Hi All!
What a great day for the last leg of our return trip on the ICW!!!



Where to begin….. how about last night in the Bohicket Marina after we landed coming in from Charleston!
After we tied up and hooked up electrical it was time to take MacGregor (our puppy) for a nice shoreside stroll.
As we got to the end of E Dock and turned left we walked along the board walk enjoying the beautiful river vistas before us.
Approaching C Dock I just happen to notice that an elderly couple ( they had a good 10-to-20 years on me anyways) in an inflatable dinghy having engine trouble in the very fast current and were being carried toward the bow of 54 footer cruiser tied on the T of C Dock.
As there wasn’t anyone else available I told the Admiral “Sh%t!” And leapt into action…( it’s the fastest I’ve moved in a while!) … and ran down the gangway to C Dock and out to the end of the T just as the inflatable was getting pinched under the starboard upstream chine of

the 54 footer as well as getting rammed under the dock lip. The two occupants were struggling to get upright on the floor of the dinghy and neither were wearing life jackets. I grabbed the handle of the dinghy and pulled it upstream and out of danger. Grabbing a loose line I tied the dingy off to the end of the T. Before anything else happened I had them put on and secure their life jackets. No point in having things go from bad to worse at this point. GFB they had been capsized and wedged against or under the 54 footer or the pier. The sharp edged side splice plate just a foot or two further in could have easily torn open the air cell on the dock side of the dinghy. Whew

! Disaster averted. It must have been a sight to see yours truely scampering down the dock at my version of full power

. Ya gotta do what ya gotta do!
Turns out this was the couples first outing in their new inflatable dinghy and new outboard. I worked with them to get it started again and warmed up. It would appear they hadn’t fully charged the fuel line (didn’t squeeze the bulb till it’s firm) before starting the outboard which led it to being fuel starved in short order after they shoved off…. It’s also why they couldn’t restart it. They apparently never allowed the engine to warm up either. A potentially rough learning curve but things got sorted out. I even got them to laugh about it to help brighten the mood they were in. Can’t blame them though as things could have been much worse but for serendipity. And I really thought my ‘rescue’ days were behind me!

All worked out!
After that we had a nice chat with some other boaters including a lady whose ambition is to overhaul a 35 foot 30 year old sailboat (in rough shape) by herself starting at near ground zero wanting to learn the skills needed as she goes! Now that takes ambition!
Later that evening we had a delicious supper at one of the local pubs. The local brewery makes a nice IPA and the cider was pretty good too.
We woke at 7 AM and untied at around 9:45 AM…. Such are the plans of mice and men… best to just roll with it and enjoy the ride.
We made our way out of Bohicket Creek into the North Edisto River and headed up stream for our return to Port Royal our home berth. A check on the weather app last night showed a clear morning with thunderstorms starting between 1 and 2 PM and we had 50 miles to cover!
As there wasn’t much of an option to slowly cruise back home we did the math and figured we needed to maintain about 12-to-15 mph if we were to make it back before the thunderstorms caught us out in the open. The Suzuki did great the whole way back even as the wind picked up and the resultant wave built against us. The trip back was fun and a bit exciting. Next time we’d really like to do it at a much more leisurely pace though! Here are a couple pictures enroute today:
Once we reached the Coosaw River it was the Admirals turn at the helm! She did great and had a blast pounding our way up wind and up river. Me, I got to enjoy the scenery and cuddle MacGregor who throughly enjoyed the ride, wind and spray!
Got a chance to see a Navy Recovery/Equipment Vessel and a specialized Oceangoing Research/Submersible/Helipad Vessel traveling in tandem. Wonder what adventures those two are gonna be up to….


… ahhh just wondering what sorts of things such nice toys could play with?
Turning off the Coosaw into the upper Beaufort River things calmed down some in its narrower and somewhat more protected waters.
The clear skies steadily grew darker as we reached the Beaufort Woods Memorial Bridge. We took a shortcut through the marsh islands opposite Beaufort (that we normally avoid due to sandbanks and shoaling but fortune was on our side as it was near the high tide mark giving us a bit more clearance.
Coming out the other side we were in sight of home port but as we turned to look the black clouds were descending upon the only momentarily before sunny Beaufort! With little fan fare we swapped the helm over and the Admiral went forward to prepare for our landing. Fenders out, fwd hatch open boat poles and lines at the ready we closed with the marina. Reaching the No-Wake buoys we cut to idle turn down stream past the main pier made our U-turn into the main slipway to see our slip open and waiting for us. This also gave us a great view of the front just waiting to pounce on us too! Throttle to neutral, a bit of reverse, bit of a side drift due to the current, drop the swing keel to 50%, back off a bit, gently maneuver to get a better alignment and ease it forward. A helpful slipmate came forward to catch our bow line just as we touched! All tied off and we’d made it home from our first real ICW 6 day cruise! We finally did it! WE CRUISED THE ICW, TADA!!!
We quickly broke open the Long Island Iced Teas and congratulated ourselves!
Then the storm hit… and it hit hard!
Here was the weather app radar when we arrived

Then just after our toast this was happening
It was a torrent of rain and wind and thunder a close lightning



.
It lasted about a half hour before letting up but the sky was still threatening

Even got a rainbow

too!
Wow! We had a fantastic trip with perfect weather for our first real ICW cruise!
Bright sunny clear weather and warm! We had been concerned that traveling so late in the year we might have been pushing our luck. There was also the concern that all the boater who had cruised north for the Spring ad Summer would be headed South for the Winter and there wouldn’t be slips available in the nicer marinas (other than wedged between fishing boats and shrimp trawlers at the backwater piers

🫣… shrimp are nice grilled, fried, boiled and sautéed but hanging around the boats that catch them at water level isn’t necessarily so much


). As it worked out we were able to stay at really nice reasonable slips at two really nice marinas. We’d heartily recommend Bohicket Marina and Harborage-Ashley Marina. Nice places with nice people!
So we spent our last night of our trip in our home slip. The Admiral made a great Bratwurst and Rice supper. Slept like logs

and woke refreshed to bright sunshine

with clear blue skies. Lots of time to have a healthy breakfast

and leisurely enjoy our coffees. Taking our time packing up. No rush.

…wondering when we can get out again, where to go and for how long???
Hope you enjoyed our recent journey.
Best Regards,
Over Easy



