The Story of Lady, Be
(a comedy of errors.)
Fleming
Key is a man made island, created when the navy dredged the bay to have a
storage point for explosives. Each shovel full of spoil was deposited on a
shallow strip of bay bottom. Through time, this pile of coral and sand was
washed of salt by the rain. Birds would visit and bring seeds, which took hold,
growing a ground cover of Australian Pines and other scrub bushes. Eventually,
the navy built a bridge to join Fleming Key to the naval base on the north
western tip of Key West. This allowed construction to begin on the island,
including a naval training facility and a waste water treatment plant.
The Neighborhood. |
Fleming
Key has been off limits us regular folks since it was built. However, the
boaters who lived aboard at “West Fleming,” a more refined neighborhood for the
live-aboards, walked their dogs on the easily accessible shore line.
As
we rounded the bend and turned toward the cove my eyes scanned the waters,
where was my new boat? First I saw green inflatable alligator tied to a
mooring. “What’s that?” I asked. “Oh, that’s Diane’s mooring. She put that
there so no one would take her mooring while she’s cruising.” Tom explained.
Then I spied a sailboat lying on her side on the beach. As we approached, Tom
said, “Here’s your new boat.” I gave him a puzzled look.
“Sure,”
he said “You just find the owners, get them to sell it to you for the cost of
salvaging it. Then, we can tow it off the beach and set it on a mooring.”
“Easier said than done.” I thought.
Looking
around for the Navy Police, we nosed in to the shore. I climbed out of the
dinghy, and cautiously walked over to the battered looking sloop. “What am I getting myself into?” I thought.
She was about a yard into the water. I waded out to her and looked down the
open hatch into the cabin. The cabin was strewn with a jumble of stuff, all
thrown into the now bottom-side, previously the side-side, since she was lying
at about 60 degrees from perpendicular. I glanced over at Tom, then back to the
boat. I shrugged and started to look for any identifying marks that I could use
to find her owner. Fortunately, the registration FL sticker was still stuck to
the bow. I jotted down the numbers on a scrap of paper I had tucked into my
swim suit, and returned to the dinghy. Mixed feelings of terror and elation
filled my heart and mind as we putted back to the dock.
Tom
was most definite about what I should do. He directed me to take those FL
numbers to the Florida Vessel registration office on Truman Avenue, and find
out the owners name, which I promptly did.
The
lady behind the desk heard my story and kindly searched the data base. She told
me that the current owner was Teddy Lea. With this new information, I returned
to the Key West Bight, and started to ask around, “Do you know Teddy Lea?” Soon
enough I found someone who knew him, boaters are a small community on this tiny
island. “Sure, I know Teddy. He is the bar tender at the VFW.”
The
VFW’s are local organizations to secure rights and benefits for Veterans of
Foreign Wars. At that time, the VFW was located in a concrete building adjacent
to the boat basin. It was frequented by the homeless, live-aboards and down on
their luck sailors. It was a great place for some camaraderie and cheap beer.
I
walked over to Elizabeth St. and went into the bar. I asked the bartender, “Are
you Teddy?” He replied, “No, he will be in tomorrow at 2.” I thanked him and
went to find Tom to report my progress.
The
next day, promptly at 2 pm I walked into the VFW and again asked for Teddy. A
white haired man behind the bar spoke up, “That’s me. How can I help you?” I
told him who I was, and what I had on my mind. He looked at me quizzically.
“Where did you say my boat is?” I repeated my story, stressing that with each
tide, the boat was being damaged more and more as the waves rocked her up and
down on the shore. I told him that she needed to be pulled off. He said, “My
ex-wife is co-owner. I will have to talk to her.”
“OK,”
I said, “I’ll come back tomorrow.” and off I went. I felt pretty excited.
That
night, as we were going out to Tom’s boat, we went by this new vessel in my
life. I noticed that her name was “Lady Lea”, and I thought, “I will have to
change that name because I don’t want a vessel named so much like my husband’s
girlfriend.” That’s another story.
The
next day, I went back to the VFW. Teddy was there and said that he hadn't spoken to his wife but he had found the registration. He also said that he couldn't just give the boat away, so I offered him $100. He said that he would
have to speak to his wife.
Next
day, the negotiations proceeded. I reported to the VFW, and told Teddy again
that with each tide she was being ground into the sand and rocks, and that she
needed to be salvaged before she was more seriously damaged. “OK”, he said.
“I’ll sell her to you, you go pull her off, and I will get the papers signed.”
With
a lightness in my step and a smile on my face I happily found Tom and told him
the news. He said that on his next day off we would haul her off of the beach.
He also that he asked Diane if I could use her mooring until my own mooring was
set and she said “Yes.” The plan was made, the date was set, and I contemplated
being a boat owner.
We
met at the dinghy dock; I was prepared for some dirty business. Tom had the
salvage all planned. Salvaging vessels after they were blown on shore was a
lucrative way to make some cash money, either by charging the owner for the
salvaging, or by harvesting any and all salable and usable parts.
We
rounded into the cove and there she was, lying on her side in the surf. We had
planned to do this at high tide, to make this effort a little easier, so the
waves were washing higher on my legs and torso as I walked toward her. I
attached the lines to whatever parts looked secure, and placed well enough to
allow for towing. That skilled mariner, Tom, proceeded to slowly tow Lady Lea
as I guided her from the water. She eased off the shore, slowly gaining more
and more water beneath her hull, becoming more and more erect, looking more and
more like a sail boat. We finally got her into deep enough water, and there she
stood, mast pointing to the sun. We watched in apprehension; will she stay
there or will she start to sink. The water line didn't move; she was sound.
Tom
came back to shore and picked me up. Then we towed her away from the shore and
out to the mooring that he had prepared for her. He passed me the bridle and I
climbed aboard the boat. I went to the bow and secured her firmly. Now would
begin the task of making her mine. The first part of the task was, in my mind,
was to change her name.
I
went below, and looked around. There were personal items and men’s clothes, a
sleeping bag and some tools. There seemed to be no damaged, water had not
entered the cabin, she was sound and she was dry.
Again,
I returned to the VFW to meet up with Teddy one more time. I told him about the
salvage adventure, and he seemed pleased. He said that he had the papers, and
that his wife had signed them. We sat at the bar. I bought him a beer. I
reached into by pocket to pay him his $100. He looked at me and said, “Keep
your money. Just give me a kiss.” I smiled. I gave him a kiss. I became a boat
owner. One of the two happiest days of a boat owner’s life; the day you buy
your boat, and the day that you sell it. I would not experience that second
happiest day with Lady, Be.
My
Albin Vega had been partially sunk in a previous incarnation, so the interior
woodwork in the bottom of the saloon was de-laminated. This sinking must have
been what killed her engine as well.
In
my mind, I changed her name as soon as I registered her, she was now the “Lady,
Be.” I chose this name to remind me to be a lady, and to remind me that all
that is required in life is simply “to be”.
I
had been searching for a suitable dinghy, so I could get back and forth to my
new boat. I was fortunate to see an index card on the bulletin board at West
Marine. Someone was selling an 8’ inflatable dinghy with an 8 hp. motor. I
called and asked to see them. The owner, Rob, took me to his boat on the dock,
and pulled a huge bag from his chain locker, “This is it.” he said, and
proceeded to spread it out and pump it up.
Being
a neophyte to this business, I took a brief look at the dinghy. “Does it leak?”
I asked. No, it didn’t leak, and the motor ran. So, I paid the man the money,
and asked if I could leave it with him until I had everything that I needed to
secure it. That would be fine. He put the dinghy back into the bag, and moved
it onto the deck.
Back
to West Marine, Tom had suggested that I buy line to string around the hull to
create a bridle and painter. The painter is the line at the bow that you can
use for towing or tying. “You have to get some cable to lock the dinghy to the
dock. Get about 8 feet of that vinyl covered cable, and make eyes in each end.
Get two of those brass padlocks with the same key. Then you can lock your motor
on to the boat with one, and lock your boat on to the dock with the other. Then
get all your safety gear. You’ll need a sticker so you can tie up at the dinghy
dock.”
The
list was made. The list was purchased. The bridle and cables were created. I
struggled to get my new dinghy down Rob’s dock and over to the dinghy dock
where Tom helped me inflate it. I watched in trepidation to see if Rob had been
honest. Would the dinghy hold air? The man was as good as his word, and my new
dinghy stayed nice and hard.
The
bridle was tied on to the dinghy. We eased it into the water. We mounted the
motor, and locked it in place. The dinghy had been equipped with a gas tank and
hose, so we filled the tank, connected it to the motor and pulled the cord.
Putt – putt – putter – putter – vroom – vroom, the motor worked; good deal! Now
I could get onto the water independently. Paradise was opening to me. I could
explore or go snorkeling as I pleased and I could get out to my new boat. That
was my first trip in my new dinghy. My trial run took me out of the harbor, out
to West Fleming, circling around my new boat, Lady Be, and back to the dinghy
dock. That day the smile on my face was as bright as the May sunshine.
The
next part of the process would be to set her mooring. Tom had an extra Danforth
anchor, and I found a couple more used on the bulletin board at West Marine. I
bought lots of chain, a bunch of shackles and 50’ of line for the bridle. Then
came the task of putting it all together. Tom had planned it out, two anchors
to the north and north-west, where the winter storms come from, and one anchor
to the south, to keep her in place with the current of the tidal changes. The
chains from these three anchors would be bought together on a big shackle. Then
another chain would come off that shackle to go to the surface. We would put a
sentinel on that 4th chain. A sentinel is a small ball shaped anchor that cab
be placed on the chain between the vessel and union point of the other chains.
This creates a triangulating effect when the boat pulls on the mooring,
reducing stress on the entire system. A friend, Jeff, had found a mooring ball
from the mooring field by the Seaplane basin that had washed ashore and gave it
to me. I slipped the end of that final chain through the mooring ball. At the
top of this chain we placed another shackle. I spliced eyes into the ends of
the bridle lines, and joined them to that shackle. Mooring completed, it was
time to set it.
Tom
had picked out the spot. It was near where I was moored temporarily, and near
his mooring. We loaded my new mooring into my new dinghy and putted out into
the harbor. We turned toward Fleming Key, and off we went. The first anchor was
dropped carefully over the side, and we backed down on it to set it. We putted
east, and set the second anchor. Then we turned south and putted as far as the
remaining chain would allow. As we passed the center point, we released the
chain, sentinel, mooring ball and bridle. There were floats tied to the bridle
lines so that they could be found again. With all three anchors lying on the
bottom, it was time to “dive the Ground Tackle.” Ground tackle is the name
mariners use when speaking about a mooring system like this. For a reformed
landlubber, this was new-speak to me. “What was he talking about?”
“Diving
the ground tackle” is the process of gearing up to dive, following the lines
and chains to the anchors, and making sure that they are securely hooked into
the bottom. I was anchoring into a combination of mud, sand and silt and needed
to make sure the anchors were secure. Tom was kind enough to don his dive gear,
get in the water and inspect the day’s work. Over the side he went; man in the
water. Soon he disappeared below the surface. I sat in the dinghy and watched
the bubbles. They went from place to place to place. Soon he resurfaced, and
touched his fist to the top of his head; divers signal, everything is A-OK.
It
was after 5 o’clock, time for cocktails at sunset, but first we had to move
Lady Be to her new home, a simple tow job. We motor over to her and I boarded.
This time, we would tie Lady Be to the side of Tom’s dinghy, “hip sling.” Tom
passed me the lines. I tied one to the
stern and one amidships. The dinghy was snug on the side, with the motor aft of
Lady Be’s transom. This way the dinghy would have better control of the sloop
and be able to move her more easily. I
tied the alligator float back in place and let go the mooring lines. Gently
gliding over the water in the late hours of the day, I experienced my first
ride on Lady Be. Elation; I was “being” elated.
When
we got to my mooring Tom handed me the lines from my new bridle, I secured Lady
Be in place, and relaxed. I was sitting in the cock pit of my new boat, feeling
the hull rocking gently beneath me, seeing the ripples in the water as she
moved with the current. I felt the peace. I felt the joy. I knew that I could
“be” here.
Relationships
in Key West are a wondrous thing. If you find a good one, let me know. Things
change, and people visit your life for different spans of time. Tom and I had
an “off again, on again” kind of relationship. Now it was off, and Jonny was in
my life. He was a fishing mate I met on the dock.
Schooner
Wolf was leaving port for a short time. I was told that I could use her slip
while she was gone. Jonny and I motored out to my boat and tied the dinghy to
Lady Be. After securing some fenders for flotation we let go the bow lines. I
had learned how to move a boat by “hip sling” when Tom and I had moved Lady Be.
With Jonny aboard to steer and me driving, we carefully moved her to the dock.
Steering was a problem on the Lady Be because she had no tiller. I borrowed a
large wrench from the Wolf, and attached it to the rudder post. We were able to
steer with that.
I
would take the opportunity while on the dock to muck out and pretty her
interior. I carefully planned what would be done. Jonny told me that he would
paint the interior. He told me which paint to buy at Sherwin Williams, and how
it would be the best paint for the job. We tied up Lady Be and went to work.
When I cleared out the interior I found, among the clothes and blankets, a
rusty hand gun. I took these things to Teddy at the VFW.
After
washing her out, Jonny started painting He masked the lights with blue tape, he
covered the counters, and… he cut the wires throughout the boat; he was going
to replace them. You will see later that
this was a mistake.
I
headed off to my job, and Jonny painted. After work I returned to a beautifully
painted boat interior. There was still enough daylight to get back to the
mooring, so off we motored, and grabbing the lines, we secured the Lady Be at
her new home.
One
evening when Jonny and I were aboard Lady Be he decided to go visit some
friends of his on their boat that was anchored nearby. We climbed into the
dinghy, and drove in toward the green post that marked the end of the shallows.
Turning back north we approached a conglomeration of vessels tied together.
They looked like they were sitting on the bottom, they were. We boarded and
visited for a short while.
I
had no proper running lights. So, like most Key West live-aboards when driving
their dinghies, I held up a flashlight with a plastic cup over the light. That
made an adequate all around light, enough to keep the Coast Guard happy,
anyway. We were returning to my boat, and I dropped the flashlight overboard.
We stopped, and without thinking of big hungries, I dove into the dark waters
and pursued the still shining flashlight to the bottom. Moments later I
surfaced with the flashlight in my hand and a smile on my face. I felt like I
was the hero of the evening.
My
lifestyle and Jonny’s were very different, so we parted ways. Within a year he
was found dead behind the shops at Lazy Way. His friends said that he had eaten
some mushrooms and complained of a sore stomach. He went behind the shops to
lie down and that is where he was found the next morning. Another man lost in
the bars of Key West.
The
story of how Lady Be got on the beach of Fleming Key is another chapter in her
adventures. Teddy had agreed to rent her to a man he had met through the VFW.
We all called him Bongo Billy, because he would sit in the door way of the
concrete building at Jabour’s Campground and play bongo drums. There were many
differing opinions about his playing. However, I would catch the beat and step
in time.
It
was the Saturday of Conch Republic days; there were many drunk people. I passed
Billy in the lane, he was toasted. We nodded to each other, and went on our
separate ways.
The
next day, the news was all about a woman who had been found in the dumpster
behind West Marine. It looked like it had been an accidental death. Blood
saturated the couch in the concrete building, and Billy was nowhere to be seen.
Rumor on the dock was that he had gone out to a boat and cleaned up before
leaving town. The police found out about Billy’s association with Teddy and his
boat, Lady Lea. The police cut her mooring lines and hauled her to shore as a
part of the murder investigation. I didn't know that part of her story until I
had salvaged and paid (with a kiss) for the boat.
At
that time few suspected Billy (aka Joseph Geibel) of being the perpetrator. He
was later arrested at a Rainbow Gathering in Nevada; Billy had a history of
attending these gatherings. They had received an email from the investigating
officer regarding the murder in Key West, and by corralling and confronting him;
he agreed to surrender to the authorities. He was later found guilty of first
degree murder.
My
older son, Jesse, came to Key West for a summer job that year. Initially he
stayed on the floor where I was living as a room-mate. After finding him
sleeping on the floor for over a week, my room-mate said that he would have to
leave; it was her place, after all. So Jesse was the first in my family to live
aboard the Lady Be. I bought a Coleman stove and we had some bedding. I showed
Jesse how to drive the dinghy. I took him out to the boat and taught him how to
become a live-aboard. That became his home for the rest of the summer.
Meanwhile, I lived in rooms that I rented. Jesse’s job gave him extended
periods of slack time in the mid-day. With the sweltering summer heat of Key West,
this northern boy would head out to Lady Be and jump overboard for a swim; what
he called his “instant attitude adjustment.”
Jesse
was returning to University at the end of the summer, and even though, he had
done well at his summer job, he was heading north. He had worked with the Photo
Crew, taking pictures of the visitors aboard the different vessels before
departing for their trips, and selling them the printed pictures when they
returned. He had done so well that the owner had offered him the job as manage.
Mixed feelings still found him heading north. I had been missing my northern
home, and decided to drive him. This did not go well with my employer at the
time, and I was let go. Oh well, Key West either eats. you or feeds you, and it
was feeding me.
It
was a three week trip. I returned with 3 other young adults, one being my
younger son Dave, and his girlfriend, Nicole; the third was my stepdaughter,
Anna. This was mid-September 1998.
Everyone in Key West remembers what happened that September 25th, 1998. Not
only was it Dave’s 18th birthday, but it was also the day that Hurricane
Georges roared across the Florida Keys.
I
was between places to live, spending some of my time on board Lady Be, and some
with Tom. He had decided that he would move his boat to a hurricane hole by the
Mud Keys; would I like to come along? This was a new adventure for me; “Sure.
I’d love to go.”
Hurricane
holes are spots in the mangroves where you can tie your boat and be fairly
assured that they will ride out the storm safely. There was a channel that
could take the boats inside a circle of small keys, which would provide good
shelter.
First,
though, we had to secure Lady Be. We checked her bridle; it was in good shape.
I had acquired some old fire hose, and we threaded the bow lines through the
fire hose. Then we secured it at the spots where the lines would be rubbing on
the gunnels of the boat with zip ties. This “chafe gear” would prevent the
motion of the boat from fraying the lines. We attached another line to the
mooring, and leaving it a little slack, tied it to the foot of the mast. This
was done as a last resort if the bow lines frayed or snapped this might still
hold her. As we drove away, I turned, said a little prayer and blew her a kiss.
This was our first hurricane together, and I was leaving her.
Tom
and I readied to put his boat in that hurricane hole. We went down the list of
provisions; radio, check; charts, check; water, check; beer, check; rum, check.
Everything we needed for a good hurricane. We were going with Henri, who was in
a trimaran. Trimarans have three hulls which draw very little water. Tom’s
sloop, Lady, drew over 6 feet. We drove
out the North West channel and turned right, motoring along the edge of the
outer keys. Watching the chart and the string of little islands, he knew that
we were near the Mud Keys. Henry went up the channel ahead of us, and waited.
We started up the channel; bump- bum- scrape, stop. We were aground.
Tom
had a plan. I was to get into his dinghy. He would attach his main halyard to
the cleat on the back of the dinghy. I would drive over there, and make the big
sloop heel over. Then, while she was heeled over he would drive over the hump
that had stopped us. An aside here, I had never driven his dinghy, and I had no
idea what he was talking about. Well, the plan failed, his boat drew too much
water. After some futile attempts both vessels returned to Key West. We secured
his boat on its mooring, and wishing our two ladies well, came to shore. We
were spending the hurricane at the party in the sail loft.
This
is another story, the story of the hurricane and all the heroes around that
event. Lady Be’s part of the story was pretty simple. She was still tied
securely to her mooring, she had not dragged, her chafing gear had held, and
she was still dry inside; the dinghy had a little more adventure.
I
had loaned my dinghy to the owner of the Wolf. They were taking Wolf out to
anchor for the storm. They were going to “ride it out.” This big vessel would
have damaged the dock and herself if she had stayed in her berth. If necessary,
my dinghy could provide an escape. The storm escalated, the wind blew harder
and harder, blowing down the harbor, straining the lines holding Wolf from
smashing into the rocks. Suddenly, one of their anchor lines snapped, leaving
only one to hold that big boat. Throughout the rest of the storm, the crew on
board took turns driving her full throttle into the wind to ease the pressure
on that one anchor line. Meanwhile, my dinghy was tied to the stern of the
schooner. As the hurricane blasted through the harbor, it picked up my dinghy
and spun it like a wind sock flying off the stern. When the winds eased the
Wolf returned to her berth, a little worse for wear. And my dinghy
returned to her spot tied beneath the bow of the Wolf, the only damage being
one of her seats had flown away. Both of
those vessels and all souls survived. There were several other vessels strewn
around the shore line in the aftermath of this dangerous storm.
After
the hurricane, the kids came back to Key West to stay with me. It was a bit
cramped, 3 big people on board a small sloop. They had no money; I had no
money. I heard “The Canvas Shop” was looking for a seamstress to help repair
all the torn canvas from around town. I presented myself to the owner as an
experienced sewing machine operator, and began work that day. At the end of the
day I was paid cash, which I gave to the kids, so that they could buy some
food. It was a tough time.
After
a few weeks the silt stirred up by the storm had settled considerably, enough
for the next project. Tom told me that I would have to dive my ground tackle to
make sure things were still in place. That meant me! I would have to don my
dive gear. I would have to swim to the bottom. I would have to follow the
chains. I would have to inspect each link to make sure it wasn’t broken or worn
thin. And I would have to ensure that the anchors were still set. I was looking
forward to my new assignment with anticipation. Tom said that we could use his
dinghy, and that he would be in the dinghy with me. He was a good role model, I
will always be grateful to him for guiding me on these adventures.
Sigh, OK I gathered my dive gear and some beer for after the dive, of course. We
drove out to Lady Be, and I climbed into my dive gear. It must have shrunk
since I bought it. The bulges seem to have moved, and gotten bigger. I could
still zip it up though, so that was good.
Next were fins, mask and snorkel, oh yeah, mask and snorkel when you’re
in the water, Tom reminded me. I hitched the tank across the rubber boat, and
set the harness so that I could get into it. I hoisted it around behind me, and
started to fasten it. It was really heavy; it was so heavy, in fact, that I couldn't stay upright as I buckled into it. With each movement I gently leaned
to the side, sliding over more and more, gently reclining until I rested on the
pontoon. I felt ever so much like a beached whale. I couldn't move. I couldn't get into the water; I just lay there, flapping my flippered feet and laughing.
Tom reached over, nudged me, and I rolled into the water, laughing so hard that
I choked.
Once
in the water the BC leveled out the buoy that was me and my tank. I floated
comfortably, and swam to the dinghy for my mask. Mask on, adjust buoyancy, and
dive. As I dove, I could see the chain leading to the bottom. I could see the
silt. “He said to check each link to make sure that it is sound.” I reminded
myself. I picked up the chain, and a cloud of silt exploded around me. I held
the chain close to my mask; I could see a vague outline. I felt it to see if it
was sound. I couldn't tell…
I
swam along the chain, each time I reached for the chain a cloud of silt
anticipated my move and engulfed me, the chain and my tanks. ‘Oh dear! This is
futile, I can’t see a thing, and I don’t know where to go.” I guessed where the
chain was going. I found three anchors. Two looked pretty good, the chain led
up to them, and they were buried in the mud. The third chain led up to where
the anchor was supposed to be and swirled around itself. It seemed to have
created a nest of tangled chain. The anchor was nowhere to be seen. I figured
that it was set, and returned to the dinghy.
Tom
had cracked the first beer, and was sitting on the pontoon with a broad smile.
I pretended that I had done as directed, and washed the salt from my mouth with
a swig of my first beer. It was evening, it was happy hour, and I had “dived my
ground tackle.”
Dave
and Nicole found a room in town, so I was alone aboard Lady Be and made her my
home. I had my own little piece of paradise. In the mornings I would rise at
sunrise, and after dressing I would climb into my dinghy and drive into town. I
would tie up in the Key West bight, right under the bow of the Wolf, and climb
up on to the dock. I used the Wolf’s bathroom card for showers. Then I would,
grab a coffee and head off to the Canvas Shop. Mid-afternoon would find me going
back to the Wolf to prepare it for a sunset cruise. After the cruise I would
join the crew in having a shift drink, then climb back aboard the dinghy and
zoom out of the bight. As I motored out of the bight, I would look behind and
see the wake generated by my little dinghy and 8 horse motor. It felt very
empowering. I felt like I was becoming my own hero.
On
board Lady Be I had the Coleman stove, some bedding, some dishes, a coffee pot,
some books, a cooler, a bucket for a head, and 1 gallon water containers for
hot and cold running water. The hot water was left in the sun to heat and the
cold was stowed in the cabin. Due to short sighted thinking, there was no
wiring to allow for lighting. I had to make do with flashlights. When I didn’t
use the showers on the dock, the shower was in the sole of the cockpit with the
1 gallon water containers. The head was the same place, with the bucket. Life
was good, the weather was fine, and the kids were close by.
Through
this time, the relationship with Tom was off and on. I would go to the house
that I had shared with husband #2, and spend some nights. I would stay aboard
some nights. I would be with Tom some nights. I was living in 2 worlds, the
life of a live aboard, and the life of a jilted wife. I knew which one I
preferred. I knew which one brought me freedom.
Life
continued, being at the house, being on Lady Be, being with Tom. Autumn
progressed. As the nights got longer and colder, so did the evenings. Living on
board Lady Be would mean either hanging out in the bars until bed time, or
chilling on board with flashlights for lighting, and warm clothes for heat. I
started spending more time at the house.
As
the seasons cycled around, spring brought with it warmer days and longer
evenings. Paul and Bronnie, friends of Tom, had a sail shop on Seidenberg
Street. They were going to sail around the world. Would I like to take over
their space? Yes, I would. I moved my sewing equipment into the shop, and
started sewing slipcovers for the gentry of Key West. I was sewing during the day, sailing sunsets
in the evening, and sleeping aboard my little boat. This was my heroic life in
paradise. In my new shop I created some beautiful cushions for the cock pit and
v-berth on Lady Be. Now I could sleep under the stars.
Spring
also brought the Western Union into port and Tim into my life. His son was crew
on the Western Union, and Tim was living in his VW camper, Gus the Bus. He was
tall, blond, handsome, available, and he didn't hang out in bars, all good
references. He loved boats, and soon joined the crew of Wolf as Terrible Tim.
He and I would sail on the Wolf. After the trip we would stay on the dock for
our shift drink, then climb into my dinghy, and singing in unison, drive out to
the Lady Be. “Oh they were sure of Victory…”
I
had a board cut that would fill in the center of the cockpit. We would pull out
the board, the new cushions, and blankets and settle down to sleep under the
stars. Late spring brings the summer rains. At about 3 am the clouds would
cover the stars and the first drops would hit my cheeks. I would wake up and
crawl into the V berth; Tim would pull the blue tarp over himself, and stay on
deck. Life was wonderful.
Mid-summer,
Tim was offered a house boat to rent, so we moved off Lady Be and into this
houseboat, Miss Maggie. The dinghy continued to be our commuter vessel, as we
went to and from the Bight.
I
received my divorce settlement in late spring 2001. I moved into my own
apartment. I decided that it was time to give my Lady Be some lovin’. Her hull
needed cosmetic surgery; her engine was dead weight in the hull; there was only
one tattered sail and no tiller; the wiring went nowhere and no one could make
any sense out of it anyway; the outboard motor mount was wobbly; and I had some
money.
Tim
and I hitched her to the dinghy and drove her over to Spencer’s boat yard. The
channel to the launch ramp is tricky, so as I proceeded up the channel, I went
straight, straight into the rocks and hit bottom. After a few bumps we were
over the rocks. At least I was going into the boat yard. Nevertheless, she was
safely hauled and placed on braces for me to start the work, for me to make her
as beautiful to the eyes as she was to me in my heart.
Grinding,
grinding, grinding each day, holding that grinder overhead, moving it back and
forth. I loved doing the work; I love the satisfaction of seeing those dings in
her hull disappear. I loved to look along her side and see it as smooth as a
baby’s skin.
But,
grinders are heavy, my shoulder decided that this work was not to be done by
me, and I strained some tendons. Then, Tim was injured. He fell and severely
injured his head. He was medivacked to Miami. Now I was without his assistance,
and without my own full capability. I would have to hire people to work on the
boat for me. Friends came and went; I paid them to help me, the costs of
beautifying Lady Be soared. The project dragged on without our contributing
efforts, and the bills at the boat yard stacked up, as each day added more
dollars to my expense.
The
days on the hard were filled with opportunities and surprises as well as the
erosion of my money. One day Scotty came by with a beautiful tiller, and
presented it to me as a gift. I hired Jeff to do the fiberglass work. He
decided that to secure the outboard motor mount he would stiffen it with a
piece of plywood, and then cover it with fiber glass. I asked and he complied.
He coached me how to put some of the fiberglass in place around the inside of that
motor mount. Now I could fiberglass.
I
hired Jacques to take the fuel tank out of the keel. I thought that it was
taking up too much space. He started early in the day while I was at work. When
I arrived at the boat yard that afternoon I saw my engine lying on the ground.
I didn't remember asking him to take that out… I thought that Art said that he
could fix it. Jacques was speaking about how horrible it was taking out the
fuel tank. He said that it had been full, and he had to deal with all that old diesel.
I’m not sure what he did with it, but when I arrived, it smelled like he had
bathed in it. When I asked about the engine, he just said that he thought that
he should take it out too because he couldn't fix it.
After
a while, my shoulder recovered enough to do some of the light work and Tim
returned to normal, for him. We would say “Tim puts the fun in dysfunctional.”
We
painted her hull; roll and tip was the technique, I rolled and he tipped.
“Always keep a wet edge.” he directed. When we finished, it was beautiful. I
had decided on a champagne hull with a brick-red waterline. We measured out the
water line, and stretched the tape. The definition of that water line made her
look outstanding. I hired the boat yard to spray the desk. Lady Be and I gradually
got closer and closer to her launch date.
When
Jacques took the engine out of Lady Be he cut the wires, hoses and pipes. Where
have I heard something like this before? This was not discovered until we were
launching. I was standing in the cockpit, Lady Be was in the sling, and we were
being lowered into the water. Suddenly, I heard water flowing beneath my feet,
inside the boat. I clambered below, and looked into the engine compartment;
water was pouring into the boat. I stuck my head out the companion way and
yelled that there was water coming in. They stopped lowering the sling, and we
hung there, mid launch. One of the workers, Chris, climbed aboard and looked
below. Sure enough, when the engine had been removed, the salt water intake
pipe was simply cut and not sealed. A cap would have to be put on that open
pipe.
They
lifted Lady Be out of the water, and suggested that I pump out the water, which
I did. Chris came back on aboard with a torch and the pipe fitting; he welded
the end cap in place. We allowed that to cool and resumed the launching.
Everything was fine. She rested in the water. She was ready to move.
I
had Tim in the dinghy to tow Lady Be out of Garrison Bight. It was getting
late, and my mooring was around the other side of Fleming Key. I didn't think
that we would make that passage before dark. I decided to go to one of the
moorings in the mooring field at East Fleming and tie up. On board, there were
no proper mooring lines, so I grabbed what I could find, and tied to one of the
mooring balls. We returned to Miss Maggie to celebrate, and I was off to my
apartment for the night.
As
dawn was crawling across the sky, my phone rang. “Did you tie a boat up in the mooring field
last night?” “Yes. Why?” I said. I was told that my boat, the freshly painted
Lady Be had washed ashore, and was rubbing against the side of the sea plane
launch ramp. “Oh no, I guess the line that I found last night wasn’t secure
enough.” I thought.
I
threw on my clothes and drove over to the navy base. The guard at the gate
looked at me like I was nuts when I told him that my boat had washed ashore on
the boat ramp. He let me on base anyway. I drove over to the ramp with my heart
in my throat, what was I going to find?
As
I drove up, I was surprised and pleased to see the mast pointing toward the
sky. I exploded out of my car and ran over to her. Lady Be had drifted to the
side of the ramp where there was just enough water for her to be afloat. The
flare of her hull hovered over the side of the ramp, and with each wave she was
gently rubbing up and down against this concrete bulwark. I looked carefully;
my new paint job was still unharmed. “Thank you Creator for small graces.”
I
called the water taxi, “Hello Arnow. My boat is adrift over by the seaplane
launch ramp. Can you come and tow her to West Fleming?”
“I
can be there after I take some people to shore. Give me about an hour.”
“OK.”
I went to back my car, climbed in and turned on the radio. I closed my eyes and
listened to the music. I tried to free my mind. The image of the new paint and
the bouncing boat kept sweeping through my thoughts.
Eventually
Arnow arrived. He pulled in close and had a look at the situation. He suggested
that I climb aboard to steer and gently pulled her off the shore. As I was
towed around the end of Fleming Key remorse filled my mind that we hadn't taken
the time last evening to complete the transit, and that my poor boat was washed
ashore. I attached her securely to her own mooring, Arnow took me to shore, and I returned to
the base to retrieve my car. Twice ashore in our relationship; this time she
survived unscathed. Lady Be and I, these
girls were lucky.
In
my life with Lady Be so far, the only way that I had covered ground with her
was by tow or hip sling. I had yet to use her as designed, as a sailboat.
Big
boats and mariners seem to find each other. One day, while aboard The Wolf, a
tall man walked up. Conversation from dock to vessel is common place. “Where
are you from?” “ Isn't she a pretty boat?” “Do you want to go sailing?” Some
would add, “I have a boat, too.” Then the conversation goes, “What kind is it?”
A different Albin Vega |
Well,
this man had an Albin Vega; he had it moored in Annapolis. This certainly
sparked the conversation for me. We shared some adventures; he told of his
sailing expeditions. I mentioned that I had never sailed my boat. He said that
he would go with me. We made a date, and met on the dock at the assigned time.
We dinghied out to Lady Be, climbed aboard and rigged her, for the first time.
I had been given a jib, so we hanked that in place. It was small for the
rigging and only went part way up the stay. That was fine for me. I was going
to sail my own boat. The tattered main sail was good enough, so up it went. We
dropped the mooring lines, raised the jib, and we were under weigh. I felt the
wind pulling her through the waters. I saw the curve of her sails. The pull and
push of the new tiller pressured my hand. The sounds of the lapping waves
thrilled me. I looked up and saw the frigate birds silently circling. Under the
sun, moving through the water, I was complete.
Time
passes, things change. The navy was dredging the ships channel, and dumping the
dredged material onto Fleming Key. All vessels within a specific area had to
move. Lady Be was in that area, I had to move her, or the navy would impound
her and move her for me.
My
new boss, another Tom, helped me with this one. We used his skiff. We motored
out to Lady Be midafternoon, after working in the morning. I sat in the skiff
as he dove down and retrieved my anchors. Anchor one and two came aboard
easily. Anchor three was so firmly in the mud, that he could not lift it. That
one was definitely set. Tom #2 figured that it had hooked into the mythical
“Navy Chain”. This is a chain that was left on the bottom of the basin beside
Fleming Key. Each link is about 10” long, and if you can hook your ground
tackle into that you are definitely secured. By chance, Lady Be was hooked in;
too bad that I had leave that anchor and move her.
We
towed her across the harbor to the North West side of Christmas Tree Island,
and set the moorings. As we drove away, I looked back; knowing that my story
with Lady Be was coming to an end. I was looking for someone to buy her, and I
was trying to rent her to someone to live aboard. I would even entertain
rent-to-own. I had a nice apartment, and knew that I would no longer spend my
nights gazing at the stars from her deck, or sleeping in the V berth on my
homemade cushions.
There
were a couple of men who lived aboard, supposedly as renters. Getting the rent
money was always a challenge. There was an agreement to purchase; again,
getting the money was a challenge. I was spending my summers in the north.
There was a new grandbaby and I needed to have her in my life. I was becoming
distant from Lady Be. There were other boats in my life, boats that paid me
instead of costing me. The dinghy was used up by unthinking renters; the pin
holding the engine in place, lost; leaks appeared in her hull; the floor
boards, lost. She was no longer my reliable ocean scooter.
A
year would go by, and the only time that I would go out to see her would be to
change the lines on her bridle and check the chafe gear. She stalwartly
continued to be there on her mooring, with men passing through her like the
lovers that passed through my life.
My
affair with Lady Be was losing its glory. In May of 2004 I moved north to care
for my mother. I returned that fall for a short time and met up with Tim. He
invited me to go to Hawaii with him; another adventure, sign me on.
I
contracted with an associate, George, to look after Lady Be, and perhaps to
sell her. I told him that the bridle on Lady Be needed to be replaced. He said
“No problem.” We signed some papers of understanding, and off I went. I trusted
my vessel to another. Even though I loved her, she had become a lodestone
around my neck. The care and attention she required was a huge challenge to me
since I no longer lived in Key West full time.
The
following hurricane season saw a parade of hurricanes stomp across the Keys,
beginning with Hurricane Dennis and ending with Wilma. As June 1st approaches
everyone is on tenterhooks, in apprehension of the coming storm season, “Have I
prepared sufficiently?”
A
couple days after hurricane Dennis passed, I got the call. “Your boat
disappeared in Hurricane Dennis” George said. I was shocked. “Tell me more.” “I
went out there after the storm and she was gone.”
There
was no point in asking anything more. “She was gone.” My heart and mind swirled
with mixed feelings. Grief at the loss of my special love, my project boat, for
so long with no progress, my retreat, my piece of paradise. And relief, I no
longer had to worry about her.
There
were no tears. I was grateful for the love that we had shared. Both my sons and
I had the opportunity to live aboard, to drive back and forth in the little
dinghy, to watch the wake furl out behind and feel like we were our own hero. I
only hope that she danced off to some distant shore and gave another woman the
opportunity to become her own hero.
Thank
you Lady, Be.