Featured Content

Why We Want to Sail

We traded a conventional life in Ottawa for the dream of raising our children aboard a sailboat — even though I had never sailed.

About Our Boat

SV Aphrodite is a St. Francis 50 catamaran — Hull #1 of an award-winning bluewater design. See her specs, equipment, and offshore features.

Long Reads: Galapagos

Volcanoes, sharks, penguins, sea lions, offshore fishing fleets, and a message in a bottle — the Galapagos is one of the most interesting and diverse places we have visited during…

Long Reads Grenada

A muddy hike, memory-making at Grenada Carnival, drama on a public bus, sailing passages from Trinidad to Grenada and Grenada to Haiti, and what happened when COVID-19 arrived in a…

Why the Caribbean has virtually no tides

Why Caribbean tides are tiny — and why Panama’s beaches can vanish at high tide.

Luperón Long Reads — Boat Kids Go Local

Joining a local school taught entirely in Spanish, learning baseball, making friends, and discovering how quickly the Luperon cruising community can rally when help is needed.


Latest Blog Posts

  • Nassau

    Nassau

    Tucked into West Bay off New Providence, we can see the bottom from our decks, surrounded by Canadian boats. Our onshore neighbour? Fashion tycoon Peter Nygard, whose property lights up like Vegas each night.

  • Queen mattress delivery and disposal – by dinghy

    Queen mattress delivery and disposal – by dinghy

    New mattresses for Aphrodite meant ferrying the old, lumpy ones to shore by dinghy, in the rain, while Rick did the heavy lifting. Everything we own arrives and departs across the water.

  • We’re in the Bahamas

    We’re in the Bahamas

    We slipped out of the Florida Keys before dawn with espresso in the air and glassy seas, and anchored at Cat Cay eleven hours later. Parts were fantastic; the rest I spent seasick in bed.

  • Bahamas tomorrow AM

    Bahamas tomorrow AM

    Tomorrow at 6am we leave the Florida Keys for our very first passage aboard Aphrodite—about eight hours across to Cat Cay in the Bimini Islands, Bahamas. The kids are thrilled and so are we.

  • Tornado watch In Florida

    Tornado watch In Florida

    A tornado watch in Florida means empty water and a bobbing anchor. Four-year-old Karen wanted to know if that anchor was truly jammed in the ground, while the boys buried themselves in the iPad.