Oriole FOR SALE - briefly.

Oriole
Sun 26 Mar 2006 15:41
After our wonderful trip from Antigua to Guadaloupe we had a night there and then a couple in the Isles des Saintes with its chique shops and great restaurants. We had decided to head down the windward side of Dominica to East Martinique to reacquaint ourselves with this lovely and unfrequented area.  It is more challenging to get there and the pilotage is more interesting but in the middle of the night with big seas and a wind which was steadily heading us off the course we decided to turn tail and run into Prince Rupert Bay, Dominica, and abandon the idea for this year. 
 
 
Chaudiere Pool, Dominica - great for swimming.
 
Oriole was briefly FOR SALE but is now off the brokerage list again but it was a reminder of how unpleasant one can make things if you really try and we were pretty tired too. We were welcomed by the very friendly boat boys in Prince Rupert Bay and we returned to the gentle pace of the most laid back but certainly the poorest of the Caribbean Islands. We got out the diving gear and dived on the lovely reef we have dived before with an interesting tunnel to swim through and good coral. Chris highly rates the dive guide who provides tea and biscuits afterwards.
 
 
Tropical rain forest with views to the sea characterises Dominica.
 
After a couple of really idle days we set off at 0400 for the trip to Martinique, 25 miles down the leeward side of Dominica most of which is pitch black and uninhabited, roared across the 25 mile open ocean passage and then joined civilisation in Fort de France with windsurfers, Optimists, Hobicats, and one design racing and supertankers on the dock with motorways and fast traffic, all a stones throw from poor little Dominica where in 25 miles we saw only a handful of car headlights on the coast road. The only habitation is at sea level. 
 
 
Normal winter trade wind weather
 
And we hear that an American business man successfully sued the Dominican Government for 3 million dollars for a failed business venture. That is 40$ for every semi-destitute Dominican inhabitant. It does not sound fair, but we do not know what court presided. The North Atlantic weather would seem to be providing Andrew and Mirabella V with strong following winds from a deep depression, we hope not too strong, but no doubt we will hear in due course, while Robert up in the Norwegian Sector of the North Sea has scurried for shelter. We are on schedule to meet John's sister in Bequia on Monday week as we gently potter south. Meanwhile back in Newton Ferrers we understand we are threatened with losing our mooring because we choose to use our boat rather than have it tied up in a neat row of yachts the majority of which hardly ever venture further that Wembury Bay, regardless of the fact that the mooring is in continuous use by another resident. Its a funny old world!  The extended cruisers, for that is what we are called, are uniting to fight back for a fair deal.