Arriving West Palm Beach, Florida

Swiftwing
Tue 19 May 2009 11:01
Our first view of the USA. The high-rise hotels of West Palm Beach from 17 miles out.
 
The Palm Beach Princess, a floating casino which sails out twice a day.
This yacht is at 'Cracker Boy Marina' and is called Virgin Money. Her keel is on the hard giving her a draught of at least twenty feet.
 
This is the fuel station. There were two types of petrol plus diesel available at the extortionate price of £1.80 per gallon.
Looking North up the Intra Coastal Waterway. As far as I know these high rise buildings are all hotels.
 
Some of the mansions that we were anchored in front of at West Palm Beach. There were dozens of these multi-million dollar houses but at night there were no lights on, they are holiday homes only used during the winter.The Kennedy's have the' Kennedy Compound' here, bought in the thirties. There is also a museum to the Kennedys which we hope to visit when we get back.
On the opposite shore there was a container port and every day ships like this came in through the narrow entrance, past our anchorage and manoeuvred alongside better than I could park a car. There was always so much going on that we found it really hard to sit in the cockpit and read our books.
 
Multi-million dollar mansions maybe but this is their view, the huge container port of Riviera Beach.
 
The Americans love big roads. This is the road to the marina from Broadway. It's a duel carriageway and we never saw more than one car on it at a time.
In the words of the Beach Boys song: "There will be no more fun fun fun fun fun when Daddy takes the 'T'Bird away". This is an early sixties Ford Thunderbird which the Florida climate has been very good to. The average American was driving something like this when we were driving Ford Anglias and Morris Minors!
Designed from the Space Craft school of design. The tail lights are supposed to look like rockets with the required fins above.
Bev liked this one, a 1953 Chevy. It's not painted brown that is a very light coating of rust. Note how the power boat is stacked on the racks. By Monday morning these racks were all full again. The yard has 375 alongside berths and 500 stacked berths. On Friday afternoon a fair sized forklift was launching one every five minutes.
The Americans think of it all. This is the floating church.
Another one of these fantastic houses that people seem too busy to live in.