| Steve with a small ladyfish |
As usual, we were up early so we did our language lessons and had morning beverages before going downstairs after Mark, Cindy and the dogs were up and moving around. We had a cold cereal breakfast working toward finishing the Chex and Great Grains boxes that we brought from Kentucky.
Kenny came over before 8 am and we loaded Mark’s boat with fishing gear to go out and try to catch some snook. We fished hard for over six hours catching and releasing 10 undersized snook, several redfish under the keeping limit, and many ladyfish. We had no keepers.
While retrieving a lure from the mangrove snags in mud that was two feet deep, I took a spill landing on my rear. Watching me trying to stand up provided great amusement for Mark and Kenny.
| Steve in the mud retrieving a snagged lure |
By the time we returned to the house around 2 pm the temperature in the upper 80s. We were all pretty hot and had been in the sun enough for the day. We washed salt from fishing gear. scrubbed boat to remove the mud that I brought on board with me after falling in the shallow muddy water.
We planned to meet Jodie and Grant at Marguerita Grill but when we drove up Hall’s River Road, we saw that they were closed on Wednesday. After talking with Grant and Jody, we went to Crumps Landing a little over a mile west of Marguerita Grill. We had never been to Crump’s Landing before but there was plenty of parking, despite being very busy. We were seated at an outside table by the dock across the water from MacRae’s.
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| Jodie & Grant at Crump's Landing |
Mary had a Cuban sandwich; I had the clam basket with chips Several of us had margaritas and Cindy had a mojito. The meal and service were good. We really like the atmosphere at Marguerita Grill but Crumps’s Landing is a good alternative.
Before we returned to the house, we made a side trip to Monkey Island near MacRae’s. Monkey Island is built on a rock outcropping near Homosassa that was a frequent hazard to boaters. In the 1960s a developer had a crew add material to the rocky structure forming a small island. The developer had a lighthouse and other structures built on the small island as well as planting trees and other plants. He also obtained a few spider monkeys and squirrel monkeys placing them on the island. Today, the island is inhabited by five spider monkeys living in very nice accommodations providing great amusement to Homosassa’s visitors.
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| Monkey Island |
Back at the house, Grant and Jodie played Phase 10 with Mary, Mark and Cindy. I fell asleep upstairs for a short nap.
I awoke when Grant and Jodie were preparing to leave. Mark and I went out to his garage workshop to disassemble a fishing reel that wasn’t working right. After cleaning, greasing and reassembly the reel seemed to work well.
We strained the peanut oil that was used to deep fry the snook at the fish fry on Tuesday evening. We put the used oil in the plastic jugs that the new oil came in. Mark would keep the oil in the chest freezer above the garage until the next fish fry.
While we were working on the fishing gear and straining the oil, Cindy came out and told us that the air conditioning in the house wasn’t working. After testing connections and attempting to locate the problem we heard a snapping sound coming from the connection box on the side of the house. Mark had worked with HVAC a good deal in their 40+ years of owning and operating McDonald’s Restaurants, so he knew that the connection box was the source of the problem. We found that the disconnect box was arcing and that made the air conditioning unit stop operating. The box had been immersed in saltwater several time during hurricanes and other tropical storms, so it was not surprising that the box needed replacing. We temporarily wired around the disconnect and the unit worked well until we could replace the box.
By the time we finished it was getting dark so we came in and watched the final episode of season 1 of Clarkson’s Farm on Prime TV. We all turned in by 10 pm.


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