Remembering a Life of Adventure and Love

Mom inspired us to follow our dreams. She stands at the rail of our sloop, Free Spirit, as we prepare to sail across the Atlantic together in 1976.

Alvina Cardenas, mother, teacher, artist, and adventurer, died in Key West on February 11, 2025, at age 95. She was loved.

Mom was born in Chicago in 1929, as the country entered the Great Depression. She was the child of modest Lithuanian immigrants, immigrants who made this country great. Her father fought with American infantrymen in the trenches on the Western Front during World War 1.

For the first five years of her life, Mom spoke only Lithuanian. Despite initial resistance from her conservative parents, she became the first member of her family to attend college. Her mother believed that women belonged at home.

Alvie, as she would come to be known, often said that her world only really began when she met the love of her life, the rakishly handsome Bob Cardenas Sr., in front of the bronze lions at the Art Institute of Chicago. They married within months and honeymooned in Cuba in 1951. Dad’s family still owned property on the island. According to family lore, Mom and Dad conceived their first child, Bob Jr., on the beach at Varadero. 

After experiencing the warmth of Cuba, they could no longer tolerate the ice and snow of Chicago so they moved to South Florida to begin their lives together and continue building a family. I was born in Ft. Lauderdale in 1955, and our sister, Susan, arrived three years later. Cathy was born in 1964. Mom liked to say that Cathy was the caboose of the family train

Mom tolerated a menagerie in her Florida home, including dogs, cats, birds, snakes, and a troupe of monkeys. The critters kept her busy, but her focus was always on her children. She gave each of her wild, barefoot kids a long leash and somehow kept us reasonably healthy. Mom believed we needed to learn from our mistakes. I learned to never again drink insect poison I found in the work shed. My brother learned not to spill molten lead on his skin when he was making fishing sinkers. Mom was always there for us when we seriously screwed up. She could have found her way to the emergency room with her eyes closed.

Mom’s energy overflowed outside of the household. She became a passionate teacher in several South Florida schools, including one that her children attended (possibly so that she could keep a closer eye on her wayward brood). Mom taught English and Drama. She taught us to use our words, although when we used certain words, our mouths were washed out with soap. I can still taste that bar of Dial soap on the back of my tongue. Discipline was different then. 

There was never any shortage of drama as our family matured. One day, Mom and Dad made an announcement. They said, “We’re going to take all you kids out of school and sail around the world.” Each of us responded with a resounding YES!

They sold their possessions and bought a 43-foot sloop, a fixer-upper they named Free Spirit. Dad learned to navigate with a sextant, and Mom made sure that none of us fell into the ocean. We sailed 4,000 miles across the Atlantic.

For years, Mom talked about that trip and how it brought us closer together. She would get dreamy-eyed and say, “Do you remember those night watches near the Azores? The whales were so close to us that I could hear their tails slapping the water.” If only Mom’s Lithuanian parents could have seen her then…

Our family in Horta, Azore Islands, at the great harbor wall where voyagers like Sir Frances Chichester (top right) memorialized their passages.

As sometimes happens when dreams are larger than budgets, Mom and Dad ran out of money. Once Free Spirit made landfall in Spain, they returned to the United States to work while their children scattered into their individual lives.

Our sister, Cathy, died unexpectedly at age 34. Mom and Dad were empty nesters and relocated, finding peace in the mountains of North Carolina. Mom immersed herself in the arts. She built a small studio and installed a pottery kiln. She painted landscapes and portraits, interacting with the talented North Carolina arts community exhibiting in shows and galleries. She was also a grandparent now. One of her great joys was introducing this new generation of Florida kids to mountain country life. She raised goats and cultivated a garden. Mom became a master at crafting wildflower crowns for the little girls.

Mom and Dad returned to Florida because they missed the ocean. They lived in a condominium in Ft. Pierce where they could watch the Atlantic Ocean from the front windows and the Indian River from the back.

In his 70s, Dad joined a cadre of like-minded souls and sailed across the Pacific Ocean from Panama to Melanesia. Mom said, “I’m flying across the ocean this time.” She joined the boat in Vanuatu, and while in Tanna, our parents hiked to the fiery rim of the active volcano, Mount Yasur.

In their later travels, Mom and Dad sailed through the Mediterranean and Caribbean. They walked along the Great Wall of China. They rounded Cape Horn in a cruise ship. And, they were robbed of their passports in St.Petersburg, Russia—and then detained by the Russian government for a week because they didn’t have passports.

Time passed quickly. Mom and Dad aged gracefully. They spent the remainder of their lives in Key West with their children. Two years ago, Dad died. Our parents had been married for 71 years.

Mom, a widow in her mid-90s, relished the role of matriarch to an eclectic band of three children, eight grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren. She followed our adventures, cheered our successes, and commiserated with our sorrows.

A few days before Mom’s death, our parish priest came to her bedside and performed the sacrament Anointing of the Sick. Mom’s breathing was labored, and her eyes were closed. She was dying.

Later, with her family beside her, someone quietly said, “We are all here, Mom. We’re here to celebrate you.” Mom couldn’t speak, but she mouthed a question—”So where’s the Champagne?” 

Of course, we happened to have a bottle of Chandon on ice. My brother poured a teaspoon of it and lifted it to her lips. Mom smiled her beautiful smile one final time. 

Mom is saying goodbye to her 14-year-old son as I rig my sailboat to “run away from home” and sail from Ft. Lauderdale to Key West.

As always, sailing is not just about the wind and the sea; the places, the flora, fauna, and people encountered along the way are equally important.

Please click “Follow” so you don’t miss a new update, and please consider sharing this post with others who might enjoy connecting here. I welcome your comments and will always respond when I have an Internet connection. I will never share your personal information.

An additional website, www.JeffreyCardenas.com, features hundreds of fine art images—underwater, maritime landscapes, boats, and mid-ocean sailing photography–from exotic locations worldwide.

Instagram: StellaMarisSailing / Facebook: Jeffrey Cardenas

Text, Photography, and Videos © Jeffrey Cardenas 2025

Let this be a time of grace and peace in our lives – Rev. John C. Baker

I’ll Try Anything Twice

The 6,500-foot peak of Tope de Coroa punctuates the island of Santo Antāo, Cape Verde. Photograph: © Jeffrey Cardenas

Remember that feeling of seeing your house from the window of an airplane? It looks so small, and so familiar. I remember that feeling now as a pilot banks over Sāo Vincente on his final approach to Cape Verde. Under the wing, 1,000 below, I can see Flying Fish moored in the harbor of Mindelo. I am returning to make another attempt at bringing Flying Fish home. I’ll try anything twice.

The first attempt to cross the Atlantic in Flying Fish ended in disappointment six weeks ago. My wife Ginny had joined me in the Canary Islands for a pre-Christmas passage to the Caribbean that we expected would take 20 days. The sailing was spectacular, until it wasn’t.

Trouble seemed to happen all at once: a broken mainsail halyard, contaminated fuel, and then a complete DC power blackout that left us hand steering in the blind through a nasty gale. With only a compass and an iPhone for navigation–and despite a collaborative family effort of troubleshooting via satellite phone–the safest decision was to divert 500 miles to the Cape Verde Islands for repairs.

My brother Bob will join me aboard Flying Fish for the upcoming passage to the Caribbean. We have a history of ocean sailing together that dates back nearly a half-century. Bob was with me at the beginning of this voyage aboard Flying Fish four years ago, on the first leg from Key West to Panama. Our father also joined us on that 1,000-mile passage in 2017. We will try to convince Dad to sail with us again once we reach the Caribbean. It won’t take much convincing. At age 95, Dad says he already has his bags packed.

This strength of family is the flood tide pulling Flying Fish toward home. For much of these past four years, I have sailed alone around the world. It was a voyage in pursuit of self-centered freedom–no obligations, no compromise, no schedule. I learned, however, that it is a lonely person who follows that route.

As I get closer to closing this circle, I feel my priorities shifting. Despite my aimless wandering, the love and encouragement I have received from my family has never wavered. While they may have questioned my motivations, my family was never judgemental of the time I spent alone at sea.

In the novel To Have and Have Not, Hemingway’s character Harry Morgan, on his deathbed, struggles to say, “One man alone ain’t got. No man alone now. No matter how a man alone ain’t got no bloody–chance.” The quote resonates with me.

I am looking forward to sailing to this New World with my brother.

The Cardenas family in 1976, preparing for our first transatlantic crossing from Florida to Portugal aboard the Cal 43, Free Spirit. From left to right: Cathy, Susan, Jeffrey, Alvina, Bob Sr., Bob Jr.

Top banner image: Farol do Ilhéu dos Pássaros marks the strait between Sāo Vicente and Santo Antāo. The lighthouse is connected by exterior stairway to the keepers house halfway down the rocky slope. It was built in 1882, and named after King Luís I of Portugal. Photograph: © Jeffrey Cardenas


Flying Fish will resume its passage toward Key West in the next week or so, depending on the weather.

As always, Sailing is not just about the wind and the sea; equally important are the places, the flora, fauna, and people encountered along the way.

Please click “Follow” at the bottom of this page so that you don’t miss a new update,- and please consider sharing this post with others who might enjoy following the voyage of Flying Fish. I welcome your commentsand I will always respond when I have an Internet connection. I will never share your personal information.

You can follow the daily progress of Flying Fish, boat speed (or lack thereof), and current weather as we sail into the Atlantic by clicking this satellite uplink: https://forecast.predictwind.com/tracking/display/Flyingfish. A Bonus: Click the “Legends and Blogs” box on the right side of the tracking page for passage notes while we are sailing offshore. 

To see where Flying Fish has sailed since leaving Key West in 2017, click here: https://cruisersat.net/track/Flying%20Fish.

Instagram: FlyingFishSail
Facebook: Jeffrey Cardenas

Text and Photography © Jeffrey Cardenas 2021

Let this be a time of grace and peace in our lives   – Fr. John Baker