HEMISPHERES MEANING RINGS TRUE

Never have the closing lyrics of my favorite song Hemispheres meant so much and rung so true as it has over the last couple of years and especially the last couple of months. Grateful for the resolutions, the outcomes, new friends, renewed lost friends, closure, happiness and new beginnings. 

We can walk our road together

If our goals are all the same

We can run alone and free

If we pursue a different aim

Let the truth of love be lighted

Let the love of truth shine clear

Sensibility

Armed with sense and liberty

With the heart and mind united in a single

Perfect

Sphere

Not Done Yet, Right To Cape Lookout…

Fourth of July weekend and the Croaker Festival, another fantastic weekend of events. Was in Oriental for the day parade on Saturday then the fireworks from the bridge at night. Caught the parade from my usual VIP spot, the porch at The Bean. Then it happened. The NSA float came by to which I got assaulted with fast flying, hard candy. Everyone ran for cover as I was squarely in their sights. They almost took an eye out. Then lunch at the newly opened O-Town, Chris Daniels definitely got it going on.

 

So not being content with remaining on land and realizing that Monday is a holiday, the impromptu decision was made to go to Cape Lookout. We told Paul and Becky and they were in like Flynn. Bruce and Kay quickly jumped on the idea so we all set sail Sunday morning to the cape. Amanda and Miah were already there for a few days so we would all meet up. There’s something about that turquoise blue water when your out in the Atlantic ocean that’s so beautiful.

 

Well of course, you know it’s not a Tony Nelson trip without a Tony Nelson type of event happening. So as we’re coming into the Cape (I’ll skip the details of a big roller coming from the starboard side, rolling Nancy off the seat and completely taking out the throttle) we had throttle issues. Apparently, the throttle cable somehow ripped out the control arm on the engine. Took a couple of minuted to figure everything out and what to do as we sat drifting. We still had control of the transmission and that engaged. Nancy had to go below and manually much the control arm on the engine so we could move. She’s a trooper. Well, after that we got safely anchored albeit a bit close to these Canadians (more on that later).

So apparently there’s an unwritten rule that the last boat in ends up being the host. As soon as we were anchored and we cut the engine, dinghys defended upon us bring strange beverages and foods. To protect the innocent, I’ll skip those details and simply say that it was a fantastic time.

 

So I think the excessive partying and yelling and overall antics pissed off the Canadians that were anchored near us. We successfully did what no other people on the planet have ever done, piss off Canadians. Because the next morning, they just pulled up anchor and took off. Never looked over at us, no wave goodbye, nothing. We did feel bad, maybe we were a tad bit rowdy? Nah, we stopped before it was dark. The next morning coffee was needed as we watched the sunrise and said our goodbyes to our Canadian neighbors.

 

If we wanted to catch the tide going in to Beaufort Inlet, we really should have left early in the morning. We all decided to stay for a while and enjoy part of the day, leaving at noon. So we had breakfast, went over to the lighthouse (which was closed on the 4th of July, go figure so couldn’t climb), walked through the park and hung out there for a while.

 

Still not being ready to leave, it was time to head over to the beach. Both beaches, inside the cape and walked over to the Atlantic side. To the right of us, a few people walking, to the left, not a soul in sight. BTW, did I mention that I totally LOVE the new AB 9.5AL dinghy with the new Tohatsu 9.8? Way, way much better than the previous two dinghies with inflatable floors and a 6hp motor….just saying’.

Pure tranquility but it was soon time to go, pull up anchor, head out into the Atlantic then in the inlet and up the creek back to Oriental. Oh, but couldn’t end that great weekend without this…..

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Done…..

 

 

 

 

 

Logging Some Serious Nautical Miles This Year

It’s been a great year for sailing so far. After a cold and wet winter, kicked off the spring in full stride. Quite a few daysails and have been to Ocracoke three times already. This year’s theme is “30 Days of Ocracoke” and I’m closing in with 18 nights already. I was told I can only count the nights that I’ve stayed there, travel days don’t count. So with 12 days to go, I have two more trips to Ocracoke this year. Definitely earning the VIP status at Anchorage Inn Marina. Spent a week there the end of April and then almost two weeks for the Memorial Day weekend to the following weekend for the Ocrafolk Festival. Will be doing the same next year, great time.

 

But what’s to talk about at Ocracoke if not food? As usual, I over-provisioned the boat. The thought was that I would just cook adn eat on the boat everyday. In Ocracoke? Really? I came back with 3/4 of the food I brought out there.

 

I have to say that I am more than blessed to be in the field that I am. I’ve always loved technology and technology is truly an enabler for life. I get to telecommute full-time with just the need for reliable internet and voice. When it comes to connectivity, “Ocracoke does not suck”. Here’s a sample of the bandwidth, my “office” down below and the “on-deck” office with a great inspiring view. It seems like when I’m at Ocracoke or on the hook at Cape Lookout, I get a lot of work done, I just get in that zone. The ideas flow and the pace of cranking things out is amazing.

 

So that was the two week stint at Ocracoke. But not done yet. This year’s Neuse Sailing Assc. weeklong has to go down in history as one of the best in a long, long time. An entire week, several ports of call and I burned about five gallons for the week. Literally sailed every leg. Left on a Friday afternoon and put the sails up leaving Oriental marker #1 and was fortunate enough to use them entering the Bay River. Up Goose Creek and anchored out for the night in Eastham Creek. A great evening, a brief rain and a great nights sleep. Next morning was a fantastic sunrise.

 

The next morning it was up and at ’em with the sail to “Little” Washington. Where fate would kick in but that’s a whole other beautiful post. When we left the anchorage going up Goose Creek at 7:30am in the morning, it was already blowing up to ~20kts out of the northeast. As we entered the Pamlico River and turned to head west, sails were raised and it was off to the races, all the way till we hit the channel going into Washington.

I’m having a little ignition switch or solenoid problem where sometimes it won’t engage and it happened as I was entering the channel. Tried a few times but it wouldn’t kick in. So I’m thinking, at least the wind is from the right direction andI’ll be sailing in hot, straight to the docks, hope there’s enough folks to catch lines. But eventually it engaged and started the engine and that was a relief. Oh, note to myself, troubleshoot that this weekend….duh. So upon getting to Washington, the mission was to locate a coffee shop. But first, a wonderful surprise which started with…”Hi Tony”, as I sat on the side of the boat soaking in the day’s sail.

 

We also got a tour of the Pacific Seacraft factory where I felt the urge to put down a deposit on a PSC40. Got to see Jimmy Buffet’s new boat that’s being built. No pictures were allowed obviously but the tour was great and learned a lot. After a couple of days in Washington (and spending a few hours at the coffee shop Sunday morning) it was off to Bath Creek for anchoring out and a fantastic NSA social. Thanks to Steve and Carol for being such fantastic hosts! An evening of great conversation, beer and local bluecrabs. When I say local, I mean from crabpots off their dock. I’ve had bluecrabs many, many times before but these were definitely the sweetest I’ve ever had. What a fantastic taste. Also, who knew bluecrabs had built-in pull tabs to make it easy to open them.

And then that night, the strawberry moon and was also the summer solstice. What a great day and night. Then there was a long conversation with a mermaid that made it even more special.

 

Then leaving Bath and Bath Creek and off to Dowry Creek Marina. Two nights there and had a nice relaxing time.

 

The first night, brought a bit of Jamaica with me. oxtails, curry goat, rice and peas.

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The second night, instead of going to Spoon River for dinner with the fleet, Mike, Brenda and myself stayed behind and decided to grill out. Adding to the evening, Nancy accepted the invite and joined us and we had a wonderful evening.

Nancy

 

And that’s how that segment ended. Later that evening there was a discussion if we should head to Ocracoke because of the high winds in the afternoon. Was supposed to hit 40kt gusts by 4pm. So we decided that the next morning, 5am, we’d all have our power disconnected and engines running and meet to make the decision. At 5am, we did. Let’s roll. It was already blowing significantly when we left under the cover of darkness before the full sunrise. Got the sails up and we were off again. I had a reef in but the wind lightened up so like the genius I am, fully raised the main. WRONG!!! The wind picked right back up and I was over powered even with letting out the mainsheet. And with all that, I happened to have picked up a crab pot. That is the worst feeling and sound as you hear it thumping on the bottom of the boat, praying that it’s not around the propshaft. Did a few 360’s in each direction to try and free it but no luck. It wasn’t until I hove-to to reef the main that it fell off. Glad it did because the only other option would have been to put on the harness, run the backline and tether in to dive over. In the middle of the Pamlico in 3 to 4ft waves and high winds, to free the pot. Glad it didn’t come to that. But what a fantastic sail over.

 

Well, back in Ocracoke. One of my favorite places. First things first, soon as you tie up, you go straight to SmackNally’s for a burger, fries and beer and that’s exactly what we did. Took the wings out the freezer before leaving Dowry Creek so we could deep-fry them for the social. Got the vhf call to check that they were defrosting properly, all was good so “back to 16”. Continuing on the theme of “Ocracoke does not suck”, it was a fantastic three days. Everything from great food to great social events to even picking up a mermaid for the sail back to Oriental. Sometimes, single-handing can be exhausting and having a first mate really helps. Thank you Nancy for making it a great sail back.

 

Well that was Ocracoke and the weeklong. What a wonderful time, just fantastic and memorable. We’ll see what happens for next years weeklong, will be hard to beat but we’ll try.

 

Because I need more Gadgets….

It’s here, it’s here! The NEMA 0183/2000 to SignalK gateway. What does it do? You attach it  to your electronics bus and it interprets 0183/2000 signals and outputs them as SignalK. This opens up a whole range of opportunities with integration with Linux, MacOS and IOS (sorry, Windows is banned on Hemispheres).

So over the next week or when I have time, I need to run a new ethernet network and a router and wireless, because I just have to have complexity. After getting it integrated, first thing is to work on a suitable streaming format to use with Panic’s Status Board.

 

Waiting for an Ocracoke Bus

Well, not happening within the next week anyway. So what’s an Ocracoke Bus? I first heard it from Jim Gay. Basically, favorable winds to go from Oriental to Ocracoke then favorable winds to take you back home with a day or two in between to spend on the island. Or even an overnighter which in turn becomes the $100 Sailor’s Burger (SmackNally’s burger and one nights slip at Anchorage Inn Marina).

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A Strawberry Sailstice

Today is a remarkable day. It’s the summer solstice meaning it’s the longest day of the year, or actually, longest daylight of the year in the northern hemisphere. Also this evening is a strawberry moon, when the moon is the closest to the earth and the sun’s light hits it just right. Having the summer solstice and strawberry moon on the same day is rare and in fact, will not happen again for several more decades. Making it even more special is being out on the water, anchored out in Bath Creek off of….Bath, NC. Tranquility, thought provoking, peaceful, content.

This photo doesn’t do it any justice so hope you’re all outside viewing this evening.

#OnceInALifetime

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It’s Time for a TWC Rant

—– Begin Rant —–

Let me just start by saying….I fucking hate Time Warner Cable. It’s a monopolistic, self serving, incompetent company that cannot deliver the basic services that they charge for and hire people who aren’t qualified to work at McDonalds. God help you if you call support and they get to the end of the flowchart without resolving the problem. Their default answer is to powercycle the router, disconnect the coax for 30 seconds and sacrifice two chickens.

Literally just this morning, I paid my TWC bill. I return home this evening to find that theres an outage…again. But I have a new plan. Instead of paying my TWC bill upon arrival, Im just going to wait until I get the second and third notice before paying because most likely, there will be another outage so why pay for something that doesn’t work anyway.

Next, why the hell does TWC keep resetting routers to a default addressing of 192.168.0.? I have a whole network of devices that’s been on 192.168.1.0 for years, for ever. Lately, TWC keeps resetting routers without notice and changes the addressing. I last noticed this when I was away and couldn’t connect to anything back home.

But I’m hopeful as help is on the way in the form of Google Fiber. I’m just counting the months to make the switch as I will be inviting everyone over and throwing a TWC liberation party. The executive and leadership team at TWC, who’s ultimately responsible for this nonsense can take their coax cable and give themselves a collective enema.

As of now, still no internet access, tethering from my iPhone right now chewing up my data plan..

“TWC – We can care less because we can”

—–End Rant —-

A Busy maintenance Weekend

When we last left off, the fridge compressor died. Got a recommendation for a local guy named Darrell Foster. I highly, highly, highly recommend him. Got him on short notice as he was inthe area. Checked out the system, discussed it, spent some time online with me looking at various systems and discussed them. Ordered a new system, basically the same one, direct shipped it to him and he got it installed right away. Great guy, professional and easy to work with.

Have to say, this unit just sips power unlike the previous one. The freezer got down to zero and the fridge at 35 degrees, awesome. Also, had it set to full and left the battery charger off for two days. Still had about ~70% battery house bank capacity. So I figure when I get the solar panels on, I can stay out on the hook at Cape Lookout for a week 😉

And let the sale begin

In an effort to reduce the amount of dinghys I have in the armada, I’m listing the big dinghy. It’s a Mercury Airdeck 340. Hypalon, 10’6″ in length, air floor and inflatable keel. Comes with a cover and a pump. it’s like new, not used much. Great for a family as it can easily support six adults. Was for a different time and configuration. Spread the word or if you’re interested, give me a shout. It’s big.

 

Here’s the link to a new one on Defender.com. List price is $3,500, currently selling at Defender for $2,569. I’m looking for about $1,400. Remember, Hypalon, not PVC.

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She’s Dead Jim…

Well, this was a weekend of ups and downs.

First, the start battery on bank one has gone to that big electroplate heaven in the sky. Turn off the battery charger and bank two, flip on a load and it drops to nine volts. Damn. Well, battery replacement was simple enough, just awkward putting it in. Anything over twenty pounds that needs to be placed somewhere in a boat crevice ends up being awkward. So out with the old Interstate Group27 start battery, in with the new Duracell…Duracell? Yeah, had a 10% off coupon from Batteries Plus, got it at the Oriental Boat show.

 

Then there’s “She’s Dead Jim…Part Deux”

We’re not done because it’s a boat. Did  you think I was getting off that easy? That cheap? Not! What else could possibly happen? Well, how about the fridge going kaput. You know, the thing that holds the beer and unused salsa and bean dip. Yup, the compressor failed and while I have my suspicions, stupid is as stupid does. I’ll leave it htere. Hint, DC electric motors do like low voltage. So this failure falls within the proper range of boat failures. Cost? A boat buck. Of course you can’t just order a compressor motor, Nope, gotta get the unit. Cool thing is I won’t be needed a new evaporator will just have it evacuated and there’s an adapter fitting for the new connection. So with Amex in hand (or on file), quickly went to Defender to offer my tithe to the patron saint of boat repairs  with another boat buck.

 

But there’s a lighter side. As I’m planing on doing more anchoring out and discovering this year, along with being a temporary resident of Ocracoke by accumulating a month on the island this year, I felt I needed a better dingly. So….(drumroll), kind of fell into a new AB 9.5AL. This thing is sweet. Aluminum floor, hypalon, high bow. Will keep me dry in the chop. Much nicer than my other two inflatable floor dinghys (which are for sale btw). This thing can take up to a 15hp outboard and it’s just begging for more than my current 6hp Tohatsu. Besides, I need something to zip me back and forth from Ocracoke to Portsmith Island. Tohatsu 9.8 with the optional external battery start is in my eye. I’m also interested in teh Lehr 9.9hp propane outboard, just still a bit concerned about getting the talk filled wherever I’m at, also concerned about having that big cylinder tank in the dinghy.

 

And did still get on water though we didn’t go too far 😉