Pottering about and meeting other cruisers

Ile Jeudi
Bob and Lin Griffiths
Wed 6 Feb 2013 22:45
Sunday 3 February 2013
 
We emptied and cleaned the saltwater out of a number of bilges.  No more signs of water ingress and it was good to remove the salt.
 
One of the characteristics of the Cape Verde islands is that there is so little rainfall, especially now in the dry season  This island in particular suffers from a lack of rain so LIn hand washed some clothes.  It poured down today.  Nowhere to hang the clothes to dry which resulted in a sense of humour loss.
 
Monday 4 to Wednesday 6 February 2013
 
The time was taken up with visits to the supermarkets, getting some laundry done (Lin was particularly impressed with how well this was done at a local 'Laundry'), defrosting the fridge, adjusting the way the towed generator was set up and other small jobs.  I would also like it to be known that I won 3-0 at backgammon (this is rare).
 
On Tuesday we met Paul and Rachel Chandler off their boat 'Lynn Rival'.  We had sundowners in the evening and went out for dinner with them afterwards.  They are a really nice couple who some might remember came to public notice when they were captured at gunpoint by Somali pirates in October 2009 when less than 24 hours out of the Seychelle islands.  The pirates had travelled thousands of miles from Somalia to do their evil deeds.  Paul and Rachel were transferred to the pirates' 'mother ship' and taken to Somalia where they were held captive for 13 months.  They were eventually released as a result of work done by someone they describe very affectionately as their 'rescuer' - a Somali native living in the UK.  Their boat was lifted on to a Navy vessel and taken back to the UK and they were reunited with her after their release.
 
Having spent 18 months refitting their boat they were desperate to return home and to normality, which in their case is at sea in their boat and they left Dartmouth in her in September last year.  We tried to steer clear of the subject in the evening for fear that they had had enough of all that but Paul and Rachel were more than happy to talk about their ordeal.  The next day we visited their boat to return a magazine and buy a copy of their book.  I was shown the entry and exit holes in their boom from one of the bullets fired which rather brought things home!  It was good to see that Paul and Rachel feel they are now returning to 'normal' although they 'have a moment' when they think of all the people currently held hostage in Somalia.