May 12, 2006 Friday
night Leverick Bay ,
Virgin Gorda, BVI
18.30.032N
64.23.331W
Bill handled the trip extremely well; even stayed awake for
most of the night. Judy fed the fish a
few times but never took any seasickness meds.
Gonna lose weight one way or another.
Amazing how unappetizing food can be when experiencing all this motion.
May 13, 2006 Saturday
morning Simpson Bay ,
Sint Maarten
18.02.022N
63.05.957W
We anchored in the Dutch side of St.
Martin rather than the French side. Put up the “Q” flag and took a nap and
decided to move on. No reason to stay
here when we still have so far to go.
Weather extremely hot and continued rainstorms.
Saturday night, Anse du Grand Columbier, St. Barths (St. Barthelemy)
17.55.504N
62.52.162W
Arrived 4:00 p.m. in gorgeous weather. Total distance traveled since arriving on
boat evening of May 1st is 161.42NM.
We picked up the last mooring ball in the tight space of the little
harbor, right next to a boat that was festooned with balloons and dressed with
flags of all sorts all over the boat. There
were also at least 6 dinghies tied to the stern.
Soon became apparent that a French couple was getting
married on the boat – very short white wedding dress, veil and all. Bill noted that one girl was breast-feeding
a tiny infant while drinking several glasses of champagne. Guess the French start drinking wines really
early in their lifetimes. Heard many
corks popping over there during the evening.
Good way to have a fun wedding.
Sounded like a good time was had by all.
May 14, 2006 Sunday
night Ballast Bay ,
St. Kitts (St. Christopher)
17.14.391N
62.39.549W Distance
traveled today 49.5NM
We left St. Barths at 6:00 a.m. Neither of us wanted to leave. Bill said he could stay right there for
weeks. Beautiful beach, good snorkeling,
hills to climb and explore, an abandoned old Rockerfeller home on top of one
hill, and just a dinghy ride around the point to Gustavia Harbor, which is one
of our favorite places on earth. But
since we have a schedule to keep, we got on our way.
As we sailed past Statia, Judy mentioned to Bill that there
had been a total absence of any visible marine life this entire trip. At that exact moment, 6 dolphins visited our
boat; but they didn’t hang around to play like dolphin sometimes do. Also saw literally hundreds of flying
fish. We took a photo of the dormant
volcano on Statia that we climbed 20 years ago when we visited the island on a
Windjammer cruise. We were both in
better physical condition back then. No
way in hell that either of us would consider climbing that mountain today.
We arrived at Ballast
Bay , St. Kitts, and
anchored for the night. Bill would like
to buy more fuel before we get into an area where it won’t be readily
available. But the fuel dock was closed
Sunday so we decided to stay the night and try to get fuel in the morning.
We did accomplish one thing today that made us both
happy. We put the dinghy up onto the
stern of the boat, where it can ride under the mizzen boom instead of having it
swinging on the davits. The dinghy is
normally carried on davits off the stern of the boat. In coastal sailing, we can also just tow the
dinghy. But on open water it is
customary to put the dinghy upside down on the bow; because it could be swamped
by a following wave if mounted on the davits.
Judy absolutely hates having the dinghy on the bow because it obstructs
the view too much. Bill thought that the
dinghy would not fit on the stern under the mizzen boom, but just to please
Judy and prove that it wouldn’t work; he tried it anyway. And to his surprise, it works just fine. So we have found a new home for the dinghy
when underway on long distance passages.
May 15, 2006
Monday Pinney’s Beach, Nevis
17.08.991N
62.37.920W
We left Ballast Bay at 7:00 a.m., hoping to be the first boat at the
fuel dock at Fort Zante Marina in Basseterre
when they opened at 8:00. We
weren’t. There were 2 small fishing
boats there ahead of us. It was a tight
space, but we managed to “parallel park” the boat on the fuel dock ahead of the
other boats. Then we were able to just
walk the boat back using the dock lines when it was our turn for fuel.
Judy cleared customs while Bill handled fueling the
boat. Bill found an ATM machine so that
we could get EC to pay for the fuel.
Judy also make a quick trip to the nearby grocery store for bread and
yogurt. Would have bought more
snack-type items but only had $20EC and that doesn’t go very far.
We actually sailed for fun for the first time this
trip. Decided there wasn’t sufficient
time to get to Montserrat today (took too long doing the fuel thing), so we
decided to stop in Nevis for the night. Found an intermittent WiFi connection where
we anchored so will try to get this posted.
We are anchored directly in front of Pinney’s Beach, where Bill and I spent
a very relaxing day sitting under the palm trees about 20 years ago.
We hope to sail to Montserrat
in the morning. We have not been able to
obtain a volcano activity report, so we are just going and hoping that we will
be able to stop there. Neither of us
wants to do another overnight sail all the way to Guadeloupe
if we can avoid it. We do know that we
will have to sail down the eastern side of the island because of all the
volcanic ash that blows to the western side.
Bill spoke with another cruiser this morning at the fuel dock who said
he did not abide by the advice of passing Montserrat
on the eastern side and it took days to clean all the ash off his boat. We still have enough boat yard dust from the
haul-out; we certainly don’t want to add volcanic ash.
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