Friday, June 11, 2010

"DAY TRIPPER"


After a month in St. Lucia, we enjoyed a comfortable day sail to the north end of the Windward Islands. Ah, Martinique – the island of baguettes, cheese, pate and wine.
The closest Customs and Immigration office was in Marin at the southeast corner of the island.  
The French islands definitely win the award for “Best Check in/out Procedures”. You sit at a computer, type in your boat and passport details and hit print. It takes five minutes max for the whole process – less if they have a qwerty keyboard . No writer’s cramp from handwritten forms in quadruplicate. No money changing hands. Simple and straightforward. Merci, merci.

Marin is a huge yachting centre with every boat service conveniently located along the waterfront. The town beyond the harbourside turned up some interesting moments. I’ve always liked the slogan, “If you object to my driving, stay off the sidewalk.”.
No wonder the preference here for small cars.

And this apartment building showed off some architectural license with ‘port holes’ in the ‘sails’.
But very nautical and spiffy, don’t you think?

This factory door looked like an expensive watercolour painting.
Quite beautiful.

We couldn’t find a sports bar, so using wifi at the Mango Bay Restaurant, we watched the Aussies win a nail biter over Pakistan in the Twenty20 cricket semi-finals.
Not sure if our lunch companion was interested in the game or the lop-sided pizza.

For the cricket final a few days later, we used the wifi at the Quai 13 Restaurant.
Despite the restaurant’s location in the middle of a boatyard, we had one of the best meals ashore we’ve had on this cruise – entrecote with frites for me and Bambi tenderloin for the captain. Yes, Bambi. Email Geoff.
England beat Australia, so Geoff needed something sweet to compensate.
He has declared this the best chocolate dessert – ever. The picture doesn’t do it justice, of course, but I was allowed one bite, so I can vouch for the quality.

Our time on Martinique was short, but we didn’t want to miss Grande Anse D’Arlet, just around the southwest tip of the island. What a sweet little seaside town.
The pedestrian-only promenade has restaurants and boutiques on one side and beach access on the other.

And we walked one bay south to Petite Anse D’Arlet.
A sleepy but colourful village.

Our last official ‘chore’ in Martinique was to load up on smelly cheeses to see us through the trek back to Grenada. Yes – we were heading home.

The day trip back to Rodney Bay, St. Lucia was quite a rambunctious motor-sail that tested our stowing techniques once again. One breakage – nothing precious – it’s all good.

We had managed to make contact with Ken and Diane in St. Lucia, cruisers from Canada with an awesome back story of dismasting, prop fouling, having to go overboard during the night in rough seas, and more. You know – the stuff cruising dreams are made of.

They met us in Rodney Bay to help us sail ‘Beach House’ down to Vieux Fort, Ken’s hometown.
What a great day. Eight hours of non-stop conversation on the boat with some lunch and drinks, then up to their home for a barbeque and HOT showers. We didn’t get back to the boat till after midnight. The real midnight. 12ayem. Thank you both for your company and your hospitality. See you next year – we know where you live.

Next stop was Bequia after another boisterous motor-sail. Look at these pics I took from the dinghy.  ; )


Mighty fine looking vessel. The 'Beach House' is a bit of a whale, but she performs pretty well in decent wind.

In Bequia, Doug and Wendy from ‘Nahanni River’ came to visit.
And meet Bill and Sue from ‘Corcovado’.
They know our good buddies Ray and Genna from ‘Nighthawk’. Six degrees of cruising - everybody knows somebody you’ve met along the way.

Next stop on the homeward cruise was Carriacou where we checked in at Hillsborough, then headed across the bay to Sandy Island to anchor for the night. The pictures say it all.

Sandy Island is nothing but the beach and a bit of scrub. Any land you see in the pictures is in the distance. Very pretty place.

Next day we headed four miles round the corner to Tyrrel Bay, one of our favourite spots – we seem to have quite a few favourites, don’t we?

These ferries at the main dock cracked us up.
Just what would one ferry say to the other? Sounds like a riddle and if you have an answer, you know how to reach us.

On a walk for a bit of shopping, we found someone’s office set up.

Will the real Caribbean please stand up?

And Tyrrel Bay, Carriacou, is home to Hallelujah, the floating bar.
That’s our friend Charles on the left, an American. Tini, sitting in front of Charles, is Dutch.
And Katherine on the right is Irish. We’re a regular mini UN down here with cold drinks as the language that everyone understands.

Denise, the owner of Hallelujah, was in London visiting family, leaving Devante in charge.
Devante’s friends here are the Swiss Family Robinson – at least that’s how we referred to them. They home-school the kids in French in the morning and Italian in the afternoon. Their boat was anchored right beside ‘Beach House, and rest assured, these kids got plenty of down time – a pre-lunch swim and an after-school swim every day. They all swim like fish and laugh together like wonderful maniacs.

And last weekend we sailed the last 30 miles to get home to Grenada.

In the anchorage outside St. George’s, this spaceship was our neighbour.
Its name is simply ‘A’.
Here are some stats we found online. The yacht is Russian-owned, German-built, cost $300 million and is 120 metres long. There’s a helipad on the foredeck and a pool on the aft deck. If you ever needed evidence that money doesn’t guarantee taste? Case closed.

We’ve been back in Clarke’s Court Bay since Sunday. It’s still early in the season so it’s fairly quiet here. That will change over the next month or two. We enjoyed a double birthday celebration on Tuesday evening.
Bob is the owner of Clarke's Court Bay Marina and the birthday boy. On the right is Jenny, the manager and number one barkeep – she’s the birthday girl. That’s Monica in the middle, Jenny’s mom. Great party.


So here we are at home. Home - this one simple word gets around. ‘Beach House’ is home, Grenada is home, and I’m getting ready to head HOME for a few months. To Canada, to family, to friends. My favourite definition for ‘home’ from my trusty Funk and Wagnall’s?
“A place dear because of personal relationships or feelings of comfort and security.”

That would apply to all of our homes.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

"BOTH SIDES NOW"



Vieux (pronounced ‘View’) Fort, at the southern tip of St. Lucia, is a bustling commercial port and an active fishing centre. Container ships and local fishing boats outnumber the cruisers at anchor. We stopped in Vieux Fort to check in with Customs and Immigration, expecting to stay a day or two, but the authentic flavour of the town grew on us. We stayed a week and it wasn’t long enough.

The main north-south street is colourful and lined with shops.
Entrepreneurs set up their wares in front of the busiest stores.
We saw several cobblers working curbside.
The locals must walk as much as we do.

We ventured up into the hillside neighbourhoods several times.
On one return walk we had to stop for a drink.
No. I mean we really had to. Pat, the elderly local owner of the bar, thought I must be a fine Irish lass since I was named after him. He poured me a stiff rum drink to toast our mutual names and Geoff had a Piton, the St. Lucian beer.

At the other end of St. Lucia, a mere 35 miles away, the scenery and ambiance in Rodney Bay is much more than just an island apart from Vieux Fort – from third world to tourist town.
Rodney Bay is over a mile wide.
The Pigeon Island anchorage with its forest of masts is at the north end of the bay.
We anchored off Reduit Beach at the south end of Rodney Bay.

Two major events, the St. Lucia Jazz Festival and the ICC World Twenty20 Cricket championship, made for a full house on both sides of the anchorage.

The Rodney Bay Marina in the lagoon had hundreds of boats on the docks and it wasn’t close to being full. Their web site gives you a better idea of the marina's size.
There’s a free dinghy dock and the grounds are beautifully kept. Among the mature trees and the new plantings, we tiptoed past this guy one day.
We’re not sure if he was left over from the night before or if he just knew how to relax – anywhere, anytime. No high blood pressure allowed.

Rodney Bay Village is the tourist mecca of St. Lucia. We walked around to Reduit Beach Road that runs behind the hotel complexes lining the beach.
Tourists seem to need a wide range of restaurants, bars, and boutiques, plus tours and rental cars.


Occasionally we walk-the-walk even if we don’t partake.

Ever seen such a pretty Scotiabank?
 As colourful as EC dollars.

 And if the residential properties are any measure, there’s a lot of money at this north end of St. Lucia. Check this one out. Majestic from the water -

- and just as impressive from streetside.

A little different from our beach house although we do have a bigger backyard.

Between gatherings with some of our Grenada cruising buddies and cricket matches, three weeks slipped away. One of the cricket games Geoff attended was Pakistan vs Australia. Leading up to the national anthems, every player was escorted onto the field by a young local boy.
Wonderful to see an effort made to get kids excited about the game.

Geoff watched the game from ‘the hill’.

Several well-lubricated locals wanted to take our Australian flag walkabout.

Geoff wasn’t sure they’d find their way back to him, so they settled for a photograph.

Memories of hockey, anyone?

Okay. They don’t call it a Zamboni, but this machine rolls out the pitch, smoothing it for the second half of the game.

On off cricket days, we took the bus into Castries, the capital of St. Lucia. The population of the island is about 160,000 and a third of the people live in and around the capital. The city has burned down twice, most recently in 1949. The rebuilding has resulted in an odd blend of architecture - modern and old Creole-style.
The tour operators and taxi drivers are a bit intense here in Castries, the most insistent we’ve run into, but as we wandered further into the city we found new shoes for the captain and a craft store with beads for me. The simple pleasures. It’s all good.

Sunsets are a glorious way to end the day and a fitting way to end this blog entry since St. Lucian sunsets are, quite simply, the best.
These two sunset pictures were taken by Len on S/V Scallywag in Vieux Fort.
We also credit Len with our header picture. Just beautiful. Thank you Len.