Pirates!

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Tue 22 Dec 2009 14:26
We are finally at the British Virgin Islands and are anchored up at the Bight at Norman Island at 18: 19.00N 064:37.26W. This is an old haunt of ours and we love to visit Pirates restaurant on the beach and have BBQ ribs and then off to Willie T's (faux pirate ship and mad floating bar) for some Rum Punch. We departed first thing Sunday morning, after fixing our in mast furling gear on Saturday afternoon abd made the 200 mile passge over night. Our ETA was about 0600 outside the islands for an entry to Roadtown in the daylight, as navigation lights and marks in the BVI are notoriously unreliable. 
 
As it happened we had to feel our way in the pitch dark into Drakes Channel. No - not a scene from Brokeback Mountain but navigating just by radar and depth soundings. We arrived so early, even after slowing the boat down the evening before, that we decided to go in and find an anchorage right in Roadtown Tortola so we could go straight to customs and imigration when they opened. As it was we managed to get a couple of hours sleep at anchor before Roadtown came to life. I will have to tell you the story about the immigration another time, I dont want to start the day in a bad mood.
 
The night before when Trish was on watch she had to do and emergency stop. She had been instructed to wake me up when we approached a certain distance away from the BVI's and before the depth shallowed rapidly to 50metres and then down to a handful of metres which we had to navigate. The depths on the south side of the BVI are up at over 2000 metres, on the north side they go down to almost 10000 metres, but the Islands seem to be perched on a shelf and depths change rapidly from these plateaus and trenches to 50 metres in a few hundred metres at some points. So Trish was bowling along in the pitch dark trying to get used to all the nav instruments and all of a sudden the depth reading which had just been showing three blanks flashed up a 5.4 metres. She slammed on the brakes immediately and called me up from my slumber to restore clam. No problem - just a conflict we believe between the Digital Sounder transducer and the Forward Looking Sonar which the rest of us had already experienced but generally not in the pitch black approaching a tricky channel.        
 
Norman Island was the inpiration for the story Treasure Island and of course was a strategic location for Sir Francis Drakes English sponsored piracy campaign. They based part of their fleet here and pounced on the Spanish as they passed by with their ill gotten gains. Sort of the Somalians of their day, but OK because it was in the name of the crown!
 
There is the most amazing snorkelling and diving here. In the caves on Norman Island you swim all the way into the end of the cave of course in the pitch black to the fabled location where there was treasure buried in the book Treasure Island. Quite creepy when you do are going along in the water with things you know not what brushing against you in the bowels of a cave.
 
Fish abound here though most are not good for eating due to traces of Cigutera which can quickly paralise you and even kill you. Well its either that or the rum I guess..... On anchoring yesterday a very large baracuda came around the stern of the boat with a whole host of other fish, quelling any ideas of swimming off the back of the boat right then.
 
So a wierd Christmas for us in a way. Hot and tropical and away from Scotland and Home. We have lots of reports of deep snow and freezing temperatures at home. I kind of miss that in a way, and I dont think I could live in a place long term that did not have the real seasonal definition that we have at home, even if I do sometimes describe it as " 9 months of bad weather - then winter starts".    
 
At this time our thoughts of course like people the world over, perhaps particularly when away from home, to to our friends and loved ones
at home.
 
From me, I would like to offer very special thanks and apreciation and seasonal greetings for a very Happy Christmas and a Healthy and Prosperous New Year to all my friends and colleagues at Gael Force, who have built it and condinue to build it into the success that it is. All the very best to you all and to your families at this special time.
 
From all aboard Rhiann Marie our love and best wishes go to all our friends and family wherever they are and of course special love and best wishes to Granny who is off to Tunisia with the "girls".
 
Bliadhna Mhath Ur agus Nollaig Chrideal