Day 21 - Boat preparations

Jacana
David Munro
Sun 1 Feb 2009 13:16
Jacana lies in the Salvadour harbour amongst the other competitors in the race as well as the World ARC fleet who used the Cape - Salvadour race to cruise /race their leg to South America. The World ARC started almost 12 months ago with 30 plus boats, they have had a number of drop outs and are down to a core of 20 boats, the ARC fleet comprised mainly of Brits with a couple of Canadians, Swiss & Germans who are cruising the world in company, the passages are planned for them and the various bits of paperwork taken care for them making life very pleasant. (see attached photograph)
 
Jacana has a work list which day 21 saw us start to tackle, the best way to get anything done here is to start early in the morning before the heat of the day. The heat we all have learnt to deal with, the humidity is the killer, everyone is permanently damp, the least amount of physical exertion  results in being dripped in persperation. The work list includes repairs to the running rigging, the boom, B&G and navigation lights, nothing major but all takes some time and effort. It has been decided to make a temporary repair to the boom somewhat more substantial than the repair we were able to make at sea. The boom will be repaired fully once the boat has returned to Cape Town.
 
Salvadour is situated on the largest inlet in Brazil, there is a 5 miles wide stretch of water between the headlands which leads into a large protected stretch of water, Salvadour many years ago used to be the capitol of Brazil, as such there is a lot of industry, trade & commerce. The town is not an international destination for tourists from outside of Souh America but is for Brazilians and other South Americans. The bay has numerous islands on which are resort style hotels with all the facilities, the Atlantic coast has dozens of beaches that stretch 30 miles to the north. Beach life is Brazilian life, every beach is packed with locals.
 
Just above the marina lies the old historic part of town and we took the lift to the top to find somewhere for lunch. The town has old cobbled streets and and squares, full of character, cafes, restaurants and bars, souvenir shops as well. Having had a light lunch we wandered around peerng in shops fending off beggars and peering over our shoulders looking for muggers!  The city has a reputation for being unsafe for visitors, especially after dark, a number of the crew on the oher boats have been mugged, we do have Paul as a minder but we still don't want to take any chances. We took a long taxi ride to a  recommended restaurant in the evening, on the way there we complained about how far away it was , but the journey was well worth making - the grill restaurant was excellent and we had a very pleasant crew evening.
 
Part of the worklist was a good tidy of the boat which meant throwing old food stuffs away and anything else that wasn't going to be used - finally Pauls' well thumbed GQ magazine made it into the bin!! (se attached)

JPEG image

JPEG image

JPEG image