18:27N 064:26W Spanish Town, Virgin Gorda
Wind Charger
Bob and Elizabeth Frearson
Fri 27 Dec 2013 21:54
A very tranquil crossing marred only by the steady thump of the engine as
winds had collapsed into weak, occasional puffs from behind. The lee
cloths were essential though as it was still rather rolly. Bob was a
stalwart and sat up on deck until 2am when I took over until the sun rose.
We couldn’t face supper so Bob finished the hobnobs, I finished the nuts and
raisins and played guess which chocolate by feel and taste with a tin of
Celebrations hidden in the darkness. My night sailing skills were a bit rusty
and there was quite a bit of confusion in identifying a strange cluster of
lights that turned out to be Richard Branson’s porch light on Necker
Island. We passed along the rocky coast of Virgin Gorda in daylight and
were calmly anchored in time for breakfast at 9am, our usual cereals, somewhat
healthier than supper last night but missing the statutory banana because they
haven’t ripened yet, it seems to be all or nothing where bananas are concerned
in this climate.
We were decidedly knackered by our two man night sail so restricted the
days activities to a run ashore. Checking in took over an hour because of
the pedantic approach and multitudinous form filling, four different ones, one
of which was a quintuplet, in this British island and a long queue of skippers
with stacks of guests passports to process. This knackered us even more so
we did what we always do in these situations, had a beer adding a rather tasty
fish lunch, wahoo for me, mahi mahi for Bob, as an accompaniment to the second
although we had to translate the menu from American remembering about zucchinis,
cilantro and suchlike.
It then transpired we were facing a dollar crisis. All transactions
in the British Virgin Islands, or at least Virgin Gorda, are made in US dollars
and not ECs, its easier for the Americans apparently. This required a
visit to the ATM which didn’t work and a visit inside the bank, which did after
Bob filled out and signed multitudinous forms. We are now equipped with a
fistful.
We then wandered along the one and only street, one way then another to
seek out restaurants for tomorrow (we still have last night’s easy supper for
tonight, waste not, want not) and popped into the substantial, sophisticated
looking supermarket to replenish essentials. They didn’t have tonic only
“thingy gator” and other additive and sugar laden pops, they didn’t have any
“proper no added anything” cereal only sugar and palm oil laden American ones,
no cheese other than American processed plastic varieties and the fruit was
enormous, highly polished and bound to taste of cotton wool. We couldn’t
go wrong with the Carib beer, the local water and a replacement corkscrew so
didn’t come away totally empty handed.
We have returned to the boat to chill, to have a quiet evening to recharge
our own batteries for a change and will have to drink beer in light of the lack
of availability of tonic. Cheers and bottoms
up. |