We went ashore on Saturday morning so WW could clear us out and
our crew could wander around Nelson’s Dockyard which they had, as yet, not
really seen. Once all our papers were in order, we returned to the ship and
raised our anchors. (Freeman’s Bay can have some dicey holding, so our captain
has decided two anchors are better than one. Certainly, it is much easier
working with two anchors when David is around to manage one and Margaret is
coiling and uncoiling line. How will be manage without them?)
Chain gang: David works on the second anchor's chain.
At the mouth of English Harbour, we raised our sails and set
off to the south. It was 9 o’clock-ish. A brisk 22 knot breeze from the east
and a mean northeast swell saw us on our way. We averaged about 7 knots the
whole way, riding 9-foot swells with swoops and slides. At the tip of
Guadeloupe, where there is always wind, we saw 31 knots of wind and briefly ran
a jolly 8.9 knots. We dropped anchor at Deshaies at about 3:30.
David thought this might look like I'm cooking...I'm in the galley, after all.
I am, in fact, doing exactly what it looks like: counting money.
I'm sorting through our disparate change to find all the Euros.
The crew had a blast. Margaret spent the entire day in the
cockpit, watching the sea and the birds and the flying fishes. David took endless
pictures of boats. It became a bit of a running joke. WW and I would exchange
bemused glances and Margaret would roll her eyes as David’s cry would go up: “Look!
A boat!” No kidding? Out here on the water? How can this be? Better take some
pictures to prove it happened. We discovered that Margaret takes pictures of people and
sunsets. David takes pictures of boats and flowers and, sometimes, scenery. And
I am happily adopting their photos for these posts.
David lowering the Q or quarantine flag
which flies until the boat and crew have been cleared in.
All legal at last, David raises the French flag.
(He liked it because he couldn't get it the wrong way up.)
In Deshaies, we went ashore. While WW cleared us in, we
wandered the tiny main street and looked at tourist stuff. After we were legal,
we went to the wee grocery store to buy ice.
Then it was back to Django for
rum punches (David and WW), water for Margaret and me (I’m doing a dry month
this month—because it’s the shortest, duh), and dinner.
Rum punch, part 1: rum, sugar, lime juice, Angostura bitters, water.
Rum punch, part 2: ice.
Well, it's not cooking, but at least it's food.
Is someone hungry??
1 comment:
This post is all too hilarious! Especially Captain Willie forlornly waiting for the signal to begin. The photos on this stretch of blog are wonderful! As is the narrative.
We have snow on the ground - for the 2nd time this winter.
Love,
G.
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