We had been discussing selling Cerca Trova and moving back to land for about six months. I was getting tired of constantly repairing the boat and Lynette’s knees were continuing to bother her more and more. After the long winter trying to get to the Bahamas hampered by either boat repairs or weather issues, we decided it was time for a change.
We had three and a half good years of sailing on two different boats and traveled almost 8,500 nautical miles during that time. We saw some very cool places and met many great people along the way. I wouldn’t give up those years for anything. This sailing adventure was a bucket list item for me, and I was able to check it off my list. Possibly the only regret I have is that we didn’t make it to the East Caribbean on our own sailboat.
With me at almost 72 and Lynette at closing in on 69, I was tired and neither of us had the energy to keep going. Are there other cruisers older than us? Certainly, but most cruisers we met were younger than us and many were way younger. This makes me wish we had cast off years earlier, but that just wasn’t in the cards.

We left off in our last post arriving at Lake Worth, FL, in the evening of May 17, 2024. We spent some time with our friends, Josh and Sheila, who were anchored there and met up with some old friends we had met in San Diego, Dave and Mary on Yo-D-Yo. All six of us had met back in San Diego in 2021 and had stayed in touch. This was the first time we had all been together since 2021 in San Diego. It was a great reunion and hopefully not to be the last.

We departed Lake Worth with Yo-D-Yo on May 20st at 7:00 am, heading north. The weather was good, so we opted to go outside instead of up the Intracoastal Waterway (ICW). We motored but tried multiple times to sail with not much luck, as the wind was just too far forward to make any headway. We arrived at Ft Pierce Inlet with the tide coming in, so got a nice push to our anchorage from the current. We made 9 knots speed over ground (SOG), which is fast for Cerca Trova. We anchored on the south side of the channel almost to the ICW at 4:16 pm and then went out to dinner with Yo-D-Yo and another couple they knew.

We weighed anchor the next morning at 8:48 am, heading north up the ICW. This was an easy and uneventful passage to our next stop at an anchorage near Paradise Blvd. in Melbourne, FL. We arrived at 5:24 pm and settled in for the night. The day had been sunny and warm, and we were happy to be on track, moving north.

There is a free dock at Cocoa Village, FL, that we planned as a stop. This was a very short 15nm passage, so we leisurely left our anchorage at 10:05 am on May 22nd and motored up the ICW to Cocoa Village. We docked at 1:03 pm after asking another boat on the dock if they would move a bit so we had room to dock.

Arriving early gave us plenty of time to explore the town of Cocoa Village and get some much-needed walking exercise. Cocoa Village is a quaint town with lots to offer. We explored a great old hardware store and ate ice cream at a cute ice cream parlor. That evening we walked back into town and had a fantastic dinner with the Yo-D-Yo crew, Dave and Mary.
Next stop, Titusville Marina. Titusville Marina had been our first marina upon arriving back in the US on or previous boat, No Regrets, and our third visit there in total. We arrived on May 23rd at 1:07 pm after a short 18nm motor up the ICW. We knew the town well, so walked to dinner with Dave and Mary, and stocked up on groceries. We bid Dave and Mary goodbye after a couple of days as they headed to Brunswick, GA.

During our stay in Titusville, we made plans to haul out and have some saildrive work done. Our port saildrive had a loose zinc anode that I had noticed while diving and cleaning the bottom in the Bahamas. I was unable to tighten it then, so figured the only way was to haul the boat out and address it on the hard. We made arrangements at Sea Love Boat Works at Ponce Inlet, FL, to haul out on May 28th, so left Titusville in the morning of May 27th. The passage was 35nm and took us most of the day, arriving around 4:45 pm. The next day at slack tide Cerca Trova was in the sling and on its way out of the water.

We rented a small AirBnB condo in South Daytona Beach for 9 days while Cerca Trova was in the yard. It was on a bus route that had a stop very close to the boatyard, so I took the bus to and from the boatyard every day to work on the boat. As I was dismantling the zinc anode on the port saildrive, I found that the mounting holes had corroded to the point where they would no longer hold the zinc in place, so I had to order a replacement end cap and wait for it to arrive. In the meantime, I had the yard sand off the copper-based bottom paint from both saildrives and apply a non-copper-based bottom paint. I removed the propellers, sanded them, and applied a prop antifouling paint. Then I tacked polishing and waxing the underside of the bridgedeck and waterline along the hulls. That was a big job, holding the buffer over my head for multiple days. I certainly had a great workout, and probably overdid it.

While we were at the AirBnB, the older couple who owned the condo were very interested in our sailing adventures, so they offered to take us to dinner. We had a wonderful time walking along the beach with them and talking about our sailing adventures. They were very nice, and we enjoyed the short time we spent with them.

With the boat work done, we splashed on June 4th, 2024, and tied up to the dock next to the boatyard. We headed north the next morning at 7:00 am along the ICW. I noticed some gray smoke from the port engine and the coolant temperature was a bit high, so kept my eye on it. Always something to cause concern on a boat. The port engine continued to heat up, so we switched to the stbd engine to let it cool down. We arrived at the mooring field in St Augustine at 3:45 pm after an almost uneventful passage of 55nm.

Since the mooring field was very close to the ocean inlet, we had quite a current shift as the tides changed. With the wind blowing in one direction and the current running in the other, the boat was fighting to stay in one place on the mooring ball. Several times the ball was pulled under one hull or the other as the boat shifted to the wind and current. After one night of this, and it was constant, we decided to get a slip at the dock for the remainder of our stay.

St Augustine claims to be the oldest city in the US with fantastic Spanish colonial architecture. We took an Uber into town to see some of the sights the city is famous for. It was good to get out and walk around. We certainly needed the exercise.
The weather was good, so on June 8th, 2024, we decided to do an over night from St Augustine to Lady’s Island Marina in Beaufort, SC. This was an outside passage as the ICW through Georgia is long and winding, and quite frankly, a bit boring. So, to keep us on our toes, we decided on short and quick. Well, not so quick as it was a 162nm passage. We motored the entire way as the wind was on our nose and light, as was often the case.

We arrived at Lady’s Island Marina on June 9th, 2024, at 3:45 pm, and checked in with the marina. Our tasks now were to prepare Cerca Trova for sale and make plans to find a place to live. This was our last official passage on Cerca Trova. We came full circle as Lady’s Island Marina is where we saw Cerca Trova for the first time back in 2022 while looking for a new sailboat. Sometimes things do go full circle, and this was one of them.
We spent quite a bit of time cleaning Cerca Trova and taking pictures for the boat listing. Once she was listed, we had several showings and then one couple decided they wanted her. I was very grateful she sold quickly and just like that; this chapter was closed.







We are now back on land and happily living near Greenville, South Carolina. We found a small house that we are quickly turning into a home. We had no furniture, so that was first on the list, and are now getting landscaping done and planning a summer garden. Welcome to our new next chapter.







