Tuesday, May 8, 2012



Well we've known the name of the boat for a while, but  putting the lettering on took a bit longer. Yesterday Eliot and Dennis put on the name. It's kind of tricky trying not to fold or stretch the letters while maintaining balance on the swim platform.


Jenny and Eliot sign on as Crew

Jenny and Eliot arrived in Charleston the last week of July - schools out and teacher and principal opted for "changes in latitude and changes in attitude" by taking a couple of weeks to crew Reunion on the voyage home.
The parrot head journey will cover the time when one pirate (Jenny) looks at 40 and another (Dennis) has a milestone birthday for starting new adventures. It just means he's growin' older but not up. So the 2 intrepid sailors are closest thing we've got to the sons of a son of a sailor and it is going to be a grand ride.
Sometime Friday the Reunion will leave this one particular harbor and turn fins to the left. Come monday, they will be heading for the north star.
Wishing you nothing but breezes
Love and Luck, Carol

July 2011

2011

Finding the right boat

Our friends and family had listened to us daydream for years about finding a boat that would take us around the Great Loop - a circumnavigation of the eastern half of the U.S. We spent evenings on the internet, read books, listened to boat people. We narrowed it down to a 36'-40'single engine diesel trawler with a sundeck, a walk around bed, a reasonable galley and room for visitors.

Dennis had a long list of electronics and refinements - most of which he could install or repair if we found something close to our specifications. By spring of 2011 we visited boats in Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Maryland, and New York. Then Dennis found a boat that fit the bill in Charleston, South Carolina. It was time to take a leap - or stop talking about it.

We named the new boat "Reunion" and started getting acquainted. Dennis spent a month in Charleston fixing, cleaning, changing, installing and learning to dock a 40' boat. Docking lessons lasted 1/2 hour and from then on it was learning by doing. I flew out to spend a week with Dennis around 4th of July. Then I came home again while Dennis continued banging the air-conditioning into shape, changing a head and putting in an auto-pilot along with hundreds of other tiny details. The boat was almost ready for the trip to Wisconsin. Next step was finding a crew and heading out - 1600 miles to bring her home.

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