Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Staniel Cay Part 1

Staniel Cay 12/21/10- 1/1/11- Judy 1/4/11


Judy --  From Warderick Wells, it was a 3.5 hour sailing trip to the area of Staniel Cay.  Not knowing the “lay of the land” and the lay of the bottom, we decided to anchor at Big Majors Spot where there were a lot of other boats already anchored.  Big Majors is known for its swimming pigs that swim out into the water to beg for food from people in dingys.   We pulled out some old bread and climbed into the dingy to go see the piggies.  They had previously been on the beach but had disappeared, so we had a pig calling contest (Steph won!) and one brave pig waded into the water and swam to come visit us.  After taking lots of pictures and videos and giving the pig all the food we had with us, it lost interest and returned to shore.  We took a ride over to Staniel Cay Yacht Club (according to the guide books, this is a popular destination with a well deserved reputation. Although there were pilings and docks to accommodate lots of boats, there was only two in sight, one at the dock, and one anchored off), beached the dingy and took a walk around the settlement.  There seemed to be a number of houses under construction, nicely coming along, and bright blue and yellow ( the national colors) street signs, sand blasted in wood.  We felt right at home, at the intersection of Kings Highway and Honey Spring Valley Road. We discovered the internet at the Yacht Club and figured we would go in another day to use it.
Big Majors was a rather long dingy ride from the dock, so the next day we picked up the anchor and moved to a spot near Thunderball Grotto.  Yep, it is the same grotto that was used in the James Bond thriller “Thunderball”!   Because of the cool water and air, we decided to visit the grotto another day.  It is safest to enter it at slack low tide and it took a few days to figure out when that was.  We were originally going to go to anchor east of Big Majors Spot but as we approached the narrow passage the current was very heavy against us and all we could see was water swirling around and over the rocks (the Crown of Thorns) which must be avoided as you go through.  Not knowing the territory and being cautious, we decided to back up and anchor next to Thunderball Island.  We met Bob and Barb on Rhiannon ( a beautiful steel hulled schooner Bob built back in his welding days, before he became a nurse, allowing them to steal away and sail and dive for weeks at a time! ) who were anchored nearby and they invited us over for drinks.  They also showed us the way to go through the passage safely to enter the area known as “Between the Majors” which is a protected area between Big Majors Spot and Little Majors Spot and is a favored anchorage when cold fronts are going through.  
Today is Friday, January 28, 2011 and those last paragraphs were written weeks ago.  I decided that I just HAD to write some more to share with you our wonderful experiences, even though I will just have to gloss over many of them because of space and time constraints.  Luckily Steph went through the photos and wrote down the highlights of each day.  Basically, we spend time doing boat projects and cruising (repairing boats in exotic locales) and spend time ashore soaking up Bahamian culture and meeting lots of nice people…natives and foreigners, landlubbers and other sailors alike. 
We have also snorkeled several times, two of them at Thunderball Grotto, which is lovely.  We bought an underwater camera that uses film, so we need to get the pictures developed and put on a CD or DVD so that we can load them into the computer.  The currents here are very strong and it is best to go to Thunderball when it is approaching slack low tide.  The first time we went, we got there a few minutes late and the tide had turned and was beginning to flood.  It was very difficult to swim against the current to enter the grotto, but it was well worth the struggle.  We had taken frozen veggies with us and used them to attract the tropical fish.  Man, it was like swimming in an aquarium!  The fish were thrilled with the veggies and got very excited and aggressive, to the point of grabbing the baggie out of my hand and dashing away with it! There are three or more large holes in the ceiling of the grotto that let in sunlight and the colors were incredible.  The second time we went we got there just at the right time tide wise. We had no veggies and the sun was at the wrong angle, but we had a lovely swim through the grotto, floated out the other side, and drifted with the slowly changing current around the end of the island and back to the entrance.  We drifted over many different kinds and colors of coral and saw dozens of kinds of fish. At each turn you see another type of fish, in colors and shapes I thought only came from Hollywood.  If you hover quietly in one spot, more fish appear as if by magic. The corals are often in day-glo colors, which I never understood at the pet shop.  We dove again yesterday and it is just another of the many stand-out experiences we’ve had. 
Staniel Cay Yacht Club is the social center of the area for the cruising community.  As we said before, it seemed pretty quiet there when we first arrived, but more boats and people arrived daily and by Christmas the place was filling up and jumping and by New Years it was really crowded.  Then, as quickly as it had filled up, it emptied out again.  In between there was an event filled calendar which included a Christmas party with Santa for all the Island and visiting kids, a pirate party with everyone in costume.  and an evening sit down dinner for adults.  The night of the Christmas dinner, some of the cruisers stayed on board, because of the dark of the moon and the difficult passage back after the Club, but we took our hand-held GPS along on the dink ride in. When it was time to go back to our anchorage we followed the bread crumb trail back to the boat in the pitch black between a virtual “Scylla and Charybdis.”By luck, it turned out to be the smoothest trip on that course. While enjoying dinner, we met Jim and Deb at the next table, a couple of medicos who flew in from Florida on their helicopter for the event.  The next morning as they flew home, they took our picture which is now at the top of our blog. At the pirate party, our friend Vernon Pryde (of Kiwi  Pryde,)confused everyone, dressed as a modern day Somali pirate, toting a shoulder rocket grenade launcher, wearing a baseball cap (backwards) and cargo fatigues.
The two events that got my (Steph) juices flowing were the mixed double match race between two local national championship class A boats and the New Years Open Cruisers Race.  The Exumas chain boast a water based population who have been building, sailing and racing home built boats forever.  Staniel Cay is the home of “The Grandmaster,” the late Captain Rolle Gray, the winningest sailor in the country.  The mixed doubles is raced between two of his winning boats, “Tida Wave” and “Lady Muriel.” These traditional island boats are manned by local teams who invite guest crew on (by lottery,) for the experience of a life time.  
While Judy was using the internet on the porch of the SCYC, I wandered around.  Most every dock has a fish cutting table, and at this one was Captain Tony Gray, dressed in a black garbage bag and a baseball cap cleaning fish. Over the wharf wall, several nurse sharks hovered around waiting for scraps.  I talked to Tony and introduced myself.  We spoke of fishing and racing and life on the island.  While he was cleaning a large grouper head, I asked him if he knew the song “Fish Heads..Fish Heads.. Rolly Polly Fish Heads…” He joked, “It’s a Bahamian song.  If not for fish heads, we would starve.” I asked him about the big race, and he told me he was the Commodore of the Race.  I asked about the lottery, and he was sketchy about the schedule and the particulars, but this is typical island laissez faire.  I told him I was a Race Patrol Chairman at my home club and was there anything I could do to help out.  He said they could use some help stepping the mast, loading the ballast and otherwise getting ready. They wait for the mail boat which has a crane to hoist the mast, “so watch for the mail boat.”
Meanwhile I asked him about the fish he was cleaning, and he said, “Here, have this one for supper.” I was delighted, and assuming fishing was his livelihood, I asked how I could compensate him, and he laughed…”You can buy me a beer some time.” That evening I made Banana Bread, using up some fruit that hadn’t been yellow for days, and cooked the fish, both on our Magma Grill on the side of the boat.
The mail boat visits the island twice a week, once on its way south from Nassau, full of most anything that arrives on the islands.  It stops again on the return trip up from Georgetown, but there’s little cargo on that stop. They do take passengers, and it seems like a fun kind of a boat ride.  It seems that Tony Gray’s dad was “The Grandmaster.” A fisherman turned mail boat Captain and a legend in the islands. Like the “Wells-Fargo Wagon” in The Music Man, the arrival of the mailboat was (and is) a noteworthy event. (Right now Mary the sailing cat is waiting for a special shipment of Kitty Litter, and her dad is hoping for a couple of pounds of his favorite coffee! And her mom is waiting for some Cream of Rice!)
Staniel Cay was originally Gray Cay, and Captain Rolle Gray knew how vital his job was in knitting the islands and families together into a nation.  “The mailboat must get through.” And in these tricky and dangerous waters it is often unwise to set out to sea.  You can see where he can stand out among his peers and countrymen as a hero. To top this off no one could beat him in a sailboat race.  Some say it was his intimate knowledge of the currents which predominate that made him unbeatable on the water. It seemed to me that he was a sort of folk hero cross between Casey Jones and John Henry. We later discovered that a song about him was the number one hit in the islands for two years in a row.  How’s that for recognition of a sailboat racer?
So the mailboat arrived, and Judy and I dinked over to the government dock to help step the mast.  Most of the preliminary work was done, and “Lady M” was already rigged. The regular crew is made up of natives and other residents (of which there are many.) Little did we know when we worked on the preparation that both Judy and I would get to sail on “Tida Wave”, and she would win three races in a row.
These all wooden boats boast a fairly small hull for their tall mast and long overhanging low lying boom.  The massive sail has an extended head (not unlike the Dutch boats that visited last year,) giving more roach than usual. The sail is loose-footed and the clew is run to an outhaul through block and tackle.  The most interesting feature and the one which made the race all the more thrilling are the pry boards.  Although there is a great deal of ballast put on board in the hold, there is not so much weight at depth as with the deep keeled and bulb bottomed keels we know. This may be for the shallow drafts encountered here.  To counterbalance the tall booms and huge spread of canvas, the crew are way beyond “rail meat.”  The pry boards are just that, these 3” x 10” boards are shoved across the deck on each tack and the crew climbs, shinnies or scoots up and back, under the low swinging boom, on these boards to flatten the boat.  There is four or five crew on each of the two boards and they may all be out over the water laying back to pry the boat upright against the cantilever of the full blown sail. What a rush!!!
Just before New Year’s big events, we headed over to Black Point, about a nine mile sail to Great Guana Cay.  Sandy Stefanic says it has the best Laundromat in the Bahamas, and we needed it.  We were also low on water, and good purified R/O (reverse osmosis) is free for the taking. That and free trash disposal are two features, along with free wi-fi at Lorraine’s Café are some of the ways this island draws visitors. On the dock at SCYC it’s forty cents a gallon.  Here’s a snip I wrote to brother Lew for his pending visit, describing the routine:
     “Our days are spent lazing in the sun, snorkeling, beachcombing, meeting the locals and other     cruisers, and reading, socializing or taking care of business.   You would be amazed how much business there is to take care of, or perhaps how much time is involved in doing it. For example, we have sailed to Black Point three times to do laundry and refill our water tanks. It takes up a slow paced day. We finish breakfast, hoist the anchor and head out by motor or sail or both as conditions require. A couple of hours later we re-anchor about five miles south of our starting point. We load up the dinghy with laundry, trash, six-five gallon water jugs and a collapsible dock cart.  I drop Judy off at Rockside Laundry where Ida runs the best Laundromat in the Bahamas.  While she sells tokens for the machines ($3.50 a load, wash or dry,) she also cuts and plaits hair.  If you want corn rows, see her.
     I take the dinghy from the Rockside Dock to the Government Dock where I tie up and unload the trash, the jugs and the cart.  I assemble the cart and walk a couple of thousand feet to the water spigot. It leaks and I get soaked, but the weather is beautiful and getting wet is fine, also the R/O water is free (elsewhere it’s fifty cents a gallon.)  The cart can carry three full jugs, so I make two trips between the water tap and the dock. I take the full jugs to the boat and decant them into our tanks.”
Well, if you’ve done the math, we now have thirty gallons of free water, and two forty gallon tanks on board, so I repeat the above routine two more times, refilling our gallon drinking water jugs from Poland Spring and Zephyrhills as well as the tanks.  While doing this, I met a sailor bragging about his watermaker. He’s only had it a year, and says it’s cost him $26 a gallon to date.  I told him I just carried ninety gallons of free water to the boat, so this was a twenty three hundred dollar day for me.  In reality, my net savings on water were $45 for the day, which is about what the laundry cost. More of my letter to Lew:
     “Anyway, the water is great, crystal clear and teaming with colorful coral and fish. Bring your snorkel, mask and fins.  I got a shorty wet suit from a guy who outgrew his for $25, so if you have one, bring it.  It’s like living in an aquarium.  You CAN swim with sharks here, I know I did.  And with barracuda just yesterday at Thunderball Grotto, an island reef featured in the movie of the same name.  Many people fish for supper, and we’ve been given fish, lobster and conch.  I haven’t caught anything yet but sea shells.
So pack light in a soft stuff able duffel bag, shorts, swimsuits and gear, long sleeve shirts for the sun and a jacket or sweatshirt for cool evenings. Bring a good book or two, leave your guitar at home, space is tight. The weather is lovely, ~80 degrees, pleasant humidity, light breezes.  The water is 82 degrees today.  We’ve had very little rain.  The biggest weather problem for cruisers is occasional cold fronts which bring high winds.  There are few all weather anchorages, which are protected from wind in any direction, so we often migrate from one side of an island to another, and sit out the passing winds.
     Well, I will close and head in to shore to Isles General Store and see if the kitty litter (and some dark roast coffee) we ordered came in on the weekly mail boat. Then it’s over to Rhonda Miller’s house for a loaf of her coconut or whole wheat bread.  I’ll check the Pink Pearl Super Market (no lights, a few dozen items and “Fire-in-the-Hole” erotic rum) and the Blue Store for items that Vivian doesn’t have at the General Store.  Then over to the Yacht Club to buy an internet card and a cell phone card and buy some cash with a check.”  
Judy here—The Yacht Club and the settlement put on this regatta and week of festivities to draw torism to the area.  The Banquet was free to everyone who came.  Tee shirts were given to all the tourist crew members and jackets were given out by drawing names.  In order to raise some of the funds necessary to pull this all off, there was an auction just before and during the banquet.  Cruisers and townspeople donated items to be auctioned off and they raised over $2000 in a couple hours.  I made a pair of earrings and a necklace to donate.
At the Banquet the day before the race, they announced that there were enough slots available for all the people who signed up for the lottery.  Boat and race assignments would be posted the next day. How great is that?  And then they followed that with a Bahamian Feast hosted by the Sailing Club. WOW. Rum Punch, Mon.  Lobster salad, conch fritters, grilled fish and conch salad, Bahamian Mac and Cheese, More rum punch (Kaliks if you preferred beer) and carrot cake.etc., etc.
Judy -- Note to self---keep head out of the way while Steph is pulling the starter cord of the dingy outboard.  We ended up visiting the clinic  late at night after I got hit in the temple and lost consciousness for a short time.  I was a bit foggy for a while, but felt better the next day.  We were driven to the clinic in a golf cart driven by Tony Gray’s sister Yvonne, who was home for the holidays.
RACE DAY.  Judy and I raced through breakfast to go ashore and see the race roster. As it turned out, we both got slots on “Tida Wave“ for the first of three races planned for around 10:30.  Everyone was milling around and team T-shirts were passed out. Judy told me that Tony was looking for me out at the dive shop, so I went off to see how I could help.  Tony was preparing the marks for the races.  There were three large round orange fenders, some lengths of line, some sawed off chunks of boat ballast and some #8 coated copper wire to fasten the weights to the line.  It was just like back at the club, prepping marks for the races.
Race time came and went in typical island style, (meaning whenever they got it together) but we were moving forward. The regular crews took the two contenders out to the course, and the guest crews piled on to a T-Top power boat ferrying us out to our rides. The race course start was about a half mile off shore, in order to avoid shallows or reefs. Once aboard “Tida Wave” we were given a quick tutorial on the use of the pry boards and other features of the class, e.g. stay low on tacking as the boom sweeps low over the deck, and keep the boat balanced by constantly moving in and out on the boards as required.  Most importantly, when preparing to tack, be ready to move clear of the heavy and fast moving pry as it is shot from one side of the boat to the other.
I made another “Note to self…” keep all appendages out of the way of the PRY, as it can severely damage any body parts that get in the way.  Unfortunately, I misplaced the note and got hit twice with the pry…so I got a major “boat bite” (which 6 weeks later still hurts).
We hoisted her medium main sail for a trial run, and found that the brisk wind today was a bit heavy for that sail, and that called for a sail change on the water before the start.  The water is filled with support boats, moral and practical, as well as spectator boats and the media.  While waiting for our sail change to be delivered from shore, Kalicks (beers) were passed around. The sail was dropped and flaked and the smallest sail was hoisted.  Judy had her multi tool and snugged up the shackle at the gooseneck while the outhaul had to be jury-rigged. The smaller jib was set also and it was time to start the race.
The next thing we know is that we are over the starting line and dropping sail. Next the anchor, a four fluked grappling style is dropped overboard and the boat is being blown back up to the start line. It’s to be an “anchor start.” The committee boat checks the line, fires a starting gun and drops the flag.  The crew starts pulling the anchor and raising the main sail in a well rehearsed ballet.  The anchor is passed back to the cockpit and stowed below.  The cockpit is a small open hatch about four by four feet with two crew below.  Everyone else, about sixteen crew was on the flat deck or the prys.  The crew in the cockpit handled the sheets, and kept the bilge pump running and the beer cold.  Water came in across the deck and from the hull. Even with the smaller sail area these tender boats required constant shifting of weight to keep the rail out of the water.
“Lady Muriel” took the lead, she hadn’t shortened sail, but it made her harder to handle, and I understand they had some equipment problems. Meanwhile, “Tida Wave” crept up with jeers and cheers, the two Captains exchanging well practiced epithets.  The rush of the water, the billow of sail and the distance between the boats slowly diminishing made for an exhilarating ride.  “Lady M” lost her lead, and never quite regained it that day, with our boat taking all three of the match races.
Our crew was swapped out with the next contingent and we went ashore to meet with the press. We were interviewed by Sean and Raquel of the National Television “Island Show” as the race program finished up.  By mid afternoon it was time for the awards.  All of the racers and race fans gathered in front of the Yacht Club for the speeches and presentation of the perpetual trophy, cash prizes and team jackets. All and all, of the many stellar experiences I’ve had this trip; this one will remain with me the longest. Hats off to the people of the Exumas for whom boat building, sailing and racing is a living tradition.
CRUISERS PRE-RACE MEETING Well, after all that excitement, it’s only midday and tomorrow is the Cruisers’ New Year’s Open.  A short walk down past the Public Beach (BTW, all beaches in the Bahamas are public,) is “Happy People” Bar and Restaurant, a disused watering hole. This afternoon, the door is open, but there is no electricity so we mill around outside, or wander inside looking for someone in charge.  It seems they are out looking for a generator or a light bulb and making rum punch and chicken wings. Finally it all comes together, food, drink and Sailing Instructions.  No handicapping, the only semi distinction is separate monohull and multihull awards.  After a long exciting day we head back to the mothership for a night’s rest.  Goodness is it eight o’clock already, “way past my bedtime.” Four hours later we are noisily awakened by boat horns and fireworks, “HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!”
NEW YEARS DAY-  We meet Wes and Linda of “Odyssey,” who will crew with us in today’s big race.  We met Wes in the dark around the punchbowl two evenings ago, and he is an avid racer with “a clean bottom.” The course is a large triangle starting a half mile out, past the shoals, and heading west to Sandy Cay, then upwind to Harvey Cay and back to the start pin two times for a near ten mile course.  Wes and I got the boat race ready while “I showed him the ropes” and discussed tactics.  Linda was going to be the photographer and Judy was at the helm.  There was one other ketch in the field and neither of us raised our mizzen sails.  There was a decent wind and we made good speed, but others did better.  Without a handicap our big sluggish boat finished ninth out of eleven starters (and the two boats that came in just ahead of us were 2 minutes and 30 seconds ahead of us respectively.)  We were elated to have been in the pack for most of the race and we had a great time.
That evening, dinner and awards were at the pavilion at the Public Beach.  The main road was closed to traffic, so the resident golf carts had to find a detour.  Fat sticks of street chalk was passed out to the kids, and the Staniel Cay Community Association which sponsored the event dished out roast pork, BBQ chicken, Bahamian Mac N Cheese and Cole slaw and sold raffle tickets.  It was a great evening social gathering with the cruisers and locals, both natives and residents all enjoying the event.  Once again there were speeches and trophies.  All racers got awards, and we got a “straw*“ bag made here at Staniel, with a loaf of Rhonda Miller’s homemade bread, two Kaliks and a souvenir shot glass. 
*The straw which one hears about is actually plaited and woven leaves of palmetto…. More elsewhere.







Swimming Pig at Big Majors Spot


Holiday decorations atop Bentaña


Names sound familiar??

Thunderball and sisters


Crown of Thorns in the middle of the cut.


Captain Tony and the fishhead

Barb and Bob on Rhiannon

Thunderball!!

BBQ fish with Shark awaiting its bite

Banana bread and fish from the barby


WiFi at SCYC



Grand Master Rolle Gray's tomb

Jim and Deb in their chopper
Between the Majors before the blow
Looking south towards Staniel Cay
Looking north towards Pipe Creek

Going to the Pink Store

To the Laundromat in Black Point...notice the dock!

Getting water

Pirate Steph and friend

Vernon, the Somali pirate

Pirate Judy

Tida Wave and the mailboat

Fresh delivery for New Years--Lady M in the backgraound

A necklace Judy donated to the auction

Big boats arrving for New Year's


Making conch salad

a little pepper...

dingy pond

Free rum punch



What am I bid???



Steph demonstrating a donated washtub bass

Am I on Tida Wave or Lady M?

Prepping the marks

Off to the races!!

Putting more crew on Tida Wave


Changing sails

Coming up on Lady M

Interviewing for TV
Boat bite

Hangin out

The Cup

The coveted jacket


more rum punch

Cruising race


Wes and Linda


Cruising race trophies


The week's activities

Steph in his new wet suit..very buff!


Monday, February 7, 2011

We are fine and having a ball in paradise

2/7/11 -Judy's Birthday......Hello all from Little Farmers Cay, Exumas.  We are so busy having fun that we are falling further behind in our blog posts.  Also, internet is pretty slow, so posting-uploading pictures is difficult.  We will be in Georgetown in a few days and hopefully will have some time there to play ketch-up.  Pun intended.  :)

Monday, January 10, 2011

12/16-21/10 Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park - Part 2

Warderick Wells Cay- Park HQ

Photos will be posted at a later date.

Judy—On 12/17/10 we decided to head for Warderick Wells Cay to hunker down through another cold front that was forecasted.  “Barry Cuda” was still resting under us, so we waved goodbye, hoisted the sails and sailed off the mooring.  What a lovely day!  The sun was shining, we had an ENE breeze and off we went.  “Otto” (the autopilot) was employed and I did Sudokus while sitting by the wheel.  It took us 3 or 4 hours to get to the approach for Warderick Wells Cay.  “Otto” was at the helm most of the way.  We eventually turned on the iron jib to charge the batteries. 
On the Exuma Banks’ side (west) of the Cays, it is extremely important to watch the chart and the water and to stay pretty far offshore because of the moving sand “bores” (bars) which stream out from shore like long, fat, misshapen fingers, sometimes 2 to 3 miles long. They are formed by the currents and the tides that come through the cuts or spaces between the islands (cays).  The cuts are dangerous as the current flows quite fast (for those of you who are sailors think “Hell Gate” here. Unlike Hell Gate, some are quite narrow, with shallows on either side; poorly charted and with ever shifting sands.  Other analogous cuts are Shinnecock inlet on the south shore of Long Island, and the channels between the Elizabeth Islands like Woods Hole and Quick Hole).
The northern end of Warderick Wells Cay has a lovely harbour protected by a ring of small islands (cays).  It has a channel on the eastern edge that curves around into the center of the protected area.  The channel is deep enough (6 to 15 feet at mean low water) but the rest of the area is 3 feet to nearly dry at low water.  It is beautiful to see the deeper blue water with yellow in the middle.
Our mooring was near our friends on Legacy.  We managed to lose the end of our boat hook while picking up the mooring and Steph decided he would dive in and save it, until he saw “Bruce”, the resident shark, swim by. We dinked into the park office and met Darcy, the “voice of Exuma Park.”  She is a wonderful, friendly, very helpful person and manages the welcome center/museum, gift shop and the radio communications in the Park.  We got all registered and joined the Bahamas National Trust which gave us two free nights on moorings in the Park.  We received all sorts of information about the Park, the hiking and snorkeling on Warderick Wells and had a fun time looking at all the cool items in the gift shop.  Darcy introduced us to the “Bananacuits” these cute, fear free, little birds with yellow on them.  (They actually became pests on the boat, as they would come in, fly around the salon and into the aft cabin, where Mary reacted just like a cat should…but we wouldn’t let her catch any of them.  They also pecked food and fruit that was out, and left little birdie poops wherever they felt like.)
While back in Nassau we picked up a package of Christmas lights and a small tree.  Now was the time to light up the boat.  I hoisted the 24’ string of multi-colored lights to the top of the main mast with 12’ descending from the cap to the spreader on either side.  The anchor light served as the star (or shammos) atop our tree of lights.
We rented a DVD for the evening’s entertainment and signed up for a 24 hour period of internet via satellite.  The internet was quite slow at times and there were no Skype or any social networking sites allowed.  We were able to do email and upload some blog postings.
The next day we went in to the office again and picked up a map of the trails and went for a hike up Boo Boo Hill.  Being a national park, there are all sorts of signs giving descriptions of the plants and natural wonders, and there certainly were lots on this trail.  It was a very interesting hike.  When we got to the top of Boo Boo Hill, we made a driftwood plaque with Bentaña’s name, the date and our names and left it with the others there.  Boo Boo Hill is so named for the sounds the ghosts of shipwrecked victims make that can be heard on the hill at specific times.  Skeptics ascribe it to the water rushing through the blow holes. Steph went to see the blow holes, but it was low tide so they weren’t blowing.  We wandered back to the office, picked up another DVD (Something with Sean Penn and a sailboat, taking place on Smuttynose Island at the Isle of Shoals off the coast of Portsmouth NH) and headed back to the boat.
On Saturday, a front came through and the wind was quite strong.  We had rain and were glad we were on a strong mooring, because we were pretty close to a rocky shore.  A beach party had been planned for 5 or 5:30 that afternoon, but no one went, so it was rescheduled for Sunday afternoon.
The rescheduled party took place after sunset on the 19th. About ten cruisers were there, joined by three resident Bahama Defense Force officers.  This island also serves as an outpost for the BDF, with members assigned here for two week shifts every year.  We were also joined by a Hutia, a small endangered rodent. Here in the park it has no predators, and may not be harmed elsewhere, so it has become a pest here, but cute… In all it was a cool and windy evening with crudités and libations enjoyed by all.  I enjoyed the Nassau Royale, a cordial made from rum. An example of activities was, “Whose flashlight can shine the furthest.” Getting our dinghys back off the beach in fresh surf in the dark (with a few drinks under our belts) was another chilling and thrilling event.  And so we returned to Bentaña for another tranquil night’s sleep.
We stayed through Tuesday morning, 12/21, as the winds continued through Monday afternoon the 20th.
The 21st was Mom’s birthday, so Darcy let us use the office phone to call and sing Happy Birthday.  The 21st is also the winter solstice, and this year it was accompanied by a full moon in a total eclipse.  Can you imagine the treat to be in a place with no light pollution, no haze, and pleasant weather in which to lie out and watch the show?  It was also benefited by having my fine Steiner binoculars at hand.  Nothing says man in the moon like good German optics. The unexpected earthshine made the part of the disk in the “Dark” actually visible but reddish and dim. I took some pictures, but you can see ones worth looking at somewhere else on the net.  After bidding “adieu” to our newfound friend, Darcy, we hopped in the dingy, headed back to the boat and released the mooring to head for Staniel Cay.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

12/16-21/10 Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park - Part 1

Judy –12/16/10 After a few days in Allen Cays, we departed for Shroud Cay in the Exuma Land and Sea Park.  We soon picked up a hitchhiker.  A small seabird, possibly a tern, landed on the solar panel and hung out for a while, turning it into a literal poop deck. As we got out onto the Exuma Banks west of Allen Cay, we decided to swing the compass for the autopilot.  After a fashion we got it done.  The instruction book is a little different than the model of the controller we have, so it took lots of button pushing to get to the correct place.  We then had a wonderful mostly hands free sail/motor-sail to Shroud Cay, our first stop in the ECLSP. A Bahamas National Park, Exumas Cays Land and Sea Park is the first land and sea park in the world and covers 176 square miles. It is 22 miles long and 8 miles wide, covering into the ocean (Exuma Sound) and Exuma Banks and includes numerous small and larger cays, some public and some privately owned.  There are hiking trails, snorkeling areas with coral reefs and pristine beaches.

Looks like the internet is having trouble uploading the photos...I will fix it next time.  Judy

Shroud Cay 

Judy--As we approached Shroud Cay on 12/16/10, the first stop in the park, we were amazed to see that we were the ONLY boat in the mooring field and one other boat was anchored north of the mooring field and left soon after we arrived.  We picked up a mooring and dinked to shore to put our payment in the strongbox….it was quite a climb to get to the box and when I got there, I found out that the fee indicated in the cruising guide and Explorer Charts were both wrong and I didn’t have enough money with me.  I took a payment envelope and figured we would pay at the HQ the next day.
We had heard about Shroud Cay from Captain Daniel on Liberty Clipper and he said that it was his favorite place in the whole Exumas.  He told us about the steams going through mangrove swamps to a beautiful secluded beach on the ocean side of the island, so we hopped in the dingy with the chart, the hand-held GPS, and a pole and motored to the northern end of the island to explore.
Steph--If you look at the photo of the chart, you can see that this cay, like many others, is actually a ring of islands. The middle, as at Allan Cay, is a sort of lagoon with protected anchorage.  Here at Shroud Cay the interior is inter-tidal and hosts a forest of stilt rooted mangrove trees.  Through the growth is a network of channels, mostly too shallow for motors but navigable by kayak or poled boat.  As we entered the first narrow pass, we both broke out in those frequent grins indicating “Wow, I can’t believe it, it keeps getting better. “ The water was probably six feet deep, but when it is this transparent it’s very hard to judge.  The channel was about 25 feet wide and the shrubs at waterside rose about four feet allowing views behind and up to the ridges of the island.  In protected areas the mangrove grew higher although wind pruning keeps most vegetation short and compact.
We motored at the recommended idle speed for about half an hour, winding this way and that, passing side channels too shallow for our motor.  Following the chart, kept in a waterproof envelope, we rounded a turn which opened up to a view of the ocean on the other side of the island.  Here was the “hidden” beach we had been promised.  GRIN GRIN Man it was lovely. BTW the weather could not have been more cooperative. We frolicked in the surf which cast up on the beach from several directions creating fascinating ripples in the sand.  The wind too carved the sand into marvelous sights, as the rays of the setting sun cast long shadows.  Unknown sand dwellers carved hollow s in the strand which collapsed as we walked over them.
With a need to return to the mother-ship before dark, we returned to our beached ride.  There we met the first humans we saw all day, a couple from Florida. The low traffic count helps keep the beaches looking pristine, but as we’ve seen elsewhere, flotsam winds up on beaches everywhere.  Some caring soul had gathered up lost flip flops, tossed juice containers and tangles of fishnet line and left them on a rock for us to deliver to the Park Office.  The park accepts no personal trash, but welcomes picked up litter. We got back to Bentaña as the sky turned its usual spectacular dusky colors and headed for a nap. The water was about 15 feet deep and we could clearly see the bottom.  As I looked under the boat upon arrival, I saw a barracuda lurking in the shade cast by our hull.

 
Our little hitchhiker
 
Our dink ride through the mangroves


 
Attempting to pay the mooring fee



Mangroves



Who lives here?



Exuma Sound (ocean)









Exuma Banks end


"Barry" the 'cuda


Boxing Day ===Steph===Time Out of Joint

Well today is the day after Christmas, celebrated in British tradition as the day of exchanging gifts, presumably in boxes.  It’s actually after midnight , 1247 hours, 27-12-10 to use the continental time and date format.  We have had a holiday from blogging for a couple of weeks, storing up more adventures and tall tales from the islands on the other side of the stream. Judy and I are taking shifts at anchor watch again as the cold fronts which have been bringing snow and blizzard conditions on shore bring high winds and cooler air here.  It’s still mostly short pants, with wind breaker and wind pants during the blows.  For me it’s sweat pants, long sleeves, fleece, socks, wind breaker and wind pants. J  The high winds are a challenge for boats at anchor.
Phil Goldberg, a long time friend and avid follower of these writings has commented about the chronology of our postings.  He points out that it may be hard to sift out the who and when of the jottings.  This is a work in progress, and any feedback is welcome.  We are now able to share some pictures of the scenes and events we write about, and would love to share some video clips if speed and bandwidth were only available.  Unfortunately it’s not.  Phil took our suggestion to get Skype, and we shared some face time before we left Nassau while still on the “Atlantis Wi-Fi.” We could see and hear Phil sitting in his office cum studio fiddling with the keyboard. Our next Wi-Fi opportunity didn’t support Skype or social networks for lack of capacity.
In an e-mail we received two days ago, Phil suggested that we identify the date and writer of each entry.  Here’s the skinny on that. Judy and I take turns writing, as the spirit moves us. Mostly we cover an event to each other’s satisfaction, with editorial comment, asides and insertions by the other set in italics. As previously noted our journal is always behind the times. We actually don’t have a calendar, and ever since my watchband broke, I stopped carrying a watch.  Of course at that time I had a cell phone and my watch was redundant.  Now my cell phone is at home and the only way I know what day it is is by reading my pillbox.  The point being (and Phil hit the nail on the head,) we are living on Island Time and do not have a firm grip on dates.  I rely somewhat on the yellow dates on the bottom of my photos to tell me where I was and when. The GPS track also logs our movements with the exactitude of satellite time. 
To further amuse, amaze, and confuse you, BLOG/CENTRAL lists our postings by the dates they were sent on-line.  They are also found in reverse chronological order, i.e., most recent is on top, with older dates below, unlike a book which begins in the beginning and ends at the back near the index. Recently we posted a few weeks worth of stories, covering a few weeks of our trip and written over the course of a few weeks.  When the Wi-Fi window opened, we submitted the work in batches, attempting to maintain the established sequence.  The mechanics of submitting text and smallified photos is time consuming under these 20th century conditions, none the less we posted about a half a dozen events in a couple of days.  BLOG/CENTRAL gives the appearance that those events all happened at that time.  Not so..  Therefore, please bear with us as we attempt to battle the clock, the calendar, mental lapses, Island Time, and BLOG/CENTRAL.  As they used to say in the days when everyone had a started web-page      SITE UNDER CONSTRUCTION.”