Our first night sleep tied to a dock in Grenada after a thrilling 4 day passage we slept like babies. Air conditioning, more than three hour naps at a time and nothing throwing us around. Ahhhh. The little things. Our first day we did a lot of purposeful things- we checked into customs and immigration, we walked the marina grounds and saw the three restaurants and duty free shops, the boat got washed and an air conditioning guy came and fixed the pilot house a.c. I worked at putting the boat back together after passage tearing down the makeshift bed in the salon, repositioning items that got stowed, opened hatches to get air and just made sure everything was ship shape. Not a fun day but one that has to be done after a long passage.
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Getting Our Bearings In Grenada
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Going Against The Grain to Grenada
Most boaters when traveling to Grenada arrive from either the north (down the island chain from the United States) or from the east (Europe) or even sometimes from the south (Trinidad and Tobago) but rarely ever do they come from the east like we did. Due to the predominate easterly trade winds and seas out of the west this passage often can be very rough with wind against current making for very large steep waves for a very long time. Despite this fact I wasn't deterred. To me it made no sense to head all the way to Puerto Rico and then head south down the chain just to have to come back north again. Not logical. So when we saw tropical storm Jerry going by smoothing the seas and calming the wind it was our chance to buck the system and head east.
At 0600 on October 9th, 2025 (Jeff's mom's birthday which felt like a good omen) we threw lines and made our way to the customs and immigration office to check out of Aruba and make our way east. The process itself went smoothly and by 0730 we were underway settling into our 3 hour shifts. The seas were 1-4 feet with short 3-7 second periods and light 5-11 mile per hour winds. It wasn't exactly flat but for heading in this direction it was pretty good.
Saturday, November 1, 2025
Awesome Aruba
My sister's birthday September 26th, 2025 seemed like a good and memorable day to start our cruise to Aruba. We had been watching weather and planning timing to make sure we arrived in the daylight and after 6am when the customs and immigration offices open. Finally at 16:23 we tossed lines as a huge rain squall blew in. The wind was so heavy that had the security guy not been there to throw me the lines I don't think I could have gotten onboard. The rain dumped and the wind gusted and we thought, "what the hell is this and should we be leaving?" I looked like a drowned rat by the time I came inside from cleaning up lines and fenders but amazingly enough within 10-15 minutes we were past it and the skies were cloudy but rain free. What a departure. The 342.8 mile passage went smoothly. We saw lightning in the distance but none in our path. Winds blew to 20mph but didn't affect the seas much as we never saw over 4 feet of wind waves or swell. By day two we got into our rhythm and settled into our preferred shifts. At 10:30am on September 28th we pulled into Aruba Harbor and tied up at the customs and immigration dock. Both officers were friendly, helpful and welcoming and the whole process only lasted about 15-20 minutes. We were a combination of excited and exhausted all in one. The marina office at Wind Creek Marina is closed on Sundays but fortunately the Dockmaster was nice enough to give us our slip assignment and photo of our dock in advance. Jeff slid the boat in and two very nice charter fisherman came to help me tie up. And that was it. We were now in Aruba. We could hardly believe it.








































































