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Getting ready to go

Sunday was a wash. It rained mostly. We stayed aboard and read.

Today we’ve been a bit more busy. Having checked the weather forecast and saying our farewells on the the cruiser net we dinghied into Woburn then took the bus into town to clear out of the country and to buy some final food. As immigration and customs were in the Grenada Yacht Club we popped in to say Au Revoir to Jim on Bees Knees as he’s still slipped there doing his own summer boat projects. Not much of a goodbye as we hope to be back in a week or so – definitely in time for the Grenada Carnival which is considerably larger than the ones we’ve seen to date.

Back on the boat we ate rotis we’d picked up at the supermarket then rested. Whenever we’ve been feeling sleepy today we’ve tried to nap as we don’t expect to get much sleep tonight on our crossing. To that end we even forwent our usual bottle of wine with dinner last night. Serious stuff.

When we’ve been awake we’ve been prepping the boat. Even in fairly rough seas things tend to stay on shelves but we’re being cautious about this crossing. Dealing with flying things in boats in rough seas is never simple so time spent avoiding mishaps is time worth spent. The boat is nearly ready. I still need to tie down the dinghy and run some lines fore and aft to act as jack lines (the proper ones are coming from the US).

Apart from that we’re pretty much set to go. We plan on leaving at 9pm. We are familiar with the entrance to Clarke’s Court Bay and have a number of plots of our passage in and out so we feel confident navigating out in the dark. We’re aiming to pass the Bocos (the NW tip of Trinidad) no earlier than 8am. If we look like we’re going to get there earlier will slow down. If we pass any earlier we may end up incurring overtime fees from immigration. We’ve heard they can be quite aggressive finding ways to charge sailors extra so we don’t want to give them an excuse.

Next blog from Chaguaramus.

Feeling pleased

On top of the mornings admin I did pickup the backing plates yesterday and popped round to see Jim on Bees Knees but not a lot else. In the evening we went out to De Big Fish for their happy hour and had a couple of beers and some chicken wings. We met and chatted to Mike from Cirque de Soleil. After that we walked round to True Blue and had a cheap and cheerful curry from a take-away.

Today we’ve been getting down to things. I’ve installed all but two of the backing plates. The six cleats on the sides of the boat are now strengthened which are the most important. The two at the rear will require some form of building up underneath as the underside surfaces at far from level. Given that these are less likely to take great strain finishing this job off is now a lower priority.

While I was down in the starboard transom I started looking at the solar panel rewiring job. Staring at where I would have to run the wires I noticed the thumb thick wires running up to the powered dinghy winch which we never use. We never ordered this but it came with the boat at no extra cost. I’ve always looked at it as spares. Well – there are these jumbo cables thick enough to take a heavy load running right where I need them back to exactly the right place. Ding !!!!

I’ve already tried using these for the solar power bodging my way around connector differences. Before trying this the delta between the amps my solar controller was putting out and the amps the charger control was measuring going into the batteries was about 20%. Now it’s under 10%. That’s a huge improvement and will probably get better when I connect everything properly. A quick bit of mental arithmetic suggests we’ll get another 20-25Ah out of the system every day.

Helen’s been busy too (she usually is even if I don’t write it up). Today she’s fixed a door latch (bit of a gluing job) and cut a sacrificial zinc down to the right size so we have an extra spare. She’s also been clearing up behind me where I expose or make a mess.

This afternoon I will focus on properly wiring up the new solar power cables. I want to leave it so they can be reconnected to the power winch if someone ever wants to reverse the change but that’s not much of a constraint.

Lazy day today

We need a rest so today we don’t intend to do much at all. Let’s see how that works out. Now to catch up.

Friday evening, while on the dock) we were joined aboard by the Where IIs, the Bristol Roses, the Arctic Terns and Diane from Jabulani.

It’s always pleasant when we have company aboard and this was no exception. The conversation was broad but the topic of batteries came up once or twice, either because I was getting the subject off my chest or others were interested.

Saturday morning was spent putting things away and/or back to where they should be. The removed drive battery was replaced and everything cleaned up and reconnected. Bar putting on a shackle (lent by Where II) to connect our new anchor to our new chain no projects were attempted yesterday. I did play catch up on some of my regular checks which have got a bit behind. Everything was fine. The morning was also spent catching up on ‘admin’ such as reading remote mail and paying bills – yach.

Late morning I paid and we said our goodbyes. We didn’t see Fletcher the very friendly night watchman but we promised to include his picture on the website – Hi Fletcher. We ate lunch aboard before setting off. Rene, who helps out a lot at Clarks Court Bay Marina, helped us leave. I showed him how an electric boat motors – no noise. I think he was impressed.

We then motored around to Prickly Bay as the winds were very low. The waters were calm so we glided along. At Prickly Bay we had our first chance to try our new anchor, a 57lb Manson Supreme. We’ve always been very pleased with our 44lb delta but even when it sets well there is always some hesitation as it ploughs its way into the sand. The Manson just set and let us know it was not going to budge without any hint of needing to settle in. The next test will be getting it out again. That won’t be for a few days. Our first impressions are very good.

We had an hour or so spare before we left for the Grenada Hash so we made a little water and this was when I caught up on my checks.

On our way to De Big Fish where we were going to leave the dinghy we popped by Sweet Caroline to congratulate them on their 50th wedding anniversary. At De Big Fish we bumped into the crew of Cirque de Soleil who we’d last met in Dominica and shared the Boiling Lake hike with (well – just Angie). We had a brief catch up before heading to the roundabout to catch a bus into town. In true local style we hadn’t quite made it to the roundabout when a local bus went past. The conductor had spotted us so the bus reversed and came back round the roundabout just to find out if we needed a ride. It seems crazy but it’s most welcome and a lot of fun.

We were soon down at the Caranage waiting for a pickup. Not long after we arrived, Mike and Jackie who we’d met on the first hash drove by on their way to the hash. They spotted us and soon we were chatting. They made room in their vehicle (they already had two passengers) and squeezed us in. This hash was not too far from town. The numbers were more than we’ve seen before, somewhere between 150 and 200 I reckon. A lot of these were new students at the St Georges medical school. We bumped into more cruisers who we’re beginning to recognize more including Jim from Bees Knees. I spent a little time on battery strategy with Jim (I have a one track mind at the moment).

The hike was basically a big scramble along what would be optimistically described as a single file track to the top of the highest peak around us and then a more leisurely descent first on a wider track and then on roads. Unfortunately we started near the back of the pack and many of the students were ahead of us. A number were out of shape and others kept stopping to take pictures which meant progress up the single track was incredibly slow. Whenever we could we skipped past the photo takers to try and pick up the pace. Along the way I lost my sunglasses as well as slipping over and getting a stick go in my eye (youch). I did take a photo when I couldn’t make any progress as the views were pretty good.

On the way I learned my reputation seems to be building. I was asked by Barb (a complete stranger to me at the point) if I was ‘the battery guy’. It seems that someone buying 36 golf cart batteries for their boat is becoming a talking point amongst the cruisers here. A few are beginning to show interest in my throwaways so I’ll be getting on the net soon to start lining up folks who would be happy to take old batteries off us and maybe even pay a little for some of the better ones. I met Diane (from the night before) once again and chatted for a while. Once we were on the road I ended up running the last mile or two. We’ve been constrained to the boat (mainly) for the last week and I felt the need to flush the system.

Back at the start we had a beer each but didn’t stop long as we had an urge for a Chinese meal at the restaurant near Prickly Bay. We started walking into town and made about a miles progress when a bus passed. On it were Devi & Hunter from Arctic Tern and Dianne and Barb. They had been more sensible and waited for the bus without walking. We parted company at the bus station as we had different onward busses to catch.

After dinghying back to the boat we showered then headed into Prickly Bay Marina to make our way to the Chinese Restaurant. It was a little further than we remembered – about a mile walk each way. The meal was very nice and the price even better.

Eventually, back on the boat it was straight to bed and to sleep. That was not without raising the dinghy as we usually do. I did open the drain between the inner and outer hulls and there was barely a trickle. I can close off the dinghy leak project – finally.

This morning my eye is pretty sore and red where the stick went in. Vision is unimpaired so I’m not concerned. Eye drops are helping so I’ll stick to that unless things get worse. I’ve checked on the house batteries. I never reconnected the worst battery. The charge levels this morning are the best we’ve seen. This will be some combination of the equalization and the removal of the crappy battery. The fact that the house batteries are worn as well as the drive batteries tells me they’ve had a rough life and it really is the best thing to replace the lot. The more I think about it the more I like the idea of adding the 4 spare batteries to the house circuit. That will really make life pleasant. The downside would be that we’d spend less time with them over 14V which means I could create a sulphation (or is it sulpatation) problem down the line unless I equalize periodically. If I do lose a cell somewhere I would have plenty of spare capacity in the house bank to remove a pair without suffering unduly until we can find a fair priced replacement. The future looks good.

So back to today. We don’t intend to do much. We think we’ve earned it.

Boat work, day 1 of many

Quite a lot accomplished yesterday. Having prioritized my project list (61 items long) and determined what near term progress can be made on the higher priority items it was off measuring, buying, checking, going back to store to exchange items and get new and, in some cases, actually get into doing actual installs. In between all this I was off with Jim to do customs/import work on our collectively imported chain and our new anchor.

During my second trip from the marine store I heard from Jim that we could go and collect the 960lbs of chain and anchor from the depot. A truck had been arranged for this and once we had made our bus ride, final round of paperwork/payments we had our two drums of chain and anchor. Trying to manhandle 450lb of chain in a round drum proved to be impossible so we got them off the truck by tipping them over and rolling them off. We couldn’t even roll them up a plank onto our trolley to get them to the dock so we had to pull the chain out of each drum, put the drums onto the trolley then hand the chain back into the drums. This was all reversed at the dock to get the drums off the trolley.

Using the lengthy dock we were able to mark up our chain before handing it into the dinghy. Our last bit of effort for the day was to then haul the chain out of the dinghy into a forward locker we’d cleared. We were able to use the bow chain roller for this which made life fairly easy relative to all the earlier hauling.

This didn’t leave much time to get on with the projects we had on the list. However, I did replace the furler line (existing one is too short) and as one project was simply to acquire a fuel filter for when filling the fuel tanks I have been able to mark two projects as complete as well as marking off some partial items. It’s all progress and it feels good.

Project work finished in time to shower and get over to Sweet Caroline (Carol & John) for cocktails.  We were joined by Diter who is also in the lagoon.  We bumped into him back on Tyrell Bay outside In Stitches so we already knew each other.  A 5pm cut off for projects seems so reasonable that we’ve invited them back to Dignity today.

I have been asked why we’re buying new anchor/chain so here is the rationale. On board we already have two anchors. The one we use all the time is a 44lb delta, which works very well, with 200ft of chain. The chain is 2 years old and a bit corroded but still serviceable. The second anchor is an aluminium jobby that has about 30ft of chain and 100ft of line. It can hold Dignity in light conditions but all we’ve ever used it for is a stern anchor to hold Dignity in one spot.

Issues:

  • If we’re caught in a real blow and need extra holding power by having two decent anchors out we can’t do it.
  • If we need to anchor in more than 50ft of water (which we will in the Pacific) we can’t do it.
  • If we have a fouled anchor and can’t retrieve our main we have no effective spare.
  • Our anchor chain is probably good for 2 more years by which time we’ll have to buy a new one.

To solve all these issues we’ve imported 300ft of new chain and a 57lb anchor. This is one of our bigger projects to complete as we’ll need a second windlass, a second anchor holder, some separation for the anchor chains, etc. We’ll probably swap over to the new chain / anchor while we’re on dock in a few days time to get the better holding power just in case we get a blow down here. The new anchor, by the way, is a 57lb manson.

Great Meal Out

Over near the old fort are two nice restaurants, one on top of each other. For our meal out we figured one should be best so we went over and looked at the menu for each. On the ground floor was BB’s Crabback Caribbean Restaurant and above was a Chinese which I believe was called the Flag Restaurant. We all agreed the Chinese looked the most enticing so that’s where we ate.

The food was utterly delicious and well presented. The best dish was “The Fish Jumping Over the Dragon Door” which was basically sweet and sour red snapper. Very well done.

When we got back to the boat we learned from one of the neighbouring boats, Sweet Carolina, that we’d drifted into her three times. The winds have been quite weird in and out of the lagoon and the boats were swinging everywhere. We put out some more chain and that seemed to do the trick. They were pretty decent about it and ended up inviting us over to cocktails this evening. Can’t refuse company and refreshments.

Today has been the start of projects. The plan to take a slip at Grenada Yacht Club has been thwarted as they don’t have the correct power supply for us. We’ve verified we can do this at Clarkes Court Bay Marina so we’ll head there next week for our battery equalization. We’re still waiting for notification that our chain is ready to pick up. In the meantime we’re picking up parts for projects and food. Things are going slowly and it’s quite hot and sweaty. This will be our life for a bit.