Steve and Kathy

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 13:47 | Filled in Website Stuff

I interviewed our friends Steve and Kathy that we met here in Marathon last year. We had seen them and we liked their boat,  a Fountaine Pajot catamaran and we had interest in them. This is their interview.

Q: What influenced you to travel on a boat?

A: Steve had crewed on a boat and was rescued by the Coast Guard and he wanted to have many views of life. Kathy saw the movie Swiss family Robinson and that looked like fun.

Q: Why did you pick this type of boat?

A: They picked the Fountaine Pajot for sailing bridge deck clearance ( water line to underside of the hull.) Kathy went with the flow.

Q: Do you like your trip so far?

A: The trip has been great through great things and not so great things ( like vomit.) They like the trip and they do not like being bored; staying in the same place all the time gets boring.

Q: What did you first do at the idea of sailing?

A: Kathy made out her will. She was scared of dangerous sea life like sharks and other things.

Q: Have you met many sailors?

A: ” Sure thing,” said Steve ” Oh, yes,” said Kathy.

Q: Do you have a favorite marina?

A:  At Emerald Bay in the Bahamas the people were so nice and every thing was great. There was anything you could want.

Q: What was your favorite place so far?

A: Cambridge Key in the Bahamas the water was great and so was the snorkeling: it was post card perfect. They said it was amazing.

Q: Did you put the sails up a lot?

A: Yes. Their favorite sail is the spinnaker. They like the way it sails and it is quiet.

Whats UP

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 13:47 | Filled in Uncategorized

Hi there,

We are still in the Keys and I don’t think we are going to leave because of the way the wind is blowing. It is not a good crossing time to go to the Bahamas. The wind is blowing out of the north so that it is in the wrong direction in order to get a nice crossing. I was at my friend Will’s house last weekend. We had so much fun. Not a wink of sleep. Up all night watching TV, eating junk, playing video games, and playing with his dogs, Tally and Molly. I came home to fun, fun, fun. We had dinner with friends and I went with my friends from the marina, Jamie, Aspen, Annaka, Cristy, Lisa, and Daniel, and Taylor yesterday. We could stay here all the time or jump over to the Bahamas for a few weeks before we have to go home.

Another Interveiw

Sunday, February 21, 2010 12:30 | Filled in Uncategorized

This interview is about our friends Meryl and Sandy.

#1 Q: WhatDSCN0550 influenced you to travel on a boat?

A: Meryl was very young and he read Treasure Island and it was about action, the sea, and adventure. He always wanted to do those things. Life got in the way. His wish was to sail the ocean on his one and only boat. He was going to die from cancer but fate said otherwise. He always wanted to do what he is doing now.

#2 Q: Why did you pick this type of boat?

A: He picked the O’Day 25 because it was the first boat he saw that he could afford. It was a gift to him from the previous owner. The boat was in a marina in the NH border. It was run down when Meryl saw it; it needed a lot of work.

#3 Q: How do you like the trip so far?

A: It was hard bad, weather and seas, scary coast, and granite bottom. They met the best people you could imagine.

#4 Q: Have you met many sailors?

A: They met many people young and old alike. Many were fisherman and cruisers. Meryl helped where he could and people that were in need. He worked with a fisherman when the fisherman was in need of help. They try to help with everything they can.

#5 Q: What was your favorite state so far?

A: They liked a lot of places along the trip down the east coast. The people were so nice and would let you use their car or take a shower and you don’t know them. They love Florida.

#6 Q: Do you have a favorite marina?

A: Marian, MA. They loved it, weather could have been better.  At Barlow’s boatyard in Pocasset, MA the people would drive them to get parts or to get groceries and they would not have to pay their driver, and the place was family owned.

#7 Q: Did you have your sails up a lot?

A: Their sails were up all the time. The only time they were down was if there was no wind. The ship, Amber Marie, will sail on almost no wind.

Video

Friday, February 19, 2010 11:18 | Filled in Uncategorized

Pix of the Exciting Day

Friday, February 19, 2010 9:47 | Filled in Uncategorized

An Exciting Day

Friday, February 19, 2010 9:40 | Filled in Uncategorized

Last Saturday we (as in Steve (the captain#1), mom, dad, me, new friends, Linda, and Steve (the guest#2) went on a day sail of a life time on Steve #1’s catamaran called Hanalei Moon. It started as a good day. We boarded and went off the mooring. The cat cruised down to Sister Creek on the other side of Boot Key. The ship went out into the open ocean and we headed out to the reef.  Dolphins started riding the bow and we got up close and personal with them. First, 10-15 dolphins roll up the waves. “That’s insane!” I kept telling myself. Just then, after they leave, 10-20 more come and that was amazing! We were just blown away. They rode the bow some more and then they went back to fishing.

We motored out to the reef. At first the water was a little cold,but it always is when you first jump in. There were so many fish! We were tossed oatmeal flakes in the water and then when we were in the water we held bread and then schools of Yellow Tail Snapper & some sort of gray fish came right up to us and were swimming around me, dad, and Steve#1. Then the barracudas came (Jaws music here: danda, danda, dandandanda, strike) not at us, but at the fish. Everything is all right. The barracudas leave. We snorkel around the reef, we see Sea Fan, brain coral, lots of fish in all different shapes, sizes, and colors on the reef. Dad and I get out and mom goes in. Dad lets Luna go (she has been crying all this time when we jump in.)  She sees the bottom, sees mum, and jumps! Of course she thinks she will touch bottom! FAT CHANCE!!!!!! She soon finds out that it’s 25 ft deep. Then, this happens in her head: “Mom’s fine! Got to get back to the BOAT!”  She swims back and dad hauls her out and she shakes. I go back in with mom and we go around the reef looking at many things. We are seeing many fish and sea life on the reef. Then I start to help Steve#1 clean the bottom of the cat. That’s boring and the task is quickly aborted.

We leave the reef and go fishing, trawling to be exact. Next thing you know, we get a fish and dad is fighting with the rod. We finally get the fish aboard. Then we find out that it’s a  HUGE Grouper and have to let it go because they are not in season and it would be illegal to take it. I was starting to smell it on the grill. AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH. We let the fish go and we wet a line again. Nothing for two hours. Then something I least expect happens; we see a sea turtle. A Green to be exact. But when we passed it, it didn’t dive. I was the turtle expert so we called the Coast Guard and they gave us the number of the Turtle Hospital.  The turtle staff told us to take it in the boat. We captured it and went straight to Burdines, a restaurant in the harbor with dock. We put the injured turtle in the cockpit and sprinkled some water on the shell to keep it from drying out. When we got there the staff asked us what we wanted to name our female turtle. We said Hanalei after Steve #1 ’s catamaran. Hanalei means ” to make a flower lei.” Lei is a Hawaiian symbol of affection.For more info and pix go to http://www.turtlehospital.org/blog/.

Interview With Cruisers

Thursday, February 18, 2010 12:52 | Filled in Website Stuff

Hello Sea Zen viewers!

I’m going to be doing interviews of people that I meet along the way.

This one is about Brian & Nicole on the vessel Sponge. They started out in Rhode Island with their two dogs, ShriDSCN0393mpy and Dexter

#1 Q: What is influencing you to travel on a boat?

A: Brian wanted to travel since he was a child. He heard about sailing and adventure on the high seas; he always loved boats and things that sail. Brian did not want to work anymore and instead of working more,  he wanted to live his life to the fullest. Nicole just went with the flow.

#2 Q: Why did you pick this type of boat?

A: They picked an intrepid 28 foot mono hull sloop. Most other boats are way too much money and they were not too experienced at the time. The ship’s lead keel is very sturdy. The boat was damaged by a tree hit and Brian could repair the damage to the hull. Nicole was in charge of painting, and scraping the hull, gross and simple, but tiring jobs. Size was a good factor because any larger wound be too much to handle and any smaller would not have enough room.

#3 Q: When did you have the idea of sailing?

A: Brian was around 12 when he wanted to sail. He did lots of research and found Sponge in a scrap yard, did a lot of work with Nicole. They had some challenges:  he had to buy a new head sail; they had to rebuild some of the inside of the boat; they had little sailing experience so they had a rough time in the beginning, especially with weather.

#4 Q: What was your favorite state?

A: Their favorite state was Florida/south, because of the temperature, with New York in a close follow up.

#5 Q: Do you have a favorite marina?

A: Their  favorite marina was a marina in New York City because of location.

#6 Q: Have you put your sails up a lot?

A: Yes, but  Brian & Nicole still need sailing skills improvement, experience wise.

Plane!

Sunday, February 14, 2010 13:13 | Filled in Video

Duck!!!

A Movie You Should like

Sunday, February 14, 2010 13:10 | Filled in Website Stuff

This is a video of  New York harbor.

Pix Pix and more Pix

Sunday, February 14, 2010 13:10 | Filled in Seazen picts