Southern Grenadines alias South Armagh.

Oriole
Mon 6 Apr 2009 19:53
Chatham Bay, Union Island, St Vincent & The Grenadines.  12:36.311N  61:27.075W
 
We have long viewed the border area between the St Vincent Grenadines and the more southerly Grenadines of Carriacou and Petit Martinique which belong to Grenada as a relatively lawless zone.  In the past, the boat boys have appeared to be a bit out of control, but maybe it was our reaction to high pressure sales techniques that gave us this view.  Over the years there have been incidents in this stretch of water and group of islands which look at each other across the three mile wide channel.  The locals move freely across the border but we yachties are subject to strict Customs and Immigration control.  That the small islands have thrived from smuggling in the past and possibly still do is subject to an official Nelsonian eye.  John has doubtlessly become more diplomatic in his approach to the boatboys and in very friendly negotiations we have managed to get the price of lobster down to 25EC$ per pound and red snapper to 10EC$ per pound.  This compares to the 40EC$ and 20EC$ per pound respectively at which negotiations have previously started and stalled somewhere in between! 
After Frigate Island we spent two nights anchored off Petit St Vincent (PSV) where the whole island is a small and exclusive resort started in the 1950s.  A few drinks in the bar at sunset would buy a good meal for two in most of the places we frequent but we sat and enjoyed an hour there with Lorna and Dudley one evening.
 
Grenadines Wildlife
 
                 
 
                    A Frigate bird delicately snatches his breakfast                              ............while below lurks a stingray
 
 
............ and a squid.
 
We had heard reports that around a week ago a yacht in this anchorage had a Molotov cocktail lobbed into its cockpit, it fortunately did not go off, but the occupants were showered with petrol.  A few nights later another yacht had an empty wine bottle tossed into the cockpit with broken glass everywhere.  The authorities have done little or nothing and one is left wondering what provocation might have produced this action.  The thoughtless activities of a small minority of fellow yachtsmen would make this a mild response and murderous thoughts by the skipper of Oriole are not unknown.  So it is by no means clear who the perpetrators might have been.
 
 
Twilight over Chatham Bay.
 
However this is a wonderful area, with some beautiful anchorages and the world economic situation has rendered them very quiet and the weather is perfect.  Chatham Bay is normally very popular and totally undeveloped but when we sailed in on Friday the friends we had come to meet were the only yacht in the bay.  This is the bay where the colourful local character James aka 'Shark Attack' barbeques fish or lobster on the beach. In company with of Dave and Carol from Overstreet we indulged last night.
 
 
 
One last drink before boarding for Barbados.
 
Sadly, we have said goodbye to Lorna and Dudley who flew out of the little airport on Union Island to Barbados on Thursday en route for the UK and eventually home to Cape Town.  We had thoroughly enjoyed their company and Lorna as a semi-vegetarian had tolerated our lobster preparation with equanimity.  Although non-sailors they soon picked up the Oriole routines, again with complete equanimity!!