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#1
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Earl Colby Pottinger wrote: 7) At my cabin I am busy converting a 16 foot canoe to a partly covered sailing catamaran. So here is my dream and questions assuming I can get the canoe properly converted. Is my dream of cruising around the islands of the Bahamas for 1-2 weeks a valid dream? The canoe and add-ons will fit easyily on my truck, I was planning to drive it all down to Florida, then get a lift to the Bahamas then just cruise for a week or two. How hard will transfering the craft to the Bahamas be? Who is the best to contact? Airline? Cruise boat? Or the special boat transporters? Private boats making the crossing? What else should I be thinking off. Earl Colby Pottinger Important reading material: http://web.media.mit.edu/%7Etim/pix/cuba.html http://www.mit.edu/people/robot/yucatan/index.html More fodder: http://cruisenews.net/search2.php?search_term=canoe |
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#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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"cruisenews" :
Important reading material: http://web.media.mit.edu/%7Etim/pix/cuba.html Interesting, but this man is a fool. A) He never filed plans or even a destination with a friend. B) He started hir trip without even know where he wanted to go. C) By himself, Cuba, Gulfstream, known coming storm, very small boat? Need I say more? One main reason I am thinking of the Bahamas is so I never am out of sight of land, and have no plans to spend night on the water. http://www.mit.edu/people/robot/yucatan/index.html Same idiot, new problems. Come on now, this guy seem to be having fun in a way, but all his actions seem very dumb to me. No map/charts of the before he sets out. Dry bags that don't stay dry (what type of junk bags is he buying?). He did not even have a completed boat when he started out, or have a pre-arranged boat/wood store to get the needed extras. At the very least I plan to have all the parts needed before I arrive. My dry bags stay dry even if you push them under water, I already have some charts and plan to buy the latest available before I go. There probably be lots of problems ahead, but the whole reason I am posting here is to find out what I don't know. This guy just blindly sets sail without the less bit of preparation. More fodder: http://cruisenews.net/search2.php?search_term=canoe And thnks this looks like lots of interesting reading ahead for me. Earl Colby Pottinger -- I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos, SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp |
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#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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A friend of mine took an 18' Hobi from Key West to Dry Tortugas with no
problem (it is 68 miles). They slept on the tramp under a boom tent. This guy might consider a few "dry runs" in the Keys cuz I have never seen any crocs there and there are a lot of islands for him. |
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#5
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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The Keys a bad idea? Dunno. Another option is the Big Bend area of
Florida (up where the Suwanee River goes into the Gulf) There is a canoe trail that wanders the coastline among true wilderness among isolated islands and a few tiny towns. Perfect for the sort of vessel you describe. The town of Cedar Key is the perfect place for such a launch point as it has access to many of these islands. Going west, you could reach the islands at the mouth of the Suwanee or even the uninhabited Pepperfish Keys. The area around Carabelle is another possibility (SW of Tallahassee) as it has access to isolated Dog Island, western St. George Is. (uninhabited) and St. Vincent Is. If you got tired of salt water, you could go up the New River and get lost for the rest of your life in the swamps. I had a homeless riend who lived for several years on a $500Venture 21 sailboat there. He did more cruising than anybody else I ever knew. |
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#6
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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:
The Keys a bad idea? Dunno. No, people implied that the Bahamas was a bad idea for a canoe-catamaran tripping. Another option is the Big Bend area of Florida (up where the Suwanee River goes into the Gulf) Googling right now. Found it, looks easy. Googling the Keys finds a number of parks in the Keys themselves. There is a canoe trail that wanders the coastline among true wilderness among isolated islands and a few tiny towns. Perfect for the sort of vessel you describe. The town of Cedar Key is the perfect place for such a launch point as it has access to many of these islands. Going west, you could reach the islands at the mouth of the Suwanee or even the uninhabited Pepperfish Keys. Yes, it does look good. The area around Carabelle is another possibility (SW of Tallahassee) as it has access to isolated Dog Island, western St. George Is. (uninhabited) and St. Vincent Is. If you got tired of salt water, you could go up the New River and get lost for the rest of your life in the swamps. I had a homeless riend who lived for several years on a $500Venture 21 sailboat there. He did more cruising than anybody else I ever knew. Ok, it looks like it will be Florida for the winter of 2006, and the Bahamas in 2007. Those who wonder about the coming summer, I think I will spend my time around the cabin doing some shake-down trip on lake Huron. If I get the time maybe go to the Upper Channel. Earl Colby Pottinger -- I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos, SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp |
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#7
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Sun, 20 Nov 2005 21:09:36 -0600, Earl Colby Pottinger
wrote: What I don't understand is the number of people who suggest it is a bad idea but don't say why. =============================================== If you stay away from populated areas (civilization), and are comfortable with managing on your own, you may do OK. No one occupying expensive real estate is going to be thrilled with you camping out on their door step, one small step up from homless. That includes marinas, town docks and quite a few parks. Other than "people" problems, the next biggest issue is the inherent unseaworthiness of your chosen craft. You WILL be capsized and swamped at various times, it just goes with the territory. |
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#8
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Here in N. FL, he'd fit in pretty well as most natives in the coastal
counties (Dixie, Taylor, Wakulla, Franklin counties) are semi-employed loggers or oystermen living fairly well on what would be below poverty level wages anywhere else. Hardly anybody would think twice about him camping with his boat except the damned transplanted yankees in their condo trash towers. Fortunately, they rarely venture into the shallow coastal wilderness so he could easily get away as long as he wanted. With a little knowledge, it'd be nearly impossible to starve too. This is not the usual beachy environment and can be very isolated and often even VHF will pick up nothing Very isolated salt marsh/mangrove islands, cabbage palms all over, shallow flats teeming with fish with tiny crystal clear spring runs emptying into the salt marshes........(paradise for some people). However, he should consider swarms of mosquitoes, no-see-um bugs, the occasional gator (not really a problem when its colder) and snakes. The gators and snakes can be dealt with easily by watching where you step or swim. He'll need to watch for Sting rays if he walks in the water. It does get cold in N. Fl. but does not stay cold for more than a few days. A canadian will probably find the water temp swimmable year round (my kids do, I do not). I would not hesitate to do this. |
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#9
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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:
Here in N. FL, he'd fit in pretty well as most natives in the coastal counties (Dixie, Taylor, Wakulla, Franklin counties) are semi-employed loggers or oystermen living fairly well on what would be below poverty level wages anywhere else. Hardly anybody would think twice about him camping with his boat except the damned transplanted yankees in their condo trash towers. Fortunately, they rarely venture into the shallow coastal wilderness so he could easily get away as long as he wanted. With a little knowledge, it'd be nearly impossible to starve too. This is not the usual beachy environment and can be very isolated and often even VHF will pick up nothing Very isolated salt marsh/mangrove islands, cabbage palms all over, shallow flats teeming with fish with tiny crystal clear spring runs emptying into the salt marshes........(paradise for some people). However, he should consider swarms of mosquitoes, no-see-um bugs, the occasional gator (not really a problem when its colder) and snakes. The gators and snakes can be dealt with easily by watching where you step or swim. He'll need to watch for Sting rays if he walks in the water. It does get cold in N. Fl. but does not stay cold for more than a few days. A canadian will probably find the water temp swimmable year round (my kids do, I do not). I would not hesitate to do this. You know, more and more it looks like my first trips outside of Canada will be in Florida. What is it with you people there? It seems you have the Canada SnowBird market all locked up. Is there and good reasons for aCanadain to bother see the rest of the USA? Earl Colby Pottinger -- I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos, SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp |
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#10
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Wayne.B :
On Sun, 20 Nov 2005 21:09:36 -0600, Earl Colby Pottinger wrote: What I don't understand is the number of people who suggest it is a bad idea but don't say why. =============================================== If you stay away from populated areas (civilization), and are comfortable with managing on your own, you may do OK. And how many people do you think I am with when I go wilderness camping? Most trips there rarely have more than one campsite on the same lake. And even if I go with others they are off doing thier own thing somewhere. If you can't handle being alone don't do real camping. No one occupying expensive real estate is going to be thrilled with you camping out on their door step, You know, it is amazing what you can get if you appoach the shore and before landing you ask politely if you can land there. Plus my plans were to go where people are NOT! If I want to see people there is tons of them in Toronto to see. I want to see nature. However, I do not enjoy the cold weather we have up here in Canada at this time of year. And no, 10-25C is not cold to me. Bahamas in winter time is still warm to me. one small step up from homless. That includes marinas, town docks and quite a few parks. And when have I ever suggested that I was planning to go to such places? Other than "people" problems, the next biggest issue is the inherent unseaworthiness of your chosen craft. You WILL be capsized and swamped at various times, it just goes with the territory. Really? Why would that be? I have been canoeing in 50KPH winds (not fun I tell) without capsizing. I have been in 2-3 meter waves without capsizing. Why should I capsize in the Bahamas if I am not there in the hurricane season? Plus I have only gone out in that weather when I was up against a hard time limit, any other time if the weather is bad I just stay inside the tent and read a book. Last, so I capsize. I always wear my lifejacket, and it does not matter how hot it gets as to me 40C is nice weather, all my stuff is in water proof bags and tied to the canoe with rope. If you ever went canoeing with Ralph you would understand why. If I go over, I will paddle to the nearest island and sort things out. Earl Colby Pottinger PS. A canoe with all it main load place on the bottom of the canoe is very stable on water. -- I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos, SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp |
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