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Showing posts from March, 2023

Exumas

 It's dry season in the Bahamas, but we get three days of rain while hanging out in Nassau. Then south across the Yellow Bank to Highborne, with its many coral heads which require a sharp lookout for part of the run. But the sun is bright and the water clear, so we have no problem. Across the Yellow Bank Each plays a role that fits Glued to charts and camera Or dancing o're the bow. The danger here is coral heads Which lurk beneath the waves Massive blocks of limestone Send a ship to Davy Jones. Kristen's in her element With Autopilot, sonar, GPS and more  Plus a camera mounted on the mast Gives digital control. Gary wears his PFD Tethered to the rail Keeps an eager lookout For colors tell a tale. Sand shows up cerulean Grass is greenish gray Coral almost black and so Between them we sashay Athena flies her canvas Bouncing o're the waves Showing off her sass  For all who catch a gaze. Highborne is a quiet island, about twenty boats in the anchorage, and an inviting beac...

Eluthera

 Our next guests are Karen and John, whom we know through dancing and friends in New Hampshire. They recently got married and this is their first time away from teenage kids at home.  Karen does family law. John is a machinist. He made some stainless steel parts for Athena last year. They flew in to Nassau and joined us on Friday while we were tied up at the Nassau Harbor Club Marina.  Nassau is the largest city in the Bahamas, with capabilities for massive numbers of tourists from cruise ships and airplanes. We visited some of the popular spots, like Junkanoo beach, where we walked the malecon amidst throngs of tourists off the six cruise ships in port. Each one can carry 5,000 passengers. Just as night fell the wind shifted and we all spent a very rough night at anchor as the swells swept in between the breakwaters and reflected off the malecon wall. Dawn couldn't come early enough.  Daybreak and four new cruise ships steam into port. Finally Harbor Control gives u...

Andros and Nassau

 On to Nassau. We spent another day on Andros, hoping to hire a boat to take us to the coral reef on the east coast of the island. But alas our lack of planning didn't pan out. Instead we rented a car and drove half way down the island. On the way we swam in a 'blue hole' , a limestone sinkhole full of fresh groundwater.  Then we visited Androsia, a batik factory where we got to watch several women making vibrant dyed fabric and turning it into clothing.  The next day gave us a challenging sail to Nassau. Close hauled the whole way, with some strong winds. We made it before sunset to Junkanoo beach. The next day we said goodbye to Tom. It's been fun having him with us. When he was much younger he had lived on a sailboat and cruised the islands.  In anticipation of our next guests, we'll stay nearby, so we pulled up the anchor and spent two nights on nearby Athol island, which hosts many small reefs. It's very popular with tourists from the cruise ships and also ...

We made it to Bimini!

Originally posted feb 8 Through an organization called Hope Fleet, we have accepted a shipment of 35 blue buckets for delivery to Nassau. Each bucket contains seeds, a small bag of soil, irrigation tubing, and the bucket itself. Everything needed for someone to start a backyard garden to help the Bahamas to become less dependent on imported food. It seems that during COVID, inter island transportation was interrupted, and some of their people on outer islands ran out of food. So this is an effort to gain independence.  We departed Miami with another sailboat also bringing buckets. For our first day here on Bimini we joined them on folding bicycles to ride to the end of the road and back. About four miles down and four back. The cruise ship dock and the fancy hotel and ritzy homes are all at the far end. Close to the inner harbor where we're tied up is the old town where Earnest Hemingway used to come. Eclectic and sometimes run-down houses, stores and old resorts crowd the street....