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Huck L. Beri
Добавлен 7 ноя 2015
My wife began calling me "Huckleberry" a few years ago. She says that if we lived on the Mississippi, she'd find me floating down the river on a raft. This channel provides a glimpse of those type of adventures.
The Triple Crown of Virginia on the Appalachian Trail - 2024 SD 480p
With this 94 mile section hike of the Appalachian Trail, we close the gap between the miles we've hiked NoBo from Springer Mountain, GA and the section we hiked in central Virginia back in 2005. Along the way we discover Virginia's Triple Crown - Dragon's Tooth, McAfee Knob, and Tinker Cliffs, and we enjoy meeting some new friends!
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Видео
Cruising the Biscayne National Park on a Hobie Cat 18
Просмотров 30 тыс.2 года назад
The Biscayne National Park including Boca Chita and Elliot Keys as well as Stiltsville are visited by two old friends sailing a Hobie Cat 18 and camping at Elliott Harbor.
Wings to Fly - Hobie Cat 18
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.4 года назад
Sailing the Banana River between Cocoa Beach and Merritt Island, Florida on a Hobie Cat 18 Magnum with wings. Hiking out on the wings we were flying at 17.2 mph!
Section Hiking - Appalachian Trail - NC/TN
Просмотров 984 года назад
This video provides scenes from two sections of the Appalachian Trail. The first section lies just north of the Georgia border within North Carolina. The second section reveals the most beautiful section I have experienced thus far in over 400 miles of hiking the AT. This sections clings to the border of North Carolina and Tennessee between Erwin, TN and Roan Mountain, TN. Little Hump Mountain,...
1940 WACO Biplane - An Open Cockpit Ride
Просмотров 1454 года назад
I have always wanted to ride in the open cockpit of a biplane. At the Melbourne Air & Space Show, my son and I did just that in a 1940 WACO UPF-7. Come with us and experience the ride!
Hobie Cat Sailing the Entire Length of the Indian River
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.4 года назад
I have often watched cruising vessels sail (and more often) motor-sail the Intracoastal Waterway that passes through the center of the Indian River Lagoon on the east coast of Florida. I have often wondered if I could sail my 18' Hobie Cat the 120 mile length of the Indian River. So I took a week off from work, and I gave it try.
Everglades National Park Kayak Trip
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.4 года назад
Over 35 years later, my college buddy and I get together for a once in a lifetime trip in the Everglades National Park. Starting from Flamingo, we paddle our kayaks to Shark River by way of Whitewater Bay and return via the Gulf of Mexico around Cape Sable. During this 4 day / 3 night adventure, we camp on "chickees" provided by the park and the beach at Northwest Cape Sable.
I would love to have continued to watch the video, but the music was too much
The Indian River goes all the way south to the Jupiter Inlet.
Depends on the source… Page 2 of NOAA charts lists St. Lucie Inlet as mouth of the Indian River. www.charts.noaa.gov/BookletChart/11474_BookletChart.pdf Much of the waterway south of that is only wide enough for the intercostal. No room for much sailing (depending on wind direction.)
That was very interesting! 68 mikes in three days is impressive!! Thanks for posting this!!
did you have a small trolling motor on this for no-wind conditions? (with marine deep cycle battery)?
no motor - depended on the wind predicted by weather forecasts
@@HuckLBeri AH, nice! There are always nice people on the water for a tow. I'm guessing you had a little emergency water-proof floatable walkie-talkie with marine channel.
That would have been the smart thing to do! Phone service worked at times, but it was spotty. There were plenty of other boats around us except when we were on the ocean side.
how bad were the bugs, i see you were a distance from the mosquitos (in the trees as you mentioned)... just wonder if there were other bugs and creepy crawlies trying to get y'all? I see someone with a head-wrap even (during the departure from the park) so just wondering if that head-wrap was for mosquitos or some flying insects of some sort. Just wondering how the bugs are in this park for family
The no-see-ums and mosquitos were terrible from dusk to dawn. No other bugs to my knowledge. It was very warm for December. If it gets cold, I understand the bugs are not bad.
@@HuckLBeri Ah, ok, that's brutal, you could always eat Deet-Brownies 🙂
Neat trip!!
Great wind cruising adventure
I saw you recently had this boat for sale. Is it still available?
Had no takers so I'm still sailing it when I can. Had it out a couple of times in the last month in high winds. Got it moving over 19 mph!
If you’re ever still interested in selling, please let me know.
My favorite type of video! Thanks for posting. But for these sort of trips, I'd put some reefpoints in my mainsail.
My old stomping ground ! Miami to Key Largo ‘77. Tornado Cat .
Great job. Love this video and that it was done in my backyard. Makes me long for a club which sales the Biscayne area and camps together in a weekend trip sort of fashion. Unfortunately, I think your catamaran is much faster than my 12' Zuma! Thanks for this well put video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Nice boats, what make/ model? Thanks.
Ocean Kayak Prowler 15 and Native Watercraft Ultimate 16
Hi just wondering what you would say is a good wind speed for something like this
10-14 knots would be great for traveling quickly and still safely. Most of our trip it was single digits, so it was slow going at times. Of course more wind also means bigger seas especially on the outside of the islands.
Is that fender near the top of the mast effective enough to prevent the boat from turtling?
The nice thing about the 18 is that is almost never pitchpoles. I've only turned over twice. Once on a downwind jibe during a squall when I first got the boat, but I was in shallow water that prevent turtling. So I started tying the fender to the mast. I turned it over on purpose to try it out along with a righting pole set up that I made and was able to right the Hobie by myself. I was in deep water and the fender held the mast near the surface while I connected the righting pole.
I am in Ft. Lauderdale, and want to take a similar trip on my H18 exactly like this. Could you give some tips on what to bring on such an adventure.
We brought backpacking gear but used dry bags instead of packs. We included tents, air mattresses, sleeping bags, hiking stove, dehydrated dinners, other dried foods, etc. We also brought our own fresh water - one gallon per person per day. Oh - and don't forget the bug spray for night and sun shade/screen for daytime. We also brought snorkel gear and a fishing pole.
Great video thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
Leaving VT for the west via Erie Canal - I’ve got a 16 cat in Florida I can’t wait to get too now! Thanks for the video
Very cool!
Great video! If you have the time, I would love a quick video on your hobie, modifications, quick sail tips, etc.
Thanks for the idea!
Just saw this for the first time ! Yes I also would like to see that & your on the trailer rigging . I have winged H18 also . Using different style pvc wing support . Great video !
I wouldn't call the lagoon a river, Turnbull creek is not a source so not headwaters. And really maybe it used to be brackish on the north end before haulover canal was dug but it's solidly saltwater nowdays. Not enough fresh water runoff to make it brackish.
Nor would I, but that is the official name of the lagoon , "The Indian River." It was named by the Spanish, "Rio de Ais" for the Native American people who lived around it and depended on it. The Haulover canal connects the Indian River to the Mosquito Lagoon. So I chose the northern most spot of the Indian River where Turnbull Creek runs into it to start my journey and the place where it feeds into the St. Lucie Inlet to end the journey since the intercostal south of there is no longer considered the Indian River. As to saltwater, there are areas and seasons where the salt content is more or less than the ocean. But fresh ocean water itself never reaches much of the lagoon north of Grant. I spoke to an Oceanography professor at Florida Tech who is doing research to help convince authorities to provide an ocean connection at or near Port Canaveral to help clean the Banana and Indian River Lagoons.
@@HuckLBeri dude I've been saying it for years the water needs to be able to get out. I know it's not the roots of the problem but at this point you need triage while you address the roots of the problems. Especially given how long all these mitigation projects take.
That looked like a grand adventure
would loved to have done it with my Hobie 16, but such is life.
I also kayaked this area during winter. There were narcotrafficking speedboats going east and west around Cape Sable all night every night, and in the morning after the mafiosos has gone home to sleep Black Hawk helicopters would circle my campsite with a guy in the back aiming a .50 machine gun at me as I waved hello and pretended to be friendly.
Holy Cow! Glad we didn't see anything like that. Not what you paddle into the wilderness to experience!
I'd be tempted to install large hatches on the hulls
We did put some items in the hauls through the hatches, but it was limited by their diameters. Don't know if larger hatches exist.
That would make a really awesome adventure catamaran. Lets start a pocket-expedition catamaran company based on the Hobie 18 rigging! (basically new hulls)
Thats a nice area. Very cool that you're cruising around in the Hobie.
Good stuff! My dad always did enjoy a good adventure. Should I start calling him Tom Sawyer?
LOL... that might just work! My wife calls me Huck because she says that if we lived on the Mississippi, she'd find me floating down the river on a raft. I call her Beri - so that's where Huck L. Beri came from. Glad you enjoyed the video. Your Dad is very proud of you. He spoke about your channel a lot while we were sailing.
Here is the link to our Everglades National Park Kayak Adventure ... ruclips.net/video/R_2NN3v11hU/видео.html
We’ve been sailing out of Pineda mainly on the weekends.i have a 14t and a 18 magnum.
Impressive. Did you train for this? I just did Flamingo to East Cape and back in two days and it wasn't easy.
No, but I row kayaks and paddle boards regularly. My buddy's ability to do this was more impressive. He had never really rowed before, but he is a swimmer. The real trick was to row with the tide and with the wind whenever possible. After studying the forecast and tide charts, we picked the route direction (counter-clockwise) for that reason.
So fun!!!
SV Avocet - thanks for the comment - honored that you would watch my little voyage. I love your videos - they are done with such professionalism!
Thanks for sharing, Rich. Nice video to watch as it feels to embrace the nature beauty in each minute. Happy new year!