Up to Antigua for the Classic Rally

MALARKEY
Jo & Trevor Bush
Fri 6 Apr 2007 17:07
Jolly Harbour Antigua. 17:04.5N 61:53.7W
 
After the cricket in St Lucia we moved north immediately. St Lucia was a good venue for the cricket but based on what little we saw of the island, we figured it wasnt worth hanging around for. Besides moules & frites were waiting for us just up the road a way in Martinique.
 
The French Islands are still part of France and it showed. Our first land fall in Marin near St Annes. The Brits, bless 'em, gave most of the old colonial West Indian Islands their independence and promptly abondoned them. As a consequence, the islands seemed to have struggled with naf infrastructure and a poor or corrupt lifestyle, which is in stark contrast to Martinique. It was just like arriving in France. The roads were pretty good, public transport adequate and bars, restaurants & good supermarkets like Carrefour, in abundance. A nice change we first thought, then it dawned on us... it was too much like France and not at all like the Caribbean we liked. Not only that, the prices were very French too and of course there was the copious amounts of dog shit on the pavements that had to be negotiated (even more important when wearing flip flops). Despite this, it didnt stop us tucking into the goodies on offer. We stuck our snouts in the trough for a couple of Froggy feeds and Jo enjoyed the shops. But the budget said time to move on, so we headed off to St Pierre on the north west coast of Martinique in the shadow of Mont Pelee.
 
Mont Pelee, for those non historians amongst us (me & Jo included), was the volcano that errupted in 1902 with very little notice and wiped out the whole town. A fireball of superheated gas rolled down the mont and incinerated everything in its path including all 29,933 of the population except one prisoner in the local nick.... - who says crime doesnt pay!. It was said to have had the force of an atomic bomb, so it was quite atmospheric to be anchored in the same harbour where no less than 12 ships were also fried and sunk with the loss of all souls on board.
 
 
Then off to Dominica for a one night stop-over before crossing to Guadeloupe. It was during this crossing that we had our first real 'close encounter of the whale kind'. Our first thoughts were.... 'that is the biggest dolphin I've ever seen' and our second thought was... 'oh great its a whale', then our third thought was... 'oh poo its not only a big whale, there are about half a dozen of them and right in our path'. Fortunately they were fairly agile and managed to swim out of the way in time. In fact they seemed to not only be aware of us but swim and play around us for about 15 mins or so. During that time we took loads of photos but we didnt seem to be able to catch them at their best.
 
 
 
They were about 15 to 20ft long and when we compared their features in Jo's hand book on whales, we discovered that they were a variety of the killer whale called the 'False Killer Whale'. It would appear that they are fairly rare and come to the warm waters of the Caribbean to breed and give birth to their young. Judging by the frisky nature of this particular encounter, we think they were definately breeding and not calving!
 
Dominica looks like an interesting place. It is relatively unspoilt, has rain forests, waterfalls, lakes and rapids, and is definately worth a look on the way back down. But in the mean time we needed to move north to Antigua before the weather turned against us. So we moved off from Portsmouth, Dominica early in the morning before the 'Mango Man' had chance to hassle us. This guy, and I kid you not, was a skinny Rasta wearing baggy football shorts and a Rasta Tea cosy hat, selling mangos from a knackered old surf board that looked like it had only just survived a shark attack. He was paddling it around this huge bay with a sack of manky mangos on the front. Unfortunately we didnt get a picture of him cos he was a bit pissed with us for not buy anything from him, having paddled all the way over to us to sell his juicy fruits!. Taking a picture of him might of tempted fate but we will promise to get one of him next time, if he is still there.
 
Guadeloupe was the next and last island before Antigua. We went straight to Deshailes on the north west coast and bumped into Adrian & Jan and Richard & Jan heading south together. We havent seen Ade & Jan since Barbados and Richard & Jan since Las Palmos way back in the Canaries prior to the Atlantic crossing. So there was some serious catching up to be done and a longer stay than planned was inevitable. We went to th Botanical gardens which was particularly nice and one of the best we have been to.
 
    
 
Plenty of ponds, waterfalls, exotic flowers, strange looking trees, parotts hiding in the bushes and lizards pretending to be sticks. A very nice day out. Well thats enough of that old malarkey and its off to Antigua tomorrow.