Y’all might have noticed that I haven’t produced any fresh
blog posts in a few weeks. The reason for that is that I’ve been busy moving to
Florida and starting my new job as a professor at Florida Gulf Coast
University.
So far, so good. The move was a logistical challenge, but with
careful planning on the part of my fiancé Rhonda and help from our friends and
families it went pretty smoothly.
We rented a 22’ Penske truck and towed my minivan behind it, while
Rhonda and her mom drove behind in Rhonda’s car. Here’s the caravan crossing
the Hudson River in NY.
We made two overnight stops; one at my sister’s house in
North Carolina, and another at my cousin’s house in Daytona Beach. It was good
getting to see the family.
Four days after we left Boston we arrived at our new home in
Bonita Springs. It’s a cute little rental house with a screened-in porch and
lanai, and a windsurf storage shed in the backyard. Rhonda’s mom stayed for a
few days and was a huge help getting us unpacked and settled in.
The same day that she went home to New England we gained a new family member- a rescue part-bulldog mutt named Grace.
The same day that she went home to New England we gained a new family member- a rescue part-bulldog mutt named Grace.
Grace is about 8 years old and has a very sweet and mellow
personality. We still miss Buri, but it’s real nice to have a dog around again.
Getting started as a professor has been an exciting
challenge. This is my new office at FGCU (now much more cluttered.) Check out
the nice view from the window!
I feel like the job is a good fit for me. The other
professors are helpful and sociable. It’s definitely what you would call a
“collegial” work environment. My
first week of teaching went smoothly, although I’m learning
as I go since I've never taught before. They gave me a pretty easy
courseload to start with. I’m teaching one Marine Ecology class with 32
students, and two sections of a Seagrass Ecology discussion course- one with 2
graduate students and the other with 18 undergrads. The Marine Ecology class
takes the most preparation time, because I have to plan about an hour of
lecture, plus fill another hour and 15 minutes with other learning activities
for the kids because I can’t lecture for more than an hour and they can’t pay
attention for more than an hour. In both my classes we’re reading a lot of
scientific articles, which is nice in a way because it keeps me up to date on
the scientific literature that I should be following for my own research.
So far I haven’t done any new marine biology research in
Florida (not counting wading around in some seagrass beds when fishing and
paddleboarding), but I’m looking forward to starting seagrass monitoring soon.
With that in mind, I’ve been sitting in on a GIS (Geographic Information
Systems) class that meets on Thursday nights at FGCU. Seagrass ecologists
often use the GIS mapping software to keep track of changes in seagrass
coverage, which they can then relate to trends in water quality and stuff like
that. I’m hoping to get government funding for my seagrass monitoring, so I want to be as GIS savvy as possible when I make my bid.
The wind and waves scene here on the Gulf Coast of Florida
is VERY different than it was in New England. There’s less wind, and there are
no real waves to speak of. More often than not, the Gulf of Mexico is
flat as a lake. Literally. Riding waves there on a paddleboard is tough, because the
only time the waves approach a rideable size is when it’s choppy
with an onshore breeze. Rhonda and I HAVE had some fun SUP sessions, but only
on flat water, like on the mangrove-lined Imperial River near our house.
We knew we were in tropical paradise when we saw red
hibiscus blossoms drifting lazily along the smooth surface of the water.
I picked up a cheap old windsurfing longboard that we
re-styled as a flat water SUP so we can both go at once. One of us uses that
and the other uses the Angulo Surfa 10’4”. There are tons of SUP shops in the
area, like CGT Kayaks and Paddleboards, so I didn’t have any trouble finding a store where I could buy a second
paddle.
I think there’s a lot of potential for windsurfing around
here, though I’m a long way from getting my launch sites and equipment dialed.
The first time I put up a sail here was at Punta Rassa near the Sanibel
causeway. I was out SUP-fishing the seagrass flats with some fellow new
professors. (One math dude, and another theater dude.) At first we were
catching lots of Speckled Seatrout- almost one on every cast. But then the fishing slowed down
and some squally wind came up, so I rigged a 6.8 and put it on the old
longboard. The thing was a beast, but it actually planed, in a loggish sort of
way. I’m saving up now for an Exocet WindSUP, which I think is going to be the
perfect board for around here.
Finding the best water access points for different wind
directions and different wave / chop conditions has been challenging. Most of
the beach parking areas also make you pay by the hour or day, which I find
super annoying. So far our best windsurfing beach find has been “Dog Beach”
between Bonita Beach and Lover’s Key State Park. There’s a short walk through the mangroves that gets you to
a sandbar on the edge of a shallow lagoon.
It was the perfect spot for Rhonda to have her best
windsurfing session ever, with a 4.2 sail on the Angulo SUP with a jury-rigged
dagger-fin.
It was a nice spot for me, too, since the lagoon opens up
through an inlet to the Gulf of Mexico, where an outgoing tide can jack up the
onshore-wind waves. I got some fun rides there on the old 80s longboard, though
my fin hit a sandbar once or twice, so I’ll have to be careful if I’m ever
riding there on a nicer board.
Today we’re starting to feel some breeze from the approach
of Hurricane Issac. The wind is NE (side-offshore), so I’ve been scratching my
head about where the best ocean-side launch might be. I’m going to give it a
try at Wiggins Pass, a relatively short 8.1 mile drive from my house. There’s a
point and an inlet at the N end of the park there, which I think will give me a
bit better wind exposure and hopefully enable me to get out on my 106
liter shortboard. Tomorrow and Monday might be unsailably windy and rainy, but
there’s a medium-sized lake on the N side of the FGCU campus where the kids do
swimming, sailing, SUP, and wakeboarding. I think it might be a good, safe spot
in an E or NE wind. As long as the alligators don’t get me.
FGCU Lake Launch.
Good luck in Florida.
ReplyDeleteHi James!
ReplyDeleteMy name is Jane and I'm with Dwellable.
I was looking for blog posts about Bonita Beach to share on our site and I came across your post...If you're open to it, shoot me an email at jane(at)dwellable(dot)com.
Hope to hear from you :)
Jane
James:
ReplyDeleteMet you once SUP'in at Nahant, we traded boards (Fanatic Allwave 9'2")..
Y'all? Tha tain't no Boston accent!!
Glad you got another dog. I never understand the folks who say "no" after their dog passes. Esp. w/ all the shelter dogs waiting for a home. I gotta believe our shelter mutt would want us to get another ASAP once he goes on to chase that giant squirrel in the sky...
Hi James,
ReplyDeleteMy name is John Fernstrom. I follow your blog and love it. Congrats on your new job/teaching position. I'm an ex windsurfer from Tampa, FLA now living in Seattle, WA. I started kiteboarding right when you quit kiteboarding. I ride here at Jetty Island which truly is kiteboarding mecca. (I ride an HQ Matrixx foil and fly with it to the Florida Keys to kiteboard now and then) Loved your kiteboarding videos. I wish you would start kiting again and shoot more videos!
John
Hi John,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment. How do you like the HQ Matrixx? I had a falling out with my foil kite as I realized how much complex maintenance and fiddling with the bridles it needed to stay in tune. I'm not in a rush to get back into kiting, but if I do I'll probably go with an inflatable just for the safety and simplicity.
Shred it up in Seattle!
-James