Curacao to Colombia

First part in France, UK and
Australia Kate and family get back from France in time for Henry’s
first day at school – where did those years go? Mike gets back from Aus having
celebrated grandson Miles’ 1st birthday with him. We head off to “up
north” to complete our “visiting our kids” tour by spending a lovely weekend
with Charlotte and Chris. Then a whistle stop overnight with Brett and Sherralyn
on board their lovely wide beam riverboat, what a cosy place. We love your new
home on the Thames!
Somewhere, I know, I have the same photos, taken in the
same places, a generation earlier! and, the
journey back……….
…and 1st school day! Early Heathrow flight to Curacao, via Miami, has us hot
and tired in a lovely hotel on Curacao. 24 hours later we still have all our
luggage and only one wheel missing! Hotel is very pretty, the BijBlauw Hotel,
Willemstad
Taxi down to the yard after an excellent nights sleep to
find Right Turn in great condition. Mike has cleaned off the bottom ready for
antifouling and the yard has cleaned off the topsides. Everything stowed or
fitted so we should be good to go back in the water soon. It’s too darn hot tho!
Until, that is, the storm broke and our dinner on the terrace moved indoors out
of the wind and rain. We wondered why all the furniture is on
casters! Next day, down to the yard again - antifouling for Mike, spray hood
repairs for Kate. Out to dinner at Fishilicious, lovely tapas and scallops and
massive prawns. Expensive but fishilicious! Early next morning, checked out of the hotel and
off to the boatyard for shopping and lift in. We are lifted back in around
midday and all goes according to plan apart from the fact that the engine won’t
start. Just about to give up and she finally springs into life. Met Georgie and
John on Shamal who are wending their way to Bahamas so maybe our paths will
cross again.
1, 2, 3 and back in the water.
Simples! Mainsail on and final canvas repairs achieved and we are
almost ready to go so dive into town after one false start, where we forgot to
pick up exit form from marina office. Walk back to marina only to be told they
do the form at the Customs in town. Too hot to walk again so another $15 taxi
ride later and Customs clearance achieved for us to leave on Sunday. Not so,
however, at Immigration, where we are told to leave on Sunday we need to come
back to the office on Saturday evening. Just short of losing our tempers we tell
him we are leaving this evening, so he stamps our passports! Leisurely lunch in
town, including forgetting to pay for some drinks at a bar – when Mike goes back
to explain and pay, she tells him he can sit anywhere! So, they didn’t get
paid! We find a bus driver who is
prepared to take us back to the yard for about $1.50, bit of a difference from
taxi prices! A bit the worse off for beer and Pina Colada consumption we come
back to sleep it off. Oops, we are meant to leave at 6pm, which we never had any
intention of doing. Because of the siesta, Mike completely forgot to collect our
boarding ladder, which is in workshop for minor adaptation so, sadly, we are
unable to leave till they reopen on Monday! Stupid marina receptionist had told me they are open all
weekend, which is evidently a lie! So another reason we can’t leave till Monday!
Lots of catching up Internet and blog writing, a few more jobs ticked off the
list, and we are all ready to go – apart, that is, from the small matter of
settling up the yard bill and recovering the boarding
ladder! Curacao Marine to Santa Cruz Bay
We are at the marina office before it opens ready to
leave. Takes a long time and 3 attempts before she comes up with a bill about
50% of the amount expected. Don’t argue…..RUN! Mike nips round to collect our
bathing ladder, they haven’t even started it. He tells them he’s not going to
wait to pay what he had considered an over the top quote in the first place, so
collects and we are out of the marina and through the Willemstad bridge in open
water by 9am.
Didn’t bother with the headsail, so a leisurely sail with
the wind aft, down the coast to a little anchorage, Santa Cruz Bay. Anchored
next to the only other boat, Mike says they are Polish. Quick lunch and Mike
says he’s going to check out the Poles. I look puzzled, how? Swim? Inflate the
dinghy? And more importantly, why?? Has he suddenly become homos sociabilis?
Apparently not, he meant poles without a capital p, which we use to “pole out”
the headsail! Ha ha, first Mikeism of the
trip!
Next morning, Mike has us underway early, its just
light and we set off for Colombia. Daytime sailing goes well, including a
dolphin show, all down wind with the headsail poled out. We loose a lure and the
hook to some big fish, which doesn’t want to get caught! As the light starts to
go the wind gets up and the sea gets lumpy. By dusk, the headsail is away and
the storm staysail is up – doesn’t bode well! So I cook up a veg curry that
makes the cabin temp unbearable, especially as we now have all the boards in. I
settle down for the night, sweatily, as we take a wave into the cockpit, Mike
manages to get the hatch closed just in time but I’m now “boil in a bag” hot!
During the night, we record a max speed of 11.1kts as we rush down a wave. The
wind stays 25-30 kts all night. Miles from Ramsgate this trip 5863nms |