A Calm Day after the Storm
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Wind Charger
Bob and Elizabeth Frearson
Thu 9 Jan 2014 22:05
We piled into the dinghy, sploshed ashore and found somewhere where we
could alight, eventually, after a tour of most of the marina. We fell into
the nearest restaurant and had a tasty supper of battered conch (me), satay
chicken (Matt, because he had been dreaming about it so it was an omen) and Bob
surprised the life out of me by having lentil soup. He must have been so
tired that he didn’t realise that it had accursed lentils in it. Bob then
had a seafood kebab, I had the catch of the day, mahi mahi which was supremely
tasty and Matt (putting aside some strange story that he had been told that all
Caribbean fish were poisoned by some weird virus) went for his first fish of his
visit, a particularly ugly, whole snapper that squatted baring its fangs at
me. We yawned our way back to the boat and slept, and slept and
slept.
Bright and not too early, Bob set to to mend the sink pump while Matt and I
went on a mission to chuck the bags of rubbish (a lot of beer bottles), find a
laundry to wash the towels that had been used to mop the flood, and our salt
encrusted clothes that had mopped up a lot of rogue waves and to check in and
out. On the dock we met a very friendly and helpful chap called Charlie
who directed us to the bins (quite a walk away) and by the time we had returned
had lined up Wayne to take our laundry off our hands, which he did with one
withered arm, it turned out that he had been stabbed in St Martin. We were
then directed to the Customs office, not far at all, and trotted through a brand
spanking new, modern mall of duty free shops, designed to entice in the
thousands of people streaming in off the cruise ships, selling really useful
things like diamonds and batik. The Customs people, both women, were very
impressed to find a lady skipper doing the checking in and out and we set about
filling in the forms, only two this time so very easy, although it was hard to
concentrate with the Immigration officer singing along to religious songs on the
radio, unfortunately not in the style of a spiritual choir but an over excited
cat. Meanwhile, Matt struck up a conversation with the other skipper who
was checking in, the American who had parked in the same spot, who also
turned out to be a surf junkie. They hoped to hook up for some serious
body boarding at a point on the north coast that the skipper had espied on his
way in to St Kitts so Matt decided that a local SIM card was a necessity, so he
picked one up before heading back to the boat where a contented Bob had mended
the pump, (eroded cable), and done engine, and generator, checks. We all
had a beer to help him celebrate.
We then went off for an explore and tried to get Matt up to the surfing
beach spotted by Jessie the surf junkie, but the taxi driver, Leroy, thought he
knew better and took us to the south to Frigate Bay, a pretty enough beach with
magnificent waves but the wind was wrong for surfing. We asked Leroy to
take us to a local restaurant where we could get fish for lunch. We dived
into the back streets, a far cry from the fancy mansions that we had seen on the
coast, and entered the Texas Bar but unfortunately they didn’t have any fish,
the weather being too inclement. We then hammered at top speed to another
bar that Leroy knew, but they didn’t have any fish either so we plumped for
chicken instead. It came served on tin foil, no knives or forks and we
gobbled it up with our hands and sucked the last succulent scraps off the
bones. My, it was good.
Leroy then took us to a nice garden where they made batik, very interesting
to see, and we bumped into Jessie again. The chaps had a boatie
conversation while I admired the batik gifts on offer. Leroy then received
a mystery phone call, hustled us back into his van and we returned to Basse
Terre at great speed. He dropped us outside the supermarket which we
popped into (Matt somewhat inappropriately clutching his body board and
flippers) to replenish the beer and Waldorf Slaw ingredients, and spotted hob
nobs which we just had to have. Returning to the dock with our spoils, we
met Wayne who had left our laundry, washed and ironed, in the dinghy. He
kindly carried the shopping for us, nice chap, where we paid him. Packed
to the gunnels again (body board, flippers, laundry and shopping) we sploshed
back to WIndy since when we have been chilling, Matt mostly so as he took a
plunge into the sea. I am about to take Matt on at Scrabble and we are
hoping that the bar tender will magic up a gin and tonic for us to help us
concentrate.
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