Saturday, May 2, 2020

More from Charleston, South Carolina

After wonderful, refreshing showers at the marina, Peter and I set off to do some more sightseeing in Charleston. But first we needed food! It was 3:30 p.m., and we had not had lunch. We picked up our take-out order from Chipotle on King Street after a pleasant half an hour walk and ate it while enjoying the balmy weather on a park bench in Marion Square. There were quite a few people there, although everyone was maintaining social distancing. We were halfway through our lunch before we noticed the sign saying the park was closed!

Peter enjoying a burrito
Charleston is an architectural treasure trove with its many tree-lined streets with beautifully restored or maintained homes and churches from the 18th and 19th centuries. We stopped to read many signs about the buildings we saw as well as a few that provided historical information on the original walled settlement as well as on significant people, structures and events from the Revolutionary War and the Civil War, or, as the signs here call it, the War of Secession or the War of 1861-65. It was interesting to learn about important persons such as Robert Small, an enslaved African American who  was serving as a deckhand on a Confederate supply ship, the Planter, when he took the opportunity of the captain, the white crew members and the pilot not being aboard to commandeer the ship. Before dawn on May 13, 1862, he, a crew of eight men, along with five women and three children (including his own wife and two children) slipped out of Charleston Harbor. With his prior experience on board, he was able to give the correct pass signal at five checkpoints and then reach the Union blockade. The Navy was most grateful to receive the guns and ammunitions on board in addition to documents providing information on routes, mine locations and departure and docking times. Small became the Union Navy captain of the Planter for the rest of the war.

After the war, he started a school for African American children, a newspaper and a general store. He bought his former owner's home in Beaufort and generously helped out the family, who were destitute. He was a delegate to the State of South Carolina's Constitutional Convention in 1868. He and others were successful in ensuring that the constitution gave black men the right to vote, two years before the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibited federal and state governments from denying the right to vote to citizens based on "race, color, or previous condition of servitude." Later, he served in the South Carolina House of Representatives and then for two terms as a U.S. Representative.

Tidbits of history can be found at every turn, it seems, in historic Charleston. The history and the structures are fascinating. I took a lot of photos of houses, gardens, trees, cemeteries and churches. I did not note the names of all the houses (if they had them), but I can label the churches. Giant oaks and magnolia trees can be found everywhere, and the pleasing scent of honeysuckle wafts from the vines growing on wrought iron fences, around doorways and up the trunks of palmettos. How wonderful it must be to enter your front yard or your entrance and be greeted by such a soothing smell.

Garden Montagu Street 
House on Montagu Street 
Garden on Montagu Street
Southern generosity
Houses and gardens on Montagu Street
St. Philip's Episcopal Church Cemetery
St. Philip's Episcopal Church 
Houses on Bay Street
Homes along East Battery Street
East Battery Street house
East Battery Street house
Home facing White Point Gardens
Homes facing White Point Gardens
Oaks in White Point Gardens
House near White Point Gardens 
House near White Point Gardens
Architectural detail on house 
House on lower Meeting Street
Houses on lower Meeting Street
Side entrance to house on lower Meeting Street 
Honeysuckle
House on lower Meeting Street
First Scots Presbyterian Church
House on lower Meeting Street
House on lower Meeting Street
House on lower Meeting Street
Peter along lower Meeting Street 
St. Michael's Episcopal Church 
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
House on Broad Street
Houses on Broad Street
Magnolia blossoms


Charleston, South Carolina

Thursday, April 30

We are still living life in the slow lane on the ICW, which is why I have not written anything in the last few days. It’s all pretty uneventful. 

We left Savannah at 7:55 on Tuesday morning, April 28, passing under the first fixed bridge with ease and maybe a foot to spare. There were no clouds and no wind, and the water was flat calm. Just before noon, we anchored up the Cooper River just before noon. After naps and lunch, we pulled up anchor at 2:25 p.m. By that time, the wind was 10-15 knots from the south, and we were able to sail for the rest of the afternoon, with speeds between 5 and 9 knots depending on our angle to the wind. We anchored with 2 meters of water under the keel in Cowen Creek, near the Marine’s base at Parris Island, south of Beaufort, South Carolina. (Not to be confused with Beaufort, North Carolina—it’s Byoo-fort, SC, and Bo-fort, NC.) It was yet another serene spot among the marshes. 

As the hours pass on our leisurely journey, we monitor the VHF radio and listen to the Coast Guard announcements, which are fairly frequent. Today there was a boat aground on Daws Island, but other boaters helped them. About the same time, a woman came on saying, “Hello,” which is not the normal form of hailing. The next thing we heard is, “This is an SOS,” which alerted mariners and the Coast Guard that this call was not from someone with experience using the VHF for maritime emergencies. Such calls usually begin with, “Pan pan, pan pan” (pronounced pahn-pahn, from a French word for breakdown). It is the internationally standard announcement that someone aboard a boat or ship (or aircraft or vehicle) uses to declare that there is an urgent situation that is not an immediate danger to life or the vessel. (This would be a mayday call.) From what we could hear—and often we can only hear the Coast Guard side of a conversation because their signal is much stronger—someone on board, we assume the captain, was having a seizure. Surprisingly, the 25-foot vessel was 60 miles offshore. We followed this situation, hearing the Coast Guard helicopter communicating with the boat and learning that a rescue had been successful. Just after we passed through Port Royal Sound into which the Beaufort and Broad Rivers empty, we heard the Coast Guard make a pan-pan announcement of a missing diver, alerting all mariners to “keep a sharp lookout.” 

There is always a strong current in Port Royal Sound and the water is murky (and there are sharks!), so we wondered what would induce someone to dive in this area. Of course, there are many unintentional wrecks along the coast, some from a couple centuries ago, and this entices some divers. (It is believed that a French ship sank in Port Royal Sound in 1577, although the remnants of it have not been found despite extensive searches.) Still, it seemed like a dangerous undertaking to us. Trying to understand why someone was diving there, I did some Internet research after we anchored. I learned that just the previous week marine archaeologists from the University of South Carolina had been diving in the area researching what is called the Stone Fleet. During the Civil War, the Union Navy loaded aging whaleships with large pieces of granite and smooth cobble and towed them south from New England to coastal South Carolina and Georgia where they sunk them to block channels through the sounds into port cities and keep blockage runners from bringing in supplies to the Confederates and carrying tobacco and cotton out as exports to support the failing Southern economy. Since the 1860’s, the actual ships have decayed and what is left are mounds of rock on the sea floor. Since there are only piles of rocks, I am befuddled as to what more could be learned about the Stone Fleet from diving among the rubble. 

Many sports divers love the area because of fossils, particularly the teeth of the shark Carcharocles megalodon. The South Carolina coast has submerged yet exposed layers of the Hawthorne Formation, a fossil bed dating between 2 and 24 million years old. Apparently, a dive consists of putting on an extra-heavy weight belt and diving down quickly to 30 or 40 feet in order to crawl around on hands and knees feeling for things which might be teeth or other fossils. Visibility in general is extremely low, and the cloud of sediment stirred up makes a flashlight practically worthless, meaning monitoring the air gauge for the tank is sometimes virtually impossible. (I’ll stick with snorkeling and diving in crystal clear waters with colorful life forms, thank you very much.)

Meanwhile, as I was doing this research in the late afternoon and evening, the Coast Guard continued to repeat this pan-pan. Distressingly, it was still being broadcast the next morning as the search for the 49-year-old diver continued. (As I write this, there is no news on the outcome of the search.)

We pulled up anchor (on Wednesday, April 29) at 8 a.m. to continue north on the ICW and find a protected anchorage for the storms predicted for later in the day and throughout the night. We passed under another fixed 65-foot bridge and then idled around and waited for the 10 a.m. opening of the Lady’s Island swing bridge. By 11 a.m., the winds were up to 17 knots from the southeast and we were able to sail again all the way to Morgan Island on the coast at Saint Helena Sound (also known as Monkey Island because of the population of over 3000 non-indigenous rhesus monkeys located there for unnecessary research on their effect on the environment). We were going to anchor near that island but chose instead to go up a creek on the south shore of the Morgan River for better protection from strong south winds. Nestled between the spring green marsh grass backed by dark green hammocks of trees on Edding Creek, we felt safe.


Add caption
View of the marsh from Mantra
After the late afternoon game of Scrabble and dinner after sunset, we got ready to settle down for the night in our snug bed as the wind was howling through the rigging well in advance of the brunt of the storm, which was not scheduled to arrive until the pre-dawn hours of Thursday. The current in the small tidal stream pushed the boat abeam of the wind. The hull shuddered and the anchor chain clunked loudly against the roller on the bow as our boat tossed and turned in the water. Peter got up and employed both the running back stays to make the mast more stable, although that did not make the thrashing decrease discernibly. A little later, as we lay awake, with the slightly vertiginous feeling of the boast spinning (although it was not), the chain began to clank and groan as it was pulled taut, and Peter arose once again to let out more chain to allow it to lie on the bottom of the creek. Peter then settled down for the night, but I could not, so I left the warmth of the bed, made a cup of hot chocolate and played solitaire while occasionally getting up to check the wind gauge. (The highest I saw was 27 knots.) 

After the wind and the current became aligned as the tide changed, I returned to bed, snuggled against Peter and fell quickly asleep. During our late breakfast this morning, both of us were able vividly to recount in precise detail our bizarre dreams from the previous night. 

The wind had died down by the time I arose, but it was dismal and dreary and I needed my wool socks and hoodie. With hours stretching before me, it was impossible to settle down to anything productive. I could have studied Spanish, exercised, cleaned, or written blog entries, but I chose to burrow in the bed and watch YouTube videos. Eventually, there was enough bright sunshine to entice me to emerge from my comfortable cocoon, and after a snack (a bad habit for dealing with boredom that I have resurrected since we returned to the States and have ready access to groceries), I indulged myself in a couple of games of solitaire (I cannot believe how I can pass so many hours mindlessly playing this!) and then started writing. Now it is nearly 3 p.m., and Peter is indicating that lunch would be appreciated!

Saturday, May 2

We are now in Charleston, South Carolina, but I will backtrack to Thursday. After a late lunch, we set off in the kayak, exploring the creek and a couple of its tributary. The tide was down, and wading birds pecked for food in the exposed, sludgy dark brown mud. We saw great blue herons, great egrets and snowy egrets and well as smaller birds. Perched high in a dead tree was a beautiful wood stork. Later, we saw a small flock of them flying above us. And then it was Scrabble, a late dinner followed by cribbage--a very quiet evening. 

Yesterday, we finally got back on the open sea, pulling up anchor just after 8 a.m. and weaving out Saint Helena Sound in 15-20 knots of chilly northwest wind. I stayed down below, my feet in wool socks on either side of my hot water bottle, popping up on deck to help raise and reef sails but otherwise reading and napping while reclining on the lee side of the boat. Even with 2 reefs, we were able to sail 7 to 10 knots, making it to Charleston quickly. We maneuvered in to our place on the Charleston City Marina’s Megadock against the strong current of the Ashley River. Our decks covered with sea spray, our pilot house windows nearly impossible to see through, we took our place among the mega yachts, some about 3 times as long as we are. The real difference, however, is that they are all spotless and gleaming with not a millimeter of rust or chipped paint to be found. (We have not yet washed our boat since arriving. How déclassé!)

The young full-time crews on the megayachts are busy during the day cleaning and polishing and doing boat maintenance. Later in the day they can be found stripped down to their shorts maintaining there physiques doing sit-ups on the docks and lifting weights and doing lat and tricep work on the railings while flashing dazzling smiles. They need to meet the job requirement of being dishy and hunky at all times. 

Four of numerous crew members working hard and looking good on the Megadock
We could not be bothered to beautify our boat after docking. Locking up, we set off to find take-out food and then take a long walk to enjoy the sunshine and admire the lovely old Southern homes. We ordered dinner at a nice waterfront restaurant with lovely views of the marshland and then ate it at a picnic table with the same view. 

Black crowned night heron

View along the waterfront
As we were walking along the attractive streets of Charleston, having gone about a mile, Peter turned his head to look down the side of a building while still walking and stepped on the back of my right flip flop, causing the strap to rip off from the sole. It was irreparable, at least there on the sidewalk, so we had to turn back. When we made it back to the waterfront, with me barefoot on the fortunately clean sidewalks, Peter jogged ahead to the marina to get another pair of flip flops for me. Eventually, I found a bench on which to wait. He returned as the sun as setting, but we decided to continue our perambulation as darkness settled in. We walked for another two hours through mostly deserted streets. King Street, a fashionable shopping area, had a few restaurants open for take-out, and the trendy storefront windows were all illuminated and showing tasteful displays of merchandise, but it was all look but don’t buy. 

We returned to the boat at 10 p.m., fairly tired, but we checked email and looked a couple of websites before retiring. We had continued to hear Coast Guard announcements throughout the day of the search from the diver missing since Thursday afternoon. When I had initially tried to find out more about it on the Internet a couple days ago, what initially popped up was reports of a successful search and rescue for two divers in approximately the same place. These divers went missing on the afternoon of March 12 of this year, less than seven weeks ago. The 66-year-old diver, Jimmy Armstrong, was found by a Coast Guard helicopter around 1 a.m. on March 13, and the other diver, a 49-year-old local man, was recovered by a charter fishing boat around 8 a.m. south of Parris Island. I speculated that the diver who went missing on April 28 might be the same 49-year-old man, Alan Devier. Sadly, this is the case. His family, of course, had been traumatized by the incident in March and had purchased and insisted that he wear a GPS device on future dives. Unfortunately, he forgot it. He was diving with his same partner, who apparently searched for him for a couple of hours before notifying the authorities. It is still a search and rescue mission even though the Coast Guard and other responders have found not trace after covering more than 785 square miles. It is very tragic.

Peter and I are relaxing on the boat this morning and catching up with things in general. This afternoon we will head out for take-out lunch and more exploring of this elegant old city.

Monday, April 27, 2020

Savannah, Georgia

Here are the latest posts, going back to Tuesday, April 21:


Tuesday, April 21

Yesterday evening, Peter and I walked around the nearly deserted streets of the old part of St. Augustine with our N95 masks. Homeless people made up a good proportion of the people we saw. Shops, bars and restaurants were locked up, but menus were still illuminated, and Peter could not keep himself from stopping and salivating over the enticing selections. The only place that was open was a gourmet grilled cheese sandwich shop. Although the food wasn’t fancy, Peter was able to get meat; he ordered a sandwich with brie, bacon, balsamic vinegar and raspberry sauce. The only other customers were two homeless people with a dollar. The woman was asking for milk for an upset stomach. The caring woman who was working there gave it to her for free, and then the people used the single to purchase a can of Coke. I wondered how that might help with gastric issues.

Back at the marina, we settled in for the night, listening to the quiet clicking of shrimp against the hull as we fell asleep. It was just cool enough to need a quilt.

This morning, we cast off the dock in time for the 9:00 opening of the Bridge of Lions. Out on the Atlantic, the seas were calm and the wind was nearly non-existent, so we motored north. I really wished for a book to read. Peter and I played cards and I napped some of the time. In the late afternoon, the wind picked up enough that we could turn off the engine and enjoy a couple of hours of pleasant sailing, averaging 9 knots. We came through St. Mary’s Inlet, the coastal border between Florida and Georgia, and headed north to an anchorage along the inside of Cumberland Island National Seashore. Unfortunately, the park is closed, so we cannot explore this pristine environment full of natural delights and history and enjoy ranger-led tours. 

Cumberland Island dock
There are ten other boats in this peaceful anchorage. To the east is the U.S. Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, the Atlantic Fleet’s 20,000 acre home port for ballistic missile nuclear submarines armed with Trident missile weapons. I am not sure if I should feel safe or in danger being near a strategic target!

Sunset by Cumberland Island
I am not at all sure that I am happy to be back in the U.S., where I have uninterrupted cell phone coverage and therefore limitless access to the news. The COVID-19 pandemic as a health and welfare emergency is very distressing, but what is really depressing and disturbing is the response within the United States to this new reality. I am acutely reminded of why I wanted to acquire another boat and escape the madness. I make a point of not relying on news outlets for information; I prefer to go to the sources that are not associated with politics such as the websites for WHO, the CDC, the NIH and even comparable agencies of other countries. If I only accessed information from U.S. media sites, whether it be NPR, CNN or Fox News, I might think that the federal government responses to the crisis, protests against stay-at-home orders (including people armed with semi-automatic rifles!), the focus on getting businesses to open again despite warnings of a resurgence of cases, and lawsuits and other attempts to assign blame were the norm throughout the world. But the BBC, the Guardian, the CBC, and Al Jazeera, among others, reveal that the U.S. response is not in line with that of most other countries in the world. The rest of the world looks on with incredulity and horror at the way the U.S. was slow to respond, the denial of data and science, the lack of preparation, the placement of economic stability or even gain over public health and welfare, and the tendency of a large proportion of the American public to feel personally victimized and angry at infringements on their personal liberty regardless of the needs of society as a whole. The pandemic is worrying, but the response in the U.S. (with the exception of certain States and communities) is disheartening and, I believe, symptomatic of the disunity, fear, hatred and moral failings of our society. I wish I knew what I could do to make things better, but I feel overwhelmed and impotent.

Wednesday, April 22

Today we motored up the ICW for a few meandering miles, going from the southern end of Cumberland Island to the northern end. The coffee brown water is teeming with life that we do not see, but occasionally dolphins delight us, rays fly out of the dark but glistening water and smack back down out of sight. Peter caught a glimpse of a manatee breaking the surface for a breath of air. 

While, as sailors, we tend to malign the ICW, we actually found this stretch peaceful and pleasant. The breaking waves of the Atlantic are only a couple of miles away, but their proximity is not felt here. The currents flow and the tides go up and down a couple of feet, constantly changing the fluid border between the open water and the marshes which stretch seemingly endlessly in all directions. We found a tranquil place to anchor on a bend of the Brickhill River. 

Late afternoon, Brickhill River
Kayaking on the river
Sunset and flat water 
Spanish moss in the trees
One other boat was anchored around the bend. Ordinarily, cruisers fire up their dinghy engines or paddle their kayaks or SUP’s in order to meet those around them. This is no longer happening. Yesterday, with a line of boats in sight of each other, we were all isolated.

Like everyone else, Peter and I have a lot of time on our hands. We played Scrabble in the afternoon and then, about an hour before sunset, launched the kayak and paddled up a wide creek. Spanish moss hangs in great weighty masses from the branches of the trees on the shore of Cumberland Island. Although most of them remain out of sight, birds are abundant. Jet black red-winged blackbirds look like dark, single-colored creatures until they take flight from their perches on the top of the marshes and flash their red epaulets.

The cold front, with its strong winds, could be seen moving in from the west, making the sunset streaky with dark and light patches of blue, gray, coral and yellow as the sun was obscured by the thick clouds. 

While we are eager to get home to California, the weather does not allow us to move swiftly up the eastern seaboard. Rather than be frustrated, we are trying to enjoy the slow pace of cruising along the coast and exploring the wetlands behind the barrier islands. We regret that there are so many places on land that we cannot visit, but, we appreciate the mobility we have on our second home.

We try not to be overcome with worry and remain positive and upbeat during this pandemic. I now have a slight cold. Normally, this would be nothing, but we have to consider that somehow I may have contracted COVID-19, perhaps from the unmasked woman at the grilled cheese sandwich restaurant in St. Augustine. Katya seems to be doing well at home, getting out a couple times a day for walks and staying in touch with wonderful neighbors. Matthew, I’m afraid, is terribly isolated in his dorm room in London, and he also felt ill for a few days. It is not good, but we must make the best of this situation and not fail to be cautious.

Friday, April 24

Stormy weather on April 23
Because my laptop was in the oven yesterday evening, I did not make a post to the blog. Thursday, April 23, was both an exciting day and a boring day. It held excitement because the weather was temperamental, and we received several alerts on our phones and on the VHF radio regarding tornados and severe thunderstorms. Although the tornados were slightly northwest of us, they are a bit unpredictable in their paths, so we brought all the seat cushions, life jackets and other things that normally stay in the pilot house down below. The thunderstorms posed a greater risk because of the lightning. We put out an extra sacrificial zinc, but still the top of our mast, at 65 feet above water level, was the highest thing around. During the first storm, we put our laptops in the oven, which functions as a Faraday cage, and started the engine, a trick we learned from another cruiser in Panamá. If lightning would fry all the electronics, then we would be unable to start our diesel engine because the starter is electric. The thunderstorms were awesome, and fortunately we avoided a lightning strike.

Other than watching and preparing for the weather, however, the day was fairly boring. We were down below most of the time. Peter and I played what has become a daily game of Scrabble on the days we are anchored. In the evening, we played cribbage. We listened to the news and were able to do some online reading of various media outlets while we had a bar or two on our cell phones.

Each night, once it gets totally dark, we become surrounded by underwater noises. Various animals must emerge from the murky bottom for a feeding frenzy which lasts a couple of hours. A continuous tapping, as if tireless and submerged woodpeckers are busy, is accompanied by a churning sound, like the noise made by a washing machine when it is agitating the clothes. There are quiet clicking sounds and a dull, low rumbling. Last night, these noises were somewhat muffled by the rain like kettledrums being played on the deck above our bed. The night was chilly, and in addition to the light quilt which we got out a couple of days ago we threw a fleece blanket on top of the bed. 

Today, my cell phone could not pick up a signal although we haven’t moved, so I was unable to communicate with my family or friends. The day started out gloomy. There was Scrabble and I studied Spanish for a while and even did a bit of strength training in addition to making meals. By mid-afternoon, the dark skies had become a canopy of light gray clouds crowding each other for space. Around 4:30, at low tide, we set out in the kayak. The mouths of the creeks, which had been wide open two days ago, were narrow openings as the water level was about two meters below the high tide. The marshes stretching endlessly to the horizon did not seem like great open expanses at low tide. As we entered the creeks, we lost this sense of wide open space and found our perspective limited by the exposed mud and oyster beds, the roots of the reeds and the three foot plants enveloping us on either side. The serpentine paths of the water further confined our view. We could see the tops of trees in the distance to the east but not the top of the marshes.

Within these wandering waterways we enjoyed the abundant birdlife. On the mud flats were many species of sandpipers, including the red knot, and we also saw herons, snowy egrets, Bonaparte’s gulls, red-winged blackbirds and wood storks. As we slowly paddled along, a golden eagle passed overhead, its wingtips curled up to aid its flight. It landed on the muddy shore not far from us. 

Shiny dolphin approaching us from the side before diving under our kayak
In addition to the birds, we encountered dolphins in the backwaters several times during our three-hour exploration of the wetlands. Once, they rushed toward the shore and almost seemed to explode onto the mud as they corralled fish. Another time, they approached us closely, and one swam toward us from the beam and then smoothly dove under us and popped up on the other side. We finally paddled back to Mantra as the no-see-ums became obnoxious.

Low tide, Brickhill River
Red knot
Oysters at low tide on the shore of the marsh
Red knots
After a day of practically no sunshine, the glowing orange orb descended below the clouds just above the horizon and made a spectacular exit from the sky, turning the surface of the green-brown water a deep indigo.

Saturday, April 25

As bottlenose dolphins swam around us this morning, we pulled up anchor at 9 a.m. and headed out to sea with only 5 knots of wind from the east, knowing we would have to motor. As we used the charts to navigate out through St. Andrew Sound; or, I should say, we tried to use the Garmin and Coastal Explorer charts, but both proved to be totally inaccurate. We found just one or two meters under the keel when there should have been a dozen and 8-9 meters in areas that should have been impassable. We almost ran aground on shoals a couple of times, and navigating by feel through the sound seemed to take forever as we took our best guesses on directions. Once we were out in open water, we motored over a consistent 10 meters of depth for miles. The offshore route was about 25 miles long while the actual distance we traveled as the crow flies was about 10 to reach the northern end of Jekyll Island. What I did not realize was that we could have traveled on the Intracoastal Waterway in a couple of hours, and there was only one fixed 65 foot high bridge to pass under. Peter thought he had told me this, but perhaps, he said, he only thought about it! So, a trip that could have been a couple of hours took exactly 7!


Dragonfly on the running rigging while we were out at sea 
Shrimp boats were everywhere
Since we were out to sea more than 3 nautical miles from shore, we were able to pump out the holding tank for sewage. In tropical waters, the effluvia is a distinctly different color than the surrounding turquoise waters. On the Atlantic coast of the eastern seaboard, it is difficult to discern the difference between that which is being pumped out and the water into which it is being discharged. 

The unanticipated advantage of traveling offshore was that we got a close look at something amazing. As we approached St. Simon’s Sound, from about 3 miles out at sea we could see an enormous construction project in the harbor; it looked like a single structure was being built that was bigger than a football field with a large, smooth roof. There were giant cranes and a lot of structures around it. We could not figure out what it was until we got closer to shore, picked up a cell signal and used Google. Then we realized that the piers, cranes and structures were surrounding the 200 meter long hulk of the Golden Ray, a shiny blue cargo vessel that had listed and then capsized in about 15 meters of water in September 2019 after leaving the port of Brunswick less than an hour before. All the barges, piers and other things surrounding the hull are there to mitigate pollution and prepare for cutting the ship into eight pieces in order to remove it from the channel. It was an astounding sight.

The capsized Golden Ray
The capsized Golden Ray
By the time we anchored at 2:00 p.m. off the western side of the northern end of Jekyll Island, where we could see people walking and riding bikes on the beaches, the wind had picked up to 20 knots from the south, making the water too chopping for pleasant kayaking. Luckily, from the deck we could see dolphins, which are amazingly abundant, and we spotted a couple of loggerhead turtles. Unlike in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, they can only be seen when they surface because the milky coffee water is almost opaque. 

Sunday, April 26

With the winds expected to get high in the afternoon, we chose the ICW today. We had to pull up anchor at 7 a.m. to go under fixed bridge across Lanier Island at low tide; we cleared by about a foot. (We will never forget the time we hit a bridge in our previous boat on the ICW, and we always approach the structures with some trepidation.) After we were under the bridge, I made Peter a cup of tea and then returned to the warmth of our bed. The last couple of days we have worn jeans. It’s the first time I have not been dressed in shorts and a t-shirt, a sundress or a swimsuit since the end of January! 

I meant to catch another hour of sleep, but the gentle movement of the boat and the purring of the engine lulled me into a deeper slumber, and it was approaching noon when I emerged from under the covers! Peter had steadfastly kept us on course in the meandering waterway, amusing himself from time to time killing the large flies that alight on the underside of the canvas bimini. They are tough and not easily destroyed, but we are perfecting our technique!

We stopped for lunch at the mouth of Shellbluff Creek and listened to the weather forecast. The wind is supposed to be 15-20 knots from the west with gusts up to 25 tonight; in fact, it was already gusting to 20 as we listened. We had planned to anchor on the north side of Blackbeard’s Island but decided to motor a few miles further north to Wahoo River for better protection from the wind. 

A family shrimp boat heading out
Typical home on shore along this section of the ICW
Another, smaller sailboat passed us heading north on the ICW just as we were pulling up anchor at mile marker 161. We realized as we got out into the channel that he had put up his genoa but didn’t seem to be moving. Unfortunately, he was not. He had strayed too far to the west side of the channel, although he was still within the markers, and had run aground. Hailing from Cambridge, Maryland, he was sailing solo and was trying to use his genoa to power off the shoal, to no avail. We offered to help, but really there was little we could do in the narrow channel. As we passed him slowly, several small local powerboats indifferently sped by leaving enormous wakes as their oversized “Trump-Make America Great Again” flags flew out stiffly behind them. I guess this is not surprising since they are people who adore a man who has shown little compassion or empathy for the thousands who have perished in the pandemic as he touts dubious accomplishments and raves about getting the economy back on track or even “better than ever.”

Anchored in the Wahoo River, we had an afternoon snack and played Scrabble for a while but paused the game to do some exploring in the kayak before sunset. We went to Wahoo Island, which has a mysterious, lit-at-night lamppost and no other development. The beach is eroding, so perhaps plans to build were scrapped. A think layer of sand covered the clay soil, which came in three colors, coal black, clay red and cement gray. The erosion showed the levels each type. Part of the small beach was covered in thick shells of ancient mollusks, and the four foot eroded bluff by the beach showed them in abundance in the soil. This only was in a little section, about 30 feet long, and we surmised that what was being eroded and exposed was a Native American midden.


Exposed Native American midden, Wahoo Island 
Chunks of black clay on the beach
View from the beach with Mantra in the distance 
Clouds from the kayak at sunset
Sunset behind Wahoo Island
Monday, April 27

We woke up to a cold morning, with temperature below 50 degrees Fahrenheit, but a bright blue sky. Bundled up in sweaters and jackets and jeans, we got under way as dolphins frolicked. We motored most of the day up the ICW, past endless stretches of marshes and open water and tributaries. Occasionally there are hammocks of hardwoods slightly higher than the wetlands. As we traveled and looked all around us, even though we knew and our charts showed that we were moving through flowing water that was behind us and ahead of us, it appeared that we were in a lake surrounded by yellow-green reeds in all directions. 

As we got closer to Savannah, we started to see more development, particularly enormous houses with private docks. At 5 p.m. we pulled into the Isle of Hope Marina, and since then we have been very busy. I went to the nearby Super Walmart for groceries and was dismayed to see very few people wearing masks or even following the one-way aisle pattern. Even employees were cavalier about protection; some of them were wearing masks just over their mouths but not their noses. When I asked the check-out clerk about this, she said she knew it wasn’t effective but she didn’t want to be wearing one at all. Employees checking receipts outside the exit were wearing no masks and certainly were not six feet away from customers. 

When I returned to the marina, I unpack and put away all the groceries, did a couple of loads of laundry, made dinner and downloaded photos. It is now after midnight, and I am exhausted. And we have to leave here by 8 a.m. to use the tide to our advantage for passage under the next fixed bridge.