Africa, fine on the port bow...

A year afloat: to the Caribbean and back
Sam and Alex Fortescue
Sun 27 Feb 2011 22:44
17:04.68N
61:40.35W
 
If the visibility were good enough and the mast high enough, we'd see the coast of Senegal from our anchorage on the east coast of Antigua. Only a wide reef is stopping the Atlantic breakers from rolling into the bay, but there's not a scrap of land on the eastern horizon. Cloud is scudding in from the east and a strong wind is keeping the wind generator humming and the crew huddling in the shelter of the spray hood. What with the weather and so many British boats in every quarter, it's a bit like the Solent, but further from London.
 
The last two nights have been spent tucked just round the corner of Green Island, where it's better protected and there is good beach and snorkelling. We managed to convince the Gaffer to take to Jemima the dinghy for a short run in to the shore, and spent yesterday relaxing on a shady bit of beach. We discovered a nest of spiny lobster, lurking under a rock in shallow water, waving their tentacles at passing swimmers. Also, a huge hermit crab that had taken up residence in a long-vacated conch shell. Brought ashore he proved rather shy, emerging for a few seconds before rattling back into his shell. Mamma was enchanted by a small iguana, who rustled down from the bushes to seize a piece of bread put out for him. It seemed like slim pickings compared to the feast of jerk pork that we've had on the barbecue. Mangos have also proved exceedingly popular, with the Gaffer partaking for breakfast.
 
We're only 6 miles from English Harbour, but we covered nearly 20 miles getting up here - tacking into the wind and fairly heavy seas. it was a sploshy four-hour ride, but exhilarating all the same to round the corner of the island, then bear away and race in between the coral at 7 knots plus. The two masts of a rusty wreck lie to port and the bleached hull of a mastless yacht is perched up on the coral to starboard.
 
Ashley the rigger managed to fit in a lightning shroud installation on Summer Song, setting her up to go back to sea after nearly a month with a fraying lower. It's a relief to be back up to full strength and not keeping half an eye on the mast at all times. Also a huge relief that we managed to find an alternative to the obnoxious head honcho of Antigua Rigging, who managed to fit a dozen sly insults into an eight-line email.
 
Before we left English Harbour, we had time to poke our noses into another world; one of 200 foot sailing boats and gigantic square riggers; one of half-a-dozen crew and permanently gleaming metalwork; one of sliding from one international regatta to another at up to 30 knots. The marina at Falmouth Harbour is well found in mega yachts, most belonging to astronomically wealthy Brits who can afford just a couple of weeks 'off' each year. We spoke to several crews, who said they were mostly free to come and go as they pleased, as long as they got the boats to this or that island to rendezvous with the owner. One was the enormous Maltese Falcon, reputedly sold for $130 million to a London based fund manager. She was designed so that a single operator could control the five sails hanging from each of the three masts at the click of a mouse. With many of the boats back from a 600-mile ocean race around Saba, it was astonishing how many tales of dismasting there were.
 
At the other end of the scale, we witnessed calamity of a tamer sort when an Italian-crewed catamaran came storming into English Harbour. The boat bounced around from one anchored boat to another like a pinball - a scratch here, a gouge there, before dropping the hook in a space barely big enough for a corracle. Realising this belatedly, the Italians tried to raise their anchor, which had meanwhile become entangled with another boat's anchor chain. Then, one of their engines conked out, leaving them capable only of turning hard to the right. After about an hour of clowning about, they shuffled off shamefacedly. No more was seen of them until we got to Green Island the day before yesterday. In bustled the Italian cat, with a new, local skipper, proceeded to drop her anchor in such a way that she hung back on to our bow. Happily the skipper encouraged her to reanchor astern of Summer Song and by the morning, she was gone.
 
We're on our way to Harmony Hall, an old sugar mill converted into an Italian resto. Thrilling for the skipper and the First Mate after so long in foreign parts, the prospect of Roman cuisine is perhaps less of an excitement for Mission Control. Nonetheless, it sounds like a rather good setting and will give us a well protected bay to anchor up in before continuing tomorrow to the north-east of the island. This involves returning through the coral pass and braving the Atlantic swell until we get round to another gap in the reef. Frigate bird colonies have been promised, as well as turtle sanctuaries and excellent snorkelling. Let's hope the Italian cat hasn't had the same idea...