Farewell, Florida!
Elapsed time
1d
Avg. speed
4.5kts
Distance
107.3nm
Moving time
--
Max. speed
-- kts
We are off! Next stop: Belize. We are hugging the Florida coastline to keep out of the Gulf Stream, before cutting across it and hugging the Cuban coastline, then making a beeline for Belize. The passage should take us around 5 days. It feels so good to be back on the water. As we motored through the Palm Beach Inlet, taking us from the Intracoastal waterway out into the Atlantic, we popped open a bottle to celebrate. I cannot express just how draining the last few weeks have been. Each and every day, it felt like we had a never ending to do list which evolved into a comedy of errors. Nothing was as straightforward as it should have been and everything took ten times as long as we expected. Go to sleep, wake up, put Argonaut back together, repeat. A boat work edition of Groundhog Day. How we all felt was rather neatly summed up by Ben. Ben: “I hate boats.” Although we are all tired, that stress now feels like a world away. Less than hour in to our passage, we were serenaded by a pod of dolphins. If that’s not a good luck charm, I don’t know what is! As night fell, we got into the rhythm of our watches. 3 hours on during the night, 6 hours off, 2 hours on during the day, 4 hours off. Keeping watch solo. I struggled to keep my eyes open on my 21.00-00.00 watch, then struggled to sleep with the noise and heat thereafter. But now, my body has started to adjust to the rhythm, and the stress of the last few months is beginning to fade. At sunrise, we were greeted with the view of a rainbow over Miami. By lunchtime, the colours are more vivid, and we are surrounded by the most surreal shade of turquoise blue waters. Ben’s new dive watch informed him that it is now a good time to fish, so the lure is out, and we have our fingers crossed for a fish braai tonight! Continued on www.alexandrabevis.com
United States
Oct 3, 2024 - Oct 4, 2024