Fresh From the Skies: The Latest From Makers Air
Makers Air and Staniel Cay Yacht Club, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, offer convenient flights to the Bahamas.
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Makers Air and Staniel Cay Yacht Club, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, offer convenient flights to the Bahamas.
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Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary protects Georgia’s special live-bottom wildlife habitat in the Atlantic Ocean and along the southeastern U.S. coast, an area teeming with diversity and an abundance of marine life.
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Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes mariners with salt water in their veins will subscribe.. $7 a month or $56 for the year and you may cancel at anytime.
When all else fails, try journalism. Chart Authorities Oblivious Re: Nonexistent Island Along ‘Thorny Path’Rediscovering the Lost Port of Christopher Columbus
“I saw an opening between large mountains that made a good and expansive port and with a good entrance, which I called Puerto Santo.”—from History of the Indies by Friar Bartolomé de las Casas, quoting Christopher Columbus An island sank in 1946 as a result of a terrible earthquake. It wasn’t a big island, only 52 acres, but it formed the principal barrier to ocean swells protecting an old coconut port on the Samana Peninsula of the Dominican Republic. The port was first identified by Columbus in 1493 and was considered significant because it could shelter ships on an otherwise inhospitable coast. The reason old Port Jackson still matters is that Jackson Cay only sank a few feet underwater and thus continues to attenuate waves that would otherwise roil the hundred-plus acre basin, which happens to have good holding. Consider atolls of the South Pacific, whose coral reefs protect an anchorage within. Port Jackson is no hurricane hole, but its sunken island and fringing reefs do provide a modicum of all-weather protection, most critically from northern swell. And it lies along the “thorny path to windward” that small craft mariners must transit en route from Florida to the lower caribbean. Too bad generations of cruisers have never known about it. And the reason for that is simple: The chartmakers of the world never took note of Jackson Cay’s demise. Even though it sunk in 1946, Jackson continues to appear on charts today, 79 years later.
If the principal landmark for finding the entrance to a harbor is an island almost the size of the U.S. Capitol grounds—and that island does not present itself—a passing mariner is not likely to trust the safety of vessel and crew to investigate, particularly in an area of numerous breaking reefs. A quirky gringo author named Bruce Van Sant wrote “A Gentleman’s Guide to Passages South: The Thorny Path to Windward,” which discussed in detail the gnarly nature of Dominican waters. Van Sant told Loose Cannon about the time he put-putted around looking for Port Jackson. Charts and U.S. Navy Sailing Directions placed Port Jackson behind a protective island, but Van Sant didn’t find it nor could anyone else because they needed to identify the island first. Local fishermen and tourist excursion captains, who do not use charts to navigate, have no problem accessing the basin and picture-poscard beach because the entrance is actually pretty straightforward, as described in the story linked below.
Once upon a time, charts for the Caribbean were the purview of the U.S. Navy Hydrological Office, which in 1972 was merged with other government mapmakers into the Defense Mapping Agency, which in 1996 became the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, which in 2003 became the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Given enough time, acronyms thus generated may well comprise the entire alphabet. Loose Cannon was dealing with the NGA, which calls itself the U.S. intelligence community’s go-to agency for processing and analyzing satellite imagery. It is referred to as one of the “Big Five” U.S. intelligence agencies First I laid out the scenario to NGA spokesman Nancy M. Rapavi and explained why clarity regarding Port Jackson was in the public interest, along with the above image from Google Earth (which may well be NGA product). In this context I sought a general explanation about how NGA updates its charts. Her answer was unhelpful:
My response was as follows:
Crickets…Ghosted by Nancy. The question of whether NGA, thus informed, will correct the chart has some relevance, not because a few cruisers might benefit, but because the U.S. Navy uses NGA charts, and therefore the Navy must also believe that Jackson Cay is still an island. According to an former civilian cartography executive that I interviewed, charts are generally updated more frequently for high-traffic or strategic areas. He said Port Jackson’s isolation and decades of disuse before the 1946 earthquake probably best explain the errors. In the mid-19th Century Port Jackson was considered strategic because a frigate anchored therein could use its guns to cut off land access to all of Samana. At the time, the only way to resupply military forces at strategic Samana Bay on the south side of the Samana peninsula was a path, suitable only for pack animals, that ran behind the length of Jackson Beach. Draft for a frigate back then was about 20 feet, which the Port Jackson entrance and basin can easily accomodate. Today’s U.S. Navy Littoral Combat Ships draw 13 feet and, though unlikely (at least one hopes), there may come a day when Chinese submarines call at Cuban ports, and LCS vessels (some of which are anti-submarine capable) will need a place to chill next to deep water on the route to Havana. Arguably, the venerable British Admiralty is even more negligent than NGA in its coverage of Samana waters. British Admiralty charts also show an island where no island exists, and the Admiralty’s piloting guide to the Caribbean Sea at the time of this writing gave highly specific directions on how to enter non-existent Port Jackson using the non-existent island as a landmark. Through the good offices of Bluewater Books in Fort Lauderdale, a distributor of Admiralty charts, I sought comment from the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office. Crickets again…Not even a “cherio, mate.” LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Every so often he tries to be funny. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid. |
Oriental is a wonderful place with friendly people and good food. And, if you do stop here, by all means, eat at our good friends at Toucan’s Grill and stay at Oriental Marina, a SALTY SOUTHEAST CRUISERS’ NET SPONSOR!
Here it is…SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE’s latest. I’m very honored that you’re following along; THANK YOU. The passages of a 1934 Wooden Sailing Yacht are transformational. For ten months, STEADFAST has been undergoing extensive repair and refit. In boating terminology we are hauled out “on the hard” in Cambridge, Maryland, USA. The archives contain many anecdotes— sail into that! If you’ve just joined our engaging little community, please read SPARS & SPARRING, my introductory piece. Weekly SPARRING intermingles sea tales with the challenges, lessons, and intricacies of restoring 90-year-old STEADFAST.…. ~J STEADFAST is a soulful entity constructed with Mother Nature’s finest materials.
There are gaps everywhere, of course, in time and place and memory and friendships, just as there are still gaps here on STEADFAST. However, those are growing smaller and smaller….Mother Nature has continued to rain rather torrentially and often, but we are doing the best that SPARRING allows. Back in September STEADFAST’s bow area looked like the photo below: No stem, no knee (which attaches the stem to the keel), and the majority of the planks (many more than are shown in this photograph) were removed. Our at first minimal, then extensive project had come to fruition and after the course of the winter got even grander. We added lots of we-might-as-wells which are better done out of the water so she’s looking wonderful underneath her winter cover, all freshly painted, varnished and rejuvenated, even with much of the exterior still unfinished. The best news I can convey is that we are closing the gaps. Here she is today, much closer to being put back together, only three planks out of thirty-one still need to be attached, and those three have been chosen and milled to proper thickness. It’s a huge step. There have been a tremendous number of other ones along the way, too, both inside and out, but I had to show you this accomplishment. Stay aboard. We will delve into the occasional video, too, and as soon as I figure out how to make all that happen here on my ‘Stack; I’ll show you some juicy and potentially interesting parts of this rebuild that haven’t even been discussed as of yet! It’s incredibly complicated, this SAVING A PIECE OF HISTORY task we’ve given to ourselves. Joyful, frustrating, draining, rewarding. AND Very importantly it has brought many people into my life that I never would have crossed paths with, for that I am forever grateful. SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE received fantastic comments on STEADFAST’S first-person recollections. This is, of course, anthropomorphizing; one reader called me out on that specifically and I am guilty! Most of what I own is she/her/he/him. I have written seven memoirs in the first person for an assortment of clients and have the unique and sometimes unnerving ability to be able to put myself in someone else’s shoes. I love it. For more of my work, please visit my website. My favorite comment is from the gentlemen who spent years on her first rebuild and then more years enjoying her to the fullest, “No doubt about it, she of many names, now STEADFAST, is a very lucky boat…..and her people have loved, loved, loved her…..in turn the seas have allowed her to bring them back safe and with more than when they departed…..” Dmitri We are all incredibly anxious to be back on the seas, having some fun again, that much I know. Share SPARRING WITH MOTHER NATURE Messages come directly to my in-box and are not for public viewing, so if that’s better for you, please do. If you’d like to further support my work, please share and RESTACK (the little recycle symbol) —-free and easy to do so. The algorithms simply love it apparently….and I have picked up many new readers via that mysterious method. I’m old fashioned here, SPARRING along, so not sure how all that works, but it does. The ultimate support is symbolic in that it means that my writing is worth the price of admission. For those of you that have chosen that option, I’m sincerely thrilled. See you next week my fine readers, I certainly appreciate all the forms of support you give. I truly enjoy the comments. ~J
© 2025 Janice Anne Wheeler |
Thirty-five years ago the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was signed into law. In partnership with the City of Charleston and City of North Charleston, the Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission (CCPRC) will present an event celebrating the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) signing.
ADA Anniversary Building Celebration Press Release
The City of Gulfport and Gulfport Municipal Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, always have a full calendar of events for all ages. The marina and harbor, found on the northern shores of Boca Ciega Bay, are easily accessible from the Western Florida ICW, just north of Tampa Bay.
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Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Gulfport Municipal Marina
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Gulfport Anchorage/Mooring Field
The City of Gulfport and Gulfport Municipal Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, always have a full calendar of events for all ages. The marina and harbor, found on the northern shores of Boca Ciega Bay, are easily accessible from the Western Florida ICW, just north of Tampa Bay.
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Gulfport Municipal Marina
Click Here To Open A Chart View Window Zoomed To the Location of Gulfport Anchorage/Mooring Field
An on-the-water retirement home or vacation home for those who love the rich cultural ports-of-call cruising waters of North Carolina, Albemarle Plantation Marina, a port on the Albemarle Loop and a CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is located just off the AICW on the northern shores of Albemarle Sound on Yeopim River/Creek.
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OUr Hometown, Hertford, Featured in ‘Our State’ Magazine | ||||
In this charming story by Molly Harrison from Our State Magazine, Albemarle Plantation’s hometown of Hertford is celebrated as a hidden gem among the state’s coastal communities. The article serves as a walking guide, inviting readers to explore the rich history and natural beauty of our quaint harbor town. From its historic waterfront and lush landscapes to vibrant local eateries and charming shops, Hertford offers a unique blend of Southern hospitality and cultural heritage. Readers are encouraged to lace up their walking shoes and immerse themselves in the captivating sights and stories that make Hertford a must-visit destination. Read the full article from Our State Magazine! | ||||
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PLAN YOUR DISCOVERY TOUR. | ||||
Enjoy a 3-day/2-night stay at the Inner Banks Inn in Edenton’s historic district. Live like a local and sample Albemarle Plantation’s many amenities, natural beauty and incredible water: • Round of Golf for 2 | ||||
book your visit now for only $249! | ||||
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Explore 172 Roanoke Drive | ||||
4 Bedroom | 3 Bath | 2,500+/- Sq Ft | ||||
If you are looking for a new construction home without the build time, this is it! Bright, open living spaces abound in the Columbia. Guests are greeted with a light-filled living, dining, and kitchen area, set with glass doors that open to a lovely, screened porch and an attached deck. The vast owner’s suite is the ideal place to recharge after a day on the water or the golf course! The convenient laundry/mudroom/garage layout means your golf cart, kayak, or workout gear are easily stored and handled. Enjoy the extra flexibility of a bonus room above the garage with its own bath, too! | ||||
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Discover Albemarle Plantation | Plan A Visit | Contact us | ||||
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Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Albemarle Plantation Marina
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