On April 3, we left Titusville and cruised to Daytona Beach. Titusville is just across the ICW from Cape Canaveral. We could see the rocket launch towers as we went by.
Rocket launch towers on Cape Canaveral
We had to ask for the bridge opening as it's only 15 ft. high otherwise.
But the Captain is happy no matter the weather; in this picture, it's only 60 degrees F. Chilly to be boating!
Days on the Great Loop ~ 335 Days at Marinas ~ 329 Numbers of Marinas ~ 101 Lock Walls ~ 3 Barge tie-up ~ 1 Convention Center Wall ~ 1 At Anchor ~ 1 Diesel Fuel Used ~ 6,597.6 Gallons Nautical Miles ~ 4,875 Statute Miles ~ 5,610
We made it to Melbourne, FL, Taurus’s home for the next three and a half months! Melbourne is also where our son lives, so we are going to get some good time in seeing him this winter. So great!! We saw him after work and for dinner today. It’s been too long. We need Covid-19 to be done please! We left Fort Pierce this morning and had an uneventful cruise. We saw an old favorite - a tug pushing a barge! We saw some more electric wires crossing the bay for those in the barrier islands. Once we were settled in our new marina, Fred and I took a walk to the Eau Gallie Art District (EGAD). We walked through an older residential neighborhood. There were Aloe Vera plants that are humongous! Aloe Vera plants in the neighborhood near our marina Plus there were cactus There were a couple of historic signs And at the end of the night - Christmas lights!
We spent today in Georgetown, because for the next few days there won’t be much to go see. We went to the Rice Museum where the Brown’s Ferry Vessel remnants are located. It sank in the 18th century in Black River carrying 25 tons of bricks made on a plantation. Artifacts, including green glass English wine bottles, oars, millstones, iron pots, a straight razor and smoking pipes made of gourds. The items enabled historians to date the time of its sinking to between 1730 and 1740. This period is about 50 years earlier than previous American shipbuilding discoveries. Model of Brown’s Ferry Vessel The ribs are made from cypress trees by the water that were plentiful here in South Carolina. The planks on the sides were hewn by ax and are all the same thickness. I’m not sure how you do that with an ax. Remnants of Brown's Ferry Vessel We also learned about rice growing in South Carolina. The planters bought 40,000 acres of lan...
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