Tomorrow, I start the AARP 55 Alive course in Coconut Creek. The following week, I'll be going down there from Riviera Beach. From that direction, it would be closer (but not necessarily faster) to get off the train at the Cypress Creek station. The trains are free again today, so I went up to Cypress Creek to check it out, and it's a good thing I did. Found out the shuttle bus runs only during rush hour, and the county bus 62 doesn't stop at the station or on the street as one would expect but across the street in the parking lot of a bowling alley. Now all I have to do is check the times for the various connections and decide which would be the best way to get to class.
Roy finally quit working on the boat for a couple of hours, and we went for our long-postponed trolley ride. It was rather a short ride, but it was fun and we saw a few places we hadn't seen before. Then we went to the fabulous public library, and Roy got to see what I've been raving about. He read an article in Cruising World and then looked at a bunch of books on boat-building. I had a hard time dragging him away. It was dark when we got back to the boat.
The two boats next to us left today, and the people who were trying to locate their friends on the Bonny Dundee moved their boat, the Wyndisphree, over next to ours. Their friends came down today from Lake Worth and are tied to the docks at the Las Olas Bridge.
This Blog is our mother's logs from her sails aboard Jofian. Our mother, Clare Holt, wrote a log every day and after her first sail to Mexico, she bought a laptop to write and save her logs. She sailed when the World Wide Web was first created, there was not as much on the Internet back then, no Wi-Fi, Internet access was very limited. I know if she were sailing today that she would be putting her logs in a Blog, so I am doing it for her. Mom’s logs to Alaska are on saillogsalaska.blogspot.com.
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