Madeira

Silhouette
Pieter, Pauline, Robyn and Kerry Lindeque
Fri 25 Oct 2013 15:39
28:40.755N 17:45.999W
![]() During the sail to Madeira we caught our first fish! Being not very
accustomed to angling, I was rather surprised when our little tuna (that was its
real name, honestly) started hopping across the deck even after we’d poured gin
down its gills! Luckily, I am more used to it now.
Calheta, the port we stayed in for our visit to Madeira, has no sand
beaches, just like everywhere else in Madeira. Or does it? This town has its
very own artificial beach with sand imported from Morocco! Despite not having
any real beaches, Calheta does have a very good Italian ice cream parlour. So
good, in fact, that we have had pudding there almost every day!
We’ve also met some nice people on the south side of Madeira. The sailing
yacht Margaux is home to Flor, and her mum Lydia and Lydia’s boyfriend Joost.
Robyn and I have made friends with Flor who comes from Holland. Our parents are
also good friends with Lydia and Joost and Dad is still speechless from the fact
Joost built the boat entirely from scratch.
On the 14th October we went up to the mountains of Madeira. It’s really
amazing up there and we would have had incredible views had it not been for the
fact the mountains were in the clouds! Up there we took a walk by the levadas. A
le
![]() Because the Madeira Group is an archipelago of volcanic islands, the island
is filled with craters. One such crater had in fact been turned into a tidal
pool which we all swam in! Robyn and I did some snorkelling. We spotted lots of
fish living in the holes of the black volcanic rock that formed the pool.
Another example of Madeira’s volcanic features include lava tubes. For
those of you who aren’t geologists a lava tube is a tunnel through the earth
that lava would run through when a volcanoe was active. Luckily, none of
Madeira’s volcanoes are spewing lava so we took a tour through these amazing
tunnels. I loved the tubes because it felt like we were walking through dwarf
mines in Middle Earth. With water dripping from the ceilings, mazes of
unexplored tunnels branching off at every turn and waterfalls flowing from
cracks in the rocks, it really was worth it. Even worth the 3D movie at the
start of the tour that made your eyes hurt because of the poor quality!
![]() In no time we were preparing for the one night trip to Ilhas Selvagens
(Portuguese for ‘Savage Islands’), a trio of islands that complete the Madeira
Group archipelago along with Porto Santo, Ilhas Desertas and Madeira.
Unfortunateatly after a pleasant sail (with some fish caught along the way) we
discovered that the savage islands were in fact very savage with a very big
swell. For all you landlubbers that basically means ‘way too many waves to get a
wink of sleep at night’.
So we continued for another night’s sail to the Canary Islands, which is
where we are now! Enjoy the half-term back in the UK, we’ll keep you updated on
our stay in the Canaries!
Kerry
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