The Sandbar Is the Whole Point
The cruise starts with a run through the Intracoastal Waterway, past the kind of waterfront property that makes people pull out their phones. But the real destination is the sandbar near Peanut Island, where the boat anchors in shallow, clear water and the group gets out. Floating mats come standard, so people can drift, swim, or just sit in the water with a drink in hand. It's the difference between watching the scenery and being part of it.
Bring Your Own Everything, Captain Handles the Rest
Every charter is BYOB. Guests bring their own drinks and snacks, and the boat comes stocked with a cooler, ice, cups, and shot glasses so nobody has to plan around logistics. A Bluetooth sound system means the group controls the soundtrack for the entire trip, whether that's a chill afternoon playlist or something louder for a bachelorette party. One of the licensed captains runs the boat the entire time, so there's no assigned designated driver and no one stuck managing navigation instead of enjoying the trip.
Built for Groups That Actually Want to Celebrate Together
Because the charter is private, the group has the entire boat, not shared seats with strangers. That makes it a natural fit for bachelorette parties, birthdays, bachelor parties, anniversaries, family reunions, and corporate outings where the point is spending real time together, not just checking off an activity. There's no venue to navigate, no line to wait in, and no schedule beyond getting to the dock 15 minutes early. Groups leave talking about the sandbar, the playlist, and how different it felt from a typical night out, which is usually enough to get people asking when they can book the next one.
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