Sri Lanka Arrival

Wildfox
Anthony Swanston
Tue 7 Feb 2017 04:54

We dropped anchor at 2145 local time on 6th February under Watering Point beside Galle.  Interestingly, in seven and a half years of cruising and 40,000 odd nautical miles, this is the first time I have ever come into an anchorage in the dark. No wind on the last day so we motored through the traffic separation zone on the south end of the island.  As we turned north the fleet of ships turned slightly less north heading to the Red Sea and Suez.  While there was a lot of light weather on passage there was no bad weather and so we had some really nice sailing over the 10 ½ days. We were only approached by two fishing boats.  They are basically looking for ‘presents’.  They did not get any. But it is scary because they come very close to my lovely paintwork in very battered boats.


So on Tuesday morning we started the process of clearing in through Navy, Port Authority, Health, Customs, Immigration and then, for some reason, the Navy a second time.  All of the officials wore black shoes with black rubber soles.  The worst thing to wear on a boat. Anyway the compulsory clearance agent (actually two of them) is / are good and they took me and the 17 officials through all of the paperwork in just five quick hours.


The inner harbour in Galle is a bit smelly and dusty so we took of straight away for Mirissa, a major fishing and whale watching port 14 miles to the south.  We did see several whales on the way along the coast but none close up.  Next time maybe. But the crew members of the little charter fleet whose small marina we are using are all great people and very helpful.


Sadly on passage I had three major failures. Gigi, radar and water generator.  Gigi is not suited to either boats or work of any type.  The radar and water generator failures are a mystery and I have yet to see if either can be repaired here in Sri Lanka. Without them I cannot go on.  I am uninsured without the radar and the wind generator cannot produce enough power on its own to keep the systems up and running on passage.  So watch this space…

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