Leewards
and ABCs 2014
- 2015
|
December 22, 2015 Passage from Bonaire to Puerto Rico
Well,
we made it to the other side. After a week in Bonaire
discovering the underwater realm (images, not even IMAX,
can do it justice), we set course for the east side of
Puerto Rico, hoping to make anything east of the Mona
Passage and hoping that the strong current and winds would
not push us to the Dominican Republic. Da sailor cat
waiting for us in Florida would not be pleased, as landing
in the DR would make it difficult for her to rejoin the
crew after the holidays as planned. As expected, the first 24 hours were hell on earth. Although we had east southeast winds, we still needed to stay hard on the wind to make easting. The waves were large and hitting Trance's hull like Mac trucks, all too familiar to us. We turned the doraids aft before setting off, but the water still made its way in (mental note to tape them shut next time). Salt spray was everywhere. Going down below required so much energy just to hang on that we both collapsed in the cockpit for 15 minutes every time we came up. All we were able to write in the log book is "nightmare." Fun times. At least we were making good speed. Just as Chris Parker forecast, once we got further north the wind and waves settled but we still made easy speeds of 6-8 knots with a staysail and reefed main the entire three days (65 hours, actually). Some sort of anomaly with the currents suddenly made easting quite easy. We even had to slow ourselves down by letting the main out to avoid making landfall in the dark. So, the second half of the sail would actually have been pretty awesome but for "the accident." On the second morning, Da Captain decided to make coffee. Conditions had settled a bit, but were still sporty. Just as he picked up the kettle to pour the hot water into the French press, a rogue wave hit Trance's hull and down went Da Captain, as well as the kettle of steaming water. Da Admiral awoke to a huge crash and opened her eyes to see Da Captain scrambling up and steam everywhere. Steam? Why is there steam everywhere...? "I'm okay, I'm okay," Da Captain proclaimed. "It doesn't hurt that bad." As Da Admiral inquired into what happened, how long it had been since the water boiled, the seriousness of the situation hit her and into survival mode they both went. Cold water from the fridge went over Da Captain's left side. Medicine at sea book was consulted, aloe was applied, burns were bandaged. Da Admiral suggests turning around, Da Captain decides to wait and see due to the absence of debilitating amounts of pain... When the blisters finally started forming, we were over the halfway point and thankful that our baby was racing as fast as she could to bring her Captain to safety. Another 140+ mile day. It was too bad we had to slow her down to await first light for our landfall in Salinas, Puerto Rico. Salinas
is not an official U.S. port of entry. But who is looking
for an official port of entry in a medical emergency? As
soon as we tied up, we called customs. The nice officer on
the other end did what he could, but still had to put us
on hold for what seemed like an eternity to consult with
supervisors since we were not at an official port of
entry. We were anxious and irritated because, as
participants of various voluntary CBP programs,
last time we made landfall in Puerto Rico (Culebra), all
we had to do was call. Not this time. Despite the medical
emergency, we had to wait an hour for customs to inspect
us in Salinas. We are very grateful that the officers were
willing to drive there, that they arrived so quickly and
that they showed so much genuine concern for Da Captain,
but still found the ordeal quite stressful based on our
last clearance experience. At the ER in Salinas, the
nurses scraped off the blisters and old skin while Da
Captain bit his lip in pain. This process was more painful
than the actual burn. They applied silver sulfadiazine
cream, gave him antibiotics via IV drip, prescribed
antibiotics for 7 days, and set him off with instructions
on the daily scraping and cleaning ritual and to follow up
with his regular doctor in 3 days. Second degree burns
over 80% of his left arm below the elbow, his upper arm
and on his torso and shoulder is serious business. Back at
the boat, we changed our flight home for the holidays to
leave earlier, made doctor's appointments, and accepted
that our tour of Puerto Rico would have to wait until the
new year. We
look forward to spending time with family and friends
while Da Captain heals, and will report in the new year
once we start heading back down island. (We'll send an
e-mail with a link to the next page.) Let
us know who wins the poll on how many days go by
before Da Captain drinks coffee again (today makes it
a week). In the meantime, we wish all
of you a healthy and happy holiday season!
December 9, 2015 Return to Curacao The
last two weeks have been quite a whirlwind. After
what seemed an eternity, hurricane season ended and we
found ourselves on a flight to Curacao the Friday before
Thanksgiving. We had Trance moved out of the depot
for our arrival, and spent the weekend changing her
anodes, greasing her prop, and beginning recommissioning
work. Her decks were filthy so we spent a good deal of
time washing them. On Monday, she was launched back into
the water, and we spent a week on the docks getting her
ready to cruise again. We
are amazed at how smooth it went and how little was
broken. There was no green to be seen anywhere, until Da
Admiral opened up a Ziploc holding a carpet that likely
had not fully dried after laundering. Not bad. Of course,
our engine would not start and we quickly determined it
was the starter battery. We tracked down a replacement AGM
by chance (we were looking for Napa and stumbled upon a
shop run by a very knowledgeable Dutchie). It turns out
that starter batteries usually have a different state of
charge than the house bank. By keeping our battery switch
on “both” over hurricane season and before, we overcharged
the starter, which likely killed it. Lesson learned. Our
accumulator
tank connected to our water pump (pressurized water) lost
pressure and we had to blow it back up with a bike tire
pump. No pressurized water = no hot water, so Da Admiral
had a slight panic attack until that was sorted. Of
course, everything with electrical connections had traces
of corrosion, so we spent a lot of time inspecting and
carefully removing it from everything. We even spent hours
cleaning the engine, and Da Admiral plans on painting the
flaking parts with high heat paint. Da Captain changed the
impeller after some friends from the marina found theirs
in pieces. Turns out it was unnecessary and getting it out
and the new one back in was quite an ordeal that
necessitated a trip to Napa to buy special plyers. Also,
our steaming light, which we had to replace in Martinique
was out AGAIN. Finally, our head pump was leaking, but
luckily we keep a whole new one as a spare. The poo job is
just too disgusting to mess with a rebuild kit that’s only
$30 cheaper. The
big item, which was thankfully solved very easily, came
when our neighbor, Peter from Leto, noticed that one of
the turnbuckle pins on one of our starboard side stays was
bent. Suspiciously, this was the same side as the spreader
that went crooked during our surfing adventure off the
coast of Georgia. Turns out we had cruised nearly the
entire eastern Caribbean like that! We called a rigger who
helped us replace it that same day. He said that he did
not see any cracks, so it was probably fine, but we
replaced it for peace of mind. Thanks to Peter--who knows
what may have happened on a later passage. Peter and
Kathy, by the way, are the most amazing cruising couple.
They are on their second circumnavigation and left 20
years ago. When they cruised to South Africa, they bought
a van and disappeared into the continent of Africa for a
year, visiting nearly every country. Peter is now 70 and
they are leisurely making their way back to New Zealand. A
million thanks to Peter and Kathy for the wealth of
knowledge and advice! After
a week of recommissioning, we welcomed some Dutchie
friends on board for a week, and checked out all of the
anchorages in Curacao. We also had an exhilarating sail to
Klein Curacao. After the tourist boats leave at night, you
have the entire island to yourself. We climbed the
lighthouse, examined the brain coral head in the middle of
the island, and peered into a wrecked sailboat on the
windward side of the island. It’s so scary to see
something like that, and heartbreaking to think that it
was once someone’s dream. Da Captain and friends also swam
with sea turtles! Once
our friends left, we checked out of Curacao,
serendipitously getting a ride from customs to immigration
and back to Spanish Waters from the cruising couple who
had taken our slip after we left Curacao Marine. They were
heading to Panama the following day. We anchored in Fuik
Bay on Sunday, the same Bay we had made landfall from
Martinique, also on a Sunday evening, six months ago, and
enjoyed listening to the local yachties once again soaking
up the last minutes of weekend. On Monday, our sail upwind to Bonaire was tough, but good practice for our planned passage to Puerto Rico. In Bonaire, we saw many old friends from Curacao marine who may be heading in similar directions as us. After consulting with Chris Parker, we planned for a Monday departure from Bonaire, and while waiting for our weather window, the last before the Christmas and northeast winds kick in, we became PADI certified open water SCUBA divers. Our instructor, Jean Carlos (a fellow Panamanian) was wonderful. He is very patient, knowledgeable, professional but fun. Like Da Admiral's mother who taught her how to drive on an old jeep (no automatic transmission, no power steering) he made sure we are ready for anything. There would be no pool for us. On our first day, we spent 42 minutes 40 feet underwater. To anyone interested in discovering the underwater realm, we highly recommend seeking out Jean Carlos Blanco at Bruce Bowker's Carb Inn on Bonaire. That's it for now. We’ll write again once we reach the other side. Wish us luck!
May 14 – 18, 2015
With
hurricane
season impending, it was time to figure out what to do
about it. We still had work to do in Germany but didn’t
want to risk leaving Trance in Martinique. We ruled out
Trinidad because of the humidity (we had heard horror
stories of cruisers returning to their boats to find
everything covered in green) and because they don’t take
kindly to sailing cats. Da Captain being a Dutchie, we
decided that Curacao would be our spot. It has great
facilities and we were very curious about the mix of our
two cultures that is Curacao. (Da Admiral being a Latina
and all.) Plus,
it is below the hurricane belt, statistically safer than
Trinidad, and it is a very dry island. There are cacti
everywhere. We set off for Curacao from Ste-Anne (Marin) Martinique, a bit anxious over what to expect. It would be almost a dead run, and so far our experiences with running had not been good. Experienced sailors, we’re sure you are baffled by all of this, as the traditional tropical circumnavigation is just that because it is “easy.” But each time we have had the waves and wind aft of the beam, it has been stormy, big and we’ve spent it uncomfortably tripping over our keel. We figured it was because Trance was just not made for low latitudes. Boy, were we newbies in for a big enlightenment! Our course would be about 270 degrees magnetic, adjusting at the end if we got too close to Venezuelan waters, as we were warned of possible piracy in the area. We had an average of 17-18 knots of wind and were doing 5 knots with just the jib. We then decided to hoist the full main (with preventer) and pole the jib out to starboard, and were soon running along beautifully at 7 knots! The waves were an average of 5 feet, and it was the most fantastic, easy sailing we had ever done. The wind averaged about 20 knots during the entire passage, and we did 144 miles on our first day. That is pretty good for a 38-foot sailboat.
At
shift change on the second night, at about 12:30 am, we
were both in the cockpit doing some adjustments, when
suddenly the entire night sky turned to day. We froze in
horror. Was it the apocalypse? Is this really how it will
end? Then, we saw an orange ball with some green and white
literally fall from the sky, into the sea not more than a
mile away. We looked at each other with wide eyes and
quickly woke the radar from standby mode. Nothing. Was it
a flare? Did someone out there need help? Could it be a
pirate trick? We scanned a second time. Still nothing.
Wait a moment, the ball of fire never went up, it just
came down. Plus, there was some green and white in it. It
must have been a freaking METEORITE! Unbelievable what you
see out here. After
two days at sea, we had 177 nautical miles to go until the
north tip of Bonaire. Our second day was a 137-mile day.
Again very respectable. Da Captain was disappointed over
the lack of whale and/or dolphin sightings. Sure enough, a
few hours later, we had a dolphin sighting. They were
shorter than their north Atlantic brothers. We made a
mental note to look them up. We were still amazed at how
comfortable running could be. We could cook comfortably
and live life rather normally (for being at sea). Da
Admiral even took a quick shower off the stern! A shower
on passage—now that’s comfort! Our
final night brought one of the craziest, scariest
experiences we’ve had. We’re still not sure what happened.
We were maybe 30 miles from Venezuelan waters when, during
his watch, Da Captain began tracking a vessel on radar
making somewhat erratic but slow movements. Suddenly it
started heading straight toward us, rather abruptly and
quickly. He shone the spotlight on our sails in case they
didn’t see us, but they still kept coming. He woke up Da
Admiral and tried to hail them on VHF. They did not
respond, but kept coming. What do we do? Can we call
someone on the SSB? We started preparing ourselves for
being boarded. Da Admiral got on the VHF and in her best
angry Latina Spanish yelled, “vessel located at x and x
coordinates, this is the private sailing vessel Trance,
you are headed directly toward us, reveal your intentions
immediately.” She yelled it twice like a crazed, angry
Latin lady. Suddenly, the vessel changed course, and off
into the night it went. It had worked. We’re still not
sure who they were or what they wanted, but most cruisers
we speak to agree that they probably did not have good
intentions. There were a couple of larger ships within
radar and VHF range, and we think that perhaps relaying
our coordinates in Spanish and in a frantic tone made it
too high of a risk for the potential evil-doers. It was a
good lesson and a stark reminder of how vulnerable one is
without local knowledge and foreign language skills. Of
course, the five languages between us won’t come close to
covering us everywhere, and it’s impossible to learn the
language of every land we will cruise, but we’re certainly
planning on making an effort to learn some strategic words
and phrases and investing some time into practicing
pronunciation so we sound as native as humanly possible. On
the third and final morning, we had 42 miles to go to
reach the north tip of Bonaire. At approximately 06:00 a
rogue wave crashed into our port stern corner and into the
cockpit. Everything was salty! Soon thereafter, we surfed
down a wave and clocked 10.7 knots! Yep, we’re definitely
nearing the ABCs. At approximately 09:00, Da Captain
spotted a grey military vessel headed toward us. We had
heard it hailing other vessels in the earlier hours. It
was the Venezuelan navy/coast guard searching for a vessel
named “Blue Rib” that had gone missing. It stopped
approximately 2, may be 3 nautical miles from us and
hailed us on the VHF in Spanish. Da Admiral responded and
ended up having a pleasant conversation with the
Venezuelan navy Captain. Da Admiral agreed to keep our
eyes peeled and report if we saw anything. She also told
them about the encounter of the evening before, and the
navy Captain made a note of the incident and of our
coordinates at the time. He was very polite, professional
and appreciative. A reminder that for every bad encounter
we have, there have been ten that reinforce our faith in
humanity. As
we rounded the northern tip of Bonaire, we decided to try
to make a run for Curacao before dark. We figured we could
always abort to Bonaire if we didn’t make good time. It
turned out not being necessary. We flew to Curacao at a
consistent 8+ knots and arrived in Fuik Bay exactly at
sunset. It was a Sunday night and there were still a few
local yachties enjoying the last moments of the weekend.
Much to our delight, the yachties were full of locals
speaking both Dutch and Papiamento, blaring both Latin
rhythms and Andre Hazes. Just as the free guide to the
ABCs says, “I think I’m going to like it here!” The next day, we got a ride to immigration from a German who lived in South Africa and is familiar with the Jacobs Brothers, Trance’s builders. We are constantly surprised at how many people know of the Jacobs Brothers and their work. We spent a long, hot week decommissioning Trance. Da Captain went up the mast and ran messenger lines so we could remove the halyards, saving them from six months of destructive UV rays. Da Admiral cleaned and covered every inch of the interior with vinegar. There would be no green when we got back! The tasks were endless. Every day, we ate delicious criollo lunches with the locals at the market, sampling stews and Rotis, made lovingly by tante’s (aunties) starting at the crack of dawn. When we were finally finished, the folks at Curacao Marine hauled Trance with a trailer and put her in the depot next to her sailboat friends for the next six months. Like doting parents dropping a child off on the first day of kindergarten, we followed the trailer to the depot gates and watched between the fence as the yard workers secured her stands.
Hauled
and cleaned |
February 20 - March 8, 2015
After checking in to St. Kitts and checking out Brimstone Hill (a UNESCO World Heritage site), we anchored off the construction site of the soon-to-be St. Christopher’s Marina and resort. The winter storms up north translate into heavy conditions in the Leewards, so yet another storm caused us to hole up for the weekend, which we spent snorkeling, exploring the construction site in our dinghy, and hypothesizing about the cruise ship-sized super yacht anchored near us. It was lit up like a Christmas tree at night, but looked like a ghost ship during the day. No crew swabbing the decks, preparing for al fresco dining or ferrying the owners to shore. Then we really scratched our heads the day a steel workboat we saw at anchor while sailing down the coast circled the anchorage. We had thought it unusual that it had Canadian flag. To make things more suspicious, a handful of local men were on board, along with two bikini-clad white girls. They launched a very large, expensive-looking (not workboat-looking) black dinghy, pulled up a thick mooring line that was floating in the water with no floatie (yet another reminder to never enter an anchorage in the dark), then hauled the dinghy back on board and left the anchorage, all in a 10-minute time frame. Bizarre. One evening, we enjoyed the most spectacular sunset we have ever seen from the fancy beach bar. Once the weather settled, we pulled anchor and headed for Nevis.
Saba
from Brimstone Hill
Strange
things afoot
The most spectacular sunset
It
was a brisk, short sail to Nevis. Wind was the usual east
at 20ish knots (after a while you stop watching the
weather when island hopping in the eastern Caribbean). We
were on fish trap watch the entire way. The coast of St.
Kitts was riddled with them. Anchoring is not permitted in
Nevis, so we got a (free) mooring fairly close to shore
and beached the dinghy in front of Sunshine’s, where we
spent the day hanging with the local Rasta dudes and a
British lady gone-local, dreads and all. Like Foxy in Jos
Van Dyke, Sunshine is apparently a local celebrity. Back
on board, the captain of a boat moored next to us asked
where we tied up the dinghy on shore. “Oh,
you
just beach it,” Da Captain told him. “It’s easy.” Mind you this was a full-on beach with sets of waves
coming in, and it sounded like the poor guy had never
beached and then secured a heavy dinghy above the
high-tide line...alone. Good times for him… The
plan for the next day was to head for the volcanic island
of Montserrat and spend a day touring the island and the
modern-day Pompeii before the next big north swell made
the anchorage untenable. We set off early to arrive before
customs closed. We motor sailed along the lee coast of
Nevis in calm conditions, and put in a reef in preparation
for stronger winds once we left its protection. We were
both on fish trap high alert, and I (Da Admiral) was
behind the wheel. About 45 minutes after exiting the lee,
after the fish trap watch was slightly relaxed (of course)
I suddenly noticed that we had slowed down substantially.
“Hmmm,” I
thought. “Why are we only going three knots in 20 knots of wind on a close reach?
We should be going at least 6.” I looked aft, and to
my horror, we were trailing a line as far as the eye could
see. In 6-foot waves, there was no way we were diving out
in the open sea. We were closer to Nevis than to
Montserrat, so we made a careful wide turn and back to
Nevis we went. In protected waters, we anchored far from
shore and Da Captain dove to free the line, which was
stuck around the rudderpost. We considered ourselves
lucky, as it could have been much worse. By that point
whatever was attached to the line had broken off, so we
had to find somewhere to dispose of the huge, nasty,
smelly, fishy rope. On deck it went, calculations were
made, and we decided we could still make it to Montserrat
before dark, albeit not before customs and immigration
closed. We set off again and about an hour into the trip,
the autopilot started beeping. The display had been acting
up in the last few days, and now it was totally gone.
There certainly would be no repairs in Montserrat. Hand
steering it would be while in the lee of islands;
hopefully the good old windpilot would do its job
otherwise. It was not our day. They say things always
happen in threes, so we wondered what would happen next. As
we approached Montserrat, we could see the volcano
smoking. At first it was difficult to tell whether it was
smoke or the clouds that permanently encircle the tops of
all the volcanic islands we have seen. It was an amazing
sight to behold. Like Saba and Statia, Montserrat has
almost no protection. They say the most protected
anchorage is in what is now an exclusion zone. We resigned
ourselves to a rolly anchorage, where we saw some familiar
boats, including a very traditional wooden boat called
Gaucho. It was dark by the time we settled in, so we
stayed on board for the evening to plan our next steps. We
had hoped to explore the island that day because an even
larger swell was forecast to arrive the following day,
which would make the anchorage untenable. Plus, we had to
keep moving because we were expected in Germany in a few
weeks. Again, with heavy hearts we decided Montserrat
would have to wait another season. We hoped for favorable
winds the next morning, because the beat to Antigua would
be slug otherwise. We would not be so lucky. We bashed our
way to the north coast of Antigua in 25 knots and waves to
match. Along the coast, we turned south toward the famous
Falmouth and English Harbours. Protected from all
directions, they were the perfect place to wait out the
blow. We decided to anchor in Falmouth Harbour and over the next few days admired the super sailing yachts and racing yachts, and toured the famous Nelson’s Dockyard in English Harbour. This is a true sailor’s paradise. We saw a famous Antigua rum for sale, which apparently those who have crossed the Atlantic from Europe take back as proof of the crossing. We wondered if we will bring something back from Europe one day. The bulletin board at the yacht club is littered with notes from folks seeking to crew on yachts, and it seemed like we are the only ones who haven’t done a “transat.” What a place. We even scored a used autopilot control unit for $100!
More
boat porn in Falmouth Harbour
After
three days in Antigua, the wind was finally forecast to
fall below the 30-knot range, and the waves down to below
10 feet. Still wild, but we resigned ourselves to the fact
that we must get used to these conditions at some point.
Trance was built for them, and we were ready. We set off
early in the morning for the sail to Guadeloupe. With a
double-reefed main and a reefed jib, we set course for the
northwest coast of the French island, putting us on a beam
reach. The waves were the biggest we had seen since
leaving the U.S. Trance took it all in stride and Da
Admiral hunkered down in her usual spot under the doghouse
while Da Captain enjoyed the conditions. This is what he
loves and makes him feel alive. Da Admiral just shakes her
head at his craziness and lets him enjoy pretending he’s
in the Volvo Ocean race, as long as it’s only a day sail,
that is. We
managed to dodge nasty-looking morning squalls after which
the skies cleared up a bit. About 3-4 hours into the
passage, Da Captain yells “whale whale!” To our amazement, there were two sperm whales
surfacing and blowing less than 40 meters from our port
stern, disappearing and reappearing with each passing
wave. “Oh my God,”
Da Admiral yelled. “We’re
too
close!” But in just one minute, they were out of
sight, swimming in the opposite direction. We
anchored in the bay of Deshaies, Guadeloupe and enjoyed
sundowners in the cockpit, admiring the picturesque
anchorage. Gaucho was there, along with a similar looking
yellow sailboat. The salty-looking captain of the yellow
boat rowed his dinghy over to Gaucho, and we commented on
how it made perfect sense that they were friends. After
leaving Gaucho, he rowed over to admire Trance and we
learned that his boat was made out of ferrocement. Talk
about old school. The captain was a Brit who had been
cruising for many years and was finally calling it quits
after this season. He
and his wife would buy a cottage and plant a garden—a
story we’ve heard more than a handful of times during our
voyage. As he rowed off Da Admiral said, “see
you later” and he replied that he hoped so. Such a
nice guy. Before
we set off on our cruise, we decided we didn’t want to be
like those cruisers that just hang out with other
cruisers. Ignorantly, we compared them to the folks who
holiday in other countries, just to stay in places where
they serve their own food and play their own music. We
almost wanted to go out of our way to stay away from them.
But it turns out that meeting other cruisers is
one of the coolest (of many) things about the life. We
tend to be younger than most, and really do feel like they
consider us the torchbearers. It’s a wonderful feeling. So
we’ve struck a balance between being friendly to other
cruisers and mingling with the locals. The
next day we set sail along the coast of Guadeloupe toward
the Saints. A few years back we went to a boat show
seminar on cruising the Caribbean, and the presenter said
it was not a place to be missed. So we decided our mad
dash to get as far south as possible before having to fly
to Germany (we were eyeing the world-class facilities of
Marin, Martinique) needed a brief hiatus once we reached
the Saints. We’ve learned a lot about sailing in the lee
of the islands. We’ve learned to reef conservatively due
to the way the wind can funnel through valleys. When the
wind dies as we sail behind a mountain, we patiently enjoy
the view (although we did have to turn the engine on a few
times). When sailing to another island, we’ve learned not
to deploy our jib until we’ve cleared the tip of our
current island, as the wind funnels furiously between
them. This experience served us well as we neared the
southern tip of Guadeloupe. As we closed in on the
southernmost point with our double-reefed main only, we
started “racing” a 38-foot Jeanneau that had full sails
flying (all you sailors know that two similarly sized
sailboats going the same way = a race!) The wind became
furious as we rounded the tip and we saw 40 knots. We
looked behind us and the poor Jeanneau was completely
overpowered by the wind, and when the huge swell started
wrapping around the island, his bow started bashing up and
down violently. After about five minutes, he turned
around. Trance, with her heavier displacement, and 7-foot
keel continued on to the Saints with reefed main only. We entered the Terre de Haute harbor, quickly dropped our main, rounded the shoal and zoomed toward the moorings, as it was entirely too rolly to anchor out. We’d heard that the moorings fill up quickly and people literally fight over them due to the rolliness of the anchorage. There were no mooring balls in sight, and as we were about to turn around, a speedboat from the Capitanerie waved us over to a huge metal ship mooring. We had gotten the last one! As soon as we finished tying up, a bronzed cruiser dinghied up to us and asked, “Is that a Lavranos 38?” “Yes,” I said, surprised that someone knew the boat. “It was built in Cape Town, South Africa, right?” he replied. “Yes!” again, my eyes wide in amazement. “My boat is Hogfish,” he said. “OH MY GOD!” I screamed!
In
trying to make my updates as succinct as possible, I
neglected to give the full lowdown on Hogfish. We were a
few days into our 9-day passage from the Abacos to the
Virgins, and must have been two hundred miles from
anywhere, and had not seen a boat in days, when the VHF
suddenly lit up and and I hear “Trance, Trance, this is
Hogfish Maximus.” I was on watch and Da Captain was
asleep, so I turned it down and scanned the horizon in
every direction. Nothing. “What on earth?”, I thought to
myself. "Who the hell knows we’re out here?" Curiosity
winning over fear, I responded, “This is Trance.” Turns
out Chris from Hogfish heard us talking to Chris Parker on
the SSB and had calculated at about what time we would
close in on his position and be within VHF range. “I
haven’t talked to anyone in like 5 days,” he said. So talk
we did. We shared info about our boats and he told me all
about his boat and how he built Hogfish. Long story short,
meeting Hogfish, as we call him, has been one of the
coolest things about the trip. Hogfish has no
chartplotter, no refrigeration, no bimini, nothing. He is
a true sailor and the wealth of knowledge he has shared
with us has changed us forever. We’re not giving up our
chartplotter anytime soon, and we’ve always been of the
school that all systems must either have manual backups or
be something we can do without, but he has taught us
tricks of the trade that have made us even more self
sufficient. For
the next several evenings we hung with Hogfish and their
friends from Wild Bird, who are probably the fittest
people we’ve ever met. They literally run up volcanic
mountains for fun. We all left the Saints for Dominica on
the same wild and windy day, albeit at different times,
and regrouped that night to find out how we all fared. The
winds were steadily in the 30-35 knot range, with waves to
match. They agreed that it was the windiest they had ever
seen it in the eastern Caribbean! For us, ignorance was
bliss and although it did feel slightly wilder than what
we had seen in recent weeks, we had gotten pretty used to
those conditions. Wild Bird made their usual fun of
Hogfish, who refuses to use his engine and instead sails
into every anchorage, and Chris agreed that it was the
harriest, craziest, longest tack into the bay. As
usual, it was a packed anchorage and we anchored farther
out at the edge of the pack. Prior to setting off, we had
studied our guide in preparation for our first encounter
with the famous “boat boys” of this part of the Caribbean.
Our cruising guide has pictures of the various characters
and, sure enough, as soon as we tacked in to the Bay,
Cobra’s assistant came alongside in skiff. We gave him a
thumbs up, and he happily headed in to wait for us to
anchor. Once we anchored, he came alongside and gave Da
Captain a ride to check in. These guys, organized into a
group called “PAYS,” are amazing. It really does not do
them service to call them “boat boys.” They organize
cookouts for cruisers to raise money to keep the anchorage
safe, clean and cruiser-friendly. It was in this anchorage
that we first saw the green flash. For those who have
never seen it, just watch the sunset over the ocean on a
clear day with absolutely no clouds on the horizon. To
make things even more ridiculously amazing, one afternoon
we sighted a pair of small sperm whales at the edge of the
anchorage. We spent the next couple days touring what we consider the most magnificent island of the Caribbean. Cobra took us on a tour, rattling off the different scientific names of the various flora and fauna species. He pulled over to pick some grass, crumbled it in his hand and gave it to us to smell. “Lemongrass!” He carved some bark off a tree for us to take a whiff. “Cinnamon!” He picked wild cacao, beautiful bird of paradise and other tropical flowers in every possible color and variety for Da Admiral. He took us to a delicious criollo restaurant for lunch and to a spot that looked like the surface of Mars, which was guarded by a member of the last remaining Carib natives. He took us to a waterfall, where Da Captain noticed an adolescent Boa Constrictor perched on a rock not more than 2-3 meters from some bathing French tourists. They had been there for at least 30 minutes, blissfully unaware of the serpent. Dominica truly is the Garden of Eden. We just hope it’s secrets are not ruined by development.
Spot the Boa Trance decked out Our tour of paradise came to an end and we headed to Martinique, where we had arranged to leave the boat for two months while we worked in Europe. It was an uneventful sail, and we then spent almost a week decommissioning Trance. As we closed up the boat on the day of our flight, taxi already waiting in the parking lot, the all too well-known Martinique officials decided it would be a convenient time to board us. We ticked off the taxi driver, who had to wait 30 minutes for us, and almost missed our flight. But we made it and Trance enjoyed some time off in Martinique while we went to work.
January 26 – February 19, 2015 (written April 02, 2015)
Once
again,
profuse apologies for the overdue update. These
delays always result in inappropriately long updates.
A
lot has happened since the last update. Several
weeks
ago, my (Da Admiral) dear childhood
friend unexpectedly passed away from a brain
aneurysm. She was just 38 and a vibrant mother and
wife. She was a true free spirit, and she and I
shared a lot of adventures in our youth (and could have
gotten ourselves into a lot of trouble). She passed
almost exactly a year after my dear cousin's husband also
passed unexpectedly. When a young, healthy
person is taken away so unexpectedly, you wonder why life
is so cruel. But, you are reminded to live life to
the fullest, to treasure what is truly important and to
not allow fear to keep you from your dreams, because time
is short. So I'm dedicating my cruise to her memory,
to no fear, and to continuing the dream. Her free
spirit is an example and reminder to live life
adventurously. So on that note, the NEWS… Recently
we
received word that we were needed back in Europe.
Seeing as it was the dead of winter, we couldn't
sail Trance home, plus we’re not ready to stop cruising.
So instead of continuing the cruise until May then
sailing home to continue life as usual and dream about the
next cruise, (that was the original plan) we chose the
route that will enable us to continue cruising beyond this
winter. Yes, we've decided to follow the dream.
So Trance has now rejoined the ranks of the world
cruising boats, with a homeport on paper but not in
practice. We were very sad to give up our coveted
mooring in the West River. We're hoping our friends
at the marina will take pity on us and take us out on the
water if we're in MD, boat-less during hurricane season.
(Also crossing our fingers the mooring will be
available when we do return to the Bay.) For now
Trance is in Marin, Martinique where Douglas Yacht
Services is keeping an eye on her, and the family unit is
in Europe. Just before June, we'll fly to Martinique
to sail her south of the hurricane belt. Next stop
is the ABCs. Who knows where the winds will take us
then! We'll keep you posted on our whereabouts. A
rewind to the cruising update, part 1: At
the end of our last update we were stuck in Nanny Cay, the
British Virgin Islands awaiting a mechanic. Much to
our delight, it was just a dirty ground wire. The
wire appeared clean to the eye, but after shining it with
sandpaper and re-connecting it, the old Yanmar started up
right away. The bill: $100 and one night in a
marina. So we were free to leave and continue our
cruise, right? Nope. You can't make this stuff
up. During the first night, the sailor cat decided
to abscond through a partially open quarter berth
porthole. We frantically looked everywhere. Da
Admiral posted signs and harassed the marina staff and
groundskeepers. We were stuck until the sailor cat
was ready to come home. Turns out the sailor cat had
gone through an open porthole into a neighboring 50+-foot
yacht for sale, with no one aboard, and she couldn’t jump
back out. The look on the broker's face when Da
Admiral presented herself in his office and asked him to
open the boat to retrieve her cat was hilarious. He
was certain the sailor cat was trying to tell us that she
wants a bigger boat. Of course. The
French-Canadian female Captain in the slip next to us (her
gentleman friend was the first mate—kick ass!) proclaimed
she was going to detail the account in her diary. We
enjoyed a bottle of Martinique rum with a British couple
in their 70s who are finally done after circumnavigating
for 10 years. All was well and we were on our way
again the next morning. We
beat to The Baths where we learned that “dry” bags are not
dry enough for a swim to shore. Luckily, in Virgin
Gorda we found a guy named Scrippy who sold us a new
Blackberry out of his trunk. Usually one must await
Scrippy’s regularly scheduled appearance on a street
corner but, after calling at least 40 of his contacts, our
taxi driver tracked down his home number and Scrippy met
us in a parking lot where we sealed the deal.
Blackberry in hand (not that we ever had good reception),
we enjoyed our time in the Gorda Sound, where we admired
Sir Richard’s 105-foot sailing catamaran. Da Captain and
the sailor cat continued their jokes/claims about Sir
Richard sightings and their invitations to Necker
Island… To Da Admiral’s irritation, they were
spewing this smack since we arrived in the BVI. We
sailed back to Trellis Bay (again) where we attended
Aragorn’s world famous full moon party. It was a
sight to behold. On the beach, Aragorn’s ginormous
steel sculptures were filled with wood and lit on fire
while stilt walkers and fire eaters circled the crowd and
a band beat out Caribbean rhythms. It
was a fabulous, exhilarating close reach to Anegada.
We’re fine-tuning our skills every day, and we continue to
be amazed at Trance’s speed. We anchored outside, as
Trance’s 7-foot keel is too deep to enter the inner
anchorage. Fast
forward
to the next morning. Imagine the scene: Early
in the morning we go on deck to launch our dinghy
(“Origami”) and, to our irritation, a helicopter keeps
flying overhead, observing and photographing nearby kite
surfers. At one point we notice a photographer
leaning out of the helicopter and snapping photos of
Trance. Ugh. They’ll probably try to sell us
photos later. We assume kite surfing rentals are
available on the island and discuss whether we have time
to give it a go. But the first order of business is
to go onshore and bike to the other side of the island, to
Cow Wreck Bay and the Cow Wreck Bar, recommended by Dan
and Ame, our friends from Chalk Point Marine. We
enjoy a fabulously scenic bike ride, and proclaim that
this is our kind of cruising. Unspoiled nature,
azure water and white-sand beaches, bulls and goats
standing in the middle of the road eyeing us with
suspicion, and no tourists. This is what we signed
up for. The scene when we arrive at Cow Wreck, walking our bikes over the sand: Random guy: “Excuse me, sir. Are you [Sir] Richard…?” Wild haired barefoot blond man on way to bathroom: “Yes, I am.” Random guy then babbles something about it being nice to meet him. Da Captain and I meet eyes with gasped mouths. Out of corner of eye, Da Admiral sees brunette (Mrs. Sir Richard) smiling at us/our reaction. Da Captain exudes childlike vindication aura rest of way to the bar. Da Admiral shakes her head in disbelief. There’s 15 or so of us at the Cow Wreck that day, including the Sir Richard party, until his Island Crew shows up, that is. We spend the rest of the day hanging out with the Island posse. After everyone eats, the kite surfers start their show while the helicopter hovers overhead. The brightly colored kites paint a surreal picture on the turquoise sky and reef-laden water. A barefoot Sir Richard hangs near all of us to enjoy the show. So cool. Da Admiral tracks down the photographer from the helicopter and he promises to email us photo of Trance from the sky. We’ll see if he delivers…
Could it be?
Photographing the Pro
We
checked
out of the BVI in Virgin Gorda and, with the moon still
big, had an uneventful overnight passage to St. Maarten,
where we planned to install our newly purchased Wi-Fi
antenna/booster, yet another attempt to access “The
Internets.” (Thanks to Dan and Ame for driving us to
pick it up!) We circled inside the flattest, most
protected part of the lagoon seeking the best spot to
install the antenna with minimal risk of dropping
something in the water. The water shallows quickly
in the lagoon, so after endless circling and cringing in
skinny water we concluded that all the spots were taken
and tried to hail a marina (unsuccessfully--we now know
they don’t answer on Sundays). Andrew from SV
Adela noticed all the circling around, chased us down
in his dinghy and led us to the last deep spot. We
proceeded to spend the rest of the week having a wonderful
time in St. Maarten, visiting with Andrew and Edwin almost
daily. Those guys made our stay, and paint a perfect
picture of what cruising is all about. Miss you
guys! Da Captain was in Dutchie paradise, riding his
bicycle over a small mountain to the big Grande Marche to
score dropjes (Dutch licorice) and other goodies.
Plus we were lucky enough to hook up with folks who are
friends with the President of the company that makes our
water maker. We're optimistic they'll set things
right. Before leaving St. Maarten, we anchored on
the French side and had a lovely Valentine’s dinner in
Grande Case. Thanks for the recommendation, Andrew! We had a beautiful sail to St. Barth, tacking our way past Ile Fourchue, which was once green. It’s now a barren rock because a bunch of goats were left there unattended. Luckily, the offending goats have since been removed. With both carnival and a big blow impending, we settled into the anchorage, which was teeming with huge turtles, and spent three days amongst the drop-dead gorgeous people of St. Barth. Carnival was a riot and we especially enjoyed downloading information about the next islands from Frenchman Antoine, who was anchored behind us. He and his family have been cruising the Caribbean for two years, after crossing from the Cape Verdes in just two weeks! In a catamaran, of course. Once again, we also shared the bay with the super yacht Venus, which locals call “the Apple boat.” We think Mrs. Jobs may be following us.
Carnival in St. Barth
Once
the weather settled down a bit (not much—the theme for the
rest of the cruise is “big wind, big waves”), we sailed to
St. Kitts. It was after this point that we
completely and fully realized our lives had
changed. We pray our posts are getting progressively
saltier. But it’s unlikely, as the more we learn the
more we realize how much we don't know and how much more
there is to learn. Stay tuned for a write-up of our
adventures from St. Kitts – Martinique (part 2)! Before
we close, we’d be remiss if we didn’t thank all you folks
who have supported us and emailed us with encouragement
during our cruise. We couldn’t do it without
you. Da Admiral’s parents have been amazing.
They serve as headquarters, doing everything from sorting
mail to completely renovating and decorating the condo we
bought with Da Captain’s parents. I don’t know who
else would put up with having sailing bums who buy a place
and take off immediately without dealing with it for
children. Da Captain’s parents, life-long skippers,
are always providing a wealth of advice and support at all
hours of the day and night. Finally, thanks to all
the seasoned sailors we have met along the way for
imparting your wisdom on us newbies. It'd be a hell
of a lot harder without you, and nowhere near as much fun.
January
26, 2015 Thanks,
all,
for your emails and well wishes. A lot has happened since
we last wrote. Just after we drafted the last update, we
embarked on a 9-day passage from the Abacos, Bahamas to
Culebra, one of the Spanish Virgin Islands (Puerto Rico). We
were both nervous and excited that afternoon, as our
longest passage at the time was four days. But we
felt pretty confident. After the hairy weather on our
passage down to Florida, we decided to sign up with Chris
Parker for weather forecasting and routing over the SSB
radio. Both he and our other sources indicated a good
weather window. The man is worth his weight in gold (or
platinum—whichever is worth more these days). Not only did
he provide us with accurate weather forecasts over the
9-day passage, but he also provided us with great routing
advice, even specific waypoints (GPS coordinates for you
non-sailors). With
his help (and benevolent wind gods. Oh, and a big
shout-out to Mr. Lavranos, Trance's designer for designing
a boat that rocks it to windward) we were able to
avoid the typical "due east until the butter melts" route.
Because of the prevailing trade winds, this would have
involved heading due east until the 65th parallel, then a
turn south to the islands, and would have added two days
to our passage. Instead we were able to cut it a bit, and
mainly head southeast. When
we left, no wind was forecast for the next three or so
days. We figured it was a good opportunity to motor east.
And motor east we did. But with the favorable forecast, we
ended up motoring southeast for the next day, and the
next, and the next. The wind was DEAD for the first four
days of our passage. We never knew the sea could be so
calm and glassy hundreds of miles offshore. At times, but
for the small line of white clouds on the horizon, it
would have been impossible to tell the difference
between the sea and the sky. Usually, we sailors would
curse this. However, Da Admiral's body though it an
opportune time to come down with a virus. We'll skip the
gory details, but it would have been a lot worse heeling
at 45 degrees for days on end.
Becalmed
Other
than
that, the nine days were almost uneventful. Da Captain saw
a whale's tail off in the distance. Dolphins investigated
Trance's stern/swim platform with their noses at night. Da
Captain saw and heard a meteorite during one of his night
watches! Night watches were a good time for
self-teaching oneself celestial navigation. Da Admiral was
hailed by a fellow I-65er (what sailors call the offshore
route to the islands) who left the Bahamas a bit before we
did and was tracking our progress on the SSB during our
daily check-ins with Chris Parker. He was a salty American
sailor living in the Bahamas who built his own lifting
keel boat and made the trip to the islands every year.
During the calm, we were both worried about running out of
fuel. We were also hailed by a French boat with anxious
crew, asking if we had any cigarettes. They left from the
Cape Verdes 20 days earlier and had run out. It was really
cool to experience the comradeship and cooperation that
exists out there. When the trades picked up, we beat to windward for the last four days of the passage. Trance was like a wild horse finally set free. Happy as a clam while we unsuccessfully tried to slow her down. Some of the waves were hitting Trance’s aluminum hull like a Mac truck and there was salt spray EVERYWHERE. But she was solid as a rock. We went from an 80 mile-day to a record-setting (for us) 140-mile day.
99 miles to go
Finally in the Virgins We
spent a fabulous few days in Culebra before heading to the
US Virgin Islands. We were finally east of I-65! Then a
client called and we holed up in a marina in St. Thomas to
work for a few days. Then we started the process of
battling our water maker vendor. Turns out our unit wasn’t
working properly and for the meantime (while they face Da
Admiral's wrath) we are only using our water maker water
for bathing, dishwashing, etc. So we feel like real
cruisers now! More on that later… Other than that, we
mainly hung around the Water Island area waiting for Da
Admiral's parents to fly in. We celebrated New Year’s at a
fancy marina and a Tanya Stephens concert (aka “famous
lady”). Da Admiral’s parents arrived just in time, as we
were starting to feel like locals. We
spent a wonderful week cruising the British Virgin Islands
"charter style." Da Captain caught Da Admiral's dreaded
virus at the end of their stay. But Da Admiral's stepdad
is a very skilled mariner and pulled his weight while Da
Admiral got to play Captain (a downgrade in rank from
Admiral). Two years ago when they visited us as we were
cruising the Bahamas, they were part of a dingy recovery
mission in the Whale Cay channel. Serendipitously, we lost
our dingy again during their visit, and they got to
witness it being towed in by a tour boat captain. Thanks
guys for an awesome time! You are our lost dingy lucky
charms! We
made new friends with fellow cruisers in Soper's Hole and
caught up with friends from our home port in Trellis Bay.
Big shout out to Dan & Ame from Chalk Point! Thanks so
much for all your support. When you're cruising, friends
(and with a car) are a lifesaver! We will definitely be
taking you up on your transportation offers. Then
the fun started. The wind died. The wind has now
been nonexistent for longer than any cruisers we have met
down here can remember. In Trellis Bay we hung out with
David, a very cool sailing yacht captain with 40+ Atlantic
crossings under his belt, who confirmed he's never seen
anything like it. So, since we're "real" cruisers now, we
decided to do what they would do and fly our spinnaker to
Jos Van Dyke. It was awesome. Until the wind completely
died (literally 0.0 knots). So
we give up and go to turn on the engine, and nothing. Try
again. Nothing. This had been happening all they way down
to the islands, but it always started after Da Captain
installed a bypass wire on the panel after reading that it
is a common (wiring) problem on Yanmars. Not this time. No
problem. We're salty now. We'll sail in. Wait, there's no
wind…So our trusty dingy (with a 4 horsepower outboard)
led us into Great Harbour, where we dropped the hook on
the outskirts of the anchorage and prayed that Mr. Rocna
(our anchor) would set. Thankfully it did. We called
around, made arrangements for a mechanic and marina for
Monday, and spent the weekend in Jos Van Dyke. We bought a
conch shell at Ali Baba's and Mr. Baba himself tried to
teach us to blow it. Sunday night at sunset, Mr. Baba's
lessons paid off, and we were giddy with excitement when
someone (probably Baba himself) signaled back at us.
Monday
we successfully sailed off our anchor and tacked our way
just outside the marina, where Husky's towing delivered us
to our slip. We're hoping for a speedy repair. (After lots
of troubleshooting with a multimeter and an old
screwdriver we're pretty sure it's the starter motor.) But
we've adjusted to Island Time and understand that if they
don't come today, it'll be "tomorrow mon, tomorrow." That's
it
for our adventures so far. We'll keep you posted on our
repairs and plans. December 15, 2014
Thanksgiving
in
Florida with family was full of hustle and bustle (and
boat work) but as you can see below, we have made it to
paradise (aka Green Turtle Cay—pronounced “key”)! Now
we are keen to get underway to take advantage of the calm
weather as we make our way further south. We plan to leave
for our longest passage ever (1,000 nautical miles) in a
few hours, so there is much excitement in the air! Before
we go: some of you have asked what we learned and what
adjustments we have had to make along the way— Our
passage
to Florida was truly a "shakedown." While in Florida we
had a rigger inspect and re-adjust the lower starboard
spreader that flew upward, and the related shroud that
loosened during all the surfing down waves (more like
downhill skiing if you ask us!) and tripping over our
keel. Luckily it was just a small wire. It is amazing how
we are still finding/learning new things about Trance.
Luckily we have a stout rig, spreaders on hinges
that can go up or down, and many other
shrouds! We
also decided that our harnesses and tethers were more of a
hazard than anything, and invested in much better sets. We
also invested in a spare autopilot arm after a brief scare
when it failed to engage for a few minutes. (Our wind
pilot doesn't work well in light winds, and that's exactly
what you get just before the full fury of a low hits you,
as we now know all too well.) Experienced sailors say that
your autopilot is your #1 safety gear on board. All too
often, fatigue leads to inability to react quickly and
logically, turning challenging situations into
catastrophic ones. Da Captain installed the new one and we
stowed the old for a back-up/spares. We
also invested in a better mount for our GPS/chartplotter
screen. On passage we like to turn the unit to face into
the cockpit, so we can sit dry and comfortable under the
hard dodger while on watch. But repositioning would take
some effort and time. One night, a squall hit and Da
Admiral had to take the wheel but found it hard to
determine the course because, in all the craziness, she
forgot what it was (oops—dumb newbie mistake) and the unit
was facing the other way! Now it swivels and tilts in
every possible direction with ease. Most
importantly,
after getting caught in one too many weather “incidents”
we decided to sign up for a marine weather service and
bought an IridiumGO! so that we can download GRIB files
while at sea. We also made countless smaller adjustments
and are ready for another long passage (new traveler line
and end caps, a zillion more bungees to secure the
countless things that rattle and keep the off-watch person
awake while underway, etc.) The
Damage |