Excerpts from Sailing the Florida Keys by John M. Grimsrud
Jim and Mary Flood;
Jim and Mary
Flood were the owners of a twin-engine sport fishing boat named Mistress… Jim’s reason for owning the Mistress was to
have headquarters for a dockside party…With a glib Irish wit and party
mentality, Jim poured all visitors his potent high-octane and nearly lethal
concoction that Jim jokingly called “cherry bounce.” It felt like 200 proof!
Jim had
worked for Household Finance in Chicago
and later Collagen Water Company where he made enough dough…Jim owned five
different planes that included a DC-3 and a Piper Aztec before he came to the
sunny southland to lay back. Jim drove the biggest Lincoln Continental
available and owned the biggest house on the block…in the high-rent district.
Jim joined the sailing community when he bought a classic Crocker designed
40-foot sailboat named Puffin with a dinghy aptly named Huffin.
Jim Flood
aboard Puffin in, Melbourne
Harbor.
Puffin
Jim and Mary Flood … anchored…south of Melbourne with their
Puffin…his spiffy yacht that now looked like a show room specimen with its
meticulous paint and varnish work. We had a fabulous time together catching
fish for our dinner. Jim had a knack for landing trout, and Jane had the talent
to cook.
When Jim and
Mary got ready to leave, I gave a demonstration of how to sail up their anchor
without using the engine…I pointed Jim’s pristine yacht in the proper
direction, sheeted in the sails for optimum speed and performance, handed the
helm over to Jim, and I got into my dinghy giving Jim and Mary a thumbs-up when
they briskly sprinted off on a beam reach. We were later told this was the very
best sail they ever had.
Jim, a scientific wine maker: Jim’s exact and precise procedures
for making wine were without dispute the only acceptable way to make wine. Jim
and Mary came to our boat for dinner, and Mary went to great lengths to
compliment Jane on her exquisite wine…would not quit her praise… Jane is a fine
wine maker…what made this incident hilarious was that the wine was made using
Welch’s concentrated grape juice… we had heard Jim go extremes to profess his
scornful disdain for wine made from concentrated grape juice. We knew that Jim
knew this was concentrate wine, and we could sense him smoldering. Mary either knew
this was wine from concentrate and was giving her husband the business or if
she did not know, then Jim knew we were just getting a chance to see him
squirm.
Another Jim
Flood wine story: Jim told Jane that we needed to take advantage of the
prolific fox grapes to be harvested in the area. We talked to our friend Harold
and asked if he knew of any fox grapes. next we were off on another all-day
excursion into the county down the back roads that just happened to yield lots
of fox grapes and a number of taverns where Harold was well known. Jane
followed Jim’s exact winemaking instructions with the fox grapes and sugar, but
in the end we wound up with the driest mouth puckering wine ever produced
aboard Dursmirg or for that matter
the driest red wine we have ever sampled. When Jane gave Jim a glass of the
finished wine to sample, Jim’s comment to Jane was: “It's always considered a
good idea to wash the feet before stomping, and in good society it is
considered that the shoes as well as the socks should be removed. If the socks
have been worn for more than two weeks, they have a tendency to add certain
piquancy to the finished product, though after the first bottle or so the
unique flavors tend to disappear.”
End of
excerpts.
We met Jim
and Mary Flood on our yearly excursions to south Florida aboard our live-aboard
sailboat Dursmirg. We made the Indian
River area and Melbourne a regular anchoring stopover. The boating community
included the Floods plus many others who became our life-long
friends. Mary passed away a few years ago, but Jim is still ticking and keeps the jokes flowing.
These
interesting people and many fascinating places are part of our Travels
of Dursmirg sailing series. The Indian River is included in Sailing the Florida Keys, Volume 3.
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