Where is this, again?Grog Bar" and a place too cook Crawfish.
- Will (Dragonfly)
Where is this, again?Grog Bar" and a place too cook Crawfish.
Diamondhead MarinaWhere is this, again?
Size matters I suppose.Diamondhead Marina
In picture #1, our boat is the tallest mast and the Restaurant is the big building on the left.
Love crawfish, but hard to find around these parts; lots of shrimp though. Usually some of our rivers and creeks above tidewater will have them, but pretty scarce. We used to use a piece of meat on a hook to catch them.PS:I hope you like crawfish.
It most definitely does, especially when it comes to bull frogs. Frogs just too small and little meat. But fried bull frog legs very tasty.Size matters I suppose.
why do you think I asked. We always catch and raise a few dozen every Summer until we have enough for a big crawfish boil with some friends from Nawl'ns.PS:I hope you like crawfish.
KindaDoes the marina allow liveaboards?
I had my boat delivered by Licensed Master from Tampa to Gulfport in January 2014. He left, behind a NorWester, but timed it a bit wrong and had to endure 8-10' seas to Apalachicola, then motored the ICW to Gulfport.I could be talked into cruising north and west, instead of south and east.
It will be around Mid April. I will give all SBO, 2-3 weeks notice since I know, SBO Sailors are Wimps.What day are the festivities?
Say WHAT! Surely you jest. Most eat about 4 dozen EACH, at a party, plus potatoes, corn on cob, mushrooms, sausages, Grog, side dishes, etc.We always catch and raise a few dozen
Oh yeah, my father met a guy who called himself "the pirate". He put on shows from his "pirate ship". I think he was in North Carolina. The guy had an honest to goodness, authentic letter of charter to be an official US privateer, signed by a friend of his who was a congressman.Long John Jamie...
Capt'n and fearless pirate
real privateer charter
We manage to keep between 75 and 100 alive 'till cook time. We catch them in batches of about 8 - 10 every few days. They haven't been our priority so, mostly we use our old horse's 150 gal stock tank and a three stone bubbler. We have also been adding stock to my father's pond over the last three years. Haven't checked to see how they are doing.Say WHAT! Surely you jest. Most eat about 4 dozen EACH, at a party, plus potatoes, corn on cob, mushrooms, sausages, Grog, side dishes, etc.
Yum = + +
Jim...
I grew up on raw oysters. There was always someone we knew having a boat launching party at Clearwater Bay Marine Ways. Wash tubs full of ice covers raw oysters was as staple as the Styrofoam cups next to the rows of beer kegs. I tell people I quit drinking before I was nine because after a couple of Styrofoam cups of that watery swill, I'd barely have enough time to swallow half a dozen raw oyster before I had to run behind the boat shed to pee, all night long.My first choice, fresh shucked oysters raw or poached and quite plentiful here.
Hoo, that brings back college memories. Back then my drinking buddy got off around mid night from his shingle mill job in Raymond, WA and after a quick stop home, we would head out in my 1960 Buick LaSabre for the rest of the night drinking Rainier stubbies. Between the two of us we could polish off a full 24 bottle case in a couple of hours. Now I'm lucky if I can keep two down.Now, more than 8oz and I'm weaving and falling asleep.
Well said, Jim. The human spirit dwelling within us provides the strength we need to overcome just about anything our lives encounter. Keep that spirit strong as you will live another day, and another, and another.Just like the rabbit in the battery commercial: just keep ……
How true, Les. That applies in spades when cruising with a small flotilla like the one I've been a part of these many years. We help each other when needed, stay close while underway, and when we arrive at our next anchorage, after securing our boats, time for a skipper's meeting. We rotate boats, start with whatever dish the skipper has on hand, or succulent we can pluck from the sea, plus potluck. Often times we can be found, after much spirits, at 2:00 a.m., still commiserating about this or that. Past sailing misadventures always a hoot; wrong turn, stuck anchor, sail trim, engine troubles, missed slack water, stuck in the mud, etc., etc., etc. Then the hard part comes, do we stay another day or head out for the next anchorage ten miles away.You’ve got lots of friends to help install things (including me) that make cruising easier.
My original plan, after retirement in 1997, was to spend more time in my wood shop making sawdust. In 1999 when the sailing bug appeared, it bit hard. Then in 2002 we bought our current boat, and well so much for the sawdust plan. That passion kicked in allowing us to find a whole new world of experiences. Still have all my wood working stuff, and maybe someday when I hang up the boat, they will be waiting for some good use. Not sure when that will be because our new passion should carry on for several more years, hopefully.Do it, don't be a, woulda, shoda, couda.