We are underway southbound in the ICW, which here runs down the middle of the Indian River Lagoon. We are finally back in more temperate weather, and I've even worn a couple of short-sleeve shirts in the past week. We've been running the heat occasionally for weeks, but today we turned on the air conditioning for the first time since leaving the northeast.
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| Vector at anchor in Titusville, as seen from the causeway. |
The remainder of our passage last Thursday was uneventful, although seas built shortly before we arrived at the St. Johns and we were glad to be heading inshore. We had a slight push upriver and dropped the hook in a familiar spot immediately upriver of the ICW crossing (map), across the river from the BAE shipyard.
Friday morning when the engine had fully cooled I learned that valving off the water heater had not changed the situation, which has since sent me further down the rabbit hole of cooling system diagnosis. We enjoyed more of the bagels that Dorsey and Bruce had gifted us as we discussed our options if we needed professional help, as that might impact which direction we went from the anchorage.
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| The chickens are fresh in Vilano Beach. |
The worst case scenario is that the coolant is going into the combustion chamber, but at this very slow rate we are probably not doing any damage and can continue to run at our normal pace. That made the much more limited selection of boatyards upriver in Jacksonville less appealing than continuing south, where there would be a lot more alternatives ahead of us. A discretionary side trip upriver thus seemed a poor choice, and we decided instead to continue south directly.
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| Pesca rooftop bar and restaurant in the Hyatt Place. |
We weighed anchor and set out for St. Augustine down the inside, with outside weather unfavorable and also not wanting to be well offshore should the problem become suddenly worse. We held back until we could make the San Pablo Creek bridge with only a couple of knots behind us (it runs as high as six), yet still have a fair tide south from the St. Johns.
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| Durty Neli's. Promising, but no food yet. |
Underway I looked up every Lugger service dealer in Florida, and we also texted with Bruce and Dorsey, who happened to still be docked in St. Augustine. We learned they would be there for another couple of nights, and we made plans to connect for dinner in town Saturday, a fortuitous bonus of our decision to continue south. I ordered a coolant test kit and some UV coolant dye marker to the Amazon locker a couple of miles north of town.
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| The approach to the Vilano pier is always festive at the holidays. |
With the Amazon deliveries not scheduled until Sunday and dinner in St. Augustine on Saturday, we decided to stop just short in our usual haunt of Vilano Beach, dropping the hook in a familiar spot just outside the cable area (map). We usually have this anchorage to ourselves, but today we found three sailboats already here, so word has gotten out. They anchored well north of the cable area, though, and we still got the closest spot.
When we came through here earlier in the year they were just wrapping up construction on an Irish pub, and learning it had opened we were looking forward to trying it. They do not yet have a working kitchen, however, and as lovely as the neat row of draft handles looked, we continued on to a different, but still new to us, place, Pesca. This is the rooftop bar and restaurant in the Hyatt Place, which was built in the Art Deco style despite being only a couple of years old. We sat "indoors," meaning under a roof, but the entire joint is open-air, so we were glad to try it on a very pleasant evening. The food was decent and we've added it to our list. We made a quick stop in Publix on our way back to the tender.
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| One of the St. Augustine Lions, near the eponymous bridge, with Vector in the background across the river. |
Saturday morning we decked the tender and weighed anchor just before the turn of the tide, timing our departure to put us at the Bridge of Lions for the 9:30 opening. We did not need it, because we found just enough room in our preferred anchorage just before the bridge, across the river from town (map). We had the hook down just in time to see the annual holiday parade marching down the street along the waterfront, but it was a cold, rainy morning, and what little crowd we saw looked uncomfortable.
That weather kept us on board the whole morning. Things dried up a bit after lunch, and we tendered over to the city marina to pay the $15 dinghy dock fee and get a little walk in. We returned in the evening, met up with Dorsey and Bruce on Esmeralde, and walked over to Gaufres & Goods, a favorite of theirs, for dinner. We went early and were lucky to score a table; they take no reservations.
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| Parking is miserable in St. A, and costs more than the $15 dinghy fee. Tensions were high. |
This tiny venue, close to the dock, serves a mix of Polish and Greek dishes, and I was surprised to find the same strong Polish porter that I had stocked up on in Sheepshead Bay, the only other place I've seen it. The food and service were excellent, with a warm ambiance, and now it's a favorite of ours, too. A gaufre is a Belgian waffle, which we had for dessert. It was great seeing Bruce and Dorsey and their pups, even though we keep saying "goodbye until Key West." Maybe this time we really meant it, but I am not making any bets.
Sunday it rained all day, and we were basically trapped on board. My Amazon orders arrived, but there was no way to get them without getting drenched. I did tender ashore in the afternoon in a brief gap in the rain to get a walk in, knowing my dingy fee would cover me until 11 in the morning to go get my packages. Our spot in the anchorage afforded us the perfect view of the festively lit St. Augustine waterfront. Tourists come from all over at this time of year to see the annual Nights of Lights display; tour boat or trolley tickets are well over a C-note. It was a nice backdrop to our dinner on board.
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| Best shot I could get with my phone to capture Nights of Lights. Every building is lit. |
Monday morning I ran ashore, hopped on the city bus (actually a 14-seat shuttle van), and ran out to the Amazon locker. I had a good 20 minutes before the return bus, which I spent in the neighboring Winn-Dixie picking up the few items on the provision list that arose in the few days since our Publix excursion.
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| Cheers from McK's pub, Daytona Beach. |
After returning to Vector I started calling Lugger service dealers, including the one in St. Augustine, who allowed there was a small chance they could get to us this week and that they would call me back. As nice as it would have been to go ashore for dinner in town, the wind forecast said we needed a better anchorage, and so we weighed anchor after lunch to make the 12:30 bridge (there is no noon opening) and continue south.
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| The memorial to Brownie the town dog is here year-round, but Daytona decorates it for the holidays. |
Just a couple hours of cruising brought us to the lovely and familiar anchorage across from Fort Matanzas (map), where I settled in to make more phone calls. We had dinner on board to the sound of the surf, and ended the day with a 7pm video conference call, something our Starlink terminal allows us to achieve in this kind of peaceful, fairly remote anchorage.
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| The south end of the Esplanade. |
Tuesday morning I called the local Lugger guys, having heard nothing back, and got the news I was expecting: they did not really have any availability until after the holiday, which is what I had heard from every other dealer from here to Stuart. We weighed anchor to continue south, but just as Louise was bringing the last of the chain aboard, the windlass suddenly made a seemingly uncommanded retraction and the anchor slammed hard into the pulpit. I could not release the pressure with the switch at the helm.
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| We seldom get to see this bridge at night. That's the slingshot ride at left. |
The Matanzas inlet is no place to be messing around with this, with a couple of knots of current wanting to sweep the boat into the shoals, and a tricky shallow section right after making the turn into the ICW, so we just soldiered on until we were in a wider and deeper section. There we learned the circuit breaker for the windlass, which also powers the washdown pump, was tripped. We used the manual clutch to release the pressure on the chain.
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| Santa and his eight reindolphins. |
Underway I called the yacht club in Daytona to make a reservation for the night, and it was a relief to learn they had space, relieving the urgency of getting the windlass working. Still, on a single-screw boat a working anchor is a critical piece of safety gear, and so once everything was settled, Louise cleared off the berth in the guest stateroom, AKA her quilt studio, so I could get to the breaker.
Fortunately that was all it was, and I was able to reach the breaker from atop the berth without having to descend into the carbon-dust-encrusted thruster bay to reach it. Before restoring power I first removed the battery from the remote control, in case that was what caused the uncommanded windlass movement. We may never know the cause but it was almost certainly somewhere in the wireless remote system.
The rest of the cruise to Daytona was uneventful, although we did have a delay at the Knox drawbridge while the bridge tender was in the head, and we passed an anchored unmanned sailboat very nearly in the channel that the USCG had been warning about on the radio for a couple of days. We were tied up in our usual spot at the Halifax River Yacht Club (map), where we met the new dockmaster, Dale.
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| New windlass solenoid, to reduce radio interference. |
As long as we had cleared a path to the thruster bay earlier in the day, I spent a couple of hours working down there to replace the whizzy energy-saving high-power contactors that energize the windlass and thruster with something lower-tech. The fancy ones contain a PWM circuit to reduce power usage, and that circuit has been causing interference on our VHF radios. I was able to replace the windlass contactor with a 200-amp Cole Hersee I bought for the purpose, but my plan to repurpose one of the 400-amp Albright units in a spare reversing contactor was foiled when I discovered they bridged the two units with a solid contact bus bar. I'll need to order something different to finish the project.
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| I hoped to split these, but the single bar across the lower contacts makes them inseparable. |
Since we were going to be at a dock with a good address, Louise decided this was a good place to try out our new Walmart Plus membership to have provisions delivered right to the front door. She chose a delivery window starting at 7pm when we would be back from dinner, and at dinner time we walked down the block to McK's pub, which had some nice drafts and decent pub food. We often just eat at the club, but we remembered the bar is very chaotic on Tuesdays, when they have a weekly raffle of some sort.
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| I've put this large filter bag over the top of the thruster motor, in hopes of containing the unending stream of brush dust that now covers every surface in the compartment. |
Not only were the club bar and dining rooms busy, but all the function rooms were busy as well, with several holiday parties. In hindsight we should have chosen Wednesday morning for our delivery. The driver arrived shortly after 7, and, having tracked the delivery on the app, we walked out to the port cochere with a dock cart just before he pulled up. It was all over in just a few minutes and we were never in the way. A tip of the hat to our friends Stacey and Dave aboard Stinkpot, who turned us on to this seamless method to get Walmart orders without me having to schlep everything on the e-bike. I finished the evening with a long walk around the waterfront taking in the holiday decorations.
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| Street decoration in New Smyrna Beach. |
With no particular schedule, and finally in some warmth, we set our sights for Wednesday only as far as New Smyrna Beach, where I had a first-hand report the city dock was once again usable for an overnight stay. That's a short run, and so we lingered at the yacht club dock until 11. I cleaned up from the under berth project and sanitized our drinking water filtration system. We offloaded all the trash and recycling before dropping lines.
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| The Santa Run streamed past right after we crossed the street. |
We made it through the tight, skinny section past Ponce de Leon Inlet and were on track to make the 1:30 opening at the George Musson drawbridge when we heard on the radio that a dredging operation had a pipe all the way across the river just before the bridge and that the channel was closed until some indeterminate time. We pulled off-channel a mile before the bridge and dropped the hook with several other boats that were already waiting (map).
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| Louise and Vector in New Smyrna. The dock is curved, making for a challenging tie-up. |
The closure was apparently not pre-vetted by the Coast Guard and the command center in Jacksonville was scrambling to figure out who was responsible and when they'd get it back open; it's almost unheard-of for us to come upon this kind of closure without having had any kind of notice. After about an hour we started to think about just being stuck there overnight, and we put the dinghy in the water to see if we could get past the obstruction to a waterfront restaurant just the other side of the bridge. No sooner did we have the dinghy in the water and ready to go than a nearby boater shouted to us that they had just cleared the channel.
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| View of the weird arrangement from the other side. |
With a full half hour to the 3pm bridge opening we had plenty of time to lift the tender, weigh anchor, and make our way to the bridge. That put us at the New Smyrna Beach dock at 3:30, where I was happy to see the dock empty, but disappointed to see there is still a 5-hour limit sign. We did not want to backtrack to the inlet this late in the day, so we just took our chances and tied up (map). When I circled back to my first-hand report they said they regularly stayed there for a night with no issues; we just crossed our fingers. Long-time readers may know we'd stayed at this dock a couple of times early on in our travels, before the limit was enacted.
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| Cheers from Prima. The pizza was very good. |
The little downtown Canal Street historic district is more vibrant now, and we enjoyed walking down the street and seeing the holiday decorations. After dinner at upscale pizza joint Prima, a recommendation from friends, we walked a bit more, barely avoiding being run over by the Santa Run. I thought the town was festively decorated and there are lots of nice-looking eateries, so it's too bad about the dock. We're hoping the have the floating dinghy dock back in operation before our next pass through.
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| We asked for a sample of one of the drafts and they brought it in a demitasse cup. |
We had no knock on the hull overnight and awoke to a pleasant morning. With only an average length day to Titusville I spend part of the morning walking the town in the daylight, and of course I could not resist picking up a couple of bagels at the bakery. We dropped lines on the flood for the Mosquito Lagoon and the Indian River, finding ourselves in a spread-out line of southbound boats. Apart from the Haulover Bridge operator deciding to make up rules on the fly, the cruise was uneventful. He did open the bridge when I insisted on it.
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| Mural in progress on Canal Street. |
We had the anchor down in our usual spot south of the Titusville Causeway (map) with just ten minutes to spare before a scheduled rocket launch from the cape, but it ended up being delayed anyway and we saw it from our aft deck just before we tendered ashore for dinner at Pier 220, really the only option here. The food is decent for a pier joint and they have a couple of beers on tap. Their outdoor tiki bar is incredibly popular, and late in the evening we could see some police and fire department action there that went on for nearly an hour.
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| Where is the tenderness? |
Yesterday we weighed anchor after a leisurely breakfast and were on track to arrive at the Eau Gallie Yacht Club early in the afternoon. I had reached out on Thursday to make a reservation. It was a gorgeous day, and as we approached Cocoa, we decided on a whim to stop there instead and catch the annual holiday boat parade, scheduled for last night. We first had to search a little to see if we could still get ashore with the day docks having been removed after a hurricane, and I had to call the yacht club to postpone our arrival by a day.
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| Centuries-old ruins, either an old fort or Turnbull's mansion, no one really knows. |
We had the hook down in the well-used anchorage (map) early in the afternoon and settled in. A short time later an alarm started sounding on our plotter, the response to a Man OverBoard (MOB) beacon being set off nearby. A quick check revealed the MOB beacon to be moving north toward us on the ICW at ten knots; a real person in the water would only be drifting. I called the only boat I could see at that position and speed.
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| Another batch of Starlink satellites rising to orbit, from our deck. VAB to the left of the sailboat. |
The skipper seemed confused, because his own display showed the beacon a thousand feet behind him. Why in the world any skipper would ignore an MOB alarm and just keep going, in violation of the law of the sea, is beyond me. Of course it was a false activation of a device on his own boat; MOB beacons just can't update their position fast enough to keep up at ten knots. He finally sheepishly admitted he had them on life jackets in a locker someplace.
After the drama was over, I was very happy to see that this all worked well on our own boat. We have exactly such an MOB beacon, which is worn by whomever is on watch overnight while the other is asleep. The alarm is both insistent and persistent; they are deliberately hard to ignore or silence, and the MOB icon persists on the chart no matter what you do.
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| The Nutcracker. We assume just the highlights. |
The boat parade was scheduled for 6, so we tendered ashore at 4 to get in a walk and an early dinner. We had read that dinghies could tie up at the boat ramp in the absence of the day docks, but we could see no way to do that without blocking one of the three ramps, so we tied to the seawall instead, closer to where the day docks had been. We had a nice walk around Cocoa Village and good burgers at the Americana Pub, which has an impressive array of drafts. We saw the city tree, to be lit at 7, and a few minutes of a children's production of The Nutcracker in the park.
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| The tail end of the boat parade, with the rest of it in the background. |
We were back aboard well in time for the start of the boat parade, which went right past us through the anchorage. It was just a bit distant for good cell phone pictures, but we had a nice view. We could see the tree all lit ashore through our binoculars, and it turned out to be an enjoyable stop. There is no evidence they will ever replace the day docks, but that does not seem to be a major obstacle to stopping here again.
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| We had great conditions and a nice view. |
Yesterday one of the cordless blinds in the pilothouse gave up the ghost, and I spent about an hour re-stringing it this morning. It's a short cruise to Indian Harbour Beach and the Eau Gallie Yacht club, and I expect we will be there before I get all the photos loaded and captioned for the post.
Update: we are docked at the Eau Gallie Yacht Club (map). Tonight we will make a pilgrimage to Publix for provisions and probably hit dinner on the way. Tomorrow we will move to the anchorage on the other side of the causeway to hunker down for an incoming wind storm tomorrow night.






































































