Monday, September 26, 2016

To Nebraska and back again...we're home.

It seems unreal that the summer went by so fast. In the end, it left us with allot full of memories. We enjoyed our surroundings while missing our sweet Sanibel and found treasure in everything we did. You see treasure isn’t just a chest full of sunken gold coins. Treasure is what we make it, and even in the Midwest State of Nebraska, treasure can be found.
We were happy to arrive at my parent’s house in Stamford, Nebraska on June 4th. Dad put us up in his RV, which is very similar living to that on Sanibel; therefore, we were right at home.
We began our fun weekends with an afternoon at the river relaxing and playing in the river.

 Jimi floating in the river.

 My daughter, Jennifer and my grand puppy, Remi.

 This is three year old, Kayne. He's my daughter's boyfriend's son.




A few weekends later we took a tube ride down the river. I remained with my great niece to help her plan her wedding while Jimi, Jennifer (my daughter), Gavlin (my daughter’s boyfriend) and Brittany (my great niece) braved the river. It turns out they were a little off on their timing. They figured it would take four hours to do the entire stretch when in reality it took four hours to go half way, which is where I finally picked them up at. I don’t think anyone took any photos to share.
We were honored to finally be able to watch my cousin compete in the NSPA Truck & Tractor Pull. We’ve heard about it and seen pictures for years, but living on a sailboat in the deep blue makes it difficult for us to drop in during a competition. The competition was in Sterling, Colorado on June 18th. It’s not uncommon for Lee to place first in these events, so you can understand his disappointment when he got second place. But we were thrilled and felt 2nd place was quite an accomplishment. We thoroughly enjoyed watching him put his truck together to prepare for the race and see its beauty. He’s done a fantastic job and it shows when crowds of people swarmed his truck for a better look.

 My cousin, Lee, putting the engine together.

 "Black Thunder"

 Matching semi.

 He's up next...final preparations as the crowd meanders over for a closer look. 


On the track.

On the Fourth of July, we attended the annual celebration in Alma. There were activities for all and yummy food. That evening we ate more food at my parent’s house and set off our own fireworks.

 The little tikes had their own truck pull.

 This is a friend of mine, who serves the best BBQ in the midwest.

 This is Pastor Jason with the best sense of humor in the midwest.












Jennifer, Gavlin and I went to the annual Derby in Beaver City, a neighboring town. And I have to tell you, that was a hoot and a holler. There’s something about watching cars bang into each other that is unexplainable. I was quite surprised when the truck and car classes were over and they brought out the riding lawn mower tractors. I was thinking only in the midwest.









Jimi and I took a weekend and drove to Englewood, Colorado to spend a day with friends Brad and Ellen. An old tradition of theirs is to rent a cabana at Water World and invite their friends. This is a tradition we’ve been unable to participate in since moving to Florida five years ago. We felt since we were close it was time to oblige and so we did. We spent the day with them under the bright sunshine, immersed in cool water rides or in the breezy cabana.

 Martinis for the Coles; coffee for the Nicolaus'

 Ellen


Ellen with Jimi following.

The following day, I flew to McAllen, Texas for work and Jimi drove back to the homestead in Nebraska.  I spent a week in Texas taking care of business and then flew into Grand Island where Jimi picked me up.

One thing you can be sure of whenever I go home and that is I will always dig every craft item and supply I have from our stored boxes and begin making things. I spent the entire summer with not a free second unfilled. I made Independence Day pillow boxes for my parent’s church and filled them with candy. I planned a surprise 40th birthday party for my niece making a banner, photo props, table decorations, cake pops, and cupcakes.

 My father designed and made the sign. I painted the letters.










I helped with several projects the church needed. Jimi was gracious enough to rebuild the church computer for them, as well as fix the Pastor’s personal laptop, a church member’s personal laptop, and my fathers. Jimi assisted my dad with much-needed work around the house like cleaning the gutters, trimming trees, mowing the grass, installing wood flooring, moving furniture and more. We stayed busy and enjoyed it all. It felt good to have something to do and to feel needed.
My sister introduced us to a genuine Midwest treasure; a large, privately owned second-hand store in Overton, Nebraska. This is truly the place to find great antiques at thrift store prices. These guys have it all. We visited a couple of times and found some real gems in the rough; however, the problem for us is that we live on a sailboat and no matter how bad we wanted something, we had to limit ourselves.

Jimi and I learned that we are going to be grandparents in February. My daughter is expecting. We are pretty thrilled about the idea of having our first grandchild.


My parents, Jimi and I went to a play in a nearby town. It was a cute comedy titled "Right Bed, Wrong Husband."




The movie theater in Oxford offers prices I could not pass up. Friday, Saturday and Sunday movies are shown in 3D for the admission price of $5. Monday nights they are not is 3D for an admission price of $2. A small popcorn is $1, medium popcorn is $2 and any size tap water with ice is fifty cents. We went as often as we could Our Monday night total for the two of us was $7.50. We saw "Finding Dorey", "Jason Bourne" and "Nine Lives" and then "Star Trek" in 3D.





It wasn’t all fun and games. Jimi brought a big job with him from Florida, but first, he had to find a heavy duty sewing machine to do the job. After a few weeks of searching, he found the perfect specimen for a mere $10 at a second-hand store. This machine is a beauty and now has a new home on Sanibel with us.
Jimi’s big project was to cut down the genoa sail and sew on a new sacrificial. Ok – it sounds easy enough, but when trying to wrestle with a piece of canvas 45 feet by 20 feet, things get harry. In addition to fighting with all that material, the sewing machine must sew through the canvas and two pieces of Sunbrella material. Sunbrella is a specialized fabric that will stand up to the UV rays and a must on a sailboat. This is the second sail we’ve sewn a sacrificial on; I helped with the first one four years ago and it was no easy task. Jimi did all the work on this one by himself.






When I found out we would be going home for the summer, I immediately contacted my great niece who had planned her wedding date for August 27th. I was so excited that I would be able to attend, but better yet, I was even more excited when she said I could help with the wedding and the reception. We did quite a lot of planning together to prepare. My gift to her and her husband included making all the table decorations, party favors, photo prop booth and supplies, guest table, food signs and program fans. Jimi probably doesn’t think so, but I had a blast doing it all. This was the third wedding I’ve had a hand in; each has been quite different and all have turned out without a hitch. Jimi’s gift to the bride and groom was being the videographer. Even with his limited equipment, he managed to give them a very memorable video.









Just a few weeks before our visit came to an end my father was admitted to the hospital. We took him to the ER after members of their church urged him to go; he hadn’t felt well in over a week and his coloring wasn’t good. The doctors determined that his kidneys were only functioning at 20%, he had a blood infection and some other minor things. We spent every day at the hospital with him until he was well enough to come home. He was there seven days, which he says was too long.


Mom and Dad coming up on their 52nd wedding anniversary. 

That same week Jimi had an outpatient surgery for a hernia. He was in and out; all went well. He’s on light duty for two or three more weeks.
We now have a new crew member on board. She is my seventeen-year-old great niece, Brittany. She’s enrolled in an online high school through the University of Nebraska and will complete her senior year with us and Sanibel. We’re excited to have her aboard and show her all kinds of neat things sailing the coast of Florida and hope she can handle the lifestyle, the heat, and the motion.


Brittany

All good things must come to an end – we left Stamford, Nebraska at 9:30 pm on Friday, September 16th. Jimi drove through the night and I drove some during the day while he slept. Our first night we just happened to past the world’s largest ball of twine (who would have thought).





We stopped to take pictures. The next day Jimi accidently took a wrong turn and we ended up at the foot of the Arch in St Louis. We parked, walked around and took some pictures. Trying to find our way back to the interstate we came across miles and miles of graffiti. The talent is astounding. We drove the wall, stopping along the way for pictures until we finally decided it was time to get back on the road.








We arrived at the boatyard in Florida Sunday morning at 7:30am. Sanibel was still standing and free from any storm damage.




Jimi took a long morning nap, while Brittany and I showered at the boatyard’s facilities and did some laundry. It was later that Jimi began working on repairing the cutlass bearing, fearing it would take a week to fix. Thankfully, he fixed it that evening and he was pleased.

Feeling so good about things, he decided to rebuild the fuel injection pump before launching. He completed the task on Monday, but the engine would not start, figuring he did something wrong, he took it apart and put it back together again. It still would not start. He referenced manuals, youtube, checked the compression, the fuel and could not figure it out. In the meantime, Brittany and I were being eaten alive by the noseeum bugs and dying of the boatyard heat. We began spending the days at the library: I worked and she studied. Still coming back at night was like walking into a death trap. Brittany was not used to the heat nor the lifestyle. I’d say living on the sailboat in the boatyard without immediate facilities, in 100-degree heat, no breeze and constant knawing at your legs and arms is about as bad as it gets. It wasn’t the kind of the first impression I was hoping for. Jimi and I were at the point that we would fork out hundreds of dollars to rent a place for a week for Brittany and I. On Thursday we decided to give it one more day. When we returned from the library on Thursday Jimi told us the good news. The engine started and we were scheduled to launch at 3pm on Friday; awww, the light at the end of the tunnel. He may as well have told us we won the lottery. We celebrated by taking a quick trip to the beach.

Friday couldn’t have been any busier. I was still on the clock with Cencorp, trying to get Sanibel ready and wash our final bit of laundry, we all had to take showers and Jimi had to change the oil in Sanibel and in the van. We had groceries to buy and drop the van off for storage at our friend’s house. Our heads were spinning.

We are floating now and much happier. Brittany is having some motion issues, which we’re hoping she’ll overcome. The excessive noseeum bites and extreme heat could be playing a factor in that. We’re hoping the weather will gradually begin to cool to give her more relief.

People don't normally leave their house for three to four months at a time unless you’re a snowbird. Our first night back on Sanibel I was desperately trying to find light over our table so I could see. It was dark and I was frustrated. I couldn’t remember where the light was. I felt really stupid when Jimi showed me the lamps on either side of the table - duh.  And then I could not get the stove to light. Jimi had to crawl out of the engine room to help me. The first thing he asked was "did you flip the switch to turn the gas on?", Uhhh no....double duh. I’m not the only one, though. The next morning Jimi was trying to make coffee and told me he couldn’t find the scoop we use and he’d looked everywhere. I turned towards the galley and pointed straight to it hanging over the stove in the same place we’ve stored it forever. We both have to laugh at ourselves.

We’re crowded and have a lot of organizing to do to find our places. In any case, we’re happy to be home and looking forward to an awesome and fantastic sailing season.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Heading West

As to be expected, our plans have changed. We last left you with the plan that we would get a mooring ball in Fort Myers for a month when I returned from Texas, well that's changed.

 Just before leaving on the 11th, we began throwing around ideas to escape the heat for the summer; last year we went north on the rediscover America road trip. With record heat predicted this summer and my being stuck to the interior of Sanibel five days a week, we decided to put Sanibel on dry dock and head for Nebraska. We’ll stay with my parents for the summer. It will still be hot, but we’ll have climate control indoors to escape the heat.

Our favorite little frozen yogurt shop.

Build your own with eight flavors and over 40 toppings to choose from.

When finished, set you cup on the scale to get weighed...pay and then eat away.



Jimi kept busy while I was in Texas: He found several busted bolts in the aft bulkhead and replaced them all with larger bolts; there were about eight in total. He scrubbed and shined the stainless on the bow and all around the windlass, he repaired the grill after the mount broke and it fell over and he rebuilt our speer guns and mounted them on the wall in a safe place. With added solar panels, we haven’t used the wind generator in a while, so he removed it and its mounting from the mizzen mast. He’s hoping the fifty pounds removed will reduce weather helm and heeling. He also managed a little interior decorating when he mounted his collection of license plates to one of the Head doors. The work and room for improvement on a sailboat never ends.
A small piece of our travels.

The speer guns are now mounted in a holder for safe storage out of the way. 


Despite my many attempts to avoid it, I celebrated another birthday.  Jimi gave me a Widow’s Mite coin embedded in a sterling silver casing on a chain. This coin is over 2,000 years old originally called a Mite and now known as the Widow’s Mite from the story in the bible mentioned in both Mark 12: 41-44 and Luke 21: 1-4. It’s a spectacular gift.
The front of the coin is a star (I previously called it a sun ray). It's off center; as you might imagine, they were made by hand, probably by slaves. Not much in the way of perfection was put in to them, making each one unique. Later they were discarded and used as weights in the keel of a boat. 

The back side is a picture of an anchor, as the community survived off the fishing industry.



We've had a lot of dolphin activity lately, but this morning we were totally surrounded.

We enjoy watching the dolphins, but they are difficult to capture in a snapshot.

It was a nasty job, but don't fear, Jimi took care of it. This is actually our anchor chain with about two inches of fur grown in. This has only been three weeks worth.



We’re now preparing Sanibel for storage and getting ourselves ready for our journey to the mid-west. 

Sunday, May 1, 2016

We rarely 'stay put'


Planes flying over the anchorage practicing for the big show.

Well I must start off by saying there are pros and cons to working full time again…first I do love my job. Sure, I get frustrated sometimes, as with anything. But for the most part it feels good; I even enjoy my short trips to McAllen. However, finding time to do everything I want to do is quite difficult and this includes writing the blog.


After spending three weeks in McAllen, Texas, I flew to Fort Myers, where Jimi picked me up. We stayed a few days anchored in the harbor and then moved Sanibel into a slip at Fisherman’s Village.  We had not yet been able to enjoy the luxuries of being on a dock, as we left the following day. With Sanibel safely tied to the pylons, we flew to Colorado. Jimi had some frequent flyer miles that were about to expire and we decided to make use of them.

We stayed at friend Juraj’s house for the first three nights. Friday evening we were able to meet up with a longtime girlfriend, Vicki and her daughter Jayden. Vicki recently lost her sixteen year old son in a car accident. We grilled steaks for supper, laughed, cried and paid our respects. We’ll continue to hold her in our thoughts and prayers.
Lorie and Vicki

Juraj made us a fantastic Spanish dish for lunch called Paella. Ingredients include rice, sausage, shrimp, muscles and various spices. It was delish! 
Paella in the making.

In addition, my mother decided she would buy Juraj’s couch and we would deliver it to her. The guys measured and decided it would easily fit in the rented mini-van we were driving. And so we proudly became a temporary furniture delivery service.

The following day we drove through a spring snowstorm to get home to Nebraska. 
 In Eastern Colorado nearing Nebraska

It’s wasn’t too bad though, eventually we drove out of the falling snow and into falling rain. While we were a little concerned about the weather, the highlight of the trip turned out to be when just as we arrived in front of my parent’s house Jimi was pulled over by a State Trooper. The reason? for not using his turn signal. I suppose it was important enough to the Trooper to stand in the rain while giving Jimi a warning.

While in Nebraska, we delivered the couch to my mother, helped my sister finalize her move to a new apartment, dog sat for Jennifer and Gavlin and helped dad with various projects. We got to meet the newest member of the family, my great great nephew Tripp and give big hugs to other family members my nieces Jacque Sue and Bonnie, great nieces Kristina and Brittany. Jennifer and Gavlin cooked us a delightful steak dinner and we played with grandpuppies Diesel and Remi.
Jenn, Remi and Lorie

Diesel

Dad and Mom with their great great grandson, Tripp.

Upon our return to Denver the night before our flight, we stayed with friends, Brad and Ellen. They ordered in a plethora of scrumptious sushi dishes. We ate and laughed and enjoyed a full evening of fun.

The flight back to Florida went without a hitch. We are still in Fisherman’s Village enjoying ‘dock life’. It’s different than being at anchor: easier to get off Sanibel, we have showers, a pool, a day room, and a nice coffee shop with internet. On the flip side – we also have very close neighbors and must be clothed at all times.
The catch from a charter fishing operation at Fisherman's Village.

Tradition when a large fish is caught; this is a Tuna. Drink pouring a beverage through the gills of the fish. This guy nearly hurled when he was finished.

We began going for walks twice a day: once in the morning, with coffees in hand, before I begin work and once just after supper. During our evening walk I usually get ice from the property’s ice machine. Since I’m working full time again, Jimi is doing the majority of the cooking. Even though I’m not particularly excited about cooking, it’s hard for me to sit back and watch/let him do it; I’ve always done the cooking. However, it makes sense and I’m happy he’s pitching in. We’re taking advantage of the pool as well. We go everyday for a short time during the hot afternoon heat. It gives us a chance to cool off and get a little exercise.
Sanibel on the dock of Fisherman's Village Marina

 The bikes...and tail end of Jimi's.

 Entrance to the dock.

 The shops and time shares in Fisherman's Village.


Punta Gorda offers a lot of activities, while we’re not strangers to the area, we can always find things to do. The city offers free use of bicycles and there’s a station at Fishermans’ Village. We go in the office and ask for a bike anytime we want one. We’ve gone out a few times now. Over the weekend we rode to the Peace River Wildlife Center. They take in wounded wildlife with the intention to rehabilitate and release the animals. If, for some reason, an animal is unable to be released back in to the wild because they wouldn’t survive, they become a permanent resident. The organization is maintained by passionate volunteers. And after our tour, Jimi and I could see ourselves giving our time to care for the animals, if we were to remain in the area. Just in the couple of hours we were there numerous animals were brought in many of which were turtles who’d been hit by cars.

This is the Pelican area for those permanent residents. Many of them only have one wing. Outside pelicans, known as freeloaders fly in to socialize and get free snacks. Clearly resembles a Pelican daycare. Other larger birds are also kept in this pen.

This is Luna, the Leucistic Owl. 

Two American Bald Eagles: one missing a wing and the other
born with deformities rendering it unable to fly. 

We have about a week left on the dock. I’ll fly to Texas on the 11th for two weeks. Jimi will leave the marina on the 12th and wait for a weather window to sail to Fort Myers Beach. We plan to pick up a mooring ball for a month. And that’s all for now folks!