Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Busy, Busy in Bequia!


Well, from famine to feast, it seems.  We had a quiet start to our short season down here, with lots of work and little socializing.  While in Bequia, things have been heating up considerably.  Although s/v Fido headed south to meet guests, we replaced them quickly with Al and Michelle of s/v Tarentela and of course with Steve and Maria of Aspen, and also Greg and Kathy of Indigo.  Soon, even more of the old gang arrived: Dream Catcher, Changes, Prism, Oasis, Katahdin, Clarity, and many more.  Jumbie also arrived from Grenada, also having a shorter season for very similar reasons as we are.

We have made the floating bar a major success; especially as again this year, we have too many people to enjoy each others’ cockpits.  The bar swarms with us at least two nights out of three.  We have also done the usual rum shop tours, snorkeling, restaurant visitations, and of course hiking: Ma Peggy’s Rock, the park to the north of Cinnamon Garden, and the top of Mount Pleasant.  The last hike had 23 people.  As well, the girls have started up a women’s lunch here, with good attendance on 3 different Wednesdays and 3 different restaurants.
Twenty three of us headed out for an uphill hike in Bequia!  We split up at noon and went to various restaurants where we undid the benefit of hiking in exchange for beers with lunch!

Dawn and I also went on our own little adventure.  We caught what was supposed to be a perfect weather window for a trip to the Tobago Keys:  low winds and waves for both the trip and for a lovely visit to a special place.  It didn’t work out, however; as the forecasts were terribly wrong.  The sails there and back were bumpy, and the wind and seas grew to the point that the water was in a horrible state in the Keys.  We stayed two nights in sheltered anchorages, and hightailed ‘er back to Bequia.
Yesterday was absolutely unique, however.  Dean of Dream Catcher voiced his wish to book passage on the local tourist boat the Friendship Rose – an old wooden schooner that used to be the mail boat and primary ferry from the main island – to go to Mustique.  The rest of us said he had half an idea, and yesterday, we all jumped on for a full day trip – not upwind to Mustique, where they don’t seem to want us anyway – but across the wind to the Tobago Keys.  It was fantastic, with great sailing, complete with two major squalls, good food and drink, and fantastic camaraderie.  Dawn got into the water for some fantastic photography as well.
Friendship Rose at 7:00 am just before boarding

The crew of Friendship Rose hoisting the sails while we looked on.

The Friendship Rose taken from Cat Tales when we sailed by them on our last trip to Bequia a couple weeks ago.
The twenty of us "little boat sailors", who paid for and jumped aboard the Friendship Rose for a fun filled day of being spoiled rotten!  Would we do it again?  Hell, yes!

A beautiful parrot fish seen at the Tobago Cays

Dawn took this picture of a turtle who really didn't mind spending time in front of her camera!
Steve steering the boat while John, the captain has time to spend with guests.  Laurie is featured in the background.

Steve and Maria (not on their own boat Aspen)

Fran and Chris, (not on their own boat Changes)

Rick (Clarity), Fran (Changes) and Dawn (Cat Tales) doing what they do best...

Laurie and Chris making excellent bookends for these new young sailors!

We are off-loaded from the Friendship Rose to be taken to the beach and/or off to snorkel, and we see that it's our old friend Sekie from Chatham Bay on Union Island operating the tourist boat!  He and his wife operate a restaurant on the beach and we met them years ago and see them from time to time when we return to their little piece of heaven.  So nice to see old friends!

Perfection!


This is pretty much the turning point for us now.  We’ll carry on here possibly until Saturday, when we’ll start back south to Grenada.  We hope to have time in both Chatham Bay and in Tyrell Bay, but need to have a few days in Prickly Bay before our haulout on April 12th.
If any of you from New Brunswick enjoy this update, and feel like sending us an email update of NB personal happenings (or wherever you are), please do so.  We often arrive home feeling like we know nothing about what’s been happening with most of you, and it is a bit depressing.  Please be advised that we are both well and enjoying life down here.
TECHNICAL
Not much to report on regarding Cat Tales’ condition.  We have been enjoying a great period of mechanical stability.  That being said, it IS time to get the list of projects ready for the season’s end.
Laurie is under the boat cleaning the barnacles and fuzz off the props!



Monday, March 4, 2019

Sweet Bequia...



Again, the blog is overdue.  We are sitting in Bequia taking life very easy. We had a great sail to Carriacou; indeed, although it was fast, a slightly open hatch that we had missed on deck delivered no water to the interior.  Besides the enjoyable sail, there was one bit of overwhelming excitement:  We were trawling one line with a new lure, and got a serious bite.  I wrestled the line in (it was bare line, not on a pole and reel), until we could see that we had a 3.5’ mahi mahi on it, fighting, diving, and slicing from side to side in a 45 degree arc.  I got down to the bottom step, and Dawn passed the gaff hook just as the beauty was within 5’ of the stern.  As I brought it around, he seemed to just spit out the hook, and nonchalantly, swam off to starboard as if he’d had a lovely time teasing us, but remembered some business elsewhere.
We found Carriacou a little lonely.  The usual hangers-on were there, but none of our “tribe” of past friends.  We did renew acquaintance with a slightly older Swiss couple – and I, Laurie, got to work on my French language skills a bit – but the truth was the extra exertion of the partial language barrier, and maybe my poor skills ensured that they preferred the many French friends they already had in the Bay.
We did the usual walks, alone this time, and also bought some conch, half of which is in the freezer.  We also whittled down our boat chores, I wrote a bit, and we read and took on increasingly difficult Sudoku puzzles.  Wind howled most of our visit.
Hiking Carriacou

On February the 25th, we set sail for Bequia in a so-so weather window; not just because we were a little tired of Tyrell Bay, but because a better weather window seemed to be nowhere in sight.  The promised kind east wind did not arrive at all, and we had blustery wind and waves on the nose for most of the journey.  At one point, while in the shadow of Canouan, we had the boat rigged with two reefs and one engine going well above idle.  The confused waves slapped us silly, and the autohelm could not keep us on course.  The waves slowed us down to the point that the rudders were useless.  After convincing ourselves we were not caught in a great mass of fishing gear, I started the second engine and put both up to 2800 rpm before the rudders and the autohelm could manage their chores.
Two hours from Bequia, tired of hanging on and of engine noise, we decided to sail just to get some feeling of success.  Cat Tales was allowed to take a tack to a position 3 miles west of Bequia, and we enjoyed the sail and tacked back and forth to get closer.  As we had at least two monohulls doing the same thing, we were able to compare strategies.  I could go 15% faster than them, but they could point 10 degrees better and keep a reasonable speed, which averaged us out in performance. 
As usual, we got our anchor down by 5:30, and could have an anchor beer.  We placed our anchor behind s/v Fido, a 50’ Xquisite catamaran that was purchased last year by Fiona and Don of Calgary.
Bequia has a new floating bar!  We have been visiting it most nights after 4 pm, with Fiona and Don, and enjoying acquainting ourselves.  One would think the bar would be populated by people under 30, but we seem to be among the ruling quartile.
Floating bar in Bequia.  Of course it would have its own engine!

I think we need this at Grand Lake!

Bequia has had a little bit of excitement in the weeks before our arrival.  A small boat went out, intending to head south, when a 30 knot gust destroyed their forestay (actually a cast aluminum bow plate failed – cast aluminum?  Curious).  The baby-stay saved the mast, but other boaters who arrived to help could neither save the jib nor the furling foil from bad damage.  Also recently, a large charter cat was 30+ minutes out, with a quasi-professional (idonthinkso) captain put her into motor-cruise, autopilot, and went into the salon to lie down and rest his eyes.  The two guests were in their stateroom, also napping.  The boat came to rest after double-teeing a nice Amel monohull, putting two holes and a deep ugly crack in her.  The “captain” of the cat attempted to leave the bay, but the authorities grabbed him.  Again other cruisers came to the rescue, pulled the booms over (ketch), and hung on to keep the damaged side high in the water as the scuttled her on the town shore for repairs.  The Amel owner, whom we’ve met, is rather overwhelmed by both the damage and the difficulties being thrown up by the insurer (which happens to represent both boats, by the way).
This is just one of many callilou leaves that Laurie washed, diced and chopped for the soup.  There might have been as many as 30 leaves!  Some soup still left in the freezer!  Sorry about the pic being sideways.

Yesterday we joined an organized Rum Shop Tour, and followed a crowd around to six different shops.  It was absolutely fun, and a great way to meet people.  The first was a major hike up the hill, off the road to a place called the “Tree House Bush Bar”, at noon.  The last four rumshops were a bus ride over into Friendship Bay, but also high on the hill.  Great views and good fun.  We finished off with quesadillas back in Admiralty Bay at Mac’s Pizzeria, and got home exhausted at 9 pm.
Michelle and Al of Tarantella arrived in the Bay while we were gone, and we have made arrangements for drinks at the floating bar tonight.
The view from the Treehouse Rum Shop after a uphill hike to get there!

The second rumshop on our tour.  We would have missed this one if it wasn't pointed out as a bar!

This rumshop even had a washroom...bonus!

THE PATIENT
This will not be a continuous addition to our weblog, but is meant to answer a few questions.  I am feeling fine, and really feel I am gaining strength and stamina.  In Carriacou, we culminated our walking with a 3 hour hike with significant climbing involved, and it seemed no problem.  This week I swam continuously for over 1000 feet without too much difficulty, although slowing down when breathless was definitely part of it.  I notice that past injuries are worse than before, however.  A bad knee is now a really bad knee, and I cannot walk long without slipping on my brace.  A locking finger joint is much worse, and a second finger has become locking with great pain.  I’m still hopeful that this stuff goes back to normal, or to a previous status.  Pain from the incision is almost nil, and pain from interior work is long-gone.  There is a bit of searching for a new normal with respect to bathroom habits, but it is not an inconvenience.  Now you know more than you wanted, ha ha!
CAT TALES TECHNICAL
Dawn worked through some raw materials that were placed on board, and created a pile of single-person folding cockpit cushions.  Pretty spiffy.
We installed an oil pressure gauge on the starboard engine and got pressure reading within an acceptable range.  Disappointingly, I could not get the gauge to thread into the port on the port side engine, and gave up.  It has no unhealthy symptoms and I stopped looking for trouble.  Yes, my Yanmars quickly dirty their oil, but I will just accept it at this point, and enjoy the season.
New 900 psi fittings and a new gauge were placed onto the watermaker assembly, but leaks continued.  After consultations on the internet, I simply increased the wraps of Teflon tape, and got that solved.  Next, we found a serious leak at the depth sounder through-hull.  I bought some stuff that was meant to work under water from the chandlery, and spent an hour working in the water sanding the area clean of bottom paint.  Sadly the product did not work well – the bottom of the tube of caulk was hard, and I suspect that the rest of the tube was poor.  It acted mealy as soon as it was in contact with salt water, and made what I call a poor bond to the boat and sounder.  I attempted to stem the tide inside the boat by unscrewing the sounder’s flange, placing both the caulking and two layers of neoprene, and closing the flange down.  It was still leaking hours later, but I gave the flange another turn and it dried up.  I will allow the laminate to dry in Grenada on the hard, then do some glassing to level surfaces inside and out, and reinstall the equipment with 3M 5200.
Good news is that the newly bedded and newly gasketed escape hatch is totally dry.  We might tackle the starboard one before leaving for Canada.  Bad news, is that some leaks showed up in the salon windows during the rough slog from Carriacou to here.  We’re still tracking these down.
I was thinking of rewriting a Jimmy Buffet song about “Boat Drinks” to tell the story of Boat Leaks.   “Boat drinks, Jimmy he sings about boat drinks.  I just wonder what he thinks, there goes my bilge alarm.  Boat leaks, I spend my day looking for boat leaks; no time for drinking or song.  Walking, I start all my days walking – I need to buy some more caulking – there goes that damned alarm...”