N13:14:50 W061:16:18 Walilollibou
Wind Charger
Bob and Elizabeth Frearson
Tue 13 Jan 2015 22:56
We returned to Chateau Mygo again last night, it being the easiest place to
get to and dodge all the showers. We keep the waterproofs and umbrellas in
the blue bag these days so as not to be caught out. We had a pleasant
chicken and coconut curry but it appears that they forgot to put the coconut
into it. This lack of flavour was made up by the inclusion of a
christophene gratinee, an enormous favourite of mine and one we don’t see enough
on the menus. We discussed “what next” and decided to head for the bottom
of St Vincent and do a bit of touristing. Kingstown is written up in the
Cruising Guide as a not very safe place to stay so, being very sensible in our
old age, we are going to head further round the corner. It is a 50 mile
sail which is pushing it but very doable if we get a fair wind, Our strategy was
to take a rain check (very hilarious, I think not) as we came parallel with
Wallilabou and see how we were doing.
I don’t know what happened to Bob the lark this morning but he was much
later arising than planned. My coffee didn’t arrive until nearly 7 am so
we made a late exit from Marigot, turned left and spluttered along St Lucia in a
piffling wind and a flat sea. Things looked up when we reached the end of
St Lucia, the wind hummed up to a nice 17 knots, it was worth putting up every
sail we had and we cantered along quite nicely. The only downside was the
broadside waves. If we stayed on course, WIndy caught the edge of them
(and they weren’t insignificant) and tossed a whole deluge back into the
cockpit. Being sensible (we are having a very a sensible time ) we veered
slightly off course so that they splooshed into the spray hood instead. We
had a lovely sail, in mostly blue skies but I still didn’t need my sunscreen
because the angle of progress resulted in the position of the sun being smack
behind the sails. I could have a go at sun bathing if I stuck my leg up in
the air, but it wasn’t comfortable. We breakfasted, we lunched and reached
the lee of St Vincent where the clouds gathered, spat at us and out came the bat
out of hell cape. Sigh. It became clear that we weren’t going to get
as far south as we had hoped so opted for the Wallilabou choice and angled our
way in.
Still several miles out, there suddenly appeared two pirogues, powering
towards us, much shouting in local dialect going on. They closed in on us,
crashed into each other, turned on each other and started waving oars in each
other faces while yelling aggressively and threateningly at the top of their
voices, their ganga reddened eyes blazing. I was petrified. We don’t
have any pirate repelling water canon, or indeed machine guns on board, (yes I
have watched Captain Phillips) so I just kept going. It soon became
evident that they were fighting over who was going to moor us but I didn’t want
such scary, shouty people anywhere near us. I gunned up the engine to as
fast as I am allowed to go and headed in seeking someone else to help us
in. To no avail. There was only the scary man who tried to persuade
us that his adversaries were fishermen who shouldn’t have been there and he was
a genuine guy (As genuine as Tony Blair and his ability to assess weapons of
mass destruction methinks). Not having any alternative, I kept my eyes
forward, did as I was told and got us on to a buoy, manoeuvred so that stern
lines to shore could be affixed. Once safely attached I then, in no
uncertain terms, told anyone who would listen that I was not impressed having
the living daylights scared out of me. I felt the arrival beer was a
little weak, I needed a stiff brandy. I have calmed down but skulked on the boat
while Bob went on shore to check in , requiring a taxi ride to the nearest
police station, and worried that “they” (in my eyes still pirates) might take
their revenge on him while alone and vulnerable, it really was that much of a
scare. We have hunkered down reading while yet more rain came
through. Bob is now whacking four bells out of the ice (I hope it is the
ice) for a nice, ice cold, nerve calming gin and
tonic. |