Left Bluff Harbor on Monday morning and headed back. The original plan was to go on around to the south, towards Marsh Harbor and Hopetown. The weather and seas were not conducive to this, so the decision was made to head back towards the west end. The weather forecast for heading back to the good ole USA was going downhill quickly after Thursday. We have known other boaters/loopers who got stuck in the Bahamas for 1-2 weeks just waiting for good crossing weather. We didn't want to take that chance. So, Monday nights stop was an anchorage at Allan/Pensacola Cay. We had a little trouble with the anchor rope while setting anchor. The rope got wrapped around the port prop. Early in our looping days, the guys purchased a small air compressor and a hookah apparatus for just this instance. To date, it had not been needed, but it worked perfectly on this occasion. It will come in handy for barnacle scraping, propeller maintenance and anything requiring underwater breathing. Once we were successfully anchored, there was snorkeling and dinghy riding and beach walking and resting, etc.
We left Tuesday morning headed for Great Sale Cay. A different anchorage this time. More snorkeling and dinghy riding. ALL 4 of us got in the dinghy and headed for shore. I found a dead conch shell up on the beach and brought it back to the boat. It was really hot and the conch really smelled. On our way back to the boat Jim tried to swish out the contents with sea water. It has been soaking in soap and water ever since. Hoping it smells better by the time I try and take it home to the grandsons.
The captain and his crew.
We headed for West End on Wednesday morning. Once there, we walked over to the beach restaurant, had an early supper and generally enjoyed the scenery the rest of the day. Weather forecasts called for 2-4' seas, with some reaching 5' and 11-18mph winds from the SSE, so we were ready to set sail Thursday.
Thursday morning we took on some extra fuel. We put Jim to good use, once again. Shortly after we were headed back to the U.S..
THe sunrise as we pulled away.
Pam sent this. Had to share.
Seas look pretty calm, right? Wrong! Most of the way we were in 2-5' seas with about a 4 second period between waves. It was rough. Tim drove 99% of the way back. About 8 hours. We all settled in for the ride.
Palm Beach
VERY large container ship. Passed within .9 miles.
Both Tim and Jim took lots of pictures in the Bahamas and Tim's going to upload some when he gets a chance. We're happy to be back.