beestforwardspeed
Pre-takeoff checklist
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CoopAir
OK Guys and gals!! Here is the intro video to this trip! The other videos will come when I post those days.
After months, even years of anticipation, I FINALLY am ready to publish a trip report documenting my journey the absolute fringe of civilization-----and back again to the NE Shore of Great Inagua---a place so unspoiled, remote, and isolated, that there are NO KNOWN photos or video of this gem on the entire internet………
Until now of course!
(Since there will be a lot of my non-pilot friends reading this, I'm going to use layman's terms to the aviation parts of this trip. Hope that doesn't drive you crazy.)
To give you an idea of just how remote this place is, I’d be 68 miles from the nearest permanent settlement at the NE Point of Great Inagua. To reach it would require a 5 hour, 55 mile drive (you do the math as to how rough this road is!) followed by a 13 mile walk, along what is one of the nicest and least visited beaches in the entire Bahamas.
As much of a focal point as getting here under my own power was, there was a 2nd place that was almost as remote and unspoiled. This would be Long Bay on the eastern end of Mayaguana’s north shore.
Unlike NE Point Inagua however, Long Bay on Mayaguana was a place that I tried, and FAILED to reach in July of 2014 when I timed my trek badly, and ended up in waist deep water right at high tide, forcing me to turn around unexpectedly. Ever since that failure, I was determined to try again and make it---this time choosing a time when the tide was low in the middle of the day, so I could cross both ways in shallow water.
Was I going to make it and be successful this time?
God only knew!
So finally on Monday March 28th, I started my long 1300 mile drive to Florida, and from there I’d be renting a plane in the West Palm Beach area to fly over to the Bahamas.
I left home about 6:00 PM on Monday Mar 28th and the start of a nearly 2 year wait had finally begun. As I headed down I-91 to the Merrit Parkway, I had to remind myself that this was not your ordinary trip! It sure felt like it because this is a route that I take when I visit my Grandmother in Pennsylvania frequently. To think that this was the start of a journey to the quite possibly the most remote tropical beach in the western hemisphere was surreal, and it hadn’t even sunk in yet that I was going to be in my most favorite place on the entire globe.
It got dark just as I crossed from CT to NY and I drove over the Tapanzee Bridge, to the Garden state Pkwy. From there I took the NJ Turnpike and by 9:30 or so, I decided to call it quits. I’d driven about 200 miles and spent the night at the Super 8 Motel in Mt Laurel NJ and got a bite to eat at a restaurant just 100 yards away.
Made it to bed at a decent hour and was planning to drive another 12 hours the next day. If I had minimal traffic, I’d probably make it to Georgia, which would leave me with a very manageable 7 to 8 hour drive the next day to West Palm Beach.
Got on the road at 8AM and luckily I had very little traffic from Baltimore to Wash DC to Richmond.
Once past Richmond, I knew the rest of the trip would be smooth sailing.
In the car that I rented, luckily I had cruise control and an ipod station with plenty of music to listen to. This always makes a long ride in the car go by a lot faster.
I lost about 15 minutes near Fayetville, NC backed up for about a mile from an accident that blocked the left lane. But other than that, I had no traffic.
I took a break at the SC welcome center and stretched for about 15 minutes. Having traveled 550 miles today (750 from home) I was just starting to feel like I was losing a bit of steam, but figured I’d be good for another 200 miles or so, which would put me near Savannah.
Surprisingly, I didn’t see any Palm trees until I reached SC and the few that I saw there were not native. This surprised me as the area is in hardiness zone 8.
Arrived in Savannah at 7:30 that night.
Having driven 720 miles that day, just 400 the next was going to feel like a cinch!
Now Wednesday Mar 30th, I started down I-95 at 8:15 that morning. Despite starting fresh that day, I could still feel the previous 900+ miles from the past two days, taking its toll on me. When I finally crossed from GA to FL, it felt as if I’d reached a major milestone.
Surprisingly however, was the fact that the overall vegetation had not changed a whole lot from the NE and Mid Atlantic states. It was mostly deciduous trees with some pines mixed in. Nothing “tropical” about it at all. In fact, the vegetation reminded me more of MAINE than it did somewhere in the sub-tropics, the only real difference being that the trees leafed-on 2 months earlier than Maine in the spring and leafed off 2 months later in the fall.
Around Jacksonville, I’d reached the 1000 mile mark from home, and it just hit me how FREAKING FAR AWAY the Bahamas are!
In this day and age with the internet, texting, social media, instant communication, etc, it was so easy to lose track of just how far away my favorite place in the world was! When you are sitting for 20+ hours in the car, and you feel mile after mile in your bones, it hits home that this place isn’t exactly around the corner!
As that thought went through my mind, I was reminded even more that 1000 miles doesn’t even come close to covering the distance to other places on my radar screen like Nepal (Everest of course!) and Fiji. To think that’d I’d have to drive that far 8 times over to reach the same distance as these places, just gave me a headache. At the same time though, it made me realize how BIG our planet is---again, something that has been forgotten the last 5-10 years with social media really taking hold of our lives.
I arrived to Ft Pierce, FL to pick up the liferaft for the trip at about 2:00 and then got a bit to eat at the café there. I then drove the remaining hour to Jupiter, FL where I’d be staying with my aunt and uncle the next few days until I left for the Bahamas.
Stay tuned as I will post Bahamas day 1 later this weekend or early next week!
After months, even years of anticipation, I FINALLY am ready to publish a trip report documenting my journey the absolute fringe of civilization-----and back again to the NE Shore of Great Inagua---a place so unspoiled, remote, and isolated, that there are NO KNOWN photos or video of this gem on the entire internet………
Until now of course!
(Since there will be a lot of my non-pilot friends reading this, I'm going to use layman's terms to the aviation parts of this trip. Hope that doesn't drive you crazy.)
To give you an idea of just how remote this place is, I’d be 68 miles from the nearest permanent settlement at the NE Point of Great Inagua. To reach it would require a 5 hour, 55 mile drive (you do the math as to how rough this road is!) followed by a 13 mile walk, along what is one of the nicest and least visited beaches in the entire Bahamas.
As much of a focal point as getting here under my own power was, there was a 2nd place that was almost as remote and unspoiled. This would be Long Bay on the eastern end of Mayaguana’s north shore.
Unlike NE Point Inagua however, Long Bay on Mayaguana was a place that I tried, and FAILED to reach in July of 2014 when I timed my trek badly, and ended up in waist deep water right at high tide, forcing me to turn around unexpectedly. Ever since that failure, I was determined to try again and make it---this time choosing a time when the tide was low in the middle of the day, so I could cross both ways in shallow water.
Was I going to make it and be successful this time?
God only knew!
So finally on Monday March 28th, I started my long 1300 mile drive to Florida, and from there I’d be renting a plane in the West Palm Beach area to fly over to the Bahamas.
I left home about 6:00 PM on Monday Mar 28th and the start of a nearly 2 year wait had finally begun. As I headed down I-91 to the Merrit Parkway, I had to remind myself that this was not your ordinary trip! It sure felt like it because this is a route that I take when I visit my Grandmother in Pennsylvania frequently. To think that this was the start of a journey to the quite possibly the most remote tropical beach in the western hemisphere was surreal, and it hadn’t even sunk in yet that I was going to be in my most favorite place on the entire globe.
It got dark just as I crossed from CT to NY and I drove over the Tapanzee Bridge, to the Garden state Pkwy. From there I took the NJ Turnpike and by 9:30 or so, I decided to call it quits. I’d driven about 200 miles and spent the night at the Super 8 Motel in Mt Laurel NJ and got a bite to eat at a restaurant just 100 yards away.
Made it to bed at a decent hour and was planning to drive another 12 hours the next day. If I had minimal traffic, I’d probably make it to Georgia, which would leave me with a very manageable 7 to 8 hour drive the next day to West Palm Beach.
Got on the road at 8AM and luckily I had very little traffic from Baltimore to Wash DC to Richmond.
Once past Richmond, I knew the rest of the trip would be smooth sailing.
In the car that I rented, luckily I had cruise control and an ipod station with plenty of music to listen to. This always makes a long ride in the car go by a lot faster.
I lost about 15 minutes near Fayetville, NC backed up for about a mile from an accident that blocked the left lane. But other than that, I had no traffic.
I took a break at the SC welcome center and stretched for about 15 minutes. Having traveled 550 miles today (750 from home) I was just starting to feel like I was losing a bit of steam, but figured I’d be good for another 200 miles or so, which would put me near Savannah.
Surprisingly, I didn’t see any Palm trees until I reached SC and the few that I saw there were not native. This surprised me as the area is in hardiness zone 8.
Arrived in Savannah at 7:30 that night.
Having driven 720 miles that day, just 400 the next was going to feel like a cinch!
Now Wednesday Mar 30th, I started down I-95 at 8:15 that morning. Despite starting fresh that day, I could still feel the previous 900+ miles from the past two days, taking its toll on me. When I finally crossed from GA to FL, it felt as if I’d reached a major milestone.
Surprisingly however, was the fact that the overall vegetation had not changed a whole lot from the NE and Mid Atlantic states. It was mostly deciduous trees with some pines mixed in. Nothing “tropical” about it at all. In fact, the vegetation reminded me more of MAINE than it did somewhere in the sub-tropics, the only real difference being that the trees leafed-on 2 months earlier than Maine in the spring and leafed off 2 months later in the fall.
Around Jacksonville, I’d reached the 1000 mile mark from home, and it just hit me how FREAKING FAR AWAY the Bahamas are!
In this day and age with the internet, texting, social media, instant communication, etc, it was so easy to lose track of just how far away my favorite place in the world was! When you are sitting for 20+ hours in the car, and you feel mile after mile in your bones, it hits home that this place isn’t exactly around the corner!
As that thought went through my mind, I was reminded even more that 1000 miles doesn’t even come close to covering the distance to other places on my radar screen like Nepal (Everest of course!) and Fiji. To think that’d I’d have to drive that far 8 times over to reach the same distance as these places, just gave me a headache. At the same time though, it made me realize how BIG our planet is---again, something that has been forgotten the last 5-10 years with social media really taking hold of our lives.
I arrived to Ft Pierce, FL to pick up the liferaft for the trip at about 2:00 and then got a bit to eat at the café there. I then drove the remaining hour to Jupiter, FL where I’d be staying with my aunt and uncle the next few days until I left for the Bahamas.
Stay tuned as I will post Bahamas day 1 later this weekend or early next week!