Boat Hunting in Florida: Day 2

Author:  Miranda

Location:  Jacksonville, Florida
[26°8′N 80°9′W]

 

Slept like the dead.  What a glorious feeling to be able to sleep horizontally after spending a night scrunched up in a pseudo-inclined airline seat.  Went to bed early so we could wake up early and get on the road.  We decided to do a long push to Jacksonville to see a 35’ Wildcat Mark II, and then make several stops along the way back to Fort Lauderdale, looking at other boats we’d been eyeing.

IMG_1416

Screen Shot 2014-06-25 at 11.13.06 PM

The five hour drive got significantly better when we realized the rental came with XM radio, and that meant several stations devoted to the formidable jams of the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s.  Heaven!  I won’t tell you how many ridiculous Bon Jovi songs that we belted out at the top of our lungs… but it was many folks.  Many.  A lot.  A lot for love, you might say.  Oh, how Pete loves that lyric.  Oh and this sweet treat really got us grooving..

IMG_1420-Edit

 

We met Al on the docks, and he took us in the dinghy out to Quest, which was on a mooring in the river.

DSC_9795

Al and Caryl were gracious hosts and very knowledge about their boat, which they helped design when it was built new, and then sailed it across the Atlantic from South Africa.

DSC_9796

We could have spent hours chatting with them about their travels, their sailing knowledge, and their cruising stories, but, alas, eventually it was time to head out, as we had more boats to see that afternoon.

DSC_9807

DSC_9812

 

On our way back to south Florida, we stopped in Merritt Island to meet with Valerie and see her 35-foot Jeaneau Lagoon catamaran.  Valerie is one of those people you meet and immediately say to yourself, “wow, I want to be friends with this person!”  Even as a young sailor, she has many years of experience boating in the Caribbean, and her boat looked much newer than the 18 years that it had.  Three tiny, adorable dogs also greeted us as we stepped aboard.  Somehow a 35’ foot cat with a 16’ beam seemed to fit three adults, three dogs, and enough equipment to live aboard just fine.

DSC_9839

DSC_9833

Valerie regaled us with sailing stories, as well as stories of her fiancé Chris’s time spent living in Colombia.  Wish we could have met him as well, but we are crossing our fingers that fate will pull us up next to them on a barstool in Caribbean someday, where we can share sundowner and talk about living in a country we now love so much.

DSC_9818

 

Got stuck in a thunderstorm on the way back, which meant that we missed seeing boats on the hard in Titusville and also in Fort Pierce.

DSC_9837

Just got too late in the day, and the marinas were closed when we passed through.  Unfortunate, but these menacing, afternoon thunderstorms that come out of nowhere are just so darn cool… when you have an enclosed car to hide in, of course.  As we were oh-ing and ah-ing one storm, I thought out loud to Pete, “boy- these are definitely not going to be as fun and exciting when we are out on the boat.”

DSC_9845

 

Had a burger and a couple of beers to top off a long day of looking for the perfect boat.  Lots of searching…

DSC_9847

Boat Hunting in Florida: Day 1

Author:  Miranda

Location:  Fort Lauderdale, Florida
[26°8′N 80°9′W]

Arrived in Miami from Santiago at 3:50 am and staggered our way back into our homeland.  Being in South Florida is the perfect way to slowly transition from South America back to the United States.  Sometimes it’s hard to tell that we actually left, as we often find ourselves chatting with someone in Spanish.  I only accidentally blurted out something in Spanish twice.  The nice Italian waiter at lunch was sweet, but confused, when I instinctively (but very incorrectly) greeted him with a smiling “Como estas?”  Oops.

We found our hotel and immediately started setting up some appointments for this week.  We plan to see boats that are both for-sale-by-owner and those being sold through a broker.  Our goals for the week are twofold.  We’d obviously be very happy if we found “the one” and started the purchasing process, but we are also here to make connections and meet with brokers in the industry who we can keep in contact with- even when we head back to the mid-west.

DSC_9789

We were able to make one appointment for right-away in the afternoon, so after watching our poor Chilenos fight hard, but fall to those tall, Dutch bastards in the world cup (I’ll soon love you again my friends from Holland- but now the wounds are too fresh… too fresh…), we went to The Catamaran Company to see Steve Moore.  Nothing like some delicious pizza and beautiful multi-hulls to raise your spirits after a tough loss.

IMG_1410

DSC_9785

Steve took us through two boats for sale: a Lagoon 380 and a Gemini 105 Mc.  All parties involved knew we weren’t interested in a Gemini, but Steve was correct in assuming that making comparisons is always helpful and seeing differences in how boats are set-up is great for narrowing down what specs are your must-haves.  The Gemini made is realize that beam, not length, is critical in determining a cat’s interior space and seaworthiness.  The Gemini was only 4 feet shorter, but it was 8 feet narrower, and this made all the difference between our experiences walking aboard the Gemini, compared to the Lagoon.

DSC_9784

The Lagoon was turn-key boat, pretty much having everything we are looking for in a cruiser.  We could have bought the boat and began cruising without much work refurbishing and readying the boat.  Being a 2006, an owner’s version, and being so well maintained, made it, sadly, a little out of our price range.  It also might be a little more boat than we need.  It’s not often when a couple gets on a boat and says, “wow, look at all the space.”  These cats are just big!  So much bigger than the monos (of comparable length) that we have taken lessons on or walked through thus far.  We are curious to see how the 35 footers that we are off to see tomorrow will feel.

DSC_9778

 

 

I’d like to close with a few laughable, yet accurate, observations from an expat without much time in the U.S. of late.

  • When did we get robots at the customs counters?  Maybe it was the lack of sleep, but these guys rocked our world.  Did you see that they raise and lower to look you in eye?!  Holy crap!  Like stepping into star trek movie.  Moments like these always remind me of when my expat buddy came back from a trip to the states about two years ago, and said, “Oh my god!  They have this box that records television and you can rewind or fast forward live T.V.”  His Ti-Vo excitement was about 8 years delayed, but so adorable.
  • The drivers!  They are so kind, courteous, and generally going the speed limit.  No idiots cutting you off, weaving through traffic, and stopping where never the hell they please. Oh man- we saw our first use of the blinker, and thought it might be the second coming of Christ.  Wow!
  • I can wear jeans and a T-shirt and not look like a complete and utter slob.  This is great!  Thanks to good old ‘Merica for setting a low standard on what is acceptable leaving-the-house-attire.
  • We can understand all the conversations happening around us- this is really distracting when you’re so used to easily being able to turn out the urban white noise equivalent to cicada chirping.  This goes the other direction as well.  We are often reminding ourselves to talk quieter and watch the swear words.  We constantly forget that people can actually understand us here.
  • When you accidentally use the metric system and a fellow citizen looks at you like you’re a terrorist.  Geez.  Step down buddy.  Calling it a meter stick instead of a yardstick is just as accurate.  And we are consistently off by a factor of 1.6 when estimating driving distances.  Hmm.
  • Service!  Picture our surprise and child-like excitement when someone actually used a blinker… well, multiply that by a factor of 10 when the waitress actually stopped by after our food arrived to “check in.”  Glorious!!  And did I mention free refills- I think we’ve died and gone to carbonated-beverage-heaven.

 

It’s good to be home ladies and gentlemen.  Good to be home.

 

 

 

 

Despedidas by the Dozen

Author: Pete

Location: Santiago, Chile
[33° 27′ 0″ S,  70° 40′ 0″ W]

 

The final countdown.  Bad 80’s music plays through my head each day as I try to scratch off all the things on my TO DO list.  Feels in the last two weeks like I’ve been just barely getting it all done each day, just to repeat it the next.  This account of our last days in Chile seems as scattered as my brain and focus.

DSC_9444

Some were happy to see all those moving on continuing with their adventure through life.  Others weren’t as happy.

DSC_9429

 

Then Andes decided to give us one more beautiful snow storm.  It fell heavy in Arayan on our little casita, and coated the cacti in little spiky parkas.  We soaked up the snow and the cold.  I think it’ll be the last we see for a while.

DSC_9329

DSC_9314

DSC_9307

The cold and snow didn’t bother us much, once we got the little car ramped up to 80 and tore up the icy switchbacks to get home.  Grow up driving a Ford Probe around the midwest.  Once home we had a toasty fire in the bosca to melt the cold out of the house.

DSC_9320

DSC_9300

DSC_9332

In the last weeks I’ve graded umpteen final exams, said goodbye to my favorite students whom I’ve grown with over the past four years.  Had several ripping sendoff parties and dinners.  The school holds a big end of the year party hosted by the Chilenos for the gringos.  They have great food on the parilla and a killer show that I was unwittingly a part of.

DSC_9460

DSC_9462

DSC_9467

DSC_9479

 

Dragged around several loads of things to donate, recycle, and trash.  It’s uncanny how much stuff two people can accumulate!  Prepping for the move has been a long process.  Then all of a sudden the movers come and whisk everything away and leave our little house pretty empty, aside from the thing we’re selling to Amy, who is life swapping with us.

DSC_9371

DSC_9372

DSC_9382

 

 

IMG_1379It’s been an intense, consistently stressful set of days. Miranda cut her hand with a box cutter the day before we flew out in the midst of all of our packing.  Sliced the webbing between her index and thumb right down through the muscle.  Seven interior stitches and six exterior stitches later we were back to packing and saying goodbyes.  Not a whimper out of the girl.  She’s way tougher than me!

 

DSC_9539

DSC_9529

 

 

In keeping with tradition we ended our last climbing session with dinner at Satira.  We pushed tables together and crammed around it.  Ordered machas de parmesana, gyosas, pizzas, curries, and rounds and rounds of drinks.

DSC_9684

DSC_9676

 

The gloomy atmosphere that we love so much about the place made for the perfect final despedida locale.  Drippy candles, old decor, dark corners, and low light.  And like a haunted house…. full of spirits!

DSC_9671

DSC_9725

DSC_9712

DSC_9756

When we asked for the bill and it didn’t come the waiter told us the system was down and that everything would be on the house.  We almost bought that.  We know who really was the orchestrator of the caper…

DSC_9727

DSC_9735

 

So we said goodbye to our favorite spot in Lo Barnechea, our favorite Friday post-climb hangout, and our favorite friends.  Thanks to you all for a fabulous couple of years in Chile.  It wouldn’t have been the same without you.

DSC_9776