Friday, March 22, 2013

Inching a Bit Further South



Regatta time in George Town is past history except for one last event.  Each year a sailing rally is organized to go to Long Island, the next island south of the Exuma chain.  With around thirty boats signed up, we leave George Town harbor, heading out the southeastern cut from protected Elizabeth Harbor.  After several days of massive northerly ocean swells, it is judged safe to depart.  It may be safe, but it still has an element of excitement.  We weave our way through reefs where the swells are crashing unnervingly close to our track. Below decks, the contents of our boat are being rearranged as we bounce through the surf. “Be careful opening the storage bins as the contents may have shifted during flight” seems to apply here.  Once we get into the deep ocean waters, the swells become barely perceptible. With virtually no wind, our supposed sailing race gets postponed, and the fleet motors down to Thompson Bay on Long Island. 

This huge influx of cruising boats to Long Island is seen as an economic boost to this otherwise quiet and often overlooked destination.  The tourist council has many activities planned for our stay.  Our group fills two school buses, and we take a tour of the southern portion of the island.  We did a similar tour last year, but decide to do it again as it provides an inexpensive way to see the many small settlements. Stops include the picturesque Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Clarence Town, built by the locally famous Father Jerome, 
Exterior and interior of the simple but exquisite church


The sign says it all


and Dean’s Blue Hole where the world free diving championships are held. 
Dean's Blue Hole with the pounding surf on the ocean side


When we stop by the Long Island Historical Museum, the local People to People organization holds a tea featuring traditional bush teas.  We sample the teas, learn about their medicinal applications, and meet friendly Long Island residents who chat about their island existence and culture. The tour concludes with a rum drink at the famous Max’s Conch Bar.

That evening Long Island Breeze Resort, a small cruiser-friendly restaurant and bar overlooking the anchorage, sponsors a sunset Happy Hour.  Music is provided by several cruisers including our favorite keyboard artist who we originally met in Marathon. 
Music on the deck of Long Island Breeze

A number of non-cruisers, including winter residents and Long Island natives, join the crowd. The ambiance is magical, and everyone lingers way past sunset.
Sunset at the Breeze, overlooking the anchorage


Since there was no wind for our scheduled race to Long Island, a make up race is planned for Saturday morning.  Rally racing is supposed to be fun and not overly competitive, so instead of a standard start with all the boats on the starting line at the same time, the committee just takes our starting time when we get around to crossing the line.  Twenty boats participate, sailing on a reach for four miles out from the harbor and then returning to the starting (now finish) line. The wind is blowing close to 20 knots and the seas are flat making it a perfect sail – we are flying, averaging speeds close to 8 knots!  Even better, we come in second in our fleet.  If we had only remembered to feather our prop before the race was almost half over, we might have done even better.  But this is a fun race and lapses by the crew are a foregone conclusion.

That evening, we have a group dinner at the Breeze, a trophy presentation, and a dance DJ’ed by fellow cruisers “Rocking Ron and Kool Karen”. Prior to the official event, local artisans set up a display their creations – straw work and baskets, jewelry made from shells and beach glass, paintings, sculptures in shells, and some very tasty jams – all of which are reasonably priced and of a high quality. In the midst of all the activity, one of the guides from yesterday’s bus tour shows up with his Junkanoo band for a rush out. To the accompaniment of horns, whistles, cow bells, and a variety of drums, the group descends on the Breeze.  The pounding rhythms and energetic dancing get everyone bouncing along. Junkanoo has its root in African culture and has become a staple in Bahamian communities.  The primary rush outs occur around New Years, but the locals are happy to have other opportunities to play and dance, and we enjoy another sampling of traditional Bahamian culture. 
Our tour guide, Omar, in the traditional crepe paper pants, leads his cru


The next morning most of the cruisers leave Thompson Bay for other destinations.  We decide to head to the north end of Long Island where we anchor in picturesque Calabash Bay.  The several mile long bay is anchored by the upscale Cape Santa Maria Resort and a number of ex-patriots’ large vacation homes. We take a lengthy walk along the powdery sand beach, gazing out on the turquoise water and many sand bores. 
Calabash Bay with the resort in the distance

That evening we dinghy over to the resort for dinner in their lovely two story screened in dining pavilion. Other anchored boats do the same, and in the bar, before dinner, we are introduced to Dave Calvert who lives about twenty miles further north on Cat Island. The name may mean nothing to most people, but Dave is an internationally known multihull racer and is the sailmaker who designed and built the sails we had on our previous boat.  It truly is a small world.

From Long Island, we head east to remote Conception Island.  The wind has picked up, and we find ourselves on a 30 mile beat to windward.  It is a bumpy but exhilarating ride, and once again, the contents of our cupboards below deck are being rearranged.  Conception is a small, uninhabited island that is in the national park system.  It rises from the ocean depths very dramatically with the sapphire colored ocean waters suddenly changing into a variety of turquoise hues. 
The beach at Conception near the anchorage

It is a place to visit only during settled weather as the anchorage has very little protection from any winds other than the trades.  Our arrival at Conception coincides with Burt’s birthday.  Friends circulate that information and plan a birthday celebration for the beach that evening. It is a birthday Burt will never forget, spent on one of the most beautiful beaches in the world in the company of new and old friends. Music, including the birthday song, is provided by Valerie and Ray from a large yacht in the anchorage.  They are professional recording artists that we originally met this winter in Marathon.
Burt celebrates his birthday at a very special location


The weather window allows us to stay an additional day, and we enjoy hiking to the windward side of the island with its equally spectacular sand beach. 
A calm day on the windward side of conception Island

Overhead, the migratory tropic birds with their flowing, long white tails are circling, indicating the spring is arriving in the southern Bahamas. When we tire of hiking, we return to the boat to spend the rest of the day soaking in the beauty of this special place.  The following day west winds are forecast, so we debate our next destination.  Do we head north to Cat Island with it exposed anchorages or return to George Town and the safety of Elizabeth Harbor? Our weather forecasting service indicates that the stormy weather being experienced on the US east coast will trickle down our way with the possibility of two more weeks of unsettled weather.  We wake up that morning to dark clouds and squalls on the horizon and quickly head out to sea as we don’t want to be caught in the anchorage with a squall. Thus, we begin the trek back to George Town.  With unusually strong cold fronts forecast to pass through the northern and central Bahamas in the coming weeks, we will opt to stay south where conditions will be relatively milder.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Life in the Big City



Compared to all the other towns in the Exumas, George Town is the big city. No, there are no stop lights and a one lane dusty road encircles the town, but we can find most of what one might need here, and there is even an international airport nearby. To access town one enters through a narrow cut into Lake Victoria and ties up at the dinghy dock provided by Exuma Market.  Multiple stops to the BTC office and J&K Productions (Julius and Krystal – a computer store in a shack with a dusty concrete floor and no glass in the windows where they really do know how to fix computers and phones - better than anyone in Nassau) get us a Zoom air card and finally some access to the internet on our computer. We can reprovision at the Exuma Market, a crowded grocery with narrow aisles, the only true grocery store on the entire 60 mile long island. There’s a bank with an ATM machine, one of only two in the entire Exumas. Lee who runs the Corner Laundry welcomes us back; she has an incredible memory for names and faces. The facility has seen better days but it gets the job done, and we leave with bags full of clean laundry.  Also along the road you will find a hair salon that also sells fresh fish and lobster, an upscale gift/art shop, several liquor stores, a gas station, and several restaurants that run the gambit from casual Bahamian carry out to high end dining.  It is certainly a study in contrasts and you know you are no longer in Kansas, Dorothy.

Life in George Town and the surrounding harbor is anything but boring.   
Our anchorage just off the Chat and Chill beach
Rainbow viewed from the anchorage
 
With so many cruisers here, 280 boats at latest count, there is no shortage of available activities.  The morning cruisers’ net on the VHF radio broadcasts the daily options that are available. Burt plays volleyball at the nearby beach bar almost everyday. 
Volleyball on the Chat and Chill beach - it is amazing no one gets hurt!

I go to Yoga on the beach under the trees some mornings and do water walking along the sandy shore with a group several afternoons a week. We take the dinghy to some of the beach access points on Stocking Island and hike along the well maintained trails to the spectacular shoreline along the Atlantic coast. 
Not a bad view for a hike

As the not very official basketweaving instructor, I occupy a picnic table near the volleyball courts most afternoons, giving instruction to beginners while also working on my own projects.   
Burt helps harvest some Silver Palm fronds that we use in basketmaking

On Sunday mornings we attend beach church under the whispering pines and Sunday evenings we go to Trivia Night at the St. Francis Resort, where one night we actually win, our team consisting of ourselves and the Babsons who hail from our area of Lake Erie. Many nights there are bonefires on some of the nearby beaches, Rake and Scrape dances in town, and happy hours with friends on boats. One night we attend a jam session at nearby beach bar where we hear a very talented keyboardist who we originally met in Marathon.  And, sometimes you just need a break from all the activity.

But if you are longing for peace and quiet, Regatta time in George Town is NOT the place to be.  For ten packed days, the cruisers put on a slew of activities ranging from big and small boat racing, a Bahamians vs. cruisers softball game, volleyball tournaments, dances, and a variety of sillier events.  We limit our participation to a manageable amount of activities.  Burt is helping on the race committee for the big boat races and is on a team in the Fun Volleyball Tournament. 
Some of the racers cut it pretty close to our boat

We join in on the Poker Run which is basically an afternoon spent visiting five beach bars and resorts by dinghy where we sample their food and drink and pick up the cards for a poker hand. It a fun and sociable way to pass an afternoon, and no one seems to care which of the 52 dinghies actually wins when the poker hands are revealed. And finally, there are the evening events – Opening Night with a Cruisers’ Talent(?) Show and dancing under the stars on the sandy beach and Closing Night with door prizes and more dancing.
The Conch Band at the Talent Show really sounded more like a herd of dying elephants
  

One day we rent a car with another couple and drive the entire length of Great Exuma Island and Little Exuma Island, a distance of over 60 miles.  We see a mix of native small communities and resort properties. We stop along the way to see loyalist plantation ruins, several century old tombs, and a monument to the leader behind a slave revolt. 
Ruins of a loyalist plantation

Beautiful beaches abound, and one even features a cave where an ex-pat lived the life of a hermit for several years. At the farthest southeast point on Little Exuma Island, we stop for lunch at Santana’s Grill, a very simple roadside, outdoor restaurant. Burt claims it is the best traditional Bahamian meal he has ever eaten, and the view isn’t too bad either. 
Open air kitchen at Santana's
Joined by friends Al and Arlene, we look like we're having a good time at this scenic restaurant

Next door is Mom’s Bakery.  Mom is a legend in the Exumas as daily she baked up to a hundred loaves of bread and trucked them 30 miles to George Town. These days, her health has dramatically cut into her business, but we find her slogan “A hug with every loaf of bread” is still in practice as we patronize her shop.
Mom shows off her wares - just another of the delightful Bahamians we have encountered

Nearby we stop to see the large stone pillar that acted as a navigation mark for ships approaching the salt flats that were actively “mined” by the British as early as the 1670’s. 
The Doric column used as an aid to navigation during the salt trade

And just down the street we find the beautiful and secluded Tropic of Cancer Beach. 
The secluded Tropic of Cancer beach - note the lack of people

Yes, we have crossed into the Tropic of Cancer, a milestone for cruisers that spent the summer in Maine.   

Back in George Town the cruising season is beginning to draw to a close. All of a sudden, gulls and song birds appear and locals tell us that is a sign of Spring. People are talking of plans to head further south to the Caribbean or north towards homes or other cruising grounds. Seminars are given on Caribbean cruising areas and passage routes, outboard repair, and other topics that allow cruisers to become self-sufficient in remote areas.  A local man comes on Sunday afternoons and gives talks on Exuma history and culture under the pines at Chat and Chill.  To celebrate the beginning of daylight savings, Chat and Chill supplements its weekly pig roast with a local band playing native music well into the evening.  The melodies float through the anchorage.  A large group gathers at one of the beaches for a going away party for a couple who have wintered in George Town for the last 26 years. They are remembered for all they have done for the community including developing the extensive network of hiking trails on Stocking Island and beginning Beach Church.  After returning to the States, they will sell their boat and move into a new home.  Thus, the circle of cruising life goes on.

The gathering on the beach at Monument Hill honoring Skip and Cheryl
While we may be preparing to leave, Mother Nature has other ideas. For the past month, strong lows along the US Atlantic coast and their resultant cold fronts have played havoc with our weather.  Now gales off the Carolinas are sending record ocean swells our way.  The wind may not be that strong, but the crashing waves along the Atlantic exposures make exiting cuts into the open water nothing short of treacherous. 
Crashing waves along the Atlantic side of Stocking Island
More waves crashing into the ocean shore iron rock
The waves form a waterfall through the rock into what we call our hot tub

Everyone’s plans are put on hold until the seas subside and winds begin to blow in an advantageous direction.