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Buccament Bay

Very briefly – more details tomorrow. Last night we went ashore on Young Island to look around and have cocktails. Met a nice couple who were staying there – Sandy and Tom. Agreed to go sailing all together today. Sailed to Bequia, dove on the reef and sailed back to Buccament Bay, St Vincent, where we parted company and they headed back to Young Island by taxi. All had a good time. Aim for birthday meal ashore thwarted as restaurant closed for hols. Curry aboard tonight. Really nice (and belated) birthday dinner (on Sandy and Tom) tomorrow. It’s my birthday and I’ll not write much if I want to.

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Two days in Bequia

For you blog hounds an apology first for missing yesterday. Reasons will be given.

Rewinding to Monday. This really was a bit of a wasted day. We ended up lying in our bunk most of the day. We were hung over, the air was still and stuffy. In the afternoon we went ashore to drop off an empty propane tank for filling and to find the cause of a lot of loud music. Turned out it was carnival day in Bequia. A typical small island carnival is not overwhelming. A few places with immense speaker stacks blaring out music and a single truck making an occasional circuit. The best thing is watching the locals. Not that we did much as after a brief walk around we’d had enough and it was back to the boat to continue our day of rest. At end of day we were treated to an amazing sunset that turned the sea blood red.

Yesterday we got back to life with the usual ups and downs. The big up was getting out on the water and diving the nearby site together on the hookah. This was the same dive as I went on with Jim and Anne a couple of months ago. The site didn’t let us down. We saw spectacular arrays of fish, an eel, a huge puffer fish, plenty of spider crabs, a grouper, some angel fish (we think) with long fluttery fins among other things.

We had dinghied out to the site in calm water. As the dive progressed the hookah was under more and more pressure from wind and waves on the surface – at one point kinking the down tube and cutting off our air. By the time our dive finished the wind was gusting fiercely and there was a two foot chop to dinghy back through. Fortunately we were wet any way but had we been dry, in our clothes, we would have been soaked.

Getting the gear back on the boat was a trial. Worse than that really. As I was moving the hookah from one side of the boat to the other to get it to the fresh water shower for a rinse, I slipped dropping the hookah. It landed on it’s side (the rubber tube), bounced, rolled, bounced again, made it past the safety line down the starboard steps and into the water upside down denting the exhaust, breaking the fuel cap and filling the exhaust / engine with seawater. Bugger.

So the time I had expected to be writing up our dive for our blog was spent following the instructions for dealing with submersion of the unit. This involved draining oil, petrol (gasoline), dismantling a lot of the components, driving out the water from inside, cleaning, draining more fuel through the unit, reassembly, re-oiling, refueling and lots of starter pulling followed by, thankfully, 10 minutes of engine running. While doing this we were visited by Matt and Karen (Where II) and Robert (Bristol Rose) who passed us in the dinghies. Robert invited us over for late drinks. Incidentally – boats had planned to go to Mustique on Monday but are still here waiting out weather.

I still need to drain the oil and replace it one more time to remove any water pushed through by the running but that’s for another day. We had run out of time. It was getting dark and we were hungry, not to mention oily. So after a big clean up we had dinner, showered and were off to Bristol Rose for evening drinks. We only intended to stay a short while (we need tee-shirts that say this) but stayed a little longer than planned. Matt & Karen were there as were another couple, Joseph & Melanie (Spectra), who we had not previously met.

Weather is very much dominating our near term thinking. We want to head north to St Vincent mainland. From Thursday there is some blustery weather coming in. If the anchorage we’re aiming for (Blue Lagoon) is protected we should leave today and get settled. Otherwise we will hunker down here for a few more days. We will make our decision later this morning.

My Brain Hurts

My own fault. Drank too much last night. The Ozzie’s have a reputation for enjoying their beer and last night was no exception. We did too but regrets are plentiful this morning.

As mentioned, this weekend’s round 2 was with Matt & Karen aboard Where II where we were joined by Robert and Trish from Bristol Rose. They were Ozzies too. Like us they’ve been living in the US for a number of years and brought up their kids there.

The evening ended up being a long one as we didn’t get back to Dignity until 1am.

Both couples are heading south and it is quite likely we’ll see them again in Grenada. That’ll be nice but we’ll have to be more careful with the plonk.

Feeling a bit wasted I really don’t know what we’ll do today. We may end up just scratching this one and spend the day nursing sore heads. To some up how I feel, I’ll leave you with this link.

SSB Problems

Karen and Matt from Where II came aboard last night. We had a great time getting to know each other and sharing lessons learned. As we didn’t finish all the nibbles we agreed for round 2 on their boat this evening.

Today I’ve spent some time aboard Where II helping Matt investigate poor performance on his SSB – perhaps some of the head banging I’ve done aboard Dignity will come in use. We managed to prove it does actually work (voice and email) and figured out one anomaly which may or may not be an issue – the antenna ground was directly connected to the boat DC ground. I’ve heard conflicting stories on this so we’re trying to see if it’s any better without this connection.

The overall shortwave environment is lousy right now and this morning on our own eqipment (not sure if it is location specific) was very crackly on the morning Coconut Telegraph (or nut net as it’s often referred to). So a poor connection seems to be about as good as it gets. We’ll try again a little later when reception is usually a bit better.

Apart from this not a lot else done today. That’s quite ok. Looking forward to round 2 this evening.

Back in Bequia

We arrived in back in Bequia this after a thrilling sail. Along the way we spotted a whale breaching several times. I grabbed the camera and took about 50 shots of which one just about shows the whale spouting – see left. It was not a big whale but it was more impressive than this picture would suggest.

After rounding the southern tip of Bequia I was able to take some better shots of Moonhole.

When we pulled in the four lines we had one fish on the end of one of them. No surprises in this case as this was the second of the three small fish we caught earlier which I’d thawed and put on the hook before we set off.

Having arrived we’ve been ashore to provision. One of the reasons for timing our visit to Bequia this weekend is we learned Where II, another Lagoon 420, is here until Monday. We saw them once before in Rodney Bay, St Lucia, but by the time we dinghied over to where we’d seen them they had left. To avoid another near miss we’ve already invited them around for ‘cocktails’ this evening. Looking forward to sharing thoughts and plans.

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