November 28, 2022

Nasty Night

Mother ocean is making us pay. Large confused seas and steady wind. We have been trying to keep it slow so we arrive in daylight but this has made it more uncomfortable. Had a couple splashes in our very high cockpit.


Everything is a mess down below. Just had a tanker pass us way to close for our liking. I called him just to make sure he saw us. He wasn't stressed at all lol.


We are in good spirits. We can smell the land and see it illuminated in the distance. 15 more miles to endure. It's 2am so we will slow even more in a couple hours. Holding on tight. Yeeehawww

November 27, 2022

Getting our exercise

The wind has been directly behind us since we left only varying slightly from side to side. It varies enough for us to question if we should move the pole holding the sail out to the other side.

Inevitably we do (this process is not fun in the big rolly sea) only to find we need to move it back! 4 times so far. 


Last time we were in the thick of it and a dolphin did a triumphant jump and spin in the air right next to us. Startled me and I whooped out loud. I heard Graham from the front of the rolly boat yelling 'focus on the task at hand'!

November 26, 2022

Off to Santa Marta

We made it off the customs dock in Aruba around 8AM. A little squally out right now, buy this is supposed to clear off.

November 21, 2022

November 20, 2022

Perfect Day

No squalls all day. Wind and waves from behind at 15knots avg. Sun, good food, music, conversation and relaxation. So nice. Fingers crossed tonight isn’t a repeat of last night! Hamburger hash and mash potatoes for dinner.

Omg squally wet night!

Sun is out and we are all relaxing and happy after a very exciting evening of wind, rain and waves. Ugh! Salty Ginger and crew all did well and definitely had no problem staying awake in all the commotion. Heading to Aruba as we will arrive in daylight. 1 more day to go. Still loving it 😊 

November 19, 2022

Cargo ship just passed

Massive ocean but for some reason boats seem to be attracted to one another! Geesh. Happy to see that massive ship pull ahead. Moon out now casting beautiful moonlight on the ocean and our bird who has made a home on our solar panels. Bit of rain. Captain is sleeping finally.

Bird with us

Oiy. You know I don’t like birds. Now I’m not worried about squalls anymore ;-). Gorgeous night so far. Lots of stars some squalls. All is well. 



November 18, 2022

Casting Off

It's always nerve wracking heading out to sea. Leaving the sight of land behind. Feeling the weight of our "self sufficiency" hit our shoulders. Takes a leap of faith to cast the lines and go. The night before this voyage I said to Graham I was feeling more nervous than usual and he said, "all you need to think about is how little we knew last time we did this voyage on Artemo with our kids!"! Oh man he makes me laugh and this did make me feel better. He is so right. Lol. Salty Ginger has had the past two years of our blood, sweat and experience poured into her. We were definitely ready to go!

When you leave Grenada for the ABC islands you sail for quite a bit behind the wind shadow of the island before you hit the "true" ocean wind and waves. We had about 5 miles of gentle conditions and then a gradual build up to 6 foot seas and 20 knot winds. When the wind comes from behind yo, rather than at you, it feels so much lighter. It gently pushes/rocks you along. Once you get use to the rocking or rolling motion it is quite soothing. Stuff down below does get thrown around though and you are constantly holding on or tensing up your muscles to dig in. Lol.

We have all fallen into a rhythm now. Eating, chatting, sleeping, relaxing. At night we tend to rotate with one person sleeping and the other two on watch together. Last night we had some crazy squalls and so much rain. All three of us were up in the cockpit together. Reefing and basically being at the ready. The winds are so unpredictable in squalls and change directions so quickly that the fear is back winding your main or damage to our poles our jib. We all did great and I didn't even freak out. Times are a changing!

Ok I did freak out when a lil bird decided it wanted to take shelter for the night. Man they seem so smart. It flew around and around checking spots out until it finally found a perfect spot for the night nestled in our kayak paddles under the solar arch. Bet they stayed drier than any of us!

As I type this I have literally just yelled "land ho"!! I see Bonaire. Unfortunately it is 6pm and it would be dark if we tried to make landfall there so we have decided to sail onto Aruba as we will arrive in the morning. I can't stop the song "Aruba Jamaica ohhh I wanna take ya to …." from playing in my head.

Good night everyone. Cross your fingers for us tonight please!!

November 17, 2022

The Journey Begins

Omg!! Tomorrow morning we depart on a 3 day sail downwind to the ABC islands. I think we will make landfall in Curacao..the island in the middle of three. We have done so much to get ready for this but it feels strangely like it has come quickly. I’m nervous. I feel like I’ve forgotten how to sail. In June I had all the gears oiled and was feeling very confident but now that it’s been 4.5 months since we’ve sailed the nerves have definitely kicked in.

We checked out of Grenada this afternoon so it’s a done deal. Gulp. Graham and I made up a bunch of food for the voyage. It’s gonna be a rolly ride downwind. We practiced taking our pole down and of course it was broken. Thank god we practiced. We spent our second last day fixing it. The pole will allow us to attach our head sail to it and it will hold the sail out like a big wing out front on one side and the main will be way out to the other side…..referred to as “wing on wing”. It’s a beautiful way to sail but with big seas coming usually just off the corner behind you and the wind coming from behind you as well, you get pushed around and roll alot! 

Sooo many jobs have been completed and
Salty Ginger is more ready than me. The Bimini turned out pretty good. I have a few tweaks I want to make but it will keep the sun off us. I think we both need this 3 day break. Lol. Permission to just sit in one place and ponder life, listen to audio books, watch shows, write, eat. Awwww blisss. I hope it goes well. 

The friend that we made while our boat was hauled out in the yard has jumped on board


with us for the trip.  Jim is his name and he thought it’d be a good way to get some experience sailing and get away from his own boat projects for a few days. It will be nice to have one more person on the watch schedule and he is really nice to be around. 

We were able to get our satellite device working so you can track our position at this link: https://forecast.predictwind.com/tracking/display/SV-SaltyGinger

I also put the link at the top of the blog page. I’ll post a couple blogs while we are out there. And so….the journey begins! 

November 11, 2022

Boat Projects

Well fast forward three weeks and we are floating again and the issue with our stern tube alignment is
all fixed! Yahoo. We spent 2 weeks on the hard, living on the boat and working non stop. We found out that in 2019 the stern tube had a leak that the previous owners had addressed and when the folks who repaired it took it out they put it back in upside down leading to the misalignment. I guess it is easy to do. Anyway we are both so happy to have it in the right way and Graham made a few other things awesome with the new installation. He even bought a flexible coupling called a “SigmaDrive” which allows for a bit of flex with the prop shaft if there is any slight alignment differences…..which there aren’t but I’m ok with overkill ;-). 

We also had our washing machine arrive while we were on the hard. It was pretty cool to watch the fellows in the yard use their crane to we hoist  it up and set it in our cockpit. Graham then rigged up a halyard (basically a long rope that comes from the top of the mast) and we used this to hoist the washing machine from the cockpit to our salon floor. We decided to convert a cabinet in our main salon which housed boat parts previously to our new washing machine home. Graham got to work organizing and relocating everything. Next was removing all the shelves and building a very secure level base…..again I think he overkilled it but he wanted to be very sure that there is no risk of the machine moving as we heel during sailing. He also made a drawer front for the space below the washer so we don’t lose any storage. Our first load of laundry onboard was seriously momentous. We both reflected on all the time and money we have spent over the years washing by hand or finding a laundromat and transporting laundry. What will we do with all our free time ;-)?

While Graham was in the aft cabin fixing the stern tube I was in the  salon sewing our new dodger. It is massive and has three huge panes of heavy duty vinyl. It was truly insane trying to maneuver this thing thru the machine. A dodger (which is basically our windshield) also has so many curves and angles…..oiy. This was such a challenge and there were plenty of times I wished I could escape this project. I had to test fit it so many times and in the heat with such a huge piece, trying to put it on and take it off and mark adjustments….ugh. so glad this is in my rear view mirror now! I finally finished and it looks pretty good. It is passable! Of course there will be a few things that I see…that hopefully no one else spends too much time looking at. Graham loves it, so that makes me happy. Such a good feeling to create something like this. 

Our pallet of groceries, a carpet for the main salon and our bow thruster motor also arrived while we were hauled out. I was shocked how quickly Graham and another fellow had 19 boxes and a carpet sitting on our back deck! Now the fun began with finding a new home for everything in amongst all our chaos. We have 5 areas below our floor boards that we are using for most of our food storage. Basically cans, jars, condiments, dried goods and baking stuff is how I separated the 5 areas. I still have to divide up and vacuum seal a bunch of stuff but man it was nice to have everything put away. This boat sucked up all the food like crazy! So much storage. I think we are well provisioned for many many months. 

Graham also got the bow thruster motor installed which I can’t wait to try. The bow thruster is a little propeller at the very front of the boat that in theory should help to move the boat to the left or right via a joy stick I have at the helm. There are so many times when I just want to move the front of the boat a little bit but without the bow thruster this means I need a lot of momentum and water moving over my rear rudder to make this happen. Now I should be able to just push this lil joy stick and voila…..so if I’m just a bit off from the mooring ball I just give it a nudge. Man I hope this works well. We’ve heard that with full keel boats it doesn’t work as good as advertised. I’ll let you know. 

I also spent some time while on the hard preparing all our life saving emergency items for our ocean passages. I organized and packed our “ditch bag’….basically a bag that we have handy when we sail and if we ever had to abandon ship we would just grab this bag and get into life raft. I reviewed so many lists online of what to pack in it. I even ordered an enema kit as many folks say this is a good idea. Good lord I hope I never have to use this! I also had our life raft re-certified. The company that did this inflates it and makes sure everything is working well and repacks it with updated water and supplies within. The company also had us come over to see how it inflates and to overview what’s inside etc. It was super informative and very helpful. I feel so much better having a refresher. 

Needless to say the two weeks went by in a blur. We did managed to have daily happy hours with our new friend Jim. It became my favorite time of day ;-). We are now back on the water and finishing a few more jobs before we leave Grenada in a week or so……OMG!!! I am busy making a new Bimini for our cockpit. We had a new arch made for the back of the cockpit …basically a mini version of our back deck arch and then we reconfigured the stainless steel tubing to allow for open access the winches and for getting in and out of the cockpit. Unfortunately, this means that the old canvas no longer fits, soooo another sewing project. We need this cover to protect us from the sun before we sail. I also managed to cut our new carpet to fit our salon and sewed binding on all the edges. You haven’t lived until you have tried to move a 8*6 carpet through a sewing machine in your boat ;-).  I am IN LOVE with this carpet though. Feels so good on the toes. Boat feels so homey. Graham is now working on installing our Iridium Go. Its basically like a satellite phone that allows us to make phone calls and texts and do weather downloads while we are out at sea. 

And the last thing we need to do before we leave next week is rename our boat!!! Stay tuned for our renaming ceremony. I need to do some research as there are lots of superstitions about it and all the rituals you need to do. I am looking forward to putting out new name on the hull and feeling like the Salty Gingers again ;-).