| Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: Gus]
#18401 04/08/03 02:20 PM 04/08/03 02:20 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA dacarls
old hand
|
old hand
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA | Hi Gus, Lots of cat sailing has happened around Cedar Key. I have helped run Hobie Points Regattas there, with up to 90 happy sailors. (Remember Points Regattas anyone?) We daysail every so often now, sometimes racing around 3 of the islands (no rules- go any way you want). There are yellow sandy deserted beaches on several of the south and west sides of the uninhabited keys offshore. Some, like Seahorse Key are official bird sanctuaries and offlimits to explore inshore. This is where the egrets, pelicans, diamondbacks, saltmarsh mosquitoes and horseflies live. Its best to visit these beautiful undeveloped beaches, pull the cat up for a while to picnic, and to shuffle your feet when swimming and wading so as to not step on any stingrays. (No jetskis will be appear to buzz your head!) Lots of rolling fish, leaping mullet, horseshoe crabs and big birds roosting in the trees. Then, typically, my wife scores a superb restaurant fish dinner while we have a cold beer and watch the sunset over the gulf, as there are no highrises in the way, and no traffic either. If several boats want to use the public beach, we ask the Mayor ahead of time by phone, and check in with THE Policeman. It is not called Florida's Nature Coast for nothing.
Dave Carlson, Commodore Hobie Fleet 153
Dacarls: A-class USA 196, USA 21, H18, H16 "Nothing that's any good works by itself. You got to make the damn thing work"- Thomas Edison
| | | Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: dacarls]
#18403 04/08/03 09:01 PM 04/08/03 09:01 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 8 Florida mbinford
stranger
|
stranger
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 8 Florida | Omigod, Dave: You've given it away to the new generation! Tell them about the bad parts: the mosquitos, the shallow water, the islands, the black-tipped sharks swimming along with the boats, the currents faster than the wind, the warm water, the mediocre seafood restaurants (I'm not giving away my favorite), the surly policeman (the only on in town).... Oh, Hell! I can't diss it enough to discourage anybody from coming over to our heaven. It isn't just cat delight - nearly 100 shallow draft, small cruisers come there every year first weekend in May. See http://members.ij.net/wctss/wctss/index.htm for an entry to their web communications. Murph asks an interesting question - could the few of us left in Fleet 153 put on some sort of event at Cedar Key? | | | Incommunicado
[Re: Gus]
#18405 04/09/03 05:24 PM 04/09/03 05:24 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 290 Pensacola, Florida / Katy, Tex... Cookie Monster
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 290 Pensacola, Florida / Katy, Tex... | From Buffett's song -- "Travis McGee's still in Cedar Key, that what John MacDonald said"
John MacDonald did write some books about his main character Travis McGee from Cedar Key. Try "The Quick Red Fox".
Just a little trivia......
Cedar Key is a popular stopping off place for cruisers going from northwest Florida down south, and back. It's a relatively short straight shot across open water from Apalachicola / St. Marks to Cedar Key avoiding the shallow water and the Big Bend, while minimizing time off shore. Should see a lot of cruisers this time of the year.
I agree, a great place to sail around, but like it was said earlier, stay in the channel until you get off shore, away from the oyster beds. And don't ever jump off your boat barefooted if you run aground!
Don
Don Cook
ARC22 #2226
ADRENALIN
| | | Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: Gus]
#18407 04/23/03 03:20 PM 04/23/03 03:20 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA dacarls
old hand
|
old hand
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA | The Wave should do fine there at CK, but PLEASE go out when there is a breeze. Also note that there is a lot of water that ebbs out the deep channels (-> west) between the islands then floods in (east <-) with tide changes. All the islands there have a shoal side and a deep-water side. It is fun to hunt for them.
Note true sailing story from about 1985- a fellow, girl and dog went out from CK on a Sunfish, and say they were "carried out by the tide": Three (3) days later someone found them floating helplessly and towed them back to CK, somewhat the worse for sun and wear. I still think this was very wierd... but some people really can't figure out how to make sailboats go. However, LOTS fewer sailors have died at sea very near CK in the last 50 years (0), than stinkboaters (~25), or inhabitants of fragile aluminum flying machines that were temporarily in the air off the end of the airstrip before crashing (maybe 25), including 2 friends of mine. A Dangerous business - not-sailing!
Dacarls: A-class USA 196, USA 21, H18, H16 "Nothing that's any good works by itself. You got to make the damn thing work"- Thomas Edison
| | | Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: dacarls]
#18408 05/05/03 10:26 PM 05/05/03 10:26 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL Sycho15
addict
|
addict
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL | What would be the best time of year to visit this area? I really want to do more sailing/camping. I rarely camp out on the islands in the summer though, as the mosquitos are truly unbearable at night.
G-Cat 5.7M #583 (sail # currently 100) in Bradenton, FL
Hobie 14T
| | | Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: Sycho15]
#18409 05/06/03 08:36 AM 05/06/03 08:36 AM |
Joined: Jun 2002 Posts: 1,658 Florida Suncoast, Dunedin Caus... catman
Pooh-Bah
|
Pooh-Bah
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 1,658 Florida Suncoast, Dunedin Caus... | This is the best time of year. Before the afternoon storms start up. I do a lot of camping not far from the mainland on islands and we do not have any florida birds (skeeters). They are only a problem where there is fresh water lying around. We do get noseeums but thats only when there is no breeze and during sunrise and sunset for about an hour or so. If you can get away from the mainland you should be OK.(hopefully)
Mike
Have Fun
| | | Re: Cedar Key, FL
[Re: Sycho15]
#18410 05/06/03 12:18 PM 05/06/03 12:18 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA dacarls
old hand
|
old hand
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA | The sandflies are out now on the Florida west coast in and near salt marsh and beaches: this is NOT a trivial problem or a joke. This means you MUST have and use repellent, because both male and female Culicoides mississippiensis (properly called biting midges) can walk thru normal mosquito netting on a tent to bite you. The netting that they CANNOT get thru also does not pass much air, meaning heavy night sweats in a tent. When I said many mosquitoes live happily on the wild birds nesting on the offshore islands at CK, I meant it. Dr. Dan Kline at my USDA lab has just finished a successful experiment with an grid of propane-powered CO2-producing mosquito traps inland across uninhabited Atsena Otie Key to reduce the heavy mossie population. How does a liter of dead mosquitoes per day per trap sound? Stay on the beach!
Dacarls: A-class USA 196, USA 21, H18, H16 "Nothing that's any good works by itself. You got to make the damn thing work"- Thomas Edison
| | |
|
0 registered members (),
361
guests, and 23
spiders. | Key: Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod | | Forums26 Topics22,406 Posts267,061 Members8,150 | Most Online2,167 Dec 19th, 2022 | | |