Heading Back to Grenada Soon!

We’re heading back to the boat soon!

We have spent the last year getting ourselves fixed up so we can continue our adventure. This is exciting!

(Click on the pictures to enlarge)

The boat was in pretty good shape the last time I checked, so we don’t have many parts to bring back:

While home we have been able to spend time with family. Took our grandson to the zoo. I’ll have the child fingers, NO, I mean the chicken fingers…

Monkeys:

He enjoyed feeding the birds:

Rhinos (case ya couldn’t tell):

And…ya:

He lasted quite a while!

He enjoys the park too:

Learned about pine cones:

We went to the Grant Seafood Festival, it was great fun, lots of people, live music, great food!

We also made it to Disney World:

Waiting to get on the Peter Pan ride:

It’s a Small World ride:

Pirates of the Caribbean:

Long day, time to head home, back under the castle:

Down Main St:

…and back out front. Such a great day:

Then up to Maine to visit family and enjoy a wonderful April 1st snow storm!

That’s it for now. We should be back in Grenada in a few short weeks!!

We can’t wait!!!!

Categories: General | 2 Comments

What Have We Been Up To?

We have been sidetracked yet again…unavoidably…against our will…

I’m going to ramble a bit here, so if you’re not interested you can just skip down to the pictures.

We were having the time of our lives sailing around Antigua and Barbuda when I re-injured my back. Already nursing a bad knee, it was evident that without medical attention my physical condition would prevent us from continuing our adventure. Greatly disappointed, we decided to interrupt our trip and head back to Grenada so that we could close up the boat and fly home to Florida. Our plan (back in April) was to fly home as soon as possible, get my knee and back fixed then return to the boat by November and continue with our adventure. Seven months was seemingly enough time to get two procedures done, recover, and return to the boat. Well, things don’t always go the way we want or expect and my repairs are taking twice as long as we wanted them to.

Actually, my knee went quite well and is back to 90 percent, which is as good as it will ever be. The relief from my previous knee surgery lasted over ten years so if I can get ten years from this procedure, I’ll be happy! Following insurance company policies and procedures, x-rays, MRIs, etc. it took about six weeks to get in front of a good knee surgeon. The wait to see a specialist is very frustrating and I assumed it would be several weeks until I could be scheduled for the procedure but for once we were pleasantly surprised. After reviewing the clinical evidence, I was quite happy and totally validated when the doctor told us, in technical terms: “your knee is messed up, what are you doing tomorrow?” His staff was able to get insurance authorization in less than an hour and a slot in the OR for the next morning! The surgery was a success, I’ll never run again but there is tremendous relief. At least we can go swimming, walking and hiking again without fear of painful aftereffects. The surgeon told us that was the last surgery on my right knee and unfortunately the next step will be knee replacement. Hopefully we won’t be talking about that for at least another ten years!

Correcting my back injury has proven to be a much more involved process. You don’t just go to a back specialist, not with my health insurance. You go to your primary care manager for x-rays, MRIs, and try the local treatment first. When that treatment proves ineffective, your PCM refers you to pain management and physical therapy, etc. When those treatments fail you go back to your PCM. So now I request a referral from my PCM to a back specialist. Even before this process started I began researching back doctors. I found the best doctor in all of central Florida right here where we live and almost went into shock when we found out he was in my insurance network!!!! Weeks go by, with no relief, while you follow the path prescribed by your PCM (and the insurance company). Another week goes by waiting for insurance authorization to see a specific doctor. Now we have authorization but, because we decided to pick the best doctor in central Florida, the initial appointment isn’t for ten weeks… Whaaaat? It gets better. Now that I am in the “back pain social network,” I meet a guy and find out his son works for this doctor! This guy makes a call for me and gets my appointment moved up by several weeks! So that’s positive! Now we’re thinking we will get to see the doctor, agree on a path forward, and I will be in recovery very quickly…uh no. First we had to see the administrative people and maybe a nurse, fill out mountains of paperwork, get new x-rays, another MRI, and make an appointment to see his assistant. Weeks go by and we finally get an audience with the doctor’s assistant. I pitch my case, she reviews the x-rays and MRI, and yes, I have debilitating sciatica, great. We agree on bone fusion as the best course of action buuuut we have to do injections first in order to appease the insurance company. Whatever. Great. Months have passed since we came home and initiated contact with the healthcare system regarding my back pain. We were surprised to hear that I can get my injection in two weeks. We wait, I get my injection, no impact, no effect at all. Now I can get an audience with the doctor. A few weeks later we get in to see the doctor and we discuss in great detail his findings, my symptoms, the impact this pain has on our lives, and possible corrective action. We confirm, face to face, exactly what is wrong with me and how to fix it. Then he tells us there is another test he wants to do to confirm the problem. Wha…whaaaat? I just stared at him and replied: “Five months have elapsed since I have started this process, you know exactly what is wrong with me and how to fix it and you want to do another test?” The look on his face shifted, he tossed the pen he was holding onto the desk, reached for some forms and said “Fine, I guess we can go straight to surgery!”

Hallelujah!

It took six months to get my back fixed. It has been a couple of weeks since my surgery and I am healing quite well. The sciatic nerve pain is gone and every day that goes by, the pain from the surgery fades away. Unfortunately there is a four to six month recovery time which is why we will not be able to return to the boat until summer.

So that’s the story for the past few months, on to the pictures. Click on them for full screen view.

Sailing around Antigua and Barbuda:

1-sail-to-barbuda

1a

Beach happy hours:

1b

1c

Beautiful sunsets, just a perfect time to get hurt and have to return home:

1g

We raced back to Grenada to haul the boat. The yard seemed to have some difficulty getting the straps positioned where I wanted them, so in the water I went. If you want it done right, do it yourself:

1h

Haul out:

1i

Trailered into position for the next few months:

1l

Once back home, first step was fixing the knee:

2-knee

Eww, bottom of my femur, which is supposed to be smooth and blemish free. My femur looks like the surface of the moon, or worse:

2a-knee3

Eww again, this is supposed to be smooth and attached. As you can see my “stuff” is ripped, retracted, and has no real functionality anymore…

2b-knee4

A couple of months after knee surgery I flew back to Grenada to check up on the boat and get some sanding done. Pleasant flight but:

3-flew-back-to-grenada

I forgot how hot it was in Grenada. I wasn’t even doing anything yet. I worked up a sweat just thinking about what I was going to get accomplished:

3a

3b

I was able to get some of the bottom sanded:

3c

…and the prop and prop shaft clean:

3d

Mmmm chicken roti, salad, fries, beer, and of course water. Delicious:

3e

Then I flew back home just in time for back surgery. I was so excited to finally be free of this pain, Tanya on the other hand did not share in my excitement:

4

Post op, a little groggy, and what’s with the hose in the neck?

4a

Breathing exercises. Tanya made me do them…just so she could laugh at me:

4b

Yeah, sitting up!

4c

Screws, rod, and cage they put in my spine. The sciatic nerve pain is gone!

4d

4e

4f

The one good thing about being home is being able to spend time with the grandson. He loves to share his Cheerios and toys:

4g

Categories: General | 7 Comments

Video

Raw, unedited video shot by our wonderful friends formerly on S/V Catchin Rays. The video is of us departing the dock at Peake Yacht Services in Trinidad. We were on the inside dock and the water gets shallow very quickly. The dockmaster came out to push our stern around which was a great help!.

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It’s All Fun and Games…

Life aboard Dea Latis is a blast but NO, it’s not all fun and games. There are requirements, chores, and maintenance issues that demand constant attention. The following is just a snapshot of the things we have to do to “live the life.”

Constantly monitoring the weather. We check weather once a day at anchor, twice a day when we feel the urge to get underway:

1a checking weather wind waves

We have to plot a track to our new destination:

1aa plot course

Keeping watch while underway so we don’t get run over by one of these:

1aaa standing watch (1024x576)

Cooking underway can be a challenge:

1aaaa cooking while heeled over

We always have to find gas for the dinghy:

1b filling dinghy gas

Have to feed the diesel engine too:

1bb refueling (1280x960)

Repair the melted alternator wire harness…when you’re in a river… in South America:

1c alternator (1280x720)

1cc alternator (1280x720)

1ccc (1280x720)

1cccc (1280x720)

1ccccc (1280x720)

Refinishing the brightwork:

1e refinish wood

1f refinish wood

Repairing sails and canvas:

1ff sail repair

1g sail repair

1ggcanvas repair (576x1024)

Splicing lines:

1h splicing lines (720x1280)

1hh splicing dinghy anchor chain (1280x960)

Cleaning the raw water intake is always fun:

1j cleaning raw intake

Yum:

1jj cleaning raw intake

Clean:

1jjj clean raw intake

One of my favorite things to do in the tropical heat: “eat a greasy pork sandwich served in a dirty ashtray,” and then clean the shower sump. Mmmmm, don’t get any better than this:

1kk shower sump

Much nicer:

1kkk shower sump (1024x768)

Have to clean the rust stains off the decks:

1n stained decks (1280x960)

1o stained decks (1280x960)

Nice white decks:

1p stained decks (1280x960)

Engine and drivetrain maintenance:

1z maintaining things

Always fun to shoehorn yourself into the generator compartment to change a cracked exhaust elbow:

1zz gen exh (1280x960)

1zzz gen exh (1280x960)

1zzzzz gen exh (1280x960)

Beautiful new exhaust elbow locally manufactured in Grenada at half the cost of new:

1zzzzzz gen exh (960x1280)

Going snorkeling today? Nope, fixing the refrigeration:

2 refrigeration (720x1280)

Defrosting the freezer:

2a defrost freezer (960x1280)

Fixing the head (toilet) vent. No vent-no flush!

3 head vent (1280x720)

Fixing the hand pump we use to empty the (toilet) holding tank. This repair and cleaning the shower sump are my two “fave” jobs!!!

3a head pump (1280x720)

There is always laundry to wash but our little blue washing machine really works well:

4 laundry (1280x960)

…and laundry to hang up:

4a laundry (1280x960)

Fans always break around noon on a hot sunny day:

4b fixing fans (1024x576)

Fixing the broken roller furler:

4bb roller furler (1024x768)

4bbb (1024x768)

Replace the nasty wheel cover:

4bbbb wheel cover (768x1024)

Maintaining the outboard:

4c outboard motor oil change (960x1280)

…fixing the outboard:

4cc carb (1024x768)

We’re out of water? Well that’s great, the water maker is broken! About twice a year I have to fix the watermaker:

4dd fixing watermaker (1280x960)

Replace the watermaker prefilters:

4ddd watermaker filters (960x1280)

Haul outs are expensive and a PITA:

4e haul out (1024x576)

Bottom painting is fun too:

4ee painting (1024x576)

Finding food can be a challenge but cleaning up afterward is a real chore. “Damn, didn’t think this through:”

4f food and clean up (576x1024)

Barber? What barber:

4ff haircut (768x1024)

And of course there is updating this website, whenever and wherever we can find internet:

7 update website

This list is just a drop in the bucket! So is it worth it? Yes, absolutely worth it!

Categories: Cruising | 3 Comments

Antigua 3

Most of you already know we are back home for an unplanned extended visit. My health issues forced us to interrupt our best sailing season since owning our boat. Tanya is doing well as always and I am on the mend. If I continue progressing, we should be back in the water by December.

While routing around the computer I found one more batch of pictures from Antigua, one of our favorite places in the Caribbean. We stopped along the north east coast at Long Island (to use their internet), then onto Great Bird Island and Hell Gate Island for a few days.

1b Great Bird Island Antigua (1024x768)

1c (768x1024)

1d (1024x768)

1e (1024x768)

1f (1024x768)

1g (768x1024)

1h (1024x768)

Lizard:

1i (1024x768)

We climbed to the top of the island for a better view:

2 (1024x768)

Dea Latis in the distance:

2a Bird Island Antigua (1024x768)

2b (1024x768)

Rugged eastern shoreline:

2c (1024x768)

2d (1024x768)

These birds were hovering in the strong updraft:

2e (1024x768)

2f (1024x768)

2g (1024x768)

Then we took the dinghy over to Hell Gate Island:

2h (1024x768)

2i (1024x768)

2ii (1024x768)

2k (1024x768)

2kk (1024x768)

2l (1024x768)

It was at this point we reluctantly made the decision to jump south and head home. On our way back to the leeward side of Antigua we were escorted by a pod of dolphins:

3 (1024x768)

3a (1024x768)

3b (1024x768)

3c (1024x768)

3d (1024x768)

After a wonderful time in Barbuda and Antigua we raced south as fast as weather permitted. Dea Latis is sitting on the hard in Grenada waiting for our return.

Categories: Cruising, Destinations, Happenings | Tags: | 2 Comments