Steve and I got up early made breakfast and headed for Bimini until a front moves out so we can have a protected anchorage. We made it past the rough breakwaters only to find out a small front had moved in on us. I felt the boat begin to sway side to side and saw those waves start to grow high and choppy. Well there goes that smooth ride, time for life jackets and three points of contact at all times. My two feet and both hands. Steve handled the boat well as we rolled back and forth like a fishing bobber in a blender. We had to cut the waves and crab walk toward our destination. Really slow going but the mistress of the sea gives you no other option if you are to safely reach your port.This sailing is getting easier to accept when conditions get rough! Talk about relief when we reached Bimini Harbor We both cheered and exhaled. We anchored out close to some other boats and a wonderful gentleman and missionary named David came out in his dinghy told us where to safely anchor and how to put out a Bahamian anchorage. He was really nice and helped a lot. He advised us that a mooring line was close to the front and the young people on the boat were leaving in AM so we talked to them and they stated that we could have the anchorage when they left. This place to anchor will protect us when the front moves through this weekend. Supposed to be cold and windy. Cold as in the low 70s, I love the tropics. We finally got settled anchored well and went in to town. This time we went to the phone company to try and find a phone. We walked into the electric company and asked for the phone company and they directed us around the corner. The ladies at the phone company were super nice and gave us all the details on acquiring a phone in the islands. We decided to just use my phone if we needed it. The missionary David told us to eat conch fritters at CJ’s on the hill by the ocean. So we walked all over the island again this time we went on the upper road, one road is on the hill side and one on the lower end. :-)) I had to walk to the end of the beach to the graveyard and try to find that swimming pool again. After i walked on the road ( well it looks like a road where big machinery tracks used to run, sorta like tracks mashed into the rock above the beach by bulldozers etc.) then into the cemetery and back to the overgrown weeds to look for the pool. We walked over pine needles and avoided the little crabs in the overgrowth as we walked. Steve noticed a staircase really hidden and I pushed my way through the limbs and found what i was looking for, the swimming pool to the old Tuna Marlin Resort built in late fifties. It had Barracuda tiled into the walls with flying fish and an octopus too! What a place this must have been then. I love it here. I took all kinds of pictures but it takes an hour to load one so i will wait for better wifi before trying to load them. After that we walked back down the beach looking for shells checking out an old wreck and saw a newer boat up on the rocks at the beach. It looks like it was picked up by the waves and slammed onto the rocks. For lunch Steve and I ate at CJ’s. Let me describe this too you. A small building with a fly bait bag on the corner to cut down on flies, a screen door into a small room with a drink cooler on the left hand side as you walk in, a small counter in front of you with 3 bar stools turn right to a small counter and two ladies cooking. The size of a small bedroom. We ordered the conch fritters and an order of fries to eat. They were delicious and Steve ordered more. The ladies were really nice and the i just loved the place they had there. They had a couple of benches outside above the beach and a screen window they yelled at you through to tell you your order was ready. YEP i could live here. We walked back through town over the dirt roads past the end of the world bar, the heavenly bakery and the monuments to Bahamian residents and back to the boat for a good nights rest.