Shannon & Dee,
So excited to here you're headed down to the Keys! It's an absolutely beautiful sail down from St. Pete and one that I have done many times. I would recommend taking an outside
route, as the
ICW can be pretty confusing heading down, and the operating
depth is more like 7ft instead of 10ft. Get yourself a good two-three day window with a Easterly or Westerly
wind and you'll have no problems following the coast. Two to Three miles of shore is the sweet spot, and for newer
blue water sailors, seeing the coast is comforting.
If you want to break your trip up into daytime sailing only, you can easily do:
St. Pete -> Ft. Myers Beach
Ft. Myers Beach -> Marco Island
Marco Island ->
Key West
Couple things for you:
I provided
Hurricane Relief in Ft. Myers and Sanibel and can tell you that the area is more of less completely leveled and most deep
draft marinas are not available. However, if you have
Navionics on your
phone, you can see a couple spots that are good.
My recommendations:
South Side of Sanibel , tuck behind the curve of the island after you pass the Lighthouse. Good
Depth and plenty of cover from currents and
wind. Sandy bottom, easy anchorage.
If you can fit under the bridge, tuck in outside of Punta Rassa Cove.
Marco Island:
Very friendly and island, and super welcoming to sailors!
Head into the north side of the Island (Marco Island River) and
anchor near Stingaree Island. You can Dingy over to Pelican Pier Marina for a cold one, or provisions restock.
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In route to Key West, you can pretty much set it and forget it with your
autopilot until you are 5 nm out. The Northwest Channel into Key West is well marked, wide and easy to navigate. It'll bring you down and around Tank Island (make sure you go AROUND as it is very shallow north of the island) , and then you can
anchor anywhere around the West side of
Fleming Key (10-20ft, Sand) or anywhere around Wisteria Island (5-10ft Sand).
Coming in and out of downtown Key West can be tricky because there are no public landings, but you can get a dingy
permit for $8 a day and
shower passes for $50 a week. If you'd rather, I run a water concierge
service down in Key West that does on demand
service for $10 a person each way!
See you out on the Water!
- Pat