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Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We
would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA |
Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
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(ALCCA) wrote: Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA You can do both. Go up and the places you don't have time to visit on the way north, do on the way south. There's no point in trying to second guess the hurricanes - there is just as much chance of having them in the Chesapeake as anywhere. Check what your insurance says. We leave from the Potomac in mid to late October. We like leaving later because there aren't as many boats clogging up the marinas since most of them leave earlier. Depending on the weather, this can be a warm trip or a cold trip. If the weather is cold, we tend to hurry more and stay in marinas more (for heat). We also like to go north earlier when the weather is not as hot, but I'm sure May will work fine. The first time we did it, we left Nov 1st laid over 2 days for weather 3 or 4 times, spent a week in Charleston, and got to Palm Beach December 16th. The weather was quite cold. The second time we left Oct 24th and promptly got weathered in for several days at the first stop. We left there Oct 28th, and arrived in Ft. Pierce December 6th. On this trip the weather was warm, and after the first stop, we stayed a couple of days in 8 places along the way. This time, we left October 31, and arrived in Ft. Pierce on Dec 3rd (we don't go inside south of Ft. Pierce anymore). We stayed 2 days in Elizabeth City, Belhaven (because of fog), Swansboro (because of rain), and a week in Charleston, a couple of days in Fernandina, a couple of days in St. Augustine (over Thanksgiving), a couple of days in Daytona and a couple of days in Titusville. On the way back the first year, we left Lake Worth March 12th, and were in Norfolk by April 14th. We stayed a couple of days in Fernandina, visited our son for a week in Charleston, and had the worst weather of all in the Chesapeake in April. The second year we came back from the Bahamas to Ft. Pierce on March 12 (and stayed there a day), and got to Norfolk April 15th. Spent a couple of days in St. Augustine (weather), Fermandina, and a week in Charleston. grandma Rosalie http://www12.virtualtourist.com/m/4a9c6/ |
Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
ALCCA wrote:
Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA This seems to boil down to when you actually want to arrive at Chesapeake Bay. Fall cruising on the Bay is considered by many as the ideal time, with early spring second, and mid-summer a dead last. If I were doing this as a one-time event, I'd try to get on the Bay no later than mid-May. If you figure about 2 weeks from Fernandina to Norfolk (which is not really a bad estimate), and then factor in the miles from Palm Beach to Fernandina, and the miles from Norfolk to, say, Baltimore, you can get at least some idea of a possible schedule. Many folks prefer to get out of Norfolk not later than mid-October, but I have left there as late as November 1 without too many problems. I think the real downside to a cruise such as this is having to endure a typical August on the Bay. It _can_ be done, but sometimes not very pleasantly. In any case, once you leave Norfolk southbound, you can luxuriate on the way back to Florida without too much worry. As Rosalie indicated, don't waste time "scheduling" hurricanes. Just have a plan, keep an eye on the weather, and get an idea of the various "holes" on the route. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.tripod.com |
Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
ALCCA wrote:
Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA This seems to boil down to when you actually want to arrive at Chesapeake Bay. Fall cruising on the Bay is considered by many as the ideal time, with early spring second, and mid-summer a dead last. If I were doing this as a one-time event, I'd try to get on the Bay no later than mid-May. If you figure about 2 weeks from Fernandina to Norfolk (which is not really a bad estimate), and then factor in the miles from Palm Beach to Fernandina, and the miles from Norfolk to, say, Baltimore, you can get at least some idea of a possible schedule. Many folks prefer to get out of Norfolk not later than mid-October, but I have left there as late as November 1 without too many problems. I think the real downside to a cruise such as this is having to endure a typical August on the Bay. It _can_ be done, but sometimes not very pleasantly. In any case, once you leave Norfolk southbound, you can luxuriate on the way back to Florida without too much worry. As Rosalie indicated, don't waste time "scheduling" hurricanes. Just have a plan, keep an eye on the weather, and get an idea of the various "holes" on the route. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.tripod.com |
Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
We did the traditional ICW trip a few years ago. This site includes a day by
day log. http://www.sv-loki.com/The_Trip/the_trip.html West Palm to Norfolk is about 25 travel days, so you'll need 50 days. You've given about 180, so you have 130 days left for playing tourist, and cruising the Chesapeake. As you can see from our log, we sometimes traveled 2 or 3 days in a row; other times we stopped for a few weeks. Only you can say which places you want hang out in for extended stays. As for hurricanes, aside from last year, the upper Chesapeake is a safest place on the East Coast. The standard strategy is to head south after the Annapolis Boat Show on Columbus Day. -jeff "ALCCA" wrote in message ... Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA |
Palm Beach to the Chesapeake
We did the traditional ICW trip a few years ago. This site includes a day by
day log. http://www.sv-loki.com/The_Trip/the_trip.html West Palm to Norfolk is about 25 travel days, so you'll need 50 days. You've given about 180, so you have 130 days left for playing tourist, and cruising the Chesapeake. As you can see from our log, we sometimes traveled 2 or 3 days in a row; other times we stopped for a few weeks. Only you can say which places you want hang out in for extended stays. As for hurricanes, aside from last year, the upper Chesapeake is a safest place on the East Coast. The standard strategy is to head south after the Annapolis Boat Show on Columbus Day. -jeff "ALCCA" wrote in message ... Hi everyone. We are planning taking our boat to the Chesapeake this summer. We would like to leave the first week of May from Palm Beach and make our way North through the ICW. We are not in a hurry and would like to enjoy the cruise without any kind of schedule. Our concern is that if we really take a very slow approach we may be increasing our chances of being in the path of a hurricane and secondly that we may miss a lot of the great cruising grounds in the Chesapeake by running out of time. We would like to start heading back the first week of October. One approach we have began to discuss is to try to get to the Chesapeake by mid to June and then take our time coming back. Does any one have any suggestions which one may be the better approach? Thanks ALCCA |
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