It never rains in the Caribbean
It squalls. One minute you are baking in the sun, sitting in the shade with all the windows open for ventilation pleasantly sailing along with 15 knots of wind. Then a squall hits for only 5 minutes and the heavens open, it goes dark and the wind gusts up to 35 knots. Everyone runs around shutting windows to prevent beds and stuff from getting soaked. Then the squall passes and it's back to baking and you dry out in minutes. It is quite a laugh, someone shouts squall and we all jump up and start the routine. This happens many times a day and this is supposedly the dry season.
So as the wind goes from 0 - 60 in a few seconds we sail around with half a gib out like below. So we don't get battered when the wind gets up suddenly.
Nick and Jen joined us in baking Barbados where we spent a week sailing up and down the coast enjoying Bridgetown, Holetown and Speightstown where I celebrated my 64 orbit of the sun.
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| Birthday boy, tequila and wine. Wine being the more expensive in Barbados. |
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| The Caboose, Speightstown. A great place to spend your birthday, great rum punches and fish cutters. |
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| These beauties are everywhere. |
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| It was hot |
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| It doesn't get more Caribbean than this. On the beach with Reggae music, Shaun the Rasta and rum punches. |
The taxi journeys were wild. Mad reggae music at a million watts travelling at close to the speed of light and anywhere on the island for £2.
Nick and Jen decided to sail across to Martinique with us, stay a week and get a flight on a puddle jumper back to Barbados to get their flight home. Well they wont forget that journey in a hurry. It was 110 miles and one of the worse sails we've had. 4m waves off our beam. Gusts up to 47 knots for 20 hours. I think Mandy and me where a bit too.... "We've sailed the Atlantic, how bad can it be?" Every day is a school day. Anyway we eventually arrived in Sainte Anne, Martinique, the largest anchorage we have ever been in. At least 500 boats. Apparently there are usually around 25,000 sailing boats bobbing around Martinique at any one time. We've learned to head as close to the shore as possible when entering a crowded anchorage and we manage to get a space close to the dinghy dock.
After a few days we moved up the coast to Grand Anse de Arlet to meet our friends who we haven't seen since Almerimar, Spain. So great to see all these people again.
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| Everyone in this picture has just crossed the Atlantic for the first time. |
As it was Lent the partying continued, the drums started at about 10pm and finished around 2am it sounded like the drums in King kong on Skull island. Very loud but not unpleasant.
Then it was time for Nick and Jen to leave, again!! So sad to see them go.
Time to get on with a long list of boat jobs and prepare for Richie's mate, Matty to arrive.














Looks so different to your adventures in Europe. So great to see you you all enjoying the festivities !
ReplyDeleteLovely photos. Looks fantastic! ๐น ๐ ⛵️ xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you guys xxx what an amazing adventure we had and you’re having! So great to meet all the Atlantic crossers and experience the Caribbean again. Bon voyage ❤️❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteThanks guys another amazing adventure for us never ever to be forgotten! ❤️⛵️๐ง๐ง๐ ๐ฒ๐ถ
ReplyDeleteAwesome Wam ๐
ReplyDeleteFabulous as always ❤️
ReplyDeleteAmazing can feel the heat and the atmosphere in your blog. Cheers me up in our cold February here in Scotland. Thanks guys. Love Trudy xxxx
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