Come on down
Don't miss the chance. I'm in Orlando, but keep the boat in Miami Bay. It's a four hour drive but well worth it. We usually get in to maimi about 9 pm and sail down to Presidents Cove, about three hours. It is west of Key Biscane, some where by B.B. Reboso's old house. Great story about him in one of William F. Buckley's sailing books. It involves the Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo. It's about 40 miles south down Biscane Bay to Gilberts. A great stop over point. Easy access, good restaurant, great bar overlooking the water. The reataurant even cooked up a big grouper we caught crossing one of the sounds on the way down. The bay for the most part is 11 to 12 feet deep and up to 10 miles wide. There are barrier islands and a couple of shallows of sand that cross the entire bay. These are clearly marked with good channels. We often make the trip back at night. Nothing like sailing those big bay areas in a warm breez. I've kedged off a lot of those bars after cutting corners. All sand never any damage. The bay intrecoastal route is well protected and i've never seen more than a two foot chop. You can go outside at the Stilt House cut just south of Key Biscane or 30 miles south at Angle Fish Creek. Until recently I was sailing a 33 foot Tartan with 6 foot keel. Could not make the later cut unless it was high tide. Tried it once at night in 3 foot seas, just slamed up on the rock bottom on the out side and had to kedg back-out. Did a couple hour lay over sailing into the Ocean Reef Club. I got the impression they were more into million dollar power boats. I also had to kedge off a sand bar in the middle of the cannel going into Coconut Grove. I now have a Hunter 37 cutter with 4 foot draft. No problems anywhere, unless you get out of one of the channel cuts. Pumpkin Island is a great lay-over, it's just south of Angle Fish Creek cut and about 3 hours north of Gilberts. With 6 foot draft I could get all the way around the "Perfectly round island, can't miss it on the chart" so you can always lay-up out of the wind. Always a few sail boats there. The water is usually clear there and an after noon snorkel in the 8 foot grass flats is interesting. Other than this cut and another creek within a mile, you cant really get from the inside bays "Intercoastal" to the ocean. I have never been much further south than the bays next to Largo, which have other good restaurant accessable by boat. I have been told you can head 60 to 80 miles further southwest down the intrecoastal to Islamarada and possibly get access again to the ocean. We have managed to amuse ourselfs out the Angelfish Creek route for several years. There are some marked reefs about five miles out, with mouring balls. Sombraro Light Reef is about 15 miles south. Once in the ocean there are some very shallow reef heads in close, a marked north south route up to 20 feet deep and then more shallow reefs, then a drop off to several hundred feet. A good chart and GPS are important here and I always keep a watch on the bow. Those bay sand bars are one thing, but the coral heads are another. A lot of markes out here and it can get confusing. It's also easy to accidentally shortcut the markers comming back in. At an angled aproach it just never looks quite like the way you left. Definately mark the exit point from the chanel on your GPS. Angle Fish Creek it's self is worth the trip. There are some charter groups out of Miami. Don't know the names, but one school often shows up at Gilberts with two or three boats. Sort of a final exam for the crews. Always fun people excited about sailing.