Thursday 26 January 2012

Days of disovery




We arrived at a place so beautiful it caught me off guard. I'm not sure why I should be surprised by its beauty, it was a crescent beach flanked by mounds of dense vegetation, like many others in the Bahamas. But this place had an aura of distinction about it. 
Perhaps we felt differently about it, because we knew that Hawksbill Cay is uninhabited, and as we pulled into its quiet, protected bay we realized we were going to have it all to ourselves. Hawksbill lays within Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park, a protected area that provides a safe haven and replenishment area for the wildlife native to the Bahamas. Fishing or collecting any fauna or flora is strictly prohibited (dead or alive). In fact they ask that you neither take nor leave anything behind. Because of the fishing ban areas surrounding Hawksbill Cay are rich in wildlife and subject to poaching. We think we witnessed a couple of cruisers in the act. Approaching the bay we saw that another boat was anchored in it, but just as we eased toward it, it began to stir. A drenched young man, fresh out of the water, was scrambling around on deck to lift the anchor and the boat left promptly after, ignoring our friendly waves of acknowledgment. 
It was their quick escape that made us suspicious, but we couldn't be certain what they were up to so we gave it no further thought and relished the idea of being the only occupants of the island. 
Once on the hook we left Rodeo and Katarina cradled in the tranquil cove and made our way to shore. Ever since my parents left Nassau, a few days earlier, we have been enjoying the company of our dear friends, Kathryn and John. In their 60's, these two have the verve of a couple of teenagers and they infect us with their love of life and each other daily. Excited, we pile into their dinghy and head for the beach, eager to explore it. Advancing water has pressed it into a crescent, lapping away at the soft, creamy sand. It rises out of the sea, spreading before us on a gentle incline and disappears into dense shrubs and palm trees that run deep inland, rolling over a hill far on the other side of the island. On either side, the land flanking the cove grows higher, thicker, stretching its welcoming arms around the anchorage. The view is breathtaking. Kath and I jump around, embracing, screaming in excitement: "This is it! This is it!" 
Next we ventured over to a sign that informs us about the park's rules of engagement. We are to stay on the path, "taking nothing but pictures, leaving nothing but footprints behind". We respectfully make our way inland, weaving through a network of heavy ground growth and short palms that remarkably sprout from the dry, inhospitable Bahamian soil. Once we reached the hill, the path turned into a porous rocky face we scaled to reach the east side of the island. There the open ocean trashes against powdery sandstone cliffs, carving out what looks like a moonscape into the face of the easter shore. 
We spent 3 fun filled days in Hawksbill Cay snorkeling, kayaking and exploring the vacant island. One of the paths led us to crumbling ruins of a Loyalist plantation, high up on a ridge, occupied now only by hermit crabs and curly-tailed lizards. After satisfying our explorer fix we eased Rodeo out and away from this extraordinary cove, and set out to discover what secrets other Exuma Cays may hold. 

Sunday 15 January 2012

World cab



Trying to get a fair deal in Nassau, when it comes to just about anything, is an art. Trying to get a fair deal from a taxi driver, on way to the airport, in Nassau is something different entirely. My parent's are about to land and we're rushing out of the marina and into the streets to find a cab. We called for one from the marina office, but it's been half an hour and it hasn't shown. Gabe, in a composed, nonchalant way, speaks to a man that spots us walking down the busy East Bay St., offering his taxi services. We try to make it sound like we've been around the block and know what to expect, but I'm sure the driver isn't fooled. Regardless of our apprehension the cool, streets smart Brazilian makes his move. He asks for the going rate and upon hearing the price of $35 he ponders on it. The ball is in his court. He juggles the information on our end for a minute, acting unimpressed and then fires back a counteroffer at the Bahamian. Gabe tells him we'll hire the cab to the airport and back for a discount. It doesn't stick. They both laugh. Another offer comes our way. The Bahamian says he'll do it for $35 each way, but won't charge us to wait at the airport. We think that's a grand idea and pile into the cab. We know that $35 is the going rate and we're prepared to pay that much. We all laugh in agreement. Brazil 1 - Bahamas 0. We engage in friendly chit chat on the 40 minute ride to the airport, as we take in the sun scorched surroundings of greater Nassau. Donna Summer's concert comes through the speakers. The driver tries to keep it low enough for us to carry a conversation, but I can tell that he want's to turn it right up and just get lost in the music. Who can blame him, "It's the last chance for romance tonight". 

At the airport parking lot the Bahamian asks us to retrieve a parking stub from the machine at the gate. The Brazilian fumbles in confusion, trying to recover his composure and get back in the game. The Bahamian explains, only now, that if he is to wait for us, we have to pay for his parking. Really? Brazil 1 - Bahamas 1. We don't give it another thought, we're too excited to see my parents and we rush out of the cab and into the terminal.
The Bahamian follows, he wants to make sure we don't forget about our deal. He's really very cordial, inquiring about our backgrounds and our plans. He wants to know about the white and red Polish flag I'm holding. I brought it along to salute my parents on their arrival. He retreats respectfully, saying he'll give us space to welcome them, and will come to collect their bags when they get here. We spot my parents still in the baggage claims, on the other side of a sliding door that expels people in small chunks into the main terminal. I frantically wave the flag to get their attention until they spot us, too. When they finally come out it's a frenzy of hugs, kisses and flashing camera shots.
My parents are glowing with joy. Excited and chatty we make our way towards the cab where my parents enjoy a long coveted cigarette, while the driver arranges luggage in the back of the van. Coming out of the airport we pay $2 for parking and muse over the chain of taxi cabs waiting at the main terminal, ready to pick up fresh fare. We realize we didn't need to have the Bahamian wait for us, we could have just grabbed a different cab back downtown. He didn't give us a deal anyway. Brazil 1 - Bahamas 2. We comfort ourselves and agree that perhaps a different cab driver would not take us back for $35. The parking fee is a small compromise for the benefit of having a car waiting and willing. The important part is that my parents are here. On the ride back the cab is buzzing with conversation interrupted only by glances out the window at the run-down yet bright and cheerful neighborhoods surrounding downtown Nassau. When we arrive at the marina we think we're neck to neck with the Bahamian until he delivers the final kick. We're being charged an additional $6 for the two extra passengers we picked up at the airport. We're surprised, shocked even; that's a rule of the game we were not aware of. The Brazilian gets back on the defense, but it's too late. The Bahamian sneaks it past us, we pay what we owe, and he finishes with a 3:1 victory. Game over. 
We pout for a second and then resume our merriment, dismissing our defeat on account of the Bahamian's cunning, a tactic inherent to taxi drivers world wide. We hold no grudges and we don't dwell. It's a "local eat tourist" kinda world, and we understand that. We're here to have fun and we just can't wait to get started. 

Friday 13 January 2012

Never a dull moment



When it rains, it pours. Once Gabe fixed the windlass he moved on to our dinghy motor, which started spewing oil last time we tried to run it. This we noticed at our last anchorage in Frazer's Hog Cay. Gabe went to mount the outboard motor onto the dinghy, after he dragged that off the fore deck and into the turquoise waters. He barely got his hands on it when the sad little thing started to bleed its vital fluids all over him. 
If you know Gabe even just a little you know that he rarely lets a mechanical problem go unattended for long. If it's broken, chances are he can fix it, and he will want to fix it right away. So without further ado Gabe started picking the motor apart looking for a snag. We just had to laugh about the fact that since leaving Halifax there hasn't been a day we didn't need the tool box. We've even changed the location where the tool box is stored several times, trying to place it in the most accessible space, because we have to get it out so often. Getting the motor figured out proved a bit more involved than expected and we decided to put it off until the afternoon, so that we could take advantage of the good weather and explore the area. This meant that without a running dinghy motor we had to row the inflatable lug to and from, with or against the current. It was an exhausting 4 hour excursion around the Frazer's Hog Cay, but we got to see quite a bit of it, well quite a bit of what little there was to see, anyway. Like many other Bahamian islands in this area, it had a rocky coast line, covered with dense succulent shrubs and impenetrable mangroves. Parts of the island were in really poor shape, riddled with garbage and debris from hurricanes past. We explored an abandoned home, brought to ruin by hurricane Helen, now overgrown with wildlife and filled with eerie presence of life undone, interrupted. We didn't linger very long. We found a beach to comb, state of which was not much different than the rest of the island. Unkept and unappreciated. It was not uncommon to see refuse lodged in the mucky sands at shoreline, and I was not at all surprised to see a deflated black plastic bag resting at the bottom of an area I was trudging through. But when the bag twitched a pointy tail, lifted its elegant black form and gracefully drifted away from my feet, I was stunned. With an excited and panicked squeal I signaled to Gabe, who was on shore, that I just stumbled onto a sting ray. But before either one of us could even budge, the ray was on the move. I just stood there, mesmerized, watching the gentle giant make a loop around me and float out of sight, wafting swirls of sand behind it as it went.
Having had our fill of thrills for the day we slowly rowed back to Rodeo, where Gabe took another crack at the motor. A few hours and a complete engine overhaul later, the little 2HP was back in action. Only not for long. It ended up giving up on us once more a week later anyway. Though for now Chief Mechanic Gabe was content with his efforts and ready to tackle the head pump, which started uttering quiet squeaks of protest against constant use and requesting maintenance. The next day, on our sail over to Nassau, Gabe got to the bottom of what was troubling the old pump and he had that running smooth and quiet by the afternoon. Just in time for my parents to arrive in Nassau. They would spend a week aboard Rodeo with us, and a well running head for four live-aboards is a luxury we couldn't afford to give up. The last thing for us to do, upon arriving in Nassau Friday afternoon was to get an internet connection so we could reach my parents, still in Canada, and work out the final details of their arrival on Sunday. This too became an aggravating obstacle as our wi-fi antenna struggled to get a proper signal. Gabe slipped out of his plumber getup, for the time being, and put on his IT thinking cap. There was a glitch in the system and he spent most of the evening and all of following morning troubleshooting the pesky affair, and after all that it turned out we couldn't pick up a free signal anyway and had to spend $10/day for internet from a local provider. Once back in touch with civilization we hailed my parents on Skype to let them know we've arrived in Nassau and will be waiting for them at them at the airport the next day. My parents coming to spend 7 days with us was something I never thought they would have the guts to do, and yet here they were, just as excited to be joining us in our adventures as we were to share them. So excited, in fact, we could barely sleep at night. My parents, fortuitous vagabonds, marooned in a 300 square foot nut shell...with us. It was going to be a fabulous week.

Wednesday 11 January 2012

Bounty



We arrived in Berry Islands around 8 am, trailing fish tackle behind us in the shallow waters of Great Harbour Cay. Since leaving Halifax we attempted to catch fish whenever we could, but without very good results. Gabe even tried his new spear gun at Peanut Island in West Palm Beach, but the only worthy opponents swimming around were Barracudas, and those guys are off limits as they can be poisonous. Needless to say we've been mollifying our cravings for seafood with store bought fillets of this and that until, finally, a bite. And what a bite at that. Gabe leapt up in excitement, screaming "Oh my God, oh my God", when his yoyo contraption sprung to life. The yoyo was a $2 purchase at a nautical flee market in Ft.Pierce. The flee market is an annual event, scheduled for one weekend on grounds of a local rotary club. The event had the misfortune of getting a torrential downpour that very weekend, but we headed over anyway, just to check it out. We were among very few other souls that decided to brave the rain, and we found many of the stands covered up with tarps, unattended, merchandise unavailable. But what we did find we scored for a great price, and walked away with solid teak spice racks and the fishing yoyo Gabe tells me is the way to go in the Caribbean waters. So now that we were in those waters, yoyo deployed and twitching with a live load, we couldn't contain our excitement. At the end of our line, in those Great Harbour shallows, emerged a beautiful Mutton Snapper. The colour of sunset, it shimmered silver, orange and blue as it struggled against the pull of the fishing line. Once on board we doused it with tequila to tranquilize it and Gabe pulled a plug on the purposeful life of the stunning creature. After filleting our 5 kg bounty we had enough fish meat for 4 meals. Not too bad for second day of cruising. Anchored near Bullocks Harbour we later set out on the dinghy to explore what turned out to be an uninspiring shore line that offered no beach access or opportunity for exploring on foot. Oh well. Instead, the calm harbour offered supper, quiet shelter and spectacular views of the night sky. We caught up on sleep in the stillness of it all and set out to seek our next adventure, moving south along Berry Islands and deeper into the heart of the Bahamas. 

Monday 9 January 2012

Kings of the cruising world



Yes, yes, yes! It has positively and absolutely been worth it. We finally arrived in the Bahamas on January 8, after two and a half months of plodding along the east coast through hell and high water. We've encountered so many challenges and technical boat issues that had to be dealt with along the way, at times it felt like we would never get here. Each time we handled a problem another arouse. It took a month long maintenance stop-over in Florida, and a lot of hard work, to get the boat to the point where we felt she was ready for worry-free cruising. But more about that in another blog. I really just want to share the excitement of getting into the Caribbean. It marks the beginning of another journey altogether. A journey that will, without a doubt, present its own challenges, but it's the promise land we've been waiting to explore and we're intoxicated with the very idea of being here. 
West Palm Beach, FL is where we spent the last 3 weeks getting work done on our boat, and helping our friends John and Kathryn with theirs. It was where we staged our crossing over the gulf stream and into Lucaya on the Grand Bahama Island. We made the passage overnight, timing ourselves so as to make it into Port Lucaya first thing in the morning. On that very still night, under the watchful eye of a nearly full moon, we thrust Rodeo into the tide of the Gulf Stream. With no wind to fill the sails we motored to the rhythmic mutter of the engine and the sputter of water expelled at the stern. It was blissful. Long and tiring, as the Gulf Stream made our progress sluggish, but we arrived on the other side exhilarated and grateful for the uneventful passage. 
First order of affairs was checking in with customs to obtain a cruising permit for the Bahamas. The customs office was conveniently located at the Port Lucaya Marina, where we pulled up to the fueling dock and got busy, me filling out the paper work, Gabe fiddling around with the anchor windlass. The mechanism started acting up just as we pulled up the anchor to leave West Palm Beach. There is no end to the repairs required aboard a boat. No end. So much for worry-free cruising. But let's not dwell on that. We had immigration to contend with, and to be honest I was a bit worried that upon inspection, Bahamian immigration might demand more paper work for Pickle than what we had come with. Some cruising posts advised about an immigration permit for any pet brought into the country, which we should have acquired a month ago, as the process takes that long. This we didn't do and I was concerned that it might become an issue. After some research Gabe was fairly certain that the permit is required only if a pet is brought into the country to stay, but I was apprehensive about it nonetheless. Though after handing in the paperwork required and forking our $300 for the pleasure, we got what we came for without so much as a second glance from the immigration officer. Pickle enjoyed a very brief encounter with dry land, rubbing herself on the marina dock, and then we were off again. Having spent the day on anchor outside of Lucaya, we set sail for our next destination, Berry Islands, just before dusk.