Today marks my third week on the water, living aboard the boat and sloooooooly making my way south, down the Intra-Coastal Waterway. I spend most of my day staring intently at the GPS Plotter, which is a must-have for making a trip through this very intracate, narrow, winding waterway.
Some nights are spent on the hook (anchored out) in a small bay or creek, while others are spent tied to the dock of one of the many marinas along the waterway. This was the case Monday evening, when I stopped for the night at the Myrtle Beach Yacht Club.
The yacht club has an upstairs restaurant with an outside deck. On this particular afternoon/evening the YC had a planned pig-pick, which was a bit overpriced at $15 per person - not including drinks.
The lady that managed the restaurant said they had a blues duo scheduled to perform that night, the lead guy played the harmonica and sang, while the other guy played the guitar. The guitar player was fantastic, one of the best I've ever seen or heard. The lead guy was OK, had a decent voice, but adlibbed way too between songs. His dead time was horendous, probably close to 3 to 4 minutes.
The gal that ran the place asked if I would play the breaks, which I agreed to do. After the duo did an hour an 20 minutes, they introduced me and I fired up the PSR-3000 and performed a song the manager requested - "All My Ex's Live In Texas." She loved it, and so did the crowd. From there I went into my usual routine, the audience, which at the onset was only about 10 people on the deck, was mixed in age from 30 to 70, and within 10 minutes after I started, the people watching football games inside came out to the deck as well.
The blues duo took a longer break than I anticipated, close to 40 minutes. By that time I had about 25 people on the deck, some were dancing, most were singing along with me, and when I performed Mustang Sally everyone was yelling "Ride Sally - Ride."
When the blues duo came back out, they asked me to do one more song, I did "Proud Mary," thanked everyone, introduced the blues duo and said I was headed inside to get warm. It was down in the low 50s, which to me is the dead of winter. Within 10 minutes of the blues guys firing up again, everyone on the deck left - bad sign for the blues guys.
The lady manager asked if I could stick around till Wednesday and play for them for the ensuing three days. Not a prayer - I'm headed for Marathon Key, Florida and Myrtle Beach gets real cold in the winter. There are lots of places to play in Myrtle Beach, nite clubs, bars, restaurants, etc..., but this is one of those resort areas where they pay-scale is right at the bottom of the heap. I discovered that the blues duo got $50 for their two-and-a-half hour performance. The guitar player drove 30 miles to the job so I doubt that he broke even on his expenses.
Tonight I'm a marina in Georgetown, SC, might end up here for a few days, depending upon the storm track, and with luck, I'll be in Florida by early next week. Everything depends upon the weather. The restaurant associated with the Marina has weekend entertainment, and I'm sure I could play some weeknights for tips and dinner, but the trek from the boat to the restaurant is nearly 1/8-mile over a boardwalk and up a steep ramp from the boat docks. Think I'll forgo this one.
Just another fun day in Paradise,
Gary