Sat 26/5/12 - In The Thick Of It - Horta

The
word that comes to mind in respect of Horta is” workmanlike”.
We
are in the marina now, after some delay yesterday. The process is not exactly
the epitome of perfect organisation, as their systems seem archaic, but they
certainly work hard at it. The guy who runs the office is only guessing as to
where there is a space according to some hieroglyphics on a sheet of paper –
which boats have gone, who has shifted, who is waiting and you. The scene
mid-morning is a bit like the Solent on a bad day: dozens of boats having
arrived overnight a bit jaded, jigging about outside the entrance and trying to
jump a place in the queue; some yachts departing slowly, with the crew perhaps
suffering from last night’s celebrations; and honourable people like us who are
just trying to keep out of the way until calm descends. The
marina is too small for the volume of traffic, so boats are crammed in, rafted
up, hung off and generally squeezed till the pips and fenders squeak. We were
given a space and checked it out in the dinghy, but the Frenchman who would have
been inside us claimed to be getting moved later in the day for some repair
work. Reporting this back to the office, we were told that he would not be moved
today and probably not tomorrow, so we were unsure as to whether he was scamming
us (happy to see he now has 2 boats outside him). Regardless, and because we
were being nice, the marina guys gave us another slot, describing it wrongly,
but we decided to raft up outside the catamaran that was not supposed to be
there. It is not a bad berth, nobody has been put outside us yet (the channel is
narrow here) but the unpleasant Briton on the catamaran opposite us decided to
have a party last night. It stopped when they went for dinner, but started after
midnight again, and consisted largely of people balling nonsense at one another
on the open deck at the aft end. Jim was close to joining in the “conversation”
at around 0430, but it faded out shortly afterwards. The
town is also workmanlike: the buildings are not as pretty as those on Flores,
but they are well packed in. The streets are narrow with cars aplenty edging
their way around the town, and scooters and motor bikes overtaking them when too
slow. There is no real centre, and nothing like a pedestrian precinct, so it is
a case of looking hard in both directions before launching across a
street. We
had a mediocre lunch out yesterday as we were late by the time the mooring
procedure had been completed, and there seemed to be a shortage of decent
looking cafes and restaurants. Painting
one’s boat name and message on the harbour walls is one of the usual pastimes
here, but we think we will abstain. None of us has any artistic talent, and
there are enough bad ones already! Next
Moves We
plan to sail to Terceira tomorrow, a passage of about 65 miles. The front that
is coming tonight will have gone and the winds are fair if light. There are a
couple of marinas on the island, and we will see which one has the best shelter
for leaving the boat. Jim’s
flight is booked from Terceira for Wednesday, by which time we will have started
to sort the boat out. We have not yet booked flights for ourselves in case there
are unforeseen complications, but travel from Terceira is not bad.
Sooon, Watergaw |