Monday, April 23, 2012

Ambling Through the Abacos


Early in the morning we, and four other boats, head north from the Eleuthera area towards the Abacos.  The winds are calm, the skies are clear, and the sea has a mild swell coming from the east.  Sails would serve no purpose, so we motor for the 65 mile passage. As one of the boats, a trawler, slowly passes us, they play swing music from their exterior speakers and are dancing on the flying bridge while the autopilot keeps them on track – it is a wonderful visual and indicative of the joyfulness of cruising life on the best of days.  A little later, another boat in our flotilla catches a sizable tuna and, shortly thereafter, a nice mahi-mahi.  A couple of the boats see a pod of pilot whales, but no matter how hard we look, they are invisible to us.  Sometimes this passage can be white knuckled, especially approaching the entrance to the Sea of Abaco where the ocean waves can well up to heights that jeopardize safety. Today is quite different, and by late afternoon we are anchored in the lee of Lynyard Cay and preparing for a shared dinner featuring some of the recently caught fish.

The next day we explore this southern portion of the Abacos.  We take the dinghy several miles south to Little Harbor. Nestled at the base of the Abacos, the ocean side beach begs to be explored as the waves lapping its shores originate in Africa.   

Our group searches for shells and beach glass that may have come from as far as Africa


The small settlement features a very secure harbor ringed by a few homes, a casual restaurant where we eat lunch, and the gallery/foundry of Philip Johnston and his now deceased father and internationally known sculptor, Randolph Johnston. The family settled in Little Harbor when it was totally undeveloped, and, for a while, lived in a nearby cave while their simple home was hand built. The beautiful bronze sculptures both in the gallery and around the premises reflect the natural history and fauna of the Bahamas, but the prices are well beyond our budget. 

One of Philip's beautiful castings


In an effort to work off the lunch, we head to some mooring buoys at a reef near our anchorage and have the best snorkeling experience yet in the Bahamas.  We see extensive patches of healthy, varied corals and plenty of small but diverse fish.

We head up to the hub of the Abacos, Marsh Harbor, which is the third largest city in the Bahamas.  Sailing in the Sea of Abaco is very easy.  The short fetch in any direction means we have smooth sailing in flat seas, many interesting harbors and anchorages, and easy access to amenities. We find infrastructure far beyond anything we have seen so far.  The conversation that evening revolves around the wonderful grocery store, rivaling anything you could find in the States.  After almost six months of scrounging for groceries, this is a really big deal for all the gals! We bicycle through town looking, unsuccessfully, for some boat parts, stop for some ice cream (a real rarity), and visit a few upscale resorts and neighborhoods. Towering over the town is a pseudo-castle that was the retirement home of Evans Cottman, otherwise known as the out-island doctor.  Starting in the late 1940’s he practiced medicine, in the capacity of what would now be categorized as a physician’s assistant, in the Bahamian out-islands, bringing medical care to communities with no other health care services.  His autobiography, Out-Island doctor, is fascinating reading and a good representation of the hardships of out-island settlement life. That evening our group goes to dinner at a marina restaurant with a rake and scrape dance following. The highlight is a limbo demonstration by a local resident that far exceeds our understanding of how a body can be contorted.

We have sympathy pains, but he manages to walk away from it all!




Marsh Harbor makes us feel like we’ve returned to civilization, but some of the other Abaco Islands beckon, so we take a short sail over to Great Guana Cay and anchor in Fisher’s Bay.  A dinghy ride and a walk through the neat and tidy settlement bring us to Nipper’s, one of the best known beach bars in the Bahamas.  It’s Pig Roast Sunday, the place is hopping, and, even though we don’t plan on eating, it’s fun to bump into several couples we had met much earlier in our trip.  The establishment is located on high dunes overlooking an endless beach on the Atlantic Ocean.  The surf is pounding on the near shore reefs and the variety of water colors is nothing short of spectacular.  We leave with our friends for a quieter location, Grabbers Beach Bar, on the shores of Fisher’s Bay and, to my delight, we find hammocks strung between palm trees at the water’s edge.   Again, it seems so much more civilized than what we have experienced up to now.

The barrier islands of the Abacos are all quite close together, so it’s an easy hop down to Man of War Cay.  This interesting settlement was born shortly after the Revolutionary War by loyalists seeking religious freedom. The village is unusually neat and clean, and it is a dry island, reflecting the residents’ religious values. Many share the last name of Albury, a name known in the Bahamas for generations of industrious boat builders. All along the main street are boat yards and boat building enterprises.  Throughout the Bahamas, Albury skiffs are the run-about power boats of choice.  

This one is about ready for launching


 In the wood shops we see high quality cabinet making along with displays of beautiful wooden half hull models.

Woodworking taken to an art form



The next stop is Hope Town.  The entrance to the harbor is so shallow that we anchor quite a ways off shore and dinghy in.  Hope Town is famous for its lighthouse, built in the 1830’s and still functioning with its original hand crank works and kerosene mantle light within a fresnel lens.   

Hope Town Lighthouse - perhaps the best recognized site in the Abacos


We climb the lighthouse for a spectacular view of the surrounding waters and interesting look at the mechanics.  

View of the harbor with the ocean in the background


 Burt is especially intrigued by the quality of the machining and clever design of the works.  

This weight  and gear mechanism is what keeps the light turning and requires winding every two hours during nighttime operation.


At the nearby marina we meet one of the two lighthouse keepers who invites us to come over at dusk to see him fire up the lighthouse.  Sadly, our distant anchorage makes that impossible.  We do walk through the attractive village of historic loyalist cottages and some more contemporary homes, all on narrow streets rimmed with picket fences and lovely gardens of bougainvillea and hibiscus.   

Pastel colored cottages and cascading flowers make Hope Town seriously "cute".


It is primarily a tourist and resort island, but we are enjoying the cleanliness and attractiveness, quite a change from southern Bahamian settlements.  A short walk through town takes us to another gorgeous oceanside beach.

Hope Town is on the north end of Elbow Cay.  We sail down to its southern point to another beautiful anchorage.  A short dinghy ride past some huge expatriate mansions brings us to Tahiti Beach, a large sand bore near one of the cuts to the ocean.  The currents have deposited shells along this area, and we wander the bore at low tide looking for treasures. Whereas in the Exumas we would have an area like this to ourselves, the Abacos are teaming with boats including many bareboat charter boats and run-abouts from the nearby cottages, so others have already gotten the best shells.

Sailing between sand flats, we head back to the snorkeling area we discovered upon entering the Abacos.  While snorkeling in fairly surfy conditions this time, we see another patch of picture perfect corals and find ourselves swimming with four large (around six feet across) spotted eagle rays.  We only wish our strokes could be half as graceful as these swooping, gliding creatures.  That night the swell of the ocean along with wind from another direction leaves us with a rolling boat.  We use a bridle off the anchor rode to turn the hull in a more advantageous direction.  It helps, but it won’t be a very comfortable night.  The payoff is a panoramic view of reefs with breaking waves and the roaring ocean with spume from the crashing surf spraying upwards beyond the barrier islands.

There is a serious storm system approaching, and all of the several hundred boats cruising the Abacos are searching for a marina berth or exceptionally secure anchorage. With squalls of up to 60 knots predicted, we opt to head north to the marina at Treasure Cay.  Unfortunately, we will need to enter the channel at high tide, so we find a protected anchorage for the night a few miles away. We will be able to pass through the channel the coming morning, but in the very far distance we see flashes of lightning in the high clouds. Something nasty is brewing.  The next morning we enter the Treasure Cay harbor at high tide with no problem.  We find ourselves docking next to Lili, a trawler captained by Jill Hautzenroder, a friend from Ohio.  With the bad weather looming, we head to the beach which is rated as one of the top ten in the world. (Why does it seem we’ve seen more than ten such rated beaches?)  

Just another spectacular beach with powder pinkish sand


 It is a spectacular pure sand crescent about 3 miles long with intense turquoise water.  At low tide we take a walk to the far point where sand bores extend far out from the beach.  Walking through the ankle deep rippling water, we spot numerous small shells and sand dollars.   

The sand bore at Treasure Cay with a darkening sky


We enjoy sitting along the shore in the beach chairs that come with our slip rental and have a hard time leaving, but we can see the storm clouds thickening in the distance. The rain comes with a vengeance that evening; it is our first serious downpour in months so we are pleased to have the accumulated salt wash away.  Throughout the night it is howling but we feel secure and snug in our floating home.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Trek Northwards Begins


The last few days of March finally take on more lamb-like characteristics after what has been a windy month, and we again leave George Town to begin the trek north. Almost sixty miles to the northeast lays the southern point of Cat Island, and we enjoy a docile motorsail through mild ocean swells.  Our destination is New Bight, a rarely visited settlement with some interesting history.  Only a couple of boats are anchored in this huge bay, and we see few people and even fewer cars as we walk the streets.  Cat Island is a decidedly quiet place. Right inland from our boat are the ruins of a Catholic church, the last built by Father Jerome who was mentioned in the blog about Long Island.  The community is holding a fundraiser in a month to finance restoration of the building.  

Church in ruins at New Bight


Just down the street are the ruins of the manor house from the Armbrister Plantation, dating from around 1760. The Armbristers were loyalists who settled and farmed the southern portion of Cat Island and some of their descendents still live in the area.

The remains of the Armbrister Manor




The next morning we hike up the 206 vertical feet of Mt. Alverna, the highest spot in the Bahamas and the location of the Hermitage.   After Father Jerome retired from the priesthood, he was given permission to construct a hermitage at this location. In 1940 he began building it entirely on his own, modeling the project on a miniaturization of a Franciscan monastery. The results are a treat for those who make the long hike.  Up the steep peak, you pass the Stations of the Cross, carved into the surrounding rock.  At the top is a chapel sized for one person with an adjacent bell tower, small living quarters attached by a classic colonnade, and nearby very clever catchment system and pump house for a fresh water cistern. The view to both the sound on the west and the ocean on the east is breathtaking.  It is indeed a very spiritual place. 

Father Jerome's Hermitage




We sail a few miles further north to Fernandez Bay, home to two different resorts.  Again, this is off the beaten track. A small landing strip nearby for private airplanes provides most of the guests for these resorts.  We meet one couple who has flown their single engine plane from Iowa all the way to Trinidad, stopping at resorts such as these each night. The setting is beautiful – a long crescent beach with cottages inland and a meandering creek at the southern end.  We take the dinghy into the creek and find small sharks and turtles amongst the mini mangrove islands.  That night we treat ourselves to dinner at the larger resort, enjoying the happy hour on the stone patio followed by a gourmet candlelight dinner accompanied by tasteful, live guitar music and a full moon rising over the bay. 

A dinner setting just doesn't get any better than this


Interestingly, the young proprietor of this resort is a direct descendent of the Armbrister family. The woman who runs the nearby, smaller resort is from Medina, Ohio.

We could stay in Fernandez Bay for days, but with time limits looming, we motor in glassy water beyond the north end of Cat Island to Little San Salvador Island and Half Moon Bay.  If you have ever taken a Holland America or Norwegian Lines cruise in the Bahamas, you have probably stopped here.  At the western end of the bay, cruisers are welcomed to anchor, but the remainder of the island is reserved for cruise ship passengers.  They arrive on these ocean behemoths early in the morning and are ferried to shore for a day of playing on the beach, jet skiing, para-gliding, horseback riding, eating, dancing, shopping, and probably a zillion other activities that don’t come to mind, all set in a facsimile of a Bahamian village.  It is a bit mind boggling for those of us who have been experiencing the Bahamas in a bit more authentic way.  A similar facility owned by the Princess Cruise Line exists about 15 miles further north at the southern tip of Eluthera.

And it’s off to Eluthera we go, stopping in the southern portion at Rock Sound.  In this protected bay we find a large group of cruisers, many of whom we have met along the way.  And, who do we run into but Dorene and George Menke who we had met in Sandusky seven years ago before when they left to cruise. 

A Sandusky reunion


Since we will have several days of windy weather that keeps us in port, we choose to rent a car with another couple to explore the island by land.  Eluthera is different from the other islands we have visited.  It has rolling hills that have more vegetation and trees.  It is an island with an agricultural heritage and famous for their pineapples which, sadly, are not in season.  The settlements along the way are a bit more prosperous and well kept.  There are several gated residential areas, one of which is popular with the British Royal Family.  We stop in Governor’s Harbor, the first capital of the Bahamas, and home to some very attractive historical buildings.  

The library at Governor's Harbor - the second largest in the Bahamas


At the north end of the island we find the Glass Window, a natural feature where the ocean has almost broken through the island to the bay side.  A road bridge has been built over the breach, but it is easy to understand why it is sometimes closed when the ocean “rages”.   

Water rushes past the remains of the old bridge


Our final stop is a bit further where we hop a ferry over to Harbor Island, a mix of high end resorts, loyalist cottages, and a native settlement.   

School girls walking past historic Loyalist cottages on Harbor Island


The ocean side sports a world famous three mile long pink sand beach, and we stop for lunch at a resort perched on the bluffs above the beach. 

Lunch overlooking the pink sand beach of Harbor Island


Afterwards, we marvel at the huge yachts docked in the marina while Burt heads off to find the cottage he stayed in over 40 years ago when the island was far less developed.

Back in Rock Sound, several of the cruisers have organized a lunch at Rosie’s Nort’side, a small restaurant on a high bluff overlooking the ocean.  Rosie is the sole owner, cook, waitress, bottle washer, and taxi driver for the establishment. The traditional Bahamian fare is quite good, the view is priceless, and it is a joy to have an opportunity to chat with such an enterprising woman.  Her husband died just after they had purchased the property, but next door she has built several attractive modern villas for rent, and she proudly announces that in a few weeks her youngest of six children will graduate from the US Merchant Marine Academy.  The other five have also received college educations at universities around the world.  We work off lunch exploring this rarely accessed ocean side beach. 



Working off lunch at Rosie's beach

It is a few days shy of Easter, and this is the weekend for the Eluthera Homecoming, a time when non-residents with family ties to the island return for several days of festivals.  We are anchored off Pascal’s Restaurant and find the lure of nightly Happy Hours irresistible with the discounted drinks and free gourmet appetizers.  We learn Pascal went to culinary school in New York City and Iceland – what a combination!  Out of guilt (we claim), we join several other couples for a full fledged dinner there that is an outstanding example of Caribbean fusion cuisine.  Meanwhile, Rock Sound is getting pretty lively.  Bands and DJ’s have the crowds dancing in the streets till early morning. A poorly timed rain storm cancels the Jankanoo Rush Out, but we still have fireworks the following evening.  During the day, we bike to the inland Blue Hole Park where we meet a family from Fort Lauderdale.  The father emigrated from Rock Sound to the US almost twenty years ago, but brings his family back every year for Homecoming so his children can maintain a sense of their heritage. 

One of Rock Sound's famous blue holes



Homecoming is over, the wind has slackened, and we see a mass exodus of boats from Rock Sound heading north.  We overnight at Alabaster Bay with a dozen others along a crescent, sand rimmed bay anchored by a small resort.  The next morning we make another hop, timing our passage for slack tide through the challenging Current Cut, and head over to Royal Island for the night’s anchorage.  Again we are joined by a number of other boats planning the 65 mile crossing over to the Abacos, leaving early the next morning. We would love to explore this area which is centered in the unique town of Spanish Wells, but that will have to wait for another year as the weather window for heading to the Abacos is closing fast.