Ascension visit

NORDLYS
David and Annette Ridout
Sun 9 Mar 2008 10:09
Our visit to Ascension Island
 
7:51S  14:35W
0830hrs Sunday 9th March 2008
 
On the 5th March in the middle of the afternoon the shape of Green mountain, Ascension Island hove into sight.  It was alas still fifty miles away and with the onset of an unusually black, cloudy and rainy night we elected to stay offshore until the morning.  Thus it was 0700hrs just after a grey dawn that the anchor went down in Clarence Bay.  702 miles logged since St Helena at an average speed of 5.8 knots which for us is very slow.
 
Ascension Island is a British possession of which large amounts including Wide Awake airfield are leased from us by the Americans.  It was here that the moon buggy was tested and a lot of early NASA tracking was carried out.  It is rumoured that it was via Ascension Island that Neil Armstrong's voice from the moon came to the public at large.  Apart from Wide Awake the Americans still have many installations on the island.  The British maintain a military base and most civilian workers who keep the island running are St Helenans. The BBC World Service and Cable and wireless have operations here. The deal is that as soon as a person retires he and his/her family have to leave the island.  There are no people resident who do not have a connection with either the American base or are indirectly working for the British Government.  There have been difficulties over this as the British Government relaxed this to the extent that some St Helenan's invested in businesses on the island.  This right was then rescinded under pressure from Uncle Sam. Aparently the St Helenans were not reimbursed.
 
We rented a car from a St Helenan couple who had been on the island since 1966, the husband is due to retire from his job as a shift controller at the power station next year and he and his wife will then return, happily in their case, to St Helena.  We were also very lucky to strike up a conversation in the settlement of Georgetown coffee shop/bistro with a Scottish couple.  Derrick Guild a very non arty looking person turned out to be an artist of international fame.  His works hang in such institutions as the Art Institute of Chicago, the Tate, both the IBM and Unilever art collections and are sold through a very famous gallery in New York.  Any they care to sell that is as I gather they keep a lot of his work for their own collection.  His wife Lorna with her trim figure, sparkling eyes and blond hair looked like a lady cast as a TV female barrister.  In reality she is a real barrister and is doing a stint as Public Prosecutor on the island.  We were able to show them and their lovely two young girls our floating home and they in turn helped us to organise a dive on a local wreck and to show us round the island.
 
Ascension is really like a huge ash heap that has emerged out of the ocean with one higher mountain that is green due to its own micro climate.  All the time we were there a cloud hung over the top of it.  In the 19th C a set of concrete channels were built and it was from here that the island got its water.  Today a desalinator does the job.  Hiking to the dew pond at the top of this mountain was rather deja vu for me because I had been there in 1984 when British Airways had a troop contract for the MOD and Ascension was our stop on the way to the Falklands.  Similarly the same feeling came when we dragged ourselves out of bed at 00something awful hours and went to the beach to watch the giant green turtles lay their eggs.  These 250kg females lumber out of the surf, spend an hour or so digging a hole, lay hundreds of eggs, cover them and somehow lumber back to the sea.  Here the males await them and after a few 'unions' they return one night to do the same thing over again.  Watching these huge creatures mate in the sea is very similar in some ways to watching drakes in action.  The males do not fight each other but as soon as one has finished another climbs on.  This all goes on at sea and the poor females head can be seen gasping air whenever she can.  Watching the females on shore is a very primeval experience.
 
I am writing this after leaving Ascension at 0700hrs this morning just twenty minutes before a Maersk tanker came and dropped its anchor to offload some oil for the island.  This operation with its long surface pipe would have made leaving difficult for us.  I have to confess to a slight hangover as last night we celebrated my birthday on board our South African friend's catamaran.  I seem to have a penchant for island birthdays as two years ago my 60th was in the Recherche group off Western Australia after our crossing of the Bight. Much delightful wine from south Africa went down with Annette's fish curry and cake desert.  We had dived together, hiked together and toured the island together and we both sincerely hope that our paths will cross sometime in the future.  They are setting out on their circumnavigation as we draw ours to a close so it will probably not be a boat meeting. (they now use the same ISP, ie mailasail as we do and are starting to write a blog, their yacht is called Indigo).  They have just been on the radio as they head out for Brazil.  For some time the SSB will keep us up to date with each other.  So as you can see we made the most of our short stay and now need to get to sea for a rest.  With just over 3000 miles in front of us and the likelihood of light winds we may well be at sea for over twenty days.  Watch this space.
 
David
 
PS sorry no photos as I am short of Iridium time, not I hasten to add for sending or receiving ordinary emails but for the long time required to send photos.  I will make up a collection when we are in harbour and can use a wireless connection to the internet.