Tropical Storm Zeta.

Oriole
Sun 8 Jan 2006 21:44
Tropical Storm Zeta which just failed to become a hurricane has broken all
records as she developed in December and carried on into January confounding the best forecasts of the Miami Hurricane Prediction Centre.  She was heading for the Northern Leewards, just where we are this week, and kept
failing to make predicted turns to the north.  We were just beginning to
make plans to hop south to get out of her path, when she finally did the
decent thing and dissipated fairly suddenly over 24 hours.   George Bush has
a lot to answer for.  Who else can one blame for floods in California,
freezing weather in Florida and winter bush fires in Texas and tropical
storms in December and January?
Meanwhile we have prised Andrew away from Antigua and had a glorious sail
(15 knots broad reach) for the 70 miles to St Barts. 
 
 
                Picture of Gustavia Harbour taken from Guide Book
 
The picturesque harbour in Gustavia was well filled with superyachts, but the outside anchorage was packed with some really wonderful toys of the super-rich.  Andrew needless to say met up with some old friends from one of them..  Placed end to end this small sample would have stretched for over a mile.  Andrew managed to get a sail on Scheherazade 150 feet or thereabouts this week while we were sailing close by, down the south side of Antigua. The power of these large yachts is just awesome, and Shceherazade is not one of the largest.  Two of the largest have been around this week and it just shows
what you can do with a few car parks and car rental if you put your mind to
it, because that is what funded Leander and Mirabella V. No we are not
envious -  well maybe just a little!
We sailed on to St Maarten this morning where Andrew has yet more friends in
the superyacht fraternity. The 50 meter motor yacht in which he crossed from
Palma is still here. I suspect we will see him for food and sleep, and
probably precious little of the latter.  Nothing has changed here since our
last visit two years ago, the enormous motoryachts are still lined up
lovingly polished by their crews and waiting for their owners to jet in for
a spin.
Anguilla would appear to be the next stop on the Cook's tour and then on to
the Virgins.  On the basis that 747s go better to windward than we do,
Andrew will leave us there while we get ourselves back hopefully with a
reasonable slant. Anyway he needs a job and the skipper would like to get
his hands on the controls again!  But at least our varnish is now in
pristine condition thanks to his hard work and his assistant's.