Christmas in Bequia.

Oriole
Mon 31 Dec 2012 12:16
Admiralty Bay, Bequia, SVG                                                                                                13:00.54N   61:14.26W
 
Phat Shag, yes that is really his name, was waiting with our mooring when we arrived in Admiralty Bay.  Bequia gets so crowded at Christmas and Easter that we have found it a good plan to get away from dysfunctional anchorers, the type who appear just as its getting dark, you are planning to go ashore, they anchor too close or drag their anchor, are usually French, and claim not to speak French or English! 
 
Christmas in the company of the crews of four other yachts, Shian, Quadrille, Breezing Up and Moonbeam has been a continual round of parties.  After a "very local" carol service on Christmas Eve in the tiny Roman Catholic church we repaired  to the Auberge de Grenadines, the best lobster restaurant in my quite limited experience. Christmas Day, midday snacks and bubbly in the garden of the Green Boley by kind permission of the landlord who forgot we were there and failed to turn up for his free drink - last time we were there two years ago he drank a whole bottle of bubbly on his own.
 
 
 
Andrerw joins the party at the Green Boley.
 
 
Gitana's and Oriole's tenders keep company. 
 
Gitana arrived on Christmas Eve and Andrew dropped by occasionally when passing in the tender, and managed  to join us at the Gren Boley. He was busy with his charter guests most of the time, but it was great to see him and exchange presents.
 
For Christmas Dinner ten of us sat down at the Gingerbread which in the past has done an excellent nouvelle cuisine turkey with all the bits.  This year it was still excellent but certainly not nouvelle, and we had little room left for the contents of the amazing desert buffet table.
 
 
 
Christmas Dinner.
 
On Boxing Day we had planned a long strenuous walk which Chris and I were going to lead, but it is quite complicated and although we have done it a couple of times before, we chickened out and at the last minute telephoned our delightful friend and guide Martine, who jumped at the idea and proved very quickly to Chris and me that there would have been some disagreement about the route!!  The walk takes in three beaches with some steep descents and climbs, and a late picnic lunch comes near the end after a swim in Frendship Bay, before walking back to Admiralty Bay.
 
 
Pineapple for elevenses.  Martine using seagrape leaves as a plate.
 
 
Picnic lunch after a swim at Friendship Bay.
 
The new rigid bottomed dinghy has been a real boon.  No longer the rather wet (in brisk conditions) 3.5 h-p plod, we have the 8 h-p dry zip down to the beach for a swim and a walk after the customary afternoon zzzzs.  It stows neatly on the deck and so far has not budged when assaulted by big seas crashing on to the deck, not that we have had many of those yet this season.
 
After ten days we needed to escape the fleshpots and we were underway at 0600 on Sunday morning  for what proved to be a stunning sail up to Rodney Bay, St Lucia.  The wind was just free so we could lay the course, and with 20 knots we were flying along with an occasional wave leaping aboard, flying fish everywhere,  the sun sparkling on the white wave crests, with a few white puffy clouds in the otherwise clear sky.  We dropped anchor and found we were in company with some friends who we had not seen for three or four years although we have kept in touch on the long range radio.  It is very small this cruising world.