Inconvenience! What inconvenience??

Oriole
Sun 13 Apr 2014 12:37
Port Louis Marina, St George's, Grenada.                                            Sunday 13th April.                            12:02.66N  61:44.82W
 
This has undoubtedly been one of the busiest weeks in our sailing lives and with the assistance of many yachties in Tyrrel Bay who have been very generous with their time Oriole now has a stable but rather stubby rig with very much reduced sail plan. 
The surveyor for our insurance was on board Oriole by 0830 on Monday morning and spent most of the day assessing the damage and discussing with us our next steps. The easy option, to take Oriole for repairs in Grenada did not appeal to us as we do not know any of the rather restricted number of tradesmen.  The passage from Grenada to Trinidad is a bit more challenging and is 80 miles of exposed Atlantic Ocean compared with only about 10 miles of unsheltered water from Tyrrel Bay to St George's.  Trinidad is "home" for Oriole. 
However we had a lot of work to do to secure the mast and get halyards rigged on which to hoist sails.  We knew that motoring without sails with a stubby little mast would produce a horrible motion.  We managed to exchange the staysail halyard for a forestay with a loop at the top to take a block for a halyard so we couold raise a jib and we managed to borrow a sail that could be hanked on to the stay. This saved us having to modify our own sail or set the jib flying.  We devised an arrangement at the top  of the mast to take another block for a new main halyard and with our running backstays set up we had a well supported rig.  The height of the remaining mast is sadly too short for even for our deepest third reef so we have borrowed a trisail to set in its place.
 
 
John cutting down the furled staysail which was held by a whisker.
 
After a total of 84 man-hours Oriole was once again ready for sea, and on Friday we set sail from Tyrrel Bay in company with Shian as guard ship and headed for Grenada.  We had a brisk 18-20 knots of wind just aft of the beam and gusts up to 30 knots, but the mast did not show any signs of movement and we bowled along with a somewhat jerky rolling motion at between 6.5 and 7 knots with the engine in fairly relaxed mode.  
 
 
We could do with a bit more sail aft, but beggars can't be choosers.
 
 
Further minor mods are required to get the trisail setting better.
 
As is usual off Kick 'em Jenny there was a more ugly sea, but Oriole and her crew took it in their stride and 5 hours after departure we were tied up in the new smart marina in the Lagoon.  As we got back into mobile phone range John was calling various contractors in Trinidad to get them to prepare estimates for repairs as soon as we arrive there.  We slept the sleep of the dead helped by a number or rum punches. Our surveyor has now agreed to recommended that we continue to Trinidad with the blessing and cover of our insurance company.  We are now feeling much more relaxed after several pretty disturbed nights with both of us having flash backs to this enormous red stern bearing down on us and tearing into Oriole with all the sound effects. 
We have been amused by the lack of planning by the ferry owners who phoned us as we were weighing anchor on Friday to ask where we were as they had a surveyor  on the fast ferry from Grenada to report on the damage for their insurance company.  Could we delay our departure?  We cordially declined, and later passed the ferry powering north as we sailed south.  On Saturday morning we had another phone call, this time from the surveyor now in Grenada, asking where Oriole was so he could come and have a look before he returned to Trinidad. We were in town for the day and I detected a note of irritation in his voice when I told him we were planning to be in Trinidad on Tuesday evening, and if only someone had thought to warn us, we could have avoided for him the very tedious journey from Trinidad to Carriacou and back. We have now arranged a visit for him to view Oriole in Chaguaramas.
The captain and owners of the ferrry have apologised for the "inconvenience they have caused us" and we are looking at this as yet another of life's challenges!   The cost of restoring Oriole to her pre-accident state is going to be prodigious.