May 26, 2006
As I mentioned previously, we rented a home for a
week at Staniel Cay in the Exumas (24.10.1 N,
076.26.3 W).
We chose Staniel Cay, because of its' location in
the center of the Exumas, thinking we could spend
each day exploring to the north and south of us.
However, I must confess that laziness set in, and
not much cruising took place. Our home came with
a golf cart, and instead, we spent our days
exploring the island, surfing the internet,
reading and not doing much of anything.
To be fair, there wasn't much we could do. We
were striking out with weather once again. It
rained every day. The locals are all saying how
much they appreciate the rain. Apparently they
have had almost no rain this year, and need all
they can get.
Dinner our first night was at the Staniel Cay
Yacht club. Although it was a very nice dinner, I
remember joking to Roberta that we would probably
be eating there another 21 times (seven days
times three meals), as there were no other
options on the island. I didn't realize at the
time how true this would come to be.
Our stay was nearing its end when we discovered
that there was another option, and a darn fine
one! If you call nearby
http://www.fowlcay.com/Fowl Cay, they will send
a boat for you. Fowl Cay is incredible. I was
told that a very wealthy businessman had bought
the island, and was sparing no expense to make it
into a small luxury destination resort. We didn't
realize where we were going and dressed
"casually," and were horribly underdressed. It
was an excellent dinner and an excellent evening.
The ambiance and setting had much more in common
with visiting friends for dinner at their home,
than going to a restaurant.
I can't leave our discussion of Staniel Cay
without mentioning some of the site-seeing we did
do.
Every morning, our routine was to listen to the
weather report, which was invariably "unsettled,
25+ knot winds, with scattered thunder showers,
and squalls."
Finally, it was time to leave our home at Staniel
Cay and venture out. We were ready for time at
anchor, and looking forward to it. We didn't have
to go far. Just around the corner is Big Major
with well protected anchorage, and a "pig beach".
We were told that pigs live on the island in
front of the anchorage, and would swim out to the
boats for food.
The anchorage itself was huge spanning perhaps a
mile, with 25 or so boats spread out. Anchoring
was in 6 feet of water at low tide, in sand. In
spite of all the space to spread out, most of the
boats were packed into a narrow space, just in
front of the beach with the pigs. We took our
place in the front of the pack, for our day of
"swimming with the pigs."
How to describe life at anchor? We were in an
incredible bay. The water was crystal clear, and
ranged from six to ten feet deep depending on the
tide; water temperature about 80 degrees. We
spent the day in and out of the water. For fun,
we cleaned the bottom of the boat, swam some
more, dived down to the anchor, listened to
music, made dinner, listened to more music, and
sipped a great red wine. As uneventful as this
sounds, I'm sure when we look back on the trip,
this will be the day that we remember most. Days
at anchor are always the highpoint of cruising.
A brief segue way:
We have had a heck of a time with cooking. We
have a simple gas barbecue, but somehow the
little tube that runs from the little propane
canister to the barbecue burner has disappeared.
Our backup is a two burner alcohol stove, which
has worked great. We also have a
microwave/convection oven which has been a
nightmare.
The manual for the convection oven says that it
takes 1400 watts, however our 1800 watt generator
won't power it. I tried the 2000 watt inverter
and it also failed. The microwave "kind of"
works. The lights on the microwave dim, and
sometimes it works, and sometimes the generator
dies. Usually, the generator dies, or the
microwave dies.
Roberta has the idea that we should consider
dumping the generator, which is adding a lot of
weight to the back of the boat, and add a much
larger inverter. The engines themselves might be
able to be run to recharge the house batteries
(I'm not sure on this), and we only need large
amounts of power long enough to cook dinner. I
will be looking into this after the trip.
Generally, we avoid running the generator. It
ruins the anchoring experience to hear it whining
away
(and damages our reputation with the
surrounding boats)
Remember I mentioned that all the boats had
anchored unnaturally close together to watch the
pigs? This made for an uncomfortable night, as
the winds came up. Winds gusted most of the night
to what felt like 20-30 knots. I had personally
dived on the anchor and knew we were set well in
sand - but, you never know. Standing watch seemed
the smarter thing to do.
This wasn't all bad. There was no moon, and the
sky was cloudless. All you could see was stars,
stars and more stars. I am not a person who is
normally impressed by these sorts of things, but
around 4am I tried to wake Roberta just to check
out the view.
It was time to start thinking about our next
passage. This next leg was the one that worried
me the most. Our destination was the Four Seasons
Hotel on Great Exuma Island. Those who have made
the run to Great Exuma know what had me worried.
Georgetown, Elizabeth Harbor, and our hotel, are
all on the side of the island which is on the
Exuma sound.
Most of our cruising thus far on the trip had
been on the Great Bahama bank, over shallow
water, with limited, but at least some,
protection from the wind. For the next leg of our
voyage we would need to venture out into the deep
unprotected water. This would be fine on a larger
boat, or a lower wind, but with our tiny 27'
boat, and gusts to 30 knot winds, we were
thinking we should stay put. Besides - we were in
a great anchorage.
Patience has never been my strong suit. At 7:30am
on the Friday the 25th of May, the weather report
was its usual: "unstable". Looking around us the
skies were clear, with no wind. Other boats were
pulling anchor, and it was time to go.
I studied the charts again, studying to see if
there wasn't some way to get where we wanted to
go without venturing out to the deep water, and
it just isn't possible. If you look at a map of
the area, you'll see where we were at Big Major
(on the West side of the Exumas, off of Staniel
Cay), and where we needed to go (half way between
Rolleville and George Town on the East side of
Great Exuma island).
Here's what we decided to do, and the mistakes we
made. Studying the chart, I could stay in
protected water only as far south as Big Farmers
Cay, and then I'd have to take one of the "cuts"
out to the deep water, Exuma Sound. Going further
south in the 'protected' shallow water would mean
facing water that in places was only 1-3 feet
deep. None of the guidebooks recommended that.
Have you heard the phrase "Let's just poke our
nose out, and we'll come back in if we don't like
what we see"? Here's some useful advice: BE
CAREFUL. We had a very easy run to Farmers Cay,
and assumed we'd have no trouble once we made the
cut to the other side. On the charts, the cut is
shown as having "high currents". As we approached
it, we could see whitecaps, and uttered the
aforementioned phrase. That was mistake #1.
Then we committed mistake #2: We were inside the
boat, and didn't notice the wind had come up. We
were expecting high currents, and could see the
whitecaps, but thought they were only at the
narrow cut.
As we entered the cut, we realized the breaking
waves were bigger than we thought - perhaps 2 to
4 feet. We were getting slammed, but expected it
to stop once we were out of the cut and into
Exuma Sound; so we continued. Suddenly, the waves
were taller, 5 to 7 feet, and one broke over the
top of the boat. When the water cleared, we only
had a few seconds of respite before the next one
hit us. All thought of moving forward was
immediately gone. We were clearly in over our
heads - literally and figuratively! -- and the
attention had shifted to "how are we going to
turn around and go back?" The waves were close
enough together, and high enough, that we were
very concerned about being beam to them.
Roberta said, "I wonder how our Nordhavn would
do?" And, I said, "I suspect even the Nordhavn
wouldn't be having fun now.. How do you think we
get turned around?" She said, "We have no choice.
Pick your wave, and go for it." This conversation
was punctuated by anything that hadn't yet hit
the ground transforming into airborne missiles.
Boom - there went the toaster. Splat - all of our
charts. Etc.
Turning around was easier than I thought, as the
boat performed flawlessly. I then found myself
surfing the top of a very tall wave, but at least
it felt calm. Then began a bizarre conversation
in which Roberta thought we should speed up in
order to out-run the waves lapping at our stern,
as I was arguing that we should continue to surf
the top of the wave, and hope it ran out of steam
before breaking. I'm not sure who was right, but
can say that things worked out fine by surfing
the wave for the 100 yards or so back into
protected water, at which time it promptly
lowered us back to water level, in relative calm.
Mistake #3 - We had let the calendar control our
cruising plan rather than the weather report. We
were racing to make our hotel reservations, and
letting this bias what were hearing on the radio.
Now what?
We did have a real schedule issue. On May 31st we
are scheduled to meet Roberta's parents back in
Nassau, 80 or so miles north of our current
location. We wanted to continue south, but were
recognizing that even if we reached our
destination, the weather might turn against us
and interfere with our return. The vision of
Roberta's parents arriving in Nassau alone
probably meant we should turn back and head north
immediately,
However, we WERE only 30 miles from four days at
the Four Seasons Hotel on Great Exuma. There had
to be a solution. Floating just inside Farmer's
Cay Cut, we spent the next 30 minutes studying
and re-studying the chart to see if there was a
path to the hotel without venturing out to the
unprotected water. We could get close, but we
couldn't get there, and neither of us was in the
mood to "poke our nose out again."
Both Roberta and I are fairly headstrong people.
When we decide we're going to do something,
nothing stops us. We docked at the Farmers Cay
Yacht Club and Marina, and asked the harbor
master if he knew of any ferries that made the
run to George Town. Amazingly, he said "No, but
there are a couple of guys in town with a speed
boat. Maybe they'll take you down."
Within the hour, we were on a speed boat, with
two locals we had never met, with our boat tied
up and lonely, at a yacht club somewhere close to
the "middle of nowhere", as we headed south.
Our guides for this next leg were "Curly" and
another guy who refused to smile, and didn't
speak. I asked Curly how he was going to get
through the rough water, and he said he would run
the inside, in the shallow, protected water. He
said that we could arrive at Barraterra on the
West side of Great Exuma island, and taxi from
there to our hotel. This led me to ask if I could
just take my boat, to which he shook his head and
said I'd never find my way through the shallow
water without him. This led me to ask if there
was a way that I could just follow him down. He
said his boat wouldn't go less than 40 knots, and
there was no way I could keep up.
Something didn't seem right. What boat can't go
less than 40 knots? What boat could go more than
40 knots?
He was right about the speed. At first I didn't
believe him, but within seconds I had no doubt.
Our run from Farmers Cay to Barraterra took under
30 minutes, and averaged over 50 knots. Roberta
and I were sitting in the open bow of the boat,
with Shelby on our lap, as we ran across water
that sometimes looked only inches deep.
If you have ever watched a running back carry the
football on a touchdown run, you know how I was
holding Shelby. I had visions of us going
airborne at any second, and Shelby flying through
the air. We actually DID go airborne at one
point, when we were launched from an exposed
sandbar. Curly looked a little sheepish, but we
kept zigzagging through the sand bars. We didn't
drop speed one knot. If they could package up our
ride, and offer it as a ride at Disneyland, the
line would stretch for miles. It was scary, but
fun.
The ride down was shocking in its beauty. We were
seeing a part of the Exumas that exceeded
anything we had seen previously. Places with
names like Musha Cay and Cave Cay. I wanted to
take pictures, but there was no way to loosen my
grip on Shelby. We rocketed past a few cruising
boats, even a sailboat, so I am convinced there
is a way for a boat like ours to reach these
places, on the inside. Perhaps we should have
gone for it, although, there isn't a marina we
could find to put Mas O Menos on the west side of
Great Exuma. So, even if we could get there, we
weren't sure what we'd do with Mas O Menos while
at the hotel. This was better
On the taxi ride to our hotel we were accompanied
by Curly and his friend. I didn't have cash for
the charter ride, and they weren't letting me out
of sight until we reached an ATM machine. Making
small talk, Curly asked what I did for a living,
and I mentioned that I am a retired software
geek. His friend suddenly lit up. It turns out he
was the local computer guy, and we had a terrific
chat about laptops and internet connections,
boring everyone else in the taxi.
We had arrived at the Four Seasons Hotel, and you
can't imagine how good it looked. Golf. Showers.
High Speed Internet. Restaurants. A bed with REAL
pillows.
At dinner on Saturday night, we went to "Peace
and Plenty" a George Town restaurant and boater
hang out. I was surprised to find a huge
incredible bay (Elizabeth Harbor), which for
roughly six months a year is home (anchorage) to
500 or so boats at any given time. The restaurant
had a huge dinghy dock, and we felt at home.
A few days of rest, then back to anchor we go
Curly picks us up for the rocket ride back to
Farmers Cay Yacht Club and Marina on Tuesday
morning.
Still ahead: the return to Nassau, Spanish Wells,
Harbour Island, and more time at anchor
.
Thank you,
Ken Williams
http://www.kensbook.com/www.kensbook.com
http://www.nordhavn68.com/www.nordhavn68.com