Okeechobee Waterway-Ft. Myers to Stuart

After breakfast at Ella Mae’s with Peter & Julie, we left Ft. Myers.  We went through our first lock on the OCWW, the Franklin Lock.  It raised us one foot!  After the locks on the Illinois and Tenn-Tom, this was nothing!  However, the OCWW locks work a little differently.  They have no valves to allow water in, they just crack open the lock door to slowly fill the chamber, so it is a longer process.

We spent our first night at a free dock in LaBelle.  The story goes that a lady who lived on the water allowed boaters to tie to her dock when traveling the waterway.  Upon her death, she left her property to the City with the stipulation that they build docks (with power & water) for the free use of boaters, and her house would become a public library. Sweet!  Julie had scoped out restaurants in town; we dined at Forrey Grill.  Nice evening, good company.

Next day we moved on to the town of Clewiston.  This is the jump off point for crossing shallow Lake Okeechobee.  Cleared one low bridge and two locks on route to the infamous Roland & Mary Ann Martin’s Marina.  They have a wildly popular Tiki Bar!  We walked into town to stretch our legs then hit the Tiki Bar for cocktails with Peter & Julie.  It started to rain, then it poured and poured some more.  Cocktails stretched into dinner.  We returned to the boats when it finally stopped raining, well after dark. 

The next morning, we bailed and pumped up the dinghy (again), then bid farewell to Peter & Julie.  They are heading straight through to Stuart, about 60 miles.  That’s a really long day for us so we planned to overnight in Indiantown.  We left Clewiston at 7:00 and had a calm 25-mile lake crossing.  We drove through heavy rain for about 30 minutes just before Indiantown.  The marina was closed but they told us to tie up to the face dock and settle up in the morning.  Really nice facility: boaters lounge with screen porch and air-conditioned kitchen.  Have I mentioned how hot it is?  We wrote blog posts in the air-conditioned space while doing laundry, then grilled steaks & new potatoes for dinner.  Couldn’t resist the A/C, so I carted the dishes to the boater’s kitchen to prevent heating up the cabin before bedtime!

Following morning, we showered and ate breakfast while waiting for the marina to open.  We paid our tab, replenished ice, and got underway a little after 8:00.  We arrived at our final lock, St. Lucie, but the lockmaster was locking through westbound boats.  We waited over an hour to get locked through.  The lockmaster insisted on lowering lines to you as you entered the lock, but he was busy chatting up the young lady in the boat ahead of us when we approached the lock wall.  (Not her fault; amazing young woman single-handing a 25’ Ranger Tug from New York to the Keys and back!)  The wind caught our bow pulling me away from the lock wall.  The Lockmaster tried to throw me a bow line; he hit me in the head with the line (twice) before he decided to throw me a mid-ship line so I could pull Steal Away back to the wall.    This lock lowered us only 14-feet, but it took 30 minutes.  Finally, he would not allow us to drop the lines in the water upon exiting like every other lock.  Oh no, he had to come and take them from us.  Control-freak, not impressed! ☹  And I have a lump on my head!

Our next delay was Stuart where it took 30-minutes to get through the bascule bridge.  The current was running strong, and it only opened every 30 minutes.  When he finally lowered the traffic gates, a car was beyond the gate.  The lockmaster had to get the car to back up behind the gate before he could open.  Good grief!  Once we exited the OCWW, the water was very rough; 19-mph winds and whitecaps.  Too rough at our first-choice anchorage so we continued on to Manatee Pocket.  The seas were calmer in this anchorage, but the wind was howling!  Peter & Julie invited us to dinghy into their marina (which had no available slips), but the winds were so strong we decided not to leave the boat for fear we would drag anchor (and it would have been a very wet ride!)

Storm Shares His Thoughts

This is Storm, the cat.  We are back in this 34-foot steel tube the staff refer to as a “sailing vessel”.  Will this bizarre passion never end?  Unlike last year when it was cool and the cockpit was my personal greenhouse, it’s hot and windy (you know I hate wind!)

You do know feline intelligence is far superior to humans, right?  I find a shady spot inside and sleep during the heat of the day; at night when it’s cooler, I eat, prowl and play.  I try numerous times each night to get my staff up so they can see for themselves, but instead of learning from the wisdom of my ways, they just get testy!  They think I’m going senile!  Don’t get mad at me!  Whose idea was it to live in a poorly ventilated steel tube with no A/C in this heat??  Not mine!

Did I mention I’m bored out of my mind??

Gulf ICW-Tarpon Springs to Ft. Myers

With the Gulf crossing and three long travel days behind us, we spent two nights in Tarpon Springs to rest, recover and enjoy some Greek food!  The City of Tarpon Springs is known for their sponge-divers and supplying the world with natural sponges.  We stayed at the Municipal Docks right in the heart of town.

We started our day with a full breakfast at Bayou Café in old town, delicious and cheap.😊  With full bellies, we tackled the task of removing the salt from Steal Away’s exterior (compliments of the Gulf).  After showering, we headed to the Sponge Docks for lunch.  We had been deprived of ice cream for so long, we decided to enjoy an ice cream lunch!  After lunch, we headed to my favorite Greek market to stock up on herbs, honey, cookies, and candy.  After cocktails and listening to live music from our cockpit, we headed back into town to dine at one of the famous Greek restaurants, Hella’s.  Huge gyro platter followed by desserts from the bakery, Yum!!

Upon leaving Tarpon Springs, we entered the protected waters of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway (GIWW).  Lots of low bridges would need to open for us to pass through.  We anchored in Boca Ciega Bay the first night then headed into Sarasota for Memorial Day weekend.  The Waterway was extremely busy due to the beautiful weather and upcoming holiday.  However, this does not excuse the lack of courtesy we experienced between Tampa Bay and Sarasota.  Speed limits and no-wake zones were completely ignored.  Large motorboats passed us so close in the narrow channel at such high rates of speed that we took their wake into our cockpit!  One boat rocked us so hard, items went flying off shelves in the galley (including a bottle of olive oil, spilling half the contents in the settee floor).  These are the most discourteous boaters we have experienced in all our years of sailing!

Marina Jack was the only facility that had transient slips available (and we soon learned why).  A large marina complex with 3 on-site restaurants, the premier marina in Sarasota.  Our slip backed up to a beautiful park with huge Banyan trees; we watched three wedding party photo shoots from our cockpit!  Already the most expensive dockage we have paid on our Loop to date, they added a $1.00 per foot surcharge for the holiday weekend.  Wow!  But we were in Sarasota for a reason: We were invited to see a Tampa Bay Rays game with our neighbor, Merle’s, daughter and son-in-law, Kim and Ed, who happen to live in Sarasota.  Check off one more major-league park from our bucket list!

The next two nights we spent at anchor, the first night in Lemon Bay and the second in Pelican Bay.  We had previously stayed in Pelican Bay on a charter vacation; however, storms have enlarged the bay over the years.  We arrived early and played in the water for the first time this trip!  We departed early the next morning and went to another favorite, Cabbage Key, for breakfast.  At breakfast, we met Peter and Julie, also doing the Loop aboard a 25’ Rosborough, Pilgrim. 

After breakfast, we headed to Ft. Myers, departing the GIWW and entering the Okeechobee Waterway (OCWW).  Upon arrival at the marina, we tied up in front of Pilgrim (they travel twice our speed!)  Just about the time Jim completed an oil change, the skies opened up and it rained, and rained, and rained.  We finally decided to don our rain jackets and head into town for a later dinner.  Ft. Myers is a really cool old town with lots of shops and restaurants.  We decided to dine at Ford’s Garage, known for burgers and beer.  Neat place: Model A suspended over the bar, shop rags for napkins, hose clamps for napkin rings.  Great burgers!  Wish we could stay another day in Ft. Myers, but we must clear a railroad bridge on the east end of the OCWW.  It will be undergoing repairs and reduce its opening schedule to just three times per week!  We’ve got to keep moving.