Pigeon Island, Rodney Bay, St.Lucia.
16/02/2003
14°05’N 60°
The tradewinds have been piping up for the last week or so and on Tuesday we were wooshed across the 20 miles of St Lucia Channel to anchor just a few yards from where we are now. As predicted it was beam reach, but with winds of 25-30 knots and a big sea to match. We tucked in behind Pigeon Island which is now connected to the shore by a causeway making Rodney Bay into an enormous sheltered anchorage. We had planned to meet up with Colin and Teg Berry (Anaesthetist and Psychiatrist from Exeter) in their yacht Calema in the Rodney Bay Marina. We initially drank a toast to the NHS and the Plymouth and Exeter Anaesthetics Departments and before retiring to a shoreside bistro for supper. They, having been down in Grenada and now working steadily north, and we, were able to swop vital information about our favourite haunts and it was great to see them so far from home. We had been warned that the boat boys and aquatically mobilefruit sellers in St Lucia were a real nuisance, but we have managed to establish very cordial relations and have not been excessively ripped off yet! A large bunch of bananas and five big mangoes for the eqivalent of £2.50 does not seem excessive when it is brought to your door with a smiling face on a boat roofed with banana leaves and decked with flags.
We poked our noses out of the marina on
Friday into the tradewind draught and even in the lee of the St. Lucia had to be heavily reefed for the short
sail down to Marigot Bay. This
whole area is steeped in Naval History:
Pigeon Island had a Royal Naval base, Castries was a major naval port and
Marigot is the spot where Rodney was reputed to have hidden his fleet behind the
sandspit covered with palm trees having tied palm fronds at the mastheads. It would be difficult to hide the fleet
of yachts now anchored in Marigot and as we approached we had no difficulty in identifying the
entrance that the French fleet had sailed straight past. This morning we retraced our steps to
Pigeon Island and were delighted to find that we were sailing past everyone in
sight in a steep sea and beating into 25+ knots of wind with double reefed main
and yankee and staysail. The lee
rail was only occasionally awash but Oriole really had a bone in her mouth this
morning. Beating to windward
wearing only swim suits and being occasionally cooled with salt water spray is
something that a sailor brought up in the English Channel is unlikely to tire
of. We have returned to leave
Oriole in the marina where she will be safe while we go to a wedding. It all came as something of a surprise,
but a little cohort of yachties will be celebrating the nuptials of the skipper
and mate of Saltwhistle3 with whom
we have been in close contact since leaving home. We joined with the Saltwhistles for a
Valentine’s Day dinner on Oriole which I guess will have to surfice as a
combined stag and hen night.