Over to Nevis

Irie
Thu 31 Jan 2008 03:07
Position 17 12 12N 6 36 79W Oualie Beach, Nevis
 
Wednesday 30th January
 
After a slightly rolly night Monday, we motored early round the corner to Majors Bay to level up for breakfast. It's a beautiful spot, with a sandy bottom sparsley covered in grass plus a host of urchins, and also a stunning view of Nevis and its mountain a couple of miles away across the Narrows. Soon after breakfast, a small brightly coloured fishing boat and five similarly colourful crew, sped past us to the beach, and started laying out a long net supported by floats. They described a large arc out round the bay and then back to the beach several hundred yards from where they started, before steadily starting to close the gap. The outboard laboured, issuing clouds of smoke, and every so often they had to stop to free the net from some or other obstruction on the bottom.This operation was directed by a guy with fins and snorkel, who swam around the net checking what was happening beneath the surface. Eventually the circle was completed, and then the crew stared hauling in one end of the net, while the outboard thrashed away in reverse, pulling the whole shooting match away from the beach. By this time we were in the water with snorkels, masks and a grandstand view of operations. It was amazing, just like an underwater aquarium. On the other side of the net were kingfish, snapper, and host of other reef fish; a large, entrapped tuna and a couple of big rays, one of them a leopard ray probably five feet across. There was also a puffer fish and then a rather frightened turtle who became caught in the net while trying to escape, but after a struggle broke free and swam rapidly down and away. Somehow the guy in the water freed the leopard ray, and then kept diving to help tighten the base of the net and form a bag as the net circle steadily closed, until there was a boiling mass of fish trapped just beside the boat. With a huge final effort the boat team heaved the dancing writhing mass into the boat. By now the puffer fish was pretty browned off and inflated himself  to the size of a football, while the second big ray thrashed around until neatly caught and lobbed back into the water. Neville's had a very positive response to his enquiry about the size  of the catch, and then they were gone, speding round the point to a market, or maybe a rendezvous with a restaurant. 
The sea was calm, the sun beat down and twelve-ish, we dinghied round to Coconut beach , a beautiful palm fringed  stretch of sand with a couple of bars and the remains of  a now deserted colonial type estate, victim of a previous hurricane. A couple of beers in the Coconut Bar then preceded a snorkeling trip round the edge of the bay. It was a real eye opener, revealing a beautiful coral garden of gently waving sea fans, shoals of reef fish, a turtle, two octopuses, four spiny lobster and a beautiful, spotted eel weaving his way over the undulating sand.
Back on the boat there was an invasion of house flies, so the decision was made to move to Oualie Beach, just over on the Nevis shoreline. Here there were two or three large moorings, one of which proved very useful as the wind and swell built through the night. It was a little uncomfortable, and for a time the wind howled and the rain thrashed down, but at least there were no insects.
 
Pulling in the net