Friday, November 19, 2010

Beaufort South Carolina -- Day 8 of Trip South

Charleston to Beaufort, SC ("Bu-fort" as opposed to "Bo-fort, NC). Easy 68 mile run on a beautiful day. Have all the back canvas down from moonlight cruise with Lexi last night. Love feeling a little less confined. Planned 10:15am undo lines in Charleston, all lines and fenders in and stowed by 10:30am and run for a 1:00pm (slack tide) arrival at Beaufort. Arrived at Beaufort at 12:45pm. Like a good plan, although I was 15 minutes early. Average speed 30.22mph (ran 35-37 but had a few sailboat slowdowns and a ripping current running against me in Wappoo Creek no wake zone). More dolphins today including a little guy all by himself. There have been a lot of comments about the currents here at the Town Docks so I wanted to arrive at slack tide. I did and it was as easy as could be. Later as the 7-1/2 foot tidal change occurred I could see what all of the fuss was about. The marina sits out in the Beaufort River and it really moves. If your coming here, plan your arrival and departure on the slack. 



The marina is connected to the Beaufort waterfront park which has been beautifully created. Went to lunch at Plums. Fine food, but the best part is the back porch overlooking the park and the river. Plums is also a hot night scene for the younger locals. Want to hear a local band try to play your favorite songs loudly, through a poor sound system? They had heart and a good crowd.  Took a carriage ride tour of the city. Beaufort is the 2nd oldest city in South Carolina and there is a lot of history here. There have also been a number of movie shoots here including Forrest Gump, The Big Chill, Prince of Tides, Forces of Nature, Rules of Engagement, Jungle Book, White Squall, Something to Talk About, The Legend of Bagger Vance, GI Jane, and The Last Dance.

I called Trina (regular ICW cruiser) to see if she had a dinner recommendation for me here. She was in the middle of her nightly sunset celebration in Marathon, FL. She has provided a number of great recommendations along the way. None for here unfortunately. So using every internet resource possible, I ended up choosing a restaurant called Breakwaters. Wow, what a great choice. It's upscale, but my jeans and polo fit in just fine. They pride themselves on their wine list and they have done a magnificent job of choosing. There were so many wonderful sounding menu choices that I ended up getting a sampler plate so that I could try 4 dishes. Everything was perfect. This restaurant is very professionally run, it shows in the service, the choices and the quality of the food. You could drop this restaurant anywhere in the country and it would be a hit.  I spoke with the owner Donna (her husband is one of the two Executive Chefs). They moved here from Atlanta and opened the restaurant 8 years ago. About 80% of the guests are local which says a lot about a restaurant of this scale and about their survival. Her and her husband travel to Savannah a couple of times each month so they gave me some great places to go there. If the chef of a restaurant you love, tells you the place he loves... you have to go. Secret for now.  Donna also told me that their number one competitor in town (in terms of quality & dining) is a restaurant called Saltus River Grill (nice fire pit outside on the river as there). If you've got 2 nights here, make that one of them as well although there are so many choices on the Breakwaters menu you may need to eat a few nights here. My server was named Alison, great service and she is a wine lover as well so when the dinner crowd was gone she sat down with me and made some nice additional recommendations. I tried a few. She filled me in on the local bar and restaurant scene as well as telling me about a lot of great things here I want to use for an episode of the show. Sorry not telling now, it's a show secret. 

Next stop, Hemingway's. This is a tiny local bar that you will only find if you are walking along the waterfront park (backside) of all of the restaurants on the main street. Drinks are cheap. The drink of choice... jello shots for $1. Pick your color. As the bartender said, they ALL taste like vodka. The walls and ceilings are covered in dollar bills. No jello shot for me after 3 glasses of wine at Breakwaters. I settled for a Margarita. I think I've had more to drink in the past 7 days then in the past 7 months. But it's the best way to really get the flavor of a town. I guess I could just put down $5 and ask for water and it would hurt less.

Charleston Summary -- Cruise South Days 6,7

Wednesday & Thursday (Nov 17 & 18) in Charleston. Lots and lots of walking around Charleston. Such a great city.  Dinner at SNOB (Slightly North of Broad) Wednesday night. Ate here 7 years ago when cruising South and loved it. Had a salad with carmalized pear that I have been craving ever since. I looked at their menu on line and it wasn't on there, bummer. Went for dinner and one of the items on the "Specials" menu... field green salad with carmalized pear, pistachios, cranberries and blue cheese (I substitute with goat)... don't know if that was exactly the same, but it satisfied my 7 year old craving perfectly.  As far as the rest of the meal... perfect.  A great Malbec to go with it. I'm not getting in to everything I eat, we each have our own tastes. I'm just going to tell you I am a foodie and this is a great restaurant. Whatever you order there should be wonderful. Mind you, I put quality and taste first. I haven't found any secret great bargains yet, just amazing food. After dinner I had planned to go to the Rooftop Bar but when I got there, the music was over and the place was dead. Ended up at a wine bar called Social. It was a popular place. The bartender poured me large pours of a lot of different wines, trying to find one that suited my taste. A lot of of pours. Not really impressed with any of them but it was nice to taste 6 different wines before my tab even started. Ended up doing a flight but didn't drink much of it. Walked the 2 miles or so back to the marina at midnight.  I have walked miles and miles and miles of Charleston, sometimes in the wrong direction, but enjoyed every minute of it. Such a beautiful town. Every street, I look at the houses and say "I could live there". Seems I could live almost anywhere in Charleston.


Took the 11am daily City Dock van ride to West Marine to get a new Shurhold boat brush pole. Saw mine disappear off the bow of the boat the other day while getting ready to wash the boat. There was a Harris Teeter supermarket there so I did a little provisioning and then pushed my cart full of boat supplies and groceries to the drive in ATM at Bank of America. Looked like a homeless person I'm sure. The courtesy van from the marina picked me back up at 12:30... shopping complete. Thursday afternoon Lexi came over and we did a little cell phone photo shoot. I put the picture of us on Facebook... you should see it in the next issue of Marinalife Magazine. Seriously, they asked me to do something for their Member Musing's column. One of the things I have to get is a new charger for my REAL camera. I have seen so many beautiful things that I wanted to capture and a cell phone just isn't cutting it. Lexi and I took the boat up the Ashley River to the next marina to get gas as a sunset cruise. No gas at the Megadock (City Marina), just diesel. Then off to a wonderful dinner at 39 Rue de Jean. Lexi is in her 2nd year at College of Charleston and I asked her to pick someplace she really wanted to go but hadn't been to yet. She gave me a list of 5, all sounded good but we chose 39 Rue de Jean. French influence. Normally I am scared when a restaurant has so many items on the menu, how can they possibly do them all well. I have to say, I have to say they have done it. Wow, everything was so good.




After dinner Lexi and I walked back to the marina, stopping at her house so that I could see it and meet her roommate. Such a great place and "Sami" (roommate) is sweet, funny, smiles a lot and a perfect personality fit with Lexi.  We got back to the marina at 8pm for a night cruise of Charleston Harbor. The water was so smooth and the light of the city and the almost-full moon made it possible to see for miles. We headed out for a 2-hour cruise around Charleston Harbor and up the Cooper River. A friend of Lexi's joined us. He's a boater and was eager to see how fast I could run. Conditions were so perfect and no one other than one larger container ship was in the harbor. We ran back down the Cooper River and across the harbor at 45mph. With a little country music as our soundtrack. Couldn't believe that it was the same harbor as the nasty one I came up a couple days ago. Love night boating with the moonlight. Tied up and got a ride from her friend back to the historical district so I could have a little wine and dessert at Kaminsky's. Walked back to the marina. What a perfect afternoon and evening.