Cruising from South Padre to Houston ICW in January.....

Easyvictor.14

New member
Looking for any hints or heads up for this trip I'm putting together. I'm not sure if I'll go South-North or North -South, any preferences?
Giving myself 6 days, updating my Raymarine C80 charts, got Skipper Bobs guide, Waterway guide, Ipad Nav apps and iPhone, VHF, autopilot,
What's there to see/do?
 
Well, I live in the South Padre Island area (1/2 mile from the end of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway). You can certainly cover that distance in 6 days, but you aren't going to see much. If your goal is to "check it off," you can do it in less time than that... another Brat did that, then rented a car in this area (we drove them 50 miles to a rental car office) to go back and get their trailer.

Timing will have a lot to do with it. We are just coming off a norther: winds to 50 mph and temperatures that got down as low as 39º. Miserable water conditions on the water, and (of course) all kinds of mariner advisories (including near shore waves of 10 to 18 feet). That is not the norm, but it can happen at any time during the winter months (December through February). Or, it might be in the 70s, sunshine, and just lovely. Last week, our water temp was 74º; today, it was 58º, thanks to days of cold and north wind.

Prevailing winds are S to SE... until a norther blows in. Keep that in mind for your route/direction planning.

If you have cruising guides, you have discovered that there isn't alot along much of the Texas Gulf Coast. A darn shame. The southern part of that route is near our home - we moved here because of the great climate and water access. This area doesn't get a lot of cruisers because... well, there isn't a lot between Houston and the Rockport area, and then again from south of Corpus Christi to the South Padre Island/Port Isabel area.

If I only had 6 days (exclusive of running back and forth to get a trailer), I would pick one area to explore. The Rockport/Port Aransas/Corpus Christi area has the best cruising per mile than anywhere else along the Texas coast. You could easily keep yourself entertained for 6 days and not have to drive 400+ miles to retrieve your truck and trailer. The South Padre Island/Port Isabel has the best weather... again, read the second paragraph above regarding potential winter weather. No guarantees, even looking at 3 day forecasts. Today, it was supposed to be 70º and sunny here... it turned out to be solid overcast, upper 50s, occasional drizzle, and the forecast SE wind remained light, but came out of the NE. We took our daughter and son-in-law dolphin watching and were wearing coats. An hour after we got back (mid-afternoon), the sun came out. Timing.

Much of the Texas Gulf Coast ICW is either in shallow bays or land-cut through ranch land. I would not describe it as "scenic." Not to diss these waters - just trying to be as forthright about it as possible. I particularly enjoy day-tripping in our local waters, but have no desire to run the coast again. If you have any consideration of running in the Gulf for that stretch, I will strongly try to dissuade that with a C-Dory this time of year... if the weather turns snotty, there are few places to get back in, and they are far apart. Thus, the reason we don't see many cruisers this far south. That said, you could have 6 of the most beautiful weather days with clear blue sky. In the words of the philosopher Dirty Harry, "Do you feel lucky?" :wink:

Since we don't know each other, my wife and I have cruised boats on both coasts (well, all three with the Gulf), and run a C-Dory from coast to coast to coast. We aren't ones to shy away from a good cruise, if the benefit is worth it. When we first got our C-Dory, we left this area to cruise in the Florida Keys and southern Florida for the winter months... because there are so many great places to go... see... anchor.

I truly hope that you understand I am not being negative, simply trying to be realistic. I love Texas. We moved here from the frozen northland, and have some wonderful water at the very southern tip of the state. We have owned a place here for going on 20 years, so I've had the opportunity to see the waters here during every season. Texas is a big state; distances between populated areas (and civilization like marinas, food, and fuel) can be lengthy.

Good luck with the planning. Drop me a note if you want to discuss any of this.

Best wishes,
Jim
 
Thanks Jim!
I live in DFW area, spent a couple weeks every summer down Port A, Rockport area.
I may just do a week of local cruising in and around Port A and Corpus, Rockport. I've been doing the Loop in sections for a few years now, I'll eventually get the Texas coast to New Orleans done, but maybe not this winter!
 
OK, EasyVictor, I looked at your photo album; saw a sub-album about doing the Loop with an Albin 25. See that you have taken your Venture to Lake Powell, Lake Travis, and OK lakes. That gives me somewhat more perspective.

Tell me about your "6 days." Is that driving from Dallas, launching, running the coast, finding a way back to your truck/trailer, retrieving the boat, then hauling butt back to Dallas? 'Cause if that is the case, I would definitely not recommend that.

If the 6 days is only the time you will spend on the coast, it is doable, without a lot of "playtime." We all cruise differently, and our preference (when we had the C-Dory) was to spend some time seeing the area. The Erie Canal is about the same distance (maybe shorter) as the Texas Gulf ICW - we spent 6 weeks cruising the canal. And some people do it in 4 to 6 days. Different strokes.

My wife has family in the Dallas area - when towing, we plan that as a two day drive. The trek from here to Houston is pretty much an all-day drive (on land), depending on traffic. I see you are from Dallas, so you know traffic. I consider driving through Dallas an occasional necessity. Houston traffic makes Dallas look like a fun Sunday drive. :disgust

Traffic along the GICW will be barges and small flat fishing boats in some areas. Air boats in some areas. If you like to do marinas, you will want to carefully plan. If you like to anchor out, you want to be sure that you will be in places that are off the GICW (the barges run all night); the Laguna Madre (our bay) is long, a couple miles wide... and most of it is 2 feet +/- deep.

Between South Padre and Corpus, there is one place to buy fuel (Port Mansfield - but call ahead to make sure it is open). If I recall correctly, it is 140 nautical miles from our dock to Port Aransas. Port Aransas is an "old Texas" beach town; decent city marina. There won't be a lot of boat activity there, other than daily fishermen, but plenty of winter Texans. Rockport has a couple marinas, restaurants, art galleries, a good maritime museum. Corpus Christ has a beautiful water front, with a city operated marina there. To get around town (population 250,000), you will need a vehicle. South of Corpus, you will go through the King Ranch area (no going ashore in that area), the land cut, and come to Port Mansfield (the one fuel stop in that stretch). There are a couple bar/restaurants there, a marina that has never had a slip available when we've been through there. 35 nautical miles south is the South Padre Island/Port Isabel area. SPI is a destination area: high rise hotels and condos, more bars and restaurants than you could visit in 6 days; a beautiful beach (on the Gulf side of the island) that will be mostly unoccupied in January. One marina, not inexpensive. A couple places that may have a slip (try Jim's Pier). Port Isabel has a very small marina on the GICW that may have an overnight slip - they are mainly a boatyard, slips are long term.

It has been years since we've been on the water in the Houston/Galveston area - and some hurricanes have changed things, so I will leave descriptions of that area to someone with more current local knowledge.

January weather can be iffy along the coast.

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On edit, I was writing that when you responded - hope it was helpful. If you have any time besides January, it may be a more pleasant trip.
 
Jim,
6 days on the water, not counting road days. I'll probably launch in Port A and cruise locally, stay in the marina in Port A. I've got a bunch of vacation that I have to burn in January and February, might as well get some time on the Texas Riviera!
 
As always great local advice from Jim. I did all of the Texas coast in the 1950's in a 13 and 15 foot runabouts/beach camping in the summer (with its own problems) I have done some of the N.Texas Gulf Coast in January recently in a delivery in a trawler with enclosed wheel house. It was miserable because we did not have adequate heat. (had to run generator to power electric heaters) If you don't have some form of diesel heater, I would put that high on my list...Some days can be really nice--but some really cold--all along the Gulf Coast the further North you go--including the run from Galveston to New Orleans. Also this part is mostly commercial--and one of the only reliable fuel stops will be Morgan City LA--when You get around to this section.

Have a great run.
 
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