speed Comparison
Pritchard’s RV Park, Jensen Beach, FL
Sampled 11/24/19 at 4:07 pm

MB down
MB up
Calyx (Sprint)
14.3
3.22
Google Fi
14.8
6.32
Jetpack (Verizon)
5.71
16.0
Park wifi
None available

Saturday, November 30, 2019

Chasing Miss Right

Manatees resting at the City Marina in Fort Pierce, FL

We are searching for the perfect boat. This is a dream we've had for years, it's taken so many twists and turns in our almost-20 years together.

Back in April 2000, less than a month after our very first date, Lance talked me into our first boat. It was a 14' zodiac on a trailer with a 35hp Mercury outboard motor, we each came up with half of the asking price of $800 and bought her from some spearfishermen in the Oakland Hills. The inflatable body of the boat was covered from stem to stern in assorted repairs. Naturally, we named her Patches. We dove the hell out of the Northern California coast in that little inflatable boat - from Big Sur to Crescent City we'd load our gear, pump her up, slide her off the trailer, motor JUST over there, roll over the side and go for it. She could fit 6 abalone freedivers or 4 well-organized camera-laden scuba divers and we were then able to anchor along the outside of the kelp forests and enjoy new angles on the dive sites we loved, without having to lug our gear across the sand. Heaven.

One of our regular dive sites involved backing the trailer down a switchback mountainside road to dunk the trailer, and then camping in the cold fog overnight. We upgraded our pickup to a stick-shift F250 diesel with the intent to install a cab-over camper so we'd have somewhere warm to sleep.

For a brief moment we played with a HobieCat which promptly flipped and left us clinging to her hull until the wind pushed us to the lake's edge where we laid shivering in the sun until we could gain the sensation in our limbs required to drag it onto the beach. We towed it home and later onto the lawn to restitch the failing trampoline. But I never came up with enough nerve after that to try sailing it again.

At about the same time the landlord started giving me trouble (he was miffed about us having the Hobiecat on the lawn for one afternoon for tramp repairs, or Lance telling him to *ahem* go away...or something along those lines... when he got snotty about our lawn activity). We talked about buying a boat to liveaboard on together - what a romantic idea for our next home! We shopped hard for that liveaboard and found a dreamy 35' Cheoy Lee trawler on the Sacramento delta around the time Lance graduated from the Engineering program, then he was offered a job in Southern California. The very weekend we were going to hand over the liveaboard down payment we decided instead to accept the job offer in an area with more income opportunities and started tying up loose ends in Napa.


Angels Gate Lighthouse as shot from the deck of the Sea Monkey. This photo was selected as the contest winner and printed in Good Old Boat magazine in 2017. The spinnaker was a gift from the cousins and made light-air sailing infinitely more fun.

In 2004 we moved to Los Angeles County for Lance's new job in Hollywood and a parking space for Patches was one of the criterion for the rental home selected. I taught my last scuba class in Monterey while Lance traveled ahead with our stuff, after the class I waved goodbye to family and our favorite Monterey dive spots, then I towed Patches down to our new home, with big dreams of scuba diving in warmer waters. It was February. Northern California reluctantly let me go, spitefully spitting big fat cold raindrops on me all the way to the Grapevine. When I arrived to Pasadena I was greeted with sunny 80-degree blue skies and palm trees waved me in. The very next weekend we found a boat launch, donned our gear and puttered around Long Beach looking for a kelp patch to dive. That's when we discovered our little inflatable boat wasn't cut out for Southern California. The good diving is WAY over there on Catalina Island - 26 miles away - barely visible from the shores of Long Beach. A very long haul for little Patches and a cold, wet and bumpy ride for us. We needed a bigger boat. We placed her with an old man who wanted to take his grandson fishing on lakes. He didn't mind the patches as he said he would probably add more with the grandson and the hooks anyways. I cried while hooking her trailer to his truck.

The next boat in our lives was an old Bayliner. We bought her from a broker on Lake Mead and dragged her down the mountain without trailer brakes - it's good that nobody short-stopped in front of us or we would have ended up crushed by the heavy old boat. The very next weekend we dunked her at the Alamitos boat ramp in Long Beach and set out for Catalina. Our brave friend Matt "Hardvickenstein" came along to help us wrangle her. During our first outing Lance, Matt and I shared a bottle of champagne while swimming two at a time in the endlessly blue deep water halfway between the island and the mainland. Years later that I found out we'd been swimming in the same area where great white sharks are often seen by the paddlers competing in the annual Catalina Classic. Oops.

We had so many adventures in that boat, most of them involved a healthy dose of cursing. She was a beast - heavy, old, cantankerous, and she didn't fit well on her trailerSome days she refused to be loaded back onto her trailer, sometimes she wouldn't idle or wouldn't go in reverse, or just would not turn over at all, then later in her own time she would fire up just fine, leaving us scratching our heads and wondering what we'd done right that last time and wrong all the times before.

We eventually named her Christine (with a nod to Stephen King), because she generally ran best when one of us was bleeding on her. She had so many sharp edges it usually didn't take long to find an exposed screw or other sharp edge and then she would be appeased. One time Lance was cutting kelp off the anchor and sliced his hand open, immediately after that she decided she would run in reverse when we asked her to. That lasted a few weekends for which we were grateful, when his wound healed into a scar she again refused to go into reverse. I wasn't superstitious when I met this boat, over the years together she changed my mind.

  Every morning at anchor we'd wake up to several inches of water on the salon floor - the two of us sleeping in the bow changed the pitch of the boat enough so that the bilge pump couldn't get it all. We tried every trick in the book and never did find the source of that obnoxious leak. At first it was alarming, over time we came to accept it as part of our daily routine and calmly made coffee from the kitchen table while keeping our feet elevated on the salon chair, handed up the mugs of coffee to the big stern cushion, and sipped our coffee while gleefully discussing the day's dive plan, during which time our weight on the stern changed the pitch enough that the bilge pump could suck most of the rest of the water out of the galley floor. The last inch or so would disappear while we motored to the first dive location of the day.

We dove every named spot on the Catalina Franko dive map, and then we filled our little handheld GPS with new spots we found ourselves, giving them names that often made us giggle with a specific memory.

The good thing about having an old fixer boat is that there's nothing to lose by trying new things. We carved holes out of the top of the livebait well that perfectly secured our dive tanks and weights, freeing the deck of gear. I made custom bags for wrangling clean and dirty laundry, storing tools and other boat gear. Lance modified just about every mechanical, plumbing and electrical system.

One day, after a long night of lobster hunting on Catalina, she died at sunrise on our way back to Long Beach and would not be resuscitated. We called Boat US who towed us back to Long Beach and helped us wrangle her onto the trailer. Lance was so disgusted with her behavior he called the Boat Angels to pick her up from the storage lot - he couldn't stand the sight of her even to deliver her to the charity. We did not cry over that good-bye.

At some point during the nausea-inducing 4-hour tow home that day we decided we'd learn to sail. With an alternate method of propulsion we hoped to never need to be towed again. It seemed like the logical next step.

The very next weekend we dropped a pile of cash at the Long Beach sailing school and collected books and basic navigation tools. We cut off a short length of rope and left it lying around the house, while studying for our sailing exams we'd take turns practicing knots with it, and for years afterwards that rope remained lying around the house somewhere, usually if the television was on one of us could be found absentmindedly tying knots.

We took every sailing course offered by the Long Beach ASA school, and rented their sailboats as often as we could scrape together the funds and time. One day, the little bean-counter at heart than I am, I added up what we were spending on rentals and announced we could buy a sailboat of our own for less than we spent with the rental agency, and if we didn't pay to store it we'd actually save money by the 10th month. Before long there was a MacGregor 26X sailboat with a 60hp outboard on a trailer in the driveway. Dual Porpoise was much lighter and narrower than Christine, we had big dreams of sailing and scuba diving from that MacGregor but found that adding dive gear to the little trailer sailboat just made us miserable - there wasn't enough space to get around. The dive gear collected dust while we sailed on without it.

Dual Porpoise on the trailer in the yard
With the big and noisy outboard motor roaring, the bilge empty and the centerboard up, the MacGregor could really scoot if the seas were calm. On one pond-smooth day we flew around the breakwater wall and were surprised by some Sheriff recovery divers and for a moment I thought we'd get a speeding ticket... in a sailboat... and I sort of hoped we would so I could frame it. They were as surprised by the sailboat speeding past them as we were surprised by them being there in the through-way with their tiny dive flag down way too low to be seen from the oncoming traffic. Everyone aboard both boats exchanged wide-eyed glances as we swerved belatedly wide to give them room to work.


Dual Porpoise on a mooring ball at Two Harbors, Catalina after our first crossing together. Our first improvement after this trip was a boom kicker to raise the boom off the deck, which greatly improved topside comfort at anchor.

With the mast on in motorboat mode she was pretty rolly, so she was not a great powerboat except in glass-calm conditions. In sailboat mode she wasn't a great sailboat either, she was too lightweight and her freeboard was quite high so she felt fragile and skittery  - I never trusted her to keep us safe in any sort of real weather. It took hours to drive her to the dock, get her mast setup and get her in the water. Often a significant amount of bickering was involved and generally by the time we motored away from the boat ramp either on the water or on the highway we were exhausted and cranky. So one summer we decided to leave her on the trailer with the mast up at the boat yard, to limit the setup effort because she'd already be there ready to go. From there it was a short jump to "let's just leave her in the water at Marina Del Rey all the time". Not long after that first summer at the marina we found ourselves eyeballing our cousins' Hunter sailboat with envy - they were actually taking up the whole width of their slip... for the same price we were paying to keep the skinny MacGregor in the water we could have a proper sailboat with room for dive gear too! We sold the MacGregor and bought a 28' Hunter sailboat.

Sea Monkey at rest in Long Beach

We loved that sailboat. We christened her the Sea Monkey and sailed every chance we got. Finding a little elbow room on the water saved our souls, which by that point had really begun to chafe at crowded city life in Southern California.

I still get choked up when I think of her. If you've read this blog from the beginning you've met the Sea Monkey, we sold her just before selling the house to become full-time RVers, all of which was done so we could go in search of the perfect liveaboard boat. While we don't regret moving to Southern California to pursue career opportunity, participation in the rat race or becoming homeowners, the liveaboard dream fueled by that Cheoy Lee on the Sacramento delta never really left our hearts, it just grew sails and bigger horizons.

So... back to today. We're boat shopping seriously now. This next boat will be so much bigger than we've ever had before, somewhere in the 38-42 foot range. There needs to be room for two adults, a dog and two cats, space for my office stuff and it would be nice if we could fit a couple of guests for short stays. Of course we'd like to bring dive gear aboard so there needs to be storage for that and room on deck to wrangle it. Because we'll be sailing "short-handed" all the lines need to be led aft, either of us need to be comfortable with most of the sailing duties while the other rests or does chores and if the majority of the captain's work could be done from the dry safety of the cockpit all the better. Plus, space for all the little things that get done in daily life need to be considered - from swimsuits to warm jackets, from sewing machine to coffeemaker, from tools to cat food.

Sailboat shopping... we've learned a lot. Like usual, we have our list of well-considered requirements at our fingertips. We know our budget, the absolute must-haves and the dream-haves. We know the approximate cost of the electronic goodies we will likely need to add. We've spent countless hours debating this or that hull shape, boat architect/designer, motor, interior layout. We've toured a handful, it's a lot like used car shopping in that the brokers tend to try to pry you into whatever's available in their inventory, so it's important to know what you want/need before you go there or you'll be dragged all over the marina looking at sinking derelicts or megayachts only manageable with a crew of several.

We've learned that a "bluewater boat" means small windows, deep fridges and secure lockers. "Traditional styling" means lots of heavy dark wood will line every surface; so in a "traditional bluewater sailboat" I will not be able to see out the few small windows and will have a panic attack in the cave-like salon, and I will never be able to reach anything in the bottom half of the fridge, let alone keep it clean.

We've learned that "center cockpit" means Lance likely can't stand up straight. Since he is our chef he needs to be able fit in the galley, and since we will be taking turns at the wheel he'll need to be able to stand straight there too.

We've learned that "turn key" actually means nothing whatsoever, as we have yet to tour any that are actually really ready to leave right now although we have toured several that were advertised as such. We were initially hoping to avoid significant boat work before departure but are coming to accept we will be doing some work before sailing away, perhaps quite a bit of it.

This one's too big. That one's too small. This one is unsafe. That one needs too much work. This one costs too much more than it is worth. That one doesn't really fit us - it's too short for Lance or I can't see out from behind the wheel.

First world problems... right?

We will keep searching. Miss Right is out there somewhere.

What all of this means for Loretta and Mr. Toad, we just don't know yet. It depends on what and where Miss Right is and what she needs, and whether or not we want to boat year-round or switch between land and sea cruising life. We hope it will all become clear when we finally meet her.

In the meantime, RV fun is scheduled through February, we'll continue to fit boat shopping around it.


This mossy souvenir was collected from Crystal Isles RV Resort, apparently I got a little closer than planned to that tree in our campsite


Internet Speed Comparison
Crystal Isles RV Resort, Crystal River, FL
Sampled 11/13/19 at 10am

MB down
MB up
Calyx (Sprint)
4.99
4.50
Google Fi
11.8
0.54
Jetpack (Verizon)
5.76
0.49
Park wifi
Not tested, extra $

Monday, November 11, 2019

This is Cajun Country: Abbeville Louisiana


Seemingly since the beginning I'd been hearing about Betty's RV Park in Louisiana. Folks said it was a "must stay", a "real experience".

Without knowing what else to expect we rolled in to the tiny little park. It's actually Betty's backyard. And it felt just like home right away.

Lance and Betty on her patio

Happy Hour is every afternoon at 4:30, hosted on Betty's patio under the collection of license plates brought by returning travelers from over the years, surrounded by fountains, lamps, sculptures of colored glass and Mardi Gras beads. Everyone brings a tasty treat to share and a cuppa something tasty. The adventure stories and the laughter flow freely.


Bloody Marys in Cajun country are typically served with pickled okra garnish, and plenty of Tabasco

This is the heart of Cajun Country. Music festivals are everywhere, great food and bloody mary drinks are on every menu. There are drive-through daiquiri shacks. I was in heaven.


First up: the Cajun Food and Music Festival. The stage turned over one band after another playing a range of music from Zydeco to blues and the audience swayed to the music while gobbling fried corn on the cob, gumbo, and ice cream sandwiches. Crowds of children flocked around to pet Chloe; she was the center of attention at the festivals and rarely walked far without an entourage.


Ice cream sandwich in a sliced donut

Next: The 5000 egg omelette festival. The ceremony was conducted primarily in French, except of course for the singing of the national anthem. The omelette festival has been going on since Napoleon (click here for more about the Giant Omelette history), and Abbeville adopted this international tradition years ago. Each year they add one more egg to the total. This year's 5035th egg was presented to the crowd by a 6th grader who informed us the egg's name was Abraham Lincoln Eggbert, as decided by the local schoolchildren.

The chefs then paraded out, cracked all those eggs and set to making the giant omelette on a 12-foot diameter cast iron pan heated on a wood fire in the middle of the street downtown, and plates of omelette were shared freely with all in attendance.


Chefs warming butter on the 12' skillet in preparation for the Giant Omelette

The omelette festivities also included a car show. The winner of Best of Show this year was a souped-up Jeep.


Best of Show award


Live Oaks gracing the entrance at the Tabasco factory

Just up the road from Betty's is Avery Island, home of Tabasco sauce, one of my favorite foods. The surprise treat was to discover it's also sustainably grown by a ecologically-focused company with deep family roots in the community. Many of the employees have lived on Avery Island for multiple generations.


The Tabasco factory, largely unchanged since the 40's


The peppers rest in salt-covered barrels for three years before the sauce is extracted, pressed, combined with vinegar and bottled. The skins are sold separately for dry rubs.

The McIlheny family had the grounds surrounding their factory declared a sanctuary to monitor and protect the birds, fish and reptiles that live there, and currently work in close conjunction with LSU on assorted animal preservation projects. Their mindful attention has brought the snowy white egret back from the brink of extinction. The Jungle Gardens are open to the public and we were able to get as close as we dared to alligators and snakes, turtles and a plentiful assortment of birds. There is also oil under the island and they allow it to be extracted with careful supervision, a perfect marriage of capitalism and ecology.


Snowy White egret at the Jungle Gardens of Avery Island

Cypress love wet feet

The next thing we knew, Betty was shooing us out the door again - she had hooked us up with a concert and tour of a local accordion factory. The Martin family hand-makes Melodians in nearby Lafayette, Louisiana, and both the Cajun music and the instrument crafting techniques are handed down through the generations orally. They played a brief concert for us and a few other guests, and the music ranged from blues to country, gospel to Zydeco to Cajun.

Junior Martin and his pedal steel slide guitar


Three generations of Martins played an assortment of instruments; the most beautiful of which were the hand-made Martin Melodians. The most confounding was Junior's pedal steel guitar, which demanded action from both knees, both ankles, and both hands all at the same time - it was amazing to watch him elicit beautiful sounds from such a complicated machine. After the brief concert they walked us through the process from wood selection to a finished Melodian, the patience and attention required to hand-make each one is mind-blowing.

Joel Martin playing Amazing Grace for us on his favorite Melodian, singing in both French and English. The Martin signature crawdad on the bellows is hand-painted by an artist in California.

Examples of color and wood options. These will become part of future assembled Melodians.
Closeup of a hand-made Martin Melodian

The nightly happy hour at Betty's involves an ever-changing cast of characters, and folks enjoy sharing their own tasty homemade creations. One night we had okra gumbo and it was unbelievable. Everyone has their own recipe for gumbo and readily debate the best ingredients and seasonings; a person could eat a bowl every day in Cajun country and never have exactly the same meal twice. Even the local Chinese buffet had their own spin on gumbo and offered it on the buffet alongside shrimp toast, Asian noodles and fried catfish.


Beignets

Next up: the local cemetery tour "if these headstones could talk". Betty again hooked us up. The local historians dressed in costume to tell us with first-person intimacy about the lives of local residents buried in the Masonic cemetery downtown.



Local historians hosting "if these headstones could talk"

At first glance Abbeville seems like a sleepy, small town. But there's always something going on and nothing escapes Betty's attention.


Live Oaks are typical in this part of Louisiana, these ones live in the downtown square of Abbeville