Oriole abandoned!

Oriole
Sat 19 Mar 2016 12:10
Rodney Bay Marina, St Lucia                                                 Saturday 19th March 2016                                                   14:04.45N  60:56.98W
 
 
On Monday we finally left the fleshpots of Marigot Bay and motored up to Rodney Bay where we anchored in very light airs before going into the marina the following day. 
All the easily nickable gear was removed from the deck (life belts, spare anchor, BBQ etc), our valuable dinghy padlocked to the deck and we were ready for the next adventure.
We shared a taxi with friends to the airport at the south end of the island (90 minutes of winding uphill and downdale with some beautiful views of the east coast.  We had managed to book a flight to Grenada on the tail end of a BA flight from Gatwick to Grenada via St Lucia at a fraction of the cost of the local LIAT airline.  
We were met by our good Trinidadian friend and whisked off to their family's wonderful house on the south coast for a week of sheer luxury and indulgence.  We had visited briefly on our way north and had hoped that we would be able to accept their invitation to join them for their week's visit.  Our real host, the owner, was present for a few days to escape the frenetic preparations for their youngest daughter's wedding at home today.  We are not sure that the dust would have settled by the time he got home.  Needless to say his wife was sadly not with us! 
 
 
What a view to wake up to!
 
We lounged in the pool, swam in the sea at the bottom of the garden, canoed into the lagoon to invite some yachtie friends for drinks and eat 3 good meals a day and drank .........   On Sunday we renewed our acquaintance with La Sagesse for Sunday lunch, the lovely small plantation house hotel on the beach close to where we used to leave Oriole for the hurricane season. We were warmly welcomed by owner Mike and his wife Lynn who had managed to look after us in the aftermath of Hurricane Ivan in 2004. Mike had managed to cater for half a dozen yachtie guests without the benefits of electricity or water, having to forage every day for food which was cooked in his sitting room.  There is hardly a roof on any building in Grenada more than 12 years old, as Ivan removed the lot.  The island has made a remarkable recovery and the tourist industry is thriving in the very popular area in the SW of the island.  However this little gem on one of the most beautiful beaches in the Eastern Caribbean remains unspoilt and relatively undiscovered.  Only a handful of people were enjoying its charms although the restaurant was busy and we had an excellent lunch. 
 
 
La Sagesse Beach - beat that, with lovely warm water.
 
We also took the opportunity yo visit the new marina/boat yard/haul out facility at Clarkes Court Bay which is in an advanced stage of development and now hauling yachts and larger craft for storage and maintenance. 
 
 
Clarkes Court Travel Lift - they don't come bigger than this in the Eastern Caribbean. (compare wheel size with man alongside). 
 
 Sadly the idyll had to come to an end as the family returned to Trinidad and we caught our BA  flight back to Oriole, where a few jobs awaited us and we restocked the larder ready for the trip north to Dominica and Antigua.