Casablanca and Moroccan Charm

Casablanca and Moroccan Charm

It was another first for us. We landed in Africa—a new continent. Granted, we had made a brief, one-night stop in the Spanish enclave of Ceuta on the North African coast a few days earlier, but for all intents and purposes that was still Spain. This was Casablanca, Morocco, something completely different, and a door to the new and unknown.

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Iguaçu and Fluid Frontiers

Iguaçu and Fluid Frontiers

There is an amazing place in South America where the Iguaçu and Parana rivers converge in a spectacular explosion of cascading walls of water that seems to form a 360° panoramic marvel of deafening, crashing, and churning foam everywhere you turn. This is Iguaçu Falls and it doubles as the borders between Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay a little farther down river. Standing before such a phenomenon of nature was like being in the heart of an Imax movie: a non-stop live action screen towering above our craning necks.

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In the Grips of Gibraltar

In the Grips of Gibraltar

We were held captive by the currents of the Strait of Gibraltar. Like a hamster just spinning in its caged wheel, we were trapped, not making any headway. The Strait was infamous for this. Finally, at the end of the day after a good eight hours of basically treading water, the "Rock" was still grandly displayed before us across the horizon just as it was when we left the harbor earlier that morning. We gave up and hiked across the water to the isolated Spanish enclave port of Ceuta, bordering Morocco on the North African coast.

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The Shack

The Shack

It was an anomaly. There it leaned, the ramshackle shack on an exclusive shoreline in the midst of an upper class, somewhat secluded tropical enclave. It was just two doors up from the pointy southern tip of Merritt Island—land's end—in Central Florida. With just a narrow bridge over the Banana River separating it from the town of Indian Harbour Beach, the area was a bedroom community for Cape Canaveral, Cocoa Beach, and the long reach of NASA at the Kennedy Space Center. It is called, in fact, the Space Coast. We slipped in the back door on the water amidst this reputable decor, and the shack became our "hippie commune" home for two itinerant cruising families for a little over three years. At first, the neighbors were not amused.

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Be Careful What You Ask For and Other Lessons, Part One

Be Careful What You Ask For and Other Lessons, Part One

Of the many things we learned from our life on the water, one of the the most notable was that the cruising community is a small and cohesive group. We would often run into boats, families, and cruisers whom we had met at an earlier time and place, later again (even years) in other ports and countries along the way. We learned that just because one crosses an ocean doesn't necessarily mean that a past stays behind.

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