St Vincent and the Grenadines-Union
Island and poison fruit
12:36.205N
61:27.116W
10th January
2015
5406 Miles from Ramsgate by
log.
I finished the
last blog with us going ashore in Carriacau for a look around, then to book out
of customs and head onto Union Island the following morning. As seems the
norm a simple couple of days got a bit complicated. We took the dinghy ashore
and while Norma booked out of customs Steve and myself filled the spare petrol
cans for the outboard. Incidentally I poured the last 20 litre can of diesel
into the main tanks that morning which filled them to the brim, that was the
last of our Mindelo stocks and so since leaving the Cape Verdes we have only used about 90 litres
of fuel which isn’t bad at all. Anyway I digress, all going well so far; while
Steve took the dinghy back to Spectra to drop the fuel off Norma and myself
walked along the shoreline of Tyrell bay to meet up with him further down by a
café that we had spotted from the boat. All still going well; after locking up
the dinghy we ate a late breakfast and found ourselves relaxed sitting in the
shade of a tree waiting by the side of the road for the local busy bus to take
us into town. At this point Steve ever the curious one picked up what looked
like a little round apple and said , “smell that it is really sweet”. Of course
me being me I took a sniff, liked the smell, licked it liked the taste and so
ate it. It had a sweet not unpleasant taste and so I encouraged Norma to give it
a go. Luckily she only touched her tongue to it and agreed it tasted not bad at
all. Within 10 minutes or so my mouth was tingling, not unlike it would if you
had eaten ginger, but this got a whole lot worse a whole lot quicker. Norma also
had the same symptoms but thankfully to a much lesser degree. Over the next
couple of hours my mouth, throat and lips began to blister and so getting
worried, Norma asked in a local shop what they thought the fruit was. The woman
looked very concerned and said it was a Manchineel, while repeatedly saying that
it was very bad, very poisonous and advising us to go to the doctor immediately. The
doctors was shut until 2pm but at least we didn’t have to make an appointment
and so we waited for an hour in a bar across the street trying out an old
military cure for all ails, drinking beer to sooth my blistered mouth. I had at
this stage started to form blisters on the inside of my gums beside my teeth and
down my throat which I can assure you was bringing a whole new level of joy to
the day. As soon as the doctor heard what had happened he prescribed a barrage
of pills and ointments and advised us to go to the hospital if we experienced
any breathing difficulties. I said, “this sounds a bit serious Doctor”, which
came out, “wiss founds a bith erious Tractor” to which he simply said, “that
fruit is very poisonous, it is very serious”, that was a bit sobering to
say the least. Anyway pills and potions purchased we were now experiencing
stomach cramps and I was very sweaty and feverish so it was not a pleasant trip
back to the boat for anyone on the busy bus. That night the symptoms slowly died
down which was a relief for both of us and on checking on the internet we found
the comment, “The Manchineel is one of the worlds most poisonous trees, the
fruits are red or green and are sometimes called beach apples, the Spanish
commonly called it the apple of death. Even standing under it in the rain can
cause blistering of the skin and if burnt the smoke can cause blindness”. Well
we really don’t do things by half do we? As for Steve he was fine and resolutely
refused to take any responsibility for feeding me the ‘Apple of Death’ no matter
how hard I tried to pile on the guilt.
Friday started
bright and breezy for our sail up to Union Island which went more or less
incident free, although the last 6 mile or so was a slog directly to windward
which with my stomach still cramping was the closest I have ever come to being
sea sick. After booking into customs at the airport, which incidentally has a
runway narrower than some streets I have lived on, we moved around the corner to
Chatham bay and
dropped the hook for the night. After a beach BBQ that evening (my appetite had
returned with a vengeance) we turned in as the wind was picking up for what
turned out to be an absolutely rubbish night. Midnight and I moved myself from
the marital bed into the cockpit as the boat was getting a bit bouncy, 2 am
found me fully awake and reaching for my foul weather gear as 30 knot gusts and
heavy rain squalls whistled through the anchorage. At 3 am the wind switched 180
degrees and the large French Catamaran which had been behind us was suddenly in
front of us and dragging its anchor. I started the engine and shouted Norma and
Steve up and we managed to get clear with only his ensign broken, but we then
had to re-anchor in driving rain and some monster squalls. I was seriously
debating heading out to sea when the hook finally gripped in 15 meters of depth
and things settled down. Spectra was soaked inside and out and so were the crew,
but needless to say it was an anchor watch for the rest of the night as squall
after squall ripped across the anchorage.
That leads us
onto this morning where we find a bedraggled and tired bunch aboard the good
ship Spectra. Norma has finally gone to bed after being up for most of the night
while Steve and myself have just re-anchored again to tuck us into the corner of
the bay for a bit more shelter tonight as it is still very blustery. Tobago Cays
has been removed from the agenda for today and we are simply going to do
nothing, which sometimes is a very good thing indeed.
Having said that
Steve has just started to pull the anchor chain out onto the deck to make the depth markings clearer for
next time, I don’t know whether to applaud his keenness or feed him a
Manchineel, I really don’t!!
Happy report next
time I promise…………………
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