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We spent a cozy rainy weekend at the marina cooking a romantic Valentine’s dinner on our sailboat. Duck, octopus, escargot, wine and candlelight — this is the sailboat lifestyle we dreamed about. There’s something special about rain on deck and warm lights in the galley. Instead of going out for Valentine’s Day, we stayed aboard and made honey balsamic glazed duck, sautéed octopus and escargot with Brussels sprouts, and baked brie with raspberry pecan topping. You'll love the knives and air fryer that I use, and you can get them on Amazon. View the details and cost with my affiliate links below: KNIVES: https://amzn.to/4c00kdR AIR FRYER: https://amzn.to/4kV43f5 This is what cozy sailboat living looks like — even on a lake. If you dream about liveaboard life, marina living, cooking on a boat, or creating a romantic boat lifestyle without living on the ocean, you’re in the right place. Enjoy! - Rodney & Cyndi Valentines day on a boat, duck recipe on a sailboat, honey balsamic duck, escargot and octopus recipe, baked brie with raspberry pecan, romantic sailboat dinner, marina living vlog, lake sailboat lifestyle, sailing couple life. ⚓ Subscribe for weekly sailing lifestyle videos 🍷 Would you stay in for Valentine’s Day on a sailboat? Cheers! - Rodney & Cyndi #sailboatlife #liveaboardlife #boatcooking #sailingvlog #cozylifestyle 🎵 Copyrighted music licensed from Lickd. Join here for an exclusive free trial: https://referrals.lickd.co/l/RODNEYERSK70/ Sailing Past by George Georgia, https://t.lickd.co/l/rMRX9MOp79j Dinner For Two by David Tobin, Jeff Meegan, https://t.lickd.co/l/5aebpGjEJ3G Bourbon Street Stomp by Lincoln Grounds, Thomm Jutz, https://t.lickd.co/l/xvp9rQkQLwg Crush It by Jason Pedder, Douglas Brown, https://t.lickd.co/l/10r1QvpXrqv Heat Me Up (Instrumental) by Simon Anderson, Duncan Pittock, https://t.lickd.co/l/dqwDb0ad9kN
The yellow stingray (Urobatis jamaicensis) is a species of stingray in the family Urotrygonidae, found in the tropical western Atlantic Ocean from North Carolina to Trinidad. This bottom-dwelling species inhabits sandy, muddy, or seagrass bottoms in shallow inshore waters, commonly near coral reefs. Reaching no more than 36 cm (14 in) across, the yellow stingray has a round pectoral fin disc and a short tail with a well-developed caudal fin. It has a highly variable but distinctive dorsal color pattern consisting of either light-on-dark or dark-on-light reticulations forming spots and blotches, and can rapidly change the tonality of this coloration to improve its camouflage. Relatively sedentary during the day, the yellow stingray feeds on small invertebrates and bony fishes. When hunting it may undulate its disc to uncover buried prey, or lift the front of its disc to form a "cave" attractive to shelter-seeking organisms. This species is aplacental viviparous, meaning that the developing embryos are sustained initially by yolk and later by histotroph ("uterine milk"). Females bear two litters of up to seven young per year in seagrass, following a gestation period of 5–6 months. Though innocuous towards humans, the yellow stingray can inflict a painful injury with its venomous tail spine. This species is taken as bycatch by commercial fisheries and collected for the aquarium trade; it may also be negatively affected by habitat degradation. Nevertheless, it remains common and widespread, which has led the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to list it under Least Concern.