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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Books by Donald M. Street, Jr.
A Cruising Guide to the ...
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ponald M. Street, Jr.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Books by Donald M. Street, Jr.
A Cruising Guide to the Lesser Antilles A Yachting Guide to the Grenadines The Ocean Sailing Yacht, Volume I The Ocean Sailing Yacht, Volume 11 Seawise Street's Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean in six volumes A Cruising Guide to the Virgin Islands Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Iolaire's westward transatlantic passage is covered by a two-hour video, "Transatlantic with Street." Iolaire's swan song as a roundthe-buoy racer is narrated on "Antigua Week '85," largely shot aboard Iolaire. Both videos are available in the States from the Dolphin Book Club, 485 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10017. The Transatlantic video is available in Europe from Marine Marketing, 54 Bollingbroke Road, London SW2 GHR, England.
Street:s- Transatlantic Crossing Guide THE ESSENTIAL COMPANION TO THE AUTHOR'S GUIDES TO THE EASTERN CARIBBEAl{, VOLUMES 11, Ill, AND IV
Donald M. Street, Jr. Imray-Iolaire harbor charts courtesy of Imray, Lauric, Norie and Wilson, Ltd.
W. W. NORTON & COMPANY NEW YORK
LONDON
Copyright © 1989 by Donald M. Street, Jr. All rights reserved. Published simultaneously in Canada by Penguin Books Canada Ltd., 2801 John Street, Markham, Ontario L3R IB4. Printed in the United States of America. This hook is composed in Caledonia. Composition by Vail-Ballou. Manufacturing by Arcata Graphics. First Edition Library of Congress Cataloging-in- Publication Data Street, Donald M. [Transatlantic croSSing gUide] Street's transatlantic crossing guide / Donald M. Street, Jr. lst ed. p. cm. "Imray-Iolaire harbor charts courtesy of Imray, Laurie, Norie, and Wilson, Ltd." Includes index.
ISBN 0-393-03329-5 1. Yachts and yachting-Islands of the Atlantic. 2. Nautical charts-Islands of the Atlantic. 3. Harbors-Islands of the
Atlantic. 4. Introduction to the Eastern Caribbean. n. Title: Transatlantic crossing guide. GV817.1747S74 1988 797.1'0997-dc19
1. Title.
88-23487 CIP
W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. lOllO W. W. Norton & Company Ltd., 37 Great Russell Street, London WCIB 3NU 1 234 5 6 7 890
Dedication The idea for this crUlsmg guide was originally conceived in 1963, and it was only through the hard work, perseverance, courage, and self-sacrifice of my late wife, Marilyn, that the original book got off the ground. Fortunately for myself and my daughter, Dory, I met Patricia Boucher, now my wife, on the beach in Tyrell Bay. She has presented me with three active sons, yet has had time to help in business, sailing loiaire, and exploring. Although she had hardly sailed before our marriage, she has taken to sailing like a duck to water. Her love of sailing was largely instrumental in my decision to keep lolaire when I was thinking of selling her to reduce expenses. It is only because of Trich's hard work keeping our various business enterprises going in my absence that I have been able to keep the third love of my life, lolaire. lolaire has been my mistress for thirty years; at age eighty-two she is still the type of boat Michael Dufour would appreciate: she is "fast, beautiful, and responsive." She first arrived in the Islands in 1947, remained for a few years, and cruised back to Europe in 1949, from Jamaica to England direct. In 1950, under the ownership of R. H. Somerset, she won her division's RORC Season's Points Championship at the age of forty-five, returned to the Islands in 1951, cruised there during the winter of 1951-1952, sailed in the Bermuda Race in 1952, then cruised back to Europe and the Mediterranean. In 1954, she returned to the Islands, where I purchased her in 1957. In 1975, we celebrated lolaire's seventieth birthday by cruising to Europe via Bermuda, New London, New York, Boston, Halifax, and then
having a fifteen-day passage to Ireland. We cruised on to Cowes, took part in the fiftieth anniversary of the first Fastnet Race, and then raced to La Rochelle, La Trinite, Benodet, and back to the Solent-four races, totaling 1,300 miles, in twentyone days. After Calais, we went up the Thames to St. Katherine's Dock in the Pool of London under Tower Bridge, then back down the Thames and up the Colne River in Essex, where we lay alongside the dock in Rowhedge, where lolaire had been built seventy years before. Then to Plymouth, Glandore in Ireland, Madeira, the Canaries, and back across the Atlantic in eighteen and one-half days to Antigua. We arrived in Antigua seven months and seven days after our departure, having sailed 13,000 miles and raced 1,300 miles, all without an engine, visiting all the places people had said we'd never make except under power. We decided that lolaire should celebrate her eightieth birthday in 1985 by retiring from roundthe-buoy racing. Her swan song in Antigua Week of 1985 was wonderful-third in the cruising division (seventeen boats), first in the boats twenty years old or older. Then we took lolaire on a 12,000-mile, double transatlantic jaunt. In seven months we visited Bermuda, five of the Azores islands, Ireland, Vigo in Spain, the Salvage Islands and the Madeiran Archipelago, five of the Canary Islands, and three of the Cape Verde Islands; then we rolled on home in fourteen days and four hours from the Cape Verdes to Antigua-not a record but a good fast passage for a heavy-displacement cruising boat. v
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Dedication
Iolaire has nine transatlantic passages under her belt, and I have sailed her a minimum of 120,000 miles. Who knows how many miles she has sailed altogether? There is little of the Caribbean whose waters have not been furrowed by her hull, and, as some
of my good friends will point out, few rocks that have not been dented by her keel! To my three loves-Marilyn, Trich, and IolaireI dedicate this book. D.M.S.
Contents Publisher's Note Preface Foreword Acknowledgments C harts List of Harbor Charts List of Illustrations 1 The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands-A General Description 2 Preparations 3C~~
ix xi Xlll
xix xxiii xxv xxvii
1
13 ~
4 Getting There 5 The Atlantic Islands-Bermuda, the Azores, The Madeiran Archipelago, and the Salvage, Canary, and Cape Verde Islands 6 Wind, Weather, and Tides 7 Sailing Directions 8 Entry and Communications 9 Provisions and Services 10 Chartering 11 Yacht Clubs and Racing 12 Leaving Bibliography Appendix A Principal Visual Navigation Aids: Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands Appendix B Principal Radio Navigation Aids: Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands Appendix C Principal Radiotelephone Communications Aids: Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands Appendix D Principal Commercial Radio Stations: Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands Appendix E Holidays Index vii
60
90 204 235 240 256 295 304 313 328 331 340 344 346 351 355
Publisher's Note D. M. Street, Jr., a veteran Caribbean sailor, is also known as an author and the compiler of ImrayIolaire charts of that area, and as a worldwide yacht insurance broker who places policies with Lloyd's of London. Mr. Street also serves as a design consultant on new construction, most notably recently on Lone Star, a 54-foot wooden ketch, built by Mashford Brothers of Plymouth, England. He also serves as design consultant on rerigging existing yachts and finding good cruising boats for people who want a proper yacht. His latest project is to do a sailing and seamanship video serics with SEA TV. Street is mainly known as a cruising skipper, but he had raced with success on Iolaire and other boats. lolaire has retired from round-the-buoy racing at age eighty, but the skipper has not and can be found at the various Caribbean regattas skippering, or sailing as tactician with local knowledge, on other boats. His contributions to sailing in the Eastern Caribbean consist of his cruising guides and the ImrayIolaire charts. Forty-sevel) Imray-Iolaire charts have replaced roughly 200 French, U. S., British, Dutch, and a few Spanish charts and are all that are needed to cruise the Eastern Caribbean. As an author, he is prolific. His original Cruising Guide to the Lesser Antilles was published in 1966, A Yachting Guide to the Grenadines in 1970, and an updated and expanded Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean in 1974, with continued expansions and updates in the 1980s. The title of the last is now Street's Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean, a six-volume work that covers an arc of islands 1,000 miles long. He has also written The Ocean Sailing Yacht,
Volume 1 (1973) and Volume 11 (1978). Seawise, a collection of articles, came out in 1976. He has completed rewriting Volume I of Street's Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean in light of the information obtained on his seven transatlantic passages and hundreds of interviews. The new book will be titled Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide, Guide to the Atlantic Islands, and Introduction to the Eastern Caribbean. He is also working on a series of books, Street on Sails, Street on Seanulnship and Storms, and Street on Small-Boat Handling, and lolaire and I, the story of Iolaire's eighty-two years and Street's lifetime of adventures and misadventures in the yachting world. He regularly writes for Sail, Cruising World, Sailing, Wooden Boat, Tell-Tale Compass, Yachting, Yachting World, and Yachting Monthly, and for publications in Sweden, Germany, Italy, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand. For well over twenty years, Street owned land and houses in Grenada, but unfortunately the houses are no more. They were taken over by the People's Revolutionary Army (PRA) in May 1979 as part of its military base. The houses did not survive the U. S. liberation in 1983, when helicopter gunships destroyed both of them. He hopes someday to rebuild on the old site. During the winter he crisscrosses the Caribbean. In the spring, he heads south to lay up lolaire in Grenada, south of the hurricane belt. In July and August, he can usually be found in Clandore, Ireland, on the family Dragon, Gypsy, either skippering her or trimming sheets for his sons. In 1985 lolaire again did a double transatlantic passage, visiting Bermuda, Spain, the Madeiran Archipelago, Canaries, and Cape Verde Islands
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Publisher's Note
before returning to the Caribbean. As a result of these explorations Street has revised Volume I of this series. The title is now Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide, to be published in 1989. He continues to explore the Eastern Caribbean to update and expand both his Imray-Iolaire charts and his guides. In both 1987 and 1988 lolaire did five weeks in Venezuelan water re-exploring and checking. lolaire was retired from round-the-buoy racing at age eighty at the end of the 1985 Antigua sailing week. This series was a good swan song. She
placed third in the cruising class, and first of the boats twenty years or older. D. M. Street, Jr., still races, but as an elder stateman, usually as "rock pilot." It is said he knows all the rocks, as he has hit most of them while exploring the Caribbean. In 1989 lolaire is again doing a double transatlantic crossing, from Antigua to the Azores and then direct to Ireland. She is returning via Spain, the Madeiras, the Canary Islands, and the Cape Verdes, and is exploring the islands she has not yet visited.
Preface When I first bought Iolaire in 1957, I found on board what was then the only straight cruising guide to the Lesser Antilles. This was a mimeographed publication produced by the Coast Guard Auxiliary and edited by a Lieutenant Commander Buzby, Carleton Mitchell's Islands to Windward, published in 1948, was generally regarded as a good cruising yarn rather than as a cruising guide, but it did have some basic cruising information in the back of the book. Unfortunately, by the time I started sailing outside the Virgin Islands in 1959, Islands to Windward was out of print. In 1960, The Virgin Islands by George Teeple Eggleston was published, the result of a one-month cruise aboard Eunice Boardman's 55-foot ketch Renegade. In 1961, Perey Chubb Ill, after a eruise through the Lesser Antilles, produced a small, privately printed Guide to the Windward and Leeward Islands of the Eastern Caribbean. In 1964, Linton Rigg authored The Alluring Antilles, a combination guide and cruising adventure of a half-year sail from Puerto Rico to Trinidad aboard the 45-foot ketch Island Belle. These seemed to suffice for the small amount of Caribbean cruising done in those days, but starting in the early sixties the charter-boat business suddenly began to expand, and many new boats arrived. It was Frank Burke of Island Yachts who inspired my entry into cruising-guide writing. Figuring that too many of the charter parties were missing the best spots in the Virgins because their skippers had not been in the Islands long enough to get to know them intimately, he asked me to write a cruisiJ,lg guide to the Virgin Islands. This was done, and he had it privately printed. I received
the magnificent sum of $lOO-which to me happened to be a veritable fortune in those days. This small volume later formed the basis of the Virgin Islands section of my Cruising Guide to the Lesser Antilles, published in 1966, after I showed it to Phelps Platt of Dodd, Mead, who encouraged me to expand it to cover the whole island chain. This was followed two years later by Tom Kelly and Jack van Ost's Yachtman's Guide to the Virgin Islands, and then by Al Forbes's excellent Cruising Guide to the Virgin Islands, notable in that, unliked many guide authors, he had sailed the area for many years before he wrote his. In 1970, following eight years of cruising the Grenadines, I produced A Yachting Guide to the Grenadines, after which, in 1973, came Julius M. Wilensky's Yachtsman's Guide to the Windward Islands, which covered largely the same territory as mine. Also in 1973, Gordon C. Ayer produced an interesting small guide covering an island group which had never been detailed before-namely, the Passage Islands. New Guides to the Virgin Islands are becoming too numerous to list. In the southern end of the Islands Chris Doyle has produced his Sailor's Guide to the Windward Islands. He is presently at work covering the area I covered eight years ago--the Venezuelan coast. The guides have been translated-into French, German, and Spanish. The Guides have been expanded to cover the Atlantic islands-Bermuda, Azores, Madeiran Archipelago, Canaries, and Cape Verde Islands. This was done because yachts going to and from the Caribbean sail through these islands but have had great difficulty in obtaining information and harbor charts for the islands. There has been a
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Preface
dearth of information on transatlantic passage-making despite the number of boats crisscrossing the Atlantic. The Bermuda Islands are covered by Yachtsman's Guide to the Bennuda Islands by Michael Voegeli, the Azores by Bob Silverman's Yachtsman's Guide to the Azores, and the Canaries by Jack Hooper's privately mimeographed Guide to the Canaries. The difficulty with all these guides is that they can be found only after you have arrived in the islands they cover; hence the inclusion of the basic information on the Atlantic islands in this volume. In the five volumes of the Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean, I have tried to include all the information I have gleaned in more than three decades of cruising these islands. I have drawn not only from my own experiences, but also from the experiences of old friends who are, in addition, good sailors. Thus I feel I have described probably every cove in the Eastern Caribbean where one could possibly think of anchoring. If you find one I may have missed, please let me know. In my 1966 guide I claimed that the book would never become dated because rocks don't move. Little did I realize how eagerly island governments would actually start moving them, creating new islands, making islands into peninsulas, and building low bridges, as the development of
the Eastern Caribbean boomed. Further, any guide is destined to go out of date simply because the idyllic uninhabited spot of one year becomes a thriving hotel and cabana settlement the next. Indeed, one of my readers lately took me to task because he was using my original guide and expected to anchor off an island described therein as uninhabited. As he rounded between Pinese and Mopion, he was greeted by a brand-new hotel ablaze with celebration, and counted no fewer than forty-five boats moored in the lee of Petit St. Vincent! At various times, Venezuelan yachtsmen have extolled the virtues of Venezuela and the offshore islands. I originally went to Venezuela to give a slide lecture to a yacht club and to take part in a race. I then took Iolaire to eastern Venezuela for six weeks and later visited western Venezuela on Boomerang. There followed a month's cruise in 1978, a two-week cruise in 1979, and a six-week cruise on my publisher's boat, Toscana, a Swan 47, which enabled me to complete the guide to Venezuela, Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura<;:ao. Admittedly, this section was not as well covered as the sections in the Eastern Caribbean. However, in 1987 we spent five weeks in Venezuela on Iolaire, which enabled us to update and expand the Venezuelan volume. Further, in 1988 we spent another six weeks in Venezuela.
Foreword
making it impossible to see any reefs until it is too late. Rule number 3: Do not enter a strange harbor at night if at all possible. Rule number 4: No chart can be absolutely accurate. In the Caribbean, learning how to read the water is as important as knowing how to read a chart. Eyeball navigation is the key to safe and satisfying sailing in the Islands. Whether Puerto Rico to the north or Trinidad and Tobago to the south should be considered part of the Lesser Antilles is a question for the gazetteers to squabble over. For the purposes of this book, we welcome all three into the fellowship of proximity. Taken as such, the Antilles conveniently break up into a number of areas suitable for two- or three-week cruises. The start and end point of a cruise will be governed by your own tastes and the availability of air transporation. The air services into San Juan and Trinidad are excellent, for example; hut neither of these places is a particularly good spot to begin a cruise. San Juan is dead to leeward of the rest of the chain-and who wants to start out with a hard slog into the wind against a strong current? Trinidad is not much better, unless you're going to Venezuela. But air transporation throughout the area has been improving over the years. Direct international flights now also arrive at Antigua, St. Lucia, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Barbados, Grenada, and Maiquetfa, the airport for Caracas. Favorite starting points for cruises are St. Thomas, Tortola, Grenada, and Barcelona/Puerto la Cruz in the El Morro area of Venezuela. To get to most of these places, you must often rely on secondary, local airlines with shuttle ser-
The Lesser Antilles stretch southward from St. Thomas to Grenada in a great crescent 500 miles long, offering the yachtsman a cruising ground of unequaled variety. Some of the islands are flat, dry, and windswept, their shores girded by coral reefs and their land barely arable. Others are reefless, jagged peaks jutting up abruptly from the sea, where they block the ever-present trades and gather rain clouds the year round; water cascades in gullies down their sides and their slopes are well cultivated. The character of their peoples likewise varies-from the charming and unspoiled although desperately poor Dominican, to the comparatively well-to-do and worldly wise French of Martinique. Unless you have a whole season at your disposal, it is foolhardy to attempt all the islands in a single cruise. Not only will you not make it, but you will fail to enjoy the slow, natural, and relaxed pace of life in these tropical islands. The first measure of a successful cruise is how soon your carefully worked out timetable is thrown away. Rule number 1 in the Antilles is: Don't make any plan more than a day in advance since you will frequently-in fact constantly-alter your intentions to suit the pace and attractions of the locale. Rule number 2: Each night before turning in, read the sailing directions covering your passage to the next area, and study the detailed description of your intended anchorage. In some cases this will seriously affect the next day's plans-particularly the hour of departure. Remember, for instance, that when you're on the east coast of Martinique, Guadeloupe, Antigua, and Grenada, you must be in the anchorage by 1400 hours. Otherwise the sun is in the west, directly in your line of vision,
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Foreword
vices. These vary from being fairly good from San Juan to St. Thomas and Tortola and the Venezuelan airlines, to downright disastrous with LIAT. LIAT's aircraft, pilots, and maintenance personnel are first class, but the office staff has developed the art of losing baggage and double-booking reservations to an exact science. There are various takeofI~ as to what LIAT actually means-some people claim that LIAT is an abbreviation for "Leave Islands Any Time," while others insist that LIAT really stands for "Luggage In Another Terminal." Still, it's all part of the adventure of a Caribbean cruise. Which starting point you choose will say something of your tastes in cruising. If you prefer gunkholing and short jaunts between many little islands only a few miles apart, if you like snorkeling and little in the way of civilization, then it is the Virgins or the Grenadines for you. But you'd best hurry down because real-estate developers and other sailors are fast filling them up. For those of you who want to give boat and crew a good tuning up for offshore racing, set out from St. Thomas up through the Virgins, then work your way across the Anegada Passage to St. Martin or Anguilla, and finish with a final leg up to Antigua. In doing so, you will gain a fair sampling of island diversity and of French, Dutch, and English colonial temperaments. The Anegada Passage is a nice, hard drive to windward, which should uncover any weak points in rig or crew. Those interested exclusively in the pursuits of diving, treasure hunting, or snorkeling should steer for the low-lying islands of Anguilla, Barbuda, Anegada, Los Roques, and Las Aves. The reefs in these areas are vast and inexhaustible. Fortune hunters still flock to these islands, where innumerable off-lying wrecks date back hundreds of years, some presumably undiscovered. Consult the source books-but remember, these islands are low, flat, encircled by reefs, and hard to spot. The charts are based on surveys done mainly in the middle of the last century. Coral grows, and hurricanes have moved through the area a number of times; earthquakes have shaken the islands, and sand bars have moved. In short, you must be extremely careful. Do not let your boat become the next curiosity for inquisitive divers! Saba and Statia (Sint Eustatius) are two attractive islands that are too seldom visited. Their anchorages are exceptionally bad, but when the conditions are right, they certainly are worth a go. Their close neighbors, St. Kitts and Nevis, are of historical interest, figuring as they do in the lives
of Alexander Hamilton, Admirals Nelson and Rodney, and Generals Shirley and Frazer. St. Kitts is well worth a visit to see the beautiful restoration of the old fortress of Brimstone Hill. A number of the old plantation great houses have been restored and opened up as hotels and restaurants. Renting a car to tour St. Kitts is a good scheme. If you like longer sails, the bright lights of civilization, and a variety of languages and customs, the middle islands from Antigua to St. Lucia should keep you happy. The French islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique afford the finest cuisine in the Antilles. The local merchants offer an excellent selection of cheeses and meats from Europe and the best wines available outside France. The tourist shops are a woman's delight, and the perfumes are at about half the stateside price. Martinique offers a fabulous collection of bikinis, but the prices have gone up so much in France that the savings for an American are no longer substantial. Rough rule of thumb: The smaller the bikini, the more expensive it is. The string arrived: its size-minuscule; its priceastronomical. One solution frequently used by the always economical French women was to buy only half the string at half the price. Others felt that even that was too expensive and sailed au naturei-not really showing off, just economizing! The universal pastime of watching members of the opposite sex is alive and well in Martinique, and the visiting seafarer soon gets into the spirit of things. This pastime can be enjoyed in many ways, but the two most popular methods are either strolling around the streets of Fort-de-France or rowing around in Anse Mitan (which today is likely to have forty or fifty boats in it) and pretending to admire the boats while admiring the crews. An added bonus here is that at Anse Mitan, going topless seems to be de rigueur. The women in Fort-de-France may not be the prettiest in the Caribbean, but they are far and away the most stylish. And the men, sitting at the sidewalk cafes sipping their coffee or punch vieux, cut figures worthy of the boulevardiers of Paris. But newcomers, take note: The punch will make a strong man weak-kneed and the coffee tastes not unlike battery acid. The French and their chicory-laced coffee have distressed visiting foreigners for many decades. A story is told of Count von Bismarck touring France after the Franco-Prussian War. He was ending a fine meal in a country inn and called for the maitre d'h6tel and offered to buy all his chicory at IO percent over the market price. The maitre d' agreed
Foreword and sold him what he claimed to be all he had. Again the count offered to buy any remaining chicory, this time at 50 percent over the market price; the maitre d' produced a second quantity of the plant. For a third time the count offered to buy any that remained-at twice the market price--and the maitre d' surrendered a small amount, assuring him that this was indeed all that remained. Satisfied at last, the count concluded, "Very well, now you may prepare me a cup of coffee!" HMS Diamond Rock, off the south coast of Martinique, is the basis for many stories in folklore, most of them inaccurate. The true story of Diamond Rock is contained in Her Majesty's Sloop of War Diamond Rock, by Stuart and Eggleston. Dominica is for the adventurous. A ride into the mountains by Jeep and horseback will take you to the last settlement of the Carib peoples. Here the natives fashion the distinctive Carib canoes that are also seen in Guadeloupe, Martinique, and st. Lucia. With nothing but a flour sack for a sail and a paddle as a rudder, the islanders set out in these boats against the wind to fish in the open Atlantic. Not an easy way to earn a living. Because of various unpleasant incidents in the early eighties, Portsmouth in Dominica came to be avoided by many yachtsmen; but I hope that Mrs. Charles, head of the country's new government, will straighten out the difficulties and make Portsmouth once again a high-point of Caribbean cruising. S1. Lucia provides some superb anchorages at Pigeon Island, Marigot, and Vieux Fort, and the truly unbelievable one beneath the Pitons at Soufriere. The volcano and sulfur baths are an impressive spectacle, and it is well worth the expense to explore the island by car or Jeep, an adventure vividly recounted by Ceorge Eggleston in Orchids in a Calabash Tree. St. Vincent, just north of the Grenadines, is a high, lush island richly and diversely cultivated. The island has an intriguing history, highlighted by the almost continual warfare among French, English, and Caribs that lasted from 1762 until 1796, when the Caribs were expelled to Central America. Bequia is the home of the fisherman and whaler, an island where any sailor can explore, relax, and "gam" for days on end. The harbor is beautiful; life is relaxed. After crusing the entire Caribbean and getting to know all the islands intimately, many experienced yachtsmen declare Grenada to be the "loveliest of islands." The highlands produce enough rain to allow the farmers to grow a large quantity
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of fresh fruit and vegetables, but the south coast is dry enough to allow the yachtsman to live and work on his boat. The island also has a dozen different harbors, providing at least sixty separate anchorages. Most of these harbors are only short, one- or two-hour sails from each other. Grenada, with its excellent harbor at S1. Ceorge's, was once the yachting capital of the Southern Caribbean. It suffered badly at the hands of its politicians for many years, and is only now beginning to recover, since the US liberation of 1983 gave capitalism another chance there. m sure the "Spice Island" will soon be able to provide the necessary yachting facilities to match its beautiful natural offerings. Barbados is relatively remote and seldom visited by yachts except those that are coming downwind from Europe. If your plane stops there en route to another island, arrange for a layover of a day or two. It is undoubtedly the best-run island in the entire Caribbean. Everything is clean and neat (by West Indian standards); the people are charming and speak in the most wonderful accent. They are solicitous and helpful to visitors. The old carenage in Bridgetown should not be missed, nor should the screw-lift dock. It is a shame that Tobago is seldom visited by yachtsmen. It is dead to windward of Trinidad, and from Grenada it is 90 miles hard on the port tack. Even if you manage to lay the rhumb line from Grenada, it will be a long slog, hard on the wind. Current and sea will drive you off to the west. It is fairly inaccessible except from Barbados, from which it is an easy reach southwestward. The American and British Virgin Islands have been laboriously described in the various tourist guides, but whatever the evaluation of shoreside life, a sailor can pass a very pleasant month cruising this area. Throughout the Caribbean, the character of the various island peoples is apt to vary broadly within a relatively small area. Even among formerly British islands, each has its own peculiar flavor, its own outlook and accent. (In fact, natives are known to complain that they can't understand the English spoken on neighboring islands.) For the most part, the people are quiet and law-abiding. The racially inspired violence that periodically has troubled st. Croix and St. Thomas has been far less a problem in the islands farther south. As the years go by, the Eastern Caribbean becomes more crowded; hence, yachtsmen are beginning to head west to Venezuela. In the fifties and sixties, cruising in Venezuela was looked on as
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Foreword
a dangerous occupation-not because of unfriendliness to yachtsmen, but because Castro was smuggling guerrillas ashore in small fishing boats. The Guardia Nacional and the navy were frequently guilty of shooting first and asking questions later, with the result that a number of boats were ventilated by Venezuelan government agencies. All this is now a thing of the past; although you may have to fill out a lot of forms and papers, everyone is extremely friendly and, to the best of my knowledge, there have been no nasty incidents involving yachts in Venezuela for many years. Venezuela is, of course, totally different from the rest of the Eastern Caribbean. The people and language are Spanish. The off-lying islands provide some of the finest diving in the Eastern Caribbean, have not been fished out, and are generally uninhabited. Yachting is only just beginning to make itselffelt in Venezuela, and if you put your mind to it, with the exception of the large marinas in the areas of El Morro, Caracas, Tucacas, and Carenero, you can cruise about to your heart's content and see no other yachts except during weekends. One cruising technique used by some yachts is to arrive at the marina on Friday night as the Venezuelans are all departing and berths are available, stay for the weekend, sightseeing, etc., on Saturday, spend a night out on the town Saturday night, sleep late Sunday morning, and depart Sunday afternoon prior to the arrival of the returning Venezuelan yachts. Unfortunately, the great welcome that the Venezuelan private clubs used to give visiting yachtsmen has cooled. As more and more sailors go to Venezuela to escape the hurricane season, the behavior of some has been such that the door has heen slammed shut against the rest of us in most private Venezuelan clubs. If you know a Venezuelan yachtsman, write to him ahead of time and he can probably get the door opened specifically for you. Los Roques, an area of 355 square miles, is almost as large as the American and British Virgin Islands with at least 50 percent of it unsurveyed. This does not mean that it is an area you cannot sail. Venezuelan and a few American yachtsmen (like Cordon Stout) have crisscrossed and spent as long as a week cruising this wonderful place. This is an area that a bare boat organization should expand into. The boats could be based at Los Roques. Air communication to Maiquetfa (Caracas's airport) is excellent from all over the world. It is only a thirty-minute shuttle flight from Los
Roques, thus putting the charterer on board his boat in a very short time. Supplies could be shuttled back and forth from La Guaira via the everpresent small diesel-powered Venezuelan fishing boats. The bare boats would probably have to be specially designed with a very shallow draft. The Herreshoff Meadow Lark draws only 18 inches with the lee boards up; coupled with a Freedom 40 rig, it would be ideal. It will be interesting to see what develops here in years to come. Venezuela is an area of contrasts. The easternmost tip of the Peninsula of Pari a rises 5,000 feet in the air with vertical slopes spilling into the Caribbean on one side and into the Culf of Paria on the other. From the Gulf of Pari a one can visit the mouth of the Orinoco River and Angel Falls, take trips into the jungle, and see unbelievable wildlife directly from the boat. The north coast of Venezuela, as one progresses westward, begins with heavy jungle which tapers out to brush and ends up finally in Laguna de Obispos. In the Gulf ofCariaco one finds a fantastic harbor-the scenery ashore is like a lunar landscape. It gives the impression that it cannot have rained there in the past twenty years! As one continues westward, the mountains of Venezuela are always close to the coastline and always barren. The cities are exploding rather than simply growing. Side by side are sophisticated new marinas and small fishing villages. Offshore are low, deserted reefs and uninhabited islands. After Puerto Cabello, most cruisers jump out to Bonaire, Aruba, and Curac,;ao. Bonaire is low, flat, and sparsely populated. Its shores rise so steeply from the sea bottom that it is practically impossible to anchor in its lee. The anchorage problem has been solved by the new marina, which has slips and a WO-ton syncro-lift dock; adequate supplies-fresh, frozen, and canned-are available. The people are very friendly. Bonaire has some of the best diving in the world, with excellent support facilities right at hand. If you want to connect up with the outside world, go to Curac:;ao, with its excellent air communications and first-class hotels. Curac,;ao, too, has all kinds of supplies and excellent harbors. Boats going westward usually skip Aruba, but it is a popular place for boats fighting their way eastward from Panama and the San BIas islands. This trip is a long slog to windward, and in years gone by yachts frequently stopped at Cartagena, Santa Marta, or anchored behind Cabo de la Vela. However, because of drug trafficking, no yacht
Foreword these days should even think of approaching the Colombian coast, much less anchoring offshore. Thus, even Aruba, basically a low, flat island covered with oil refineries, looks like heaven after a week or so of slamming into the heavy trade winds and westerly current. When flying to the Eastern Caribbean to charter a boat or join your own boat, you will traverse island groups that are largely ignored by the yachtsman yet provide excellent cruising. The Bermuda Islands are regarded strictly as way-stops for heading to the Caribbean from the East Coast of the States or leaving the Caribbean for the States or Europe, while in actuality, a week, ten days, some people say even two weeks, can happily be spent poking around the various harbors and coves of those enchantingly beautiful and well-run islands. To most transatlantic yachtsmen, the Azores are merely a way-stop. Horta, with its great sea wall covered with sign painting by the various yachts that have stopped there and at Peter Alvere's Cafe Sport, is known to yachtsmen worldwide. However, what yachtsmen may forget is that the Azores are an excellent cruising ground. The harbors may not be too secure; the weather variable, as North Atlantic gales occasionally find their way down into the Azores; the water on the chilly side, for swimming; but the scenery, the friendliness of the people (including Port Captains and Customs and Immigration officials), and the low cost of food supplies and eating out all mean that when a good sailor dies and goes to the sailor's Valhalla he will find himself on the island of Flares, the westernmost of the Azorean islands. Similarly, for all too many yachtsmen the Madeiran Archipelago is merely a stop at Funchal, then onto the Canaries and across the Atlantic. Actually the Madeiran Archipelago offers the yachtsman a minimum of two weeks cruising and, if the weather is good, four weeks. Similarly, the Canaries have been regarded merely as a stop en route to the Eastern Caribbean-usually a stop in the oil-fouled Canary Island harbors of Las Palmas on the island of Gran Canaria or Santa Cruz on the island of Tenerife. The Spanish government has built numerous new yacht harbors, and there are many improved commercial harbors, small fishing harbors, and specially built yacht harhors that are clean and attractive to the yachtsmen. There are eight major Canary islands. I remember the reply of Malcolm Horsley, skipper of the famous ocean racer Stormvogel, when in 1975 I
xvii
asked him which of the Canary Islands I should visit and which I should miss. He told me to visit all of them. He was right. A yachtsman could easily spend a month to six weeks in the Canaries. Jack Hooper, who wrote a small, privately printed Canary Island guide, spent a year there. South from the Canaries lie the Cape Verdes, a largely unknown cruising area. When we went there in 1985 with lolaire we were able to obtain very little information despite intensive searching through SSCA bulletins, Royal Cruising Club journals, and the CCA Cruising Information Library at the Peabody Museum. Most of the information we were able to obtain was inaccurate. There are many disadvantages to cruising the Cape Verde Islands, but any place where you can buy lobster for $1 per pound can't be all bad! For the transatlantic yachtsman, it is well worth visiting the Cape Verdes as it reduces the open passage across the Atlantic to fourteen to fifteen days for a 40- to 45-foot boat. A fast boat will do it in eleven or less, and even a slow boat will do it in seventeen to eighteen days. Again, in the Cape Verde Islands, the only information available was about the island of Sao Vicente, where the main commercial port of Mindelo is. However, a yachtsman could cruise the Cape Verde Islands for two or three months quite happily prior to taking off across the Atlantic. Our Icelandic friend, Toby, has been there for eighteen months and plans to stay. We hope that with the aid of these books you will enjoy the Caribbean islands, the Venezuelan coast, and the Atlantic islands as much as I have for more than three decades. Anyone contemplating a cruise aboard a charter boat is well advised to read the supplementary chapters, which provide background information and a host of important tips and facts not included in the average tourist or charter-boat broker's brochure. It should be noted that much basic information for the Eastern Caribbean is found in Volume Iof Street's Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean. That book serves as a companion volume to whatever other volume you are using. Volume I also gives you an overall picture of the Islands and allows you to better choose what area you plan to sail; it also has a ·very important chapter on wind, weather, and tides. One caution in particular: in May, June, and July, the Caribbean is usually 12 to 18 inches lower than it is in the winter. Thus, at the time of a lowwater spring tide in those months, the water is a
xviii
Foreword
full 3 feet lower than it is at high-water spring tide in the winter. Although the Imray-Iolaire charts' soundings are based on the lowest-level datum, not all charts or local knowledge take the difference into account. If you have any doubt about your situation, take soundings before you venture into questionable waters. To repeat, "Sailing Directions" is probably the most important chapter, one that should be read and studied: It should be consulted regularly before making the day's plans. While the navigational features and anchorages of individual islands are described in the chapter on each island, the routes between the islands are described in the sailing directions-so be sure to consult them each day. As an addendum to this, some advice to readers who operate bare-boat charter Reets: Study the
book carefully, make your judgments, and mark on the sketch charts of each boat's copy the anchorages you want your charters to avoid. Finally, be cautious. Practically every place in the Eastern Caribbean and the Atlantic islands where a yacht can anchor has been described or at least mentioned, but not all are easy to enter. Many of these anchorages can be used only in good weather and perfect visibility. Some boats are handier than others, and some sailors are better than others. Thus you must evaluate each anchorage for yourself before entering. The time of day, the weather, your abilities, the weatherliness of your boat-all inRuence the final decision. Fair sailing to all. D.M.S.
Acknowledgments Yachtsmen who cruise the Caribbean should be thankful to Phelps Platt of Dodd, Mead, who saw my original draft of what was then going to be a privately printed guide to the Virgin Islands and liked it enough to encourge me to write a complete guide to the other islands. Yachtsmen should also thank Bernard Goldhirsch of United Marine Publishers, founder of Sail magazine, who did the 1974 updated and expanded cruising guide. Thanks are now due to Eric Swenson of W. W. Norton and Company, who not only agreed to publish a completely updated guide, but also agreed that it should be expanded to include Venezuela, its off-lying islands, and Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura~ao, plus tremendously enlarged sections on "Getting There" and "Leaving." The guide is now so big that we have produced it in five volumes. I must also thank the many yachtsmen who have helped me with valuable information. Augie Holland (the only person I know who cruises in a genuine Block Island Cow Horn), Ross Norgrove of White Squall II, and Carl Powell of Terciel all deserve a special vote of thanks for helping me update the Virgin Islands section. Jon Repke of Power Products, a refrigeration expert, electrician, mechanic, sailor, and pilot, solved many of the mysteries of St. Martin / St. Barthelemy / Anguilla by spending the better part of a day flying me through this area. Carl Kaushold supplied an excellent chart and information on Salt River. Ray Smith of Grenada was most helpful in his suggestions on tides and weather patterns in the Caribbean, and in compiling the list of radio stations and radio beacons. His brother, Ron, solved the mystery of the whereabouts of Tara Island, on the south coast of Grenada, which is improperly marked
on the chart. Carl Amour of the Anchorage Hotel solved the great mystery of the rocks off Scotts Head, Dominica. Dr. Jack Sheppard of Arieto, the late Dick Doran of Laughing Sally, and Carlos Lavendero of several boats made possible the inclusion of the Puerto Rican and Passage Islands information. Gordon Stout of Shango and Peter Lee of Virginia Reel made possible the inclusion of Tobago. Jerry Bergoff of Solar Barque and Sylver Brin of St. Barthelemy were most helpful in clearing up some of the mysteries of the eastern end of St. Barthelemy. Pieter van Storn, formerly ofIsland Waterword, and Malcolm Maidwell and Peter Spronk, of Caribbean Catamaran Centre, were most helpful in the St. Martin area. Hans Hoff, from the 90-foot Ketch Fandango, is one of the few people who has won a bet from me on anchorages. The standing bet is I will buy a drink for anyone who can find a good, safe anchorage with 6 feet of water in it that has not been mentioned in the crusing guide. I expect to be nabbed once in a while by a small boat, but not by the skipper of a 9O-foot ketch! Hans found an anchorage inside the reef on the north coast of Anguilla. Where the chart showed nothing but solid reef, Hans managed to find himself inside the reef with 40 feet of water! John Clegg, formerly of Flica Il, Dave Price, formerly of Lincoln, and Gordon Stout of Shango have continually popped up with wonderful odd bits of information that they have gleaned on their cruises from one end of the Lesser Antilles to the other. Numerous other skippers have, over the years, given me a tremendous amount of help. They include, in the Antigua area, Desmond Nicholson, xix
xx
Acknowledgments
of V. E. B. Nicholson and Sons, English Harbour, and Jol Byerley, skipper of Morning Tide (and former charter skipper on Ron of Argyll, Mirage, Etoile de Mer, and Lord Jim), to name but two. For finer points on the exploration of the east coast of Antigua, I am deeply indebted to David Simmonds of the little crusing / racing sloop Bacco; David is also head of Antigua Slipways and the senior marine surveyor in the Eastern Caribbean. Thanks should also go to Simon Cooper and David Corrigan, both of whom unfortunately have left the Islands; Morris Nicholson of Eluthera; Simon Bridger of Circe and other boats; Peter Haycraft and George Foster of Tortola, both of them harbor pilots and yachtsmen; Martin Mathias of the sportsfisherman Bihari; Bert Kilbride, diver extraordinaire of Saba Rock, Virgin Islands; and the Trinidadians Doug and the late Hugh ("Daddy") Myer of Rosemary V and Huey H. I want also to thank Arthur Spence of Dwyka, Marcy Crowe of Xantippe, Andy Copeland of various boats, Mike Smith of Phryna, Ken McKenzie of Ti, Dave Ferninding of Whisper, and Chris Bowman of Water Pearl of Bequia. Jim Young of Dive Tobago provided reams of information on Bucco Reef at the southwest corner of Tobago, on Tyrell Bay at the northeast corner, and on many coves in between. The Tobago sketch charts in this book could not have been done without his help. Molly Watson, her son Eddie, and all the members of the Trinidad Yachting Association have done a great deal to help get out the word on Trinidad. I have been helped by Venezuelan yachtsmen Rolly Edmonds, Dr. Camejo of Caribaiia, Pedro Gluecksman of Bayola, and OUo Castillo, port captain of Sinclair Oil, and yachtsmen from the Eastern Caribbean, including Paul "Pog" Squire, Gordon Stout of Shango, Hank Strauss of Doki, Richard and Barbara Weinman of Narania, Augie Holland of Taurus, Mike Jarrold of Lily Maid, and Billy Wray of Indalo. Peter York and Daniel Shaw, yachtsmen and marina constructors, have been most helpful in digging up harbor plans for the numerous new harbors and marinas that have been built in Venezuela. Thanks also to Rear Admiral Justo Pastor Fernandez Marquez, retired Venezuelan navy; Capitan Eddy G. Mendez Perez of the Venezuelan navy and director of the Hydrographic Department; and the numerous yachtsmen we met in our 1987 cruise to Venezuela who supplied us with various bits and pieces of infor-
mation for the update and expansion of the Venezuelan section of the Guide. Also thanks to Peter Plaut of Varadero Caribe, Cumana, who supplied a vast amount of information on the Cumana area. The Atlantic Island section of Volume I could not have been completed without help from a number of people. For the Bermuda chapter we received great help from Warren Brown of War Baby, Hal White of Nightwind, and Jerry Trimmingham of Quest of Paget. In the Azores, Boh Silverman, who has written a Guide to the Azores, and Senor Joao Carlos Fraga have given me invaluable help. In the Madeiran Archipelago, Colonel Cecil Garton was most helpful. In thc Canaries, Jack Hooper, who has writtcn a small, mimeographed Guide to the Canaries, and Anthony Browne, who spent many months cruising the Canary Islands, supplied a considerahle section of material including some excellent harhor sketch charts that have enabled us to do a number of sketch charts for Volume I (these are strictly sketch charts; no proper marine charts exist of these harbors). Ron Boot of Mogan read the Canary Island section of the guide and added updated information and corrected the inevitable errors that crop up in any guide. In the Cape Verde Islands, Mr. Tom Ball, US AID officer, Mr. Gerry Dam, and Mr. Vernon D. Penner, the US Ambassador to the Cape Verdes and also a yachtsman, read and checked the Cape Verdian section and made suggestions and updates. Tony Castro the well-known IOR yacht designer, happens to be Portuguese. He was extremely helpful not only in obtaining difficult to find Portuguese charts, but also Portuguese sailing directions. He tells me it would not have been possible except for the help of his mother, Condessa das Antas. Yachtsmen who use this book owe them both a thanks. Special thanks go to Morgan B. MacDonald Ill, my nephrew, who did the sketch-chart drawings for the 1974 edition of the Guide; I'm pleased that many of them are still in this edition. Jim Mitchell did a superb job on the topographical views of the Islands. Thanks must go especially to the late Tom wilson of lmray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson, who immediately embraced the idea of Imray-Iolaire charts when I presented it to him, and pushed hard to get the series out as fast as possible. His son "Willie" Wilson is carrying on Tom's work.
Acknowledgments And the Wilson family graciously allowed me to use sections of the Imray-Iolaire charts as harbor charts in these volumes. Alan Wilkenson, Imray's draftsman, has done a splendid job of drawing up the charts. Admiral Sir David Haslam, retired head of the British Hydrographic Office, and his successor, Rear Admiral R. O. Morris, have been most helpful in supplying information and giving permission for material from the British Admiralty charts to be incorporated in this book. These appropriations have been made with the approval of the controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office and the Hydrographer of the Navy. I want to thank Patricia Street, my sister Elizabeth Vanderbilt, her husband, Peter, and their son Jay for their help in rechecking many facts. Finally, a special round of thanks: Maria McCarthy of Union Hall, County Cork, Ireland, labored long and hard during the summer of 1978, typing up corrections and inserts on the previous edition of this volume. Audrey Semple spent the winter of 1978-1979 doing a magnificent job of cutting, gluing, correcting, typing, and fitting it all back together again. Geraldine Hickey, my secretary during the winter of 1979-1980, did similar work under trying circums tances. Aileen Calnan of Glandore, County Cork, not only worked with me in Ireland but also came aboard Iolaire in the winter of 1983, and still is with us as typist-secretary-crew, sometime babysitter, and sometime cook. Special thanks should go to Harvey Loomis, who
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for eight years has labored hard as editor of these guides. He not only is a good literary editor but is also an excellent sailor. As such he has been a tremendous help in rewriting the sailing and piloting directions to make them clear to the reader. Both I, the author, and you, the reader, owe Harvey Loomis a vote of thanks. The help of these devoted friends of the Street family and of Iolaire has been invaluable to the production of this book. During the summer of 1985, Iolaire visited and explored the Azores, the Madeiran Archipelago, the Canaries, and the Cape Verde Islands. The information gained has been included in this book. Now I feel my exploring days are over-the "old Tiger" has retired-and it is time that one of the young "Tigers" (daughter Dory or one of her three brothers, Donald, Richard, or Mark) take over Iolaire and explore new fields. It is impossible for anyone yachtsman to cover absolutely every cove, find every rock, and ascertain everything to be known about the currents for such a vast area as is covered by these five volumes. Needless to say, any help in the form of information that yachtsmen can give to this author is greatly appreciated. If any yachtsman has any suggestions, corrections, additions, or material he feels should be deleted, it would be greatly appreciated if the information could be sent to me via D. M. Street, Jr., % Mr. David Payne, Cayzer Steel Bowater, 32/38 Dukes Place, London EC3 7LX, England. (Needless to say, this address will also reach me for anyone requiring marine insurance.)
Charts I formerly carried on board lolaire about 200 US, British, French, Dutch, and a few Spanish charts-all of which were out of date; that is, although they were new charts, the various government offices had not accurately corrected and updated them. The British Admiralty will correct charts of a foreign area only if the government concerned officially notifies the BA. Much worse, US charts are corrected only when the whole plate is corrected; if you buy a new chart of Puerto Rico and it is a twelve-year-old edition, no corrections have been made on that chart since the date of the edition twelve years before! Furthermore, BA and US charts are often on the wrong scale for inshore navigation by a yacht. The charts covering Grenada, the Grenadines, and St. Vincent are 1:72,000, while the famous old Virgin Islands chart is 1:100,000, which is even worse; one needs a magnifying glass to find small anchorages and coves. In addition, it cuts Virgin Gorda in half. Several of the US and British charts break up the St. Vincent and Grenadines area in odd splits not conducive to use by the average yachtsman. The US chart of the Grenadines has an excellent blow-up insert for the Tobago Cays, but it does not have tidal reference points. The British chart does have this valuable information. Furthermore, the US and Admiralty charts are based on surveys made in the 1890s. The latest NOAA and Admiralty charts have new deepwater information but retain the old, inshore errors. As a result of all these difficulties, I signed a contract with Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson, usually known simply as Imray, which traces its ancestry back to 1670, to do updated and accurate charts specifically tailored to the needs of the
yachtsman. Our information has been gathered from US NOS and DMA charts, British Admiralty charts, French and Dutch charts, plus unpublished US and British Admiralty surveys, topographical maps, and aerial photography, backed up by the information I have gathered in nearly thirty years of exploring the Eastern Caribbean. Information also has been supplied to me by other experienced yachtsmen. Alhtough it may be that I know the Eastern Caribbean as a whole better than any other yachtsman, there are individuals who know individual islands and areas much better than I do. These yachtsmen have been tremendously helpful in supplying me with their information. Our charts come in one standard size, 25" X 35V2", and three colors: blue denotes deep water, white denotes water 5 fathoms or less; and yellow 1 fathom or less. Detailed harbor charts are inserted in the margins of the general charts. Useful ranges (transits) are shown to guide the mariner clear of dangers. Various overlapping coverages and often contradictory information found in the various French, US, Dutch, and British Admiralty charts have been eliminated. Imray-Iolaire charts are kept up-to-date through careful attention to British Notice to Mariners, my own observations, and those sent by readers of these guides and users of the charts. Important corrections are done by hand at Imray prior to shipment; all corrections are logged in on the master sheet so that even minor corrections are included in new editions. Seldom do we go more than six months between printings of a chart. (The most popular Imray-Iolaire charts-those of the US and British Virgin Islands, and Anguilla, St.
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xxiv
Charts
Barthelemy, St. Martin, and Antigua-are available on waterproof paper.) As of this writing, forty-seven Imray-Iolaire charts cover the entire Eastern Caribbean, except for Tobago which will be along in due course. The Imray-Iolaire charts have become the accepted standard; the us Coast Guard, as well as the St. Vincent and Grenadian Coast Guards, use Imray-Iolaire charts rather than government charts. Very few chart agents in the Eastern Caribbean continue to stock the government charts. In short, I strongly recommend that yachtsmen use the Imray-Iolaire charts instead of British Admiralty or US government charts. The Atlantic islands are well covered by Spanish and Portuguese charts, with the exception that when new harbors are built they are seldom included on the charts. For the average yachtsman, there is also the disadvantage of finding the Spanish and Portuguese charts, which are extremely difficult to obtain. Therefore, the Imray-Iolaire charts eventually will be expanded to cover the Atlantic islands. In the meantime, virtually all harbors in the Atlantic islands either appear as harbor charts or in some areas (where we are working from minimal information) as sketch charts. Sketch charts must be used with EXTREME caution.
Most of the harbor charts in this volume have been taken from the relevant Imray-Iolaire charts. However, the few sketch charts included here are just that, sketches. They are as accurate as I can make them, but they are not official publications, and should be used only in conjunction with reliable navigational charts, with common sense, and with eyeball observations. The sea level is roughly 12 to 18 inches lower in May, June, and July than it is the rest of the year. Imray-lolaire chart soundings are based on this low, low datum. Other charts may not be. No chart can be absolutely accurate, but I feel that the Imray-Iolaire charts are the most accurate charts available. They can be kept that way only if experienced yachtsmen continue to feed information and corrections to us to correct the small errors that may still exist or to update charts where the topography has been changed by hurricanes, earthquakes, or dredging. Please send information regarding chart corrections to: D. M. Street, Jr., % Mr. David Payne, Cayzer Steel Bowater, 32/38 Dukes Place, London EC3 7LX, England. D.M.S.
Harbor Charts VENEZUELA Monjes del Sur
85
BERMUDA Outline (sketch chart) St. George's Harbour (sketch chart)
91 92
A20 A21
Al A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 AB A9 AI0 All A12 A13
A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19
95 99 100 102
M6
130 131
SIl SI2
SALVAGE ISLANDS Selvagem Grande (sketch chart) Selvagem Pequena (sketch chart)
132 133
M2 M3 M4 M5
103
104 105 106 107 108 108 109 109 110 111 111 112 113 113 114 115 116 117 117 118 118 120 120
Cl C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9
ClO
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121 122
MADEIRAN ARCHIPELAGO Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts Outline Porto Santo Bahia de Porto Santo Outline Madeira Funchal (sketch chart) Camara de Lobos Machico Ensenada da Abra Outline Islas Deserta Grande, Bugio, Chao Anchorage, Deserta Grande
Ml AZORES Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts Outline Flores and Corvo Vila das Lajes Santa Cruz Porto de Santa Cruz Whale Factory Anchorage Vila Nova Outline Faial Horta Outline Pico Madalena Cais do Pico (sketch chart) Santa Cruz das Ribeiras (sketch chart) Outline Sao Jorge Velas Outline Graciosa Vila da Praia Santa Cruz Folga Outline Ilha Terceira Angra do Heroismo Praia da Vitoria Outline Sao Miguel Ponta Delgada Vila Franca da Campo Porto de Capelas Outline Ilha de Santa Maria Vila do Porto
Baia de Sao Lourenco I1heus das Formigas
CANARIES Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts Outline Graciosa and Lanzarote Orzola (sketch chart) Arrecife / Naos South Coast of Lanzarote / Playa Blanca Outline Fuerteventura Isla de Lobos and Corralejo Puerto del Rosario Castillo (sketch chart) Gran Tarajal Outline Gran Canaria Puerto de la Luz / Las Palmas Porto Deportivo Taliarte (sketch chart) Ensa de Salinetas
123 124 125 126 128 128 129 129
135 142 143 145 146 147 148 148 149 149 150 152 153 154
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Cll C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30
C31 C32 C33
C34
H arbor Charts
Bahia de Gando Arinaga Southwest Coast of Gran Canaria: Punta de Maspalomas to Mogan Pasitos Blancos Arguineguin Puerto Rico Mogan (sketch chart) Rada de la Aldea Las Nieves Rada de Sardina Outline Tenerife Ensa de Antequera Santa Cruz de Tenerife Radazul (sketch chart) Candelaria (sketch chart) Abona Raja / Medano Los Cristianos West Coast of Tenerife: La Caleta to Pta Teno (sketch chart) Pto Deportivo North Coast of Tenerife: Garachico to San Marcos Outline Gomera San Sebastian Santiago (sketch chart) Valle Gran Rey / Puerto de Refugio Vueltas (sketch chart) Outline La Palma Santa Cruz de la Palma (sketch chart)
154 155 156 157 157 158 159 160 160 161 162 163 164 165 165 166 166 168 169 170
171 172 173 174 174 175 176
C35 Tazacorte (sketch chart) Outline Hierro C36 Puerto de la Estaca C37 La Restinga (sketch chart)
CV1 CV2 CV3 CV4 CV5
CV6 CV7 CV8 CV9 CVlO CVll CV12 CV13 CV14 CV15 CV16 CV17 CV18 CV19
CAPE VERDES Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts Outline Ilha do Sal and Ilha da Boa Vista Palmeiria Bahia da Mordeira Santa Maria Pedra de Lume Sal-Rei Outline Maio, Santiago, Foga, and Brava Porto Inglez Porta da Praia Ribeira da Barca Porto do Tarrafal Santiago Sao Filipe Vale de Cavaleiros Porto da Faja Porto da Furna Outline northern Cape Verde Islands Preguica Porto Grande / Mindelo Porta Nova Ponta do Sol/ Maria Pia Tarrafal
177 178 179 180
181 185 186 186 187 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 195 196 196 197 198
199 200 201 202
Illustrations Twin staysails versus genoas. Downwind tradewind rig. Bahamian Moor Bow and Stern Mooring (Bow-To) Bow and Stern Mooring (Stern-To) US Charts of Madeira, and the Salvage and Canary Islands British Admiralty (BA) Charts of Madeira, and the Salvage and Canary Islands Spanish Charts of the Canary Islands Portuguese Charts of Madeira and the Salvage Islands US, BA, and Portuguese Charts of the Cape Verde Islands US Charts of the Eastern Caribbean British Admiralty (BA) Charts of the Eastern Caribbean French Charts of Martinique and Guadeloupe Imray-Iolaire (11) Charts of the Eastern Caribbean US Charts of the Azores
20 20 24
British Admiralty (BA) Charts of the Azores Portuguese Charts of the Azores Westward Across the Atlantic Weather Chart: Azores high and Sahara low produce trade winds. West from the Canaries and Cape Verdes East Coast Routes to St. Thomas The Western Caribbean The Eastern Caribbean Index of Harbor Charts to the Azores Index of Harbor Charts to Madeira Index of Harbor Charts to the Canaries and the Salvage Islands Index of Harbor Charts to the Cape Verde Islands North Atlantic Pilot Charts Tidal Chart, Lesser Antilles Current Chart, Lesser Antilles TidaVCurrent Chart, Virgin Islands Eastern Caribbean Passages Routes from the Islands and Transatlantic Routes
25 25
47 48 49 50
51 52 53 54
55 57
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58 59 62 66 68 72 88 89 95 123 135 181 209 227 228 229 236 320
I
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic IslandsA General Description Caribbean to Grenada; he lay over there during the hurricane season and then cruised back to the States via the Islands and the Bahamas. Immediately after World War 11 Carlton Mitchell wrote a superb cruising book, Islands to Windward, the story of his cruise north through the Lesser Antilles from Trinidad to St. Thomas, and then on through the Bahamas to Miami. In the back of the book he gave some basic cruising information. This opened the eyes of post-World War 11 yachtsmen to sailing in the Lesser Antilles, and a trickle of them started sailing there in the late forties and early fifties. This trickle became a stream in the early sixties and a flood in the late sixties, seventies, and eighties. What does the yachtsman find when he arrives in the Eastern Caribbean? He finds the almost ever-present trade winds, which blow with an amazing regularity for nine or ten months of the year. Even during those periods which the Caribbean yachtsman refers to as the "flat-calm days," the wind blows about as hard as it normally does in the light -air sailing areas of western Long Island Sound, Southern California, and the Great Lakes. Even in northern Europe one can get becalmed for days on end. But seldom is there so little wind in the Caribbean that a boat that sails well cannot make progress with the aid of a big genoa or
The Eastern Caribbean is undoubtedly one of the great sailing areas of the world. By the term "Eastern Caribbean" I am referring to Puerto Rico (one of the Greater Antilles), the Lesser Antilles (namely, the islands stretching south and east from St. Thomas to Trinidad), to the Venezuelan coast and its off-lying islands, plus the islands of Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura<;ao. In contrast to some of the world's great cruising grounds such as French Oceania and other Pacific areas, it takes a relatively short trip to get to the Eastern Caribbean from North America, and even from Europe. And for the yachtsman who wishes to charter a boat in the area, modern jet traffic and package tours make the venture within reach, geographically and financially, of a tremendous number of people. Package tours even make it possible for the California yachtsman to afford a cruising holiday in the Caribbean. And it's only eight hours away. The area was first brought to the attention of yachtsmen at the turn of the century by Fritz Fenger in two wonderful books. The first, Alone on the Caribbean, is the story of his cruise in 1911 from Grenada to Saba in the Yakaboo, a batwinged, decked, rudderless, 17-foot canoe. The C mise of the Diablesse tells of his cruise from the States down through the Bahamas, through the 1
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spinnaker-witness the fact that my yawl Iolaire has spent the last sixteen of her thirty-three years in the Islands with no engine. Fog is unknown, and visibility, in normal conditions, is usually excellent-you can expect to pick out islands 20 miles away or more. (Occasionally St. Croix, which is 38 miles from St. Thomas, will look not more than 10 miles away.) This is not always true, however. During a long drought in the Sahara Desert in the early 1980s, dust sometimes blew all the way across to the Caribbean, knocking visibility down to 6 or 7 miles. In 1983 a really bad sandstorm blew across the Atlantic and reduced visibility to less than a mile in some parts of the Caribbean-anchored in Anse Mitan in Martinique, we were unable to see Fort-de-France, 3 miles away. Worldwide pollution has also affected visibility in general. Pilots who are experienced sailors have told me that above 5,000 feet the air is crystal clear but that below that height the haze builds up. If you read stories of Columbus and other early navigators, you may wonder how they navigated the Eastern Caribbean so well with no charts and only rudimentary instrum~nts. The answer seems to be the amazing visibility they enjoyed: by studying their logs you realize that they were regularly seeing islands 50 and 60 miles away-which certainly simplifies navigation. Tidal conditions are nearly ideal, with an average rise and fall of about 18 inches; the tidal current seldom runs more than 11/2 knots, and most of the time it's less than that. Sometimes the currents have to be reckoned with, but the tidal bores, overfalls, and racing currents found in European and North American waters are practically unknown in the Eastern Caribbean. The water is wonderful for swimming, with temperatures ranging from a cold of 70° F along the Venezuelan coast to a high of 80° F in some isolated harbors that are warmed by the sun. Water pollution is practically nonexistent, and if you encounter some you have only to pick up the anchor and sail a few miles away to find crystalclear water. Throughout most of the area spearfishing and snorkeling are the pastimes of the average yachtsman. In some areas spearfishing is forbidden, but you can still have a wonderful day swimming around and looking at the fish-which seem to realize that they're protected and are so tame you can practically feed them from your hand. For those who like to fish from the surface there are all types of sport available. In Grenada, Bahari,
skippered hy Martin Mathais, caught a number of world-record sailfish on light tackle. Off the Virgin Islands on Baracuda Bank, many world-record marlin and sailfish have been caught. Sports-fishing boats and good sport fishing are found along the coasts of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Grenada, and northern Venezuela, especially in the Caracas area. For the yachtsman who is not a sports fisherman hut merely wants to trail a line over the stern of the boat to see what he'll catch, well, good luck. You may feed yourselffor a month or you may get zero. Chance and skill at picking the right gear play an important part in this type of fishing. For the light-tackle rod-and-reel fisherman there are numerous areas in among the mangroves where you'll have a field day. And of course there are various areas in the Caribbean where the shelling is superb. The Atlantic island groups-Bermuda, the Azores, the Madeiran Archipelago, the Canaries, and the Cape Verdes-are generally written off as mere stopping places on the way across the Atlantic. Yet they offer excellent cruising possibilities themselves and a chief goal of this new edition is to encourage cruising yachtsmen to take some time to explore those possibilities. Chapter 5, "The Atlantic Islands," describes each island group in detail, and I recommend that you read that chapter carefully before planning a transatlantic voyage. If your bent is cruising pleasure, rather than simply getting the boat from one place to another, I think you'll be tempted to linger in one or more of these inviting and unspoiled cruising grounds. Bermuda-a bit more than 600 miles off the east coast of United States just south of the Gulf Stream-has unique charm and a kind of fairy-tale, pastel beauty. Though thickly settled, it is incredibly clean and efficient (in contrast to the Eastern Caribbean islands); its people are welcoming and its Customs and Immigration officials are friendly and helpful. It has been in the tourist business since the 1870s, and that is its main industry, so nothing is cheap. But you'll have a good time spending your money. The cruising potential here is less than in the other Atlantic islands but if you are waiting for crew or supplies to arrive, or for the weather to change, you can certainly make a pleasant week of poking around the main island and its nearby islets. The Azores-some 800 miles off the Portuguese coast-are a group of nine main islands, some of great beauty and most worth visiting. The Azoreans are wonderfully friendly, yet sturdily inde-
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands-A General Description pendent and completely uncorrupted by tourism. Their language is Portuguese, hut many Azoreans have strong connections with the States, so English is widely spoken. There are some difficulties, because yachting facilities are minimal. Many harbors are too open for comfort, and anchoring along the precipitous coast can be a problem. But there are several well-protected harbors, new breakwaters are being built, and at least one new marina has opened. The future for the cruising sailor is bright. Madeira and its smaller sister island, Porta Santa, have a lot to offer. They are about 450 miles west of Morocco, and belong to Portugal. Yachts sailing from Europe to the Caribbean usually leave before the equinoxial gales, which will get them to Madeira too early to continue on to the Caribbean. That's a perfect chance to explore Madeira. Like Bermuda, Madeira has been in the tourist business a long time, and Funchal, on the big island, is a very civilized city; it also has a good marina. A rented car or bus trips are highly recommended. But there are also several other anchorages where you can be all by yourself. And the adventurous can sail off to Isla Deserta, or, weather permitting, to the Salvage Islands, which remind me of the unspoiled Grenadines, except that the water is cold. The Canary Islands, a cluster of Spanish islands that lie roughly 825 miles southwest of Spain and less than 75 miles off the African coast, are so varied and have so many harbors that you could spend many months happily cruising there. Some say that the Canaries have been ruined by tourism, and indeed, they certainly are a popular winter retreat for thousands of European sun seekersthe place positively reeks of suntan oil. But the tourist sardines are packed in concrete clusters that take up relatively little space. In between, the cruiser will find the Canary Islands and their people as they were forty years ago--warm and welcoming and interesting. The Cape Verde Islands, about 400 miles west of Dakar have been virtually ignored by cruising yachtsman. When Iolaire was there in 1985 we could find practically no information about the islands. We discovered that they were not dry bits of desert inhabited by starving people, as we had heard them described. Some are flat and arid, some are mountainous; all offer good cruising. Mindelo on Sao Vicente is a serious commercial port, and other places offer different delights, such as lobster at $1 a pound, beautiful pine forests, good food, and friendly people. Brava, with its
3
5,OOO-foot-high peak, has been compared to the Caribbean's Saba, which makes it very attractive indeed. In general, I think these Atlantic groups are ripe for discovery by serious cruising yachtsmen. One experienced Belgian sailor who has been to the Caribbean many times told me; "To heck with it. I am tired of fighting with Customs and Immigralions in the Caribbean, and I'd rather spend my time cruising the friendly Atlantic islands." I prediet many more will follow his lead.
History The history of the Eastern Caribbean is interesting and can be investigated in greater depth by consulting the books listed in the Bibliography at the back of this volume. Columbus visited this area in his early trips. He established a colony in Puerto Rico, and saw and named some of the Lesser Antilles, but neither he nor subsequent early explorers landed much on them. This was because the small islands had no mineral wealth and were populated by Caribs, a fierce, warlike tribe who had emerged out of the jungles of South America and fought their way up through the Lesser Antilles. At the time of the white man's arrival, the Caribs had taken over all the Lesser Antilles up to Puerto Rico. They were busy raiding, killing, and putting in the pot the peaceful Arawak Indians who populated the Islands. The Caribs were fierce fighters, besides being cannihals, and they not only conquered the Arawaks, but were willing to take on anyone else. It took the Europeans and their firearms a long time to subdue the Caribs. Their few pure descendants now live in a protected enclave on the island of Dominica, but their bloodlines can be seen on many Caribbean islands. The Venezuelan coast, especially around the island of Margarita, was settled because of the extremely profitable pearl fisheries there. The first gifts Columbus took back to his sovereigns was little gold, hut much in the way of pearls. Then came development of huge salt pans. Prior to the advent of refrigeration, salt was an extremely valuable commodity, and the value of the salt pans in this area caused all sorts of commotion. The Dutch arrived on the scene in 1540, because salt was essential to support their vast North Sea fishing industry. They established salt pans at Araya, El Morro de Barcelona, the flat area east of BarceIona, and on Aruba, Bonaire, Cura<;ao, and St. Martin. Needless to say the Spanish didn't like
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these incursions into the area and fought them tooth and nail. They finally threw the Dutch out of El Morro de Barcelona and Araya, and built a magnificent fort at Araya, which can still be seen today, to defend the salt pans. They were unable to put the Dutch out of Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura~ao. The last became an important base, not only because of the salt, but also as a port from which smugglers, privateers, and pirates could prey on Spanish commerce. Among the goods smuggled were Dutch gin (in, to the Spaniards) and tobacco (out, to Europe). That trade established Holland as the premier cigar maker of Europe. In the early years of the seventeenth century it dawned on the European nations that the Spanish were making money in the West Indies not only in gold but also by growing sugar. Sugar was extremely valuable, sold by the ounce, and brought in by the tons per acre! Thus in the early years of the seventeenth century the British and French (and to a lesser extent the Danes) colonized the Lesser Antilles, as the remainder of the Caribbean was already claimed by the Spanish and Dutch. The Danes got into the act by buying St. Croix from the French crown, which had originally granted it to the Knights of Malta. They then obtained st. Thomas and St. John's, using St. Thomas mainly as a commercial island, which, with its large, incomparably good and easily protected harbor, became a major transfer port for goods in the northern Antilles. Denmark managed to remain neutral in most of the wars in the eighteenth century, so St. Thomas became an excellent neutral harbor to bring in captured vessels and cargoes for auctioning off by admiralty courts of other warring nations. St. Croix became a fabulously wealthy sugar island, while St. John's enjoyed a brief spell of prosperity that was ruined by a slave revolt from which the island's economy never recovered. The remainder of the Eastern Caribbean was fought over by the British and French. So valuable were the islands as sugar producers that at one point during peace negotiations between England and France, the British negotiators were instructed to be willing to give all of Canada in exchange for St. Kitts! At the close of the Napoleonic wars, with the Peace of Vienna, the Antilles were divided up mainly between the French and the British, and during the era of Pax Britannia their importance began to wane. This was brought about by a number of factors. First came the introduction of sugar
beets into Europe in the early nineteenth century; European nations protected their infant sugar beet industries by erecting strong protective tariffs against West Indian sugar. Then the slaves were freed and the plantation economy suffered drastically. As a result the islands lost their economic importance. In fact Grenada was the only island that stayed productive, with an economy based on coffee, cocoa, and nutmeg. According to the British West Indian Year Book, Grenada showed a favorable balance of trade straight through from 1820 to 1955, with only a few exceptions. In 1955 it was knocked flat by Hurricane Janet and has never really gotten back on its feet. By the closing years of the nineteenth century the Islands had becomc a backwater. Military bases were closed down, the British troops returned to the homeland, the Islands slumbered and were a continual drain on the British and French exchequers. In the period from 1850 to 1920 St. Thomas and St. Lucia did become relatively important as coaling stations. During World War 11 St. Thomas and Trinidad were fairly important US naval bases. St. Lucia and Antigua received air bases, while the other islands got small emergency landing strips, usually placed on the wrong side of the island, which hindered later commercial development. Since World War 11 the Islands have struggled along economically-bananas and tourists have helped stave off disaster. Trinidad did well for a while with its oil, but overall, the Islands are in pretty marginal economic condition.
Topography The topography of the Eastern Caribbean is extremely varied. Along the Venezuelan coast the mountains rise from the sea, bare and arid, except on the eastern tip of the Peninsula of Pari a where they are heavily forested. As the sun goes down the cold air drops off the mountains, making the entire coastline extremely cool at night and completely changing the trade-wind weather pattern. Rain squalls are practically unknown. At the northern end of the Eastern Caribbean is Puerto Rico, a large island of varying climate. Some areas are dry and arid, while El Yunke, "The Rainmaker," on the northeastern corner of the island, brings absolute torrents from the sky to produce magnificent rain forests. The Virgin Islands are small and fairly arid, with peaks ranging from a few hundred to 1,500 feet.
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic lslands-A General Description In between lie the Lesser Antilles, curving in a crescent down the eastern rim of the Caribbean Sea. Some of these islands are relatively low and dry, like Anguilla and Antigua; others, like Dominica, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent, are high islands, with mountains, rain, and heavy vegetation. The bigger islands, like Guadeloupe, Martinique, and Grenada, offer both high / wet and low / dry terrains. Here are brief descriptions of the individual islands, starting up north. The American Virgin Islands-St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John-although politically one unit, are quite different. St. Thomas has always been a commercial island because of its large and easily defended harbor. Little sugar was grown, as evidenced by the small number of old windmill towers on the island. At various times it has been a transshipment port, a coaling port, a naval basebut all that is in the past. Today it's one huge tourist trap, which sometimes hosts as many as seven cruise ships in one day. It has a fantastic array of duty-free shops, and a tremendous concentration of yachts in Long Bay. Christiansted, St. Croix, was capital of the Danish Virgin Islands until the dosing years of the nineteenth century. St. Croix was a fabulously wealthy sugar island in the period from 1720 to 1840. The northwest corner of the island rises vertically out of the sea and then the terrain falls off to rolling hills and a flat coastal plain to the shore in the south. The coastal plain is roughly 20 miles long and five miles broad. It gave the Danes a fantastic area for growing sugar. Farther to the east, the rolling hills provide an excellent area for raising and breeding cattle. As late as the 1950s cattle was the first important cash crop, sugar second, and tourism a very poor third. In the sixties sugar collapsed, tourism increased, and industry arrived in the form of the Hess oil refinery and the Harvey aluminum factory. Now St. Croix is largely industrial, with tourism and cattle being lesser factors. The harbor of Christiansted is magnificent, and in my opinion the town is without a doubt the prettiest in the Eastern Caribbean. The lower section of the town is a collection of old Danish buildings, archways, and shaded sidewalks. It has been declared a national park and thus the exterior facade of buildings cannot be changed without the Park Department's permission. It's well worth making the glorious reach over from St. Thomas to spend a day or so wandering through the streets of St. Croix. A drive around the countryside to see
5
the old estate houses and windmills (especially Estate Whim, with its restored great houses and adjoining operating windmill) is not to be missed either. St. John is a beautiful island, mostly bush and few tourists. Most of the island is a national park, so no real development can take place. The British Virgin Islands is a group of small, scattered islands with a minimal population. Their economy collapsed with the fall in sugar prices at the end of the Napoleonic wars and the freeing of the slaves in the 18305. Into the 19605 it was still a backwater with little in the way of roads, electricity, or modern development. Since the late sixties and early seventies activity in the BVI has been expanding, largely as a result of the boom in the bare-boat charter business. To the east of the Virgins lies Anguilla, low and flat, populated by fishermen and schooner captains. The island has historically made its living from fishing and by supplying skippers, crews, and mates to thc schooncr tradc through thc Islands. They were the last ones to give up sail, and I well remember in the late fifties seeing an Anguillan commercial schooner coasting into St. Thomas harbor in light airs by first light, sporting a fisherman's staysail and a topsail. St. Martin is southeast of Anguilla and is half Dutch and half French. Don't try to make a phone call from the French to the Dutch side, as the routing goes from St. Martin to Paris to Rotterdam and back to the Dutch half of St. Martin. This is extremely expensive, time-consuming, and frustrating; you'd do better to get in a car and drive to the Dutch half. For many years the French side developed more slowly than the Dutch half, but in the last few years that has changed as Frenchmen from metropolitan France have invaded the island en masse. The sleepy little town of Marigot has changed so greatly that you will think you have been transported via space vehicle to Saint-Tropez in France; you will definitely not feel you are in the West Indies. The Dutch half is beginning to look like the Miami Beach of the Eastern Caribbean. (I wonder if the St. Martin developers haven't studied the development in St. Thomas and decided to compound all the errors made there.) Southeast of St. Martin lies the wonderful little island of St. Barts, populated by rugged individualists. Being part of the French West Indies, it is a departement of France, which means that any person who is a citizen of an EEC country can settle in St. Barts-so there's a flood of people
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rapidly engulfing the island, endangering its sleepy individualistic charge. The locals do not necessarily appreciate their Continental cousins, as illustrated by the fact that the famous Lu-Lu Magraz sells a T-shirt with a row of frogs on it and the caption "I HATE FROGS." I said, "But you are one," and he replied, "No, I am from St. Barts, not France." Southeast again is sparsely inhabited Barbuda, flat as a pancake, with mile after mile of fantastic beaches, unbelievable spearfishing and snorkeling, while south of it lies Antigua, the tourist island. Antigua also has fantastic beaches, unbelievably numerous coves, many splashy hotels, and the incomparable anchorage of English Harbour, site of Nelson's old dockyard, which is presently pretty much the capital of yachting in the lower Caribbean. Originally a sugar island, Antigua now largely runs on tourism and yachting. (The name of this island, incidentally, is pronounced an-tee-ga; the ancient capital of Guatemala is correctly called antee-gwa, but here the word has been anglicized.) South from Antigua are Guadeloupe and Martinique, the two French islands that are completely different in language, culture, and diet from the English islands. They're also departements of France and you'll think that you've been transported to France except that the climate is better. The girls are beautiful and well dressed. The abundance of fresh fruit and vegetables is a wonder to behold, and the ports of Fort-de-France and Pointe-a-Pitre are true cities. In between them lies English-speaking Dominica, which rises vertically from the sea and rains water out of the sky at an incredible rate: In the wet season it rains all the time and in the dry season it rains most of the time. It also rises so high that it is extremely difficult to sail through its lee. St. Lucia, south of Martinique, is steeped in history, full of forts, having been fought over by the British and French for all of the eighteenth century. Although it has officially been a British island since 1815, the French influence is still strong. A large portion of the population speaks a French patois that is incomprehensible to a Frenchman, much less to an Englishman. It's a fertile island with a number of extremely scenic, although difficult, anchorages. To be anchored bowon to the palm trees with a stern anchor in 100 feet of water, and the Pitons towering above you, the moon rising in the valley between them, is one of the most f~mtastic experiences of an Eastern Caribbean cruise.
South of St. Lucia comes St. Vincent, a farmer's delight but a sailor's nightmare, because the anchorages are few, far between and crowded. Better sail on to Bequia (part of St. Vincent), the home of the old whalers. The Grenadines, low small islands between Bequia and Grenada, provide wonderful sailing, cruising, and swimming. Grenada has, with good reason, been described for centuries by Englishmen as "our most beautiful island in the Eastern Caribbean." A farmer's and a sailor's delight, the island has three basic climate areas: Point Saline and the southern coast are dry and almost arid, the town of St. George's receives a moderate amount of rainfall, and the mountains get heavy rainfall. Most of the island has enough rainfall to make growing and farming a very profitable occupation; the mountains are heavily forested. Unlike many of the other high islands it has anchorages too numerous to mention. You can start at St. George's and spend two weeks of wonderful cruising without leaving the island. Out to windward is Barbados, low, flat, heavily populated, intensely cultivated, extremely well run-"Little England," it is often called. For years it was the chief landfall for yachts crossing the Atlantic, but then harsh entry fees and the lack of a proper harbor cut down its desirability. Now the Barbados government, realizing that yachts bring money to the island, have reduced fees to a reasonable level and are building a new fishing harbor and converting the old carenage into a yacht marina. Plus, it is now the finish for the ARC Atlantic Rally for Cruisers, which brought over 200 boats to Barbados in 1987 and 1988. Unfortunately, it is so far out to windward of the rest of the Islands that most yachts cruising up or down the Lesser Antilles never get there. Tobago also lies to windward of the island chain. It's seldom visited, not only because of the long beat, but also because of the South Equatorial Current, which forces boats off to leeward. However, yachtsmen sailing across the Atlantic are well advised to sail from Barbados down to Tobago to see a wonderful old-fashioned Eastern Caribbean island that has changed little over the last thirty years. Trinidad has Port-of-Spain, a dirty commercial port, and the home of carnival. It's an exciting city with its polyglot population (and beautiful women); large States-type supermarkets; department stores; high-priced, chic nightclubs; low-priced, exciting (but dangerous) dives-an interesting place, particularly for the brave and adventurous. It's the home of the Trinidad Yachting Association, which
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic lslands-A General Description has long been a spearhead of yacht racing in the southern Caribbean. Trinidad did well for many years with the skyrocketing price of oil; however, when the oil bust came, it was particularly hard hit. Its dream of building an industrial economy has not been fulfilled. To the west of Trinidad is the fast-developing and attractive cruising area of Venezuela. Its coastline offers tremendous variety, from villages that exist totally on smuggling to the exploding new industrial cities, including the city of Caracas, which is only a 45-minutc drive from the yacht anchorage. There are many anchorages, populated by fishermen, but few yachts. The Gulf of Cariaco has completely deserted anchorages and fantastic sailing in an enclosed body of water 35 miles long and 10 miles wide. There are also wonderful new marinas in El Morro de Barcelona and Caracas areas. You can go to the offshore islands such as Islas Los Roques or Los Testigos and find crystal-clear water, deserted anchorage, and lobsters sitting there just waiting to be picked up. To the west are the ABC Islands, Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura<;ao, part of the Dutch Netherlands. Bonaire is extremely quiet, with very nice people and everything within walking distance. Curac;ao, of course, is a great shipping and oil-refining center, and its city of Willemstadt is an excellent free port, with fantastic shopping areas. The yacht clubs are in Spanish Water, ten miles down the coast, southeast of town. Cura<;ao is a worthwhile stop for boats heading west. Aruba is low, flat, oil-refining area, an island that does not particularly appeal to yachtsmen except those who have fought their way east to windward from Panama against the very boisterous trades. To them, exhausted and covered with salt spray, Aruba looks like heaven. An appealing aspect of cruising the Eastern Caribbean is that the vast majority of passages in the Virgins, the Grenadines, and Los Roques will be only a morning or an afternoon sail, while the interisland runs are only full-day passages. Slogging across Anegada Passage, admittedly, is a full twenty-four hours, and not much fun for most boats, but you can island-hop right down the remainder of the chain with day sails only. You might make a long passage direct from St. Thomas to Grenada (420 miles) or the reverse. With luck, in either direction it will be a beam reach or close reach, and gloriOUS sailing. Another long jump that
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yachts frequently take is the one from St. Thomas to Margarita off the Venezuelan coast (440 miles) or the reverse. In this case you should be guaranteed a superb beam reach. The Eastern Caribbean has had such an explosive development in recent years that many people think there are no more uncrowded anchorages, but this is not true. Yachtsmen worldwide tend to exhibit a lemming instinct, a desire to cluster together in certain known protected anchorages. With the aid of the other volumes in this Guide and some common sense, though, you can still usually find a deserted beach or a nearly deserted anchorage. Just go to the places other yachts do not frequent, particularly in the Virgin Islands where the bare-boat clusters seldom get off the beaten track. The Atlantic islands vary greatly from Bermuda, which is low and flat. Like many of the islands in the Eastern Caribbean it has water problems, but unlike the Eastern Caribbean, Bermuda has largely solved them because it is extremely well run; everyone is required to keep his roof in good shape and collect all the rain water. The Azores are volcanic peaks rising out of the sea. They are heavily forested and have been intensely cultivated. Their pleasant climate never gets really cold, but if you've come from the Eastern Caribbean they will seem chilly. Carry a sweater or jacket ashore when you go for dinner. Madeira rises so high that it has three climates: alpine, temperate, and tropical. It occasionally snows in the upper reaches of the island, which has instant air conditioning-it's hot during the day but come sundown it can get so cold that many Madeiran houses have fireplaces. Porto San to, on the other hand, is low, flat, and arid. Isla Deserta and the Salvage Islands are dry and windswept, with absolutely no fresh water-very much like the Grenadines or the British Virgins. Among the Canaries, the eastern islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote are low, dry, windswept-almost desertlike. The western islandsGran Canaria, Tenerife, Gomera, Palma, and Hierro--rise so high that their peaks are shrouded by clouds and clothed with pine forests. In the Canaries they have been chopping down trees for five hundred years, yet the reforestation program is so good that they still build boats, doors, porches, and such with locally grown pine. The Cape Verdes are in the Sahara dry belt, but are not quite so dry as one is often led to believe. The eastern islands-Maio, Boa Vista, and Ilha do Sal-are indeed desertlike, but the fishing is superb.
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Sao Vicente (with the group's main port of Mindelo) , Santa Luzia, and Sao Nicolau rise about 1,500 feet, which gives them some moisture, though not much. But the high, forested islands of Santo Antao, Santiago, FO!l;o, and Brava have a totally different climate and make for good exploring.
Politics There's not much point in discussing island politics at length in a cruising guide, partly because local politics don't affect the cruising yachtsman a great deal and partly because they change so fast that anything said today will not be applicable tomorrow. But there are a few generalizations and specific comments that might help you decide where to go, and help you stay out of trouble when you get there. Despite the bewildering uncertainties of politics in the Eastern Caribbean, the situation in general can be called stable, as far as the yachtsman goes. Grenada had its revolution, the French islands had their riots and general strikes, but in no case has the political turmoil really affected the visiting sailor. Venezuela in the fifties and early sixties had all sorts of trouble with Cuba trying to smuggle guerrillas ashore. As a result the Guardia Nacional frequently shot first and asked questions later. This has all changed, however. The students who rioted in the sixties are now too busy making money as businessmen to riot. Venezuela has just recently had her fifth peaceful presidential election, and thus the government can be said to be stable. There are problems, but no massive revolutionary political problems. No one seems to have a chip on his shoulder, and the visiting yachtsman is liked, appreciated, and helped by every man in the street and the ever-present fishermen. As explained in Chapter 8, "Entry and Communications," the paperwork in Venezuela can be aweinspiring, but everyone is friendly. Puerto Rico's commonwealth status is challenged by a small, radical, and violent independence party which periodically causes trouble by firing off bombs in odd places. As yet I haven't heard of any yachtsman's becoming involved in these political squabbles. However, it should be said that although the average Puerto Rican seems to like yachtsmen, the crime rate in general is extremely high and guns are in abundance; so
make friends with Puerto Rican yachtsmen as soon as you arrive and follow their advice. The American Virgin Islands, a possession of the United States, also has a crime rate that, althou!l;h not so bad as it was, is still extremely high. In the late sixties and early seventies, at the height of the Black Power push, it was worth your life to go ashore in St. Thomas and St. Croix, especially the latter island. Eventually the government made a massive appeal to the people, pointing out that tourism is their main business and tourists will come to the islands only if they are friendly. There has been a considerable change in attitude hy the man in the street in St. Thomas. But the police department in the US Virgins long had a reputation of being less than honest and heing antiwhite, and while this may he changed, white visitors should remember, when ashore and on the verge of an argument, that the black man is always right. Few people realize how much money yachtsmen hring into the Virgin Island economy. In the last gubernatorial election one of the candidates wanted to ban "boat people" from voting, despite their being US citizens and island residents, on the grounds that they did nothing for the economy. But in the spring of 1986 a report showed that the charter-boat business produced fourteen cents of every tax dollar raised in the US Virgin Islands. (If that figure had included general yachting as well, the result would have been considerably higher.) Yachts do contribute to the econumy, and not only in the Virgins, hut throughout the Caribbean-a fact that all too many local politicians forget. The British Virgin Islands is still a colony of England, and tourism rests rather lightly on them as most of the tourism is provided by the bare-boat charter business. The yachtsman arrives, says hello to the crew who have cleaned up his boat, leaves his mooring, and departs; thus there is no large group of British Virgin Islanders doing nothing but waiting tables, making beds, and doing laundry. They don't feel that they're a nation of busboys and waiters. The islands are so small that it seems unlikely that they'll ever be anything other than a British colony. The British Virgin Islander is an independent, honest, law-abiding individual. The courts intend that they will remain that waythieves are given long sentences and murderers promptly "hung by the neck until dead." In this day and age it's a pleasure to visit an island where people leave cars unlocked and the keys under the front seat.
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic lslands-A General Description In the BVI, the major sources of outside income are the yachting and diving businesses; yet there are still some civil servants who only grudgingly tolerate yachtsmen. When will they learn? Anguilla, St. Kitts, and Nevis, formerly British colonies, became a single, semi-independent nation governed by the late, notorious Robert Bradshaw, whose political machine gave nothing away to the iniquities of Boss Tweed's organization of earlier New York days. Anguilla revolted from Bradshaw's rule and is now administered directly from London. Nevis, too, makes noises about breaking from st. Kitts. What the next political developments will be in these islands is anybody's guess. A hilarious account of Anguilla's revolt and its subsequent invasion by the Royal Marines, thinly disguised as fiction, is found in The Mouse That Roared by Leonard Wibberly, and more factually in Under an English Heaven by Donald E. Westlake. Both books make must reading for Islandbound sailors. St. Bart's, Guadeloupe, and Martinique are all departements of France, with their own representatives in the French Chamber of Deputies-they are basically parts of metropolitan France. At times there has been an independence movement in Martinique and Guadeloupe, and there have been general strikes and riots. (The last one in GuadeIou pe in the late sixties was brutally put down by the French army with a considerable loss of life. Seeing the number of French soldiers and gendarmes on the islands today, I feel that any other independence movement in the near future will be stifled or nipped in the bud.) However, I should point out that in all the riots in Guadeloupe and Martinique since World War II the yachtsman has never been bothered at all: the American or the Englishman has been able to walk through the street in the middle of a riot, and his only worry has been to avoid being dragged into too many bars while the French West Indians explain to him how nasty the French government is and how justified the strikes are. Actually, when things get too hot in Martinique and Guadeloupe all foreigners are usually sent off the islands-all yachts are told to clear out. Then the gendarmes and the army move in and knock heads. Antigua and Barbuda form an independent political unit. But Antigua's political past is checkered. The politicians have fought back and forth through many bitter elections, but they have all been basically free and relatively honest elections. However, feelings ran high in the election of 1979
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and the new government hauled the previous government up before the courts for misappropriation of funds. For the first time in Eastern Caribbean history one government legally convicted the previous one of misappropriation of funds. It even placed its predecessors in jail! In the old days the new party taking over would let bygones be bygones; now maybe light-fingered politicians will think twice. Let me cite English Harbour as one more example of the amount of money yachting contributes to local economies. When I first arrived there in about 1960, Antigua's business was sugar, with a little tourism. English Harbour and Falmouth, not in sugar country, were among the poorest towns on the islands. There was practically nothing there, and almost no way to get anywhere else. Now, with the huge expansion of yachting, the pla<.'e is booming, with regular transportation, shops, and dozens of restaurants and small hotels. It is undoubtedly the richest area on Antigua, and it undoubtedly owes its prosperity to yachting. Dominica has been in a lot of political turmoil in recent years, but at latest count the island-if anything-was very pro-American. Dominica was knocked flat by Hurricane David, but within hours of the hurricane's passing a British destroyer arrived and did a magnificent job of getting power plant, hospital, and telephone systems working, of flying relief missions in the helicopter, and in general doing a fantastic job. And for once Uncle Sam reacted rapidly and flew in large quantities of emergency material so that when the Cubans arrived to help out they were greeted by hundreds of American flags and a very pro-American populace. A few years back, things in Dominica were in a very poor state for foreigners. In the height of the Black Power days a religious sect called the Dreads was running rife throughout the Islands. It is known that a number of people were murdered by the Dreads, and with a few exceptions all victims were white. So, many yachtsmen avoided the island in the late sixties and early seventies. In the last few years, however, the Dreads have either disbanded or changed their tune. Almost everyone I've met who has visited and toured the island has spoken very highly of the friendliness of the people, especially high in the hills. The Dominican government is headed by Mrs. Mary Eugenia Charles, who is a leading light among the West Indian politicians and who was one of the main instigators for organizing the rescue of Grenada by the United States after the
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People's Revolutionary Army massacre at the fort. St. Lucia has gained independence from Britain, the political parties are fighting back and forth, unions are flexing their muscles, and everyone is trying to line up and vote-all of which make things rather unstable for business. But from the yachtsman's standpoint there appears to be no particular problem. St. Vincent has always been a hotbed of political intrigue, and for years the two parties were split so evenly that the government never had a real majority. This meant that at various times politicians would merely walk across the aisle and sell their votes. In fact, James "Son" Mitchell, the Beguia district representative, stated that he would give his vote to whichever side would make him premier, with the result that for a couple of years the man who represented one of the smallest electoral districts in St. Vincent held the premiership. But in 1984, Son Mitchell and his party won a landslide victory. He has labored hard since then to get St. Vincent on its feet-a tough battle. I wish him luck; he comes from a long line of seamen and is attuned to the needs of the yachtsmen. Grenada has had a very stormy political scene for the last thirty years. Grenada is particularly attractive to the sailor because of its numerous harbors and friendly people. One of the reasons some people feel that the people of Grenada are so friendly is that the island has had the largest proportion of small farmers in the entire Eastern Caribbean. Even in the days of the so-called plantocracy, the white planters held only approximately 30 or 40 percent of the island, while the remaining 60 or 70 percent was in holdings of six acres or less. This was made possible because the agricultural economy was largely dependent on nutmeg and cocoa, crops which can be grown on a small holding. They didn't make anyone wealthy, but they enabled a man to support himself. But things began to go sour for Grenada in the early fifties when E. M. Gairy returned to the island from Aruba, where he had been mixed up in the labor union movement. He became a superb politician, and proceeded to set up a political machine that ran the island for the next twentyfive years or so. Three times he was removed from power by the British government for blatantly squandering and stealing money. Each time he returned to power. Opposition leaders were beaten and jailed, elections were rigged, and the populace was terrorized by an all-powerful police force. In the mid-1970s Gairy achieved independence from
Britain for Grenada despite an overwhelming sentiment against the idea. Under Gairy's dictatorship the island suffered severe economic depression. Finally in 1979 the opposition staged an extremely popular and almost bloodless revolution while Gairy was in New York attending a United Nations meeting. The new government asked for assistance from the US government, which dithered so long that the Cubans had time to establish control. American diplomacy was not brilliant in dealing with the Grenadian situation. Many of us welcomed the People's Revolutionary Army as a change from the Gairy Mongoose Gang, but we discovered, eventually, that it was out of the frying pan and into the fire. Things went from bad to worse until the infamous massacre at the fort, which led to the American liberation. The island is trying to get back on its feet economically but faces a long uphill struggle. One of the major problems that most of the small islands face is that for all the years they were ruled by Britain their separateness was emphasized by the colonial power-the islanders learned to think of themselves as Grenadians, St. Vincentians, and so forth, and each island had its own governor, legislature, Customs laws, etc. So when Britain tried to unload the colonies and form a West Indies Federation, few of the islands were willing to work together-not only did the rich ones fear the economic drain of the poor ones, but the politicians of even the small islands wanted to run their own shows. So the Federation didn't survive, and now each island or each small group is trying to make it alone--either as an independent nation or as an associated state (with Britain)-and support the stifling weight and expense of the bureaucracy of government, armies, diplomatic missions, and so on. To cite just one example, it costs millions to staff the obligatory missions to the UN in Washington, Toronto, and London. This also imposes a serious brain drain on the all-too-few educated islanders who are desperately needed to run the local governments. Thus, I'm convinced that as long as the Islands insist on staying individually independent, they are going to remain economic basket cases. No wonder the Cubans, with their offers of aid and support, are making inroads in places whose people basically have no interest in Communism. In contrast to the distressing political situation that has developed in the fragmented former British islands, the Dutch have succeeded in giving
The Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic lslands-A General Description political stability to their former colonies. Aruba, Bonaire, Cura9ao, St. Martin, Saba, and Sint Eustatius (Statia) were gathered together as the Netherlands Antilles with a single elected legislature comprising delegates from each island. They are virtually an independent, self-governing nation whose foreign affairs and defense are handled by Holland. Thus the Dutch islands, unlike the ex-British islands, are not overloaded with a huge bureaucracy, nor can one rabble-rousing politician get his party an overwhelming majority and run roughshod over the opposition. Bermuda does not have the problems of the Eastern Caribbean because it is a rich, self-governing British colony with few defense or foreignservice expenses. The Azores and Madeira are part of Portugal and are well-supported by the mother country. The Canaries, although part of Spain, are apparently becoming semi-independent; but Spain still takes care of foreign service and defense. With tourism expanding, the Canaries appear to be really prospering. The Cape Verdes are a republic, having gained independence from Portugal in 1975. They seem to be suffering from the same economic problems as the newly emerging nations in the Caribbean.
How to See the Islands So much for politics. Here's a quick rundown of the various ways to take advantage of these beautiful, exciting, and convenient cruising grounds. For the Caribbean, the easiest and most usual course is to contact a charter broker or a charter yacht direct (see Chapter 10, "Chartering"), hop on an airplane to the Islands, and go sailing, either with a crew or on a bare boat. The choice is governed by your desires, sailing ability, and bank account. You should remember that if your plans are made well in advance, and prebooked plane tickets are purchased, the travel expense is not all that great. Other yachtsmen will want to visit the area in their own boats. This, of course, involves not only money, but time. There are various solutions to this. Many yachtsmen have succeeded in visiting the area by organizing several groups of friends: they sail the boat out with one crew and then have other crews join the boat at various times for cruising and bringing the boat back. This can be accomplished in a surprisingly short
11
time. It's easy enough from the East Coast of the States to sail your boat down in the fall, or arrange to have it sailed down by a delivery crew, with no more than three weeks spent on the total delivery. This can be broken up into stages, so that you'll miss only a week or ten days of work at a time if you do it yourself. Once the boat is in the Islands, air service being what it is, you can go down two or three times during the winter to use the boat, and leave it at one of the various caretaker services (see Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services") between visits. In the spring you can have the boat delivered home by a delivery service or friends, or you can sail it hack yourself. Again, three weeks is ample time and the trip can be broken up into seven- to ten-day segments depending on the size of the boat. While in the Islands, the complete spectrum of yachting is available. You can tie up in a marina, enjoying the sun and cheap liquor, or you can be a proper cruising yachtsman, hauling up the anchor and cruising the Islands or the Venezuelan coast, or you can be a racing yachtsman and fly down to do the various regattas (see Chapter 11, "Yacht Clubs and Racing"). Or do a combination of all three. When you first look at the project it sounds expensive-and so it is. But if you look at your normal expenses of hauling the boat, removing the rig, storing the boat and gear for the winter, and then recommissioning, spending a winter in the Islands may not be as expensive as it first appears. A number of European yachtsmen have made what some refer to as the "Caribbean round. " They leave northern Europe late in the fall (see Chapter 4, "Getting There"), sail to Madeira, the Salvage Islands, the Canaries, and the Cape Verdes and cruise these areas for three or four weeks, then cross the Atlantic in November to the Lesser Antilles. They spend the winter cruising and racing in the Eastern Caribbean. They take part in CORT, the Caribbean Ocean Racing Triangle: the Rolex Regatta in St. Thomas the first weekend in April, the BVI Regatta the next weekend in April, the Tortola-St. Barts race the following weekend, the Guadeloupe-Antigua race the last Thursday in April, and finally the wonderful spectacle of Antigua Race Week-a total of thirteen races in less than a month! After all this they can cruise or race to Bermuda, and thence either to the Boston area and across the Atlantic by the northern route, or direct to the Azores and on to Europe, arriving there in midJuly. This leads to either a summer's cruising in
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Europe or to Cowes Week, the Fastnet, and the latter half of the Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) racing circuit. Admittedly, to do this round you must arrange for a year's absence from your business, or be at the crossroads of life when you have decided to quit one job and look for another. Many people at
this point in life have taken a year off to make a cruise such as described above, and have returned rejuvenated, relaxed, and ready to take on the business world again. They did it! The following chapters will tell you a great deal of what you need to know to turn the dream of a transatlantic and Caribbean cruise into reality.
2 Preparations Cruising the Caribbean will be a lot more pleasant and safer if you equip and perhaps alter your boat for tropical climes. First and foremost though, if you're sending her south on her own bottom, make sure she's truly rigged to withstand a gale at sea. It can get rough on the trip down, either from the United States or from Europe, and the boat and equipment that stand up fine in Long Island Sound or the Mediterranean may not be rugged enough to take the rough stuff offshore. The chances are very high that on the way from Europe to the Canaries or from the northeastern United States to the Caribbean you'll encounter at least one hard gale. Following are tips and recommendations in various categories for making your cruise to and through the Islands a success.
before you plan to go to the Caribbean; every time you possibly can, when the weather report shows force 6 (25-31 knots), 7 (32-38), or even up to 8 (39-46) or 9 (47-54 knots), hop in your boat with as many crew as possible who will be sailing transatlantic with you, and go out and "put the bricks" to the skipper, the crew, and the boat. Put your head down and beat to windward, ease sheets to a close reach, go off on a broad reach, then dead downwind with the headsail wung out on a pole in gale conditions; check out yourself, your crew, and your boat both above and belowdecks. Experienced seamen feel this is essential, as your chances of sailing from the east coast of North America or from Europe to the Caribbean without going through at least one major gale are absolutely minimal-the first time you encounter a gale at sea is rather scary, the second time less so, and by the time you have been through three or four gales you say, "So what, I have been through this before." Your first gale at sea should not be enroute to the Caribbean but BEFORE you have gone to the Caribbean so that any deficiencies in the skipper, crew (those who get seasick should find out what seasick pills work for them, as each person could be different), and boat above and belowdecks can be remedied before heading south. Regarding celestial navigation, don't worry. If you can do coastal piloting, you certainly can do celestial navigation. Prior to about 1950 celestial navigation was considered black magic. Few people understood it, and everyone else was overawed to the extent that the navigator was assigned the hest bunk, and was woken up for morning and evening stars with the hot beverage of his choice; he took the helm only
Captain Ideally, the captain should be a man who has sailed all his life, has owned the boat he is planning on taking to the Caribbean for at least ten years, has weathered force 10 storms, can repair absolutely anything on board, and can cook up a wonderful meal in a gale when everyone else is seasick. This is the ideal, but all too often the skipper has only done coastal cruising in what is sometimes referred to as a "two-string boat"-the modern sloop whose sails are controlled by a mainsheet and a jib sheet. The skipper has carefully watched the weather reports and at the first sign of heavy weather has, with great prudence, ducked into port. But if you are in the latter category, the essential thing to do is to watch your weather the summer 13
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide when he felt like it. He never cranked winches or trimmed sheets. Ahsolute horror of horrors-he never went near the galley except to put in a special request for a snack or meal. Celestial navigation was black magic and the celestial navigator was God. But, Mary Blewitt Pera then blew it, as she wrote that wonderful little book Celestial Navigation for Yachtsmen. All sorts of yachtsmen learned how to do celestial navigation. So many yachtsmen learned how to do celestial navigation that the navigator was no longer God-now he was expected to stand watches, help in the galley, crank winches, trim sheets, and do all the rest of the dirty work that is necessary for the sailing and operation of an offshore sail boat. Buy C elestial Navigation for Yachtsmen and sit down and study it. Forget about stars, planets, and moon, concentrate on the sun-by the time you reach your landfall you will have learned to take sun sights well enough to make your landfall. Once you have sun sights down pat, according to your interests, skills, and time available you can expand to moon, planets, and stars. There have been many books written on celestial navigation but I learned mine through Mary Blewitt. I have taught dozens of others how to do celestial navigation (many of my students are now much better than their teacher) with the aid of Mary Blewitt's book. Unfortunately, Mary Blewitt Pera (she married the late Commander Pera of the Italian Navy) gets a little bit upset when I and some of the other old fogies tell her that her original, tiny, soft-backed book is better and more concise than her present hardback. She replies with great frustration, "And what have I heen doing for the last twenty-five years in my rewrites of the book?" I still prefer the original but the present Celestial Navigation for Yachtsmen is the standard by which many of us measure all other simplined navigation books. If a skipper can sail coastwise, can stick his nose out a couple of times in a gale and survive with no major problems, he can sail across the Atlantic.
Crew Ideally, your crew consists of twenty-one-year-old tigers who have grips like a vice, who can go up the mast hand over hand like a monkey, and have cast-iron stomachs; they can reef, steer, cook, and being young and of the modern generation, will obviously understand engines, electrics, and elec-
tronics. Armed with his age and experience, the skipper can sit back and point out what he wants done and the crew will immediately take care of it. In fact, the skipper will undoubtly have to settle for less than the ideal crew: when selecting your crew the main thing to look for will be adaptability and enthusiasm. Adaptability is the ability to get along with other members of the crew and willingness to work, even under adverse conditionsespecially when seasick. I always say you haven't really been seasick until you see your toenails come up. It has probably been thirty years since the last time I was seasick but I well remember in my youth, when serving in the early fifties on a US navy diesel electric Guppy Snorkel submarine, running on the surface, rolling 45° either side of vertical through a 90° arc, standing helm and radar watches with a big tomato juice can with the top cut off, lanyard inserted through two holes I punched near the top, standing watch with my miniature bucket tied around my neck, so when my Irish friend "O'Rourke" came to visit me I did not have to run to find someplace to deliver "0' Rourke"-I have seen my toenails come up but I was still able to stand my watches. If they are adaptable, enthusiastic, and willing to learn how to do it YOUR WAY (different ships, different long splices) then they can make a good crew. Experienced yachtsmen know that a good, willing, adaptable, enthusiastic female crew is a jewel: if she is good, she is fantastic because what she lacks in brawn she more than makes up for in enthusiasm and skill. Some of the finest helmspersons I have ever sailed with have been women. Some women accuse me of being the world's worst MCP because of my dogmatic attitude about where women belong on a boat when sail handling. With few exceptions women are just not strong enough to do really heavy work; thus, they belong on the tiller, tailing up, calling sails-they don't belong on the foredeck trying to heave spinnaker poles around. The smart captain will try to recruit a varied crew: someone who is good with sails and rigging, another good mechanically, another who is a woodworker (even boats built of fiberglass-"frozen snot"-have a lot of belowdecks woodwork), another an electrician, and another handy with electronics. It is no use having five mechanics and no riggers as crew! The thing that all skippers must remember is that in port all too many crew that are great at sea
Preparations fall apart, both individually and collectively. This is not a new problem-Lord Nelson stated, "ships and men rot in port." If the crew does not turn to and help out in port, all of the normal routine maintenance, repairs, alterations, cleaning up, shopping, cooking, can fall in the skipper's lap and he won't be able to enjoy the in-port time. It should be made clear to everyone that every day in port (there will, of course, be exceptions) from 0700 to 1300 belong to the boat, either working on the boat, cleaning up, or running ship's errands and the like. After 1300, crew should be free (except in emergencies) to go off on their own. After a late night out, the 0700 morning coffee may seem very early but the skipper can point out to his crew that if they have had a late night out, they should still get up, get going, get the work done. Then at 1300 begin to act like a Spaniard and take two-to three-hour afternoon siestas, after which they can be ready for the night's battle ashore. The crew should also realize that during the working day, weather permitting, from 0800 to 1600, while on watch and when not busy steering, trimming or setting sails, or navigating-rather than sitting and reading a book or listening to a Walkman, the crew on watch should be taking care of the numerous little repair jobs that inevitably crop up on a long passage.
Insurance Many cruising yachtsmen, confident of their abilities, feel that insurance is not necessary. They figure they will spend their money on extra ground tackle and new gear instead of insurance premiums. But no matter how good your seamanship, you can end up with major damage through no fault of your own, which you will have to pay for out of your own pocket. If you are rammed by another uninsured boat, you have little chance of collecting without the services of an admiralty lawyer who will demand his money up front. During Hurricane Klaus, a cruise ship came into St. Thomas Harbor, knocking loose a number of yachts, which ricocheted off other boats. Many well-maintained, properly moored boats ended up on the beach as a result. Those who were insurcd had their damage repaired and their insurance companies, backed by heavyweight lawyers, went after the cruise-ship company and collected. Most of those who were uninsured collected nothing, as they could not afford the cost of an admiralty
15
lawyer. Another cruise ship in Martinique turned on its bow thrusters and then backed down so hard that it did serious damage to thirty-two boats moored in the yacht basin west of the dry dock; no one who was uninsured collected anything. Still another ship in Grenada pumped its oil-filled bilges in the harbor, dumping thick tar-like fuel that ruined the paint jobs on a number of yachts and all the dinghies that were in the harbor. The captain denied liability and no yachtsman collected anything! In preparing your own boat for a trip to the Lesser Antilles, it's easy to forget to check your insurance coverage. DON'T. Most policies, even on boats hailing from the East Coast of the United States, do not cover sailing in the Lesser Antilles. Underwriters usually require an additional premium for the trip down and back, as well they should in light of the number of boats that have been lost and the damage that has been sustained in making this passage. European boats are usually covered only as far south as Gibraltar, beyond which they need additional coverage. Many local European insurance companies refuse to cover European boats beyond Gibraltar; some will extend coverage as far as the Canaries but no farther. However, there are Lloyd's underwriters who will cover yachts virtually worldwide-basically anywhere that a reasonable yachtsman would wish to go. (Beating to windward around Cape Horn does not impress me as a reasonable cruise or an insurable risk!) Amazingly, many companies who will cover boats in the Eastern Caribbean refuse to cover boats south of Grenada, i.e., the Venezuelan coast. In actuality, the experienced yachtsman justifibly feels that the underwriters should give a reduction in rate if boats promised to stay in Venezuela, i.e., south of the hurricane belt, during the hurricane season. Insurance rates in the Islands are approximately the same as they are for twelve months' navigation in the Mediterranean, but considerably higher than the twelve months' navigation in California. Rates in California are set on the basis that most of the boats are moored to the dock twelve months of the year and don't go sailing, and those that do go sailing go only for weekends or a fortnight. In general the APs (Applied Premiums) for the trip to the Islands run roughly 0.5 percent from the East Coast of the States to the Islands and .35 percent to 0.5 percent for a transatlantic passage in either direction. On offshore passages, L1oyd's underwriters usu-
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
ally require a four-person crew on a 40-foot boat, three On a smaller boat. Even with self-steering, they feel three in crew is necessary (for insurance purposes) because loss records show that with only two on board, watch-keeping standards are extremely lax. In addition, a considerable number of boats have been stolen or lost to a dragging anchor when both crew members have gone ashore. Single-handers can forget about insurance. A charter boat will pay a higher rate than a private pleasure yacht because first of all, it will be sailing more weeks in each year, and secondly, every time it goes out on charter there is a potential liability suit. The rate will vary according to the type of chartering you are doing. I will not say multihulls are uninsurable but the underwriters I deal with hate them with a passion and will not touch them with a ten-foot barge pole. They can be insured at Lloyd's through brokers specializing in multihulls. Incidentally, one of the reasons for the recent increase in insurance rates is the drop in interest rates. When interest rates were sky-high, in the late seventies, the underwriter could run a book loss-lose a dollar and a cent for every dollar he had insured-and still make money on his invested income. This is no longer true; hence the increase in rates. All too many American companies refuse to insure any boat over ten years old, particularly wooden boats. Needless to say, it is aggravating to skippers who have paid insurance for ten years, with clean records, then to be told in the eleventh year that the insurance company won't insure the boat anymore. Furthermore, American companies are not too adventurous in areas outside usual cruising grounds, i. e., the Venezuelan coast. These are all reasons to look to a competent, independent broker who places his insurance at Lloyd's. Lloyd's prefers to deal with large deductibles (excesses), as the paperwork on small claims is expensive in proportion to the income derived. They are prepared to cover your dinghy under a separate deductible, providing the name of the vessel is on the dinghy, in the hopes that it would be recognized and repossessed if the name were permanently on it. Outboards must be secured with an "antitheft device" of some kind, and unless an extra premium is paid, dinghies are not covered while being towed in open passages. Similarly, Lloyd's has been deluged with paperwork on small claims of several hundred dollars caused by boats that have moored improperly and have dragged or swung into surrounding boats, causing damage.
Consequently, it has now placed a deductible on the third-party "Protection and Indemnity" section of its policies. Many yacht owners have little idea of what should be done after a serious accident that results in an insurance claim. First and foremost, there is the unwritten insurance law backed up by history and innumerable court cases: in case of an accident, act as if you were uninsured-protect your own and the underwriter's interests to the best of your ability in light of the circumstances. Second, you should immediately contact by phone or cable both the underwriter and the broker concerned. Third, find a reputable and competent marine surveyor to ascertain the damage. He will then make recommendations to the brokers and underwriter on repair and salvage. Given a good boat that will pass a rigid out-of-the-water survey, a good crew, and a reasonable itinerary, we can arrange insurance coverage at a competitive rate. Now, here comes the commercial: I have been a broker who places insurance at Lloyd's for more than twenty years, and I am happy to offer my services. I have been dealing with the same Lloyd's broker and the same leading underwriter for over twenty years. Mutual trust exists between us and that is what marine insurance is all about. I can be reached at all times c / 0 David Payne, Cayzer Steel Bowater, 32/38 Dukes Place, London, EC3 7LX, England. A package of mail is forwarded to me weekly wherever I am in the world. Remember that there is good insurance and cheap insurance but no good cheap insurance. Another axiom is that you never know how good your insurance is until you make a claim. I'm glad to say that I am still drinking partners with all my clients who have suffered a loss. For a list of surveyors in the Eastern Caribbean see Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services."
Navigation Some yachtsmen think you need all the latest electronic equipment for a transatlantic passage. Actually, all you need is a sextant, a Nautical Almanac, H0249, a small multiband radio that will pull in BBC time ticks, a basic direction finder, and a lead line. All for a few hundred dollars-a far cry from the cost of a fancy electronics package. If your navigation skills are rusty, you should also invest in Mary Blewitt's little book Celestial Navigation for Yachtsmen. With that, and a knowledge of basic arithmetic, anyone can navigate. Of
Preparations course, the navigation programs for hand-held calculators are also very handy, but they cost more. When choosing a sextant, get one that matches your capabilities. No sense having an $800 instrument for a $100 navigator. Plastic sextants give very satisfactory results as long as you remember to check the index error after each individual sight. If you take a string of eight sights (especially in hot weather in the tropics) the index error in the plastic sextant can change rather drastically over a fifteen-minute period. I also recommend Commander Bauer's excellent book, Sextant Simplified. He explains how to adjust your sextant at sea if it gets out of adjustment and other fine points. Secondhand sextants are a good buy. Thomas Foulkes and Company, 4A Sansom Road, Leytonstone, London Ell 3HB, England; telephone: 01539-5627/5084, have built up an excellent reputation for selling good secondhand sextants at a reasonable price. For plotting buy a book of US DMA Universal Plotting sheets, so called as they may be made up for any latitude. They may be purchased at any major chart supply house in America and Europe. There are numerous pilots / sailing directions for European waters. They should be available from the local chart agent. The Admiralty pilots for Azores, Madeira, Canaries, and Cape Verde Islands are not particularly useful as they are out of date and written for the large commercial vessel and not the yachtsman. At present [May 1988] the only yachting guide for Madeira or the Cape Verde Islands is this book. The Canaries were moderately well covered by Jack Hooper's privately printed, mimeographed guide, but I don't know if it is still available. The Azores are well covered by Bob Silverman's Yachting Guide to the Azores, available from Bob Silverman, Apartado No. 65, 9900 Horta, Faial, Azores, Portugal. All these places are also covered in this book, which contains harbor charts for virtually all the anchorages the average yachtsman would use in the Azores, Madeiran Archipelago, Canaries, and Cape Verde Islands, By the autumn of 1988, I hope all these island groups will be covered by Imray-Iolaire charts but in the meantime, use whatever charts you can get. The Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verdes are best covered by Portuguese charts; the Canaries by Spanish charts; and Bermuda by either US or British charts. Once in the Eastern Caribbean you can get away with practically no navigation equipment if YOIl are careful. I always remember the story of Marv Berning, who subsequently owned the 36-foot yawl
17
Impunity, on which he twice crossed the Atlantic and crossed the Mediterranean. Marv and his buddy Bill Bailey purchased a 20-foot Bequia doubleended fishing boat in 1958. They put a deck on it and sailed from Bequia all the way up through the Islands to St. Thomas on a three-month cruise. Their navigation equipment consisted of a dry Boy Scout compass placed on a block of wood that floated in a calabash half full of water and an Esso road map. They got through the Islands without any serious difficulty, but looking back, they don't recommend this to others. It's amazing what you can do when you are young and adventurous. The major problem is that although the air may look absolutely clear, it often is not, and visibility can get as low as 3 miles due to a semi transparent haze. Occasionally you can sail right by an island without seeing it on an apparently clear day. This is a very good reason for carrying a really good hand-bearing compass, so you can get continual and accurate bearings in times of haze. This is especially true when you're sailing passages between the islands from Antigua south, because when you leave an island on a compass course you're never absolutely sure whether you're being set to leeward or windward. If you can't see the island ahead, it's a hit like a game of blindman's bluff Suddenly you discover when the island appears that you've sagged well to leeward of the rhumbline course. Thus the end of the trip, instead of being a nice reach, is a dead slog to windward against wind and current. This unfortunate circumstance can be avoided if you regularly take back bearings on the island you're leaving and make sure you stay well to windward of the rhumb-line course. By the time you lose the island astern, the next island will appear right where it should be. I think the best thing for this important navigational practice is one of the good "hockey puck" hand-bearing compasses; keep it handy in the cockpit and use it continually. It is not only wonderful as a navigational item but a wonderful toy for all apprentice navigators on board the boat. Its constant use will improve your piloting immensely. As I said earlier, fancy electronic equipment isn't really needed in the Caribbean. I continually see yachts with lots of fancy electronic navigational equipment that is seldom used and when the time comes to use it, it often doesn't work because the dampness and salt air have penetrated it. For electronic navigation in the Islands, all you need is a good direction finder that picks up the standard AM broadcast stations. (See Appendix B for the
18
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
frequencies, hours of transmission, and locations of all the major AM stations in the Eastern Caribbean.) You can take a bearing on a radio station, which is often receivable at a very long range, much longer than the very small and short-range marine beacons in the Eastern Caribbean. If you do plan to use the marine RDF beacons, note that their frequency varies from 290 kc to 410 kc. Make sure your direction finder has a band wide enough to cover this spread. Celestial navigation is seldom required in the Eastern Caribbean, but on long hauls it's extremely useful. I for one will not sail any distance in the Caribbean without my sextant and necessary navigational books and tables. This is especially true when heading from the Virgins or Puerto Rico direct to Venezuela (or the reverse) as without celestial navigation (or Satnav) it is virtually impossible to ascertain how strong the current is running. It is important to know that Loran barely reaches down into the Islands. You are at its extreme range, so it is not all that accurate. Curiously, the reverse is true of Satnav: it's too accurate. The problem is that few of the islands in the Eastern Caribbean are accurately placed on the charts-most of their positions are a mile to a mile and a half off. This means that your Satnav is more accurate than your charts, which can put you in serious trouble when close inshore. In Antigua there have been three Satnav-controlled groundings that cost the underwriter half a million US dollars. When you get close to the Islands, switch from Satnav to visual or radar bearings and depth soundings. Needless to say, if you do rely on electronic navigation, you darn well better have some oldfashioned back-up gear aboard for when the electronics fail. Twice during the 1986-87 season boats frantically called Antigua to get someone to talk them in; they had crossed an ocean, their electronics had failed, and now they didn't even know which islands they were looking at. For charts to the Eastern Caribbean I recommend Imray-Iolaire charts. They have completely replaced the government charts to the area, as is illustrated by the US Coast Guard's purchase of their charts direct from Imray. The charts are available through all major chart agents in North America and Europe. As to sailing guides to the Eastern Caribbean, I happen to be partial to the other volumes of this Guide: Volume 11, Part I-Puerto Rico, Passage and Virgin Islands; Volume 11, Part II-Anguilla
to Dominica; Volume III-Martinique to Trinidad; and Volume IV-Venezuela. (Pirated editions of this Guide are also available in German, French (two different authors), and Spanish!
Self-S teering Many self-steering units that work fine in coastal waters do not effectively self-steer in a 20 to 25 knot trade blowing up the tail with a big sea swinging the stern around. Before going offshore check your self-steering gear while running broad off and dead downwind with your trade-wind rig set; you might then decide to take an extra crew to back up the self-steering gear. In any case, make sure you have a good stock of spare parts for the unit; by the time you cross the Atlantic your gear will have taken a tremendous beating. One problem with self-steering gear is that too many boats rely on the gear too much and so fail to keep a good lookout. The watch-keeping standards of merchantmen have become so bad that I warn my crews to regard every merchant vessel as though it were being run by a homicidal maniac whose only purpose is to do us in. Keeping a good lookout is vital. The late R. H. "Bobby" Somerset, winner of the CCA Blue Water Medal for rescuing the crew of the schooner Anadane in the 1933 Bermuda Race, noted, "I've never seen a self-steering rig yet that will shorten down for a squall or alter course to avoid a steamer-we stand watches!"
Sails When choosing your sail inventory for Island cruising, remember that the winds usually blow 12 to 18 knots; anything less than 12 knots is considered light airs. To have it start blowing 30 and keep blowing 30 for four or five days is not at all uncommon, so rig accordingly. You won't need your big, light-air sails most of the time. Under the lee of high islands, however, the wind goes light, and a high-cut reaching genoa sheeted to the end of the main boom will more than earn its keep. Otherwise a no. 2 or no. 3 genoa, with the clews cut high enough so that they don't scoop up water, is the most useful sail. A no. 4 will sometimes be used, but except for getting to and from the Islands the storm jib is seldom necessary. On a double-headed rigged boat, a light reaching genoa staysail will be a most useful sail; with a
Preparations big high-cut Yankee or no. I jib top, you'll have the same sail area as with the no. I genoa. The rig is much easier, though, as each sail itself is of a size that can be easily handled. Any single-headsail boat venturing offshore and headed for cruising in the Caribbean, whether it has a roller-reefing headsail or not, should have a removable staysail stay set up to a release lever. Then when it really blows up one can set up the staysail stay, hank on a small working staysail, and douse or roll up the forward sail completely. With douhle-reefed main and small hanked-on staysail, the average cruising boat should be well balanced with all sails centered and she should be able to take 40 knots of wind in comfort. For light airs, off the wind, use a multipurpose spinnaker with a snuffer or a spinnaker with a snuffer; going dead to windward in light airs, if you really like to sail, have a multipurpose genoa with a snuffer. Roller reefing on the headsail seems to be here to stay. Twenty-five years ago I installed rollerfurling headsails on lolaire-roller furling, not roller reefing; the sails furled on their own luff wire. We used this system for twenty-two years with great success. I did not like and would not install rollerreefing gear hecause I had seen discarded units stacked up in rigging lofts in the States and the Caribbean like cordwood with the gears jammed up, foils bent, and many other problems. But eventually Olaf Harken persuaded me to put Harken roller-reefing gear on Iolaire. I must report that I am extremely pleased. We have "put the bricks" to the roller-reefing gear, done everything to it, and it has given us hasically no problems. There may be other units on the market as good as Harken but from my experience, Harken has been superh. You must remember, though, that no rollerreefing deadsail gear can be all things to all men. You can take your light no. 1 and reef it down to a no. 2, and perhaps, but doubtfully, to a no. 3; you can take a heavy no. 2 and roll it down to a no. 3 and to a working jib but it will not do as a storm headsail because the center of effort is just too far forward. That's why I feel a removable staysail stay and a hanked-on heavy-weather staysail are vital for heavy weather conditions. Yawls and ketches should carry a big mizzen staysail. It's easy to set and douse. It increases sail area more easily than changing headsails. It will more than earn its keep with the wind on the quarter. Mainsails should be well built, heavily rein-
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forced, and rigged for easy reefing. The idea that benign trades blow with constant velocity is a figment of the charter brokers' and tour directors' imaginations. Squalls are all too common and wind force will he drastically affected by the islands. You must he able to tuck in a good, deep single reef easily; if it pipes up more, you'll want to be able to tuck in a second reef or hoist an easily set (via separate track) storm trysail the same size or slightly smaller than a douhle-reefed main. A double-reefed main can always give way at the seams; with a vertical-cut storm trysail set, you can let the winds blow, sit back, and relax with a beer in hand, knowing that the rig will come down before the sail splits. A trysail of this size should have a set of reef points to enable it to be reefed down in the ultimate storm. There are all sorts of new ways to shorten sailinternal roller reefing in the mast, inside the hoom, zipper furling, and so on-and all of them supposedly work pretty well. But I say supposedly because I have visited the sail-repair people in Bermuda and the Azores and have heard the problems they've encountered with these systems. When first installed, apparently, they're fine, but as the sails get tired and the gear worn, troubles crop up. Time, no doubt, will tell. During the winter of 1986-87 we tested both the Dutchman and the Doyle Stackpack systems. There is no room for a detailed analysis here but the conclusions are: if you have a good mainsail with a number of years left in it, install the Dutchman system; if you are purchasing a new mainsail, or buying a new boat from the builders, install the Stackpack. I highly recommend a downwind rig. It will have to accommodate winds ranging from 10 to 40 knots, which sounds like an extreme variation. But it happens. Folks talk about the steady 25-knot trades, but all too often they blow 15 or less. A boat rigged for 25 to 40 knot winds and running before a 15 trade is going to have a very slow passage. Fortunately, the old days of high-cut twin headsails is pretty much gone. Electronic or vane selfsteering systems work better, and the high clews induced dangerous and uncomfortable rolling. In fact, you're much better off winging out two genoas. The center of effort is much lower, rolling is reduced, and the pole won't dip. My favorite rig is what I refer to as "poor man's twins"; no special sails, no expensive gear to be bought; just the normal sails are used with a few extra bits and pieces. If you have hanked-on head-
20
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
TWIN STAYSAILS WITH &OOMS
SMALL Gf!/IIO" TO SPINA.KgJl POLL.
Twin staysails versus genoas.
sPlnnaKe.r guy 9" y throuqh J~WS of porIL Downwind tradewind ri?;: Rigging a spinnaker pole with its own fore?;uy and afterguy.
Preparations sails you should replace the spinnaker halyard block aloft with a becket block; attach one end of a wire to the becket (size of wire will of course depend on the size of the hoat), and lash the other end to the stem fitting or to the end of the bowsprit and set it up as a light jackstay. Now you can hoist your high-cut reaching genoa on the headstay on the lee side, and sheet it out to the end of the main boom and back to a cockpit winch. Hold the hoom forward with a wire preventer (see sketch). To the new stay, hank on the no. 2 genoa (the no. 1 is too long on the foot and produces too much of a curve, which causes rolling). Lead that sheet to the end of the spinnaker pole and then aft. The spinnaker pole should be rigged semipermanently in place. (If you are lucky you will be on starboard tack all the way over, westbound.) The pole should be rigged with its own foreguy, its own afterguy, and topping lift; the headsail sheet just runs through the jaws of the pole. Thus if the wind pipes up and you have to take down the headsail or reset a smaller onc it is just a matter of slacking the sheet, dousing the headsail and shifting the sheet to the new one. The pole is guyed out there and does not need any attention. And it is not charging around the foredeck trying to knock someone overboard. An excellent rig fex boats with roller-reefing headsail systems where the headsail system has a twin groove is to feed two genoas up the foil at the same time. If they are different luff lengths, just add a tack or head pennant on the smaller sail so the luff lengths are equalized. Sheet the no. 1 genoa or high-cut reaching headsail to the end of the boom and the no. 2 out on the pole as already described. The advantage of this rig is that if you must shorten down, you can reef the sails togetherroll them up one on top of the other. (This idea with two sails sewn on a single luff wire was developed years ago by Wright Britton, who called the rig "roller twins.") If the wind is on the quarter when the weather headsail is rigged to the pole, it will dump air across the reaching jib even with the main set. If you're keeling and rolling, you may dip the boom and break the preventer, the boom vang, or the boom~r all three. The way to avoid this is to install what I refer to as a roll reef, i. e., an extra reef cringle midway between the first reef and the clew. Tuck in this diagonal roll reef and it tops up the boom 2 to 3 feet; then take up on the boom vang to minimize twist. Now the chances of dipping the boom are, if not eliminated, then certainly minimized.
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Incidentally, if you arrange your first and second reef cringles on the mainsail so the reef is deeper at the clew than at the tack, then the boom is topped up whenever the sail is reefed. The poor man's twin rig can be used not only on the tradewind passage from Europe to the Islands but also from the Eastern Caribbean on to the Bahamas or westward across the Caribbean. With luck it can also be used on the northern route to Europe. In 1975 we set this rig off Cape Race, Newfoundland, and carried it to Crookhaven, Ireland. And I have heard of boats that picked up the westerlies two days out of Bermuda and carried them all the way to the Azores. Chafe is a continual problem and must be checked regularly to prevent sheets and halyards from wearing through. But if you are careful it is amazing how little chafe occurs-most of lolaire's running rigging has done four transatlantics. It is impossible to have too many snatch blocks aboard. With the aid of a snatch block and a length of line there is almost no foul lead that can't be readjusted so that chafe is minimized or eliminated. The headsail sheet should be covered with leather where it goes through the pole, and the jaw of the pole should be carefully filed to make it as smooth as possible. Before YOll head offshore check the halyard blocks, sheaves, and turning blocks to reduce the chances of chafing. For instance, where some chafe is inevitable on sheets and halyards, changing the nip an inch or two will give the lines much longer life. Or you can spiral one-inch-wide lengths of canvas around the sheets and secure them with marline. In an emergency it is amazing how well masking tape, electrical tape, or duct tape prevent chafe to sheets and guys. I used to recommend leaving the spinnaker behind as it's not often used in the Lesser Antilles. However, I've revised my views in light of modern developments and some personal experience. If you cruise without an engine or don't like to use one except where absolutely necessary, you should definitely carry a spinnaker. Without it, in light airs broad off or dead downwind, the boat will plod along at 2 or 3 knots; setting a spinnaker will boost the speed up to a respectable 5 knots, only slightly less than you'd be doing with an engine. For handling spinnakers on a cruising boat, I would recommend using a snuffer, even though I don't think they've been perfected yet. The ads suggest that a mom-and-pop crew can snuff a chute when the wind comes up by simply easing the
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
22
sheet and pulling down on the snuffer. Wrong. If it's blowing hard you'll have to ease the pole forward and bring the sail in behind the mainand even then it will take a gorilla to heave down on the snuffer line. Snuffers also have a mind of their own. No matter now carefully we stow ours, we still often get tangled when hoisting and snuffing. In fact, I'd say we are in the same state with snuffers today as we were with spinnaker handling in the early fifties. If the young tiger spinnaker handlers of today ever heard old geezers like myself describe how we handled spinnakers back then, they would think we were idiotic incompetents who should not have been allowed out of the cockpit. Sail handling, and especially spinnaker handling, has developed drastically over the last thirty years. So will snuffers. It's a great idea, but so far has its limitations. If you're going to be in the Islands for any amount of time, bring your sail covers; the sun raises hell with Dacron sails. Apropos of which, have your sails checked before coming down. Tired sails have a habit of blowing out en route. Even if you do not have sails completely resewn, take them to the sailmaker and have the leeches restitched three feet in, as this will save many problems. At the same time check the design of the clew patch; the clew patch reinforcements should lock into the first reef clew patch and the first clew reef patch should lock into the double reef clew patch. It is also worthwhile to extend a back reinforcement 12, 18, or 24 inches wide, depending on the size of the sail, from the upper clew reef patch down to the clew reinforcement patch-mainsails always split from the leech in! Sails can now be repaired on virtually every major island in the Eastern Caribbean, in Bermuda, the Azores, and in the Canaries. Madeira and the Cape Vcrdcs arc the only places where you will be completely on your own. See Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services," for location of sailmakers.
Rigging Needless to say, if you're sailing your boat to the Islands, give the rigging a complete going-over. If you have swaged terminals, some preventive maintenance is in order. Go over all your terminals, polishing them and examining them with a magnifying glass. Certainly any swaged fitting four years old or older should be die-checked before you head south.
There are few boats with much time in the Isldnds that have not had cracked swaged terminals on the lower ends of their shrouds. Evidently, salt water lying in the top of the terminal causes corrosion, which expands and produces hairline cracks in the terminal. Some skippers have prevented this condition by cleaning out the top of the terminal with derustifier, heating the terminal with a blowtorch, and then sealing it with sealing wax, beeswax, or other preparations-nothing guaranteed, but it seems to work. Bring enough wire, with a terminal on one end, to replace your longest stay, as stocks of stainless-steel wire in the Islands are erratic. The same holds true for end fittings, turnbuckles, and toggles: bring a few spares as they're very difficult to obtain in the area. Riggers will argue the merits of Norseman versus Sta-Lok fittings; my experience has been that although their reliability is probably equal, for the amateur a Sta-Lok fitting is much easier to install, but they don't last forever: if they are six or seven years old, die-check them. For smaller rigging sizes- 1/4-inch, 1 X 19, and smaller-it's hard to beat the old-fashioned Nicropress system, where you compress a copper alloy sleeve around the wire to make an eye in the end (Talurit, to our English cousins). If you're short of stowage space, the Sand F Tool Company (PO Box 1546, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 USA) makes a small wrench-operated tool to substitute for the bulky, long-handled press. Either way, use two sleeves and a slightly oversized thimble to ease the bend of the wire; you'll have a cheap, easily installed fitting that will last almost forever. If you don't have a gallows frame, have one installed. (Check my book, The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vo!. 1, pp. 262-64, for a discussion and photograph of fittings available from Merriman Bros.) Trying to stabilize a boom swinging; on a topping lift or trying to hook one of those ridiculous wire pendants from the mizzenmast or backstay to the main boom at sea with a big swell rolling is a fine way to have an accident. My own experience with those affairs has been one splitopen skull. Besides its benefits in safety and ease of handling, the gallows frame provides a good brace for the navigator and a great place to secure a small awning.
Anchors and Anchoring Anchoring in the Caribbean is usually easy, although like everywhere else it also has its exasperating; and even humiliating aspects. If you know what
Preparations you're about, you understand that different conditions demand different methods of anchoring and that there is no one maxim that will let you rest easy every night in every anchorage. Sometimes a Danforth will hold where a plow won't, sometimes vice versa, and sometimes neither will do the trick. An old-fashioned Herreshoff will usually work but it's heavier and harder to handle. I use a SO-pound Herreshoff as my primary anchor. To avoid wrestling with it on the foredeck, I sling it from my bowsprit, where it can be catted without taking it aboard. I can do the same with a 4S-pound CQR plow slung from the other side of the bowsprit. As spare forward we carry a 4Spound Bruce and now aft we carry a IS-kg FOB CT. We also carry a 3S-pound Danforth, various 12-foot lengths of chain, and 600 feet of %-inch nylon in two coils plus various shorter lengths. We also carry a ISO-pound three-piece Herreshoff anchor in the bilge as an insurance policy. Big Herreshoffs or copies thereof can still be obtained from Paul Luke, East Boothbay, ME, or from A&B Industries, Inc., 41S Tamal Plaza, 200 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera, CA 9492S. They not only make the galvanized iron version but also a fancy one of manganese bronze. When calculating the size of the anchor they need, most people start at the wrong side of the scale: they ask, "What's the smallest anchor that will hold my boat?" They should ask, "What's the largest anchor I can handle considering the gear on board my boat and my physical capacities?" A 35-foot sloop moored with a 45-pound CQR is going to stay put, whereas if she has the minimumsize anchor, her owner will always have trouble getting it to hold and will frequently be awake at two or three in the morning chewing his nails when the squalls come through. For a number of years now we have been experimenting with a Bruce anchor, with varying degrees of success. On bottoms with loose coral it won't dig in at all nor does it like grass. But on other bottoms-sand, mud, or clay-it usually drags 20 to 30 feet and then digs in really solidly. The nicest thing about a Bruce is that once you have it well buried, you can shorten your scope considerably and the anchor will still hold. Sometimes when sailing the anchor out wc have come up on short stay, with the anchor line straight up and down, and sat there for S to 10 minutes before getting it to break out. We've also experimented with Marlow plaited anchor line, which is excellent in that it's Virtually nankin king and thus cannot develop a hackle. Further, it can be spliced directly into anchor chain,
23
thus eliminating the problem of lifting a shackle and thimble over the bow roll~r. However, no matter how carefully it's coiled, it will not run out without fouling-it must be carefully faked down in 2S- to 30-foot lengths or stowed or fed directly from a reel. In contrast, the three-strand nylon gets hard as it ages, and takes the shapes of its normal coil-it practically coils itself-and can be veered directly from the coil on the foredeck. For some fifteen years I've used 5fs-inch threestrand nylon secured directly to the Herreshoff anchor. This seems to work, although I'm careful not to anchor where I can see any coral as it could cut a nylon rode. If I can't avoid a coral anchorage, I use chain; it can be backbreaking to lift in the morning, but I can sleep soundly all night in preparation for the exercise. I should emphasize also that we always use a 12-foot length of chain with the Danforth, CQR, and Bruce anchors to ensure that the pull on the anchor is near horizontal. Those of us who prefer rope to chain rodes realize that in Island cruising it's common to anchor two or three times a day. Not being masochists, we choose to play with line rather than struggle with much heavier chain. Besides, line is easier to row out in a dinghy if you're setting a second anchor or carrying one ashore. Always carry plenty of line. Some anchorages are surprisingly deep and several hundred feet will be required. If you should have to cut away 30 or 40 feet from a fouled anchor, you won't want to interrupt your trip to procure a replacement. Two lengths of at least 200 feet apiece and three anchors are the minimum to carry on board, four if you're sailing transatlantic. Replacement anchors are almost impossible to find in the Azores, Madeira, or Cape Verdes. You also want to have handy a tripping line to tie to the crown of your anchor in case it gets fouled on something down there. You can use a buoy to float it, but buoys often cause problems. First, some fool bareboater may come in and pick it up thinking it's a mooring. Second, the buoy always seems to foul the anchor line. Finally, if you're in deep water and your tripping line doesn't reach all the way to the surface, remember that a one-gallon Clorox bottle exerts 8 pounds of lift on the back of the anchor! I think it's often better to use polypropylene line that floats up from the anchor to within a few feet of the surface, with no buoy on the end. Then if you need to trip the anchor you can swim down and tie on another piece.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
24
One of the nagging problems of weighing anchor is getting the shackle that joins the rode to the chain up over the bow roller. A 45-pound anchor with 12 feet of chain weighs 60 pounds and that can mean a pain in the back for the bowman if the shackle won't bump over the roller. I recommend splicing the rode directly to the chain, or finding a chain shackle with an oval-shaped pin secured by a wooden peg (see p. 256 of The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vo!. 2). Either of those rigs should pass over the bow roller without trouble. When anchoring in Madeira, the Canaries, the Azores, and Cape Verde Islands remember that all these islands are volcanic. Even if you dive down and see sand and think your anchor is well secured, you will discover that the sand is only a thin layer on top of hard rock. It will not really dig in and may well drag. Anchoring in these island groups is always difficult and you should use extreme care. In the Eastern Caribbean it's common to have a strong current running counter to the direction of the wind. Setting the mizzen while at anchor may keep you lying head to wind, but not all the time. The Bahamian sloops have devised a means of coping with this problem which is of special value in crowded anchorages. I call it the "Bahamian flying moor." Done right, it can be effective and spectacular; done wrong, a shambles. Here's how to do it. Have two anchors made up and ready with plenty of line faked out on deck ready to run. Slow down and drop your first anchor, then sail on beyond it in the axis of the tide. Pay out the rode fast and coast uptide until you come to a stop or until you run out of anchor line on your first anchor. Drop the second anchor. Luff up, or drop your sails completely, and let the tide set you back on this second anchor. Let out the
/
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normal amount of scope after setting the second anchor. Then take up the slack on the first anchor and set it. Give the proper scope and secure both rodes at the bow. You should now be lying evenly between the two anchors and swinging by the bow in a circle whose radius is determined by the length of the boat. Sometimes it's easier to put out one anchor, get settled, and then row out a second anchor in the direction from which you determine the tide will come when it changes. You can also set the second anchor by letting out double the scope on your first anchor as you drift downtide, dropping the second off the stern, leading it to the bow, and pulling yourself back up to normal scope on your first anchor. For the old-style boat with the rudder secured to the keel there is no problem with this kind of double rig. However, a boat with a short keel and separate rudder will sometimes develop a wrap around one or the other or both. A solution to this problem is to secure a small weight to each rode about 20 or 25 feet down the rode from the bow. A Bahamian moor is also useful along the Venezuelan coast, because in the afternoon it is usually blowing IS to 20 knots (or more) from the east or northeast. After sunset the wind dies out and then begins to come in light from the west, swinging you in the opposite direction. As to anchoring bow and stern, in general I like to avoid it, as the boat cannot weathercock into the wind. If the wind comes in hard on the beam, it puts considerable strain on the anchors, frequently causing the boat to drag; at that point you have a real mess on your hands. In certain circumstances, however, I definitely recommend bow-and-stern anchoring. In an area where there's a swell rolling around the islands and not much wind, as in BasseTerre, St. Kitts, for example, you should anchor bow and stern with either bow or stern facing the swell (which way depends on the shape of the individual boat). This way the boat will merely hobbyhorse, which is a fairly comfortable motion, instead of rolling, which is hard on the gear and can rapidly drive the crew nuts. When mooring directly to shore, most boats moor bow-on, rather than stern-on, so as not to damage the rudder. It can be a great help in all these anchoring maneuvers to have your second anchor permanently stowed on the stern pulpit. In IoLaire the problem was that a Danforth big enough to hold her had too long a stock-it stuck up over the pulpit and tended to foul the rigging. Then we
Preparations
Dinghies
BOW and STERN MOORJNG~ f30W-TO
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were given a 35-pound FOB HP anchor. It has large flukes but the stock stands only 26 inches high and so stows snugly under the stern pulpit rail. (We did have to make removable wooden caps for the flukes, though, after three crew members gouged themselves on the sharp points.) Once again, the most important thing to remember about anchors is that they must be of sufficient weight. I see people trying to moor boats with 14pound Danforths, I5-pound Bruces, 15-pound CQRs-a waste of time. Even for a fairly small boat the minimum weight of an anchor is 25 pounds. As stated above, the question should not be: "What is the smallest size anchor that will hold?" but "What is the largest size anchor I can physically handle and stow on board my boat?" Finally, any time you anchor, it's wise practice to send someone over the side with a face mask to verify that the anchor has properly set.
The only places in the entire Lesser Antilles where you'll find a launch service will be in St. Thomas (an excellent commercial launch service available via VHF and the St. Thomas Yacht Club) and at the Trinidad Yachting Association. Other than that you are on your own: you will have to use your own dinghy. But what kind of dinghy? It's a definite problem. The average yacht dinghy or pram is apt to be inadequate for the constant use to which it will be put in the Islands. Aside from getting ashore and lugging stores, there will be explorations and diving expeditions where you'll frequently have to make passages of a mile or more in moderately rough water loaded down with three or four people, anchor, outboard, diving gear, etc. Often there will be anchorages where a sailing dinghy will provide a pleasant diversion. So you want the biggest dinghy that you can possibly carry aboard. Weight is not so much a problem as space; even a comparatively heavy dinghy is easily handled if it's hoisted on a sling from the main halyard (see The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vols. 1 and 2). If it is at all possible, you should carry two dinghies onboard. Inevitably part of the crew is ashore trying to get back and cannot raise the boat, or else part of the crew is left on the boat and cannot get ashore. Ollr solution to this problem has been to stow one dinghy inside the other. For many years we used an 8-foot stemhead dinghy, "Mark's Ark," an instant dinghy built in one day! (See the November 1985 issue of Cruising World.) This stowed nicely inside our ll-foot dinghy. Now that our son Mark has outgrown his ark, we are going to replace it with a 7-foot pram, which will give us two dinghies in the space of one, with the second one capable of carrying three people ashore in calm conditions. If you're looking for small prams, two companies in England sell something called "Boat in a Box." The Barrow Boat Company and the Merryman Boat Company, both of Wivenhoe, Essex, C07 9BC, England, offer both 6-foot and 8-foot prams that come with all parts and are put together with epoxy rather than rivets. Supposedly they can be built in a day by folks with only moderate woodworking skills. In The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 2, I discussed the concept of jOinted dinghies that would fold up and allow even a small boat to carry a proper 8- or 9-foot rigid dinghy. Now do-it-yourself plans are available for just such dinghies that can be built
26
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
quickly and cheaply. There are a number of offthe-shelf jointed dinghies on the market that stow in 4 to 5 feet yet expand to 10 to 12 feet! As for rubber dinghies, which are used by the hundreds in the Islands, a few points should be remembered. They are excellent for diving expeditions, are extremely stable, very seldom capsize, have tremendous load-carrying capacity, and are easy to get in and out of when loaded down with scuba tanks, weight belts, etc. They also make good emergency life rafts. But they have their problems. If you're in a trade-wind anchorage exposed to the west and the outboard quits, there's little or no chance of your rowing back against the trade winds. Rather, you'll be blown offshorenext stop, Panama. Few people can sUIvive the 9OO-mile trip downwind in a rubber dinghy. The inflatable dinghies are big and bulky, and it's a pain to deflate them every time you move, so people tend to tow them. They tow moderately well, but in heavy weather the wind tends to get underneath them, lift them up in the air, and flip them upside-down. Most of the larger rubber dinghies with the wooden floors have been equipped to take outboards, and the wooden transom acts as a superb sea anchor that stops the boat and usually tears the towing eye out of the inflatable. Off they go. In fact, the painter is all too likely to pull out of the dinghy, even if it hasn't capsized. I recommend that the dinghy always be towed on two separate lines attached to two separate towing eyes. I was pleased to discover at the 1978 London Boat Show that if you write to the manufacturers of rubber dinghies, they will secure extra towing eyes on the dinghy for a reasonable extra charge. This does not guarantee the safety of towing a rubber dinghy, but it certainly rolls the dice in your favor. Incidentally, when trying to row a rubber dinghy, don't use the ridiculously small oars that come with them. I use my 9-foot oars on a rubber dinghy when I'm forced to use one, and although it doesn't make rowing a rubber dinghy a pleasure, it at least gives me a pretty good chance of getting where I want to go even with the wind against me. In fact, almost all dinghies have oars that are too short. Oars should be twice the boat's beam plus 6 inches. If your dinghy has high freeboard, that will be about perfect; with low freeboard you may have to take a saw and whack off two inches at a time till they're just right. (You can always shorten an oar: you can't lengthen it.) Proper length oars,
light and well balanced, will make any dinghy, rubber or rigid, easier to row. (But take a tip from the French: if you have two or more people in a rubber dinghy, use canoe paddles. They're much better than one man rowing.) I definitely feel that you should be able to stow your dinghy on deck and that you should do so for any long-distance trip. On the passages between the Islands, I for one don't like to be towing a dinghy. Admittedly, many boats do tow their dinghies (in many cases, Boston whalers with selfbailers) up and down the Islands in all weather. But they're lost with amazing regularity. My view is that the dinghy is too expensive a piece of gear to be towed behind in rough weather. Moreover, insurance companies tend to agree when it comes to paying off on lost or damaged dinghies. Lloyd's of London, for instance, does not cover dinghies under tow in open passages without a special rider being written. L1oyd's also insists that dinghies be marked with the name of the parent vessel and that outboards be locked in place. This is no idle problem, as the theft of dinghies and outboards in the Islands has become rampant over the last few years. If you have an expensive dinghy with a powerful outboard, my advice is to secure it to your boat, or to a dock, with a good padlock. And even then, make sure your insurance is in force. Experience shows that inflatable dinghies are much more likely to be stolen than hard dinghies. The reason is if your dinghy is stolen at night, the thief is probably a fellow "yachtsman" who rows the dinghy back to his own boat, deflates it, and stows it (plus the outboard) in his fo'c'sle; he then sails to the next island and sells the works. This is not as farfetched as it sounds: one French "yachtsman" was caught stealing a dinghy. When the police arrived to arrest him, they inspected his yacht and discovered six dinghies stowed belowdecks. A rigid dinghy is a little harder to conceal. Also, be aware that a rubber dinghy is not a nomaintenance operation. They do require maintenance. Luckily they can now be professionally repaired in Martinique, Tortola, and st. Thomas (see Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services"). Even so, the life expectancy of an inflatable dinghy in the Caribbean on a charter boat or one that is continually cruised is approximately two years; with great care they will last three, but that is the end of them. In contrast, a good wooden dinghy, although it will require sanding, painting and var-
Preparations nishing, and occasional repairs, will last almost indefinitely.
Stoves Alcohol stoves leave much to be desired. Drinking alcohol is cheap, but alcohol for stoves is incredibly expensive-if you can find it. The alcohol flame is less hot than gas or kerosene, and some people find the smell offensive. Primus (kerosene) stoves are the old standby, but there's trouble with them too. The kerosene (paraffin in Britain) found in the Eastern Caribbean is of poor grade; much of it, I'm told, is jet fuel, and great difficulty is experienced with clogged burners. As a result people frequently burn mineral spirits. This burns clean and does not clog the burners. It also burns with a hotter flame! Over a period of time it will cause the side of the burner to bum through and explode with disastrous results. On all stoves, but especially alcohol and primus stoves, it is essential to have a remote shut-off between the fuel tank and the stove that can be reached when the stove is on fire! Today bottled propane is probably the most common stove fuel on yachts. Properly mounted with the gas bottles on deck, with a manual or automatic shut-off, and a sniffer in the bilge, they are pretty safe; the fuel is relatively inexpensive and is available virtually worldwide. At first glance, the European and American gas fittings look the same, but they are not. The British female fitting will not fit in the American bottle, while the American fitting will fit the British bottle, though the fitting will leak slightly. When heading for the States, Europeans should bring along some spare European fittings plus some high-pressure gas hoses. Then when they arrive in the Caribbean or the States they can purchase American fittings and make up a pigtail that will enable them to fill their bottles at the filling plants. Americans should do the same, except bring the American fittings to Europe; upon arrival, purchase the European fittings and make up the pigtail. You should have both the male and female fittings, as with a bucket of fittings of various types, plus hose and hose clamps, and you should be able to fill your bottles anywhere. Since bottles vary in size, once you have crossed the ocean in either direction you will invariably discover that you will not be able to exchange
27
bottles. If you're in a hurry, it can be most inconvenient to have to wait a couple of days for your bottle to be sent to the plant and refilled. A method around this difficulty is to pick up a gas bottle, pay the deposit, take it back to the boat, cross-connect it with your bottle, secure the bottle to be emptied upside-down above the bottle to be filled. In cold climates, merely pour boiling water over the bottle to be emptied, open the valves, and the gas will blast on through. In warm climates, first cool the bottle to be filled by leaving it in the water for an hour, then cool it with ice, connect the bottles as described, and proceed with the boiling water. Don't smoke when you are doing this. On the West Coast of the United States, liquefied natural gas (LNG) is becoming popular for the cruisi'1g yachtsman-but anywhere else, you should forget about it, as the gas is just not used worldwide and you will be unable to fill your tanks. Calor gas is obtainable throughout Europe, Madeira, and the Canaries. But you won't find that in the Caribbean, either. Furthermore, Calor gas tanks should never be filled with propane, as the Calor gas bottle has no release valve. It is illegal to put propane in a tank without a release valve; you might be able to get away with it in the Caribbean, where things are a bit lackadaisical, but you might also kill yourself in the process. So if you have a Calor gas installation, change it to propane-the stove will run equally well on either one. Likewise, camp gas-small gas bottles still popular with European yachts-isn't suitable for the Caribbean. You might find camp gas in Martinique and Guadeloupe, but that is all. It is essential to carry spare parts for all stoves, and pressure-pump parts for alcohol and primus stoves. For propane stoves, spare nozzles are desirable too because eventually the nozzle holes get too large, which results in smoky pots and irate dishwashers. No yacht should go offshore without a gimbaled stove. Otherwise, life for the cook is just plain miserable. I even hate to go to sea without a gimbaled table; I consider it an uncivilized torture to sail any distance without one. At the very least, you should consider a gimbaled sideboard in the galley. It gives the cook a place to move pots onto from the stove, and also a place to make sandwiches and prepare his/her meals. The late Percy Chubb had one installed on Antilles, which was superb. (See The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vo!. 2 for further discussion of gimbaled tables and how to
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide make them work on light-displacement hoats with quick motion.)
Guns My advice about having guns aboard after more than thirty years in the Caribbean is Simple: don't. They're more trouble than they're worth. The gun laws are different on practically every island in the Caribbean and those laws are enforced in the most whimsical ways that can get you in a lot of trouble. In Puerto Rico, for instance, Customs and Immigration don't ask you to declare your guns, but they fail to tell you ahout Puerto Rico's stringent gun law. If you fail to register your guns and then the police find you have one aboard, you are likely to spend six months in jail with a fat fine. Venezuela lets you keep your guns aboard, but that gives the Guardia Nacional an excuse to come aboard and ransack the boat looking for them. Many stories tell of jewelry, cameras, money, etc., being "lost" during these searches. A famous incident in St. Thomas involved a yachtsman who waved his gun at a would-be dinghy thief. The latter ran ashore and told the police about the gun, which turned out to be unlicensed. Nothing happened to the culprit, but it took the guy who waved the gun a six-month legal fight to get off with a suspended sentence. (See Chapter 8 for information about gun laws in the Caribbean.) If you feel you need something to defend yourself with-and it's true there have been some had incidents over the years, though their proportional frequency is probahly far less than in "civilized" cities of the United States or the United Kingdom-then I suggest you think of your Very pistol as a defensive weapon. Of all the Islands, only in Tobago do they take away your Very pistol; everywhere else it is considered safety equipment and can be left on board. And what burglar, I ask you, would stare down the barrel of a Very pistol for very long? (Granted, a Very pistol is a one-shot aflair, but there's no reason not to have two on board.) One way to increase the pistol's potency is to stand a white flare on end, wrap masking tape around the top, and pour in some birdshot and hot wax. Or if you have a metal-harreled Very pistol, you can use B-gauge shotgun shells-hard to come by, but they turn the pistol into a fiercely effective short-range weapon. Or you can use standard 25mm saluting cannon shells enhanced with shot and
wax, but eheck your pistol with a gunsmith before doing that number. Even without doctoring the flares (and I know some people will think that a bit extreme), a Very pistol can he pretty intimidating. A large Schermuly 38-mm pistol will fire bird-scaring cartridges, explosive shells that go out 300 feet and explode like artillery shells. I can't imagine anyone hanging about in the face of such a weapon. A few years ago, to celebrate lolaire's eightieth hirthday I saved all her expired flares after replacing them with new ones. Then on New Year's Eve (Old Year's Night to Grenadians), I fired them off during the general and raucous celebration in Union Island. Of fifty-two flares, forty-eight went off, and many of them I fired horizontally. They looked just like bazooka rockets. Believe me, even a full-time pirate would have been scared off. When headed offshore you should have distress signals aboard. I prefer the hand-held rockets to Very pistol flares, since the flares go up 300 feet while a standard rocket goes 1,000 feet. Obviously, the rocket is more visible. Nevertheless, I will always have at least one Very pistol aboard with a supply of flares. It used to he hard to find flares, rockets, or Very pistols in the Caribbean; now you can get the pistols and flares, hut usually only the 25-mm size, and usually no parachute flares. Rockets are still very hard to find. Incidentally, you should be aware that standard US Very pistols are 25- or 37-mm; standard British sizes are 26.5- and 38-mm. You can't tell the difference by eye, but I can assure you from distressing personal experience that the British flares will not fit in the US pistols. When all is said and done regarding guns, flare pistols, rockets, spear guns, winch handles, baseball bats, and the like, for personal defense in outof-the-way places, the best method for making sure no intruder comes on board is to have a dug. Size doesn't matter-as long as the dog barks, the intruder will leave and look for easier pickings. Any thief will figure that if the dog barks, the crew will wake up and God only knows what he will be greeted with-gun, flare pistol, spear gun? I am very partial to Schipperkes, the little black Belgian barge dog. They are highly intelligent, take up little or no space, will happily live on scraps from the table, swim like fishes, and will bark if anyone comes near the boat. But be forewarned, they are so highly intelligent that if you are not good at training dogs, they will train you!
Preparations
Life Rafts and Emergency Gear Have them checked yearly. In years gone by it was almost impossible to find this service in the Caribbean, but now there are at least four places to have it done: two in St. Thomas, one in Tortola, and one in Martinique. Incidentally, you can rent a life raft in St. Thomas for a cruise, then return it or airfreight it back when you're through. (See Chapter 8 for details about airfreight.) But one must remember that in the land of the blind, the one-eyed are kings. One wonders how expert the experts are. It is said "ex" is the unknown quantity; the "spert" is a drip under pressure. I say this as Paul Adamswaithe, owner of Stormy Weather, with whom we sailed the Channel Race, Cowes Week, and the Fastnet, reported that his life raft, which had been re packed and recertified a year before, was condemned in the United Kingdom when it was inspected and repacked for these races. Not only was the life raft condemned but the water cans were marked 1979, although the raft had been repacked and recertified a number of times since 1979. My advice is make sure the life raft is inflated and remains inflated for at least 72 hours; inspect it yourself; personally verify the contents of the raft when it is repacked; and personally check the weight of the CO 2 bottle! If you can't get to one of these professional services, you can check a life raft yourself-but don't follow my advice given in previous writings. According to the Switlick Company, which has been in the life raft business for years, you should never test a life raft by pulling the inHation cord, because the CO 2 blasts out at a very low temperature and damages the material of the raft. Instead, you should examine the cylinder and its mechanism to verify that it is not corroded, then disconnect it. Pump up the raft with a foot pump or air bottle and leave it inHated for 24 to 48 hours to check for leaks. Then deflate it by using a vacuum cleaner to get all the air out, and try to repack it, which is easier said than done. Speaking of safety equipment: don't go to sea without an EPIRB unit. Now that their emergency signals are bounced off satellites rather than to aircraft that might be passing overhead, your chances of being located with an EPIRB are greatly increased. EPIRB stands for Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon; they are also called ELTs-Emergency Locator Transmitters. These units transmit on the commercial aircraft and military emergency frequencies of 121.5 MHz and 243
MHz, and now the newest ones also transmit on 406 MHz. All units are received by the rescue satellite, eliminating the blind spots that formerly existed when one was sailing in areas where there were no aircraft. The rescue satellite is one area where there has been excellent East-West cooperation. The new units that transmit on 406 MHz not only transmit the distress signal, but they can also be programmed to transmit the navy registration number and plenty of other information.
Paint and Varnish Here's a suggestion to transatlantic voyagers: give the portside waterline and the area aft under both quarters up near to deck level a coat of cheap, soft bottom paint hefore your departure. On the way across, every boat picks up pin barnacles above the waterline. Remember, the best adhesive known to man, better than epoxy glue, is the glue that a barnacle uses to attach itself to the bottom or sides of your boat. By the time you've removed the pin barnacles, you'll have taken a few layers of paint and possibly gel coat with them. The rough spots will have to he reglazed, sanded, and painted. But if you slap on a coat of cheap, soft bottom paint (without sanding the boot top and topsides first), a few hours' work with wet sandpaper on arrival will get you down to the original finish. It might need another coat of paint, but it would have needed that anyway. Another suggestion for transatlantic passages that will save mu~h work is for yachts with varnished rail caps: the day before you leave, slap on a coat of cheap, flat-white housepaint without sanding the varnish. A sanding on arrival will flake off the white paint and with a quick coat of varnish, your boat will look fresh from the boat yard. Otherwise, you'll probably have to go to the wood to make the rail cap look decent again. (Perform this operation only if your hrightwork is in top-notch shape beforehand. ) As to the bottom of the boat, the specter of the teredo is grossly exaggerated. With good bottom paint and a periodic haul there's nothing to worry ahout. A major problem with bottom paints is that one will work in one area but will not work elsewhere. In fact, the Petitt paint company once offered three grades of bottom paint: temperate zone, semitropical, and tropical. The tropical worked best in the Caribbean. Another point is that most of the modern selfcleaning bottom paints will only work if the boat
30
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
does 6 knots or better. At various times when we have sat for a few weeks in a patch of light airs, the fuzz has built up on the bottom; then when the wind came in again and lolaire began to move, she'd clean her own bottom in no time. I remember once when we were using International's Micron with good success on lolaire our good friend Roz Griffiths was using the same stuff on her little Squib with disastrous results-it looked as if she had put fertilizer on the bottom of the boat. I pointed out to Roz that during the summer in Grenada lolaire would have a thick moss on her bottom but that once we went sailing and got up to 6 or 7 knots, it would all come off; by the time we arrived in St. Thomas the bottom was polished clean. I advised her to find a boyfriend with a highspeed runabout and get him to tow her Squib around at 7 knots once a month. Then the bottom would stay clean. When I first came to the Caribbean thirty years ago, if you wanted a clean bottom and could afford it, you hauled three times a year; otherwise you spent a lot of time scrubbing the bottom every week and probably suffered worm damage. As years went by bottom paint got better and better (and more and more expensive) to the point that now you should be able to figure on hauling once a year. If you use a liberal application of modern copolymer bottom paint and put on three coats when you haul, you should be able to go eighteen months before hauling again. Three last tips: to ensure good bottom coverage on each coat and also so that you can check for how much bottom paint you have left, I strongly advise you to alternate colors on each coat. lolaire's bottom has blue, then red, then blue. As I write this we are down to red; when the blue begins to show I'll know the time has come to start thinking about hauling again. If you have a wooden boat and your rudder post is not coppered, it's well worth removing the rudder and coppering the post. No matter how hard you try, it's impossible to do a really good job of painting between the rudder stock and post. Finally, if you have a taste for shoal-water exploration and a wooden boat, have the deadwood aft of the ballast keel coppered so that if you run aground you won't have the bare wood inviting the worms to dinner.
Wind and Water Generators In the Eastern Caribbean the wind blows 85 percent of the time, from November through July.
Lying at anchor in an idyllic tropical anchorage one hates to disturb the peace by running an engine or generator to produce electricity. The quick solution for an average-size boat unencumbered with a showroom load of electrical equipment is a wind generator mounted on the mizzen masthead on yawls and ketches, or on minimum 12-foot stub masts secured to the stern pulpit on sloops and cutters. Wind generators had a bad name because too many of them produced milliamps instead of ampsonly enough to keep the batteries from going flat if the boat is sitting untended and unused. However, the Ampair wind generators which we've had on lolaire's mizzen masthead for the past twelve years and through four transatlantic passages, produce on an average 18 ampere-hours a day lying at anchor and ± 28 ampere-hours a day underway as long as the wind is forward of abeam. In periods of heavy weather beating to windward, it will put out upward of 72 ampere-hours a day. Its one weakness is when you're running downwind, because the faster you sail the less apparent wind comes across the deck and the lower the generator's output. Within the Lesser Antilles this is not too much of a problem since the islands lie approximately on a north-south axis. With the wind in the easterly quadrant, there are few periods when you will spend a couple of days sailing dead downwind. However, the problem arises when you're sailing either way across the Atlantic. The solution to the downwind problem is to tow a water-powered generator-the Aqua-Amp, which is a specially designed, 12-inch, low-drag, two-bladed propeller, attached to 60 or 70 feet of :%-braided line attached to the generator. Result: 16 pounds of drag at 6 knots, producing 3 amps per hour, 72 a day, the same as running a diesel engine for a couple of hours, and you don't have to listen to the noise or smell the diesel fumes blown the length of the boat by the following breeze. If your boat has a three-way masthead light and, below decks, fluorescent lights (which produce twelve times the light per amp of an incandescent light and produce no heat), you can illuminate them and keep your batteries charged with little or no engine use. You preserve peace and quiet, save wear and tear on the engine, and considerable fuel. Further, if the engine or generator gives out, the batteries can be charged by merely going sailing-a wonderful excuse to get the anchor up and get going. These wind- and water-powered generators are
Preparations designed, built, and marketed by Hugh Meriwether (Ampair-Lumic, 55 Tarrant Street, Arundel, West Sussex BN18 9DJ, England). They've been given a hard test on lolaire over the last twelve years. We know they work, as we have no engine and rely solely on wind and water generators (backed up by a cheap Sears & Roebuck trickle charger when tied up to the dock in windless anchorages). We've had flat batteries no more than about once a year. Meriwether's original Ampair in 1974 was probably the first really workable wind generator for sailboats. There are now dozens of other brands; some of them are fine, others seem downright dangerous. Once the blade diameter gets to 5 or 6 feet, they can take an arm off or kill you. So the generators must be permanently mounted high enough so that the tallest member of the crew cannot touch the blades. And the unit must be securely mounted up there, since the load on it when you're slamming into a head sea can be enormous. Some boats have another wrinkle: an alternator that is belted off the propellor shaft, which is allowed to freewheel when sailing. On the average 45- to 50-foot cruising boat, this rig will produce 30 or more amperes per hour at 6 knots. (For further information on this subject, read The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vo!. 2, pp. 100,405-6, and 409.)
Iceboxes and Reefers The insulation for iceboxes or refrigerators is another area where boats built for northern climates are frequently deficient. I've been aboard too many modern yachts, recently built at tremendous expense, whose icebox insulation is cork or glass wool or foam-but even if it is foam, the foam is not thick enough. In any case, if the box has been in place for any amount of time the insulation is probably soaking wet. The insulating properties of wet cork are about the same as those of old coconut husks. Not only that, but using cork is a great way to cause rot. The case of my own boat is noteworthy. When I bought lolaire she had no icebox, so I built one of 200-pound capacity, insulating it with 2 inches of plank styrofoam. This setup kept ice for about a week-not particularly efficient. So I put an insulated bulkhead down the center of the box and split the top, in effect getting two totally separate lOO-pound boxes. When the ice had melted halfway down in both sides, it was thrown together
31 on one side, so that after no less than five days I started anew with one full lOO-pound box. Then I had a number of extra days in which to take on more ice at my convenience. In addition, since each box was only half the size of the original, the whole of each smaller box, rather then just the bottom of the old box, stayed cold. This worked very well, but finally I became concerned about what might be happening behind the icebox, so I tore it out as a precautionary measure. Sure enough, despite the 2 inches of Styrofoam, condensation was gathering and rot had started eating away at the ceiling of the hull. Luckily, it had not worked its way through to the framing or planking. I rebuilt the whole thing, this time using poured polyurethane foam. The result was well worth the trouble. Polyurethane foam is expensive, but its insulating properties at 2 pounds per cubic foot are superb, as the polyurethane bubbles are not filled with air but with inert freon. The expense of rebuilding my icebox was more than justified, due to the saving in the time and effort of procuring ice and the further saving in the actual cost of ice. If the boxes were cold and topped off to their full capacity of 100 pounds each, I could stretch the ice supply to as long as seventeen days in the first few years after the box was refoamed. As time goes by, however, the foam breaks down and becomes less efficient, to the point that now we are hard put to make 200 pounds of ice last ten days. It's time to remove the icebox again (after twenty years) and reinsulate. Despite what salesmen say to the contrary, it's absolutely essential to insulate the top of the box and to have the top fit with a really tight seal. Bruce Bingham rebuilt the icebox on his little 22-foot Flicka and changed it from an ice swallower to a box that will keep 40 pounds of ice for three weeks. That must be something of a record. (For more on iceboxes and refrigeration systems, see The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vo!. 1, pp. 487 -506 and vo!. 2, pp. 464-85.) Even if you have mechanical or electrical refrigeration, it still pays to reinsulate your box if you plan to visit the tropics. This will keep it from sweating and causing rot. Having the box really well insulated will appreciably reduce the time you have to run the engine. The great difficulty with mechanical refrigeration is that it's very difficult to get it repaired in the Islands. Some boats have kerosene fridges, others have gas; but all in all, with the time, effort, and expense involved, the simple but well-insulated icebox is hard to
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
beat. It's bound to work: just buy ice, put it in the box, and everything has to get cold. Remember that what gets you by up north will not necessarily do so in the tropics. To test the iceholding properties of your system while in northern waters, top off your icebox on a summer Sunday, say, just before leaving the boat. Come back the next Saturday and have a look; if the loss has been more than 5 pounds per day, you'd better get the box reinsulated before coming down south. For mechanical refrigeration and / or deep freezers, load the box with food and cool it down to the desired temperature. If from 2000 one night to 0700 the next morning it has gained more than 5° F, it's time to reinsulate, install new holding plates, or what have you. Finding ice in the Islands, incidentally, is no longer the challenge it used to be. Ice used to be cheap but hard to find. Now it's easy to come hy, but expensive. (Available, that is, except when the ice plant breaks down.) So nowadays the best bet is a small icebox with superb insulation, since you'll seldom be more than a week away from the next load of ice. (For the availability of ice in Bermuda, the Azores, Madeira, the Canaries, and Cape Verde Islands see Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services.") The subject of marine refrigeration is a daunting one and there is neither time nor space to do it justice here. But a word or two is indicated. Many boats use compressors belted directly off the engines, others use llO-volt units run from a big power generator, while by hu the most common unit in medium and small boats is a 12-volt system that runs on thc battery. These 12-volt systems work OK, but all the manufacturers seem to have a very optimistic idea of the cubic capacity that a 12-volt unit will effectively cool. On lolaire we have two small off-theshelf 12-volt units (off-the-shelf, but adapted to Iolaire as you will see) that I feel are effective. Our two iceboxes total 4 cubic feet. Mounted in a 2cubic-foot box, each unit needs to he run four hours a day to keep everything cold. (If we had one larger box, we'd have to run the reefer longer.) The units draw approximately 5 amps, so each box uses 20 amps per day-an amount of electricity either our wind or water generator will easily produce at sea. Each icebox and its reefer unit is a separate operation; thus if one of the units quits running we'll still have one completely cold icebox. I have found pretty general agreement that a yacht's refrigeration system should have two completely separate units, because inevitably any
refrigeration system will break down. If you have a single unit and it is not repaired within twentyfour to thirty-eight hours, you will lose your food. It is not a case of if your refrigeration system stops, but when, as they inevitably do break down. If you have two separate systems, at least you'll be covered. A constant argument boils as to whether the reefer units should be air cooled or water cooled. On Iolaire we have proved that air cooling will work, but only if the unit is installed in a wellventilated place. All too often an air-cooled unit is shoved into some tiny locker or stuck in an overheated engine room so that the unit works but poorly. Small 12-volt water-cooled units will work extremely well, hut it is vital that the tiny water pump be installed according to the directions. Another most important installation point that many manuals do not stipulate is that there should be a water scoop facing forward to force water into the water intake. Once you get over 4 knots, a slight vacuum is created along the hull, and the pump is so small that without a scoop it cannot overcome the vacuum. No water, no refrigeration! I strongly advise installing only 12-volt units that have a small holdover plate. Basically, the units are too small to really make any ice unless you run them continually, which will suck your batteries flat in short order. In addition, the aluminum refrigeration evaporator plate is very susceptible to electrolysis-you get a leak and there goes your refrigeration. We went through three aluminum evaporators before we finally switched to stainless holdover eutectic plates and since then, we have had few problems. Our technique is to put 30 pounds of ice into each box and then run the holdover plates four hours a day. The ice will last practically forever. Finally, as mentioned before, it is possible to run the electric refrigeration without using the engine. Iolaire's Ampair unit mounted atop the mizzcnmast and her taffrail generator trailed over the stern when sheets are eased provide all the power needed. lolaire did a double transatlantic voyage in 1985 to celebrate her eightieth birthday, and the refrigeration system worked most of the time. We carted ice and had cold beer and fresh meat the entire trip.
Ventilation Of prime importance is physical comfort. Even in steady trade winds, providing for effective ventilation is a must when water and air are both warm.
Preparations The former holds at about 78° F, and the latter hits 85° F every day. But despite what many people say to the contrary, air conditioning is totally unnecessary. With adequate awnings, ventilators, and wind scoops, cabins and cockpits need never get uncomfortably hot. A tremendous number of new boats are coming to the Islands each year, including many that have been specifically designed for bare boat chartering in the Caribbean. Some have hatches opening forward, which, of course, must be closed for all rain squalls and under sail when the spray is flying, which in the Islands is most of the time. Other boats have aft-opening hatches. At sea the aftopening hatch will possibly collect eriough air to make belowdecks bearable, especially if it has a good dodger so that it can be left fully open under sail. In port, though, you'd die of the heat since not enough air is pushed through the boat by aftopening hatches. Therefore, I consider a double-opening hatch that can face either fore or aft a necessity. However, to reverse the standard double-opening hatch requires your going on deck to change the pins-a real pain at 0200 in a driving rain squall. The answer is an extremely good hatch by Goiot, a French marine hardware firm, which can be opened facing either forward or aft without having to go on deck to check the pins. This is by far the best hatch on the market hut it necds one addition: a pad eye and stainless-steel lanyard secured to the hatch to prevent it from blowing overboard. Best of all is to have your hatches hinged four ways, as sometimes you'll be moored to a dock beam to the wind or on a beam reach where you might want to open the hatch facing to leeward. Jay Paris, designer of the transatlantic record holder Lone Star (see pg. 67-68), designed a four-way opening hatch that can be switched to any of the four positions without going on deck. For information about this unique design contact Lone Star's owner, J. O. Huggins, 2121 Edwards Street, PO Box 7692, Houston, TX 77007, USA. Going to windward and reaching in a fresh trade wind with a big sea produces large quantities of spray, and the Caribbean's rain squalls, while perhaps welcomed at first, can become unpleasant in a hurry. A folding dodger that protects the whole forward end of the cockpit will he a real godsendand in a midships-cockpit boat, absolutely essential. Otherwise you'll feel as if someone is aiming a fire hose at you or throwing a bucket of water at your face every two minutes. With a proper dodger, only the helmsman gets wet, while the rest of the crew relaxes under the dodger, drinking beer; the
33
main companionway hatch can be left open too, a big help in ventilating the cabin. It's also essential that all hatches be equipped with good watertight dodgers so that when you're beating to windward the hatches can be left partly open facing aft, with the dodger over them to keep out the spray, A buttoned-up boat in the tropics soon becomes a sweatbox. A large number of bare boats in the Caribbean fit this category exactly, and are impossible belowdeck under way because of the heat. This is especially bad for people coming from the north who need to get below out of the sun, but can't because of the sweltering conditions down there. One sorry development in ventilation has been those low-profile cowls designed to reduce windage while racing. They mayor may not minimize windage, but they certainly do minimize ventilation; for that job they're all but useless. (See The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 1, pp. 276-82 regarding the amount of air passed below by ventilators of various sizes.) When you're at anchor, a couple of "galley staysails," i. e., wind scoops aimed down the hatches, are worth their weight in gold. Keep the air moving and you'll stay cool. Awnings will keep the sun from frying your brain-as long as they're not made of Dacron or nylon. The sun shines right through these materials; you can get sunburned while sitting in their supposed shade. Perhaps worse, they're noisy. We have all experienced the distraction of a fluttering leech; a nylon or Dacron awning's fluttering will drive you right out of your mind. The best awning material is Vivatex, a mildewproofed canvas sold by various canvas suppliers in large cities. It blocks out the sun completely and stands up well to tropical elements. If you have a large awning made up, covering from the mainmast aft, be sure to have its edges roped: it will last longer and won't tend to stretch. An awning rigged good and tight so that the wind doesn't blow it around will make life aboard a good deal more enjoyable. Although it's not essential, a second, smaller awning that can cover the cockpit when sailing is a useful extra. Another way for boats with ports opening on the cabin trunk to increase the amount of ventilation below is to install "bunny ears" while at anchor. This device, described and sketched in The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 2, p. 331, is now commercially available from Fawcetts, 110 Compromise Street, Annapolis, MD 21404. Two of the biggest problems you'll encounter when crossing the "pond" are sunburn and heat.
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
To minimize damage from the former, buy some big straw hats in Madeira or the Canaries; then tie strings to them and to the shirt you're wearing, so that if the hats blow off they won't go overboard. And don't worry-no matter how much you cover up, by the time you reach the Lesser Antilles you'll be tanned. When in doubt, cover up. Take plenty of total sunblock for use on your face, the backs of your hands, and the top of your feet. Sailing across in the trade-wind route, the sun comes up dead astern; by 1000 it's shining down on the deck with an awful lot of heat and it stays up overhead until late in the afternoon when it disappears behind the headsails. Thus, for four to six hours a day you should rig a small cockpit awning so that the helmsman and anyone relaxing on deck can do so in the shade. Even the best-ventilated boats get hot when they're running dead downwind. On Iolaire we open the forecastle hatch and rig our large galley staysail into the forecastle and leave it there continually. As rain squalls come by, we tie a sail stop around it and flip the hatch closed, opening the hatch immediately after the squall passes. This produces a good air flow through the entire boat, cooling it off drastically at night and making it cool during the day: the thermometer hanging from the overhead in the main cabin never rose above 79° F from the Canaries to the Lesser Antilles. Surging along at hull speed in the low-free board Iolaire there was always a lot of water on deck aft but the foredeck was usually dry, and seldom did any water come down the forecastle hatch. A hot new item on the market for ventilating boats is the solar-powered exhaust vent-a small electric fan powered by its own solar panel. It is an integral unit that fits into either a 3- or 4-inch deck plate, and it moves an amazing amount of air. They are very useful on any boat, but I think they're essential for a wooden boat in the tropics. Mount one forward to exhaust the dead air out of the forepeak, and two aft to ventilate the transom. They certainly will do a tremendous amount to eliminate the dampness and rot in the ends of the wooden boat. We have experimented with NicroFico solar-powered vents, and they have been amaZingly effective and robust. There are probably other good brands, too.
Keeping Warm While sailing to and from the Islands, it's essential not only to keep dry but to keep warm. In cold
weather, cotton dungarees, sweatshirts, and socks are useless, as they have absolutely zero warmth when wet. As a result of intensive ocean racing in the round-thc-world races, a number of companies have come out with clothing to be worn under foul-weather gear that allegedly is warm even when wet and is also quick-drying. It is excellent gear but very expensive. The old standby wool works really well and is cheaper than the new fancy synthetics, especially since you can usually pick up wool long johns, pants, socks, watch caps, etc., very inexpensively at fishing supply and military surplus stores. Once in the Caribbean you will still need something to keep you warm when sailing at night; I still like a wool watch cap and sweater underneath my knee-length foul-weather coat. Round-the-world racing has proved that diesel heaters will heat up a boat very efficiently but they will not dry the air. There is only one way to dry out the interior of a boat and that is with a solidfuel stove burning wood, charcoal, peat, or anthracite (steamer coal). But the solid-fuel stove will work only if you have a really good smoke head that will create a draft in all weather conditions and under all sail trims. We have experimented with six different smoke heads and have come to the conclusion that the Jolie Brise-type smoke head (see The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 2, pp. 338-39) is the only smoke head that fills the bill. The type of smoke head we have on Iolaire is now made by N icro- Fico. Probably the ideal method of keeping a boat warm is to have a diesel heater ducted throughout the boat, backed up by a solid-fuel heater to dry the air in the main cabin.
Keeping Dry There are numerous superb and expensive foulweather suits available, but I still contend that if fabric is breathable so that air can get through, so can water. Needless to say if you are sailing to the Islands, crossing the Atlantic, or leaving the Islands for points north, it is essential that the entire crew have really good foul-weather gear. A wet, cold crew member is an inefficient, dangerous crew member. Most people in the Caribbean itself feel that seaboots and foul-weather trousers are not necessary. But many of us get sick and tired of living with a bottom that's always wet because the stan-
Preparations dard foul-weather jacket is too short. For that reason I persuaded my Irish friend Alfie Burns of Brymac, 35 Upper John Street, Cork, Ireland, to make us up knee-length foul-weather coats. They have been extremely effective, liked by every member of Iolaire's crew, and admired by other yachtsmen. Unfortunately, we had little success selling them to marine hardware stores-it was definitely not one of my more successful business ventures.
Pumps Another sensible precaution before starting south or west is to overhaul your pumps. Many a boat heading for the Islands has run into serious difficulty because its pumping system couldn't cope with more than a small leak. I feel it is essential to have at hand big diaphragm-type bilge pumps. In my opinion the old-fashioned navy pump is next to useless. It is operated with an up-and-down motion: within half an hour your arm is coming out of its socket and no water is coming out of the boat. These pumps are also hard to disassemble and easily damaged. A good big diaphragm pump should be mounted so that it's easily accessible; make sure that the intake and discharge lines have as few bends in them as possible, and for ease of pumping, install a handle two or three times larger than that provided. If your boat has only one pump, discretion dictates that you acquire a second. A simple solution is to bolt down a big diaphragm pump on a piece of %-inch plywood and attach to it two hoses long enough to reach overside from the bilge. Then stow it in the lazarette and hope to hell you never have to dig it out. Many diaphragm pumps are on the market and almost all of them are good. The only trouble is that many modern yacht builders install the minimum size. Whale Gusher 10, for instance, is an excellent pump, but is too small for many boats; the Gusher 25, or larger, would be better. Finally, I must say that I have worked with various pumps over the last twenty-five years and have come to the conclusion that the best largecapacity pump is the dear old Edson: it's reliable and extremely easy to disassemble. My hat goes off to the designers, builders, and suppliers of the Edson pump, who have literally saved my life a number of times. (You might also remember, as I think Ray Mullender wrote after a passage through
35
the Roaring Forties, that the world's most efficient bilge pump is a terrified man with a bucket.)
Engines, Fuel, and Fire Extinguishers Check your gasket kit and make sure everything is there that should be. I once opened my gasket kit after I'd taken the engine out of the boat only to discover that the essential oil seal, which cost about fourteen cents, was missing. What with telephone calls, cables, and lost mail, the missing oil seal cost me about $20 and two lost weeks. The same holds true of carburetor parts. It once took me two years to replace standard carburetor parts for an engine that is still being manufactured. Diesels are admittedly much more reliable than gasoline engines. However, when things do go wrong, you'll discover that the diesel-parts situation in the Islands can be excruciatingly poor. For a diesel, I'd strongly recommend bringing a complete set of gaskets, a couple of extra valves, some spare injectors, an injector pipe, and a spare starter motor. Other brands of alternators and generators can usually be adapted, but for a starter motor only the correct one will fit. The greatest problem with both gasoline and diesel fuel is dirt and water; be sure to have a large-capacity filter and plenty of extra filter elements, as they're very scarce in this area. Marine suppliers do have some, but never the type you need. If your engine needs overhauling, overhaul it. And in any regard, be sure to carry the most complete repair manual that the manufacturer prints-the real mechanic's repair manual, not just the owner's manual. These days there really isn't any reason to have a gasoline engine. With so many small diesels on the market, why deal with a potentially explosive bomb? Especially when so many insurance underwriters won't touch gasoline-powered boats with a ten-foot barge pole. Although diesel fuel will not explode, it certainly will burn, and a leaking injector spraying fuel on a hot exhaust manifold will cause a massive fire. For that reason I strongly advise installing an automatic Halon system in the engine room, with a remote pull in case the automatic part doesn't work. The size of the engine room must be carefully considered; I have seen more than one engine room that is much too big for the capacity of its automatic Halon system. An added incentive for installing an automatic fire extinguishing system is that the Lloyd's under-
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide writers whom I deal with, and many other underwriters, give a 5 percent reduction on hull premium for the installation of a built-in fire extinguishing system. The system will pay for itself in reduced insurance premiums in about three years.
Radios This is not the place for a full-bore discussion of marine radio equipment. It seems fair to say, though, that the single side band radios, formerly so expensive that they were only for fancy racing boats, are now reasonable enough that anyone making a long passage should think seriously about getting one. The new SSBs are all-band sets that will transmit and receive on the commercial frequencies as well as the ham bands. Given a really good ground, a properly tuned antenna, and a well-trained operator, an SSB will give you virtually transoceanic coverage. You can also call in to commercial radio systems and patch into the international telephone system. VHF radio, of course, provides only line-of-sight reception and transmission. It is very useful close inshore, and is particularly good in the northern Lesser Antilles because VI Radio, St. Thomas, has an antenna 1,900 feet up on Crown mountain and Saba Radio has one at 4,000 feet. The latter range reaches almost to Antigua. Both systems can connect you to the phone system so you can call worldwide if you can afford it. South of Antigua, the VHF is strictly short-range because there are no commercial systems with high antennas to patch you into the phone system. But VHF lets you talk to other yachts, marinas, and port captains' offices. Ham operators can work their magic with very small sets to talk worldwide. If you are so inclined (I go to sea to avoid telephones and radios, myself), you'll of course need a ham licence. It certainly can be useful for getting weather information. The Eastern Caribbean's maritime mobile net comes on at 0700 local time on 7.30 MHz. The UK maritime net comes on at 0700 and 1200 GMT on 14.303 MHz. A worldwide maritime net on 14.313 MHz is up virtually twenty-four hours a day. Weatherfax machines are becoming more and more common, less and less expensive. They can prOVide you with a lot of information but it won't do you much good if you can't interpret it. I have seen too many boats with stacks of weather and
temperature charts, and no one onboard who knows what to do with the information. For Maxi ocean racers or really large cruising yachts that can do 10 or 12 knots, the weatherfax is a great help, as it frequently allows them to get out of the way of bad frontal systems and lows, or to get on the correct side of an unfavorable wind. On the average 6-knot cruising boat, though, all the weatherfax tells you is that you are going to get your tail kicked in a day or so and that there is nothing much you can do about it.
Time Signals The old standby, of course, is WWV in Fort Collins, Colorado, which gives the time every minute and from the hour to 15 minutes after the hour gives the location, speed, and direction of all the lows (and hurricanes) worldwide. They broadcast on 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 MHz. But in the Caribbean and east of 25° west longitude, WWV is hard to receive. For that reason many navigators (this one included) tune into BBC shortwave. GMT
2000-0800 2300-0300 1800-0800 1800-0800 1800-2000
49 41 31 25 19
meter meter meter meter meter
band band band band band
6.195 mc 7.13 9.51 11.75 15.07
These signals can usually be picked up on any good transistor multiband portable.
Personal Gear No matter how little you bring with you, it will most likely be too much, whether you've come down on your own boat or flown in for a two-week charter. Suitcases, of course, are a particular nuisance on board. Admittedly, a few of the larger charter boats have stowage areas in the engine room, but these are the exception. Carry your gear in duffel bags and, if necessary, zippered hang-up bags for suits and dresses. You'll need very little clothing. Women should take a couple of fancy dresses, which they may not use but which they'll be relieved to have on hand should the occasion present itself. They should also take a couple of blouses, bathing suits, and slacks. Bell-bottom slacks are the most convenient, as they can be rolled up and kept dry when you step out of a dinghy into ankle-deep water. Simple,
Preparations cool dresses should be carried, and wrap-around skirts, since on many of the islands shorts and bikinis are not considered proper attire. A pareu or two-I V2 yards of brightly colored cotton clothwill be extremely useful, to be worn as a nightgown by night, a dress by day or night, and a skirt on the beach-with or without a bikini top as local custom and personal inclination dictate. I've known women visiting for two weeks of sailing in the Caribbean to arrive with the clothes they are wearing, a foul-weather jacket, and a handbag containing three pareus, four bikinis, a couple of shirts, spare bra and panties, and makeup kit. They had no problem with lost baggage or stowing their gear. Men should take a tie and jacket for the one or two places they'll need them. Otherwise, shorts and T-shirts are the staple items. Better still are old, slightly threadbare, long-sleeved cotton shirts. They're cool and provide the best protection from the sun. Pareus, once you get used to them, are just as useful for men as for women. (I wear one regularly, but sometimes think of Dr. Samuel Johnson's definition of a kilt: "A strange wraparound woolen garment worn by Scotsmen-an incomparable garment for defecation and fornication. ") It's a good idea to pack a pair of worn-out sneakers to wear in the shallows so that you don't have to worry about sea urchins. Light foul-weather gear and l' sweater for the evening will come in handy, as will an old pair of socks to protect the tops of your feet (and of your tiller hand) from sunburn. Seaboots and all that sort of heavy foulweather gear are not needed; rather, find a light, knee-length foul-weather coat with a hood. That way you'll have a dry tail when you sit down, yet not have to wear foul-weather trousers. Finally, if you're traveling to the Islands by air, be sure to carry a pair of shorts, bathing suit, shirt, and a change of socks and underwear in a small separate bag, hand-carried on board the plane. Then when your luggage is lost in transit (note that I say when, not ifl), you won't spend your first few days wandering about the tropics in a tweed suit. Electric shavers are of uncertain value in the area. In the Eastern Caribbean, for example, the 220-volt current that services most of the larger islands will burn out most plug-in shavers in a second or two. Battery-operated cordless shavers are probably the most convenient on board, until it comes time to recharge them. My only slightly biased advice is to grow a beard!
37
Most everyone will want to bring a camera. But film can be hard to come by, so it's a good idea to bring with you as much as you plan to use. Keep it dry, and if possible, cold; at any rate, keep it out of the sun. An underwater camera will be particularly valuable; be sure to use a red filter to counteract the bluish cast that's noticeable in so many underwater photographs. When you're transporting photographic equipment in a dinghy, keep it all in a watertight plastic bag. A waterproof camera should be well secured to your wrist or to a thwart. I once capsized a dinghy in breaking seas on the outer reef of the Tobago Cays. We lost a fine underwater camera and meter which would be ours today had I tied them down. Sunglasses, if you use them at all, are absolutely essential in the area. Bring extras, as they have a way of getting away from you when you need them most. Before you leave the States, drill two small holes in the bows of the glasses. Later a piece of sail thread can be knotted through the holes and passed around the back of your head to keep them from being knocked off your nose into the drink. You can also secure thin marline or waxed twine with a couple of tight rolling hitches around the earpieces. Finally, let me stress again the importance of protecting yourselffrom the sun. I've said it many times in these volumes, but it's worth repeating. Sun is the real bugaboo of Caribbean cruises. For anyone who spends a lot of time at sea, especially in the tropics, skin cancer is a definite problem. More so for blonds, but also for darker complected people. My advice is to load up with the highestnumber sun-block lotion available. If you're going to be snorkeling or windsurfing, Bulldog brand is advertised as being completely waterproof. In addition, I recommend cotton trousers and long-sleeved shirts for the sun-strong hours of your first week. Pajamas work fine and you can also wear them in the water. If not pajamas, at least wear a T-shirt when swimming-an hour or so of snorkeling makes even a well-tanned back look like boiled lobster. After experimenting with all types of headgear over the years, I've decided the best is the good old Tilley hat-as modeled on the cover of all Street's Guides to the Eastern Caribbean.
Fishing Equipment There is without doubt in various areas of the Caribbean fantastic big-time sport fishing, but that's
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide a book in itself and not really part of the Caribbean cruising scene. Trailing a line over the stern in the hope of catching yourself dinner, however, definitely is part of the Caribbean scene. Fishing practice from a sailboat varies from using some old frayed nylon line wrapped around a hook and tied onto heavy monofilament pitched off the stern of the boat to the fancy rods, reels, and fishing chairs sometimes found on the stern decks of the Stephens Yachts Gulfstar 50s. Believe it or not, on the former rig about twenty years ago in Current Hole, us Virgin Islands, lolaire caught a 7-foot, 63V2-pound sailfish. Not a very sporting proposition I'm sorry to say: we hitched the line around a winch and cranked it on in. Not having a gaff we tied a running bowline around its tail, put a snatch block in the backstay, and hoisted it up in the air, then killed it with a winch handle. We now usually fish by using heavy monofilament line tied to a wire leader, with various types of lures. The monofilament line is taken about 15 turns around the windward cockpit winch counterclockwise and then secured. This is done so that if a fish strikes, he gets 6 or 8 feet of line before it becomes taut and it also instantly tells you that you have a strike, since the ratchet starts clicking. As for what lure to use, the only thing to do is to talk to local fishermen in the area you're sailing, consult your horoscope, and roll a few dice-then pick a lure and pitch it over the stern. A gaff will help in boating the fish, but if you don't have a gaff, swing the fish clear of the water and over the lifeline in one smooth motion. Gloves are pretty much essential, as monofilament is tough on the hands and the wire leader will cut through the toughest calluses. Years ago myoid friend Marv Berning, who helped me salvage and rebuild lolaire in 1958, reported that from the Azores to Gibraltar and Gibraltar back to Barbados, he had averaged a fish every other day. Needless to say, I asked him the secret of his success. He very kindly supplied the following information, which will undoubtedly be of interest to those who like to fish: "Don't ask why, but the fish in the Caribbean seem to bite differently from the fish in the open Atlantic and Mediterranean. "Having no luck at all on the way to the Azores, I met there some French naval officers from Brittany serving on a visiting naval vessel who gave me a tip that was to change my luck completely. "Much to my surprise, their rig had no stainlesssteel or wire leader at all. It had a double barbless
hook, 21/2-3 inches long, with a few pieces of red leather seized to its upper end and attached to 30 or 40 feet of 40-pound test monofilament which ended in a swivel. Behind feathers was a 4-inch, pale-pink plastic squid. It should be noted that the hook trailed mostly clear from the pink plastic squid, the latter overlapping the hook only about 3/4 _ to I-inch (2-3 cm). The 30 to 40 feet of monofilament before the swivel is important to give undisturbed water ahead of the lure. From the swivel to the boat I use about an 80-pound test monofilament (80 to 120 feet), using the shorter length for the slow speeds and the longer length for higher speed, on the theory that there should be just enough flexibility to prevent its breaking when a fish bites but not have it too flexible so that the hook isn't set properly. No weights were used. "The best time of the day for fishing was the first few hours after sunrise. "This rig kept us amply supplied with big-eyed tunas, bonito, and dolphin for the rest of the trip to Gibraltar. "We've found that using a silver spoon (about three inches long) behind the pink squid worked very well too. "It was only as we neared Barbados on our return trip that we began losing our rigs-the fish were biting through the monofilament. "I believe that as you approach the Caribbean it is necessary to go back to the usual stainless-steel wire leader to prevent losing all your lures. "A silver spoon skipping along the surface seems to be very good for dolphin around the Barbados area, where flying fish are abundant. "Incidentally, our line is simply belayed to a cleat and the fish are pulled in by hand and heaved aboard into the cockpit." If you are towing a taffrail log or generator, forget about it; the only thing you will catch is the log or generator. A quote from another successful fisherman: "If you want to use a heavy fishing pole, it should be set in a rod holder in the stern pulpit, secured by a safety line with 300 or more yards of 6O-pound or more test line on the reel, a swivel secured to 5-8 feet of steel line with line and treble hook. A gaff is necessary if you don't want to lose a lot of fish. The drag is set just tight enough so that the line does not run out. The minute the fish bites, the drag is thrown off to allow the fish to actually swallow the bait, then the drag is reset and the fish is winched in. (You are going for food, not sport!) "Once the hook is set it is best that the boat be
Preparations left luffed and slowed down-this is sometimes a project when running downwind in a heavy trade with a big sea under the stern and two headsails swung out forward. A slow luff will back the weather headsail and stop the boat, but bearing off again may be difficult. Sometimes you have to kick the engine on to swing back downwind; each boat will be different. " Gill Frei of the famous 72-foot yawl Escapade insists that with the aid of a yellow feather he has caught dolphin (dorado in Spanish), good big ones at least every other day on all of his transatlantic passages. He trails two lines at once: one from a rod, the other a straight handline secured to a winch as we do on Iolaire. Unlike us, though, Gill catches plenty of fish and he swears by his yellow feather. You should keep your fishing gear handy, because if you become becalmed or are sailing slowly, a large dolphin may be attracted by the shade under the boat. This happened to us when we were becalmed, but by the time we got out the fishing gear, stowed in the bottom of the lazarette, we made so much noise banging around that the dorado was scared off. Warning: when fishing in the Caribbean north of Guadeloupe, consult the locals regarding fish poisoning; it is a problem, but only north of Guadeloupe.
Insects One great problem in any tropical area is cockroaches. If your boat remains in the Islands for any amount of time, sooner or later cockroaches will come on board and begin to breed and multiply. Cockroaches on board are not a sign of a filthy boat. The place I always find them in Iolaire, for instance, is in the winch-handle boxes-they love the grease on winch handles. It's possible to have a boat fumigated in the Islands, but it's an expensive and time-consuming procedure. A better bet is to buy a bottle of Diazon and an old-fashioned spray gun, follow the directions (the Diazun is mixed with water), spray all the dark and unventilated corners of the boat, especially the bilge, and you'll be rid of cockroaches-for a while. If you have a leaky boat you can simply pour some undiluted Diazon in the bilge water and let it slosh around. (This information was given to me by the former head of the Food and Drug Laboratory in Puerto Rico. He stated that most of the commercially sold sprays in
39
the Islands are more dangerous to the sprayer than to the bug.) The incubation of cockroach eggs is two weeks; even if you bomb the daylights out of your roaches, you'll have to do it again in two weeks to get the eggs that are then hatching out. If you use commercial sprays, switch brands occasionally. We have had good luck with so-called "roach hotels." At least they save YOll from the sprays. But you need a lot of them-for a 45-foot boat you should put out at least a dozen. Buy a bunch if you see them in a store and replace them every six to eight weeks. Another new weapon and apparently the best in the roach war is Combat, available direct from American Cyanamid 6, Consumer Products Group, Wayne, NJ 07470, USA; it's similar to a roach hotel but smaller. We regularly win many battles against roaches, but the war always goes on. Flying, biting insects are not too much of a problem except in the Bahamas, but always keep a can of insecticide aboard, as well as mosquito coils, which smolder like punk and are effective in keeping the mossies out of the cabin. Occasionally---due to poor garbage facilities at marinas-a rat comes aboard. Then you have a real problem. West Indian rats are usually too smart to fall for a trap or poison-and if one does eat poison it might die in an inaccessible place and the smell would drive you off the boat anyway. One possible solution is to place a Honda (or similar) portable generator below decks, and run the generator for four to five hours; pray thc exhaust fumes will kill it or at least make belowdecks so unattractive that it will abandon ship.
Medical Before taking off on any long-distance passage you should contact a sailing doctor and have him make up a really good medical kit, well stocked with antibiotics. Be sure to have him note what antibiotics should be used for what sickness. It is also essential that you have enough strong pain-killers aboard. Someone with a broken arm in the middle of the Atlantic, even if the arm's splinted and immobilized, should be kept full of pain-killers until a ship can be stopped and the patient transferred to better medical facilities. Normally, cruising yachtsmen in the Caribbean run into minor medical problems. Bad water, possibly fruit, possibly too many rum punches may bring "Montezuma's revenge" or "the Grenada
40
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
grunch." Lomotil is a great stopper-upper, without doubt the world's best, and no boat should be without it, though Lomotil doesn't cure the problem; the prescription drug Imodium is even better. Staph infection is rife, so any cut must be carefully cleaned and kept dry. Salt water is not a good healing medium for any cuts. For healing normal cuts it is hard to beat BNT ointment, Cicatrin powder, and pHisoHex-once staph infection starts it is very important to wash the area three and four times a day with fresh water and the pHisoHex. Hospitals in the Caribbean vary drastically. Some are excellent, others are so bad that the most dangerous thing you could do is to spend a night in one. Betsy Hist Holman's book Sitting Duck tells a horror story of a public hospital on St. Vincent. The situation was a disaster until she discovered there was an excellent private hospital on the island. Most of the islands have a private hospital, and generally they're better than the public ones. Most of the doctors in the Islands are very well trained, but some, admittedly, have forgotten much of what they learned in medical school. The best method of finding a good doctor is to call one of the hotels, talk to the manager, explain the situation, and ask him to recommend or contact a doctor for you. If you're in an out-of-the-way anchorage with a medical problem, get on the radio and start calling. Usually among the charter-boat parties you'll find a doctor who will be able to give you advice in person or over the radio. Make sure your medical kit has a good dental kit so that if anyone has a bad toothache you have the material to pack the tooth and minimize the pain. Before making a long passage it is well worthwhile to make sure every member of the crew has a careful dental check-up before departure. One final word: there are all sorts of native West Indian medicinal herbs and remedies; telling of them would make a book in itself. One such remedy, however, which should be seriously kept in mind, is aloe, a sap squeezed from the Oat cactus plant locally called "pingwing." It is without a doubt one of the finest burn remedies in the world. Liberal application of aloe saved my wife from being badly scarred as a result of an oven explosion (ashore, not on the boat). The same balm works wonders in taking the burn out of sunburn. Aloe plants grow wild all over the Islands; ask a native to get some for you. Slice off the outside; the jelly
that pours out should be applied directly to the skin.
Water Safety Much has been written in travel brochures and adventure stories of the dangers of swimming in tropical waters. Perhaps because the sharks, barracudas, and eels have not read the same literature they're not aware of how dangerous they are. Fact is, by observing a few simple procedures you are probably safer swimming in the Lesser Antilles than you are crossing Forty-second Street in New York City. Here are the fundamentals:
1. Don't swim at night; the greatest number of shark attacks take place after sundown. 2. Don't swim from the boat way offshore. Sharks near inshore reefs are well fed and not particularly hungry. The ones a few miles off may be hungry and dangerous. 3. Don't swim wearing bright-calored clothes. Leave necklaces, rings, watches, and bracelets on board the boat. 4. When speamshing, keep a dinghy nearby. As soon as you spear a fish, put it in the dinghy. A bleeding or Outtering fish will attract a shark in a hurry. Should this happen, leave the fish to the shark as an appetizer. He'll eat it up and usually go away. (The same applies to barracuda, which are always curious, seldom aggressive.) Most of the firsthand accounts of shark attacks are told by experienced spear fishermen. If you question them closely, nine times out of ten they'll admit to having taken chances in an area they knew to be dangerous, say, continuing to swim long after injured fish left in the water began making their distinctive distress cry (a sort of clicking noise). The moray eel is a nasty, mean-spirited customer who hides out in coral caves and holes. Unless sharply provoked, he will seldom attack. But don't go sticking a hand or foot into dark holes in a reef without taking a damn good look first. If you see a lobster and an eel in the same opening, you are advised to leave the lobster alone, for the eel may take offense at the intrusion. There are four other swimming dangers that present a more common threat than shark, barracuda, or eel. These are: (1) severe sunburn on the
Preparations shoulders, back, or legs; (2) sea urchins (they do go right through the sole of a swim fin); (3) being swept away by the current; and (4) getting run down by an outboard. The last becomes a greater problem every year as more and more yachts come into the area tendered by absurdly high-speed launches. There must be something of the fly-boy mentality in these launch operators who, even when their yachts are moored only a few hundred yards offshore, feel impelled to make the trip at nothing less than full speed, and woe betide the poor swimmer in between. I know of one person who was killed in this way, and m sure there have been others. Don't add to the statistics. If there are people joy-riding with high-speed outboards, stay close to your own boat or row ashore and swim off the beach. No matter where you are, check the current before diving over the side. There are times when there's no way to swim against it. If you're going
r
on a snorkeling expedition, determine the set of the tide. Don't go when it's running to leeward, and in a strong tide don't swim downstream of the dinghy. In the Grenadines especially, the tides can run very swiftly, and even a strong swimmer with fins will not be able to make way against them. And last, as tempting as they may look, do not eat the crab apples on the beach. They are manchineel and deadly poisonous. Windsurfing keeps getting more and more popular everywhere. In the Eastern Caribbean, remember, the wind is almost always from the east; many anchorages are open to the west, and many's the skipper who has looked up to discover one of his crew members three miles downwind on a windsurfer, completely exhausted and unable to beat to windward back to the boat. More than one person has gone to sailors' Valhalla this way. My best advice is to always stay to windward of your boat.
3
Charts The harbor charts that illustrate this Guide by and large have been directly reproduced from ImrayIolaire charts or from US, BA, French, Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, and German charts. (The latter are the best of the Cape Verde Islands, based on pre- World War I surveys. Were they made for German raiders, perhaps?) If you find a difference between a government chart and the Harbor Chart in this book, I feel sure the Harbor Chart will be more accurate. But you should be very careful because there's a lot of harbor bUilding and renovating going on, particularly in the Atlantic island groups-breakwaters, marinas, dredging, new lights, beacons, and buoys are being added at a great rate everywhere. Keep your eyes peeled. Where we don't have re/iable charts to work from for harbor illustrations we have provided Sketch Charts, which are so marked. They are based on the best information we can obtain, sometimes from a topographical map, sometimes a road map, sometimes just by pacing off a breakwater and guessing at its length. In any case, they are not precise, and are to be used with extreme caution. Finally, and most important, DO NOT ENTER STRANGE HARBORS AT NIGHT OR UNDER BAD CONDITIONS. Throughout the Islands lights are notorious for their unreliability, and many buoys have been moved or lighted differently or have gone adrift and not been replaced. Be careful. Charts are always a problem for the cruising yachtsman. In one sense they are as vital as any piece of equipment on board, yet they can never be relied on absolutely. So you must always use careful judgment, balancing common sense and
alert observation against the printed word. In my thirty-three years in the Caribbean I have used and studied most of the two hundred-odd charts~American (NOAA, DMA), British Admiralty (BA), French, Dutch, Venezuelan-that cover the area. While most of the US and BA charts are 98 percent accurate, I found many problems. Often the scale is too large to be much help to yachtsmen. Many charts are based on ancient surveys. The size of the charts vary and some are awkwardly large for a yacht's navigation space. Often an area is split up the wrong way-one US chart cuts Virgin Gorda in half, for instance, and several US and BA charts break up St. Vincent and the Grenadines area in odd splits that make them difficult for cruising use. Finally, and most frustrating of all, the correction services for most government charts vary from inefficient to nonexistent. Throughout the Caribbean and the Atlantic island groups harbor facilities and navigation aids are constantly being changed~ither by development projects or through natural forces such as hurricanes and wave action. Island administrations fail to report changes to chart makers; or if they do, the charts are not updated for years. The chart correction service for US charts is extremely poor. Notices to Mariners are published, but are not placed on the chart until it is republished. For many areas frequented by yachtsmen the charts are only occasionally reprinted. Be sure you look at the lower-left-hand corner of the chart for its edition and original issue date. Remember that no corrections have been logged on that chart since that date unless you have done it yourself. 42
Charts The BA correction service is much better. Not only is a notice to mariners published, but British chart agents, like Kelvin Hughes, log in the corrections on existing charts right up to the date the chart is sold. The trouble is, though, that the BA can't correct charts of foreign waters until they have been officially informed of changes by the hydrographic office of the country concerned. (Normally, unofficial reports from yachtsmen don't count. It took me ten years to convince the BA that I was a reliable source of such information.) One example of such communication failure nearly cost me Iolaire. In 1985 she left St. Barts bound for Bermuda with just me and the mate aboard. At sunset we saw a light in the Anguilla area. The light was not marked on the chart, and we had heard nothing about a light being established there, but knowing how narrow the channel is between Anguilla and Scrub Island, I assumed the light was on the end of Scrub. (My friend Hank Strauss says: "On a yacht you can never assume anything, unless you see an aircraft carrier going up the channel ahead of you-then you can assume there is enough water for you." He's right.) When the light came abeam, I went below to catch some sleep, but no sooner had I turned in than the mate yelled, "Quick, come on deck. The light has gone out-land ahead!" I rushed on deck and we hardened and just cleared the breakers at the eastern end of Scrub, picking up a lobster pot enroute. I couldn't figure out what was going on, when suddenly the light came on again. Turns out it was On the end of Anguilla, not Scrub. Later that year I talked to the British Admiralty, and they knew nothing of the light. A barrage of letters went back and forth between the Admiralty and me and the Anguillan harbor master. Finally, more than a year later, the harbor authority admitted they had established the light on the end of Anguilla-in December of 1984! Such are the difficulties of keeping charts up to date. In an effort to solve some of these chart problems, I signed a contract in 1981 with Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson, usually known simply as Imray. They have been making charts since 1670, so they know what they are doing. Originally all charts were privately printed. It was not until the early nineteenth century that the British and American hydrographic offices bought up the rights to various private chart organizations and began to make their own charts. Today Imray and Stanford Maritime Ltd., are the only two companies completely redrawing and redesigning charts. Other
43 chart publishers merely photostat government charts. The Imray-Iolaire charts are the only charts in the western hemisphere that have been specifically designed, redrawn, and rescaled by and for yachtsmen. Frequently we have altered the boundaries of charts; we do not cut Virgin Gorda Sound and Bequia in half, and you don't need a magnifying glass to find the Tobago Cays. We have corrected them by personal exploration, frequently consulting unpublished government surveys, and added information supplied to me by experienced yachtsmen. Ranges (transits to the British) are regularly shown on the charts, plus navigational warnings, and tide and current information; we have also inserted various harbor plans on the margins of the charts rather than issuing separate charts. All charts are the same size: 25" X 35ljz" (25" X 18" if folded once-a handy size to fit on a chart table). The result is that the entire Eastern Caribbean -from Mona Island to Trinidad plus the Venezuelan coast and offshore islands as far west as Arubais covered by forty-three Imray-Iolaire charts. They are up to date and much more accurate than the two hundred US, French, British, and Dutch charts they replace. This, of course, is a marked saving to the yachtsman in both space and money. Imray-Iolaire charts are corrected not only through Notices to Mariners, but also by information sent in by myself and experienced yachting friends. Twice a year our agents receive a booklet containing all corrections that have been made to the charts in the previous six months. By obtaining copies of those booklets, the yachtsman may keep his own charts completely up to date. There is no such thing as an absolutely accurate chart, but we believe the Imray-Iolaire (11) charts are the most accurate available today to yachtsmen for inshore navigation. We know they are more accurate and useful than the various government charts. In fact, they have become so much the standard that the US Coast Guard uses them in preference to the NOAA and DMA charts. Furthermore, the British naval officers setting up Coast Guard outfits in the lower Caribbean now use II charts rather than the BA charts. Nevertheless, the problems of updating them remain. In Venezuela, for instance, thanks to Rear Admiral Justo Pastor Fernandez Marquez, Venezuelan Navy (retired), I visited the hydrographic office in Caracas. There Captain Eddy G. Mendez Perez and I spent the better part of the day going over their charts and discussing problems. I made
44
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
the amazing discovery that the Venezuelan Department of Communications and Works, which is in charge of rebuilding harbors and also granting permission for building marinas, is basically not on speaking terms with the hydrographic office. They forward no information on new harbors, breakwaters, marinas, etc., to the chart makers! Thus the Venezuelan, US, and BA charts are completely out of date regarding new construction. Luckily, the 11 charts will have much of this information, but only because of the information supplied to me by friends in the marine construction business who have kept me up-to-date on all new marinas, harbors, breakwaters, etc., that have been built. Therefore, we make an urgent request to all who read this Guide to report to Imray not only errors they discover on 11, DMA, NOAA, or BA charts, but also any new developments they come across during their cruising. Only in this way can the charts be kept accurate. The address: Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Wych House St. Ives Huntingdon Cambridgeshire PE 17 4BT ENGLAND As for the Atlantic island groups, there are no Imray-Iolaire charts yet, so you'll have to use existing government charts, which generally are OK. In the Azores, Canaries, and Madeira, the DMA or BA general charts are adequate and are completely backed up by the harbor charts in this volume. For serious cruising in the Canaries, you should also have some Spanish charts for areas not covered in enough detail elsewhere. See page 49 and 134 for a list of these useful Spanish charts. For the Cape Verdes, the US or BA charts are adequate, but I would advise obtaining, if you can, Portuguese charts (see page 178 for list); read carefully the Cape Verdes section in this Guide, especially page 182, because the Baixo de Joao Valente reef is misplaced on many charts. With luck, by 1989 all the Atlantic island groups will be covered by 11 charts, which will be helpful, since finding the Spanish and Portuguese charts can be difficult, to say the least. Incidentally, my boasts about Imray-Iolaire charts are not simply an effort to sell them. They were designed specifically for the cruising yachtsman, and I really feel the 11 charts are better for the yachtman's purpose. But if you cannot find them
or want to go with the government charts you already have, by all means do so. As I say, they may not be as handy as the 11 charts, but they are generally reliable. After all this talk about charts, let me point out that as important as charts are for knowing where you are and what to look out for, you can nevertheless pilot yourself through most of the Lesser Antilles and the Atlantic groups with no more than common sense and a good pair of eyes. This is possible because of the extreme clarity of the water, which reveals the nature of the bottom merely by its calor. (Remember that, except in extreme sea conditions, the only thing a seaman really has to fear is land that is closer to him than the bottom of his keel.) A practiced eye can gauge the depth of water with great accuracy. (This is not true in the Cape Verde Islands after a rare rainy spell, because the water can be muddy and the visibility nil for months after rain.) It takes a bit of on-the-job training-and perhaps a few bumpsbut eventually your eye will become an infallible guide, superior to either chart or depth meter. This applies, however, only when the sun is highthat is, between roughly 0900 and 1500 hours. It's also much better if the sun is behind you. With the sun low and in front of you, the glare and reflection will make it difficult or impossible to see down far enough to gauge depth accurately. This is especially important if you're lying in a reef-bound harbor on the eastern side of any island. Don't leave until about 1100, because with the sun low in the east (the direction you're trying to sail), it will be virtually impossible to spot shoal dangers until it's too late. Similarly, when running into an obstructed harbor on the eastern side of any island, don't enter after 1500 or else the lowering sun will be in your eyes and the reefs will be impossible to read. So be foresighted and plan your days' sailing so that you always negotiate harbors with the correct light; in some cases it means a late-morning start, in other cases an early afternoon arrival. I said that the eye is better than a depth gauge and I mean it. In most places in the Eastern Caribbean, the bottom rises so steeply that if you're studying the depth gauge instead of the water ahead, you'll be hard aground before the meter shows any change. There are two exceptions to this rule. One is in Venezuelan waters, where the color of the water is absolutely no indication of the depth. Because of the influence of wind, current, and river outflows, Venezuela's coastal waters are almost impossible to eyeball, except in some of
Charts the off-island areas. The second instance in which your eyes need help is when the sky and light conditions change. Then it's useful to test your visual recordings of the water with a depth meter or lead line until you've adjusted to the new conditions. In any case, polarized sunglasses are well worth the investment, as they accentuate the difference in color and make reefs and shoals stand out in bold relief. In general, dark-blue water is deep. As the bottom shoals, the water becomes a lighter blue, turning greenish as the 2-fathom line is approached. Once you are in green water, you must exercise caution: depending on the shade of green, you'll have from 2 fathoms to 1 fathom below you. At about 1 fathom and shallower, the water becomes almost white and crystal clear. Coral always shows up as brown. If you must enter an area that has coral, use extreme care to pilot yourself between the coral heads. This may well mean sending someone to the spreaders to get a better perspective, and remember, coral literally grows. In any area that shows scattered coral on the chart, I recommend that you subtract roughly 3 to 6 feet from the given chart depth. Areas of grass show up as dark patches. Avoid anchoring in these spots as it's difficult to get the anchor to hold. The most important thing to remember about pilotage in the Lesser Antilles is that you must not try it at night. If you're making a long passage, it will of course be necessary to sail at night; but landfalls should be in daylight unless you're entering one of the main ports that is well lit. Even then, remember that the buoyage and light systems in the Islands are unreliable in the extreme. In short, and most emphatically, I repeat that anyone who tries to enter harbors in this area at night is simply asking for trouble.
Chart Suppliers UNITED KINGDOM
Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Wych House St. Ives Huntingdon Cambridgeshire PE17 4BT Tel.: St. Ives, 048062114 C harts available: BA, II
4S
Hydrographic Office Taunton, Somerset TAl 20N Charts available: BA Kelvin H ughes 145 Minones London WC3N INH
Charts available: BA, 11, US O. M. Watts 19 Albemarle Street London
Charts available: BA, 11
UNITED STATES
National Ocean Survey (NOS) Distribution Division Riverdale, MD 20840 (US and territorial waters) Charts available: US (NOS) Defense Mapping Agency (DMA) Topographic Center Attn: DPCP 6500 Brookslane Washington, DC 20315 (International waters) Charts available: US (DMA) Weems and Plath 222 Severn Avenue Annapolis, MD 21403-2569 Tel.: (301) 263-6700; Telex: 87-933 CPLATHUSA Charts available: 11 New York Nautical Instruments & Services Corp. 140 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 Tel.: (212) 962-4522 Charts available: BA, French, 11, US Hagstrom Map Store 57 West 43rd Street New York, NY 10036 Tel.: (212) 398-1222
Charts available: 11, US
EASTERN CARIBBEAN
Virtually every island has at least one store that distributes Imray-Iolaire charts.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide VENEZUELA
SPAIN
Comandancia General de la Marina Direccion de Hidrografia y Navegacion Caracas Charts available: Venezuelan Shore Base Pampatar Isla Margarita
Instituto Hidrografico de la Marina Tolosa Latour no. 1 Cadiz Charts available: Spanish
II
PORTUGAL
Instituto Hidrografico Rua das Trinas 49 Lisboa 2 Charts available: Portuguese NETHERLANDS
FRANCE
Service Hydrographie et Oceangraphie de la Marine BR 426-29275 Brest Cedet Charts available: French
Dienst der Hydrografie Koninklijke Marine PO Box 90740 2509 LS's Gravenhage Charts available: Dutch
Charts
47
Cha,ts ot Madel,a, the Salvage, and the Cana,y Islands 51260 51261 51262 51263
~orLsanto
51261
51341
51262
~adeira
Func~ 51263
"
51342
~
51343 51380
Canary Islands (Western Group) Madeira Archipelago Bay of Porto Santo (Madeira Archipelago) Bay of Funchal and Praia Formosa (Plan of Funchal) Ports in the Canary Islands Plans A. Santa Cruz ,Tenerife) 8. Puertos de Arrectfe, Naos and Los Marmoles (Lanzarote) C. La Isleta (Gran Canaria) D. Puerto de La Luz (Gran Canaria) E. Santa Cruz (Palma) Salvage Islands Plans A. Selvagem Pequena and IIheu de Foro 8. Selvagem Grande Approaches to Puerto del Rosario (Plan of Puerto del Rosario) Eastern Canary Islands
33"
32"
31'
Setvagem
Grande
I
~Salvage Islands
~elvagem Pequena
51380
I
30'
51342
()
Lanzarot~
V
29"
Arrecife
51260
D51J~
()stcruz
Palma St Cruz
o
O
Tenerife
PIO de:a
Gomera
~Hierro 17'
18'
Fuerteventura
Luz
28'
Gran Canaria
15'
US Charts of Madeira, and the Salvage and Canary Islands
14"
13'
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide 1869 1870 1856
t>.1Porto Santo
1831
Palma, Hierro, Gomera Tenerife, Gran Canaria Western Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote Plans of Santa Cruz (Palma), Puerto de la Luz (Gran Canaria), Puerto de la Cruz Santa Cruz (Tenerife) Bocayna Straight, Puerto Naos, and Arrecife Entire Canaries and Salvage Islands
1857 1886 1229
33'
~adeira
Fun~
32'
1229
31'
Selvagem 3651 Grand'l--,
~ salv1age Islands
~Ivagem
30'
Pequena
L--_ _ _ _-I
1870 ()
~n
1869
f~1
~StCruz
•• ,ot.
29'
Arrecife
)
_~ jPalma
v
~(StCruz
00
~ Pt, de la Luz
OI1\
Gomera
Gran
flue".v. . u,"
28'
~ Canaria
~Hierro
of
17'
18'
15'
14'
British Admiralty (BA) Charts of Madeira, and the Salvage and Canary Islands
13'
18·
15·
16°
17°
14·
13·
The Spanish charts covering the Canaries are: 204, 205, 206, 207, 210, 218, 219, 220, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 519, 520, 5020, 5030, 5040, 5060, 5061, 5080, 5081, 5130, 5131, 5132, 5140, 5170, 5190, 5200, 5670, 9791 (42 in all). The area covered by each is indicated in the accompanying outline-index chart. Spanish charts are necessary only to someone who really wants to explore. Those necessary are 502, 5020,5030,515, and 516.
H31·
Selvagem G rande
SALVAGE ISLANDS
0
CJ Selvagem Pequena
H30°
200
(J
E
291
;t Go
51\)9PALMA I
Sta Cruz de la Palma
207
205 '516
Gomera{'"',
Iq]0
517
~aii
I
Los
28°
seb~stiiln Cristianos
514 d. I. ,,,'"
Hierro
510
Morocco
4:0-
(CJ
27
Spanish Charts of the Canary Islands
50
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
O~
a Trto
11
1 02
ll.
a elra ~d I
l
San
The Portuguese charts covering Madeira and the Salvage Islands are: 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157. See the accompanying outline-Index chart.
to
33'
103
104
Funchal_ _-+~., L--_
32'
31'
Selvage105 m
1 157 ~ Salvage Islands [!J ., 1156 I
Gran~e:l
30'
Selvagem '--- Pequena
100
()
~n>a"'t.
W~ife o
~Slcruz
V
29'
Palma SI Cruz
O
Tenerife
o
Fuerteventura
PIOde la Luz
Gornera
28'
Gran Canaria
Morocco
17"
18'
Portuguese Charts of Madeira and the Salvage Islands
15'
14'
13'
,
BA366 P0I1201
11ii
SA,TO ANTAO
i I
I
( ; ] , aBA369 do Sol Port252
~8rt ~o 1B~~70
Terrafal BA369
r------------------I, GlA389 Port 2081I
264
0
I
I
!
S.vl CENT
....1.\.01--88-'T-A-L-U-Z""'1
I
US51500
~
,
:
Pa',!"eoria Port269
'Port 205 I L:----------------------Br .•~co ~
~
I
:'
: Pedra de Lumel IBA389 I SAL Port281 I US51520 I I S!a Mana II Pon280
I I. ~orileora
, 8.0..389
If : I
17'
I
i
I
II
'I
I ' r-~------------------J----,
II
II
I'
,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,
I
I
I
:I~II I Sal· Rei • I I
I
I t
IBA389 .. Pon262
------- J.o.A VISTA I
La!. 16' N.
I
I
I
i
it
I
I I
~~500
I I . IL_~:+: Bao Joao Valente
i I
US"~I
I -----+1 I
SANTlAG~--e
I
1
I
a " a ~ ; rt.~UMpOlSteoros ~BA369~'""" ~271
~a;3tI6ago
I
le'
I
PO.rt201 BA366 26"
I BRA '0, I '''' VA r;m, ",..,
.
2 '
•
_
~}"
'00
'
\
_.
.'O~
.
•
'OGO
.,," BA36' Port 267
-.
-.
--:-
I I
I
I
I
MAlO
t-----I I I1
"0 .~'0'"••' BA36.
US51540
,_
. US, BA, and Portuguese Charts of the Cape Verde Islands
I
I Port 209 J
____________________ _
I ,___
(J ;:-."
-2 3
I
I
-~
1I
US.E.!520
15'
CI1 <
....
7"
71"
72"
70"
18"
IS"
&7"
&e'
65'
M'
63'
.,"
e2'
10'
IS'
19'
25600
25640
SANTO DOMINGO
~
Vlfgin Islands
E.astern MOfla Pils5i1ge
PUERTO RICO
"'"
"
25609
"Cl
..&1AngUllla
.0
18'
0'
E?~5575 nClguCl
17
17'
nghsh Hr
25570
~
25563
GUADAL~U~ I
'~
w.
'" SEA
CARIBBEAN
'G.~
0 :'"e-G.I.n,e
' 116'
l>
~
....c.n
Cl)
~
V>
DOMINICA
15
'0" de
(1)
"~
~
Castrles
~
~
.:;
l
13"
24470
l
5"
'
Klngstown
~
;:!
'"
\:) 14'
T LUCIA
m 548
Ir-=J25484 OrT VINCENT
~
",,'
~
MARTlNIOUE
~
s
14"
....
11
1
BARBADOS
13'
~
!}
....;:lc:)'
C"')
a""
..""
CJ ~
12'
U" ~ La Orchlll.a
11"
11'
C
La i ortug
10'
VENEZUELA
244401
10'
L44,SUI
9"
9'
73'
72"
11'
US Charts of the Eastern Caribbean
70'
69'
18'
67 '
66'
65'
M'
63'
,
;:l
~
62'
61'
60"
~
71'
12'
7-:",°
118'
70'
...
'7'
IS'
M'
.,.
IZ'
U'
eo'
,.
19-
1
SANTO DOMINGO PUERTO RICO
e'
lB
472
[!\Ba'bUda
Ci 51
3408
ChnSl0Ph.'~ 487
11"
r-I2064 eVls
~n1lgua
7"
Engtlsh Hr
Mon1serrat ~
~
'f}. '!,
16"
~
CARIBBEAN_ _ SEA
IF', I
(,955
,"
~
'"
r----===-------!u,s·
15.
1
14'
-t:J
114'
~
~
(j
~
;:t
~
'"
1966 ,~
13'
13"
cuJ~21
12"
~BONAIRE I de Aves
1~ld .. lo~ Roqut:s
~a·
'1480
12"
bla Blanqu.lla
~ La Orchill.a
Gulf of Venezuela Cumarebo
".
1529
""
b
la Tortuga
la Gua.ra Cabf!Uo
10'
Caracas
10"
VENEZUELA
9'
9"
73'
72'
71'
70"
69"
British Admiralty (BA) Charts of the Eastern Caribbean
68
67'
66"
65 "
64"
63'
12"
""
50"
~
1032
The Antilles, San Juan to Trinidad
3423 Guadeloupe 3125 From Ponte de la Grande Vigie to La Pointe 3419 4519 2872 3375 3129 3172 3418 3422
des ChAteaux From Pointe-a-Pitre to Marie-Galante Port of Guadeloupe Entrance to anchorages of Pointe-a-Pitre From 8asse-Terre to Pointe-a-Pitre lies des Saintes Anchorage of 8asse-Terre to Riviere des Peres at Pointe du Vieux Fort From Pointe du Vieux Fort to Pointe Allegre From Pointe Ferry to Pointe de la Grange Vigie
3367 Grand Cul-de-Sac Marin, east part 3287 Grand-Cul-de-Sac Marin, west part 3128 Marie-Galante 383
386 5930 384
389 390 385 391 5916 5906
I
Martinique Northern Martinique St. Pierre Eastern Martinique La Trinite Harbour Robert and Franr;ois Harbors Southern Martinique Le Cul-de-Sac Marin Port-
\Jt -I:>.
MARTINIQUE t/)
....
J367
~ (':l
.....
",'
~
~
'"= .... 0::.
3125
GUADELOUPE
S"
.......=
~
~
n
~ ~
s· o .: §:
'JQ
3419
384 3423
385 385
French Charts of Martinique and Guadeloupe
72'
71'
17'
18'
70'
M'
16'
13'
M'
'2'
'"
19'
A
1 General Eastern Caribbean Chart
A2,
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
,.
~
A3
o
tlo
'Ill do Mon.
11
(J)
'1"
m
:n
G:.:AVe5 I.
15
CARIBBEAN D
B
SEA
(j
A
~
I:l
a
14'
13'
13'
--
r-~--Bpnair~._ II
"
' I CU!..8!i!.o___ J 0232
12'
I
~ ___
I.de Aves
_
.' ~ D 2 '
0231
Islas los Roques
~ ~
rxL!I
12'
B lanquilla
~'D14
D22
La Guaira
•
Caracas
10'
B
..
Charts in preparatIOn (1989) 72'
71'
70'
I
'
88"
Imray-Iolaire (11) Charts of the Eastern Caribbean
17'
61'
'5'
M'
13'
12'
11'
10'
~
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
56 IMRAY-IOLAIRE (11) CHARTS
This is the most recent list of II charts covering the Eastern Caribbean. Detailed charts show each area of the Eastern Caribbean in blow-up useful to the yachtsman. I
Eastern Caribbean General Chart
A
Lesser Antilles-Puerto Rico to Martinique
Puerto Al All AI2 Al3 Al4 A131
Rico Puerto Rico West Coast of Puerto Rico South Coast of Puerto Rico Southeast Coast of Puerto Rico Northeast Coast of Puerto Rico Isla de Culebra; Isla de Vieques
Virgin Islands A23 Virgin Islands, with inset o[St. Croix A231 Virgin Islands-St. Thomas to Virgin Gorda A232 Virgin Islands-Tortola to Anegada Leeward Islands A2 Puerto Rico to Anguilla (in preparation) A3 Anguilla to Guadeloupe A24 Anguilla, St. Martin, and St. Barthelemy A25 St. Eustatius, St. Christopher (St. Kitts) and Nevis A26 Barbuda-Southwest Coast A27 Antigua A271 North Coast of Antigua A28 Guadeloupe A281 Guadeloupe-Iles des Saintes; West Coast of Marie-Galante
Windward Islands A29 Dominica A30 Martinique A30l East Coast of Martinique A4 Guadeloupe to St. Lucia B Lesser Antilles-Martinique to Trinidad Bl St. Lucia B2 Barbados B3 The Grenadines-St. Vincent to Grenada B30 St. Vincent to Mustique B31 Bequia to Carriacou B32 Carriacou to Grenada B311 Middle Grenadines-Canouan to Carriacou B4 Tobago B5 Martinique to Tobago and Barhados (in preparation) Venezuela D Venezuela-Trinidad to Curac;ao Dl Grenada to Trinidad and Carenero D2 Carenero to Aruba Trinidad to Carupano Dll Dl2 Carupano to Cumana and Isla de Margarita Dl3 Is la de Margarita to Carenero Dl31 Puerto Mochima to Morro del Barcelona Islas 105 Testigos; Isla la Tortuga; La Blanquilla D14 D21 Carenero to Tucacas D22 lsla los Roques; Isla de Aves D23 Bonaire, Curac;ao, and Aruba D231 Bonaire and Aruba (in preparation) D232 Curac;ao (in preparation)
Charl8 of the Azores 51041
51081
Flores and Corvo (P'lans: A. Port of Lajes; B. Port of Santa Cruz) 51061 Faial, Graciosa, Terceira, Pico, and Sao Jorge 51062 Plans in the Azores (Plans: A. Angra do Heroismo; B. Santa Cruz; C. Canal do Faial; D. Praia do Vitoria)
51082
Sao Miguel and Santa Maria (Loran-C) (Plans: A. Vila Franca do Compa; B. Vila do Porto) Porto de Ponta Delgada, Archipelago Dos Cores
--\40' 51041
Corv(»,'i'W ·...J"Ponta Negra
Ponta do Alba'"('N Santa CrUl
.... '::/ Flores
.'*' Graciosa·~,
51061
AZORES
39'
".'o,~h. . ~,~O,g:·"·'A:r.'C.i' .
51081
:~··.~.osa.s
"'';I~~ ~~~r:~:1:-It; .~~~ >/-0
...... :PootadoTopo ...
onteodas
n ;:::!"'
•
0::.
2-
Pico- '.
Banco
dOI~:~or;/ () S.Miguel
<":-::.: .:::: C.:
38·
··:.~*~Arnel
Ponla Delgada.~*....",J.·
i!'-:, Vilado
P~~i~.~santa Maria
37·
... ·Gone.lo Velho
31·
30·
29·
28·
27"
28·
26·
c.n.
'..t
US Charts of the Azores
1946 1855
3224
Corvo, Elores (Plans of Vii Nova, Punto de Santa Cruz, and Punta das Lajes) Faial, Pico, Gracioso, western half of Terceira Terceira (Plans of Santa Cruz, Vila da Praia, Folga, Porto de Angra do Heroismo, and Bai de Praia de Vitoria)
1854 1856
1940
San Miguel (Plans of Porto de Ponto Delgada and Porto de Capelas Santa Marta, Isla Formigas Porto de Herta, Canal de Faial
'8,
1950
j40' 1946
Corvo;"
............
Ponta Negra
I :.
I
Ponlo dOAlbGrn.,zo·~ Santa CrU2
I
Cl:! .....
'.. ....• Flares I
~
~
......
.. . 13224 ~
Graclosa'-~
AZO R ES
39"
~
v'leFor~:.~8~.:L '~rgl,:;;~1·+· I ."
....
~o,"'I> .... 1940
...
I
I
~
;:s
'"l::l.....
S"
.........;:s
'~. Hertsmo ' .......Cont.ndas . ...... 'PontadoTopo
Pica ..
'"
~
(')
Cl
3224
"'\
<:::>
~
S·
Banco dos A~ore.f
~
r8:~~~~+e,
381
~
I .... .. .. . . '"
~
Ponta Delgada~ ...... ..,.".,J.. :
..
1865
/ " , Santa Maria
Vila do
31'
30·
British Admiralty (BA) Charts of the Azores
29'
28·
27·
26'
pci~io~:GOnCaIO velh!
I
.
25·
...CJ
I
H3]"
Portuguese charts covering the Azores are: 107, 108, 109,110,111,112,113,114,115,160,161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 168, 169, 170, 172, 174, 176, 177, 178, 180, 181, 182, 183, 186, 187, 188.
f40'
le orv0t!!J .' I ...... 188 Ponta dOAlbarnefrai:Sta Cruz
;"
. 186
I
...... ' Flores
115
I
187
~j4 175
-, 176
,"
109
AZORES
Graciosa ..... •
':'__
~~IS
1131
39'
I.
Merre) ...............
178~. ·· ....$:Jorgel g.Tercelr8 Vale formoso~' .". 180. . . . .. .".. ....... I~erlsmo AnQra d ...... ··tiintendas .'72 I . .... . FaI8.l. .. 184
y..o~
183
..... ~
~
IC0181
~
I
177 ....... :PontadoTopo 170
p ..... '"
~
>:l
~
112
114
Banco dos Ayor~.~ ......
S.Miguel ~167 163 .....::
38
··:it.~~·Arne
Pon!a
Delg·ad~~.. . '.
=...•
160 "165
16
111
(':
166
r;:l
Ld
168
. . . l~··'. Santa Mini8
Vila do Porta .I I 167 ' .. '., :Gonealo Velha
lOB
L..1J.Q1
37'
J
General Area Chart 107 ~
31 '
Portuguese Charts of the Azores
30'
29'
28'
27'
28"
25"
\0
4
Getting There From Europe
south from the East Coast of the United States to the Islands. There is no easy answer. If you leave northern Europe in early September or late August, you will arrive in the Madeira, Salvage, and Canary Islands area in mid-Septemher-much too early for a safe transatlantic crossing, since August, September, and October are still hurricane months. Although by the end of October the hurricane danger is largely past, you shouldn't count on the likelihood of a decent passage before late November or early December, when the trades have settled down to their winter reliability. In the Lesser Antilles the "Christmas winds" herald the departure of fall variables and lead to the winter trades. These Christmas winds come in strong and steady, but arrive any time from midNovember till early or mid-January. Even when the Christmas winds do blow in, they caT) be a false herald. They might blow hard for a few weeks, die out for a few days' calm, then come in again. As each month goes by the trades become more and more settled, to the point that May, June, and July can he the best sailing months in tbe Lesser Antilles. When it blows in these months, it blows a steady 12 to 14 knots all day long with no calm whatsoever, whereas in winter it will blow hard, 20 to 25 knots, for several days, then drop off to a light 6 to 8 knots for a few days before building up again. A late March to early April calm has arrived every year without fail for the last thirty years that I have been in the Eastern Caribbean. No one can explain why, but it arrives and knocks down windy April's average wind velocity to less than that of May, June, and July. With few exceptions, the fastest transatlantic
In the late I950s the number of yachts crossing the Atlantic was a trickle; by the sixties it became a stream, which increased during the seventies. Now it's a veritable flood. In both directions, sailboats of all descriptions make tbe trip, mostly between Europe and the Caribbean. (In 1986 there was a cruising-boat race from the Canaries to Barbados that drew 208 entries. My guess is that 600 yachts crossed the Atlantic in 1986.) What was once a great adventure has become statistically routine. But a transatlantic passage is not routine. Improved equipment and navigational gear may have made the trip easier and safer, but you can still get in a lot of trouble. There are just as many big waves and strong winds out there as ever, and the water is just as deep. The voyage is no less a major undertaking in terms of planning and logistics-and the sea is as tough an adversary as it ever was for the unprepared, the unwary, and the incompetent. The time you leave, the route you sail, the stops you make, your rig, crew, and gear are all important factors in planning a transatlantic voyage, and it can be a fatal mistake to slight anyone of them. A sealed Clorox bottle dropped overboard in the Canaries will eventually get to the Caribbeanand some of the boats that make it across fit that description pretty well. But you'll have a much better, faster, and safer trip if you pay attention to details and make adequate preparations. This book is intended to help you do that-read Chapter 2, "Preparations," carefully! Timing problems plague the sailor who wants to cross tbe Atlantic westward to the Lesser Antilles, just as they plague him when he decides to head 60
Getting There crossings have been made in late April, May, June, and early July, while many slow forty-five to sixtyday passages were made in late October, November, and early December. It's possible for a yacht beginning a cruise in Europe to cross the Atlantic, cruise the Islands, and sail home again all in about eighteen weeks. This is best accomplished by leaving in early April, putting the average 40-footer in Barbados by the end of the first week in May. If seven weeks are spent cruising north through the Islands, the first of July would find you in St. Thomas. From St. Thomas to Bermuda is a five- to six-day trip; from Bermuda back to the Azores is another ten to fifteen days, and from the Azores to Europe takes about seven days. All of which places you home in mid-August, having enjoyed a glorious four-and-ahalf-month summer holiday. However, most European sailors like to spend the summer cruising in Europe and then head out to the Islands for the winter; thus, the majority of transatlantic passages are made in the late fall, even though that's not necessarily the optimum time to cross. Circumstances may decide the time of year you sail from Europe to the Islands, but the route you sail is entirely up to you. There are several options. Racing yachts regularly beat to windward across the northern Atlantic in the OST AR races, but that is a separate subject. To cruise to North America via the northern route seems crazy to me. But if you're determined, have a tough boat that is good to windward, and a crew of masochists, then by all means try it. I advise you to sail from the English Channel to Ireland and then wait in one of the harbors on the south coast until you get a break in the weather. Then take ofl'for st. John's, Newfoundland, 1,700 miles away. Stay well north of the great circle track so as to keep above the lows that march steadily across the Atlantic from west to east; when the lows go by to the south, you may get gale winds, but they should be favorable. How far north you can go depends on how far south the icebergs and growlers get, and that varies dramatically. From St. John's, Newfoundland, you work your way down the east coast of Canada to the States in short jumps-still beating against the prevailing southwest wind, but enjoying some splendid cruising grounds along the way. Some yachtsmen sail down to the Azores from England or northern Europe and then head west to the US East Coast. They almost always end up beating to windward most of the way. One excep-
tion was Kay, a 53-foot S & S yawl now called Legend, which knocked off 1,200 miles in six days and made the voyage to New York in fifteen days, for an average of 7.2 knots. (Rod and Olin Stephens, the designers of the boat, refused to believe it until they checked out the rough deck log and reworked the positions.) At the other extreme was the experience of Westertill, a 52-foot yawl, which sailed from Horta in the Azores to the East Coast and ran into a series of westerly gales; when she arrived in the States the insurance company decided the cost of repairing all the heavy-weather damage was so great that they wrote her ofi' as a total loss. In my very firm opinion, and that of many other yachtsmen, the best route to the Caribbean or even to the East Coast of the United States is the old trade wind route, pioneered by Columbus in 1491. Down to Madeira, on to the Canaries, and then across to the Islands or to the States via Bermuda. Now, in light of my 1985 transatlantic cruise in Iolaire, I would recommend embellishing that route with an additional leg south to the Cape Verde Islands, which will provide an interesting new cruising ground while almost guaranteeing you trade wind conditions when you jump across for the Americas. In the following pages I'll discuss getting to Madeira or the Canaries from northern Europe and then sailing to the Caribbean. The next chapter contains new and detailed sailing and cruising directions for Madeira and the three other island groups in the eastern Atlantic: the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verdes. Also, be sure to read Chapter 2, Preparations, before you make any solid plans.
Getting to Madeira The first real problem is getting across the Bay of Biscay. Over the years I have listened to innumerable horror stories about the difficulties of crossing the Bay of Biscay, rounding the corner of Spain, and reaching Madeira and the Canaries. The northern European sailor usually leaves the Baltic during the autumn, works his way down the North Sea, and makes final preparations in The Solent for the jump across the Bay of Biscay. Similarly, the majority of English yachtsmen prepare for their jump across the Atlantic from The Solent, some stopping at Plymouth to make good deficiencies in gear discovered while beating down the Channel. The normal routine from Plymouth is to head
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Westward Across the Atlantic
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Getting There west to clear U shant, then stand south across the Bay of Biscay. Usually it's a tough fight to work the boat far enough to the west to clear Ushant, and often when rounding that island a southwesterly gale springs up, driving you into the Bay of Biscay. All the old seamanship manuals warned the merchant seamen never to become embayed-that is, caught between two points of land, with the prevailing wind driving the vessel farther and farther into the bay on a lee shore. This is still excellent advice, of course, and applies particularly to crossing the Bay of Biscay: in the autumn, gales come piling into the bay with alarming frequency. On leaving Plymouth, rather than trying to clear Ushant you should work your way down the Cornish coast where harbors are plentiful, at least as far as Falmouth; here you make a decision. If a favorable weather report gives you a good chance of crossing the Bay of Biscay before the next southwest gale comes in, it is best to jump south immediately to Point A, 480 miles southwest magnetic (see the Weather Chart) and to clear Ushant by about 50 miles. The normal routine is to try to cross the Bay of Biscay before the September equinoctial gales. The latter two weeks of August and the beginning of September is the time favored. However, in 1986, August was the wrong time to cross the bay because three bad gales, on the tail end of Hurricane Charlie, swept through the area. Then, during September, one high after another Hoated across the Atlantic, keeping all the lows well to the
north. One could have crossed the Bay of Biscay in an open boat. To avoid having to deal with this craps hoot, and especially if the wind is southwest when you're ready to leave England, I strongly recommend heading across to Ireland instead of sailing directly south. This might seem to be the wrong direction, i.e., north, but the course is basically northwest. You're getting your westing in. You have two excellent choices on Ireland's south coast: Kinsale and Cork. In bad weather r d advise going into Kinsale, because there's an excellent RDF on the Old Head, and only a buoy off Cork. Kinsale is completely sheltered in all weather, has a marina, and a clean yard where you can scrub and paint the bottom before heading south. In fine weather, though, Cork is a lovely place to go. In Crosshaven is the ever-hospitable Royal Cork Yacht Club, the oldest yacht club in the world, founded in 1720. Crosshaven also boasts a new boat yard, Castle Point Boat yard Ltd., started by Paddy Lake and a few of his very experienced shipwright friends. For many years Paddy Lake was senior shipwright at Crosshaven Boatyard, the builders of all the Moondusters, Sir Frances Chichester's Gypsy Moth, and other famous boats. Their speciality is wood but they are also experienced with fiberglass; because of his strong history in the boatbuilding business, Paddy is able to arrange subcontracting on stainless work, engines, electrics, electronics, etc. Crosshaven also boasts good pubs and bus ser-
Westward Across the Atlantic
NORTHERN ROUTE Since you are not racing, Falmouth to Crookhaven (220 miles), Crookhaven to Newfoundland (1,670 miles, course 245 true, probably dead beat to windward all the way), coastwise from Newfoundland to desired US port via St. Pierre, Bras d'Or lakes (no fog), Halifax, Boston-keep all runs short, can play the weather and enjoy life. MIDDLE ROUTE (1) Crookhaven to Azores: 1, lOO miles, course 219; Azores to Newfoundland: 1,200 miles, course 324, since the course is so far north, with luck there should be a lot of close-reaching; then coastwise as for northern route. VIA BERMUDA (2) Crookhaven to the Azores: 1,100 miles, course 219; Azores to Bermuda, course is roughly due west, 1,820 miles, but that course traverses the Azo~es high where little or no wind can be found. North of the high, you will run into the prevailing southwesterlies, and if not beating dead to windward, you will be hard on the wind. Bermuda to the East Coast of the United States: various mileages varying from 400 miles to Virginia Capes to 700 miles to New York and points east. Boats should not head to points of the United States south of the Chesapeake Capes from Bermuda, as doing so you would be bucking the Gulf Stream most of the way. CROOK HAVEN TO THE AZORES (3) 1,100 miles, 219 magnetic. Azores to New York: 2,600 miles, pretty much dead to windward, normally a very long hard slog; the exception, in 1956 a 53-foot yawl, /(ay, did this run in fifteen days, one hour (see page 61 for further details).-but this is the exception rather than the rule.
64
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
vice to Cork, only minutes away. In Drake's Pool, upstream from Crosshaven, a boat can be stored in the water, completely sheltered. You can take the dinghy upstream to Carrigaline and load stores directly into the dinghy, or you can take the good bus service to Carrigaline. West of Kinsale, on the southern Irish coast, are a number of other good harbors. I'm prejudiced toward Glandore, since my wife's cottage is across the street from the Marine Hotel, which happens to be one of the best pubs in southern Ireland. A hundred yards up the road is the Glandore Inn, with a perfect view of the rowing and sailboat races that take place afternoons and evenings and during the Glandore Regatta, a most entertaining event held on the third Sunday of August every year. In fact, August is a great month to cruise the south coast of Ireland, since every weekend the local villages have regattas with rowing and sailing races. The rowing races are well worth watching: four-oared gigs, a smaller version of the famous Scilly Isles pilot gigs, race with great enthusiasm. Castletownsend has a beautiful sheltered harbor; if you're anchored above the sand spit, a hurricane could blow but you'd lie in perfect comfort. Skibbereen, only three miles away, offers most of the necessary food supplies to stock a boat for the trip to Madeira, the Canaries, and points beyond. (I should mention that the one hundredpound sack of potatoes we bought here in Ireland in October was still healthy in Antigua at the end of January.) West of Castletownsend there is shelter at Schull, which has the added advantage of having a fish factor with a deep freeze where ice is available. There are nice places to visit, but I'm not suggesting you go all the way to Ireland simply for the pleasant cruising and excellent pubs. The great advantage of going there from Falmouth is that you'll be well to the west, and will be able to steer about south-southwest to Point B, 500 miles away, and clear Finisterre by 240 miles (see the map, "Routes from Europe to Madeira and the Canaries"). If you wait in Ireland until a front passes through and the wind goes west and veers into the northwest, you have a fairly good chance of getting across the Bay of Biscay before the next gale sets in. If a gale does arrive and you've had a few days of decent weather, you should be completely off soundings in over 2,000 fathoms of water-a course southwest from Cape Clear leads off sounding in only 60 miles of sailing. This is significant, because one reason for the roughness of the Bay of Biscay is the bay's relative shallowness: the Atlantic swells,
coming on soundings, hump up to greater and greater heights. With 300 miles of sea room, you are obviously in a better position even if you catch a gale. (We saw this phenomenon when leaving Ireland on lolairc's 1975 transatlantic. We left Glandore, and headed southwest to get off the continental shelf as fast as possible; within hours we could see and feel the difference in swell. Similarly, coming from the Azores to Ireland in 1985 we knew within hours that we had come on soundings because of the difference in swell.) Once across the Bay of Biscay, YOll have to make an important decision: Do you stop on the SpanishPortuguese coast or do you continue to Madeira? In 1975, on lolaire, we continued south with the glorious Portuguese trades behind us until we were about 100 miles south of Lisbon, when suddenly the wind switched around to the south and either blew like mad or died out completely. The wind was basically southwesterly, but it always seemed to be on the nose whichever way we tacked. We finally arrived in Madeira fourteen days out, feeling very sorry for ourselves. We were even more discouraged to find that had we stopped in Spain or northern Portugal for a few days, the weather pattern would have switched back to normal; indeed, boats four or five days behind us enjoyed consistent Portuguese trades right into Madeira. Many boats coming across the Bay of Biscay duck into La Coruna, an excellent harbor with a friendly yacht club. There is one big disadvantage in La Coruna though: it is east of Finisterre. With the prevailing southwest wind, plus the frequency of westerly gales, you might get stuck in La Coruna while waiting for a break in the weather to allow YOll to get around Finisterre and then south. Better to make your landfall south of Finisterre, explore the rias (the Spanish equivalent of Norwegian fjords) south of Finisterre, then go on to Vigo. I feel Vigo is an essential stop for any boat heading for Madeira, the Canaries, or the Cape Verdes and on across, as it is a large city with good shopping facilities and is probably your last stop with a superb boat yard: Astelleros Lagos. The yard was started by Senor Lagos in 1916 and has been inherited by his three sons, Alfredo, Juan, and Nico; between them they probably speak six or seven languages and all have various skills. It's hard to believe that such a tiny, scruffylooking yard as theirs can have a worldwide reputation and do such wonderful work. The answer is subcontracting and the competence of the Lagos brothers. Their yard has excellent carpenters and repairmen who can do basic engine and electrics
Getting There work; for everything else-from machine work to sail repairing-the Lagos brothers know exactly where to go in the city of Vi go, which is the biggest fishing port in Spain. They can do practically any job for any yacht of any size, either in their own yard or elsewhere, and they personally supervise the work. I walked in one day with two winch handles I wanted cut and joined together to get a little more leverage on I olaire' s winches. I gave them the winch handles, showed them a sketch, made of few phone calls, went across the street for a couple of beers, walked back, and the job was donehaving just been delivered from a machine shop down the street. And then the Lagos brothers will tell you exactly where to find the best buys on wine, food, and staples. In addition, Alfredo, who looks like a friendly Galician pirate, is Vigo / Bayona Port captain for the Ocean Cruising Club and is the most hospitable and knowledgeable fellow you can imagine. He also has a fine maritime libary at home. This stop has become even more attractive as there is now a lOO-berth marina at the yacht club in the city of Vigo. Exact details I don't have, but looking at the plan it appears the marina would accommodate the normal yacht, i.e., anything 60 feet or less. Those are some of my reasons for recommending a stop in Vigo / Bayona. When you leave the coast of Spain or Portugal, you dream of finding the Portuguese trades to blow you down into the northeast trades, which will then take you across the ocean. It can happen, if you're lucky, and if you go at the right time. The Portuguese trades, which blow from the north, are strongest near the coast and begin in late May and continue through early September, getting more erratic as autumn approaches. The northeast trades are their farthest north in late Mayor June. So if you leave Europe in latc April you can luck out and, with a quick stop for refueling and restoring in either Madeira or the Canaries, then sail on almost a great circle course in the trades all the way to the Islands. A 40- to 50-foot boat could do it from England to Antigua in thirty days at that time of year. There's no doubt about it, if you want a fast passage to the Islands, late April or early May is the time to leave northern Europe. (Because of the danger of hurricanes, though, be sure to plan your passage so you'll arrive in the Caribbean by early July at the latest.) Still, every route and every time is fraught with uncertainty. Everyone has heard about the Azores
high, for example, and its effect on where the trade winds are: but equally important is the Sahara low. If it's not there, the trades won't blow. That happened in the autumn of 1985, when there was virtually no wind in the area as the Sahara low became a high (see the Weather Chart). The matter of what course to sail across the pond from the Canaries is hotly debated. Basically, you want to find the trades; usually in November or December you have to go south almost to the Cape Verdes before turning west. One basic rule is to sail south until little puflball clouds of the trade winds begin to appear; then you start to swing west. Another rule: if the barometer rises, head farther south, even if you have wind at the moment. A rising barometer means the Azores high is heading south, which will kill the wind you have. We had an interesting situation in the fall of 1985. As previously mentioned, the Sahara low had become a Sahara high, and what should have been a four-and-a-half-day trip from the Canaries to the Cape Verdes took the engineless Iolaire seven days. We then spent ten days cruising the Cape Verdes, by which time the trades had filled in; we were blown across to Antigua in fourteen days and a few hours. So we had twenty-one days at sea plus a nice cruise in the Cape Verdes. Now, most of the boats that left the Canaries when we did powered southwest, impatiently looking for the trades. In that frustrating process, they used up their fuel and arrived in Antigua after twenty-one to twenty-five days at sea. If these boats with engines had powered on our southerly course to the Cape Verdes, they could have arrived there in five days, topped up food and fuel, taken off, and still reached Antigua faster than they did sailing direct! A few yachts did not go looking for the trades that year but sailed a direct great-circle course from the Canaries to Antigua, and they turned in respectable times of eighteen to twenty days. But as far as I can determine, they were light-displacement, ocean racing boats with crews willing and able to play with the spinnaker for days on end. Thus even in light air they could knock off 150 miles on days when regular cruising boats would be logging 80 to 90 miles. In these times, with so many boats going transatlantic and especially with all the light-displacement sleds, maxis, and multihulls, it's hard to keep track of fast passages. Back in 1956, for instance, in the heavy displacement ketch Arabella, we did 2,156 miles in 11 V2 days; if we hadn't turned north to Bermuda, we would have made Antigua in 14 to
66
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
A 240 Nautical Miles East of Finisterre B 450 Nautical Miles SW (Magnetic) of Falmouth
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Getting There
15 days, which would have been some kind of record. Then in 1979 Peter Bowker navigated the maxi Mistress QUickly from the Canaries to Barbados in 11 days, 17 hours. In the early 70s Eric Taberlay took the trimaran Pen Duick from the Canaries to Martinique in 10 days, 12 hours-an average speed of 10.57 knots, or 252.8 miles per day! In general, though, it'll take a minimum of 16 days for a good-sized, heavy boat to go from the Canaries to the Islands (we did it in 14 days, 17 hours, aboard Joe Huggins' 54-foot heavy displacement ketch Lone Star in 1984). From the Cape Verdes, fast boats in the 45-foot to 50-foot range should take 12 to 15 days; lolaire did it in a little over 14 days in 1985, but the Swiss sloop Antinea, Jean-Marie Vidal, owner, made it from the Cape Verdes to Barbados in 11 days, 2 hours. What kind of voyage should you expect? Iolaire's passages in 1975 and 1985 are examples. In late November of 1975 we left the Canaries under
reefed main and staysail; once clear of the islands, we swung off' to a southwesterly course, doused the main, set the roller-furling staysail on the spinnaker pole, and surged off at 7Yz to 8 knots under staysail only before a 30- to 40-knot northeaster. After a day and a half of this, the wind moderated and we set a light reaching staysail on the other side to the other spinnaker pole. As the days went by the wind moderated more. We rolled up one staysail and attached its pole to the medium genoa. The wind moderated more, but was still northeast, and we sheeted the large genoa out to the end of the mainboom, replacing the light reaching staysail; the wind was 12 to 15 knots. Then we added the mizzen staysail and we chugged along, averaging a little over 160 miles a day for nine days, seeing only the occasional whitecap. The wind picked up for a few days, swung around to the southwest, and suddenly died out almost completely. Then it came back in from southwest and we found ourselves beating hard to
Routes from Europe to Madeira and the Canaries SOUTHERN ROUTE: Falmouth or Crookhaven to Finisterre (525 miles), head southeast to get off Soundings, and once off the Continental Shelf head south for Finisterre. FINISTERRE I MADEIRA: South from Finisterre to the latitude of Cape SI. Vincent (400 miles), hopefully being booted along by the Portuguese trades (April to mid-September) thence southeast 400 miles to Madeira. with a strong possibility of favorable winds from Finisterre to Madeira. MADEIRA TO TENERIFE: 170 true distance 250 miles, should be a fast broad reach. CANARY ISLANDS TO EASTERN CARIBBEAN: Great Circle course, 2,560 miles. 264 magnetic. not an advisable course except in the months of April. May. June. and early July or by racing boats with racing crews willing to set spinnaker and forget light airs. NORMAL TRADITIONAL ROUTE: Course southwest until latitude 20 or whenever you feel YOII have reached the tradewinds, then course a little south of west to latitude of desired landfall, then course roughly due west, sailing distance about 2.900 to 2.950 miles. THE LOGICAL ROUTE: Canary Islands to Cape Verdes: 850 miles, course 216 magnetic. should he a downwind sleigh ride. CAPE VERDE ISLANDS TO LESSER ANTILLES I EASTERN CARIBBEAN: Course west magnetic, 2,200 miles, should be a fast run all the way. Combined mileage from Canaries to Cape Verdes to the Islands is very little more than the normal sailing distance. plus you have a welcome break in the Cape Verdes and a chance to take 011 fuel. water, and fresh stores and buy cheap lobster! This to me is the ahsolute logical route.
Crookhaven to Madeira. Course: 1980 true. Distance: 1172 miles. Falmouth to Madeira. Course: 211 0 true. Distance: 1185 miles. Southampton to Madeira. Course: 2180 true. Distance: 1282 miles. Madeira to Tenerife. Canary Islands. Course: 1700 true. Distance: 253 miles. Gibraltar to Madeira. Course: 254 0 true. Distance: 603 miles. Gibraltar to Tenerife, Canary Islands. Course: 233 0 true. Distance: 703 miles.
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- - --........ ,.,....,-D.c. __ tr-* West from the Canaries and Cape Verdes Canary Islands to Antigua. Course: 264° magnetic. Distance: 2,560 miles. Canary Islands to Barbados. Course: 258° magnetic. Distance: 2,558 miles. Canary Islands to Cape Verde Islands. Course: 216° magnetic. Distance: 811 miles. Cape Verde Islands to Barbados. Course: 268° magnetic. Distance: 2,020 miles.
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~ Source: Yachting World magazine, December 1986
Getting There
69
CANARIES TO ANTIGUA 1956
Arabella May
45-foot heavy displacement ketch-did 2,156 miles in 111/. days, 187 miles per day, turned north 6SO miles (about 3 1/2 days) out of Antigua. If we had continued, a IS-day record would still stand today-we never broke 200 miles per day but had 7 days of between 195- and 199-milesper-day runs. ISO (18 hrs), 120, 160-average 197 next 8Y. days, then turned north.
1975
Iolaire late November-early December
44-foot heavy displacement yawl-168, 169, 166, ISO, 164, 160, 149, 163, 158, 162, 154, 168, 123, 162, 175, 149, 141, 150, 122. Total: 2,956; average speed: 6.5, average day's run: 156. 19 days.
1984
Lone Star June & July
54-foot heavy displacement ketch. 95, 170, 174, 184, 178, 186, 188, 191, 180, 189, 200, 200, 201, 182, 180 (note-last day's run was only twenty hours, had it been twenty-four, would have had another 200-mile day). Total distance: 2,699 miles; average speed: 7.6; average day's run: 181 miles. 14 days, 4 hours.
CAPE VERDES TO BARBADOS: 1948
Iolaire January
(then a gaff-rigged cutter) 141, 145, 162, 112, 113, 138, 155, 159, 157, 166, ISO, 177, 180, 177. 153 112 miles per day. 14 days, 6 hours plus 6 days, 12 hours Canaries to Cape Verdes. Total, Canaries to Barbados: 20 days, 12 hours.
1984
Antinea December
48-foot medium displacement cutter--exact day's runs not known but total 11 days, 2 hours, 193 miles per day. Plus 6 days Canaries to Cape Verdes. Total, Canaries to Barbados: 17 days, 2 hours.
1985
Iolaire December
(aged 80!) 44-foot heavy displacement yawl. 68, 150, 155, 167, 162, ISO, 170, 141, 159, 182, 105, 169, 162, 40 (150 miles per day). 14 days, 4 hours plus 7 days, 4 hours Canaries to Cape Verdes. Total, Canaries to Antigua: 21 days, 8 hours.
windward on the port tack, rail down under normal working canvas and unable to lay west. The wind died again, and came in light and dead aft, so we set the light spinnaker. After about eighteen hours the wind began to increase. We doused the spinnaker, switched to twin genoas, and slowly reversed the process of sail changing we had experienced on the other side of the Atlantic until we were back down to the roller-furling staysail alone on one pole, running before a 40-knot easterly. We were at hull speed when we made landfall in Desirade, a small island off the east coast of Guadeloupe, eighteen days out of the Canaries. Our 1985 passage wasn't standard either. We left the Cape Verdes in early December and once we were clear of the wind shadow of Santo Antao (5,000 feet high) we should have headed southsouthwest from St. Vincent for 30 to 40 miles before we turned west. The wind came in strong, not out of the east or northeast as expected but from due north. It stayed there for two and a half days, putting us on a close reach with the wind slightly fOlward of the beam. The wind then started shifting aft; no. 2 genoa was set on a pole to windward, and the large genoa hoisted to leeward,
sheeted to the end of the main boom. We sailed on for a number of days until the wind went farther aft to dead east. With the mainsail doused we continued poor man's twins (see page 20 for this rig) still knocking off 155 to 165 miles per day. Twice, however, the wind dropped off to the extent that to pick up speed we doused the no. 2 and set the spinnaker with the no. 1; a couple of times it blew up enough so we had to douse the no. 1, jibe the no. 2 over to the end of the main boom, and set the roller-genoa staysail on the pole, which maintained hull speed but under substantially reduced sail. Each time the wind eased off, necessitating a change back to poor man's twins or to the spinnaker plus the no. 1. One lesson to be learned from these passages is that few generalizations can be made about "normal" trade-wind conditions. Sometimes you think you've reached the trades, only to have them die out a day or two later. The small percentage of westerlies indicated by the pilot charts can turn into one to three days of nasty windward work. Some years, boats haven't found the trades at all. So look for a pleasant downward passage, but be ready for anything.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Slow passages are often recorded for the simple reason that all too many people have read inflated stories about "consistent 25- to 30-knot" trade winds and rig accordingly. For many years, most transatlantic passages were made under twin headsails or twin jibs rigged to the helm for selfsteering, but these never gave enough sail area for the 12- to 15-knot blows that are more common. Now, with the advent of really efficient self-steering gear, boats are posting better times under mainsail and genoa, with the genoa sheeted to a spinnaker pole. Some even have set spinnakers under self-steering. But there are still those that come across under the traditional high-cut twins, whatever the strength of the seasonal winds, and who inevitably complain of rolling both rails under all the way and making poor time to boot. My preferred rig for going downwind-the poor man's twins-improves the traditional paring. It provides the sail area necessary for speed and it keeps the center of effort low. It also requires a minimum of re-rigging in preparation for the trip. Nevertheless, some alterations of your boat's rig and gear will probably be necessary. A boat tried and tested in northern waters is not properly equipped for a happy, fast and comfortable tradewind passage. See Chapter 2, "Preparations" (pp. 18-22), for details of the poor man's twins and other ideas about proper transatlantic and Caribbean cruising arrangements that will make your voyage a pleasure instead of a pain. Incidentally, one of the excitements of transatlantic passages is sighting other vessels en route. These days it is not uncommon to see other yachts, and in fact there have been a couple of near collisions between yachts that were sailing happily along on self-steering gear and not keeping a good lookout. On Iolaire, four days west of the Cape Verde Islands, I came on deck one morning to see a spinnaker on the horizon. After a while the boat overtook us and turned out to be a Swan 65, Victoria of Strathearn. She was kind enough to radio messages to our families in England and Ireland. But my point is that, as we learned later, Victoria had been overtaking Iolaire within sighting distance for five hours before anyone on board saw us. Even more dramatic was the time Joel Dressel was sailing the famous schooner America replica on a beam reach somewhere in the Atlantic, churning along at 13 or 14 knots. He spotted a maxi yacht ahead of him, sailing without a spinnaker. Who on a maxi thinks about being overtaken by
another yacht? So Joel chased the maxi for three hours, and was within 100 yards astern before someone coming out of the hatch finally saw America for the first time. What a surprise! Joel's joke was spoiled, though-he had hoped to poke his bowsprit over the maxi's transom and ask for a beer. So don't forget the first rule of watchkeepingkeep a watch. In summary, remember that the hardest part of the transatlantic voyage is from northern Europe to Madeira or the Canaries. After that you're likely to have decent, or at least warm, weather. I recommend you go to Ireland en route to get your westing in and thus avoid the terrors of Biscay. I also think it's wise to stop on the Iberian west coast along the way. There is a lot of good cruising to be done among the island groups of the eastern Atlantic, and in Chapter 5 I've done my best to tempt you to stop awhile in one or more of them. I'm particularly keen on the benefits of extending your route south to include the Cape Verdes. If your boat is equipped to sail in light air, you should be able to cruise from the Canaries to the Caribbean-approximately 2,700 to 2,900 miles, depending on whether you sail the shorter great circle, or swing south to pick up the more dependable trades-not too far below hull speed. That should figure at about the square root of the waterline. A big solid propeller will reduce hull speed to about 80 percent of that figure; if, in addition, your boat is a dog in light air-load stores for a long trip. (All the more reason to stop at the Cape Verdes: you can restock and then it's only 2,100 miles to go.)
From Africa While sailing through the Lesser Antilles you will encounter many South African yachts and yachtsmen, and on reflection, it's hardly suprising. From Cape town to the Caribbean is one of the easiest offshore cruises imaginable. Out of Capetown the next port is St. Helena, 1,700 miles and downwind all the way. From there it is 700 miles to Ascension, a good part of it downwind, although the doldrums must be traversed as well. From Ascension to Grenada is 3,300 miles, with the trades and a good strong current behind you. (The anchorages in Ascension and St. Helena are bad in the extreme, although it's reported that the hospitality ashore more than makes up for that.)
Getting There I'm told you can leave Cape town any month of the year, but December through April are the best months to leave to avoid the spring gales around Cape town and the fall hurricane in the Islands. I've noted that many South Africans make their first long offshore passage a transatlantic one, and frequently they learn their celestial navigation en route. Some don't learn it well enough and miss St. Helena and Ascension. They finally run into shoal water off the South American coast and feel their way northwestward to Grenada-thank God for channel 16 and friendly merchant shipsl Incidentally, and unfortunately, South Africans are not allowed ashore on many of the islands in the Eastern Caribbean. I would recommend yachtsmen to make their landfall in Martinique and there ascertain what islands they are allowed to visit. Trinidad is not a good landfall when coming from southern waters. Offshore oil rigs are being installed off the east coast, and unbuoyed Darien Rock lingers 22 miles offshore under 1V4 fathoms. Fifteen miles north of this rock, Emerald shoal (at 3 fathoms) breaks in heavy weather and is also unmarked. The east coast is low, poorly lit, and generally hard to spot. Boats coming from the south favor a landfall on the high well-lit island of Tobago, entering at Scarborough. Tobago is a beautiful, unspoiled island, which is often just too hard to reach from the rest of the Lesser Antilles. When approaching Tobago from the southeast or when pa~sing between Tobago and Trinidad, watch out for Drew and Wasp shoals, as there is considerably less water over them than shown: divers claim that at low-water springs in May, June, and July, there is only 8 feet over Wasp shoal-a far cry from what the chart shows.
From the US East Coast In the days of the coasting trade between New England, Nova Scotia, and the Caribbean, the old sailing directions to the Islands were simple; "Head east-so'east until the butter melts, then head south, and when you spot an island, find yourself a fisherman and ask him which island you're looking at." It worked well enough as long as you spotted one of the high islands instead of barreling into lowlying Anegada, Anguilla, or Barbuda. In the nineteenth century, high loss of life at sea was a New England method of population control. Now every autumn more and more American yachts head south to the Eastern Caribbean. Most
of them aim for St. Thomas, which is probably the most advantageous landfall for a yacht intending to continue on into the Islands. San Juan, although a commodious harbor, is simply too far to leeward. And a landfall any farther east than St. Thomas is risky indeed; just check the number of wrecks on Anegada, Anguilla, and Barbuda. Besides, in St. Thomas you'll find every sort of supply and repair facility. It's also a free port, so luxury items are relatively cheap: it's a great place to buy yourself a new camera, watch, or spot of scotch whiskey. Since summer cruising is good in the eastern part of the United States, most people plan their Antilles cruise for the winter. But coming down in the fall poses a problem. If you leave in September, when the weather is good up north, you may run into a West Indian hurricane. Wait too long and you get caught in the Atlantic's winter storms or get iced in before you leave. A check of the dates of the hurricanes over the past years and a check of the pilot charts will show that early November is about the best month to come down. In December north of the Thirtieth Parallel you're bound to have a lot of cold weather, and the frequency of gales is 22 percent. South of Hatteras the percentage is 13, and toward St. Thomas the percentage is still 12. In three sectors northwest of Bermuda the December percentages run 7, 10, and 15. During the month of November, however, the percentages are between 5 and 7 for the Hatteras area south, while northwest of Bermuda they run 6, 9, and 12. Despite the outside possibility of a late-season hurricane, I prefer early November or the last week in October because, with a good long-range weather forecast, your chances of making the trip without getting caught in a gale are good. I will not risk an encounter with a December gale. A yacht in warm waters may weather a 45 to 50-knot gale with no particular difficulty, but when a frigid northwester comes through and the temperature drops to freezing or below, crew efficiency will not merely deteriorate, it may disappear entirely. Survival becomes more a factor of pure luck than good seamanship. Trying to reef sails or repair rigging from a sleet-covered deck in three layers of clothing when your mittens are crusted with rime is as dangerous and unpleasant a situation as I can think of. There are three distinct types of storms that you can encounter on your way south to the Islands. Foremost is the true tropical hurricane, although these seldom occur after late October or early November. If one should happen to develop, the
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
.. -.
... --
Common track October hurricanes
Track/ollowed by late-season sub-tropical hUrricanes-gales
------ ... -. ._-
"" ...
Bermuda
...
-..........~ Approxi~ southern limit 0/ fall gales
Atlantic Ocean
....._---_.--- .....
."',
St. Thomas
East Coast Routes to St. Thomas ROUTES to ST. THOMAS ROUTE I. New York-Bermuda, 790 miles; Bermuda-St. Thomas, 800 miles. Sometimes difficult landfall in Bermuda, crosses path of both late-season hurricanes and the small gales / subtropical hurricanes that form between Hatteras and Bermuda. ROUTE lI. Newport-St. Thomas, 1,670 miles, crosses hurricane track, passes through area oflate-season hurricane-gales that form hetween Hatteras and Bermuda. ROUTE Ill. New York-St. Thomas, 1,650 miles, same as H. ROUTE IV. Morehead-St. Thomas, 1,160 miles, crosses hurricane track and thc southeastern corner of the late-season subtropical hurricane-gale area. However, this is so close to Morehead that you should be able to cross this area on a good weather forecast. Inland from New York to Morehead safe but draft limited to 7' -8'; not limited by overhead clearance. ROUTE V. Charleston-St. Thomas, 1,200 miles, crosses late-season hurricane track, passes south oflateseason subtropical hurricane-gale area, but so far west there's usually a lot of windward work. Draft limited to 7'; overhead bridge clearance limited to approx. 55'. Long waterway trip from New York. ROUTE VI. Miami-St. Thomas, roughly 1,000 miles, most of it to windward; navigational and draft problems in Bahamas, plus 1,200 miles of Inland Waterway from New York. ROUTE VII. Miami-Ft. Lauderdale area, sail across stream to Freeport, Grand Bahama, wait there until norther hits Florida, then take off eastwards through northwest, northwest Providence Channel, head due east as long as weather permits. When trades reassert themselves, fall off on starboard tack for St. Thomas, San Juan, or Mayaguez as wind and current dictate. ROUTE I, II, and III for large yachts only, Oct. 28-Nov. 21. ROUTE IV. Best route Oct. 28-Nov. 21. ROUTE V. After Nov. 21. go farther along the waterway to Charleston, until mid-December; after midDecember, continue south to Jacksonville, then to Miami, then Route VI.
Getting There wise mariner will have ample warning of its origin, growth, and progress. Such depressions are now well tracked by satellite; radio WWV announces at from eight to eleven minutes past the hour all major storms in the North Atlantic and updates the report every four hours. Monitoring this channel will give a few days' warning, time enough to project a storm's course and get out of the way. A second type of storm that occurs regularly from September to June is the familiar northeaster. These low-pressure fronts sweep across the North American continent, become unstable as they pass over the warmer ocean surface, and roll up on themselves to form intense low-pressure centers. Their arrival is announced by a cold northwest wind blowing anywhere from 15 to 40 knots, with occasional squalls. After the front passes, though, the wind will make a switch from northwest to northeast, with rain squalls, snow, or sleet. Sometimes the wind shift is gradual, taking as long as a day to swing from northwest to northeast; at other times the shift will take place in a matter of five or ten minutes. The winds may be nothing more than a good solid one-reef sailing breeze or they may pipe up to 50 knots and above. There's a third type of storm, referred to as a late-season hurricane, and encountered mostly from October through April. It's not a true tropical hurricane, as it usually springs up unexpectedly somewhere between 30° Nand 70° to 80° W. These storms are small in diameter and not particularly long-lived, but they can blow anywhere from 50 to 90 knots. They often give no warning, and the chances of their being picked up on a long-range weather forecast are slight indeed. They've done in a tremendous number of yachts over the years: when the wind blows 60 to 70 knots from the east or northeast, Hatteras becomes a deadly lee shore. In the Gulf Stream the wind blowing against the stream turns it into a seething mass of breaking seas, where boats lying ahull can be rolled over in no time. Obviously, the most important thing in going the ocean route to the Islands is to get well south of 30° N without getting involved in any of these kinds of storms, and then to avoid any young hurricanes south of 30° latitude. Here are a few suggestions towards achieving those goals. First, make sure you know as much about the weather as you possibly can. When going south in the tricky season, never rely on only one means of getting weather reports. Use every source you can find: SSB direct to shoreside sources, a weather fax machine, and an all-band receiver that picks up US government weather reports.
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WWV, the time-signal station, broadcasts storm warnings for the whole North Atlantic Ocean fifteen minutes after every hour. Another useful source is a private outfit named Weather Services at 131 Great Road, Bedford, MA 01730; Tel.: (617) 274-8860. Bob Rice, who runs the service, takes all available weather dope, analyzes it, and comes up with his own prediction. Now, any three experienced weathermen may look at the same complex patterns and come up with three different predictions. But Rice has a fine reputation, having provided excellent weather predictions for boats in the BOC Round-the-World races and for Dodge Morgan of American Promise on his record single-handed round-the-world passage, as well as for many of my friends heading south. Yachts without SSB can make ..lrrangements to call Rice via VHF and the normal telephone. Boats with SSB can keep in touch with him all the way down to the Islands. Typically, a running analysis of the weather from Weather Services, with a recommendation on when you have a chance to get south without too much trouble, might cost from $150 to $200. The exact fee will depend on how much work Rice has to do and how long he has to do it; but whatever deal you make, it's a good investment. Another source of weather information during the autumn is W AH out of St. Thomas, which broadcasts not only Caribbean weather but also North Atlantic synopses on VHF 28 at 0600, 1400, and 2200 (St. Thomas time), and SSB coastal 2506 high seas channels 401, 416, 604, and 804.
Offshore All the Way If you set out from New York directly for St. Thomas or Bermuda, you have about 180 miles before reaching the northern edge of the Gulf Stream and warm water; it's more than 600 miles to Bermuda and it's about 700 miles to 30° north, the approximate northern limit of the doldrums and southern limit of the North Atlantic gales; St. Thomas is 1,400 miles. (Roughly the same distances apply from points east of New York; the New England coast bends so far east and so little north that Halifax, Nova Scotia, is only 60 miles farther from St. Thomas than New York.) As noted, during the month of November the chart covering the area for the first part of the trip shows only 6 to 12 percent gales, but around Bermuda the percentage runs to 17, reaching 19 in December and 28 in January. Bermuda attracts gales like a
74
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
magnet at this time of year and is a risky landfall in bad weather to boot. Except for two powerful lights on its mainland, Bermuda is not particularly well lit and a yacht could conceivably pile up on its extensive northwestern reefs without seeing any lights at all. Further, the bottom comes up so steeply that unless the channel entrances are pinpointed, a yacht approaching in heavy weather could find itself in real difficulty before realizing how close inshore she had come (witness the bad scare yachtsmen received at the end of the 1972 Bermuda Race). Finally, the channels into Hamilton and St. George's are very poorly lit. When a gale is building up, the temptation to fight one's way into the safety of Bermuda may be too great to resist. Such attempts have led to disastrous results, to wit, the sinking of Romana in the late 1960s with the loss of five lives. In Iolaire, I scared the daylights out of myself and my crew in just this way. We made a landfall on Bermuda just before a gale; standing off till the gale had passed, we felt, would alarm those waiting for us ashore. So we entered at night with our hearts in our throats; I assure you it's not something I'm likely to try again. So if you set off in November, I strongly recommend that crews be prepared to make the jump all the way to the Islands without stopping at Bermuda. Then in the event of a gale you can stand off and alter course for St. Thomas. From my own experience, I consider the Bermuda route a risky proposition in November, and I'm reluctant to recommend it. I recommend the Bermuda route at that time of year only to those boats that are of too deep draft to use the Inland Waterway from Norfolk to the Morehead City-Beaufort, North Carolina, area and boats that cannot pass under the 65-foot bridge over the Inland Waterway south of Norfolk, to boats that are taking off well to the east, perhaps from Maine, and to boats big enough to really make fast time and keep ahead of bad weather. In fact, the best way to make the offshore passage is in two separate jumps: the first to Bermuda in September and a second to St. Thomas in November; then both the winter gales and the hurricanes can be avoided. Hurricanes start at about 58° W, 12° to 18° N. At theirformation, they are a minimum of 800 miles in a straight line from Bermuda. But they typically travel in a curve, usually west-northwest, gradually turning farther north and finally east, thereby traveling some 1,100 miles before reaching Bermuda. From the time a
hurricane is first spotted to the time when it could possibly be dangerous to a boat en route to Bermuda is about five days. If you check the weather just before you leave the East Coast in September and no hurricane is reported, you'll have clear sailing for at least four to five days. Keep careful track on the weather via all methods possible and if no hurricane is reported in the first forty-eight hours, you should reach Bermuda without difficulty. If one is reported, calculations will tell you whether you should continue or turn back to the States. Once you've reached Bermuda, the boat can be left there for the final leg of the trip in November. During late October and early November, keep a check on the weather and when the report looks good, hop a plane to Hamilton. With the aid of a good long-range forecast and a little luck, you should be able to push south to the doldrums before any gales arrive. Don't be afraid to use fuel in the beginning of the trip; it's more important to get out of the region of gales than to worry about getting becalmed in the doldrums. Your course is due south. Once you hit the trades, it will be fast sailing to St. Thomas. While I still feel it's dangerous to sail from Bermuda to St. Thomas in September, the advent of satellite hurricane tracking has made this a viable option IF you have reliable methods of getting satellite reports and IF your boat has a good range under power. You should check your weather three to four times a day; if a hurricane is reported, immediately sail or motors ail to clear the potential track of the hurricane. If you can't tap several sources of weather information, or if you don't have the speed or range to outmaneuver the storm, don't try it.
Intracoastal Waterway The alternative to the offshore route is, of course, the Inland Waterway. You can take it down to Florida in the fall and then work your way east through the Bahamas to St. Thomas. This is good in that you have only one long offshore hop-from Turks Island to St. Thomas. But, among other objections to be discussed later, there are the distances involved and the easterly winds. From New York to Miami is 1,200 miles, while st. Thomas is another 1,000 miles east-southeast from Miami. Shortly after leaving Miami you reach the trade-wind belt, with its constant easterly wind and westerly current. This means sailing hard on
Getting There the wind all the way, with plenty of extra distance thrown in because of tacking, Bahama-island dodging, and the leeward set of the current. The Bahamas in general are poorly charted and poorly lit. Many an intended cruise to the Lesser Antilles has been abruptly cancelled on unbuoyed Muchoir and Silver Banks. Other boats have made it halfway through the Bahamas before deciding that all this windward work just wasn't worth it. It's a very time-consuming process that may take six or seven weeks. Once in a while you may pick up a norther and reach all the way to the western tip of Puerto Rico in six days, but such passages are few and far between, requiring a rare combination of time, patience, and skill. So my preferred route to the Islands, the best way to avoid both the northern gales and the southern hurricanes, is inland to the Morehead City-Beaufort, North Carolina, area, then offshore to St. Thomas, 1,260 miles away.
MOREHEAD CITY-BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA
The big objection many yachtsmen make to the Inland Waterway (as most sailors still call it; the properly bureaucratic, seven-syllable label is the Intracoastal Waterway, or the ICW), is the problem of grounding. But if you draw no more than 7 1/2 feet and navigate only during daylight hours, you can get from Norfolk to Morehead City-Beaufort without grounding. Even boats drawing up to 8 feet can still usually make the trip without grounding, if they can maintain 8 knots under power. The trick is to poke along slowly until a tug and tow passes you. The barges may only draw a few feet of water, but the tugs, which will be in the deepest part of the channel, usually draw 8 feet or more. Even larger tugs, which touch bottom occasionally, have so much horsepower that they just chug their way right on through, basically dredging the channel. If you follow directly in their wake you won't run aground, but you must be able to maintain a cruising speed of 8 knots. Just as serious a problem to bigger boats as depth of water is height of bridges. In the winter of 1979-80, a fixed bridge with a clearance of only 65 feet was completed across the waterway just south of Norfolk. Up until then all bridges that low that blocked the waterway were draw or lift bridges. But no more. Now there are numerous 65-foot fixed bridges, and a lot of yachts have been excluded from the waterway, which is a damn shame.
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Cruising the JCW can be a lot of fun. Many skippers, myself included, normally rush through the waterway en route to somewhere else. But one of my life ambitions is to set aside two weeks, get the current Inland Waterway Guide and NOAA charts 11542, 11544, 11548, 11550, 11554, 11555, 12204, and 12205, and take two weeks on the way to Morehead City instead of the usual three days. I'd gunkhole the rivers that extend back into North Carolina, then go the other way to the Outer Banks, including Kitty Hawk, where the Wright brothers made history. Everyone I know who has made this cruise raves about it. Anyway, whether you take it fast or slow, the route through Morehead City-Beaufort is by far the best way to get to St. Thomas. It will gain you very little to go any farther south along the waterway, as after Morehead City it begins to tend much more west than south. Charleston is 30 miles farther south than Morehead, but 180 miles farther west from St. Thomas. These are hard miles of easting to make back up when you set out offshore. The Morehead City-Beaufort area is an ideal takeoff point because it has numerous places where you can leave your boat in the fall until you're ready to go; there are excellent food stores, plenty of good mechanics, and, in recent years, a growing number of sailboat suppliers. In Beaufort you will not only find slips but also room to anchor out if the slips are all full, something which is not found in Morehead City. Beaufort also offers hauling facilities up to 25 tons, sail makers, electronics, and electrical engineers. There is also Mike Beal, 209 Marsh Street, Beaufort, NC 28516; Tel.; (919) 728-2536, who runs a consulting service for sailors preparing for the offshore jump. Many of the things you may need fixed on your boat Mike will be capable of doing; he will be able to arrange for someone else to do the things that are beyond his capabilities. As a yacht consultant he is well qualified, with ten transatlantic passages under his belt and many years as one of the best-known charter skippers in the Caribbean. Money spent hiring Mike as a consultant before you take off for the Islands will be money well spent. When heading north or south I have always stayed at the Morehead City municipal yacht basin, where James, who runs the docks, has taken wonderful care of me. Now Morehead City has been eclipsed by Beaufort but next time I head south via the waterway I'll still go over to Morehead City Marina to hoist a few pints with James! Incidentally, they don't seem to have good hard blue coal in the South, so take a supply along with
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide you if you use a coal stove. Also, scout around town for some five-gallon drums that can be carried on deck. If you're in a hurry, carry as much fuel as you possibly can, because in November the trades may be light or nonexistent and the doldrums usually extend about 300 miles. One year we burned up eighty-four hours of fnel and could have used still more. A further advantage of leaving from Morehead City-Beaufort is that the Gulf Stream is only about 60 miles off the beach. You leave at the first of the ebb with a fair weather report, and no mater how cold it is on the mainland, you're out in the warmwater area within eight to ten hours, depending on the size of your boat. Further, if you have a decent break in the weather for thirty-six hours, you'll work your way clear of the really bad gale areas. I repeat: if the wind goes light, turn on the mill and push east-southeast as fast as you possibly can to get out of this dangerous gale area. But you should obtain charts of the Morehead City-Cape Lookout area, because the shoals extend well over 20 miles to sea. If you don't have a detailed chart, which is frequently unavailable in Morehead City, you can easily get in trouble on these shoals, which extend well south of the rhumbline route from Morehead City to St. Thomas. When sailing from the Morehead City-Beaufort area, wait for a good weather report and try to take off on the face of a northwester, which will blow you out across the Stream and into warm water before the wind switches to the northeast. With luck the northeaster will blow you down to the trades. If you leave at slack high water the ebb in the channel will really boot you along. Then from the seabuoy at Morehead City take a course to clear the shoals off Cape Lookout, allowing 'for the current, which is northeast. Then steer east-southeast. According to the wind charts, the wind will be in the northerly quadrants for the first part of your trip, northwest to northeast at about Force 4. If the wind stays in the northwest you'll have a nice downhill slide a good part of the way. Around 300 to 31 0 N latitude the wind will fall off to light and variable, so don't forget that big genoa. The final 300 miles should be a fast reach with the wind high on the beam. Many boats report southeast winds of 20 to 25 knots once clear of the Morehead City-Beaufort area; this will be uncomfortable, but with a good boat it won't kill you, whereas a winter gale with snow, sleet, and ice, which you might encounter leaving from New York and points east, can do in even the best boats and the best crews.
Be sure to carry a Bahamian cruising guide and a general chart of the Bahamas. You are not planning to go there but because of heavy weather or broken gear you may be forced to; with a general chart, a guide, and some common sense you should be able to get yourself into a harbor of refuge without losing your boat.
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
Those boats that can't use the waterway will have to leave from Norfolk or farther north, although if you stay inside as far as Norfolk you'll be taking to the open sea in slightly warmer weather. For the first 150 miles you'll have the Outer Banks and Cape Hatteras on your lee bow starboard bowand that's no place to be in a northeaster. The "Graveyard of Ships" shoals extend 20 miles to sea, and the currents and tides are very strong. So watch the weather report: Hatteras is a fearsome lee shore, and the Gulf Stream in a northerly gale is at the least hellishly uncomfortable, at the worst deadly. Avoid both like the plague. If the weather is not perfect when you depart the Virginia Capes, Little Creek, Virginia, just inside Cape Henry is an excellent place to wait for the weather-but once you get a break in the weather, get going. The danger of leaving from the Virginia Capes lies in a gale coming through before you can get across the Stream and out the other side. My friend Hardy Wright CHardly Ever Right") got caught this way in Onward, a 65-foot Alden schooner. He hove-to and handled her beautifully, and the boat rode the bad seas and howling wind comfortably--except that the Stream and the gale were both moving slowly northeast at 50 to 60 miles a day. So Onward was caught in the grip of the storm for three days until the gale finally went off across the Atlantic. Incidentally, it is not a good idea to lie ahull in the Stream in a northerly gale, because the breaking seas caused by the Stream running against the wind have rolled many a good boat. Heave to properly so that you're inching upwind, or else run off before it. It's my theory that once the wind gets over 50 knots, the survival of a boat depends one third on good seamanship, one third on the boat's fitness, and one third on luck. The best of boats and best of crews sometimes meet that big wave with their names on it and come to grief. Every winter for the thirty-three years I've lived in the Islands, one or more boats bound from the
Getting There
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States to the Lesser Antilles have been lost and three or four have suffered heavy weather damage. Some cases can obviously be attributed to bad seamanship or ill-founded boats. Many good boats and good men, though, have succumbed to the power of a winter gale in the North Atlantic. Sometimes the idiots have survived and the good seamen have not. Many marine insurance underwriters (and this yacht insurance broker as well) insist that boats be south of Hatteras before November 15, that boats of 40 feet or more have at least four in crew, and that, draft permitting, the Morehead City-Beaufort route be used. I think it would benefit everyone-insurers, Coast Guard, rescue teams, and yachtsmen-if all marine insurance underwriters and brokers insisted on these conditions. Some people have made this trip dozens of times with little or no serious trouble. Viv Snow, skipper of Percy Chubb's Antilles, has made over two dozen trips on this run; I have made roughly three dozen. The only times I've had bad scares have been when I've broken my own ground rules by leaving late and not watching the weather. Given a good boat, an able crew, and a decent break in the weather, a November trip from Morehead City- Beaufort to St. Thomas can be a wonderful offshore passage, one to be looked forward to and not to be feared.
City-Beaufort route but because of a late start, or unforeseen problems with rig, engines, refrigeration, electrical, or electronics, they find it is too late in the season-late November or early December-to leave from Virginia or North or South Carolina. So they end up chugging down to Florida before taking off for the Caribbean. Once you get down to Jacksonville, you are pretty much south of the winter gales other than the bad northers that blow down through Florida once or twice a month. My advice is to wait in Jacksonville for one of those northers and then leave Jacksonville about twenty-four hours before it comes through. Obviously, you'll have to keep a close watch on the weather reports. The point is to get across the Gulf Stream before the norther hits (you definitely don't want to be in the Stream when it does), and then ride it east on a sleigh ride toward the Islands. It will probably blow 25 to 35 knots, but with eased sheets and shortened sail this should give you no trouble. (Every once in a while it will be hang up to 50 knots. Be prepared.) Hold as close to east as you comfortably can until the norther blows out. If you've reached the trade winds by then and can lay a course for St. Thomas, fine and dandy; if not, motor until you find them and, if necessary, head for the western end of Puerto Rico.
CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA
If you are coming south down the waterway bound for the Islands, I don't think it is worthwhile continuing south of Jacksonville. But Miami-Fort Lauderdale is a logical place to jump from if you've refitted in the area, if you're trucking your boat from the West Coast, or if you've come up from the south. (The St. Petersburg-Tampa area on Florida's west coast has become one of the yachtbuilding centers of North America, and many boats come around the bottom of Florida on their way to the Islands.) Still, most of us who have been delivery skippers with a schedule to keep have spent a lot of energy swearing at the Miami to the Islands route. It is much harder from Miami-Fort Lauderdale to the Islands than from New York. It is usually dead to windward, and threading the Bahamas in a hurry is no fun either. However, the cruising yachtsman is not locked into a time schedule. Thus the smart cruiser starting from Florida should take the easy way to the Caribbean. Take off from Miami or Fort Lauderdale and sail over to Freeport, Grand Bahama.
MIAMI-FORT LAUDERDALE
If it is very late in the year some boats continue down the Inland Waterway to Charleston, South Carolina. This gets you farther away from the gale area, but it also means many more miles in the waterway. Because of the curve in the coast, the first day's run in the ICW after Morehead City is literally due west--directly away from the Islands. But it's a pleasant way to spend four or five days. Once you arrive in Charleston, it is basically the same situation as Morehead City: wait for a break in the weather, get to sea, cross the Stream, and head east-southeast until the butter melts. Don't forget, though, that you will have to sail almost 200 miles to reach the eastern edge of the Gulf Stream-a lot can happen in 200 miles, hence the reason for advising Morehead City-Beaufort if it is not too late in the year.
JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
The best-laid plans of mice and men, etc., and frequently boats are all set to do the Morehead
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Then wait there until a north er is predicted to come through and take off in the face of the norther. As mentioned above, it may blow very hard but you will sail 100 miles from Freeport to northeast Providence Channel with the island of Grand Bahama sheltering you from the sea but not the wind. The norther will be a fair breeze with eased sheets. Carry the norther as far east as possible, then when it dies, proceed as if you were coming from Jacksonville (see preceding description). Boats leaving from Florida should have onboard a general chart for the Bahamas and the north coast of Hispaniola, plus Harry Klein's Yachtsman's Guide to the Bahamas and Yachtsman's Guide to the Greater Antilles and the Virgins, as they have useful information on places you may end up in if you. have a gear failure. For Puerto Rico, and Passage and Virgin Islands, have onboard Street's Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean, vol. n, part I.
From the US West Coast When I first arrived in the Lesser Antilles I was amazed to discover that most of the yachtsmen were from either Europe or the West Coast of the United States. The Europeans I could understand, but when you consider that it's roughly 3,000 miles from San Diego to Panama, and another 1,000 miles against both wind and current to the Eastern Caribbean, the number of West Coast sailors in the Islands was hard to account for. Perhaps it's an indication of the scarcity of extended cruising opportunities on the West Coast, and perhaps it's also testimony to the adventurous and frontier spirit of West Coast sailors. Two such excellent sailors are John and Joy Pantlin, owners of Bellina, the best-maintained wooden boat I know. They have made the trip from the West Coast to the Panama Canal twice, and they are extremely competent seamen who thoroughly research their trips. I am grateful to them for supplying the invaluable information that follows; but remember, this information dates from the early 1980s-since then there have been radical changes in Central America both in the amenities and in the political situation. Further, to the best of my knowledge no one has written a guide to the area from Acapulco to Panama so the yachtsman heading south is doing so with minimal information. When planning a trip from California to the
Panama Canal, groundwork is most important, and a sound, well-founded vessel is a must. In general, Central America is far less geared to the needs of the cruising yacht than many of the more popular sailing areas of the Caribbean. Therefore, even greater care and thought should go into the subject of what spares and replacements ought to be carried, in an endeavor to avoid the frustration of the boat's being stranded in some remote spot while you frantically try to obtain the unobtainable ashore, or get it sent down, or even in desperation fly back to the States to get it. Stores for any voyage are a matter of personal taste, but just remember that stateside prices for most nonperishable articles and foods, canned goods, etc., are usually lower than any you're going to meet elsewhere. However, if there's a space problem, don't worry unnecessarily because most of the ports along the way have well-stocked stores and supermarkets. Fresh foods and produce can usually be obtained without too much difficulty from the local native markets, prOViding you can stomach the unhygienic conditions under which they're often sold. An essential item when facing a voyage down the coast of Central America is a supply of Spanish Crew Lists, as several copies will be required at each port you call in. The easiest way out of the problem is to obtain a special block of them, already printed, with spaces left for you to fill in and samples of how to complete them, which is a boon to those of us unfamiliar with the Spanish language. They were the brainchild of the late Larry Baldwin and are obtainable from any of the leading yachting stores on the West Coast. At some ports there are shipping agents who will do the paperwork for you, if you can afford their fees. Don't forget, though, that the entry and clearance procedure has to be followed at every port you visit, not just when entering or clearing a country. It involves a visit to the port captain and Immigration, and often Customs as well when you arrive in port; then when you want to leave the whole procedure is repeated for clearance. What makes matters worse is that in most ports you will find that the offices of the port captain and Immigration lie at opposite ends of town. While often frustrating and time-consuming, it's quite possible and usual for cruising people to do their own paperwork, although it's understandable that the more affiuent yachtsmen take advantage of the services of agents when available. We hope that one day Mexico will make things a little easier for visiting yachtsmen by treating cruising boats less like commercial vessels and more like motor homes
Getting There and automobiles, which are subject to far fewer formalities when touring Mexico. While on the subject of paperwork, it might be well to mention here that a visit to a Mexican consulate before entering Mexico can greatly facilitate the initial entry procedure. Here again Larry Baldwin's block of Crew Lists is a help because not only does he explain the procedure but he also gives a special form of Crew List for this purpose. You can obtain Tourist Cards for each member of the crew from the consulate, another requirement when cruising Mexican waters. If you have any fishing equipment on board, you should also inquire where to get fishing licenses, as these are required for the boat and each member of the crew when cruising the west coast of Mexico (although, strangely, they don't seem to place such importance on them on the east coast). There are several fast patrol boats running up and down the west coast of Mexico keeping an eye out for possible offenders of this law. Cruising guides for this trip are somewhat limited and concentrate more on Baja California and the Mexican coast as far as Acapulco. The Admiralty Pilot, although a useful source of information, is intended more for larger ships and a lot of anchorages dismissed by it as being unsuitable except for "small vessels with local knowledge" are just what the cruising man is looking for. In this respect a lot of useful information can be gained from the bulletins published monthly by the Seven Seas Cruising Association. These are made up of letters sent in by members and others, giving useful advice and telling of their various experiences in different parts of the world. Many of these letters relate to the coastline between the States and the Panama Canal, and the SSCA publishes an annual cross-reference that gives the issues from which information about various regions can be gleaned. It is not necessary to be a member of the association in order to obtain the bulletins, which can be purchased from the Editors, Seven Seas Cruising Association, Inc., Homebase, PO Box 38, Placida, FL 33946. On the subject of charts, a word of warning is necessary. Some charts, especially the large-scale ones, are not always too accurate in their detail and should not be relied on implicitly. Neither should any reliance be placed on lighthouses, as many don't even show a light and most of the rest don't follow their allotted characteristics. This can make nighttime travel extremely hazardous, particularly considering the dangerous currents, often shoreward setting, that when running with or against the boat can add or detract 20 miles or more on
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the dead-reckoning position. This is why the practice of setting a safe course to take the boat away from shore during the night and closing the shore to confirm or discover your true position during daylight is a good one to follow. The Admiralty Pilot warns of the more dangerous currents and it's well to heed such advice, as many a large freighter's hulk rusting on a beach or reef along the way will testify. Now to the trip itself and when to leave: The most important thing is to avoid the hurricane season, and you'll find that most boats wait until the middle or end of November before entering Mexico, as the northern parts of Central America are subject in general to the same hurricane season as the Caribbean. The route taken will vary according to individual tastes, from those people who prefer to make long hops and get it over with quickly to those who like to take their time and see as much of the intervening countries as possible. For the latter it would be well to mention here that, having waited for one hurricane season to clear before starting, you'll have to get your ship into a safe area of the Caribbean before the next hurricane season commences. It's easy to linger too long enjoying the delights of Mexico only to find that time is running out and the equally appealing delights of the southern part of the cruise have to be bypassed. Those with unlimited time, of course, can spend the next hurricane season cruising the safer areas off the coasts of Costa Rica and Panama. The coastline from Ensenada to the Panama Canal has many good anchorages suitable for small craft. Some are more popular than others and some have amenities, while others have none, relying for attraction on their very remoteness. Here is where a cruising guide and the SSCA bulletins prove their worth in helping you decide which anchorages will suit your particular needs or tastes. The us charts that cover this whole coast are numbers 18009, 21011, 21014, 21017, 21020, 21023, 21026, 21030, and 21033. More detailed charts are listed in the descriptions. The following is just a brief description of the larger ports to be found along the way.
The Mexican West Coast ENSENADA
BA 3056 Port of entry. The purely commercial harbor has poor holding ground and is filthy, but the offices
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of the authorities are close by and so are banks (you get a better rate of exchange if you change your dollars at a bank rather than at a store), stores, liquor stores, etc. TURTLE .BAY (PUERTO SAN BARTOLOME)
US 21081, 21120; BA 2885, 3055 Good anchorage off the pier. Fuel and water are available and shops are primitive but adequate for basic items. Care should be taken when entering the bay as there are several rocks and reefs to avoid. MAGDALENA BAY
US 21120, 21121; BA 3053, 3054 This is a good alternative to Scammons Lagoon, the famous breeding ground of the California gray whales, since the Mexican authorities have placed restrictions on boats visiting the lagoon. Near the entrance to the bay it's possible to get almost within touching distance of these huge mammals, which is a bit nerve-racking at first until you realize that so long as they see the boat, they'll be the first to take avoiding action. Another advantage of Magdalena Bay is that fuel and water and some provisions can be obtained at the Port of San Carlos at the head of the bay, but take care when nav'igating the tricky, twisting channel leading there. Puerto Cortez, a naval base reached by following a channel indicated by two sets of leading-in markers in the southeastern corner, provides a good anchorage and the navy is reputed to be helpful in times of mechanical and medical crises. CABO SAN LUCAS
NOAA 21100; BA 3053 Very popular and therefore crowded, as it's the end of the line for some California boaters with only limited cruising time. There is a small inner harbor affording fair protection, but most boats anchor fore-and-aft off the beach where there's reasonable protection under normal conditions. However, conditions are not always normal as was related in stories in Sail magazine in February, March, and April 1983 when an onshore gale and big swells came in, on September 8th, 1982, and put thirty-two boats on the beach, twenty-two of which became total losses. If you're anchored off the beach in Cabo San Lucas, monitor the weather reports very carefully, and at the least sign of a blow get out to sea immediately.
Entry and clearance here are sometimes complicated by the elusiveness of the Immigration officer and the distance between the various offices. The little town is picturesque and touristy, and adequate supplies, fuel, and water can be obtained without too much difficulty. MAZATLAN
US 21301; BA 2060, 2323 A large commercial harbor and popular sportfishing resort. A bus service takes you into the town, which lies some distance from the smallboat harbor, but which is quite sophisticated and supplies most needs. Fuel and water are available. PUERTO VALLARTA
No charts available A popular tourist resort, very attractive, with a small boat harbor some miles north of the town. Be prepared to anchor fore-and-aft in an impossibly small space among countless other boats, unless you prefer (and are able to find) a space in the marina there. Fuel is usually trucked from the nearby garage to the cruise-liner dock, but take on only bottled water for drinking as the piped supply has been suspect for years. Entry and clearance are somewhat complicated, starting at the port captain's office at the harbor entrance and involving at least one and often two trips into town to the Immigration office. A bus service takes you into town where most supplies are available. MANZANILLO
US 21342; BA 516, 587, 1053 The old commercial harbor near the town is dirty, and landing from a dinghy is difficult although not impossible. Supplies are good once you get into town. Officialdom is confined conveniently to one modern building between the old and new commercial harbors. Cruising boats usually congregate either in or near the marina at the Las Hadas Hotel at the other end of the beach from the harbors, conditions there being much more pleasant and the surroundings picturesque. ZIHUATANEJO
US 21382; BA 1051 An attractive little holiday resort with a good anchorage. Officials and shops are conveniently close to the beach off which the boats lie, and the
Getting There friendly atmosphere of this fast-growing little town makes it well worth a visit. Fuel and water would be difficult to get on board in any quantity. ACAPULCO
US 21401; BA 1051, 1944 The largest tourist resort on this coast, with all the advantages and disadvantages to be expected therefrom. Officialdom and touristy shops are an easy bus ride from the yacht club, but the market and food stores are readily accessible only by taxi. If you don't want to use the yacht club's marina, it is possible to anchor off it. Fuel and water are available at the yacht club and also across the harbor where the sports fishermen obtain theirs. (The coast from the Mexican border south to Acapulco is covered in Boating in Mexico, by Dix Brown; contact the Aztex Corp., 7002 East Paseo San Andres, Tucson, AZ 85710.)
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breakwaters built out from the shore and by its lighthouses. It's gradually being developed as a small-boat harbor and is fast becoming popular as a clearance port for yachts heading south. Yachts sailing down the coast of Mexico are advised to have on board BA charts 349, 516, and 587, which have numerous harbor plans ofharbors not listed here.
Mexico to the Canal Zone Given the highly volatile political state of this part of the world, particularly El Salvador and Nicaragua, it would seem prudent to research the situation carefully before leaving, and then to give the questionable parts of the coast a wide berth. BA charts 660, 1049, and 1960 cover the area. Costa Rica, though, seems pretty stable at this writing, and you can probably count on finding an end-of-passage haven there.
SALINA CRUZ
US 21442; BA 587, 1050 A commercial harbor mainly catering to the huge fleet of shrimp boats that fish the Gulf of Tehuantepec. In the past it hasn't been popular with cruising folk due to poor experiences with officials, although fuel, water, and provisions are available. GULF OF TEHUANTEPEC
PLAYA DE COCOS, COSTA RICA
The officials at this attractive little tourist resort are empowered to check your papers and grant temporary permission to cruise Costa Rican waters until your boat is entered properly at Puntarenas farther south. Water can be got off the beach in cans, but supplies from the village are restricted. Anything else involves a bus ride into Liberia, inland, which is interesting but time-consuming.
US 21023; BA 1050 A word here about navigating this sometimes dangerous stretch of water. The accepted method for most small craft is to go around the edge, keeping close to shore, which provides maximum protection if you're unlucky enough to meet a Tehauntepecker, a gale which comes roaring across the low-lying land between the Gulf of Campeche and the Gulf of Tehauntepec. The usual procedure if caught in a Tehauntepecker is to nose into the beach and anchor just off it; you may get sandblasted, but at least you won't have to suffer the mountainous seas that quickly kick up farther out in this shallow gulf, and neither will you be blown miles off course as you ride out the storm. PUERTO MADERO (SAN BONITO)
No charts available The new harbor here, just short of the Guatemala border, is easily recognizable by the double
PUNTARENAS
US 21545, 21546; BA 1931, 2145 Entry procedure is simple, provided the rule of anchoring near the commercial pier while the skipper takes the papers ashore is observed. Any boat which enters the estuary before entering the country is regarded with suspicion. When attempting to go up the estuary for the first time, it's a good idea to take a pilot or follow a vessel with local knowledge, preferably just before high-water slack, as it's very easy to run aground in this tricky channel. Inside, the channel runs unbelievably close to the shore, and the current flows swiftly. Once you're anchored somewhere off the town docks, you'll find the facilities are good, with everything in the way of stores within walking distance; fuel, water, and ice are readily available. There are several boat yards here where repairs and haulouts can be effected.
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GOLFITO
US 21560, 21562, 21563; BA 1932 A well-protected harbor where fuel, water, and supplies are available, and whence clearance from Costa Rica can be obtained, although some boats prefer to enter and clear the country at Puntarenas and bypass Golfito. BA charts 1928 and 1929 will carry you on to Panama. PUERTO ARMUELLES, PANAMA
US 21581; BA 1300 The authorities here have a reputation for overcharging and it is not terribly convenient, so most cruising boats, if they need only to overnight in some of the more remote off-lying islands and bays with which the south coast of Panama abounds, bypass this port and obtain their entry and cruising permit at Panama City itself. PUNTA MARIATO TO CABO MALA
US 21601 This is where the shipping lanes leading to the Panama Canal start to converge on the coast, and a sharp lookout should be maintained as there are often several large, fast-moving commercial ships in sight.
You can supplement this excellent advice from the Pantlins by reading Chapter 3 of Hart and Stone's Cruising Guide to the Caribbean and the Bahamas. As to the canal itself, the July 1979 issue of Cruising World magazine has an excellent article by Russell Van Keik titled "The Panama Canal After the Treaty." Other articles on transiting the Canal appeared in Cruising World February 1985, p. BB, and February 1987, p. 129. Norrie Hoyt's three-part article in Sail magazine, starting in December 1979, is also a gold mine of information. Check your insurance before traveling the canal; the Panama Canal Corporation is a law unto itself, responsible only to God-the US government, at least, seems to have little control over the corporation. Boats have been damaged and the corporation has denied liability. Lloyd's has paid off and then tried to collect from the Panama Canal Corporation. The corporation denied liability, despite the fact that the boats were under the charge of their pilots, and even all Lloyd's heavyweight lawyers could do nothing. The pilots vary in the extreme: most are efficient and helpful; some are fantastic, making traversing the canal a wonderful experience; others, luckily a very small number, are so miserable and officious that the crew of the yacht concerned is reduced to abject terror and made to suffer an experience they will never forget. Cross your fingers and hope!
ISLA TABOGA
US 21603; BA 1300 A sometimes rolly anchorage off a small resort, where yachts waiting to transit the canal often lie. Its big advantage is a regular ferry service to the Panama Canal Zone. PANAMA CANAL ZONE
US 21604, 21605; BA 1299, 3111 When approaching the Panama Canal it's a good idea to contact the Flamenco Island Radio operator (VHF channel 16), who will direct you to the smallboat anchorage just inside Flamenco Island. Here you will be boarded and, in due course, measured (unless your vessel has been through the Panama Canal before). Landing from this anchorage is not allowed, so that unless a mooring at the Balboa Yacht Club can be obtained, the only way to gain access to the Canal Zone is by ferry from Isla Tabogo. Your boarding officer will advise as to the best procedure to follow; it's a little complicated and the authorities go very much by the book.
East from the Canal Once the canal has been traversed and you're anchored in Cristobal Colon, the eastern terminus of the Panama Canal, you should prepare yourseif for what is undoubtedly one of the worst hauls you'll ever undertake. The thrash to the east across the Caribbean is no fun, no matter how you tackle it. But first, you can treat yourself to a visit in the San BIas Islands (see US charts 26063 and 26064), which lie 80 miles east of Cristobal Colon. These islands, which to the best of my knowledge were first cruised by an American yachtsman in 1922 when Alf Loomis and his new bride, Priscilla sailed there in his 28-foot gaff-headed Hippocampus, are still reputed to be one of the high points of a Caribbean cruise. (The natives no longer have the reputation for cannibalism they had back then.) There isn't much cruising information on the islands, although Hart and Stone's excellent book covers them briefly. Furthermore, the charts aren't
Getting There much good either. The American chart of the islands (US 26063) does have enough information on it to enable the careful navigator who is experienced at reef piloting, and who only sails when the sun is high, to explore the San BIas Islands. However, both this and the equivalent British chart are of dubious accuracy. Kitt Kapp, one of the charter skippers who arrived in the US Virgin Islands in the early 1950s, left the area to explore the Colombian and Central American coasts in the middle 1960s. As a result of his exploration, he has produced four privately printed charts of the San BIas Islands; they can be obtained from Kapp Publications, PO Box 64, Osprey, FL 33559, for $3.50. Once you've explored the San Bias, you have to face up to a difficult decision. Do you stand north on the starboard tack across the Caribbean to Jamaica, or do you fight your way east to Aruba and then along the Venezuelan coast? I very much favor the latter route, for the following reasons. The course from the San BIas Islands to Fort Royal, Kingston, Jamaica, is 025° magnetic, a distance of51O miles. However, because of the strong westerly set in the Carihhean, plus leeway, the actual course sailed will have to be about 045°. Furthermore, 30 miles to leeward of the rhumbline course lies the San Pedro Bank, which is completely unmarked, an area of shoals and rocks that scarcely bare at low water. This bank covers an area almost the size of the Virgin Islands. Not only is the bank dangerous to navigation, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if the cays on the eastern end of San Pedro Bank are frequently used as a rendezvous point for Jamaican and Colombian dope smugglers-and they're even more dangerous than rocks and shoals. There is also the Bajo Nuevo (New Bank), which again, extends over a considerable area with shoal water that would certainly create breaking seas in heavy weather. There are also the dangerous reefs of Banco Bancador and Banco Serrana. Both of them are supposedly lit, but the reefs are extensive enough that you could easily end up on the bricks before seeing the light, if it's working. The only offshore stops in this area are St. Andrews Island, run by Colombia (covered in Hart and Stone's book), and Old Providence. The disadvantage of breaking the trip and going to the islands is that it puts you well to the west of Jamaica. Not only that, but the area east of Central America is noted for poor charts, strong and variable currents, erratic lights, and plenty of wrecks. Once you arrive in Jamaica, you do have the
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chance for good R & R; but after you've relaxed, restocked the boat, and recuperated, you still have to stick your head down and bull your way east along the coast of Santo Domingo, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands. The distance from Jamaica to St. Thomas is a full 750 miles, most of it to windward. It isn't always a beat from Jamaica to Puerto Rico. There's the story of Richard Scott Hughes, who with his wife Jenny was running the 65-foot De Vers Lentch steel schooner Boekanier. They had finished a charter to Guatemala and were engaged to take the boat back to Antigua; everyone figured on a long, hard beat, so the deadhead fee was very substantial. As it happened, a north er blasted through as they left Guatemala, and with eased sheets they took off on a beam reach across the width of the Caribbean, getting to the south coast of Puerto Rico in no time. He didn't dare go right on to Antigua for fear the charter broker would insist on refunding some of the deadhead fee to the charterer if the boat got back so far ahead of schedule. So he sat in the bar at Marina Cay enjoying life and making up stories about the rough trip he'd had from Guatemala. Incidentally, when coasting along the south coast of Hispaniola, remember that the island is large enough so that the sea-land breeze routine is felt: easterly winds during the day die out at dusk and come offshore at night, enabling you to work your way along the coast with favorable winds in relatively smooth seas close to the shore. You are also likely to find an easterly current along the shore between Bayaux Cayes and False Cape and, similarly, between Beata Point and Soana Island. (For more information on Hispaniola, check Harry Kline's book, Guide to the Greater Antilles and the Virgin Islands.) Well, then, you ask, what's the easy way across? Unfortunately, there isn't one, unless you have Richard's luck. I think the southern route across the top of South America is less dangerous and in the end more rewarding, but it's still a long, hard slog to windward. In the old days you could break the trip by stopping along the Colombian coast and visiting, among other places, the fascinating city of Cartagena. This old Spanish city is probably the best-preserved Spanish colonial city in the western hemisphere and is still a wonderful place to visitbyairplane. Now that drug smuggling is big business in Colombia, the country's coastal waters are so infested with smugglers and local pirates that I doubt if any insurance company in the world will
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide insure a yacht in those waters. I certainly wouldn't go there myself. Thievery and worse violence are rampant, and even in Cartagena it's reputedly impossible to ensure the safety of an anchored or moored yacht. Furthermore, the US and British charts of much of the area are badly inaccurate; Puerto Colombia, west of Isla Verde, offers no shelter at all, and the coast should not be approached under any circumstances. Baranquilla, on the Magdalena River, and Santa Marta should be avoided at all costs; in both ports many boats have been completely stripped. East of the Caya de la Agua-Santa Marta area is a series of fjords, coves, and anchorages that should make a fantastic cruising area. However, in light of what has previously been said, they are best avoided. From these coves east to Cabo de la Vela, a distance of 130 miles, there is no anchorage. You can anchor under the light at Cabo de la Vela for a rest before the next hitch east, but be sure to keep an armed guard awake on deck. Similarly, in the attractive-looking harbors of El Portete and Bahia Honda, to the east, yachtsmen have reported keeping a twenty-four-hour, armed deck watch while fishermen (pirates?) continually circled them. It also can blow extremely hard from the east along the Colombian coast, and frequently an easterly countercurrent sets up very rough and often dangerous sea conditions. In fact, if you check the weather chart for the area, you'll see a big red circle off the Colombian coast for December, January, February, and March. That red circle means that seas more than 12 feet high are encountered there 10 percent of the time. The chart shows that the sea stays calm until July (as mentioned elsewhere, July is the windiest month in the Caribbean), and then eases off again from August through December. It seems the best time to cross via this route is during the hurricane season, hugging the Venezuelan coast to avoid the hurricanes. So, all in all, I have to advise against cruising the Colombian coast, because it can be a mucho dangerous place. If you find yourself there, though, and you get to the western side of the Gulf of Venezuela, be warned that the final 80 miles across the Gulf of Venezuela to Aruba can seem like the longest 80 miles in the world. Fortunately, there is a harbor of refuge in between the southern most Los Monjes (Harbor Chart VI). On the chart and from the northwest, these islands look like one; but they are two, with a navigable passage between, which offers a passable anchorage. There is a small Venezuelan military base there, which safeguards
you from contrabandistas. But don't enter the place at night; stand offshore till daylight, and try to contact the military on VHF. So, all things considered, I feel the best thing to do on leaving Panama is to head directly for Aruba, a beat of some 600 miles. Start off on the starboard tack, taking an occasional hitch to the southeast, but always remaining outside the lOO-fathom curve of the Colombian coast. It won't be much fun, and Aruba isn't exactly a yachtsman's paradise, being mainly a commercial port. But the hospitality and food are good, and the joy of not having the boat bouncing up and down anymore will more than offset the lack of palm-fringed beaches and coves. Besides, you now have the prospect of a pleasant few weeks working your way east along the Venezuelan coast, which is a wonderful cruising ground indeed. If you feel you absolutely have to stop for a rest before getting to Aruba, you can duck into the Gulf of Venezuela and seek refuge in the southernmost Los Monjes. Once rested you can again head eastwards in the Gulf of Venezuela to Amuay. Stand in on the port tack to the Bay of Amuay, on the Peninsula de Paraguana, and find anchorage at the oil terminal at Los Piedros. There are no real yachting facilities, but it's an anchorage. You can enter at the Customs House pier at Ensenada Caheta Guarana, south of Bahia de las Piedros. Inquire as to water, fuel, and stores, which are available. Remember, though, that the Peninsulas of Paraguana and Guajira are both deserts. The wind howls across them, and you may find it's blowing considerably harder inside the gulf than offshore. You'll be out of the sea, but it may be blowing gale force. I'd be wary of standing into the Gulf of Venezuela. Eastward from Aruba is covered in detail in Volume IV of this cruising guide. Basically, you can fight directly east to the Eastern Caribbean, a long and painful process, or you can island- and coast-hop, spending three to four weeks reaching Grenada. You will soon discover that there is ample cruising along the Venezuelan coast. Try it, enjoy it, and you may take a month to reach the Antilles; once you do, you may decide you like Venezuela better! One last word ahout coming from the West Coast. The advice of many yachtsmen is to put your boat on a truck in California and ship it to Jacksonville or Fort Lauderdale and set out for the Islands from there. Trucking is not such a big deal-many of the 1987 Twelves, for instance,
Getting There ;'
14
19
23
85
MONJES DEL SUR 18
22
27 12 :
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V 1-Monjes del Sur were built in the East and trucked to the West. If this sounds like heresy from a cruising yachtsman, consider that the estimated cost for shipping a 40foot boat is about $3,500 and that travel time is about four days. That's a whale of a lot faster and cheaper than sailing those 5,OOO-plus hard miles. When you do finally approach the West Indies, from whatever direction, you'll want to know what the best landfalls are. Read the following pages, 85-87, very carefully.
Landfalls from Europe Barbados was for many years the most popular landfall, since it is well out to windward of the other islands and therefore shortens the transatlantic trip by about 100 miles. It is also well lit on both the south and north ends, there are no offlying shoals, and you can home in on the radio air beacon and on Barbados Radio (see appendices B and D for frequencies). A recent development in Barbados is the newly created fishing harbor north of the carenage, which is planned to become a yacht harbor. Right in the middle of town, the carenage will be most convenient if developed into a yacht harbor. If you decide instead to anchor out in Carlisle Bay, you no longer have to land your dinghy through the surf, because there is now a dock at the Knowles brothers' boathouse. This is a good
setup, with showers, bar, restaurant, laundry machines; the Knowles brothers know how and where to get things done on the island. Your dinghy is safe alongside, and it's an easy walk to town. As yachting facilities have developed in the Islands, yachtsmen have used other islands as their landfall. Read the brief description on the following pages, then check detailed descriptions of the islands concerned in Volume 11, Part 11, and Volume Ill; then make your decision as to your landfall. Tobago is not a good landfall from Europe under any circumstances, though it might be a good place to home in on if you're coming from Africa (see pp. 70-71). But if you've landed in Barbados, Tobago is worth visiting on your way to Grenada. It's very hard to get back to once you reach the other islands. Grenada is an excellent landfall if you want to bypass Barbados; either way, it's a must-visit island-high and lush, with varied topography, plenty of fresh food, friendly people, and dozens of good anchorages. Pass around the south end of the island and pick up Cabrit light flashing 2 + 1 every 20 seconds, visible 18 miles but obscured east of 135° magnetic. Then you can go into either Prickly Bay on the south shore and enter at the Spice Island Marina, or around Point Saline and up into St. George's, the island's main port. Yacht repair and
86
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
maintenance facilities are available; see Chapter 9, "Provisions and Services," and also Volume III for further details. St. Vincent is a poor landfall, with no reliable lights, no harbor, and no marina. St. Lucia does make a good landfall, since the east coast of Martinique is well lit and a landfall can be made at Martinique. Then turn south to St. Lucia and enter at Vigie Cove, Rodney Bay, or Marigot. In all of these harbors there is a good chance of being able to tie up alongside a dock. Before you decide on whether to enter Vigie Cove, Rodney Bay, or Marigot, read the relevant sections in Volume III on St. Lucia. Martinique is not too good a landfall because the anchorages are so crowded that it's difficult to find room to tie up alongside to get fuel and water on board, take showers, get all the dirty clothes off to be laundered, and so on. Finding a shower in Martinique is extremely difficult. Dominica as a landfall is hopeless. Guadeloupe in recent years has developed into an excellent landfall because of the brilliant lights on Deserade and Petite Terre. It's an easy sail down the south coast of Guadeloupe to enter into Point-a-Pitre harbor and tie up alongside the brandnew marina at Pointe a Bas, where all possible facilities are available. There is also a big marina at Fran~ois but it is not too good as a landfall as it is well out of town and though it does have marina facilities, restocking the boat is more than a little bit of a problem. Antigua is a very popular transatlantic landfall and has become a safer one with the building of the St. James Club in Mamora Bay, which is brightly lit and visible many miles to sea. Mamora Bay/St. James Club is a port of entry, but it is a private club with few facilities for the arriving ocean sailor. It's better to continue on to English Harbour, but be aware that the Shirley Heights light is very unreliable. (However, the bar and restaurant on Shirley Heights should be lit until midnight and is a useful landmark. ) You can anchor in Freeman's Bay and hoist "Q," or you can proceed directly into English Harbour and moor stern-to to the dock. Skipper only goes ashore with passports, ship's papers, etc., to clear. English Harbour has no marina but water, fuel, food, showers, and laundry (ask for Mrs. Malone), hauling, repairs, and sailmaking are all available. When approaching Antigua from the south or southeast, be very careful not to confuse the lights of the Curtain Bluff Hotel with English Harbour; if you do, you could end up on Cade Reef, an
unlighted, unmarked danger that regularly claims one or more boats every year. Don't try to make a transatlantic landfall anywhere north of Antigua. It's too easy to pile up on Barbuda, which has about 300 wrecks on its reef, or on Anguilla, which has 150 wrecks, or Anegada, with somewhere around 500 wrecks. Even in this modern day, Anegada still nails at least one boat a year, often two and sometimes three. Don't add to the statistics.
Landfalls from the North St. Thomas is by far the best landfall from the north. St. Thomas has become so developed that the glow from the island can be picked up 15 to 20 miles to the north and the radio towers on Crown Mountain and Signal Hill are clearly visible in all normal conditions. If approaching at night, one should always come around the WESTERN end of the island as there are just too many islands north of St. Thomas, and between St. Thomas and St. John's to make that entry worthwhile. When approaching the western end of St. Thomas it should be remembered that Cricket Rock, Cockroach Island, Dutchman's Cap, Salt Cay, and their off-lying rocks are stilI unlit. If you desire to enter at night, pass west of Savanna Island and then proceed eastwards south of St. Thomas in deep water using the Buck Island light, flashing every four seconds, visible 8 miles, as your main reference point until you pick up the channel lights of St. Thomas. I'd wait until dawn to enter due to the crowded conditions of the harbor. In daylight you can go directly to Tortola (via West End) if Tortola is your destination. Make sure your ETA is in the middle of the day or later because if you have an early morning approach you must remember that Anegada-a graveyard of ships-is a little over 20 miles north ofTortola. As of this writing (summer 1987) Anegada is still unlit. If you are farther east and a little ahead of your DR when aiming for Tortola, you could easily pile up on the north end of the low island of Anegada in the dark, rather than making your proper landfall on the high island ofTortola. If this happened you would become another statistic in the wreck book! To go for a landfall east of Tortola is insane. If your navigation is just a little off, you can pile up on Anegada without even seeing Tortola or Virgin Gorda. In the last twenty-five years or so, at least a dozen boats coming from the north have been
Getting There lost here, and there have been many more nearmisses. Norrie Hoyt, a superb seaman and navigator, was one. Sailing Telltale with his wife, Kitty, from Bermuda, he thought he was doing fine and went below to cook breakfast. Kitty, on watch, suddenly said, "Norrie, please come on deck; there seems to be an island ahead." A few hundred yards away was the reef. Another ten minutes and Telltale would have been a permanent monument on Anegada. The groundings are caused as occasionally the current reverses itself and runs EAST across the top of the Virgin Islands. Despite the fact that your fix the day before landfall is dead on, if you figure on the normal westerly set, you can still end up being reef bait if the current has reversed itself and is running east. I advise against using Sombrero as a landfall because, again, if your navigation is off, Anegada to the west can grab you before you even see Sombrero's powerful light. If you're heading to Antigua from the north, be careful not to get tangled up with Anguilla. Allegedly, in years gone by the Anguillans made a large portion of their living by shipwrecking. As far as this author is concerned, they are back in business again. In May 1985 we came within a hair's breadth of losing lolaire on the eastern end of Scrub Island, which basically forms the eastern end of Anguilla. We had departed St. Barts heading north on the first leg of lolaire's eightieth birthday cruise-a double transatlantic passage. We spotted a flashing light, which we presumed was on the end of Scrub Island, as the channel between Anguilla and Scrub Island is so narrow and rough that one would think twice about using the channel in daylight, much less at night. My good friend Hank Strauss says that one should never presume anything at sea unless there is an aircraft carrier in the channel ahead of you-then you can presume there is enough water for a yacht! As the light came abeam I went below; suddenly my mate gave a cry: "The light has gone outbreakers ahead." I came flying up on deck, threw
off the preventers, hardened up, and just cleared the end of Scrub Island. The light was on the end of Anguilla and had disappeared behind Scrub Island. Upon arriving in Ireland in mid-July I called the British Admiralty. They knew nothing about the light. We both wrote to the harbor master in Anguilla-silence! Finally in September 1985 after a couple of letters, it was admitted that a light had been established on the eastern end of Anguilla. Many more letters followed until in October 1986 it was admitted that the light had been established in early December 1984! The sequel is even more amazing-in late April 1987 when sailing by Dog Island off the northwestern end of Anguilla we spotted a quick-flashing white light. I again wrote to the harbor master in Anguilla, asking who had established this light and when. The harbor master replied a month or so later, stating that he knew nothing about a quickflashing white light off Dog Island but he had just discovered that the light on the eastern end of the island hadn't been working for two or three months (no one seemed to know exactly how long it had been out) and no one seemed to know when enough money would become available to reestablish the light, but of course, neither the British Admiralty nor the US Coast Guard had been informed so they could put a notice in their Notice to Mariners. In short: Avoid Anguillan waters at night! Barbuda, low and unlit, is even more dangerous. If you are coming south toward Antigua stay well east of Barbuda. When you get near its latitude turn on the depth finder; if you get soundings, you are too close; alter course to the east. San Juan, Puerto Rico, is an easy landfall from the north, but that puts you dead to leeward of the Virgins and you'll have a long, hard slog ahead. If you're coming from Florida or the Bahamas, though, then you can head for San Juan; failing that, duck into Mayaguez on Puerto Rico's west end, rest, restock, and then head east along the south coast of Puerto Rico and through the Passage Islands using the information contained in Volume 11, Part I, of this series of guides.
88
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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The Atlantic Islands Bermuda, the Azores, the Madeiran Archipelago, and the Salvage, Canary, and Cape Verde Islands Bermuda BA: 332, 334, 360, 867, and 868; us/ DMA: 26340, 26341, 26342, 26343, 26344, 26345; Sketch charts Bl, B2.
visible 26 miles. (Needless to say, in periods of bad visibility the lights can be obscured by rain squalls and one could still sail onto the shoals north and west of Bermuda without having seen either of the lights.) The Gibbs Hill radio beacon has a range of 50 miles, the Naval Annex air beacon has a range of 30 miles, and three Bermuda radio stations broadcast twenty-four hours a day (see appendices Band D for further details). And, of course, Loran and Satnav make it a whole new ball game. Whether approaching the island from north or south the entrance is the same: via St. George's cut in the northeast corner of the island. You can enter the channel, continue west into St. George's Harbor or swing northwest and follow the main channel around to Hamilton via Great Sound or via Ferry Reach. I am very partial to the town of St. George's and feel that it is not worthwhile going around to Hamilton (except via bus or motorbike) unless you plan to spend a long time in Bermuda. For the average yachtsman who is merely stopping in Bermuda and continuing elsewhere, St. George's is the place to go. lf you decide to go on to Hamilton, you may not have to go hack out of the harbor and around via
The Bennuda Islands lie roughly 900 miles north of the Caribbean, 870 miles east-northeast of Miami, 620 miles from the Chesapeake Capes and between 600 to 700 miles from anywhere along the East Coast from New York to Cape Cod. They are a way-stop for yachts heading from the northeast to the Caribbean Islands in the fall (especially since 65-foot bridges on the Inland Waterway close the Morehead City-Beaufort route to many yachts), and a good stop for boats leaving the Caribbean in the spring heading for either the States or Europe. Bermuda used to be very hard to find, due to the erratic current of the Gulf Stream, poor lights on Bermuda, and difficulty with direction finders. In years gone by it was entirely possible to pile up on the reefs north of Bermuda when the lights of the island were still invisible. Now, North Rock and Northeast Breakers have decent lights on them; St. Davids light, on the northeast corner of the island, is visible 18 miles and Gibbs Hill light on the southwest corner is go
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The Atlantic Islands Great Sound: page 45 of Yachtsman's Guide to the Bermuda Islands by Michael Voegeli says you can pass from Hamilton into Great Sound through Ferry Reach. (The British and American charts show Ferry Reach closed off; they're only about twenty years out of date.) As of the summer of 1986 there was no overhead clearance problem and depth was good for 8 feet. However, I would check this information locally as things may have changed. If you cannot pass through Ferry Reach and have to go around north of St. George's, note that the South Channel will save you considerable distance over the long shipping route via North Channel. If you are delayed in Bermuda, especially if you have a shoal-draft boat, use Voegeli's Guide to spend a pleasant week or so exploring the Bermuda Islands. The first thing you notice about Bermuda is how polite and helpful the Customs and Immigration officers are to visiting yachtsmen (a far cry from most of their counterparts in the Caribbean), and how friendly the locals are (only in the Azores are they friendlier). It's a pleasant culture shock! The only problem with Bermuda is that it is expensive. Remember that the Bermudians have been in the tourist business since the 1870s. They are so adept but so polite at relieving you of your money that it doesn't even hurt. I have never heard anyone complain of being ripped off in Bermuda, but neither have I heard of anyone who left the island with any money in his pockets. Bermuda weather by Stateside standards is superb, as there is basically no winter, i. e., no snow-but from November through April/May temperatures in the 50s can be regularly encountered. During May/June and October/November, when yachtsmen are likely to be there, it will be warm though seldom hot during the day and cool at night. Although the weather on Bermuda is good, influenced by the Bermuda high, the weather around it can be lousy. Bermuda seems to attract storms like a magnet, and all the "garbage" weather that comes piling off North America goes whistling by not far off. This is particularly true in the late fall, and you're very likely to encounter at least one good blow on your way there. For that reason, I avoid Bermuda like the plague in the fall. (Bermuda is technically in the hurricane belt, but the Bermuda high almost always holds passing hurricanes off to the west of the island. Needless to say, though, the edges of a hurricane can give the old
93
Onion Patch a pretty good whack, as happened in 1987 when "Emily" passed close by. ST. GEORGE'S
Sketch chart It's best to enter St. George's only during daylight hours. You must absolutely stay in the dredged 31-foot channel: close to both edges there are more than a few nobbies. In 1985 Iolaire left her mark on one of them when we tacked a little too late. Once inside the harbor, proceed directly to the Customs and Immigration dock on the western end of Ordinance Island, clear and then find yourself a mooring spot. There is space between Ordinance Island and the mainland where boats can lie alongside two or three deep. As of 1985, you could tie up anywhere you liked east of Ordinance Island at no charge, but there were no facilities in the way of showers, water, or electricity. To find these facilities go down to the western end of the harbor and make arrangements to lie at the small marina of the St. George's Sports and Dinghy Club, a most pleasant organization that formerly had its headquarters on Ordinance Island where it was accessible to members working in town. They would stop by for a noontime pint or one at quitting time. The visiting yachtsman was quickly absorbed into the group-it was a superb location. Unfortunately, the building caught fire and burned in the early 1970s, and the present location of the club is a pretty long walk from town, so the club is no longer the great gathering place that it was. But it's still friendly. Water and fuel are available east of Ordinance Island at Dowling Shell Marina. St. George's used to be the world's most expensive place to have laundry done but now, thankfully, there is a laundromat in town. A sailmaker may be found west of town, on the way to the club. At the head of the eastern end of the harbor is Myers Marina-Shipyard with a 50-ton travel lift plus a I,OOO-ton railway capable of hauling any size yacht. Bermuda does have enough tide for a boat to either dry out or semi-dry out (4-foot tide at springs) but we couldn't find any convenient place to dry out alongside a wall. We had a small leak, which we could have easily plugged by drying out or hauling, staying in the slings for half an hour, and then going back in. Myers Shipyard gave a flat price for a haul, chocking, and going back in whether you stayed out four days or thirty minutes. (With the aid of a borrowed Aqualung I found and plugged the leak.)
94
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Outerbridge supermarket right in town can supply you with just about all you could need in the way of canned goods and other staples. Also, if you butter up the manager and are very nice, you might discover they have block ice in their deep freeze or can arrange to have ice frozen for you on special request. They do grow things other than tourists in Bermuda. There is an open market three days a week in the main square of Hamilton where fresh, locally grown produce is available. Further, when we were there in 1985 we contacted Warren Brown, Jr. (son of a famous ocean-racing owner of War Baby), who is a farmer and a sailor. He stocked us completely with fresh fruit and vegetables. He also knew the tricks of stocking vegetables ripe, almost ripe, and green, so that we were eating Bermuda tomatoes two and a half weeks later in the Azores and nothing had been refrigerated. Liquor seems cheap if you're coming from the States, but expensive relative to St. Barts. So if you're sailing transatlantic from the Eastern Caribbean I advise you to stock beer and booze for the whole trip in St. Barts, where it is considerably cheaper than in Bermuda. Bermuda has excellent air communications to the States, making it a perfect place to pick up or drop off crew. However, all of Bermuda's air contact seems to be via the States: the cheapest way to get to Bermuda from Europe is via the States; unfortunately the only way to reach Bermuda via air from the Caribbean is to fly to the States and thence to Bermuda. As a tourist mecca, Bermuda of course has hotels, restaurants, and bars too numerous to mention. When you arrive, obtain the local tourist guide, make your own local inquiries, and then find the places that fit your taste and pocketbook. For upto-date, detailed information on the islands, the Voegeli Guide mentioned before is first-rate.
AZORES
BA 1854, 1855, 1856, 1940, 1946, 3224; Portuguese 107-15, 160-66, 168-70, 172, 174, 176-78, 180-83, 186-88; US 51041, 51061, 51062, 51081, 51082. The Azores, a group of nine islands in the eastern Atlantic, lie between 37° and 40° north latitude and between 25° and 31° west longitude. This puts them about 800 miles off the coast of Portugal, to whom the islands belong. They are 1,100 sailing miles from Falmouth, England; about 2,200 from
Provincetown, Cape Cod, a good jumping-off place from the States; and 1,800 miles from Bermuda. Three hundred miles separates Flores, the western most island, from Santa Maria, which is the farthest east and south, and which lies 180 miles south of Corvo, the group's small northern outpost. Thus there is a great deal of water around, and it can get lumpy. The islands lie south of the Gulf Stream and on the edge of the track of the North Atlantic gales, which produce swells that make many of the group's anchorages untenable for much of the year. June, July, and August are the prime-in fact, some say the only-months for yachtsmen in the Azores. The islands were first found in the fourteenth century and then they were lost; Vasco da Gama rediscovered them in 1427, and ever since they have been called the Disappearing Islands or the Floating Islands. Over the centuries many a reputable navigator has seriously testified that the islands have moved or vanished. I can vouch for this confusion, for although they are high volcanic islands, they have an uncanny way of being invisible, even close-to. In 1985, the last time Iolaire visited the Azores, we approached Flores from Bermuda with a good celestial fix and a clear horizon; at 5 miles off there was nothing. Suddenly the southern end of the island popped into view, right where it should have been-and only two miles away. Later, approaching Pico, a 7,000-foot volcanic peak, we could see nothing at five miles off with an apparently clear horizon! The answer seems to be in the fine mist that forms around the islands under certain conditions. Heavy long-term fog is not common, but you can run into thick patches that reduce visibility to a few hundred yards before you come out into brilliant sunshine again. It makes navigating among the islands an exciting business. The climate is mild, somewhat like Ireland's; it never gets really cold in the winter, never gets really warm in the summer, and water temperature is down in the 60s. In the summer while sailing on good days, it is usually long pants, wool socks, and light-wool-sweater weather; on bad days and at night it is cold. Ashore it is usually shirt and shorts weather until dusk and then it is definitely long pants and a tight wool sweater. The Azores are out of the trade-wind belt. The most common. wind in the summer is from the westerly quadrants. However, the wind can also go to the east and can blow hard from that direction. Summer gales are infrequent, but stormgenerated swells continually roll through the Azores.
40·
.n. Corvo tru Vila M
~
Novo AS
Flor.s
Santa Cruz 1.2 , A3
Vila das lajes Al
G raciosa Folga
A12
Santa Cruz
~Vila ~
da Praia All
39"
A13
Terceira
Al0~
Faial
~
Sao Jorge
Vel as
Q
A15
Praia da Vitoria
~
Angra do Heroismo A14
Madelena
('t>
>
Horta AS
59 EO Banco das Acores
§=-
S.Cruz das Ribeiras A9
23
;:s .... c;-
-
Banco O.Joao de Cas/ro
';:s" " 1S'
~'l>"
38"1.
(j'l>V"
6°
EO 65
~
~5'
B/Jnco de la Princess Alicis
Pta Oelgada
A16
A 17 Viis Frsnca do Campo
1.21
Formiga. @) Santa Maria
A20 37" ~ S.Lourenco Vila do Porto ~ A19
31·
30"
Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts-Azores
29"
28"
27"
26"
25"
3;
96
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
In winter the edges of the North Atlantic gales bedevil the area to the extent that local advice is that no yacht should arrive in the Azores until early June and that everyone should be out of the Azores by the September equinox. Even the large harbors of Ponta Delgada and Horta, despite being protected by huge breakwaters, can be totally untenable to yachts during the time of winter gales; even yachts out of the water in cradles ashore have been washed out of their cradles in Horta. But there may be a change to all this in that at Horta an inner sea wall has been built to make a yacht marina (Harbor chart A 6). It appears that this inner sea wall allows yachts to remain in the Azores during the winter. If this is so it will certainly change the cruising aspect of the Azores. They traditionally have been visited only by yachts on their way through, coming from the States, the Eastern Caribbean, or Bennuda. Yachts have tended to stop, spend a week or so in the Azores, then continue to European ports. Now, if you can winter in Horta, a whole new pattern may emerge in which the Azores could be the end or beginning of a season's cruising instead of just a way-stop. Some yachtsmen sail out from England, cruise around the islands for a short period and then go back to England; but it's a long way to go. The only real way to cruise the Azores is to have one crew sail out, cruise the islands, and fly home. Then another crew flies in, picks up the boat, cruises the islands, and brings the boat back. American yachtsmen can do the same thing en route to Europe: stop, explore the islands, and change crew there if necessary before continuing on. It is possible to fly direct to the Azores from New York or Boston, which is much cheaper than flying to Lisbon and then doubling back to the Azores. The Azores are volcanic islands rising vertically out of the ocean floor with relatively few really secure all-weather harbors; thus, most anchorages are nothing but open roadsteads on a shore that drops away very steeply. You will often be anchoring in extremely deep water (sometimes 100 feet), so make sure you have enough anchors (I think four is a minimum for a proper cruising boat), plenty of line, and lots of chain. Many of the anchorages will be open to certain directions, winds can shift, and you may have to move out in a hurry. In an emergency be prepared to slip your line and buoy it to be retrieved at a later date when conditions calm down. Because of these conditions, I feel that the best
way to cruise the Azores in comfort is with a big crew. Then some can remain onboard while others explore the islands. If the weather changes, the onboard crew can pick up the anchor, stand offshore, and await the return of the rest of the crew. The double-hander who goes ashore to explore is always worrying about whether or not the anchor will drop off the almost vertical cliffside in which it's set or whether the wind will shift and drive his boat ashore. Cruise the Azores with a full crew. The population of the islands varies from the smallest, Corvo, with only 300 people and no cars, through Faial with about 25,000 people, to Sao Miguel, the largest of the islands-30 miles long and a population of 150,000. The amenities and availability of supplies is roughly in direct proportion to the population. The language spoken is Portuguese-a language that relatively few yachtsmen speak. However, the connections between the Azores and the States and Canada are very close (so many Azoreans live in the New Bedford-Boston area that a passenger freighter plies back and forth on a moderately regular run between the Azores and New Bedford) and thousands of islanders have gone to the States and Canada, learned English, made their money, and gone back home to retire. Finding an interpreter is not too difficult. The islanders, incidentally, proudly consider themselves Azorean first, Portuguese second; they even have their own flag. With all the disadvantages of the Azores-their isolation, lack of warm water and white sand beaches, the scarcity of good harbors-why should a yachtsman go to the Azores? Because of the people, the prices, and the scenery. In my experience the Azoreans are fantastically friendly people. After our landfall at Flares I thought the hospitality there was the best I'd ever seen anywhere-but I've been told that the people of Graciosa are even friendlier. Amazing. Then, too, the Azores are cheap. A beer at a good bar (not a local dive) was US twenty-five cents in 1985, dinner with wine in a good restaurant ranged from three to four dollars. Fresh food, although not tremendously varied, is available and also cheap. Ice is either free--chipped ice from the fish factories-{)r else ridiculously cheap, US fifty cents for 50 kilos of good block ice. Local wine is a good buy but imported liquor is expensive and it can not be bought duty-free, so load up with duty-free at your port of departure en route to the Azores! Water at the major ports is free; fuel, while not too easy to obtain as one must queue up among the fishing boats, is reasonably priced. Taxi fares
The Atlantic Islands are reasonable and the buses that crisscross the islands are so cheap as to be virtually free. Interisland air fares, while not as cheap as those in the Canaries and Cape Verde Islands, are cheap by Caribbean and European standards. The lOO-mile flight from Faial to Santa Maria is only US fifty dollars. The Azores are wonderful islands for shoreside expenditions. There are working windmills, and flowers of all types growing wild in such profusion that you'll think it is a cultivated garden. There are colorful festivals, beautiful farms, amazing little lace factories. Sao Miguel boasts a blue lake and a green lake right next to each other, a fantastically beautiful grotto with an underground lake, magnificent views from the tops of volcanoes, and hot sulfur springs. There is also the legacy of the Azores' whaling past. In Flores we discovered a defunct whale factory and only one whaleboat. Upon inquiry, though, we learned that there were twelve whale boats operating out of Flores until a couple of years ago; the last year they hunted whales (1982, I think) they caught sixty-six. In the Azores, unlike in Japan and the Caribbean, the idea of eating whale meat is just not heard of. They use only the oil and the bones and teeth for scrimshaw. The basic old-fashioned whale boat was a sixoared boat with a crew of seven; about 33 feet long, it had a 7ljz-foot beam, and depth of hull from the rail to the top of the keel was 26 inches. The seat was set 10 inches below the oarlock, with 32 inches between seats and no foot braces. Instead of tholepins they had beautiful bronze oarlocks and the longest oars I have ever seen a single man pull-17 feet! The steering oar appears to have been a full 24 feet long. Frames were 10 inches center to center, 11/4 inches deep, Vs-inch wide; seam batten construction, seam battens 2 inches by I/z-inch, 10 planks to a side. In Ponta Delgada I saw a fairly new whaleboat that was either single or double diagonal with another layer of planking going fore and aft, the whole thing held together by copper rivets rather than glue. This gave a smooth interior; frames were I-inch deep by %-inch wide, 18 inches center to center; thwart knees were galvanized steel. It would be interesting to know what its weight was versus the old-fashioned construction. The rig of the whaleboats leaves a lot to be desired: high-peaked gaff main, low aspect-ratio with a long boom, and a tiny club staysail. The mast is set on a pivot so it can be raised or struck by merely pulling a pin. (Unlike the Bequian style
97
where one must lift the mast up and drop it vertically into the mast partners. If a Bequian misses when stepping the mast it goes straight through the garboard strake!) I am altogether in sympathy with the great worldwide Save the Whales effort, but I do admit to a twinge of regret about the end of the Azorean whaling enterprise. It provided a bold and honorable living for generations of Azoreans and made a very small dent in the total whale population. It also produced a rich tradition of folk art in the now endangered genre of scrimshaw. Azorean scrimshaw can still be found in the islands, but it's getting scarce and its quality varies drastically. In Horta the best source is a fellow named Orton; Pico prices are cheaper, Terceira is dearer, due probably to the presence of the US Navy Air Station there. The best scrimshaw depicts traditional whaling scenes and local Azorean vistas; efforts to picture modern yachts for the tourist trade are pretty bad. Incidentally, I understand that during 1985 Sailing Week (the Azorean equivalent of Antigua Week) there was an exhibition of whaling techniques, and whaleboat races under sail and oars. I hope this will continue and preserve a unique Azorean heritage. Customs and Immigration in the Azores could not be more helpful and more friendly, but you must enter and clear at every port. This takes time and requircs a stack of papers, hut the fees are negligible. The routine varies slightly from island to island but if you go to the Port Captain's office, he will point you in the right direction. Usually Customs and Immigration are at the Port Captain's office and some more papers must be filled out at the Guarda-Fiscal. Don't fail to follow the routine. We did not realize we had to enter and clear in every island and we almost got into hot water for not entering when we arrived in Horta; we placated everyone with apologies. Then on leaving I completely forgot about clearing until just before the noon closing time (they close until 1500 in the afternoon). I rushed down to the waterfront to discover that the immigration officer had just left. One of the GuardaFiscal ran up the street, pulled the immigration officer out of his car and back to his office. I apologized profusely and explained that I had completely forgotten about clearing. To which he replied (his English was fair but not perfect) "You lie, you lie." I thought "Oh, boy, here's trouble," as he thumbed through his papers muttering "You lie, you lie." Suddenly a big grin spread across his face
98
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
and he said, "Ah, here you lie," and he pulled out the entry papers and handed them to me. "You lie" was his pronunciation of Iolaire. Needless to say I was a very relieved skipper, and when I explained it to him he almost fell out of his chair laughing. He said he would be happy to join me for a drink except his wife already had his dinner cooked. He was as anxious to keep on his wife's good side as I was to keep on his. Like everywhere else in the world the Azores are beginning to have a drug problem, and like everywhere else the smuggling is being blamed on yachts. True or not, yachtsmen are allowed to visit only the major towns (many of which are mere villages). You are not allowed to anchor without prior written permission in many of the little outisland coves. Customs and Immigration are also very firm (but polite) about the fact that you must leave your dinghy within the dock area; they won't allow you to take your dinghy anywhere else as they say they are afraid you may smuggle something ashore. This is a little ridiculous, since they don't inspect you, your baggage, or anything else you wander in and out of the commercial dock with, but there it is. As to charts. The Portuguese have the Azores incredibly well charted, covering the area with thirty-two charts. They haven't kept up, though, with the construction of new breakwaters or marinas. For general use I would stick with the US or British charts and then use the Portuguese charts for the small out-of-the-way ports. There are three general DMA charts and two detailed harbor charts. The British charts cover the group with one overall chart and six for the individual islands. By the spring of 1988, I hope, two Imray-Iolaire charts will cover the area, with one general overall chart with some harbor plans, and a second chart with the remaining harbor plans. For now, the best alternative source for information is Bob Silverman's excellent Cruising Guide to the Azores, available from Robert B. Silverman, Apartado No. 65, 9900 Horta, Faial, Azores. The magic of the Azores is not just about disappearing islands. If you've come from the Caribbean in May, where water is scarce, ice expensive, and the people grumt>y, to arrive in the lush Azores with waterfalls spraying onto the beach and to be greeted by people who want to give you water, ice, and hot showers, where the Customs Officer offers to buy you a drink. . . well, it makes an old sailor think he's arrived in Valhalla. Obviously more and more yachtsmen are discovering these pleasures. I knew the Azores were
popular, but was amazed in 1985 to discover that by August some 750 boats had passed through Horta, which is the main yachtsman's rendezvous. In 1986 the number was about the same. Admittedly, most of those boats were passing through, but with the new marina, my bet is that increasing numbers of them will be staying for a longer look. During the winters of 1986-87 and 1987-88, a couple dozen boats wintered in the marina with nO problems.
Flores US 51041; BA 1946 with a plan of Santa Cruz and VHa das Lajas; Portuguese 107, 115, 186 (plan), 187 (plan); Harbor charts AI, A2, A3. Flores, the westernmost island of the Azorean Archipelago, makes an excellent landfall for boats approaching from the west. Flores is small, only 10 miles in a north-south direction and 5 miles wide; it rises 2,000 feet out of the sea, and has a population of about 7,000 people. It cannot be considered a place to restock a boat but it does have the basic essentials that any sailor would want coming from sea. Flores has a D. F., beacon callletters FLO with a range of 250 miles and call letters SC, Santa Cruz, with a range of 25 miles, making the approach easy in foggy conditions. (See Appendix B for details.) When we made our landfall from Bermuda we were about to anchor south of Santa Cruz in the open roadstead but someone got On the radio (speaking French, not Portuguese) and said we could fit into the inner harbor at Santa Cruz. He came out in a dinghy to lead us in. He lashed the dinghy alongside and towed us (engineless) through one of the narrowest, rockiest, hairiest harbor entrances I've ever been through. An immediate 90° right turn avoided a particularly nasty rock and put us in a tiny basin crisscrossed with floating lines. We were greeted by two American yachtsmen standing by in dinghies, and by a bunch of Portuguese fishermen standing by on both sides of the basin to receive lines. We were talking English, they were talking Portuguese but everyone knew what they were doing and in no time they had us over the floating lines, turned around 1800 and moved into the innermost part of the basin and properly secured. All this with much waving, shouting, and gesticulating but no real confusion. A few of the fishermen came onboard and had a beer; one of them, Jose Augusto Lapez, who would
The Atlantic Islands
99
Depths in Feet
282
472
Pta Oesta
223 229 Baixos do Joao de Lisboa
195
IIheude 0 Monchique .;,' . o~3sa" '..
;.:~ IIheu de Alvarvo +: Rodriques
1963 •
Bal~
'72 Testa da Igreja
. 2662
FLORES
o Aero RC
78
• 2157
39"25' N
~
~
114~ofJ~'b
pta o\) Bo do Escolar 62 Depths in Feet
l~)
;:~>,:+:.. ~1i' 28 "oQ0'"
...
::1.~)BO dos Morros
~ \)
282
o I
2
3
I
4 ;
Sea 5Mile
I
Outline Flores and Corvo
easily pass for Ron Holland's twin, immediately asked how we would like some nice hot showers. He said he would be back to pick us up in about two hours. Then he looked up at the mast and saw our wind generator, which had done a 1800 turn when a weld on the bracket let go, and they were amazed to discover we had no engine. We said we had solved our engine problems sixteen years before by throwing it overside. They then looked at our
upside-down generator and said, "Then you must need electricity." I said, "Fine but obviously you have no shoreline here," and they said, "No, but we can rig a jumper off the light pole [pointing to the light pole 100 feet away], run the wire over to your mizzen masthead and down to your batteries." They were all set to do it but we did not have a 120 12-volt battery charger. Later we discovered a small ferry, operated by
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
100
Jose's father, Augestino--the Augustos seem to run everything in Flores, including a 55-foot freight boat powered by a 200 horsepower cat dieselthat was heading for Corvo. Three of us jumped onboard, made the two-hour, I5-mile run from Flores to Corvo, had a quick tour of Corvo, and returned; the ferry stays there only forty-five minutes. (What we should have done was made arrangements to spend the night in a Portuguese home.) On the trip back we tried to pay Augestino, but no way would he accept any money. On the
following day when we were getting ready to leave Flores they insisted on giving us enough ice to fill our boxes. There are four separate anchorages in Flores. VILA DAS LAJES
Portuguese chart 187; Harbor chart Al Anchor in 60 to 80 feet of water northeast of town, which in reality is a small village, a secondary anchorage for the island, sheltered in all winds
75
19 '367
20
10
~ 0
14
,,0Baixode Chicharra
29
:-r 0>
45
~
M 39 22:50 N 0
25 9
30 52 12 27
40 79
26
······0 ..:22
33 95
82
85
o I
Al
100
VHa das Lajes
200
300
I
400
I
Yards
99 Depths in Feet
The Atlantic Islands from south-southwest around to north, completely open to the easterly quadrants. Some of the crew should be left onboard so that the boat can be moved if necessary to stand offshore if the wind comes in from the east. If you have clothes to wash, there is a beautiful waterfall that provides all the water you need for washing and showering right on the beach half a mile north of where you anchor. SANTA CRUZ
Portuguese chart 186; Harbor charts A2, A3 Ten miles north of Vila das Lajes is Santa Cruz, the main town, with two anchorages. The outer anchorage is in the bay just south of Ponta Espigo in 40 to 50 feet, rocky bottom; sheltered from southwest around to north. This anchorage is used by the tunny fishermen sheltering from westerly gales and by the small freighters that periodically bring cargo to Flores. The second anchorage, Porta das Pocas, is the inner basin described above. It is suitable only for boats drawing less than 8 feet, and if you draw much more than 5 feet, don't go in except at high water-a rocky ledge stretches across the mouth of the harbor. Get the southern end of the breakwater on a bearing of 304 0 magnetic, run in on this line, and practically kiss the rocks on your starboard side: immediately turn 900 into the basin. Be prepared to work the floating lines that crisscross the harbor underneath your keel. (This is a place where a long-keel boat is really worthwhile; fin-and-skeg boats have a lot of trouble with the floating lines.) The farther into the harbor you can work yourself the calmer and more secure you will be, but be aware that in total this harbor is probably 100 yards long and no more than 50 yards wide. If there are more than four boats in the harbor don't try to get in. And don't go in unless the weather is settled, because if it gets rough you are trapped inside until the sea calms down. Water can be obtained from the town landing via a long hose; basic food supplies are available ashore-nothing spectacular but adequate. Fuel strictly by jerry cans, but ice, as previously mentioned, is free. There are a number of small good restaurants ashore and plenty of bars. Taxis to explore the island are cheap: $18 for a three-hour tour and about $2 an hour after that. You can call home from the post office in town. Maria, whose house overlooks the basin at Vila das Lajes, does laundry but she has no drying facilities and be sure you agreed on a price before
101
you leave your laundry. If you think the price of anything is out of line, check with Jose Augusto in Santa Cruz. WHALE FACTORY ANCHORAGE
Portuguese chart 186; Harbor chart A4 This is north of Santa Cruz beneath the old whale factory. Here you anchor and run lines ashore to various rocks: stern line to the west, starboard bow lines to the rocks, drop the port anchor but be prepared to anchor in 100 feet of water. Since the anchor will be pulling uphill, you will not need the standard three-to-one scope. Be sure to be facing out; if the weather changes and you need to get out, you want to be able to get out fast, powering directly into the head sea rather than trying to back out. Arrange your lines so they can be cast off rapidly and have your anchor line rigged so that it can be slipped and buoyed to be retrieved later if it is fouled and you have to leave in a hurry. This cove is completely sheltered from all directions except northeast, and is a place to be entered only by boats with an engine. It is a halfmile, very scenic walk along the cliff to town, or you can hitchhike along the road. Rumor says that a large breakwater is to be built extending due north from Ponta San Pedro, which should create a big all-weather harbor here.
Corvo US S1041; BA 1946 with harbor plan of Vila Nova; Portuguese 107, lIS, 188. Harbor chart AS Corvo, a small island rising steeply out of the sea ten miles north of Flores, has no real harbor. You can take the launch-ferry from Flores to Corvo, but it remains alongside the jetty for only fortyfive minutes. Better to try to arrange through Jose Augusto overnight accommodation so that you can spend a night and day in Corvo exploring and then return on the ferry the next day. It is possible to anchor northeast of the small jetty in 15 to 20 feet of water. Use two anchors on a Bahamian moor, and make sure that some of the crew stay onboard, as the anchorage is protected west through north but is otherwise completely open. Amazingly, there is an airstrip on Corvo--too small for TAP's Avro 748, but it's used by the military once a week. With a population of only 300 people, the island of Corvo is run like one big family-a very loose form of local government. There are no cars, just little three-wheeled single-cylinder tractors attached
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
102
Depths in Feet
36
50
758
85
71 ,('f\ <-
27
+
+~+ +
52
++
76
70
Ch.S.Pedro
138
--------
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Porto de Santa Cruz 201 Monte das Cruzes
39"27'N"",
. 695
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----
221
+ .39
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89 178
75 728 20
o I
500
1000
I Yards
A2
Santa Cruz
The Atlantic Islands
10 3
19
Depths in Feet
+. +.: 175
\
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34
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Porta de Santa Cruz
100 I
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300
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...
_ .
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
85 138
"+" ...... 16
39
85 132 82
~ N
.....
P M 39'27:8 N
5 -'.23
112
*.
135
24
2 : 125
o I
100 ,
200
I
I
Depths in Feet
Yards
A4
Whale Factory Anchorage
to two-wheel carts that haul goods to the dock from the village, about 200 feet up the cliffside, If you are interested in working windmills, there are three of them on the southeast corner of the island that grind corn, the island's major crop,
Faial
US 51061, 51062; BA 1855, 1940; Portuguese 114, 183 (plan), 186; Harbor chart A6 HORTA
Harbor chart A6 Horta, the harbor for the island of Faial, is the favorite stop for yachtsmen passing through the Azores, as it is the western most Azorean island with a harbor that has good facilities and is secure in all normal circumstances. As of 1986, Horta provided free yacht moorings or free berthing alongside the docks; water and
fuel are available, and shaved ice in reasonable quantities is free from the ice plant right on the dock. At the head of the harbor is a public bath where for about US twenty-five cents you get a clean hot shower with all the water you want-a welcome change from the Eastern Caribbean that you have probably just left. Just behind the public baths is a laundry that does washing quickly and economically, and gives you dry laundry (in contrast to Maria at Flores), This harbor is also known by yachtsmen the world over as the headquarters of Peter Azevedo, the owner of the Cafe Sport, who has followed in his father's footsteps and continues to offer a warm welcome to all visiting yachtsmen, He serves as a bank, mail drop, agent, and counselor for yachtsmen of all nationalities; he forwards mail, and finds mechanics, welders, and carpenters and in general is an all-round good fellow, In summer you will find as many as forty yachts anchored in the harbor. One of the musts before leaving Horta is to paint your yacht's name on the
The Atlantic Islands
105
.... : .... "16
L 'i-
Senhora dos M,lagres
60
100
20
39
Portinho da Casa
24 33
Tank
43
+
+
+
+ 39 ~
'"
57
~
····0::-····
56
18
+
+
66
."
56
' .. ' Laredo da Catheta
52
56
;;:; 39'40'N
33
--~~~~-----6~5
31
o Depths in Feet
A5
I
100
200 !
300
400
I
Vila Nova
mile-long harbor wall, which serves as a catalog of yachting history for the island. There are a number of small supermarkets in Horta, some of which offer free delivery to yachts. The open-air market should, of course, be visited for fresh supplies, Taxis are cheap, so carrying large quantities of supplies from the market or elsewhere is no problem. If there is space in the new marina, that is
obviously the place to moor, but I suspect that there will be a waiting list to get in all summer long. In that case you can lay alongside the west wall, or raft out from the pier in the southeast corner. Yachts under 40 feet can pick up bow-andstern moorings in the southeast corner. If you anchor out it is incredibly poor holding--miscellaneous loose hard rock and sand over a very hard bottom. The only thing that will keep you from
106
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Depths in Feet
246 . Cabeco Verde
1601
38"35' N
FAIAL • Cabeco Gorda 3425
879· 192 Pta do Castelo Branco ----.-..~_,/'"-""-...,.-~--'" 't: 91
o I
4 Sea Miles !
550
i2}: Ba
cio'Sul
Outline Faial
dragging is hooking onto one of the mooring chains that crisscross the harbor bottom. This will keep you from dragging, but will inhibit you retrieving your anchor unless you have a tripping line rigged; be forewarned. In calm weather, I am told, it is worth taking the dinghy out around to the extinct volcanic crater of Monte da Guia, The island of Faial is certainly well worth a tour either by taxi or by the tour bus that operates on certain days. When we were there with Iolaire in 1985 there were virtually no yacht supplies available in Horta but you could get almost any kind of repair work done well and cheaply. The large Reet of wellkept, electronically sophisticated tunny fishing vessels in Horta attest to some competent electronics, diesel, and general repair experts in the neighborhood. Holga Kreuzhage, of the 72-foot schooner Lord jim, tells of trying to get a broken gear train for a Barlow winch welded. The machine shop he found said they couldn't do that but they would machine him a new part. They did it for less than he figured it would cost to buy the new part and have it shipped from Australia, and in a fraction of the time. Peter Azevedo can tell you where to find that wonderful place. And now, with the new marina operating, I'm sure someone will show up to sell yacht supplies. We had no trouble filling our gas bottles in
Horta. Mail is slow, telegraph expensive, and international phoning difficult but possible. Hauling facilities are primitive, but it's possible to arrange for yachts under 25 tons to be hauled by crane. Bob Silverman, author of the Azores cruising guide, also runs a sail repair loft in Horta, where he does good work at a reasonable price.
Pi co US 51061, 51062; BA 1940; Portuguese 107, 114, 180 (plan), 181 (plan), 186; Harbor chart A7, Sketch charts A8, A9. Pico, dominated by its 7,000-foot peak, is famous as a longshore whaling station. Until 1984 whales were harpooned from boats similar to those Captain Ahab used. Lookouts on the mountain telephoned to town, the boats were launched and then towed by launches to the pod. The launches helped herd the whales, and stood by as crash boats to rescue survivors if a boat was holed or capsized; once the whale was killed they towed it in. But the approach, the harpoon throwing, the "Nantucket sleigh ride," and the killing were all out of Moby Dick. Pico's anchorages are all open, so the only sensible way to go there has been by ferry from Horta. Going on the first ferry in the morning and returning on the last one is a fairly good day. Some yachtsmen have spent the night at a pension on
The Atlantic Islands
107
in Feet
57
36
N
59
102 46
~138'32N Mast IJ
HORTA 43
108
75 IJ
105
92
135
o
500 Yards
A6
Horta
108
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
84 36
216 38'30' N
:!: (:) N
00
. Pico
2B8
Pica
N
7713
i\,6 0
181
• Groloes 3304
~...o
?:p"-
Bahiados Caste/etes
Laje , 3172
162
PIa da Ilha 204
144
o
10 Sea Miles
5
I
Depths in Feer
I
I
Outline PieD
Depths in Fee
78
57 41 c.S.bkShCo
114
144
27
F5.bk Sh
13
~ FI.R.6s.65ft.3M
(+ \;f.
65
23 Baixa Bran ca
"
53 91
PIa da Pedra
Bra;'_:~-- ALdg Oc.R.3s.33/39fI2M
----::,-----;;+; L~~':!~~~ - - - -- --...... ,/ 2'
_-------
A7
Madalena
44 ", ,,'5
0
500
1000
I:::::;':=::::::::::::::::::::::I::::::::::::::::::::;;:~';11
Yards
The Atlantic Islands
L09
Depths in Feet Mole Head Light 38°24:4 N 28'11 :2 W
52
237
.' 7
2
+ 30
9
92
66
Atafona F.R.42ft.5M
~
-----Oc.G.3s.2M. --:::. .,: L 227 49 -..:.___Ldg Lts 280'
~
L3
"v"v~/
85
V//
17
/
52
/
/
/
,/
//
13
718
,-;,)"".
;>'76 + ----..,'-" , .• <.,:
17'.
26 16
o
500 Yards
Eb=-3==~==EE=3==~==~e=d==~
50
ApproK
I
Mole Head Light 38°31 :9 N 28°1 9:2 W
A8
100 Yards
, I ApproK. Depths in Feet ..
Cais do Pico (sketch chart)
A9
Pico and sat up late in the evening, listening to all sorts of stories when liquor has relaxed the whaler and loosened his tongue. There is also a whaling museum on Pico that is said to be worth a good look. Most recent reports say that breakwaters have been built at Madalena on Pico's west coast, and Cais do Pico on the north coast (Harbor charts A7 and A8). Ask in Horta whether or not these have made suitable refuges for yachts. There is also a possible anchorage and dock on the south coast at Santa Cruz das Ribeiras, Sketch chart A9.
Silverman's guide to be small and crowded; he advises anchoring in the northeast corner of the harbor in a suitable depth, being ready to move in a hurry. Bob Silverman feels a stop is worthwhile as "Sao Jorge's foreboding exterior cliffs and mountains hide a most attractive interior."
Sao Jorge
US 51061; BA 1855; Portuguese 107, 109, 114, 177 (plan), 178 (plan); Harbor chart A 10. VELAS
We did not visit Sao Jorge, but only sailed along its shores. The main port, Velas, appears from Bob
Santa Cruz das Ribeiras (sketch chart)
Graciosa US 51061; BA 1855, 3224 with plan of Folga; Portuguese 107, 109, 113, 174 (plan), 175 (plan), 176 (plan); Harbor charts All, A12, A13. Doctor Paul de Bie of Musette, an extremely experienced yachtsman, states that the people here are even nicer and more friendly than they are on Flores-something which I find hard to imagine. There are three separate anchorages. Since the island is fairly small-basically a circle 6 miles in diameter-you can choose your anchorage according to the weather and move from one to another as conditions demand. The anchorages are only 3
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
110
336
o Depths in Feet
5
10 Sea Miles
tl~==~==~==±I==~~====~~1
Outline Sao Jorge
miles apart. This is unlike most other Azorean islands where the anchorages are either one to an island or a good distance apart.
VILA DE PRAIA
Harbor chart All Vila de Praia was formerly an open anchorage but now a breakwater has made a harbor sheltered, except for winds from the southeast. If the wind moves to the southeast you can move a half mile and anchor behind the island of Praia.
SANTA CRUZ
Harbor chart A12 Santa Cruz is an open roadstead, open to the east through northwest, no real harbor; anchor in 80-plus feet. But according to Bob Silverman the town is well worth a visit. If the wind is in the
northwest to north, you'll find shelter in Portinho da Barra half a mile to the east of the anchorage off town and within walking distance of town. If you're sailing from Portinho da Barra to Santa Cruz or the reverse, stay well offshore as Baixa Alagada, a pinnacle rock with only 3 feet of water over it rising out of 45 feet of water, is a full quarter of a mile offshore and surrounded by deep water. FOLGA
Portuguese 174; Harbor chart A13 Folga, on the south coast only 5 miles from Praia, is open from the west to the southeast, a deep open roadstead; just be ready to move. Ice is available at the Entreposto. The major danger of Graciosa is Ilheu de Baixo, a rocky island off the southeast corner of the island. Bob Silverman advises passing outside the island, staying well offshore because of the shoal that extends southeast from Ilheu de Baixo.
The Atlantic Islands
111
O~==~1~O~O==~2~?~O~===3=?~O~====L:!~~y:ardS I
400
•
5f
PORTO DA S VELAS
+
43
50
53
37··...
'.
707
85
79
........
112
".
53
95
115
Ba
65
85
-·~·+"tf+:.: . .d~··k;~~;~at!..
'.... 46
i~~~:::,. ".
44
Depths in Feet
AlO
Velas
Depths In Feet
: ...... Ba do Pesqu elf 0 Longo 'i>~.
.~...
'.17: .
15°
1\."
216
GRACIOSA
">
q,'-"'.
27
n,".*.. ia (;> ."".' lI-: IIheu da Pra «.' "V*' .q . . ... + .. , 36
162 "
6'3~
.,:
......'1>
0"tio9 a 204
~ ~ IIheude V
2
3
I
I Sea Moles
Baixo
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
112
Depths inFeet
38
IS'
42
37 42
31
FI.G .3s.49ft.9M
35
+
41
42
27
37
do PfJdrfJ d, Porto Poeirinho
+
41
12
~
14
~
~
25 .'
10
+
12
38
+ ;f; + Cais da Praia
23 13
3
88i)(8 do Forno
+
+
:+..... +
'. if! ;If
10
36
+
88i)(1I PfJqufJnll do Enfillouro
+
*
~+"
+
24
8
4 +
111
9 12
+ 1
All
30 11
5
3
"+ '" +. +
39'03:1 N
+
+
+ if!
12
0
100
200
300
Yr
Vila da Praia
Terceira US 51061; BA 3224; Portuguese 107, 109, 112, 170, 172 (plan); Harbor charts A14, A15. This island has two harbors and is the home of a big US Naval Air Station. The main city is Fanal with its port of Angra do Heroismo. ANGRA DO HEROISMO
Harbor chart A14 Angra do Heroismo is the anchorage for the main town. You can lie on the western side of the harbor under the Club Nautic, which before it closed in June 1985 offered showers, a mail drop, etc; perhaps it will reopen. The Customs Officers do not like you to anchor on the eastern side of the harbor but would rather have you anchor by the main commercial dock. However, the Customs Officers usually will grant permission to lie on the
eastern side of the harbor if a direct and plaintive appeal is made. The trouble with the western side of the harbor is that it can be a very tight squeeze when the large ships, which enter and leave with no tug, come to the main commercial dock. The easiest way to reach town is to run the dinghy over to the fishing-boat ramp in town, drop part of the crew off, and return to the boat; someone should remain onboard, since this is a commercial port with crews of all nationalities visiting the harbor. The town of Angra do Heroismo is interesting, with plenty of shops, some good, very inexpensive restaurants, large hotels, and a beautiful old church; but the town is still in a state of rebuilding after suffering a very bad earthquake in January 1980. The Port Captain can tell you how to get fuel and water, but there are basically no yacht facilities at all. If the wind begins to blow hard out of the southeast this harbor would get either uncomfortable or untenable; you'll find shelter by going
The Atlantic Islands
113
Depths in Feet
44
48 ,+:Restinga Afonso +... Martms
~
36
8
15, 31
39°05:5 N
88i8 dos Santinhos
:E
47
50
cS .bk. Sh.Co 48 39
(f:, Baixa Alagada
24
it
36
';1~ '~21i42:i; ;;;';1" *' : .... 1 . '~'"
.:*' : /"..
.'
+
-4--
8 18,j'i .·B. 7 'R'; 25
+ 3'· ++ + ". + + + ++..... ++ + +
:'2 ..........: "·14 . Pta do Rifao
<;:' .. + '" ". + ;.;
27
+ +·~.11
~.......-
+ :' + + :' ~ + + 5:"
+
... ' . . *....
~ ·'14
:'9
14
9
500
I
I Yards
A12
Santa Cruz
66
Il)
55
8Co N
39' 01' N
72
46 57
114
96
46
;r
150
102
Pta do Pesqueiro '. do Pau
72
10
"'+ ',4
-T
\+
\++ +
: +* +
150 0
I
500
I
Yards
A13
Folga
29
......." 2 + + + +......: 12 Portinho de Barra
o
\
28 .. " .... +., :.
:'39
Restingo ..... do Enxudreiro 7
33
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
114
Depths in Feet
.).,~\
<;9' ~,oy'0
150
~...~
,iiJ;Bo da Serreta~:.: .. ' 300
234 • IIheu do Norte
%
: Pta do Raminho
Pta Serreta FI.(3).15s 312fl.21 M
~
'v'
~
75i
2649' Caldeira de Sta.Barbara
186
:'+
3S'45'N
AI.FIWG.l0s.
.~
:!:
o .....
'334-7
N
TERCEIRA
696 .....
Pta do Balxio '1612 '1431 OcR.3s.19ft.2M
Pta das Cinco ~ LFI6s.72ft.12M 138
1080'
Pta do Roaz
*
Pta etas C
£Bahia da Vila 432
0""1'61
--... ~--....
"0'.
408
Monte Brasil Pto JudeuJ:f_ ~ <:Po!" • *OcWR.10s.7Oft.12M 72 7~~~PtadaMlna ::-=-!
L...-_ _
0'
~lIheus das'l'.9o Cabras
o
5
I
ISea Miles
~'>Jf?
('~"t,..;
"-9,s
306 ".$. ''>''fr (30) : , ! ) 2 6 M
Fradinhos
Outline Ilha Terceira
around Monte Brasil and anchoring in Fanal, a 2mile distance, but you would first have to obtain permission from Customs. Alternately, you can sail around the island to Praia da Vitoria. PRAIA DA VITORIA
Harbor chart A15 Praia da Vitoria is now well-sheltered due to the completion of the new breakwater extending north from the south end of the harbor. It offers good holding on sand bottom and clean water. The village of Praia da Vitoria is very much a tourist village as it caters to the American base, which is shared with the Portuguese Air Force. It also attracts the people of Terceira as it is apparently the only sand beach on the island. There are windsurfing schools, restaurants, bars, etc., but virtually no yachting facilities or marine supplies. In an emergency, I would imagine that if you befriended the crews of the tugs that lie in the harbor to serve the American ships carrying supplies for the air base, you could get practically anything done, as has been discovered by more than one retired US military person.
Something else worthy of note: if all the restaurants in town are closed-believe it or not-you can take a taxi to the naval base, go in, and eat American-type chow at the Navy Petty Officers' Club. Furthermore, at the PX, any retired military person can avail themself of the great variety and cheap price of Stateside products! Finally, our friend Mr. Fraga of SATA, the local airline, reports that block ice is available at Hotel Lota at San Mateuz-but you'll need a local road map to find this village as it is not a harbor!
Sao Miguel US 51081; BA 154 with inserts of Ponta Delgada and Porto de Capelas; Portuguese 107, 111 (plans), 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165; Harbor charts A16, A17, A18. Sao Miguel is the largest of the islands, about 30 miles long. It is also the most populous-about 150,000 people-and has the biggest port, Porta Ponta Delgada with a steamer quay a full half-mile long, a large town with excellent restaurants, hotels,
Oc.R.6s.149tt7M.
\'
\'\ IAngra do Heroismo
~~"o~\,
23
32·.
\,~
fI ...... 96 •.'".
++ . + + 23 y+. das ~:+'+ r++. AguIIs '++/ '+ : 7 ill ++":. .......... .
***. *
46
52
44
N
+
30
'+ .. ,; 1
>1<
55
22
S.J.Baptista
52
'. 8I1ixio.:
(jii.'!os AguIIs
*
:.~.>'
Ba/xa da Pramh: .•
FI.G.3s.46ft.7M , '.21
40
,
48
~
59
.......
\,
29
.... N
49
61
52
'. '
~
IQ.
\c;: Iu>
52
~
....>
\ I",
81
,~
IN,
S"
;:
....
1-
' ....
Mont.'
,~
\ I
559
\
(")
87
.....
'" S"
I
,!
94
;:
~
MONTE BRASll 133 Mte Brasil 670.
133
133
185
~~
169
169 107
159
172 0
I
500
I
1000
I Yards
Depths in Feet
A14
Angra do Heroismo
......
en
116
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide + -+::
Praia da Vitoria
f' l
Town Hall
DD~j
2
5
NORTH
8
MOLE
S
25
7
49
39
s
25
S
FI.G4s.56ft.5M
18
42
5
S.Sh 78
20
62
37
FIR4s.(Tempy) p
'.
2
96
12 SOUTH
MOLE
57
r UNDER
31
+ :+:
CONSTRUCTION) ~
4
44
Lt> M
72
o
~
38°43'N
Sh. S.
49 30
54
30 6
36
o I
A15
100 . I
200
19 Depths in Feet
Praia da Vitoria
supermarkets, shops, etc. Ice is available at the beer factory, only a short walk from the dock entrance gate, good block ice and cheap. Yachts anchor up on the north side of the harbor or moor alongside the floating docks at the western end of the harbor. Customs and Immigration are in the Port Captain's office at the head of the dock. Everyone is very friendly but they are very firm about the fact that dinghies are allowed to be
brought only into the orange floating dinghy dock; they are not allowed to land at the small dock at the restaurant or at the north edge of the harbor. This seems a bit silly and means a longer walk into the city, but see the section on Customs and Immigration in Chapter 8, for reasons. Free hot showers can be had right outside the gate to the Club Naval. Contact the Port Captain for fuel and water and check very carefully. Remember that
The Atlantic Islands
117
3:
g In N
37"55' N
Pta da Bretanha
Pta da Ajuda '__ _- - Pta da Ribeira
Pta do Arnel l:t
FI.5s.25M.
SAO MIGUEl
o
5 10 Sea Miles tl~==z=~=z==c=~~~==~~I-
Outline Sao Miguel
o
MaedeDeus
Oc.G.5s.154ft.BM.~,
N
, \
300
,
Yards
.,~'I>
:'1"\8ajo de Poello
....... ;..... :t. ..
7
'• •'
..
t-.. 4-+.... ~ada palal~a
.... +
.... ..........
:'
24
........ 30
20
34
........
17 Lts in Line 266' (1)
".
30 ~
y
16
13
13
(i·t· aixa de S.Pedro ..... 0.(6) + L.Fl.15s.
13
~\V
?>'I> «''I>
27
'oido PesQueiTo
(f:
~~~
:'
i
~~;::==~OcR3s46ft 5M.
13
49
30
....
........
A16
Ponta Delgada
59
33 42
Depths in Feet
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
118 Deplh& in Feel
26
23 . . . ' ..... .
40
............ 30 14'
22
24
61
5
25
11
N
40
43
47 60
45
74
60
56 Pta da Cozinha
71
o
500
1000
I
I
*. . ". if. : Baixa das Cracas 78
91
A17
Yards
Vila Franca da Campo
o 58
400
I Yards
\ \ \
.
133
\
. : Cal,?au da Canavieira\
.
\
78
\ \ \
94 \ \
\
\
\
\ \ \ \
\ 52 \ \ \ \ +.21
<,. Calhauda Grul2
\
40
\ \
\ Morro de Capelas
~~ Capelas ~::--:: Depths In Feet
A18
Porta de Capelas
,;,
The Atlantic Islands this is a commercial port and commercial fishermen take precedence. Furthermore, the water and fuel hoses are none too long; thus you may be alongside the dock waiting for fuel and then find the hose won't reach. There are no yachting supplies but, as in Horta, there are plenty of skilled craftsmen around. Right on the quay are a couple of woodworking shops building boats, plus what appears to be an excellent machine shop, obviously making up duplicate parts for the fishing fleet. Hauling facilities are minimal and crude but they work. It is the usual Portuguese operation: basically a wire attached to the stem of the boat, bilge skids put underneath the bilge and hauled up by BF&I (brute force and ignorance). Last-minute update, May 1988: Cordon Stout, skipper of the 109-foot motor sailer Shango (which we have insured twice around the world, as far north as the Bering Sea, as far south as Tierra del Fuego), arrived in Porto Ponta Delgada with no rudder, having motorsailed, steering with sails, for the last 200 hundred miles. He reports the successful repair of Shango in Porto Ponta Delgada, and I quote from his telegram: " ... electric, electronic, engine repairs, machine work-including stainless-steel welding--can be performed by various workshops, also good woodworking facilities, haul out for vessels drawing 6'6" or less can be done Portuguese West Indian-style BF&I, extremely active and well-maintained fishing fleet, yacht club with 200 meters floating dock, active dinghy racing on weekends; Jose Fortuna, Lloyd's agent, extremely competent, knows everyone and can get anything done. Antonio Ferreira, tel 24016, has good machine shop and can arrange all work; with a little chasing around you can get anything done, it's like being back in the Eastern Caribbean in the late sixties. Traineira best restaurant on island, 3 miles out of Lafoa, good red wine, fi)rget about other wine, bread awful, shopping expensive (guess this has changed since Portugal joined the EEC). Regards, Cordon." You could spend a week in Ponta Delgada and just scratch the surface of what Sao Miguel offers. The city is urbane and busy; the solid old Portuguese fort overlooking the harbor bespeaks its antiquity, and the bustling streets offer several days' worth of browsing, shopping, eating, and drinking. The island has many delights, including the inland resort town of Furna with its hot springs and miniature Old Faithfuls; Sete Cidades at the east end is a mountainous area with splendid vistas and varied scenery. In spring the miles of bloom-
llg
ing hydrangea hedgerows that separate the fertile fields are stunning. All this can be observed from an inexpensive rental car.
Santa Maria US 51081; BA 1856; Portuguese 107, 108, 111, 169, 168; Sketch chart A19; Harbor charts A20, A21. This is the southernmost of the Azores, first to be discovered in 1427, and which had its moment in history in 1493 when Christopher Columbus stopped on his way back to Europe after he discovered the West Indies. He anchored off Anjos (he must have had good anchoring gear as he would have had to anchor in 100 feet of water!), went ashore, and gave thanks for deliverance at the end of his long voyage. The church is still standing. Santa Maria has a large airport built as a refueling stop for World War II transatlantic flights. The field continued to be used for refueling into the mid-seventies but now the long-range jets largely bypass it; it is still used for some flights to and from the States.
VILA DO PORTO
Sketch chart A19 Santa Maria's main port, Vila do Porto is sheltered from the north, east, and west but completely open to the south. The town, unfortunately, is on a hill overlooking the harbor. Water can be had at the port, but fuel has to be humped in jerry cans down from town by taxi. Ice can be bought in the ice factory and I am told the open market and supermarkets are quite good, considering the size of the town. A new breakwater is being built that should vastly improve the harbor for yachtsmen.
SAO LOURENCO
Harbor chart A20 from Portuguese 168 If the wind goes around southwest and makes Vila do Porto untenable, move to Sao Lourenco, or San Lorenzo. This is a beautiful little village with a gray sand beach. It is an open roadstead, open from north to south to southeast, obviously to be used only in settled weather. The village contains vacation homes of those who live in the States and visit for a month in the summer, when the place is crowded with Canadian and American Azoreans. This is the harbor where everyone is so
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
120
SANTA MARIA Pta do Cedro
I.da Vila Pta
0
lel'ld~.---o de Nla\I'),~l5s.S\~·· ~'Ii I'\.~ .. ,
~'Ii
~'Ii
o
Pta do Castolo
FI.(3)15s.27M.
Pta Malbusca
i>0
r
2
4 Sea Miles
t~====i===~'====j~e=e=3!
Outline Ilha de Santa Maria
o
f'---=3
I 14·
N
500 I Yards
F.R.190It6M.p'
VILA DO PORTO
203
,
24 ;". ~
.'
:0, " ....
../
I
:0
170
.: ~
Caution With the completion 01 the new breakwater the leading lights are in need of re-alignment at night proceed with caution.
I
....
. I
36·56·5~ 141 41
.......... ~~.:
29No .20
,(---
44
/
I
I
,
ONo.3
1
44
39
/
...'\....... M almerehdo
"~(C_~~~iJ/
/52 I
'., 31 (J!JJm1:1~' "
) 29 ."
.1
~I
32
46
.....
Cl
44
~;
-.11
~
22
-.1/ 1
72
A19 Vila do Porto
I
31
'", ....+,
18
The Atlantic Islands
121
62 dos Matos 49
85
49 76
28 62
~
11
'" 0
31
in
N
36"59'_ 5N
59
32
24
40
62 46
.... Prsis dos FBlgodos "
72
_"iliBa,xa dos Succes
'.
1 ;~-' •••.
19
47
32
PrBis do Ponts
69
,'. ~ij'. 36 . ' 72 IIheu zinho;~9. ~Bsixs do IIheu ~
<.....5 43
Ptada Furna
Pta do
49
J;t
FI.5s.676ft.12M.
(PAl
o
500
I
I
Yards
A20
Baia de Sao Lourenco
friendly the Customs Officer insisted on buying drinks for the crew of Musette.
ILHEUS DAS FORMIGAS
Portuguese 166; Harbor chart A21 A small string of uninhabited islands, rising out of a couple hundred feet of water. I have no
information on these islands, but it seems, on the Portuguese charts, that with the wind in the easterly quadrants you could anchor southeast of the light. Certainly you would have to anchor on a Bahamian moor and be ready to move out at a moment's notice. I would think that spear fishermen would have a field day, but remember that the water temperature in the Azores is cold; definitely wetsuit diving.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
122
Offlying Dangers of the Azores
N
In general the Azorean Islands rise vertically out of the sea with few off-lying dangers. However, there are a few pinnacles of rock poking up that could cause problems in heavy weather. Southwest of Faial and Pico is Banco de Azores and Banco Princess Alice; they are not shoal enough for a yacht to hit them but I would expect some of the shoaler peaks could create a very rough sea in gale conditions. Similarly, 10 miles southeast of Terceira is Banco de Joao de Castro with one spot showing less than 30 feet of water, which certainly could produce breaking seas in gale conditions. Formigas should be approached only in settled conditions, as 5 miles southeast of Formigas the chart shows a lO-foot spot, while 10 miles to the northeast is the shoal of Coloracao, marked on the Portuguese chart: "ED"---existence doubtful?
124
59 69
Madeiran Archipelago US 51261, 51262, 51263; BA 1831; Portuguese 101, 102, 103, 104, 151, 152, 153, 154; Charts M1, M2, M3, M4, MS, M6.
136 R
The Madeiran Archipelago lies 1,200 miles southsouthwest of the English Channel, 600 miles westsouthwest of Gibraltar. Funchal, on the island of Madeira, has been a stopping point on the transatlantic trade-wind route for centuries. The weather in the Madeiran Archipelago is governed by the northeast trades, which are created by the Azores high and, suprisingly, by the Sahara low. During October and November in 1985 the trades were noticeably absent-not through a misplacement of the Azores high but because the usual Sahara low became a Sahara high for most of that period. With two highs there was virtually no wind at all, and what there was came from the southwest (so much for the pilot charts). The two main islands of the archipelago are Madeira and Porto Santo, separated by 40 miles of ocean. Three small deserted islands-Isla Chao, Isla Deserta Grande, and Isla do Bugio---lie 40 miles east of Madeira. Like the Azores, the archipelago is governed by Portugal.
231
;.~t: 128
:
82 R '.
:. 26 ". 37 :
....... 88
A21
o
I .
Ilheus das Formigas
100 I
200
I
Yards
Porto Santo US 51261, 51262; BA 1831; Portuguese 103, 105; Harbor chart Ml. Porto Santo lies northeast of Madeira and is an excellent landfall if you're coming from northern
The Atlantic Islands
12 3
ISlA DE PORTO SANTO
I.de Baixo M1
lat.32'45'N
~
lala Chao
~
~~Ia Bugio c
.3 Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts-Madeiran Archipelago
Europe. It has a radio beacon with a range of 250 miles (see Appendix B for details), and a light on Ilheu de Cima visible 27 miles. Pick up the radio beacon and run in on it, leave Ilheu de Cima to starboard, swing around the island, and up to the town on the south coast. (I advise against entering the harbor at night, at least until the construction that was going on in 1986 has been finished.) Until two breakwaters were built, this was a wide open anchorage; when the harbor is finished it will provide perfect shelter in all conditions. The harbor apparently was built for the hydrofoil ferry that comes across from Funchal on Madeira and for the few small fishing boats based in Porto Santo. But it's also going to make a very nice place for yachts to lie. The water is clean, the bottom sand at 12 to 15 feet. Variable winds, though, will dictate a Bahamian moor or bow-and-stern anchors to keep you from swinging into your neighbor. Porto Santo, with a population of 9,000, is low and dry (the 1,600-foot mountains are not high enough to stop the rain clouds), and is justly famous for its 4V2-mile white sand beach, which
c
.3
makes it a resort place for folks from the bigger island of Madeira. There are virtually no facilities at the new port, which is 1 V2 miles from town and there's no taxi service. This would appear to be a disadvantage, but it is not, as everyone is so friendly that if you just start walking toward town, the first car or truck that passes will pick you up and give you a lift in. The town is small, attractive, old-fashioned with an open-air cafe and restaurant facing onto the main square and various small bars on the side streets. The Port Captain and Guarda-Fiscal offices are in town, where you must go to enter. The officials are all very friendly and entry is free but the Portuguese do like their paperwork-a stack of it! There is a small fish market, an open-air vegetable market, and a couple of unsuper supermarkets, which although not ideal for stocking a boat for a long trip are more than adequate to top up supplies after the passage from northern Europe or Gibraltar. You can relax in the open-air restaurant/cafe or
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
124
:ii:
Rc Roca Falcon 8ajo de N.W.
•...•. 0
10'
164
72
161
115
141
232
:'{f ..... I.de
167
69 :~::1.8ai)(a do Melo
111 I.dos 8arbeiros ... 128 .·.'!t··.Pta da Cruz .:;. ··+")k:. 42
I.da Fonte .... da Areia :.~::
Fora
;f.'if."
98 184
98
Pico do Facho '1693
5'
Pta dos Ferreiros
+*:, :'.'f' Ba. do Cotrim :Ensa dos Frades
59 "*" ..*.:r..if.~I(~j2s.29M. Pta do Incao
·...
161
92 Pta da Canaviera .....;t; :'+. ".
lode Cima
69
:'
lode Ferro~' ~ . L.Fl.15s.8M:if······:.
BAHIA DE PORTO SANTO
299
256
B,}o de E.315 191
:~1..: 8,;xinh,
3' 147
'Pta
Lat
• O' N
do IIheu
~ 0 N
-g.
1D
D,pths in Feet 5'
0
I
.9
2
!
f
4
ii,e
6S..
I
6'
Outline Porto Santo
go down to the beach, where there is an excellent small restaurant, or visit the good hotel a mile north of town. At first glance the island does not appear too interesting. However, the crew of the Marquesa report that they rented a car, toured the island, and found the drive to be well worthwhile. There appears to be a building boom-vacation homes
for the wealthy Madeirans who come over for the weekend to enjoy the beach.
Madeira Maderia is a rock rising 6,100 feet out of the sea. Being so high, it attracts the rain clouds, and so
The Atlantic Islands Aero RC 0
Porto Santo L.FIR.6S'4.\
\ % Chy t-
Airfield
.
;f! ;f! ;f!. 69.. Pt~ do Inc~~"~'~ :t: 27 26 *+;f! ~;ft IIheu' d. elm. L FI 28 ~,.... ",,"'(N'Wd H.rboU~I'i,'C;\~, ... ~' FI.(3}158403ft.29M. , . . Ff'6s. , .•.. 46 un conllno '" '.. '" :
114
" . ........
14
; 61 \.
aixo
.r
.47:
, Fl.3s.
......
.......
.il'
59
.•••...•
&oQII 81
83;t;
92
240
: " ...... ./
:'}9
.. ' ...................... " ...............:.....
69 '"
Ana Ferreira 928
"
..... .
Baia de Porto Santo .'
211
908
10'
N
2191
30
99 :
\ .......
o
Pt~"do
2000 Yards
==:r:=::~---':J
Cl
14·9·····
Ml
DtI tha in Ftltlt
Bahia de Porto Santo
much rainwater falls that the island is completely electrified by hydropower. Electricity is cheap and lights are left on all the time, so Madeira is lit up like a neon sign and on clear nights can be easily spotted from 40 miles away. The island is big enough-30 miles long, 10 miles broad, and 6,100 feet high-that it creates its own wind system. Almost every day as the land heats up, an onshore breeze builds, until by 1700 a 15- to 20-knot wind is blowing directly onshore. (A real problem in the old days before the marina was built.) Then when the sun goes down, the cool air falling down the mountains provides natural air conditioning and kills the sea breeze. An hour after sunset there is either flat calm or a light offshore breeze. Because of its temperate climate, abundant rainfall, and fertile volcanic soil, Madeira is completely self-supporting in food, which is incredibly cheap. (Only meat is expensive.) The island is so high that it enjoys three separate climates: the upper regions of the island are almost Alpine, and in fact it does occasionally snow, although snow does not stick to
the ground; the middle slopes are temperate; while the lower slopes are subtropical. Thus tropical fruits and vegetables plus the vegetables one finds in the temperate and lower Alpine climates are all available on the same island. Originally the island was heavily wooded. Settlers cleared land for farming when the island was first colonized in the early fifteenth century. The Portuguese lit fires, which burned for seven years. Then, of course, the rain began to wash all the topsoil off the steep slopes, so they commenced terracing. The entire island is carefully terraced and irrigated by water brought down from the mountainsides by an amazingly intricate system of ditches that are beautifully maintained from service paths along the edges of the ditches. For sailors who like to walk, following the irrigation ditches makes a wonderful scenic jaunt, leading to beautiful waterfalls, pools, and small hostels. The hostels are strictly do-it-yourself camping-out cottages, but an interesting break from the normal yachting routine. Madeira became an important calling port in the
55'
..... t.)
0')
259
... ~...
(:) ..!.do Faial
• Pico do Remal
177
. 4330
...•.
C'l
portO
265
.* ·>.i:f.;8aj~:1;ru! ~
...
, 6105
e 5315
ISLA
* + ~ ". -"\,,",,~~ .....
Pico Ruivo de Santana
Bica da Cana
DA
..9\~"o
0 ~~o ,,(6
".
",'
~
174 ",
.32e45'N
MADEIRA
~
i}
... a~ ;!
~.
Pico Joao do Prado
157
"4281
C")
:'Pta da Queimada
/"i2!J
~'
...Pta de Sta Catarina
G")
s: ~
164
35'
o
5
I
I
1S
Outline Madeira
1~
to I
Sea Miles
...~
-
~
55'
50'
45'
40'
~
The Atlantic Islands mid-nineteenth century as coal-burning ships heading to South America and the Pacific stopped here for coal. It remained so until the early twentieth century. It was also one of the early cable stations for transatlantic and African cables. Madeira developed such close ties with England through the coaling and cable stations that at one point in the 1890s Madeira almost became a British colony. It also became a popular resort for upper-class British tourists beginning in the 1880s, when a fast steamer could make the trip from England in only three or four days. Though Madeira's climate is not absolutely tropical, it is certainly much nicer in the winter than the south coasts of England, France, or Spain. For a few years after World War II the steamer traffic was supplemented by flying boats from Lisbon. The landing conditions were such, though, that sometimes the flying boat would fly from Lisbon to Funchal, discover the sea was too rough and fly back to Lisbon with all its passengers. A large airport was built in Porto Santo in the 1950s and one was finally carved out of the side of the mountain on Madeira in the late 196Os; even so, that strip is so short that the planes take off from Madeira and fly to Porta Santo to load their fuel before going on to Portugal. Madeira has a total population of 300,000, and tourism rests very lightly on the island. Tourism has definitely not spoiled Madeira and Porta Santa.
12
7
the dock and the main tourist office in town, a five-minute walk away, are most helpful and cooperative in giving information on plane and bus services. Bottled gas is available at the traffic circle found at the west end of town, five minutes from the marina. The main market is an absolute joy, and there are three different slightly unsuper supermarkets that can provide all the food necessities a yachtsman might want. The island itself is tremendously scenic; a ride around the island is definitely a must. Car rentals are cheap, but the roads, although well-surfaced, are twisty and narrow. Meeting a tour bus going in the opposite direction on a narrow cliffside road is enough to give one a heart attack. Of you can take a local bus to one of the outlying towns, enjoy a relaxed scenic ride, have a good lunch, and return hy another hus route, thus getting an excellent tour of the island at a very inexpensive rate.
CAMARA DE LOBOS
Harbor chart M3 West of Funchal there is a small fishing harbor, Camara de Lobos; not an overnight stopping place, though. A good place to visit by bus, have lunch in the cafe overlooking the harbor, and admire the beautifully constructed and beautifully painted Portuguese fishing boats.
MACHICO FUNCHAL
Harbor chart M4
Sketch chart M2
Machico, north of Funchal, is an active fishing harbor that looks extremely exposed. However, Colonel Garton, a yachtsman who has lived on the island most of his life (for many years in a house overlooking the harbor), says there actually is no problem. The fishermen normally anchor in the northeast corner of the harbor, where there is shelter unless the wind swings to the southeast, which it seldom does. If it does, they pick up their anchors and move to the southern side of the harbor. For reasons no one can explain, though, the harbor of Machico appears to be the only place in the Madeiran Archipelago where one has to worry about thievery.
Funchal, the main port, is becoming a very popular stop for yachts on the trade-wind route because of the new marina that has transformed a nasty open anchorage into a snug haven. In 1975 when we sailed into Funchal there were only two other yachts there, and no one stayed very long. In 1985 we had to shoehorn our way into the marina, where forty boats crowded the south wall, reserved for visiting yachts, and another thirty yachts, locally owned, were lying on pontoons. Funchal, with 100,000 in population, is a shopper's delight as, being Portuguese, everything is cheap. For the skipper, water and fuel are available alongside, and electricity seems to be free for the taking, although the strange plugs seem to match up with nothing. (Some brave souls just took a couple of wires and shoved them in a plug with matchsticks; it seemed to work, although I don't recommend the procedure.) Showers are available on the dock. A small tourist office on
ENSENADA DE ABRA
Harbor chart MS In the northeast corner of Madeira, east of Pta de Sao Louren is a cove referred to in Philip Allen's Atlantic Crossing Guide as Ensenada de
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
128
Funchal
............
17
10'
22 28 30 ....... ".
30
,.' .-('--,....>- ..
.... ~.-< . ..... " ....... ~~ ... "'"".' .. ~,.< .;;: -<'" -r -r- ,.. ,.... ..,.... ..,- ...,.. --<
. 28 ~
~~~
... .-<' p~o.y'~e.s.s. ........... '.-< 40.-( .
,<-<~
.-<'
34
.-<'
>-.'.
38
40
~
b ~
~-<'"
~
~ 32'38'30"N
59
BAHIA DE PONTINHA Anchoring Prohibited
44
51
76
Steps
46
Steps
Steps
PONTINHA Container Terminal FI. R.4s 46ft.ll M.
~DA
c:::::J MOLE~
Tide Gau!je
\-
0
100
I
300
200
I
I
I
Depths in Feet
M2
Funchal (sketch chart)
164 '
+
29
"
39
49
':++ Baixa do Atanasio·· if.
~ .. , ..
+ +
+ +
+
13···+·,,· .. ·"/·5·
,,'
.. '
8
23
o
100
200
Li ht -. 32'38"7N 16'58"5W
M3
300 Yards
~~·~Ic===~I====~1
tl
Camara de Lobos
39 Depths in Feet
400
r
500 Yards
I
~
The Atlantic Islands
129
10'
... .,
4
Porto de Machico 11
.' "1
.. ' "
,
15
10
12
25
22
32
15
10
:"2
14
29.:
14 13
7
41
72
105
61
27
;'13
3:
34
75
v
8
27
A)
Ln
in
Baixa da Cruz
'"
32'42"7N
69
108
108
----22
.:31
61
49
o I ....
121
92
100 1 ....
1
Depths in Feet
M4
Machico
98
105
315 32'45'N
Pta das Comidas
144
72 ENSENADA DA ABRA
···t.f 115
.' 44
·331
;f··':······.+H
226 1000
Pta de Barlovento FI.5s.338ft.27M.
":'·10L'J.4~
IIhe~·d·~·~ora~T:· .'::'. ...... .;t;.
357
o
~.nJJ~il*·;
Badajeira·· .. ·· 92
2000 Yards
.:::::::::J::'::;:::'':Z'II=====~I
bl
M5
Ensenada da Abra
Depths in Feet
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
130
Abra. Here one finds a small anchorage, completely deserted, old church ashore, reputedly good shelter. We did not visit this anchorage, but from the chart it looks as if it is sheltered in normal weather, i.e., the northeast trades. A bus goes to Conical the old whaling station, now abandoned, two miles west of Baia de Abra.
lsla Deserta Grande Harbor chart M6, Forty miles east of Madeira lies the uninhabited island of Isla Deserta Grande, with an anchorage off its west side. The British chart shows an island, Pta do Pedregal, but Portuguese chart 104 shows
193
278
80 de Trompets'···· ..
:.*~L.FI.(2)15S.13M. 210 ..... ··.. ISLA CHAO
'..
35'
". 221
8oqueirao Norie ~·.~ta da Coada Pta da Castanheira; . 787 :
:* \
...
~
ISlA =..,.
DESERTA
'--.134
GRANDE 318
lat.32'30'N
.
.:
'.*
301
Pta do Tabaqueiro
161 ..... . I 82
8oqueirao SuI Pta do Cagado"" .... 308
,
. .
183 :
:
I ~ -- *'. I\. -~~:: ISlA
\Pta da Pole
171 :
751
265
.... :. - ;f.,.
25'
Pta da Estancia
::t
45a8
....
~ Cl)
z-::::::::::::::.jl==::::::jl~==:tj==='1ji'es:
°t!
*
.:: ..... :: : ~.:Pta da Agulha ••••••
292
j
Outline Islas Deserta Grande, Bugio, Chao
256
Depths in Feet
26'
The Atlantic Islands
.;r
131
69
".*".+ '.*,
34 :
46
'.*
Pta das M.Brancas·
+'. *'+'.+·. Pta
da Faja Grande
147
11
.. ' +
. 1338
'.+
169
2(: + :+
-t .
.... :1: +
+:..t..:'f"-:-. DESERTA
" '" ....
72
~ '" ~
~,j."'+"
39
+'. *'.:
32'30'N
+:
GRANDE
o
~"
1000 Yards
cl:::::::::!=:::::::::=c::::::::::::::::::::::·dl
. 1273
De ths in Feet
M6
Anchorage, Deserta Grande
an anchorage at Doco, latitude 32°30' N. The Portuguese and British charts do not agree despite being made from the same 1938 Portuguese survey. I am told that at Doco a shoal connects the island to the mainland, which gives protection when the wind is from the north and the tide is low. At high water, especially during spring tides, the sea comes over the top of the reef, making the anchorage a little lumpy although in general, still safe. This anchorage is highly recommended to those people who want to get away from it all and observe the almost extinct monk seal that comes to Isla Deserta Grande to breed during the summer months in caves along the coast. Not having been there in person, I wonder if the anchorage and caves are off the island of Pedregal or at Doco? Someone who has been there please advise.
Salvage Islands BA 365; DMA 51342; Portuguese 156, 157; Sketch charts SIl, S12. The Salvage Islands, which lie on a direct line between Funchal and Gran Can aria, the Canaries,
are well worth a visit if the weather permits. They are called the Salvage Islands undoubtedly because ships have been wrecking themelves on them for hundreds of years. They are presently lit, but we did not feel that the lights were visible at their stated range. On the other hand, you probably shouldn't approach them at night anyway; the lighthouse keepers and various yachtsmen who have been to the area agree that the charts are definitely not 100 percent accurate. Keep your eyes peeled for shallow water. For many years the islands were uninhabited. Portuguese fishermen anchored offshore, weather permitting, and went ashore on Selvage m Grande (chart SIll to gather birds' eggs during the nesting season. However, a Mr. Zito of Funchal obtained ownership of the islands and declared them a bird sanctuary. For some years he lived on the island during the nesting season to keep the fishermen from collecting the eggs. Now the island is protected by the Portuguese government, whichofficially--does not allow visitors ashore. We found some ornithologists staying there, tagging the birds and studying their habits. The island is perma-
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
132
....
"..
\. ·..... Baixa de S.Joao
.. ""
7.:
96
198
102
la>
174
Baixa do Norte (breaks)
'J)
:'"
.........
168
::,'1I!1!J .
do Nordeste . 18...... 90
~4s"
Palhe,ro de Terra (72)
Baixa
96
'·~1.2'
144
..................
90 120
179
palh(~~O) do ~~,.\
fl!
72 36
90
72 ....
Baixa do ':*'::Pta Risco
,/+.' .
49
.
.... '*.;Balxa da Pta Espmha.
.'36 '''',::
77
55
.
78
36
132
BaixB de Noroeste :}, ........... .
,
72
108
72
150 108
78
"';-0'+';" Baixa de Oeste ,..... ' '/breaks)
".
102
78
72
25
30'08'N
96
62
!2J'
:6
Balxa dajoana" ".. ' ....
o
,
~.
:N Lt)
it>
83
108
1000
I
I Yards
Depths in Feet
SIl
Selvagem Grande (sketch chart)
The Atlantic Islands
133
79
96
35
.. ' 38
112
119
83
86
155
69 :
83
3
50
.'
.
:' ,'.
.'13
:
++: . + 7:
27
.' 35
58
86
55
&,...:
+'«}llheu Alto .. 38
:.:; + + +: 8: ......:+ + * +.
.
~
.,""
q"
'.
46
:.
20
~ Pt~
125
.
do Est~ .: 30'02'N
~
~
~':":'.~~~}J-1~.
41
1B ~ .... " 4
21
~
,.*-t ".:' 11
<0
~
40 .
Ilh .
:
,13
Grande:~ .".
31
',i'1' '.
20
63 86
..
..... *:~
:·f;··.
:;
pi
...... : ........... "":.'
... :.....
Ense~da
"'::';:-.:\.:".~
"+,:,,:
,
. .. . . '
.......... " .. .
dos GaraJaus
.:
..' , 119
.;35
-:;'4 *9:';. :' ..... .. ·:Balxi! da
Enseada
102
n:
'.24 ".
55 .......
,,+ + .'. .1." """
eu ',6
53':
~ta de Leste
+' " . "
1-:59'~.':.t:,.""" ,T. .. "it12 :, '"
:
·:.~.llh.~.v.. peq32no·"··· "~.... llheu do Sui
~.:
8 ". 29 .. . 13 .: : .. ···12 ,'.' .:·Baixa Co;;'pnda 41 : ·.. · .. ···:13 ( ::: 46 . 99
". : . ;"5':':: . ·.... :~r:::.:
79
64:
614
125
f.,,, Yards
Depths
SI2
In
Feet
Selvagem Pequena (sketch chart)
134
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
nently inhabited only by two lighthouse keepers and the two custodians of the ornithologists' house. We, along with four other yachts, found an anchorage on the south side of Selvagem Grande. The first arrivals were able to anchor in 30 feet of water; we had to anchor in 70 feet. Yet the water was so clear that we could see the anchor and chain on the bottom-the clearest water I have ever seen. The bottom is rocky, so you definitely want to use a tripping line so you won't lose your anchor under a rock. When we were there in October 1985 it was absolutely Oat calm; when Ken McKenzie of Saudade was there, two weeks previously, the wind was coming in from the west, and the swell on the south side of the island made that anchorage untenable. However, Ken reports that on the east side of the island he anchored close to shore in 30 feet of water-a perfect anchorage where they enjoyed excellent snorkeling. Spearfishing is prohibited in the Salvages. The day we were there a Portuguese gunboat was in attendance and almost seized all the spearfishing gear from a Spanish yacht whose crew, ignorant of the law, were happily spearfishing. Some fast talking and apologies and they were allowed to keep their gear. Although the water may seem warm to northern Europeans or American yachtsmen from the Gulf of Maine, to someone accustomed to the Caribbean's 77° water temperatures, the waters in the Madeiran Archipelago are cold. A wet suit or at least a wet suit top is recommended. Seven miles south of Selvagem Grande lies 5elvagem Pequena (chart 512), whose northern coast is decorated by the bow of a large French tanker that managed to put itself ashore. We found an excellent anchorage on the southeast side of the island, which is evidently the usual anchorage because in the early afternoon a teen-age boy, about fourteen years old, rowed a heavy Portuguese fishing boat around the corner of the point to sell fish. He had rowed 2 miles from his father's boat, which was then fishing off the western side of the island. At dusk his father's boat came in and anchored. Evidently the normal routine is to anchor at night in the lee of Selvage m Pequena and cruise the various off-lying cays and reefs during the day in search of fish. Weather permitting, the Salvage Islands are definitely worth visiting and exploring for a few days on your way to the Canary Islands. If you can find a copy of E. F. Knight's The Cruise of the Alente, first published in 1890 and now reprinted in paperback by Granada, buy and
read the book. The Aiente, a 63-foot gaff-rigged yawl, visited the Salvage Islands in search of buried treasure in 1888. A good sea story, especially if you read it while anchored in the Salvage Islands.
CANARY ISLANDS
DMA 51260, 51341, 51343, 51380; BA 1856, 1857, 1869, 1870, 1886; Spanish Forty-two in number but only 502, 5020, 5030, 515, 516,and 512 needed. The Canaries have been a logical stopping place for seamen heading to the Caribbean ever since Columbus stopped there in 1492, and on two subsequent voyages, to pick up water at Gomera. (Good water is still available on Gomera, and easy to get.) In recent years the Canaries have also become more than a stopping place. Since the early 1970s the Spanish government has built roughly a dozen artificial harbors in the islands, so that instead of offering a few unsatisfactory anchorages that are either unprotected or filled with commercial bustle and filth, the Canaries now constitute a prime cruising ground for the yachtsman who has a few weeks to spend before heading off on the tradewind route west. Most yachtsmen arrive in the Canaries from late September through November. Since the Canaries are the beginning of the trade-wind belt, it's best to cruise them from east to west, i. e., Larizarote, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Tenerife, Comera, Palma, and Hierro. This works well if you're coming directly from northern Europe or Gibraltar. If you're stopped in Madeira, though, it would probably be a close reach from Madeira to Lanzarote, and remember to allow for the southwest set of the current. If you visit the Salvage Islands after Madeira, it may be extremely difficult to get to the Eastern Canaries, unless of course the wind goes around to the north when you leave the Salvage Islands. The Canary Islands are wonderfully varied. The eastern islands of Graciosa, Lanzarote, and Fuerteventura have miles of beautiful sand beaches, good snorkeling, and small fishing villages completely untouched by tourism. You can anchor off and have nothing to do with shoreside life. Ashore, the low islands are dry and desertlike, with parts looking like a moonscape. Many yachtsmen and tourists who visit the Canary Islands report that tourism has ruined the islands,
SALVAGE IS.
~
~
Selvegem Grande
30°
Selvegem Paquena
30"· I.Alegranza
o
ATLANTIC
"
C EA N 29'
t
>-
s=..... c:;. ;:s
-
Sta CrUl
C34
'5'" "
C21 Antrequera
FUERTEVENTU RA
3D',·
~
C28
Q
Pto
C29 Deportivo
GOMERA
Valle Gran Rey Pto de Vuehas C
c:;e
33
os Gig.n.es Pto de la Luz / Las Palmas Taliarte C9 Salinetas Cl 0
San C31 Sebastian Santiago C.
C32
L~s
nstlanos
C27
28°
Gando Cll
Est.ca C36
La Restinga
HIERRO
C37
....
W
18°
30'
Index of "arbor Charts-Canaries
17"
30'
16°
30'
15°
30'
14°
30'
CIl
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide and it is true that in some areas the Spanish have built concrete jungles strictly catering to the tourist economy-places like Puerto Rico, Los Cristianos, Las Palomas, Los Gigantes. However, on the large islands of Gran Canaria and Tenerife all you have to do is to get in a car (car rentals are cheap) and do a little exploring. For example, half an hour south of Santa Cruz in Tenerife we found Los Abrigos, a small fishing village with a series of restaurants overlooking the harbor. It is definitely not a tourist trap but rather a favorite lunch spot for the Canary Islanders. There we had, without doubt, one of the best fish meals I've ever had in my life, fantastic smalllangoustinos in a wonderful sauce, superb salad, potatoes, bread, and wine. After a good lunch you can follow the super highway south to the concrete jungle (tourist development) of Los Cristianos and its harbor, then up the west and north coasts. While driving along the northwest coast, take a left turn down the cliff road; you will have a heart attack as the car winds down the cliff' road to Garachico, which was the original capital and was the major port of Tenerife. Halfway down the cliff is a roadside cafe with the tavern on one side of the road, open-air bar on the other side; it's definitely worth a stop. Have a drink and recover from your heart attack. Looking down from the cafe the town of Garachico is one of the most spectacular views of the islands. The town is well worth a visit as it has been almost completely bypassed by tourism; here is a Canary Island town as it existed sixty years ago. Continuing along the northwest coast you'll see magnificent scenery. Puerto de la Cruz has more tourist development but it's built on an old port town and is quite well done with open-air bars, a beautiful tree-lined square, old churches, and what have you. Up in the mountains are pine forests and large lakes, which a Scots friend claimed reminded him very much of Scotland. Incidentally, when you explore the Canary Islands by car, take shoes, socks, long pants, and sweater on your expeditions. It may be hot when you leave but up in the mountains in the late afternoon it can get downright cold. That is just one suggestion for a day's exploring that will take you off the tourist track. Gran Canaria offers similar jaunts, while such smaller islands as Palm a and Gomera and Hierro have not been blighted by tourism at all. (See the following discussions of individual islands.) And the other side of the coin is that tourism means better-stocked stores, better harbors, and in general more amen-
ities for the yachtsman-who, unlike the tourist, can still get away from it all any time he wants. All in all, I feel that the future of the Canaries as a cruising ground is bright, and herewith off'er a guide to help you enjoy its pleasures.
Charts The Canaries are covered by US charts Nos. 51260, 51341, 51343, and 51380. The BA charts are 1229, 1856, 1857, 1870, and 1886. There are also some three and a half dozen Spanish charts, but many of them duplicate and overlap, and they are not regularly corrected; years after yacht harbors are built they still don't show up on the charts. So if you plan to visit only the major ports I advise using the general us or BA charts, and the harbor charts in this guide. If you're really going to explore some of the out-of-the-way spots, you should acquire the following Spanish charts: 502 5020 5030 515 516 512
(northern end of Lanzarote, Graciosa, and off-lying islands); (ditto); (southern tip of Lanzarote, Isla Lobos, and northern tip of Fuerteventura); (west coast of Ten erife); (northern coast of Tenerife); (northeast coast of Ten erife).
The harbor charts in this section of the book are fashioned from my own observations made in the autumn of 1985; with the great help of Anthony Browne, who cruised the islands in the early 1980s and supplied me with many sketch charts; and particularly with the aid of the Canary Island Cruising Guide, a mimeographed booklet compiled hy Jack Hooper. As in the Lesser Antilles you should not try to enter harbors at night. Spanish lights are unreliable at the best of times and during this period of expanding and rebuilding the harbors in the Canaries, the charts are likely to be completely out of date. Sometimes when a breakwater is built, the old leading lights are not discontinued, which lead the unwary smack into the new breakwater rather than into the harbor.
Weather The Canaries, at latitude 28°30' N, are normally hot, although they cool off' in the evening. It can also get cool when the weather is bad. In general
The Atlantic Islands the climate is practically the same as that of the Lesser Antilles. When a hard west wind blows off the Sahara, visibility can be reduced drastically over the Canaries, and a fine layer of sand can cover your boat. Since the Canaries are not truly in the trade-wind belt, their wind patterns are influenced by Africa, which means violent storms can blow across the islands. In 1975, for example, a brief storm of almost hurricane velocity swept through and totaled five yachts on the beach. The Canary Islands newspaper puts out a good weather chart which will give you an idea of the overall pattern for the Canaries. However, it is impossible for any weather map to predict the weather close into the islands as the islands are high enough that they create their own wind patterns. Close inshore, as the land heats up during the day, air is sucked in from the sea to create a sea breeze, which will blow onshore (east) on the eastern side of the island and onshore (west) on the western side even if offshore the northeast trades are blowing. Then when the sun goes down, the cool air dropping off the mountains flattens out the sea breeze and an offshore breeze takes over after dusk. In his guide Jack Hooper mentions that when the barometer starts dropping steeply, watch out for a hard southerly blow. If you are in a harbor exposed to the south, get out and find a more secure anchorage. A look at the chart will show you that a drop in the barometer would mean that the Sahara low is moving out to the Canaries. Depending on how far out it comes, it can produce extremely strong northeast winds; if it comes far enough west and sits over the Canaries, it produces the hard southerly blow. If, on the other hand, the Sahara low becomes a high, as it did in 1985, the wind may fail altogether. Aside from these disturbances, there can be drastic local winds, caused by the funneling effect of the high islands. The normal northerly wind is accelerated drastically between Gran Canaria and Tenerife, and between Tenerife and Gomera. Also, at the southern corners of the islands, you may get drastic increases in wind. It is entirely possible to go roaring down the coasts of Gran Canaria or Tenerife booted along by 35- to 40-knot winds and to find yourself at the southern end of the island completely becalmed. Furthermore, whenever you are near a high island you can expect gusts to blow down off the hills. I call these hard gusts williwaws; Jack Hooper more scientifically calls them katabatic winds. Whatever they are, they can lay you flat or blow
137
out a sail in no time. Be prepared for 30 to 40 knots, and if you see whitecaps up ahead, stand by! . At sea level the climate is generally dry. However, the islands are so high that they create their own rain clouds. In fact, all the western islands have pine forests up in the mountains. (It shows what replanting and conservation can do: they have been cutting trees here for 500 years, and yet they are still building furniture, doors, balconies, and small boats from local timber.)
Tides and Currents Generally the current is southwesterly, increasing between the islands and around the tips of the islands. The tidal rise and fall varies drastically with the moon and time of year. At springs and certain times of the year (September equinox for one), the tidal rise and fall is well over 6 feet; but then a few weeks later at neaps it may be as little as 28 to 30 inches. If you check your tide tables carefully, it is possible to dry out alongside a wall, but you must do it a day or so after springs, because the neaps just do not produce enough rise and fall.
¥ achting Facilities Yachting facilities in the Canaries are increasing so fast that all I can do is write in general terms. In the early eighties in Puerto Rico, Gran Can aria, for instance, there was an excellent hauling facility and yacht yard, but this was demolished in a harbor expansion. It is expected to be back in operation in 1987-but seeing is believing. Basically, there are no marinas on Lanzarote or Fuerteventura. There are proper marinas on Gran Can aria and Tenerife, the two largest islands. On Gran Canaria at Las Palmas, the southern corner of the harbor is strictly for yachts, and there are marinas at Pasitos Blaneos, Puerto Rico, and a new one at Mogan. In Tenerife there are marinas at Radazul and Gigantes, plus shelter at Los Cristianos. See the following discussion of specific islands for more details. But remember, in almost every port in the Canary Islands, you will find a fishermen's cooperative. Through them you can contact the various reliable repairmen. Even in the smallest harbors you will probably be able to find someone who can take care of the basics. In the large fishing harbors, i. e., Santa Cruz de Tenerife; Las
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Palmas, Gran Canaria; and Puerto Naos, Lanzarote, where large fishing fleets are based, you will be able to obtain practically any repair necessary for the average yacht.
Hauling Facilities There are two types of hauling facilities: the large commercial operations in the major ports of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, and Puerto de la Luz and Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, and the smaller setups in the islands for marinas. Santa Cruz has major shipyards for hauling the largest fishing boats and they are equipped to do any type of work a shipowner would contemplate. Convincing them to haul the average-size yacht may be a bit of a problem, but certainly their machine shops would be equipped to take care of any needs the yachtsman would have. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria also has shipyards that cater to the fishing fleet, but the yards do not appear to be as modern, large, or as well-equipped as the ones in Santa Cruz. Otherwise it's travel lifts: on Fuerteventura at Castillo (30-ton), and possibly at the new Puerto Morro de Jable; on Gran Can aria, at Pasitos Blancos (35-ton), Puerto Rico (25-ton), Argueneguin (25-ton), and possibly at Mogan. On Tenerife, at Los Gigantes (6O-ton), Los Cristianos (50-ton), and Radazul (30-ton); and on Gomera, the 30-ton lift at Santiago. In 1985 we decided that the hauling at Los Cristianos was undoubtedly the cheapest anywhere. The translatlantic yachtsman is well-advised to sail to the Canaries with his bottom paint onboard, haul at Los Cristianos, and scrub and paint the bottom, thus avoiding having to haul in the expensive yards of the Eastern Caribbean. I don't know about hiring local labor; everyone seemed to be doing his own work.
Drying Out As mentioned above, at spfing tides there is a 6foot rise and fall, and during the fall equinox in September the range is 10 feet; this is adequate to allow the average yacht to dry out alongside a wall. However, there are relatively few places in the Canaries where you'll find a wall to lean against. Here are the few that I know about: Fuerteventura, the new Puerto Morro de Jable. Valle Gran Rey, Gomera: excellent; wall will accommodate 9-foot draft at spring tides.
Mogan, Gran Canaria: 7-foot draft at springs, but as of November 1985, no place to secure lines to hold the boat upright. Puerto de la Luz, Gran Canaria: 6 feet, in the commercial harbor, but check bottom carefully at low tide before drying out, and be warned that the area is filthy and pilferage is a problem. Puerto de la Estaca and Restinga, Hierro; Santa Cruz de la Palma, Palma.
If your boat carries her own legs, you'll find in almost any harbor a concrete ramp where the local fishing boats are hauled by winch, cable, or tractor (no cradle). On these ramps you could dry out on the tide long enough to work on the stern tube or rudder or to do a quick scrub and paint job.
Caretaking Facilities As far as we could ascertain, there are only three suitable places where you could leave your boat to be taken care of in your absence with a fair degree of reliability. Pasitos Blancos, Gran Canaria, appeared to us to have the best setup. Pasitos Blancos is out in the middle of nowhere, a mile off the main highway, with a guard at the entrance; unless you have a pass with your photograph on it that matches up with the pass at the guard shack, there is no way you will get into Pasitos Blancos-it is harder than getting into Fort Knox. In fact, security is so good that your dockage agreement states that if any equipment is stolen off your boat the marina will replace the equipment. It's the only place I know of that has a docking agreement that favors the yachtsman. Stopping overnight or even for a week at Pasitos Blancos is an expensive proposition, but the monthly rate is quite reasonable. Boats can also be care taken in Puerto Rico and Mogan, Gran Canaria. Ran Boot, Correzo, Puerto Rico, Gran Canaria; Telephone: 28-74-0335. Ran actually lives in Mogan but still has a Puerto Rico mailing address. He did an excellent job of taking care of Lone Star in 1984; he will help you to find marine supplies and he can also guide you through the maze of paperwork necessary to clear goods shipped in.
Marine Supplies Robert Origgi CIS, Juan Bautista 57, Santa Cruz de Tenerife; open only from 1000 to 1400, who is the Lewmar and Autohelm agent. Renee Brent,
The Atlantic Islands the sailmaker, also will be able to help out on securing marine supplies and can help in many other ways. Alcorde, Juan Rejon 67, Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, is a six-story department store with just about everything in cruising marine supplies and an excellent supply of tools, electrical equipment, etc. It is easily found by riding bus No. 1 from the yacht harbor. We also discovered, two blocks directly west of Club Nautico in Las Palmas, a marine supply store with a tremendous quantity of small-boat fittings. Both Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, and Santa Cruz de Tenerife have large Heets of fishing boats. That means there are also people who are experienced in installing and repairing radar, Decca, fathometers (and fish finders), hydraulic pot haulers, generators, main engines, etc. If you speak Spanish, or if you don't, with the aid of an interpreter, you can go on board the fishing trawlers and find someone who is capable of fixing practically any piece of equipment you have.
Sailmakers There appear to be three sailmakers in the Canaries: In Las Palmas, there is Senor Pedro Acosta Parrilla, Tomos Garcio, Guerra 28-3, Isda; Tel: Las Palmas 27-11-99. Also in Las Palmas, R. and C. Brent, Alfredo Calderon; Tel. 24-61-45. In Tenerife a sailmaker named Roberto, Via Juan Bavista 57, Santa Cruz, did a very nice repair job, rapidly, economically, for the boat lying alongside the fishing harbor, which had blown out her mainsail.
139
practically for free; any place you find a big Heet of fishing trawlers you find ice-but only when they are actually loading ice. In lesser harbors where smaller fishing boats sell fish every evening to be carted off to the factory, you can usually obtain a few canvas sacks of slush ice from the trucks. Trouble is that it will reek of fish. In the yacht-harbor area of Puerto Rico, Pasitos Blancos, and Arguineguin the only place we found ice was in the expensive ice machines in hotels and / or restaurants. In Gomera we found none at all, and suspect the same situation may be true in Hierro; of course someone smarter than I who speaks Spanish well might be able to find ice in both places.
Water Water is available throughout the Canary Islands, but it varies drastically in quality and availability. On the eastern, dry islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote it is difficult to obtain water alongside and the quality may be poor. On Gran Canaria at Las Palmas water is available alongside and considered excellent: however, on the other side of the island, down by Puerto Rico, everyone has been warned not to use the water coming out of the hose for drinking; drinking water must be bought in jugs. In Tenerife the water is excellent, though we had trouble finding the man in charge of water at the trawler port. At Los Cristianos we were most unlucky as just as we were filling our tanks a major water main burst. Subsequently we discovered that the whole town of Los Cristianos was out of water for about four days. La Palma and Hierro also have water alongside the main ports and the water is considered excellent.
Engine, Electrics, and Electronics Check the local phone directory, find an interpreter if you don't speak Spanish, and anything is possible.
Ice The only place we found block ice in the Canaries was in the wholesale supermarket in Los Cristianos, underneath the post office (like Martinique, where you buy yeast for bread-making at the bicycle repair shop); it was cheap, glass-hard, superfrozen. Otherwise you find out where the fishing boats load their chip ice, which is so cheap it is
Cooking Gas As I've mentioned before, propane is the way to go if you're headed for the Caribbean. All the Canary Islands, with the possible exception of Hierro, have propane bottling plants. Don't forget your adapters in case the fittings differ from those on your tanks.
Fuel Diesel oil-known to the Spanish, Portuguese, and French as "gas oilu-is pretty much available
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide alongside throughout the islands. (Don't ask for "gas oil" on the other side of the Atlantic though, or you'll get your tanks full of gasoline!) Gasoline-petrol to the English, Spanish, and French-is generally available only from automotive gas stations, which means lugging it by the can. Kerosene (paraffin or lamp oil) is known as petroleo in Spanish and is definitely scarce. We couldn't find any in Las Palmas in 1985, but you might locate some in a ferreteria (hardware store) or a cepsa (gas station). Alcohol (methylated spirits) is available at the farmacia, or drugstore.
Food Buying food in the Canaries is a pleasure. Except on the dry eastern islands, produce is abundant, and the local markets are full of inexpensive fruits and vegetables. In all the larger towns there are also supermarkets-some of which offer an amazing variety of Spanish, French, English, Dutch, German, and Italian specialties. The best routine is to start at the local market for fresh produce and, often, meat, chicken, and cheese as well. Then fill our your list at the supermarket. If you have any money left over, try the speciaJty store for luxuries. (El Carte Ingles in Las Palmas, for instance, has many delicacies, will deliver to the boat, and accepts credit cards.) For final stocking before heading west, Las Palmas and Santa Cruz have everything you need. The Puerto Rico-Arguineguin-Pasitos Blancos area is also accustomed to supplying yachts. (Several yachts reported that the tomatoes bought were so carefully selected that even without refrigeration they were eating Canaries tomatoes as they arrived in the Caribbean-they ripened en route.) Los Cristianos, Gran Canaria, is another favored takeoff point, with excellent stocking facilities. Gomera and Hierro have abundant fresh food but a more limited supply of staples.
Laundry Laundry is a :plague for the cruising yachtsman everywhere. We had ours done by a ship agent in Puerto de la Luz on Gran Canaria and it was a disaster. Best to carry your laundry directly to a laundromat, if you can find one (in Los Cristianos it is at the back of the Dutch butcher shop). I am
also told that as of 1987 there is one laundromat in Mogan and two in Puerto Rico.
Customs and Immigration Generally we discovered that Customs and Immigration were singularly uninterested in the comings and goings of yachtsmen as long as they didn't try to leave the Canaries in some conveyance other than their yacht. Numerous yachtsmen have had problems when they've arrived on a yacht, then tried to fly home. The Immigration officials at the airport did not allow them to leave the island as they had not officially entered. So be very careful, if you plan to leave by air, to inquire locally as to where you can find an Immigration officer and get your passport stamped to show you entered the Canary Islands. In general, upon arriving in the Canary Islands, I would hoist my Q flag and ask the yachtsmen already there what should be done about Customs and Immigration. If you are picking up crew in the Canary Islands and they hand-carry bits and pieces onto the boat, customs at the airport seems to be very simple; shipping or air-freighting things for a yacht into the Canaries, though, is a bigger deal. Contact Ron Boot; he claims that if you have all the papers, invoices, ship's papers, customs clearance showing the boat has entered, and captain's passport, the goods can be cleared in about four hours. Life is too short to waste days of effort tying to clear gear through customs when someone like Ron Boot in Mogan, Gran Canaria, who is an expert at this, can do it easily for a reasonable fee.
Anchoring The Canaries are all volcanic, so even when you think you are anchoring on a sand bottom you often discover (usually after you have dragged) that it is a relatively thin layer of sand over a rock bottom; your anchor will hold only if you have actually hooked into a rock and then let's hope you have a tripping line. (See my remarks about tripping lines in Chapter 2, page 23.) In many Canary Island anchorages you should anchor bow and stern, since you are anchoring on the backside of a slope. One anchor will be in quite shoal water, the other in deep water pulling up hill, which will prevent you from swinging ashore when the wind dies or shifts.
The Atlantic Islands
Crew Many yachts arrive in the Canary Islands while getting ready to head south to the Cape Verdes and on across the Atlantic only to discover that some of their crew members are not suitable or have jumped ship or that people who were to join them in the Canaries can't make it. There are three logical places to look for crew: Puerto de la Luz and Puerto Rico on Gran Canaria and Los Cristianos in Tenerife. Post a notice on the bulletin board at the bar at the yacht basin in Puerto de la Luz, Gran Canaria. In Los Cristianos post notices in the various bars that have bulletin boards and also in the small shipyard. Your best bet seems to be Puerto Rico, as we discovered in 1985 when we were looking for extra crew. I took a quick Hight from Tenerife to Gran Can aria, a bus ride down to Puerto Rico, and within two hours I interviewed eight prospective crew and picked the three best. Most crews are willing to pay what they feel are expenses-$5 a day seems to be their idea of expenses. At that price you had better find good sailors who are really willing to work, since the cost offood, beer, and booze per person is at least twice that. Obviously, you have to be careful choosing a crew for such a long passage. More than one skipper has been overwhelmed and had his boat stolen~r worse--by bad eggs. Others, of course, have turned out to be lifelong friends. So don't be scared off by horror stories; picking up crew in a strange port can be risky, but so is going to sea short-handed. Just keep your eyes open. Another important warning: once your new crew signs on, you practically own him. That is, if you part ways at your first stop in the Caribbean, you may not be able to leave that port until he has left, either on another boat or on a plane. That means that if he doesn't have a ticket home, or the price of one, you may have to buy it for him and ship him out before you can clear to leave. This sounds crazy, and it may not always happen, but it does happen, and is a real problem. South Africans (normally good, hard-working seamen) aren't allowed ashore in most of the Eastern Caribbean islands, except to go to the airport to ship out. Sending them home can be expensive. So I strongly advise that you sign on nobody unless he presents you with a ticket home from your first port of call in the Caribbean or deposits with you the money for same. Showing you the tickets isn't good enough. I know several cases
141
where the crew has had the ticket, then cashed it in and spent the money. The owner had to finance the crew's ticket home when they got to the Caribbean.
Flying in the Canaries Flying around the Canary Islands is a bit like Hying in the Caribbean: schedules are changed suddenly, reservations are paid for but there's no record of them, baggage is lost with great regularity. The one great difference is that Hying around the Canary Islands is much cheaper.
Eastern Canaries Lanzarote and Fuerteventura and their off-lying islands are generally considered the Eastern Canaries. They are dry, almost desertlike with miles of beautiful white sand beaches, which is why they appeal so much to the Northern European tourists who want heat, sand, sun, and miles of empty beaches so they can shed all their clothes. The islands have small populations and very little agriculture. The Eastern Canaries have many off-lying reefs that provide excellent diving; practically all of the Western Canaries are peaks rising so steeply out of the sea that there is little or no really good snorkeling or diving. When approaching the Eastern Canaries from Gibraltar or the coast of Africa at night, beware of Roque del Este--an unlit pinnacle rock 6 miles northeast of Lanzarote. There are several secure anchorages on Lanzarote, and I am told it is well worthwhile to rent a car and tour the island. Buy a tourist guide to the island, a road map, and then start exploring.
lsla Graciosa US 51380; BA 1870; Spanish 502, 5020; Harbor chart Cl Eastern Graciosa provides four anchorages, but no harbors. From north to south they are Pedro Barba (which is not shown on sketch chart; refer to BA, US, or Spanish chart), La Sociedad (with a short dock), Playa Francesa, and Playa de la Cocina. Pedro Barba is sheltered only when the wind is from the north to southeast (counterclockwise), completely exposed when the wind is in the east.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
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LANZAROTE Lat 29'N 1955
19
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Outline Graciosa and Lanzarote
The other anchorages are much more sheltered, as they are protected by Lanzarote. All these anchorages are just like the Caribbean anchorages: approach them with the sun overhead or behind, eyeball your way in, and remember our note on anchoring. Reputedly, these are among the prettiest anchorages in the Canary Islands. Use the Spanish charts 502 and 5020.
Lanzarote US 51341, 51380; BA 1870; Spanish 502, 5020, 5030; Harbor charts Cl, C2, C3 ORZOLA
Sketch chart Cl The northernmost anchorage in Lanzarote is Orzola, which is wide open to the north and north-
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Depths in Feet
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
east. However, according to Jack Hooper, one can squeeze 6 feet inside the reef, strictly eyeball navigation, and go diving on the reefs to the east of the anchorage. This is definitely a calm-weather anchorage only and examine the harbor sketch carefully. ARRECIFE/NAOS
Harbor chart C2 This is actually a double harbor; the northern one, Puerto de Naos, is the main commercial harbor for cruise liners and fishing boats. It has good holding in mud. If the weather turns bad you can get inside the fishing harbor and anchor in complete shelter, protected from winds from any direction. However, it is a typical Spanish fishing harbor, befouled by oil. The better anchorage is in Puerto de Arrecife a mile south. In heading for Puerto de Arrecife give Punta de Lagarta a wide berth and approach Puerto de Arrecife from the southwest. If it is not too crowded you may be able to lie alongside the wall. Otherwise, feel your way into a suitable depth and anchor off, but be advised that the harbor is completely open to the southwest and south. Showers, phones, etc., are available at the yacht club casino within walking distance of the anchorage. PUERTO CALERA
Two miles northeast of Playa Quemada is a new marina, Puerto Calera; no information is presently available as to completion date or facilities. SOUTH COAST OF LANZAROTE AND PLAYA BLANCA
Harbor chart C3 In all normal weather there is a good anchorage off Playa Papagayo, west of Punta Papagayo. Sail along the coast until you find a suitable anchorage and enjoy the beautiful white sand beach, which Anthony Browne calls the best beach in the Canaries. Bathing suits are not essential but use p!enty of suntan oil or you may damage some parts of you that have never seen the sun before-most uncomfortable! Do not round Punta Papagayo close aboard as there are off-lying rocks and shoals that extend out a good 500 yards from the point. Two and a half miles west of Papagayo, Playa Blanca has a hotel, a number of small restaurants, a bank, a car rental office, and a harbor with a breakwater about 600 feet long, with ample depth
in the harbor for any normal yacht. The outer eastern end of the breakwater is used as a ferry dock, so stay clear; as space permits, you can lie alongside the wall; small yachts go onto the pontoons. Facilities for yachtsmen as of this writing are understood to be minimal or nonexistent. (Note: The sketch charts in Tony Browne's and Jack Hooper's guides sure as hell don't agree and there is no detailed Spanish chart, so proceed with caution.) This is a well-sheltered harbor but you should definitely not enter at night.
Fuerteventura US 51343, 51380; BA 1870, 1886; Spanish 5030; Harbor charts C4-C7 Like Lanzarote, Fuerteventura is low and dry, with plenty of good beaches but only a few harbors. It is an island worth exploring by car-if for nothing else than to see the camels that are used on this island for transportation of both locals and tourists-it shows how close to the coast of Africa you are. ISLA DE LOBOS AND CORRALEJO
Harbor chart C4 Off the northeast corner of Isla de Fuerteventura, Isla de Lobos is relatively unpopulated and undeveloped with no real harbor. In settled conditions you should be able to find an anchorage south of Playa Calera and then explore the attractive lagoon in a dinghy. Avoid this area if the northwest ground swell is coming in. A new harbor has been built at Corralejo mainly for commercial use. Tony Browne reports that although it is well-sheltered, the harbor has such high walls that it is hard to get ashore. Jack Hooper warns that if the wind is northeast it increases as it approaches shore. If a ground swell is running the entrance is very difficult-narrow with reefs on both sides. Merchant vessels use this harbor so it is not advisable to anchor off; be prepared to move if a merchant vessel arrives. Tony Browne reports good restaurants and shops in town, and two enormous hotels two miles to the southeast that make a very conspicuous landmark. Jack Hooper reports that there are a good diving school and a large, expanding windsurfing school. PUERTO DE LAS LAJAS
In 1987 it was reported that a 400-berth marina was under construction at Puerto de las Lajas, 3
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miles north of Rosario. Probably by the time read this, the port will be open for business,
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PUERTO DEL ROSARIO
Harbor chart C5 Some yachtsmen state that it is worthwhile visiting this harbor just to watch the commercial fishermen at work. Reputedly, the quay has been extended-roughly double the length that is shown on the harbor chart, but I have not seen it myself. You can lie alongside the wall; one of the few places in the Canary Islands where Customs and Immigration actually show up and want a stack of papers filled out, but it is all very friendly. Town has adequate shops, phones, etc. Be warned, of course, that the harbor is completely open to winds from the south or southwest, A mile and a half south of town there is an excellent beach, Playa Blanca.
CASTILLO: PUERTO DEPORTIVO-CALETA DE FUESTE
Harbor chart C6 This, I suspect, is two names for the same place, a new artificial harbor (see sketch chart with contrary information). Jack Hooper gives 7 meters depth inside the harbor; other sources seem to say there is considerably less depth, talking of 2 and 3 meters. The harbor is not too large and is completely open to the east-it obviously should not be approached in periods of strong easterlies or a ground swell from the east. Give the eastern shore of the breakwater at least half a mile clearance, swing well to the south and approach from southsoutheast, line up leading mark and castle bearings approximately north, take a good look before entering and feel your way in. Use eyeball navigation like in the Caribbean. Ashore there is a yacht club, an old castle, and a
The Atlantic Islands
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Outline Fuerteventura big water tower as landmarks, plus, of course, a tourist area, which is developing so fast that anything we report here would be out of date by the time you read it. Spanish chart 506 shows anchorages off Pozo Negro, 2V2 miles south of Salinaz, and another anchorage off Jacomar, behind Punta las Borriquillas. Are they real yacht anchorages, or places where commercial traders anchored in years gone by to off-load cargo?
GRAN TARAJAL
Harbor chart C7; use Spanish 506 for anchorage to south This small harbor has a jetty for the ferry; stand clear. You can anchor off in settled weather, to visit the interesting village and beach ashore. From here to the westernmost point of Fuerteventura are dozens of uninhabited, beautiful white sand beaches that you could have completely to your-
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self. Anchor off them in settled weather only, of course, and keep an eye open for signs of change. TARAJALEJO A new breakwater has been built by the fishing village; whether it will be extended and facilities supplied is not known at this time, so proceed with caution, investigate, and any information you can supply to this author will be greatly appreciated.
PUERTO DE MORRO JABLE
This is a new harbor protected by a massive breakwater, as well as the terminus for the hydrofoil that plies between Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria. Looking at the photo in Jimmy Cornell's Yachting Warld supplement on the Canary Islands, it appears piers have been built to allow for the establishment of a travel lift and a ramp appears available for drying out. Jimmy warns of violent
31
Depths in Feet C7
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gusts up to 50 knots that can suddenly sweep through the harbor, so be prepared. Reread notes on anchoring (pp. 22-25) and the warning of poor holding throughout the Canary and Cape Verde Islands. It would appear that behind Punta de Jandia, off the little village of Puertito at the southwestern corner of Fuerteventura, one could find a good anchorage. Needless to say this anchorage would be open to the south and southeast.
Gran Canaria US 51341, 51360; BA 1856, 1869; Harbor charts C8-C20 Approaching Gran Canaria, the largest and most populous of the Canary Islands, is relatively simple, as it is steep-to on all sides with very few offlying dangers. There are a few off La Isleta, near the northeast corner of the island; give the north-
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
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ern side of La Isleta a good berth. The other dangers are a small island about half a mile off Punta Lonara and, more important, Baja de Gando, half a mile off Peninsula de Gando, lying northeast of the airport. The final navigational danger applies only at night off Punta de Maspalomas, which is an area of fantastic sand dunes-looks like the deepest part of the Sahara Desert. The obscured sector of the Maspalomas light is not properly set up and
the light shines over the land, so that you can be in the visible sector of the light and be led right ashore onto the sand dunes, something I am told has happened to a number of yachts. When east of the light at Maspalomas make sure you do not let the light bear less than U5 0 magnetic or you are likely to end up on the beach. You probably shouldn't be that close to land at night anyway. Gran Can aria is high-Roquez Nubolo is 5,525
The Atlantic Islands feet (1,700 meters), Pi co de Nieves is 6,337.5 feet (1,950 meters)--so it can create its own weather system, i.e., the onshore winds and the sudden downdrafts off the mountain on the south and southwest coasts that I previously mentioned. Remember, if you see whitecaps ahead, shorten down drastically. The choice of marinas, harbors, and anchorages in Gran Canaria is legion. There are marinas at Puerto de la Luz, Pasitos Blancos, Puerto Rico, and probably at Mogan by the time this goes to print. You'll find sheltered anchorages in normal conditions behind the peninsula of Gando near the airport; in Bahia Arinaga; sometimes at the main harbor of Arguineguin, west of Punta Taozo, and also east of Punta del Parchel in the old, small fishing harbor of the town of Arguineguin. Also south of Punta de la Aldea on the west coast, and south of Punta de las Nieves and south of Punta Sardina. Brief descriptions of all these anchorages follow. PUERTO DE LA LUZ/LAS PALMAS
Harbor chart C8 Puerto de la Luz is a large commercial port for the city of Las Palmas, the Canaries' biggest, with 300,000 people. Basically, the port is set up for commercial shipping and is also a major fishing and ferry port. As a result, if you dig far enough and speak Spanish, absolutely anything needed can be found and/or manufactured. However, as is to be expected in a commercial harbor, it is likely to be dirtied with the effiuent of all major ports. A yacht basin has been created in the southern corner of the harbor. This main pier, with stern-to moorings on the eastern side of the harbor, is 1,500 feet long. The western side is lined with pontoons for the local yachts. They have attempted to protect the area from oil pollution by floating an oil boom, which sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. Ashore are showers, a small friendly bar, and a friendly fuel and water station. There is also an excellent yacht club: the Club Nautic de Las Palmas. However, it is a typical Spanish club---more of a social club than a sailing club. Do not under any circumstances try to arrive at the club via dinghy, for you will be chased off by the boatmen in no uncertain manner. In fact, getting into the yacht club is about like breaking into Fort Knox, so go there equipped with two or three yacht club cards and a member of the crew who speaks good Spanish. You will probably be sent to the commodore. Once the situation is
explained (in Spanish only-forget about English or French) and you are accepted as a visiting member, the club is excellent: wonderful showers, pool, bar, restaurant. The hospitality is fantastic, but don't try to get in unless you are a member of a legitimate yacht club and have a valid, unexpired membership card to prove it. The No. 2 bus (only a short walk from the yacht harbor) runs all the way through town, through the old, very picturesque main square; you can jump off here and go to the tourist office, where they speak excellent English and are very helpful, and then jump back on the bus to do your errands. The bus also takes you past the beach and restaurant area on the other side of town. La Strado restaurant near the bus route gives sailors all they can eat (and wine) for 500 pesetasabout US $3 (in November 1985). The laundromat is at the corner of Calle de Sagasha and Isla Hierro; sail makers R. and C. Brent are at Alfredo Calderon 37; Tel. 24-61-45. The bus continues down through the main commercial section of town to Alcorde, the six-story hardware and marine supply store, and back via the main market. Go through the main market and you will find a fresh-fish market. Across the street from the main market is an excellent bakery. On the tourist map locate El . Corte Ingles, an emporium important to yachtsmen not only for its delicacies, its free delivery, and acceptance of credit cards, but also because the staff speaks English there and will let you make collect overseas telephone calls. Along the breakwater wall of the yacht harbor in Puerto de la Luz you'll see the locally sponsored racing boats lined up. They're about 24 feet long with 10 foot beams and hull draft of about 18 inches, but bolted onto the keel is an unballasted fin, sort of like a fixed centerboard, that increases the draft to 7 feet. These boats are lateen-rigged and sail with big crews, somewhat like the Bermuda-fitted dinghies, which are limited as to length of hull but nothing else. If you are in the Canaries during the racing period (November to June) it is well worth visiting Puerto de la Luz on a weekend to witness the racing and the enthusiasm, and betting, of the crowds. PORTO DEPORTIVO TALIARTE
Sketch chart C9 This yacht harbor is south of Pta Melenara, one mile north of the industrial complex of Salinetas. The harbor is a small breakwater only 250 yards long, and depth of water inside the breakwater is
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide 46
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not known at this time, so proceed with caution and only when the sun is high and the light good. If approaching from the north, care must be exerted as reefs extend 500 yards offshore from Pta Melenara; approach to the harbor should be made from the southeast. The town of Taliarte is within walking distance (half mile) from the harbor. ENSA DE SALINETAS
Harbor chart CIO
all winds except those in the southeasterly quadrant. ARINACA
Harbor chart C 12 A small village, offering a moderate degree of shelter; useful as a stop when going north and beating to windward against the northeaster, but I think in that case I would be more inclined to continue up to Cando, which would provide better shelter.
This should be regarded as merely a harbor of refuge in an emergency; it is basically a commercial harbor.
Southwest Coast of Gran Canaria BAHIA DE CANDO
PUNTA DE MASPALOMAS TO MOCAN
Harbor chart ell
Harbor chart CI3
When approaching Peninsula de Cando, beware of Baja de Cando, about half a mile due east of the peninsula. It's unmarked and unbuoyed, with plenty of deep water inside or outside of the reef; I would be inclined to hug the steep-to coast, favoring the shoreside, when passing either north or south. Swing on into the bay and anchor in the northeast corner where there is a small Village and a road that leads to the airport. This would be an excellent place to anchor if you're awaiting crew arrival or departure by plane. The bay is sheltered from
This ll-mile stretch of the southwest coast is the scene of instant tourism, but there are plenty of spots for calm weather, daytime anchorages, and a number of harbors: Pasitos Blancos, two at Arguineguin, Puerto Rico, and Mogan. The mountains come right down to the coastline, so the highway is a tortuous zig-zag route along the edge of the cliffside. Driving from one port to another is not particularly fast and unless you are in a bus, it is expensive. On the other hand, this coast is usually flat calm in the morning so that if you have a
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
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dinghy, and especially a fast whaler or inflatable, you can zip up and down the coast, stopping at various marinas and towns for supplies and then transport them directly back to the boat faster and more cheaply than by car. Likewise, having walked from the road through the daunting sand dunes at Maspalomas to reach the beach, I certainly would visit the beach and the sand dunes via dinghy from Pasitos Blancos.
PASITOS BLANCOS
Harbor chart C 14 Excellent marina, as described on page 138 but remember it is expensive for one night. Better, unless you are really pushed, to continue on 6 miles along the coast to Puerto Rico. However, in calm conditions I would think you could anchor off the beach anywhere between Moro de Colchas and Pasitos Blancos.
ARGUINEGUIN
Harbor chart C15 This is a rather attractive town, an old fishing village that has obviously become an "in place" with the local Canary Islanders, as many of the old houses are being completely rebuilt in the old Canary Island style with wooden doors, wooden balconies, and louvered windows. There are two harbors here. There is the new commercial port behind the jetty west of Ponta Taozo (Harbor chart C15) which has only recently been completed. On the eastern side of town is a small commercial fishing harbor (Harbor chart C16). Yachts should very definitely stay out of the way of the fishermen here. PUERTO RICO
Harbor chart C 16 Puerto Rico is one of the major jumping-off spots for yachts heading for the Caribbean. (In 1985 we
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.
.....
BAHIA LA MELONERA
"
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36
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Pasitos Blancos
49
38
Arguineguin ~_.--
/'\~
52 23 27'45'N
Bahia Santa Aguedll "
" ",
43
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59
o 500 1000 35 Cl:::::::::::::::==:::::::::::I==~:::!:.::jl" Yards
C15
Arguineguin
32"
39
Depths in Feet
57
Street' s Transatlantic Crossing Guide Depths in Feet
PUERTO RICO
g'
N
de puerto Rico
.............. '
~
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39
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36
............ '
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48
69
56
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300
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Yards
C16
50
3:3 ............
....
Puerto Rico
ran into Berger Viking, which had taken part in the Whitbread 1983 Round-the-World Race and was on her way down to Puerto Rico, Canary Islands, for charter work. It seems that one of the crew had flown all the way over from the States to join Berger Viking for her voyage from Norway to Puerto Rico. Imagine his disgust when he found himself in the Canary Islands instead of the Caribbean!) The Manyards, who run the marine supply service in Puerto Rico, estimate that roughly six hundred yachts a year pass through Puerto Rico, with some heading across the Atlantic to the Lesser Antilles, others continuing to the Cape Verde Islands and across to Brazil, while other yachts visit the Canary Islands and then go on to the Cape Verdes and on to West Africa. (In years to come I suspect Brazil and West Africa will rival the Eastern Caribbean as a warm weather area for the northern European cruising yachtsman.) When entering Puerto Rico be advised that the
western harbor is the commercial harbor for visiting yachts. The eastern harbor berths are strictly for private club members. When we were there in November 1985 the harbor was being rebuilt. The harbor chart shown here is as accurate as possible, but be prepared for changes. Visiting yachts, especially larger ones, usually moor stern-to to the northwest corner or alongside the southwest wall; finger-pier floats are available for the smaller yachts. Puerto Rico is a favorite jumping off spot for yachts heading across the Pond. Don't forget that Tenerife is so high that its wind shadow is likely to extend 30, possibly 40 miles out to the southwest. If you don't have an engine to power through this calm area, you can flop around for two or three days looking at the snowcapped peak on Tenerife. So when leaving Puerto Rico, as soon as you clear the land and pick up the wind, you should stand south-southwest until you are 30 to 40, possibly even 50, miles off Tenerife before swinging around to your desired course across the Atlantic.
The Atlantic Islands
or to repair a leak; plus, supposedly, a travel lift is to be operational by the summer of 1988. The old village of Mogan, with its twisting narrow streets and small restaurants and bars, is well worth an exploration; it is a sharp contrast to the new, instant village. A massive 200-plus slip marina has been built with water, electricity, phone, and cable-TV plugins! Ron Boot, who runs a caretaking service, lives in Mogan (phone 28-74-0335).
MOGAN
Sketch chart C 17 Mogan is a new yachting port built off the old fishing town of the same name. The new port is to serve both the local fishing community and visiting yachtsmen. Confusion over which areas were for the yachtsmen and which were for the fishermen has delayed completion of the port. The new village is extremely attractive, having been built in the old Canary Island style. It was distinctive in that the day we were there we found an excellent small bar and restaurant run by, of all people, an Irishman from County Cork whose brother has a house in Glandore where I spend part of my summers. It was his opening night and a memorable party ensued. Now, I am told, the Irish bar has been leased to a German and it has a Bavarian flavor. In Mogan harbor, there is an excellent small weather station, which I am told produces a weather report and weather map every day. Not only that, but allegedly it can put out a seventy-two-hour prognosis, and on request can prepare a longerrange process. Mogan harbor also runs a rescue service with two high-speed inflatables. Mogan is also useful to the yachtsman in that there is a ramp in the northeast corner of the harbor and a wall that a boat can be leaned against if you want to dry out for a scrub, quick paint job,
I
o
RADA DE LA ALDEA
Harbor chart C18 An open beach and small village, connected to the main road, this is an out-of-the-way spot to anchor in. Definitely an exposed anchorage, this anchorage will remove you from the concrete jungle of tourist development on the southwest coast of Gran Canaria. LAS NIEVES
Harbor chart C19 Las Nieves is a small fishing village with a short quay strictly for the fishing boats and/or dinghy landing, not an all-weather anchorage. It is an oldstyle fishing village where lobsters can be bought and where life has been bypassed by tourism.
g
79
DIG U E
o
I ..
C17
I ..
100 I
00
Mogan (sketch chart)
159
200
I Yards
26
SUR
Light 27' 48"9 N
15' 45':7 W
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
160
.-------------------~ Depths In Feet 755
Puerto de las N ieves
757
728
3! ..... 705
705 "
722
....
....
43
112
.... • to de ,. A~d_ \ ,__\
'.,29
39
92
............
32
49
Rada de la Aldea
52
27
43 39
75
56 28
2S·00N 49 59 :.99
"28
66
28·05' 6N
52 .
82
43 62
o I
1000
Pta de los Agujeros ....
o 100 I .... I
I Yards
C18
56
Rada de la Aldea
Depths in Feet
C19
RADA DE SARDINA
Harbor chart C20 Again, a small fishing village, open anchorage, only to be used in calm weather when you are prepared to move. Beware of lobster pots in this whole area off the northwest coast of Gran Canaria. We were amazed to discover buoys for lobster pots 2 or 3 miles offshore in what was obviously 200 to 300 feet of water. Hooking into one of these pots would be disastrous as they are obviously anchored with heavy line that would be difficult to disentangle; it would also cost the fisherman large amounts of very valuable gear.
Tenerife US 51260, 51341; BA 1857, 1869;
Spanish 515, 516 for north coast; Harbor charts C21-C30 Tenerife was probably never visited by Col umbus, since the inhabitants were not subdued by
. 26
:49
500
I
Yards
....
:::'26 ( ....
Las Nieves
the Spanish until the early sixteenth century. It is now the second most populous island of the Canaries and is extremely interesting, but the number of secure anchorages available to yachtsmen is strictly limited. There are, however, many fishing villages and resorts around the island where you can find nice anchorages in calm conditions. Tenerife has few navigational hazards except on the north coast. Near Punta Anaga, off the northeast corner of the island, are the rocks of Bajo de la Mancha Blanca; inshore on the entire north coast are off-lying rocks. Don't poke around the north coast except in calm weather, and have Spanish charts 512 and 516 on hand. The island is well worth touring by car-two days should really be allotted to the exploration. Santa Cruz is connected to Los Cristianos by a four-lane superhighway, and you'll find in the latter a concrete jungle of tourism. However, if you continue north beyond Los Gigantes, a totally different island opens up with pine trees, lakes, and other delights described earlier. The highest point in Tenerife, 13,OOO-foot Pica
The Atlantic Islands Depths in Feet .~
\.
..
. 3~,' ..... _ .....
'.
".
102\
76
25
Rada
72
de Sardina
82 122
0
69
122
79
142
132
148
132
~
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I
B2 2S'OSN
145 000
I :' Yards
C20
Rada de Sardina
de Teide, can be reached by cable car. At the base of the cable car is an excellent restaurant with a spectacular view. Sometimes it is fully booked, though, as it is a popular stop for the tour buses.
ENSA DE ANTEQUERA
Harbor chart C21 Antequera is a cove 4 miles northeast of the fishing harbor of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. It is a deserted cove with a white sand beach; anchorage is 6 fathoms, sand bottom. No road reaches the area so you are guaranteed to be off by yourself. In settled conditions it provides a nice break from the bustle and possible filth of the trawler harbor. It is especially attractive if you have a fast dinghy, as it is only a 4 mile run down from the cove at Antequera to the bathing beach, which is protected by a breakwater. Here you can pull your dinghy up on the beach, take showers, have snacks in the restaurants, and jump a bus to the center of town.
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE
Harbor chart C22 The main harbor is on the northeastern end of the island at Santa Cruz de Tenerife. The best place to lie near town is in the trawler harbor, which is east-northeast of the main harbor. It's no use going into the main harbor, which is exposed to the southeast. If you anchor in front of the yacht club you will definitely not be welcomed with a red carpet-you may get ashore but that's about all. Thus it's much better to go up into the fishing harbor, which is east of the seven oil tanks. Head for the easternmost of the seven tanks, coming in on a course of northwest, and just before you hit the shore the entrance to the fishing harbor will open up. The basin is about 800 yards long, and was still in the process of expansion and construction when we were last there. Find yourself a spot, tie up, and act friendly-no one seems to be in charge. An excellent bus service runs from the basin right into town, and is quick, frequent, and
.... 5989
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Pt. de R.,que
422
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TENERIFE
...... 7604
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Abona ~ Pta de Abona FI(3) 205 174ft 17M
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.......... 2527
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Depths in FHt
I
The Atlantic Islands Depths in Feet
75 if.
:. .
• ···.;]3
108
..···Pta del Sabinal
'24
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····~t:: Bajo de la Mancha Blanca
26.
66
49 75 . 49
59 108
52
95 .'
56 181
89
85
o I
Ptd del Roquete
C21
Sea Mile
Ensa de Antequera
cheap. The harbor is usually clean, but if the wind goes around to the southwest it can get full of oil Water is available alongside, and ice is free when the trawlers are loading. The trawler harbor would not win any prizes, but it is convenient in that by bus or by walking you can go a mile eastward to the bathing beach, where you'll find changing rooms and shower. RADAZUL
Sketch chart C23 This place does not show on the navigational chart but it is 5 miles southeast of Santa Cruz. It boasts a beautiful new marina with a very active yacht club, with yachting world cadets, bar, restaurant, and showers. It may be a nice place to stop, but there is no transportation from the yacht club to town; rather you have a vertical climb of probably 1,000 feet to reach the main highway, where a bus can be caught to town if you have not
already died of a heart attack climbing the hill. Harbor is immaculately clean and has a 50-ton travel lift. CANDELARIA
Sketch chart C24 This is a small fishing village with a modern town growing up around it. The old village is picturesque and has a very nice open-air market and numerous restaurants. Shelter is not always all that good; a place to stop for lunch but I would not regard it as a place to lie for a couple of days. PUERTO DE GUIMAR
The main port is a commercial harbor, but it also has the typical big Spanish club nautico, more of a social club than a yacht club. But as of the fall of 1987, they were in the process of building a marina. Whether or not visiting yachts will be
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SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE
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Santa Cruz de Tenerife
o I
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The Atlantic Islands Breakwater Head Light La!. 28° 23'9N Long. 16° 19'·3W
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Depths in Feet
Radazul (sketch chart)
Breakwater Light La!. 28° 21 '3N Long. 16' 22' 'OW
0. PUNTA LARGA
o Depths in Feet
C24
100
200
300
400
C:=:±I:=:::t:1:=:11=::;!I Yards
Candelaria (sketch chart)
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
166
allowed to use the facilities is, of course, unknown. Recheck page 151 for advice on how to obtain entrance to the large yacht club at Puerto de la Luz. There is also a small fishing harbor protected by a breakwater nearby, but much construction is going on, so I would advise proceeding with caution only while the light is good and to go strictly by eyeball navigation. Any information sent to this author would be greatly appreciated.
ABONA
Harbor chart C25 Here is a small village and a large open bay, usable only in settled conditions. Completely open to the east but sheltered from winds north counterclockwise around to south. If the wind is from the south, anchor at the southern end of the bay; if the wind is around to the north, anchor in the northern end.
251
LAS GALLET AS
West of Abona is the small fishing village of Los Abrigo, which enjoys a reputation among the locals as an excellent place to obtain a good fish lunch or dinner. Basically a lunch-time stop in settled weather. Still farther west, one will see the tourist development of Las Galletas. In the winter of 1987, a new breakwater was under construction, which will probably produce a well-sheltered harhor. How much the harbor will develop as a yachting harhor remains to be seen. ROJAiMEDANO
Harbor chart C26 Southwest of Mount Roja near the airport there appears to be an anchorage shelter from the north, with a long, deserted beach. Remember that something put all that sand there, probably a large swell.
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28' 09·N
56
23
739
254
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95
136
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297
~ 28' 01·N 102
181 Depths in Feet
C25
Abona
o I
500
224
1000
, . I Yards
Depths in Feet
C26
Roja/Medano
o I
Sea Mile
The Atlantic Islands LOS CRISTIANOS
Harbor chart C27 Los Cristianos is a popular harbor with yachts getting ready to take off across the Atlantic because there is a hauling facility. The travel lift in Los Cristianos provides incredibly cheap hauling, and you can do your own work. Shopping facilities for food are excellent, and as mentioned elsewhere, good block ice is available-you find it underneath the post office! The excellent laundry is at the back of the Dutch butcher shop. There's a nice long beach that is cleaned every morning at dawn; by noon it is wall-to-wall with people. The problem is that the harbor is very crowded. Lying alongside the wall southeast of the ferry slip is not a good idea unless you have extremely large fenders and a big enough crew so that people can stand by whenever the ferry enters or leaves. The ferry comes in around the quay full bore, then backs down hard. The wash it throws up against the wall has to be seen to be believed. Anchoring out is a problem in that the bottom is a thin layer of sand covering rock, with rocks sticking up here, there, and everywhere. Although we had tripping lines on our anchors when lolaire anchored there in 1985, it took me four hours of diving to retrieve our anchors and lines. Apparently this is not unusual. Frequently a strong onshore wind develops in the afternoon as the land heats up; it dies at night. When entering or leaving Los Cristianos, note that the shoal water off Punta de Camison extends well offshore. If you're approaching from Palma, do not get too close to shore, as the sea humps up on the shoal.
West Coast of Tenerife
corner of Tenerife. Now a harbor, Puerto Colon, has been built; it will undoubtedly expand as a yachting facility in years to come. PUERTO DE PLAYA DE SAN JUAN
Formerly this was an open beach off a small fishing village. In 1987 a breakwater was started, but as of January 1988 we still do not know if it is a breakwater to shelter the local fishing boats or if it will provide services for both fishermen and yachtsmen. LOS GIGANTES
Harbor chart C29 Los Gigantes is a beautifully constructed new yacht harbor, with a 3D-ton travel lift; entrance is from the north. If a northwest ground swell is running, entrance to the harbor can be extremely difficult; furthermore, Hooper reports that with a hard southerly blow, which very seldom occurs in the Canaries, a bad surge builds up in the harbor. Ashore there is a new tourist development; a whole village has been created where nothing existed twenty years ago. As in Arguineguin, the architecture is quite nice, modeled after the old Canary Island style. There is a nice restaurant at the head of the dock, a good beach north of the marina, showers available, and shopping; but since it is all catering to the tourist I suspect everything is expensive. Even with the cheap hauling it would not be worthwhile hauling unless you had all the material you might possibly need already on board. From north of Los Gigantes to Teno at the northwest corner of the island are numerous interesting beaches that can be anchored off. Be very careful of the weather, though, as there is absolutely no shelter.
LA CALETA TO PTA TENO
Sketch chart C28 On the west coast of Tenerife there are some anchorages in settled weather; consult Spanish chart 515. Hooper's Guide refers to anchorages at La Caleta and at a small fishing village at Santiago.
North Coast of Tenerife GARACHICO TO SAN MARCOS
Spanish charts 515, 516; Harbor chart C30
PLAYA DE LAS AMERICAS/PUERTO COLON
Playa de las Americas has been a resort for many years, part of the "concrete jungle" of instant resorts that have sprung up on the southwest
Along this coast in certain conditions there are possible anchorages: Garachico, Ancon de San Marcos, and Puerto de la Cruz. However, considering that there are no detailed charts of these anchorages it would take a very adventurous skipper to explore the area. I think I would rather
168
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
3 6
........................... 13
.•..
N
10'
.... ......
6
15
27
...... '. '"
........... ....... 36
.... ............ "
5
20
48
19 60
'.
'.
60
o r-,
Depths in Feet
C27
69
27
19
500 ,: 4
--...,..---...----,---,--~I
'.
'.
..
Yards : 12
Los Cristianos
explore this area in a rented car than by boat; but one way or another I feel that Garachico must be visited by everyone who visits the island of Tenerife. Having been to Garachico and seen the fantastic road cut into the hillside, I can only wonder what San Marcos is like. If you do sail on the north coast you should have a Spanish chart on board; 3 miles west of Puerto de la Cruz lies Baja de Nos Realejos, an unbuoyed lO-foot shoal rising out of 160 feet of water.
Comera US 51260; BA 1896; Harbor charts C31C33 The island of Gomera has three anchorages: the main port of San Sebastian de la Gomera, a small fishing port at Santiago, and another fishing harbor at Valle Gran Rey. Gomera, with a population of 25,000, is a favorite with many yachtsmen but only those that like
to get off the beaten track and see the world as it was. San Sebastian is a nice, old-fashioned, friendly town largely bypassed by tourism, with a good, sheltered, clean harbor but open to the southeast. Reputedly the best water in the Canary Islands. If you have no power, one thing to watch very carefully when sailing in or out of the harbor is that the current runs to the north at about 2 or 3 knots and sets directly up on the rocks of La Gila. In 1985 in Iolaire the wind died about a mile off the harbor and we spent three hours fighting our way into the harbor trying to avoid the rocks in water that was too deep for anchoring. (Sailing without an engine puts the sport back into sailing, but it also puts a few gray hairs into the skipper's beard.) Ashore you'll find an attractive, old-fashioned little town with a beautiful parador (governmentsponsored hotel) built in the old Spanish style with antique furniture, antique prints, a beautiful garden, and a fantastic view. If you can't afford to buy a dinner there it is still worthwhile going up to the
-2952
'656
San Juan
213 /
~
C':>
~
....
157
El ;:!
....c:;-
115
367
354
124
?40
200
475
'" El ;:!
~
925
o I
2 Sea Miles
I
Depths in Feet
C28
West Coast of Tenerife: La Caleta to Pta Teno (sketch chart)
'"' ~
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Depths in Feet
'\u \
.,"
Pto Deportivo
:" 59
ACantilado de
IOiG;ga,'" ~
28' 14' 5N
38
Puerto de
o o Santiago
Cl 75 ;
o I
Yards
C29
Pto Deportivo
parador and having a couple of drinks at the bar. It also has, as far as I could figure out, the only phone on the island of Comera that works. Comera is 4,900 feet high, with a series of huge ridges separated by deep ravines. Apparently the old method of communicating was whistling-the shepherds had a complete whistling language to "talk" from one ridgeline to the next. The hillsides are so steep that for getting downhill they used a special pole, called an astia, 2 meters (6 feet, 7 inches) long, 2.5 cm (1 inch) in diameter with a steel tip, which they used to vault down the hillsides at tremendous speed. Be sure to notice the open irrigation ditches, open-topped like Roman aqueducts. They wind their way around the hillsides mile after mile, bringing water down from the high mountains to the arid lowlands. I've no idea how they were constructed, but they're fascinating. Another interesting point about Comera is the castle that still stands in the town of San Sebastian.
It was the fortress of Doii.a Beatritz de Perona, who entertained Columbus during his trip through the Canaries on his first voyage of New World discovery. The second time he came through she welcomed him with fiesta and fireworks; but the third time she had lost interest in him and apparently taken a new lover. Doii.a Beatritz was a beautiful but ruthless woman. Her husband was ambushed and killed by the original inhabitants of the Canaries-the Cuanches, a light-skinned race from Africa, who were not entirely subdued until the sixteenth century. Doii.a Beatritz's husband was on his way to a lover's rendevouz with his mistress, a Cuanche princess, when he was ambushed. To avenge her husband Dofia Beatritz killed a great number of Cuanches and enslaved many others. So brutal was her revenge that she was heavily fined by the Spanish government for exceeding her authority. She was big on revenge. When one of her lovers was too loud-mouthed about his conquest, she
Depths in Feet
287
972
409
273
907
2fi
....
Rada De Garachico 326
287
211
313
.....
402
99 Cl
'
.'
..
47
. :0'
Pta de Juan Centella
:'
132
151
......
48
~
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,2S'23'N
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43
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79
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El Roque
8
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59
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El Guincho
o
o
Cl
~
Sea Mile
C30
North Coast of Tenerife: Garachico to San Marcos
... ...
'!
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Depths in Feet
396
244
623
495
82 .'
Lat.2S·10'N
250
415
OMERA Alto Garajonay
:, 227_--'1--_
. 4878
• 8ahia
: de Avalo : !. San Crlstobal
272ft 20M ~ :
TT
San Sebastian
FI.G.6M.
Ptd de
.
980
Ptd Gdviota
Santiago
244
o
5
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Pta Becerro
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1617
Outline Comera
invited him to her castle for a banquet, then after dinner had him seized and hanged until dead from the castle walls. In Comera in the fifteenth century it didn't pay to kiss and tell; sounds as though Columbus was well out of it. SAN SEBASTIAN
Harbor chart C31 On the eastern side of the harbor, which has been dredged and drops off very steeply, use two anchors, inshore one set in as shoal water as your draft will permit. Basically you are anchoring on the backside of a shelf; hard gusts can come roaring down off the hills and you may drag. lolaire dragged off the shelf after having been anchored for five hours. This necessitated hauling up 130 feet of anchor and chain that was hanging straight down, and sailing back into the harbor and re-anchoring on three anchors-two bow anchors in shoal water, stern anchor in deep water to prevent us swinging when the wind died. The ferry arrives early in the morning and departs, arriving back in the afternoon. Once the ferry is gone you can go alongside the ferry dock to pick up water. To get water you must go to the Port Captain's office, where for a small fee you will get a note for the water "King." Finding the water "King" is difficult, but once you find him you can lay right alongside and fill with excellent water.
Diesel and gasoline have to be lugged in jerry cans. Ice is unavailable unless you con the man who runs the kiosk in the main square out of a little. Or make friends with the stewards on the ferry; sometimes you can get ice from them. Shopping means visiting numerous small stores. Driving around the island is well worthwhile as it is one of the most spectacular of the Canaries. Northeast of the dock is a tunnel that takes you to the yacht club, which unfortunately we did not visit. It would probably be a good place to make friends, learn more about the island, and get a shower. SANTIAGO
Sketch chart C32 Five miles southwest of San Sebastian is the small fishing port of Santiago, protected by a breakwater 600 to 700 feet long. The inner end of the breakwater is used by fishing boats for loading and off-loading fish in the evening; yachts lie sternto to the outer end of the breakwater with anchors off to the north. This is strictly a fishing port, an interesting place to watch the fishermen at work and their comings and goings. Ashore we saw a shipwright refitting a fishing boat, working with a portable and very noisy generator, and an electrical planer, Skil saw, electric drills, etc. He was one of a number of carpenters working on boats.
The Atlantic Islands
173
Depths in Feet
8·
N
SAN SEBASTIAN DE LA GOMERA / /
V
" ~
5
........
:"
5
......
.. ' .. '
/......
:J·:.·.:.·.::::.:·l·~:··:>. :·~.~::t·i,a
17
.
34
)/
.:,.,
61
·· .... ·.. 4.....·· 6
......
:;4
.........
"
61
80
~,
28
~128'5'N _
.. '
6
20
107
53
80
o
300
~I------~-------.------~!
Yards
C31
San Sebastian
Obviously, if you spoke Spanish and needed carpentry done on your boat this might be a good place to stop. There are a number of very attractive-looking restaurants and bars that obviously are supported by the fishermen, as there is very little tourist development in the area. There is a fish cold store and trucks loaded with ice arrive every afternoon about 1700 to load fish until 2100 or 2200. If you don't mind ice that smells of fish you can get chip ice from the trucks.
VALLE GRAN REY/PUERTO DE REFUGIO VUELTAS
Sketch chart C33 Valle Gran Rey is on the western side of Gomera with an artifical harbor; the breakwater is 800 feet long with a light at the end. I certainly would not advise entering at night under any circumstances, as although they have built the breakwater they have not removed the rocks at the entrance. Once inside, anchor off bow and stern or lie alongside
the wall. This is very iffy, though, as at times a bad surge builds up. It is hest to run stern lines up to the quay with bow anchors out on the northern side of the harbor. There is a ramp at the head of the harbor with 9 feet of water at its outer end and a wall a boat can be leaned against if you want to dry out and scrub. There are small shops within walking distance of the harbor plus car rental. The tourist population on this end of Gomera seems to be exclusively Scandinavian and German. In fact we discovered that in Gomera little or no English was spoken at all. The beach at Playa Santiago is strictly a shingle (stone) beach.
Palma
U. S. 51260, 51342; BA 1856, 1869; Sketch charts C34, C35 The island of Palma, with its capital and major port Santa Cruz de la Palma, is considered by
.' .
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
174
Jetty Head Light Lat 2S' 01 '5N Long 17' 11 '7W
Santiago
.................
15 feet "
.
'
.,'
"
.
30 feel .,'
33
FIR2s.43ft.5M
82
PUNTA DEL ESPINO
o
100
200 Yards
1::1====±I====:::jl
Depths in Feet
C32
Santiago (sketch chart)
Jetty Head Light La!. 2S" 04'7N Long 1 T 19'5W
PTA TRIGO
Vueltas
.... ..... 16 ......
0
.......................
~/ '
.
~~
..
"
~!!IIIIIII
FI.R.6s.49ft.5M
". ". '. '."
" t
?t===l::i1=O==::J2?0 Yards
.............
.
'
. ......
......
B,4HIA DE AReA YAL Depths in Feet
C33
Valle Gran Rey / Puerto de Refugio Vueltas (sketch chart)
The Atlantic Islands
175
Depths in Feet
-
..... ui o
...
~
Pta del Mudo 1593
Pico de la
1791
Cruz
7713
:4521
LA PALMA
4917
Lat.2S·40·N
Aero RC 0 ':a Ganado :
/
4719
4422
.....
".
..S9
....
5379
/'
.:
.'
FI(3;;'~i ,..i~ de Fuenc.lient.
138ft 14M .. . 1551~
o I
.......... .....f 15
10
I
Sea Milet
Outline Palma
many to be the nicest of all the Canary Islands (population 76,0(0). The market certainly had the cheapest fruit and vegetables I have ever seen in my life. We filled two of Iolaire's big ice bags full of fresh fruits and vegetables. We must have had 80 pounds of fruit and vegetables-total cost us $20! The island boasts a most hospitable yacht club;
temporary membership is extremely cheap and it grants you the facilities of the pool, good restaurant, showers, and friendly Canary Islanders. The lower end of Santa Cruz is an old Canary Island town complete with wooden balconies; definitely a spot to visit. A drive around the island is well worthwhile, especially if you go up into the caldera of the volcano. Allow one and a half hours
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
176
for the drive up to the caldera. Also look for the sign, halfway up the dirt road to the volcano, that reads: "Donkeys for rent, you drive it---donkeys." Another worthwhile stop is Los Llanos, where we found a beautiful old building, a bar and restaurant that is an offshoot of a private club built in 1901. The building is a magnificent structure, with inexpensive, excellent drinks: three beers and snacks (tapas) all for only 500 pesetas! There is an old cobblestone square and church and beautiful trees around the church. The rest of the town was quite modern but the area around the church is well worth a visit.
on it. Some yachts can tie up stern-to with lines ashore off the yacht club, the rest of them are crowded with bow-and-stern moorings south of the club. When we were there in 1985 the harbor was very crowded and there were wars going on between the yachtsmen and the Port Captain. I counted twenty-four yachts anchored outside the designated yacht area. Someday the western side of the harbor will be enclosed by a breakwater, which will give enough room for seventy-five to one hundred boats to lie alongside in complete shelter. It would make Santa Cruz one of the most popular yacht harbors in the Canaries. At the present time the harbor is clean, with everyone going in for an early morning swim. An extremely friendly atmosphere prevailed among all the yachts-at one point I was trying to do some underwater patching on Iolaire when a friendly Norwegian came over with his Aqualung and spent an afternoon helping me put strips of lead bedded in navicoat along the stem seam; total payment was a large quantity of beer. Water is available along-
SANTA CRUZ DE LA PALMA
Sketch chart C34 This harbor has excellent shelter except when the wind is from the southeast, which is relatively uncommon. Yachts may sometimes be allowed to lie alongside or stern-to on the southern corner of the west side of the harbor but I wouldn't count
Depths in Feet
22
SANTA CRUZ DE LA PALMA /
10'
/VV'
Harbour OfficV ~F.R 1M.
N
':48
p-FR1M.
25 56
63
185
149 38
~
b
~ 28'39'30"N
30 :~
:
'-
'"
Cl Cl
26
45
.g>
....
o 48
C34
142
....::?
Santa Cruz de la Palma (sketch chart)
400 Yards
The Atlantic Islands side, check with Pedro; slush ice was available at the main port right on the dock; gasoline must be humped in jerry cans from the petrol station and diesel is available via a bouser, i. e., a four-wheeled cart that is towed around to the yacht. On the southern end of the harbor there is a hard ramp so that a boat with legs can dry out on the tide to scrub or paint the bottom.
1 77
deadman, tractor, bulldozer or anything. There are absolutely no facilities at Tazacorte. The old port of Tazacorte (how did they ever use it with a huge Atlantic swell coming in?) is half a mile away. There are a few small stores and a number of very attractive-looking beach bars and restaurants.
Hierro TAZACORTE
Sketch chart C35
US 51260; BA 1869; Harbor charts C36, C37
Tazacorte is the only other harbor on La Palma, an artificial harbor with a 1 V2-mile-long breakwater that is 50 feet high and built of massive concrete blocks measuring roughly 10 X 10 X 10, and weighing about 80 tons each-how they ever got in a crane big enough to lift these blocks is beyond me. Again, there is a hard slip on which boats can dry out, and the locals haul their fishing boats there, though I can't figure out how; there was a 50-foot trawler up on the yard, with no sign of a winch,
We did not visit Hierro because we wondered whether it was worth visiting. Obviously it is, as in May 1986 in Antigua I ran into the Norwegian friend who had helped me plug the leak while we were in Palma. He reported that they had enjoyed Hierro so much that they spent two weeks there, The port of Hierro is not the main town-the port is Puerto de la Estaca, but the main town is Valverde. The population of the island is a mere 7,000 people with 5,000 living in Valverde.
+
++
Dlgue de Abrigo Light La! 27' 38'3N Long. 17' 587W
+ +
+ '.
'.
'b --;(1),...
+
+
+ + o
100
200 Yards
t:1===:::::::::It::::::::===::jl
C35
Tazacorte (sketch chart)
+
+ +
+ + +
+
+
Depths in Feet
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Depths in Feet
'.
.... -
r- .....
CD 0
\ gt5
;lOO·q
:i!
4101
4728
5326
;3686
Malpaso
4884
HIERRO
4921 4217 .......
5131
o I
.
.
5
I
Sea Miles
Outline Hierro
PUERTO DE LA ESTACA
Harbor chart C36 Anchor off or lie alongside the dock but of course check with the Port Captain when lying alongside the dock as the dock is also used for the ferry from Tenerife. There is a small village ashore, but a bus runs to Valverde where there are the main markets for fruit and vegetables, and small supermarkets. Hierro is definitely not a tourist island and the selection of food will not be anywhere near as varied as onc will find in Tenerife or Gran Canaria. RESTINGA
Sketch chart C37 This is a fishing village with a small port and breakwater only about 100 yards long. Fresh fish is available and fresh fruit and vegetables are delivered to the market from Valverde a couple of times a week. It is one of the few places we have heard of in the Canary Islands that has a diving school where bottles can be filled. One reason for the diving school must be the fact that a quarter-mile offshore, out of almost 200 feet of water, rises a pinnacle rock to within 20 feet of the surface; I imagine it is absolutely loaded with fish. In his Guide Jack Hooper mentions that one can anchor off Naos and also at Cardillos-both must be regarded as merely open daytime anchorages.
Note that on the northeast corner of the island at Punta Roques de Salmor there are a number of off-lying shoals-again pinnacle rocks rising out of deep water. Give this point a very wide berth.
CAPE VERVE ARCHIPELAGO DMA 51500, 51520; BA 366, 369, 370;
Portuguese 201, 205, 208, 209 The Cape Verde Archipelago is a group of islands 700 miles south of the Canaries and 300 miles west of the African coast, off Cap Vert-Dakar, Senegal. They are 2,020 miles from Barbados, which makes them closer to the Caribbean by some 500 miles than any other logical jumping-off place on the east side of the Atlantic. Traditionally the Cape Verdes have not been popular with yachtsmen: they have a reputation for being short on food and water, expensive, unfriendly, and too far south; there has also been very little cruising information published about them. Yet many yachtsmen who have visited there recently, myself included, are coming to feel that the Cape Verdes are worth going to and writing about. They certainly are isolated, but that's a plus for many cruising folk, who want to get away from tourism and fellow yachtsmen. And the Cape Verdes
40
46
....
PUERTO DE LA ESTACA
..... 54 : (~') .Roca Anegada
31 39
:.26"
5·'
". 19
50
:23::
4~ on r-.
22
12,.'
27'4T~
........ .
....
21
55 46
29
35:
50
50
:"8; ;:
;i
··· .... ::38
~
~ .....
31
21
36
.: ~Fl.G4s 30ft.5M
S'
112
... ;:!
-
125
("')
73
:
:
'" S' ;:! !}
32 .:
22
41 37 73
9 :
30:
231 380
19
5 49
25 102 51
22
716
74
o
I Depths in Feet
C36
../2
,,;
Pto de la Estaca
284
500
I
1000
I Yards
....
'I CO
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
180
Dlgue de Abngo Light Lat 28' 38'5N Long. 1T 56' 5W
23
19
Q.(2)G 7s,46ft.5M
Dlgue de Abrigo
+
====:I2?O Yards
0tl====:::::::::::;:.='Otlo
Depths in Feet
C37
La Restinga (sketch chart)
offer some very attractive crUlsmg possibilities, with good beaches, diving, scenery, and interesting culture. Finally, at the time of year when most yachts cross to the Caribbean-late October, November, December-you have to sail so far south from the Canaries to get into the trades that you might as well go a little farther and win the double bonus of a new cruising ground and a shorter transatlantic hop. The islands were discovered in the fifteenth century and were settled by the Portuguese, who developed a sugar cane culture, using slaves from Africa. The islands were prosperous enough to invite aggression: Sir Francis Drake sacked the original capital on Ilha de Santiago in 1585 and again in 1592; later, the Dutch tried and failed and the French succeeded in 1712, at which point the capital was moved to a more defensible site. Eventually the Cape Verdes became a slaving center, exporting slaves to North and South America until the mid-nineteenth century. When that nefarious trade died down, coal-burning ships came to the rescue, and after that the transoceanic cables. Now diminished in importance, the islands export tuna, lobsters, and landing rights on Ilha Sal to various airlines, including German, South African, and Soviet. In recent years the Cape Verdian government has also successfully solicited aid programs from many nations, including the United
States, Belgium, Iceland, Britain, the Soviet Union, France, Holland, Germany, and Austria, as well as from the EEC. The Cape Verdians have close ties to America, originally through the whalers who came out from New Bedford to top up supplies and flesh out their crews before heading to the Pacific and South Atlantic whaling grounds. Later, Cape Verdians provided cheap labor for the Cape Cod cranberry bogs. There are now about 100,000 Cape Verdians in the Boston area alone. The money sent back to relatives is a considerable chunk of the islands' economy, The Cape Verdes lie between north latitudes 15° and 17°, like the middle islands of the Eastern Caribbean, and the climate is similar: dry season from December to June, wet season from June till early November. The wet season produces sudden heavy rains and flash floods, and the wind can come from any direction. (Heavy rains can also muddy the normally crystal-clear waters for many weeks afterwards.) Dry-season temperatures are in the low 80s during the days, cool at night. It's normally clear, but occasional sand storms blast out of the Sahara, reducing visibility and giving everyone a sore throat. Also like the Caribbean Islands, the Cape Verdes are exposed to the northwest ground swell produced by North Atlantic storms. Remember that
SANTO ANTAO
Tarra!al
O
ladOSOI CV18
17°
PlO Novo CV1? Mmdelo CV16
CV19
o SoVIC'NT,a
~AWZ1A
~
Palme,na CVl
S.NICOLAU
Branco~ ~
Mo,delra
Ped,a de Lume CV4
SAL
CV2
Raso
Sla Mana CV3
Sdi
~
Re, le
CV5
BOA VISTA Lat. 16'N
> S;:! .... ~o
~
'.+:
CV9
R,belr" da Ba'ca
Fa)a CVl3 26'
VA
rttTrl
0"
''''''o(,!:J;::{u"", CVI4~\\\Oe
25'
Index of Harbor and Sketch Charts-Cape Verdes
FOGO
CVI2
SaO
CVII
~ ~
~
PlO In91ez
cve
iJle,/I~ ~Mo,slelros Ci/~Vi/le
BaD Joao Valente
OM.,O
Ptb Tarralal
BRA
S" ;:!
15°
CV6
cV?
N
.3"
23
22
...Oc
...
182
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
the swell has absolutely nothing to do with local conditions; it can come in at any time and give you grief if your anchorage is open to it. The Cape Verdes have only one natural allweather, year-round harbor, but many docks and breakwaters have been built in recent years, and, particularly during the dry season, there are many safe harbors and dozens of more open anchorages that can be used with care. Details of these harbors and anchorages will be discussed. Like the Canaries, the Cape Verdes vary drastically from east to west. (They spread about 150 miles east to west, about 135 miles north to south.) Sal, Boa Vista, and Maio are low and dry with miles of beaches and off-lying reefs, good fishing and lobstering. The other islands are volcanic peaks rising from the sea with few beaches and few offlying dangers-and difficult anchoring conditions. (Nota bene: Abnormal magnetic variations are reported to exist in the vicinity of the Cape Verdes, especially near Fogo and Brava, off the eastern side of Boa Vista and the western side of Ilha 'Sal.) The northeast trades blow strongly in these islands-sometimes building up to gale force-and since they don't lie east-west but in a sort of square, you have to be clever to visit them all without doing some hard thrashing to windward. Ilha Sal is the logical place to arrive if you're coming from the Canaries, and then it's downwind to Boa Vista, Maio, Santiago (where the capital is), Fogo, and Brava. But getting back up to the Sao Nicolau-Sao Vicente-Santo Antao group would then be almost dead to windward, considering the strong westerly set of the current. A better way to do it would be to zig zag from Boa Vista to Sao Vicente (and its main commercial port of Mindelo) and then back down to Maio or Santiago; departure for the Caribbean would be from Fogo or Brava. That way you would sail a few extra miles, but could probably avoid any beating. Charts give a bit of trouble. Many are based on an 1819-21 British survey, updated by various Portuguese surveys, mainly in 1932, 1954, and 1971. Often there is disagreement among the British, Portuguese, and US charts; and we found some harbors on German charts that weren't even covered by the others. One major anomaly is the island of Boa Vista, which a BA Notice to Mariners a few years ago listed as being 2 miles to the east of its charted position. (The Admiralty Pilot also warns that Boa Vista's east coast is poorly charted, with off-lying rocks and shoals.) Where does that leave Baixo Joao Valente, a dangerous shoal 19 miles southwest
of Boa Vista? The British and Portuguese charts don't agree on its position or even what it looks like. The BA chart shows the center of the reef as a pinnacle of rock; the Portuguese show a reef extending 2 miles in a north to south axis. (If that's so, a shoal-draft boat might even be able to work in through the coral heads and anchor atop the reeffor some glorious fishing.) In any case, be sure to give Baixo Joao Valente plenty of sea room. There are four Portuguese charts of the Cape Verdes: 201, 205, 208, 209; three BA charts: 366, 369, and 370 (supposedly being redone, but when?); and three US DMA charts: 51500, ,51520, and 51540. The latter include three port plans and are of a useful scale, but they're based on old surveys. Number 51540 is the most detailed for the southern Cape Verde Islands. (I expect Imray-Iolaire to have Cape Verde charts before too long.) We have compiled nineteen harbor charts of the Cape Verdes for this book, based on the best available data: from other charts, other yachtsmen, and our own explorations on Iolaire in 1985. I would advise getting the general Portuguese chart for the Cape Verde area: 201. To order Portuguese charts, write Instituto Hidrografico, Rua das Trinas 49, Lisboa 2, Portugal. Tidal rise and fall is negligible: 21/2-foot springs, 1 foot at neaps. Current, though, is something else. Despite the relatively small tidal rise and fall, the tidal cllfrent funnels to the southwest between the islands of Sao NiL'Olau, Santa Luzia, Sao Vicente, and Santa Antao like a millrace. Beating to windward against this current is next to impossible. Even more significant is the constant westerly current that flows among all the Cape Verde Islands, as it does in the Lesser Antilles. The east- and northeast-flowing tidal current is largely negated by the constant westerly current. Because of this, the current runs probably eight hours southwestward and four hours northeast out of every twelve, as in the Caribbean. The southwest current begins about three and a half hours after high water, and the northeast current begins one half hour before high water. If you don't have a tidal atlas covering the whole Atlantic, note that HWF&C (High Water, Full and Change) is about eight hours after the moon passes overhead on the days of the full and new moon; thus you can calculate time of high water from the Nautical Almanac. See the table in Chapter 6, page 233, for further explanation. In any case, whenever you make a long passage from onc island to another, be sure to factor in the constant westerly current; in the normal northeast-
The Atlantic Islands erly trades, the current will always be setting you to leeward. Everything said about anchoring in the Canaries applies to the Cape Verdes. Off the high islands you'll have trouble finding a good bottom-or finding the bottom at all. Use more than one anchor and be sure you have enough on board so that you can afford to lose one. Customs and Immigration procedures are different on each island. On Ilha Sal no one seemed to want to know anything about us, and I'm told this is also true of Boa Vista and Maio. In the capital city of Praia on Santiago, the Immigration officer hailed us from the shore and we picked him up and filled out a stack of papers. He went ashore with our passports, which we retrieved the next day after filling out more papers. Cheap, and friendly, but time-consuming. In the large commercial port of Mindelo on Sao Vicente, Customs and Immigration came out in a big outboard-powered rubber dinghy. Since we had already entered at Santiago, we didn't find out what the routine is in Mindelo. Warning: when you leave Sao Vicente you must leave behind four passport photos of each crew member. They're available in town at the photo shop, but they take twenty-four hours, so plan ahead. The food situation is generally acceptable, but the prices come as a shock after the great bargains in the Canaries-an orange cost us as much here as at a green-grocer in London. The variety of fresh fruit and vegetables is acceptable, and seafood of course is excellent. Fogo produces wine, and, according to some, the best coffee anywhere. Water, however, is definitely a problem. Some places it comes from a distilling plant and you have to carry it ahoard in jerry cans. In Santiago I was told the water is contaminated and must be boiled before drinking. In Mindelo it's possible, with a bit of effort, to get distilled water at the dock. Better to try asking a freighter loading in the harbor; they are usually happy to give a yacht whatever water it needs. Ice isn't easy, but in many places you can buy or beg slush ice from the fishermen, then leave it overnight in their deep freeze. In Santiago, according to US AID Officer Tom Ball, ice is so scarce that when invited to a cocktail party you are not asked to bring your own bottle but your own ice! Gas bottles can easily be filled at the bottling plant at Mindelo, within walking distance of the dinghy dock, or on Santiago, a taxi ride from town. Diving and spear fishing are excellent on various
of the islands, and lobsters are almost a dime a dozen. (Not quite, hut we heard that on some islands they're so abundant they're fed to the dogs.) Actually, lobster runs about US $1 a pound; less if you go directly to a fisherman, more jf you deal with the young entrepreneur dressed in white who tours Mindelo harbor jn a rowboat selling live lobster to yachts at US $2 per pound-but he does provide to-the-"door" delivery! The fishin~ boats in the islands, incidentally, are surprisingly crude for people who live so much by the sea. The smaller ones are lateen-rigged with a great long yard, difficult to tack and not very efficient. Their hulls are not sweet, to my eye, but the Verdians are obViously good seamen. They also row, one man to an oar, swinging great crude 12 to 14-foot oars scarted together out of two pieces of wood. Outboard motors have made the scene, but are still rare. There are direct, though infrequent, flights from Lisbon, and South African Airways flights from New York stop at Ilha Sal to refuel. It's possible to huy a ticket just to the Cape Verdes, so you could arrange crew changes there if necessary. Within the islands, air transport is wondertully cheap, with fli~hts varying from US $8 to $30. (Would that it were even half so cheap in the Caribbean.) All the islands except Bravo have airfields, so it would he easy to visit any islands you don't want to sail to. Cables are possible hut expensive, ditto telephone calls. You can try the post office first, but hotels seem to be the best bet for telephones, even if they're more expensive. Note that the telephone exchange is not open twenty-four hours. Mail is slow: I mailed a post card to Antigua before we left Mindelo, and it arrived precisely as we radioed English Harbour for Customs clearance from lolaire fourteen days later. The langua~e of the islands is Portuguese, hut a Spanish speaker can usually get by. In the eastern islands the most common foreign languages were French and Spanish-practically no English. But in Sao Vicente and, we were told, in Fogo and Brava, it's not hard to find an English interpreter. Whether they speak English or not, the Cape Verdians are extremely friendly. In Ilha Sal, for instance, which has no public transportation, you get around by standing on the road and waving your arms. Any car or truck driver passing by feels obligated to take you wherever he's going. If your paths diverge, you stand on the road and wave some more. The same friendly spirit prevails throughout the islands.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide All in all, it seems to me that two weeks spent in the Cape Verde islands would make for an interesting and enjoyable cruise-and you still wouldn't see them all. Maybe you should stay for a month!
Ilha do Sal US 51520; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 208; Harbor charts CVl-CV4 Ilha do Sal is the northernmost of the Cape Verde islands and the obvious landfall for any yacht coming from the north as there is an excellent aero radio beacon-the range is almost 300 miles. The airport lights, however, cannot be relied on as they are turned on only about half an hour before a plane lands-no planes, no lights. Part of the wealth of the Verdes came from exporting salt obtained either by mining or the evaporation of sea water from shallow "salt ponds." Before the days of refrigeration, salt was an essential commodity, and wars were fought over control of its sources. Salt is still exported from Ilha do Sal. Water on the island comes from a distillation plant, and must be taken aboard in jerry cans. Abnormal magnetic variations are reported west of the island. There are four anchorages, only two of which are any good: BAIA DA P ALMEIRIA
Harbor chart CVl On the island's west coast, this is an excellent anchorage in all normal conditions. The new jetty off Ponta Jaoquin Machado shelters it in all but extreme conditions. A small village is nearby, the main town three miles away. BAIA DA MORDEIRA
Harbor chart CV2 This anchorage, south of Baia da Palmeiria and Ilha do Rabo de Junco, is an excellent anchorage, described in the British Admiralty Pilot as the best in Ilha Sal and one of the best in all the Cape Verde Islands. It is sheltered in all directions except west through south, and thus is exposed only during the wet season. In the dry season, tuck into the northeast corner and anchor in 15 feet of water. Superb diving, snorkeling, fishing and lobstering, a fair beach, and you are com-
pletely off by yourself as there is no road coming to this bay. One wonders why it did not develop as a port in the early days of the island, except that maybe the salt mines and salt pans were too far away for easy transport of salt. SANTA MARIA
Harbor chart CV3 On the extreme southern end of the island, this is a rather exposed anchorage off Santa Maria with its two hotels, Moraboza and Bolo Norizonte. Best anchoring is to the west, to leeward of the reef (which should provide good snorkeling) and the semiderelict salt-loading dock. Getting the dinghy through the surf onto the nice beach could be exciting. However, our Icelandic friend Toby (with an unpronounceable last name) insisted it was a worthwhile anchorage as Moraboza is extremely friendly to yachtsmen anchored off the hotel. The clientele of the hotel is interesting-mainly the flight crews of the South African, German, and Soviet planes that refuel at Ilha Sal. Politics are forgotten while they swim, drink, and play snooker. BAIA DE PEDRA DE LUME
Harbor chart CV4 This is an old salt-loading port on the island's east coast. I would definitely NOT anchor in or off it, except in ideal conditions. But if you hear they are about to load salt it is worthwhile going there by car to watch the process. It is hard to see how they can compete with the completely automated salt-loading operations in Venezuela, Bonaire, and Curac;ao. A tour of the salt works here is worthwhile, as the archaic machinery is very interesting; most of it looks as if it should be in a museum, not continuing to be worked.
Ilha cIa Boa Vista US 51520; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 209; Harbor chart CV5 As previously mentioned, Boa Vista's east coast is poorly charted; the island should be approached only from the west and then only in good light. British Admiralty charts state that the island is two miles farther east than charted. One wonders how accurately Baixo de Bartola and Baixo da Estancia ou Baixona are charted. The previously mentioned Baixo Joao Valente, 19 miles southwest of the island, is also problematic. Finally the chart gives
23"
Pta do Morrinho Vermelho
16'30'
16'30'
+
+ Pta Antonia
+
.
Pta Rodrigo
•+ +
Calheta do V.elh
Fl1:e'~~':~ei~
I
Ba. do Bartola +
I
+
·1076
+
IlHA DA BOA VISTA ·1210
80. Vauban +
I
Pta Varandinho HI OM. Racan 16'
Lat. 16'OO'N
.....j:., Bal)(o Joao
.+ .
\.....*..'
Valente
~
o
'" ~
Cl
c:
o
...J
Outline Ilha do Sal and Ilha da Boa Vista
==::!::::::::±~====ljP_iiiio;;;;;;;;;;;;'itr===:::::::3io Se. Miles
01::1
22'30'
186
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide 737 Ptcl JoaoZlnho
'''v
7.11
~
106
FI3:5s.49ft.3M.
/
'.' PIa JoaQulm Machodo.
124 98
/*'Fl.3:5s.30fI.5M. j,
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56 131
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28
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62
82
435
0
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24
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118
112
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72
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BAIA DA PALMEIRIA
(Occas)
..... ---
·.0''''29
40;.1
111
,...*' F.R42ft.5M
98
: 23
62 79
98
118
525 10
23 89
111
+
59
..
Depths in Feet
CVl
.: 10+ Pta' da Fonlona 41 . ++
79
95
o Bn
+
o
Palmeiria
..~
19811heu do:f'\ 1+ Rabo de'.V +
+
0Aero R.C.
Jun~%·".
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40
43
'';c30 ,t<
50 ,t<
61
282
7
'"
DA/ /
7
o
61 Y
78
38
r' r'
Anchoring Prohibited
r'
~ <=>
Y
Cables
~98
1r40' N
Y
MORDEIRA
..<
187
f
36 .
42
,,< 72
88
BA lA
Y 184~
1-1
N
o 2000 ~I====~==~I
CV2
y
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Yards "( 95
Bahia da Mordeira
62
26
49
++
Y
+
l'
Rife da Bancona :' 24
Y 54
37
,
."
PIa do Rife
++ +
.82
Depths in Feet
500 Yards
I
The Atlantic Islands
N
14°
Santa Maria
Hd. ·. ··~··········· 9 .....
.............~
34
23
....... ···· .. j3···· .....
......
20
36
45
; 42
23
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71
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40
47
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62
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Pta do Si no ~,~33ft.5M
..................
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11
27
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.... 25
+ ..... +
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~
500
I
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Depths in Feet
Santa Maria Depths in Feet 14°
o
1000
I
Yards
N
I
25
56
.' 21 Baixona , .... '···;2 l"
/ ......
~~ 54
64
:. 62
CV4
Pedra de Lume
b=3
1000 Yards
F=3
Fd
188
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
a warning of abnormal magnetic variation in this area, particularly off the island's east coast.
be noted that the reefs on the east cost are littered with wrecks. Still, in calm weather there is undoubtedly excellent diving here. On both Boa Vista and Maio the cheapest food you can buy is lobster.
SAL-REI
Harbor chart CV5 Here you'll find an anchorage in 10 to 15 feet of water with the town of Sal-Rei, which is described as a nice village, bearing due north magnetic. Entrance to this harbor should be done only during daylight hours with good light, as English Reef is underwater and hard to spot; pass either north or south of the reef. Anchor bow and stern, so that if the wind comes in from the west you will not be blown ashore. There is superb lobster diving on the island.
Ilha do Maio US 51540; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 209; Harbor chart CV6 Maio is low and flat, with not much to attract the yachtsman except lobster and possibly a new port in future. A cement factory is being built in the middle of the island, plus a road to it from the main town of Maio-also called Porta Inglez on the British chart. There is talk of building a real harhor at Maio; possibly by the time you read this there will be a proper wharf instead of just a landing stage.
The Portuguese charts show anchorages around the southeast coast of Boa Vista but I would be very dubious about anchoring there. It should also
,-
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Iq;.'li
,61
,
Pta da :
N
61 .:;f....... .
. . :~+*" il'll.-ooo;...:)..;...+
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6
>;'+j:: 4 +;'
..
'
Pta do
72
Forte
12
52
19
33
"29
16'09' N
I
69
62
79
I I
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\
N
\
N
22~':
ID
~~~ ......
\
,1"-- -----\ \ I
1000
: 10~+6+.
Bo. da Chave ;+~ ~ + . 21\. 2000 Yards .
::jlc::::c::::====::ll
tl::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::.
49
CV5
Sal-Rei
21 43 ':
;:+
\
o
"
56
I
48
Wkv.:
51
465
.. ,
Depths in Feet
'
15'30'
+
Bo do Galeao
Pta do Pau Seeo
-3487 ,bei,a da Ba,ea
Pta dos 'Flamengo
Pta das Sal,nas Forte de Sao Jos'
ILHA
Santia!'l (Ped,a Badejo)
F.R.3~
;;i <':>
DE
...>S-
- 4567
SANTIAGO
15'
Lat.1S'OO'N Pta do Lobo F.SM.
Pta Fundao
a
(:\'
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!}
Pta do Incenso Pta de Sougui Pta Prainh 'Pta do Peseadeiro
:;:
o
o
~
N
24~30'
Outline Maio, Santiago, Foga, and Brava
Cl c:
.3
o I
S
1f 23'30'
20 I
30Sea Miles 14'30' I
...
0:, (0
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
19 0
llha de Santiago
PORTO INGLEZ (MAlO)
Harbor chart CV6
US 51540; BA 366, 367, 369; Portuguese 209·, Harbor charts CV7-CVI0
Enter during daylight only, anchor northeast of the landing stage (same as Customs dock). Anchor bow and stern, two anchors ashore and one off the stern, as the bottom drops off steeply. You'll find a nice white sand beach to the north. The mayor (delgado guverno in Portuguese) speaks good English and is extremely friendly to visiting yachtsmen. Besides Porto Inglez there are also fishing villages at Calheta and Porto Cais. Gerry Dam, who has sailed among the Cape Verdes for a number of years, says there is an anchorage in the big bay on the island's western coast behind Ponta do Pall Seco. If you go to Calheta (you can drive up from Porto Inglez) contact a lobster diver named Pilonge, who is an excellent diver and can also serve as pilot if you want to explore the northwest coast. On the north coast the mountains are very high and the coastline flat-you can almost be on the beach and think you are much farther offshore.
Santiago is the biggest-30 miles long by 15 miles wide, 4,524 feet high-and most populousl00,OOO----ofthe Cape Verdes. Its main port, Praia, is also the archipelago's capital, a city of good size and home to various aid missions, but no facilities for yachts. Since we were told the water in Praia is undrinkable, we were lucky to discover the US frigate Hewes in port; she kindly gave us good old US Navy water plus a couple of bags of ice out of their ice machine. We met Tom Ball there, the US AID officer who is also an enthusiastic yachtsman. He told us the US Embassy has a small motor sailer, which is used for recreation and to carry the ambassador among the islands. I hope this will encourage the Cape Verdian government to take an interest in welcoming visiting yachts. In fact, there is talk of improving the yachting facilities at Praia, including a project to fill in the
Pta das Salinas Salt Pans
Mtdo~~~e {~
'.
0~+
'. 31 ... ".'.
N 90 ......
____ ..:.:.:.""._~----<:.u!t~m~
14"
\~
,.........
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Porta Inglez
~ Fort{ruins)
F.R.3M
34
\
c::
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··· .... 48
". \ . . . . --::::.--.,1\ ".
\ \
\ \
o i
Lighthouse
1S'S'N 23'13'3W
CV6
Porto Inglez
1000
I Yards Depths in Feet
The Atlantic Islands shoal water between Ilheu de Santa Maria and the mainland, and turning the old prison fort into a yacht club and restaurant. Filling in the shoal would create a yacht anchorage behind the south end of Ilheu de Santa Maria-it certainly would give welcome shelter-presently there is virtually none. It would also permit direct access to the main part oftown. The crew of lolaire discovered two hotels: government-owned Hotel Praia, with pool, restaurant, and bar, plus the Mirisol. Virtually no English was spoken at either hotel, only Portuguese, French, and Spanish. There is a car rental service, Alucar, which enables one to explore the island. There are buses, but we were unable to figure out the schedule. If you need help to find gear for the boat there is a ship chandler, Joa Barbosa Serdaun, across from the central park and he speaks English.
PORT A DA PRAIA
Harbor chart CV7 The main quay on the southeast corner of the harbor has been extended, and apparently there is deep water off the end. Once by the end of the quay, come up and head for the north end of the inner quay and anchor where the symbol is on the harbor chart. Local yachts anchor in the northwest corner of the harbor on heavy moorings. We were told that the wind funnels down through the gulley in the northeast corner of the harbor, and that your chances of getting the anchor to hold in that area are minimal. There is no thievery problem, but small boys do row around the harbor and are inquisitive; thus it is recommended that you keep at least one person on the boat at all times. There is no problem with outright boarding and burglary but petty pilferage
Depths in Feet
PORTO DA PRAIA
N
+
43
47 6Z 69
~
~114~'N" 20
GpFI(2)10s 6M. 'H1i~"'I ....
"",D.Mana Pia ",+ :'. +++. . . + .. 52 7
CV7
Porto da Praia
72
32 105
72
o
1000
65 Yards
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
192
is likely to occur in any port in the Cape Verde Islands.
but it is relatively useless as the names of the points, shoals, and bays they refer to do not show up on any nautical chart but some of them show up on topo maps. There are two charted anchorages on the west coast, Ribeira da Barca and Tarrafal.
West Coast of Santiago Gerry Dam reports that on the west coast of Santiago there are many small coves where a yacht can anchor, but at this point there are virtually no charts-it is strictly a case of eyeball navigation. You'll probably power up the coast, as the island is so high a wind shadow frequently extends out almost 20 miles to the west from Santiago. It is a steep-to shore, so moor- bow and stern, with the bow anchor buried in the beach or a line tied around a rock. To explore the west coast I advise getting a detailed topographical map of Santiago. The US, British, and Portuguese charts are not detailed enough to show the coves on the west side of Santiago. The British Admiralty Pilot gives detailed directions and descriptions of all off-lying dangers
RIBEIRA DA BARCA
Harbor chart CV8 I don't know exactly what facilities you will find here, but according to the harbor chart, taken from the German chart, an anchorage does look possible. If you spend a night here and take off at first light or possibly before dawn you should be able to motorsail north to Tarrafal and stop there before jumping off to Sao Vicente. TARRAFAL
Harbor chart CV9 Gerry Dam feels there is considerably more water in the cove where the anchor shows on the
N
' ......, :r-.. . . I
'
......
,,:
1-";8
/
,-$le
iJ
,...
.~.....
72
--'...
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',20...
79
I 0 82
:~ I I
72
i.------------~ 17+"
Dais ", + 34 : :+:: Penedas : 11 + "" 14: + 17
62
.
525
'
.. 23
:'~+" '~' , ,
+
7 ++
++ +~
o I
Depths in Feet
CV8
Ribeira
da + : + Barca 43 38 ,: ....~.< 8 . " . ' 10' + F.R.17ft.2M. " .- - - - + .;;.'__ -26---:1 1 7+
95
,~
_---
13"· + '. 7
Pta Redanda '. 20 75 ---,',
Ribeira da Barca
300 Yards
I
Pta Redonda 15'08'1 N 23°46"4 W
The Atlantic Islands
193 N
58 ",Pta "
75
54
"
23-",
6
39
69
158
98
61
29
',:+: 43
150
82
\19
26
52 58
.....
.t
41
79 170
58
47
.
'
."
o.
..... .'
.'
28 ;
Porto do Tarrafal
SChlachthof
207 ~
144
~
(')
N
15'16"5 N
244 Depths in Feet
CV9
o 180
500 Yards
I
Porto do Tarrafal
sketch chart than the chart shows; feel your way in and anchor, There are clean and simple beach cottages onshore with water and electricity until 2300; they can be rented very cheaply, It might be a good place to spend a few days away from the boat, Overlooking the harbor is a tree-shaded esplanade with the inevitable cafe; Gerry reports that it is an excellent place to have an evening snack or a sundowner while you admire the harbor. SANTIAGO
Harbor chart CV 10 If you plan to sail from Praia to Sao Nicolau or Sao Vicente, you can go up either the west side or east side of Santiago, If you go west, motorsail to Ribeira da Barca and / or Tarrafal, as described above, and take your departure from Ponta Preta. To go up eastabout, leave Praia on the port tack until you can lay Ponta do Lobo; hold well above the rhumb line course, since both wind and cur-
rent will be setting you down on the island, and because of the lack of detailed charts of the coast, There is, though, one stopping place on the east coast if you have perfect conditions: Pedra Badejo, also called Porta do Santiago, just south of the point of the same name (Harbor chart CVlO). It's wide open to the east, so be careful.
llha do Fogo US 51540; BA 366, 367, 369; Portuguese 209; Harbor charts eVIl, eV12 Fogo is a volcanic peak, rising 9,000 feet out of the sea, and a round island 15 miles in diameter. This island is distinctive in that the road, or track, goes up over the edge of the volcano and then down inside the volcano. Fogo, needless to say, is high enough to stop the trade-wind clouds, so it has water and a considerable degree of cultivation. Toby, our Icelandic friend, claims that the coffee grown on Fogo is the best in the world. The island
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
194
23
89
49 36
23
56
.... 35
T7
22
36
27 Salina
400 Yards
0 Pta da Ped ra Badejo 15"OB' N 23"32"3 W
CV10
I
I 17
Depths
In
Feet
Santiago
also boasts a family of blond-haired, blue-eyed Frenchmen, descendants of loyalist refugees from the French Revolution who have lived inside the crater of Fogo for marc than two hundred years, Being French, of course, they grow grapes and make wine, There is an anchorage of sorts at the main town of Sao Filipe (Harbor chart CVll), but it's not much good, You'll need an anchor ashore and two astern because you are anchoring on the backside of a cliff. Furthermore, the wind gusting down off the hills makes it even less secure. Better go a mile north to Vale de Cavaleiros.
VALE DE CAVALEIROS
Harbor chart CV12 This is a small fishing harbor built a few years ago. I discovered it on a picture postcard, and then Gerry Dam supplied a sketch chart; subsequently we learned from Tony Castro (surely the only Portuguese-speaking IOR designer) that there is a detailed Portuguese chart of the area, which we have shown as Harbor chart CV12. Storms have knocked down the end of the breakwater, but you can maneuver into the head of the basin, put bow anchors out in 10 feet of water, and stern lines ashore. Then you can hitch a ride to
Sao Filipe where there's a hotel and other delights. It is recommended that you leave someone aboard, and when you come back be prepared for a bunch of barking dogs; I'm told their bark is worse than their bite, but. ... A quarter mile north of Sao Filipe is a reef with a wreck on it. Good diving, but don't bump into it on your way to Vale de Cavalerios. Amazingly, there are two airstrips on Fogo, at Sao Filipe and Mosteiros, and because of the volcano between them, it's easier to fly from one to the other than to drive. US chart 51540 has anchor symbols denoting three possible anchorages: two miles south of Punta Fundao on the east coast, under the light at Alcatraz on the southeast coast, and west of Pta do Fio do M. Vermelho on the northwest coast. There are no soundings, though.
Ilha Brava US 5140; BA 366, 367, 369; Portuguese 209, Harbor charts CV13, CV14 . Brava is Fogo's little brother-a round island 5 miles in diameter with a central peak 3,000 feet high. It's the only Cape Verdian island without an airport. It has two established harbors.
The Atlantic Islands
1 95
Depths in Feet
41 :
·196 72
N 51
:
~
oDJao
53 23. 12
6 5 :.
/'0 "
Pta de Vale de (avale;'
Dp
34.
76
44 24
24
PORTO DE SAO FJ{JPE
79
7
328·
F.R.118ft.2M
,7
53
79
.ID
;14'55' N
44
85
9
69
22~ W
44
7
~
PORTO DE VALE DE CAVALElROS
(11
~
57
26
18:
180
98
~
43
lO
:,0
69
: 25
89
.
5
,
Pta do Penedo Vermelho 42'
102
174
+
+
i
3
0,"-==r=:::I=::::r:=5 O::O:::Y a,rds L I I I
Pt~
da
Arel~'.
"10
Depths in Feet
CVll
;'11
Sao Filipe
FAJA
Harbor chart CV13 This is Brava's main port; even so, there is excellent lobster fishing right in the harbor. Best anchorage is in the northeast corner, off town. Again, it's very steep-to, so put two anchors in shoal water to the east and a stern anchor in deep water to the west.
°Cl==~~c==r==~~1
500 Yards
CV12
7
Vale de Cavaleiros
island of Saba: the port is small, the town at water's edge; it's hot in the morning and during the day while the sun shines, and then cools off rapidly as the sun goes behind the mountain to the west. A nice expedition is to hire a car and go to the island's main town, Nova Sintra, high in the hills. (It's cool there, so dress accordingly.) I've heard that the Brava folks have especially close ties to the States and that English is spoken in Nova Sintra.
FURNA
Harbor chart CV14 Gerry Dam and Tom Ball agree that Furna, on the northeast corner, is a better anchorage than Faja. It is home base for the ferry Furna, which plies between here, Fogo, and Praia, Santiago. (Harbor chart CV14 is based on a German chart drawn from an old Portuguese survey; use it with caution.) Anchor behind the point, once again with anchors out bow and stern. Gerry Dam likens this place to the Caribbean
Ilha de Sao Nicolau US 51500; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 209; Harbor chart CV15 For well over a hundred years Preguica supplied crews and food for American whaling ships. The last sailing whale ship stopped at Preguica in 1924. Thus from the older members of the community you could probably hear stories of the Yankee whaling days.
196
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Depths in Feet
Pta do Padre 14'51' 8N 24'45' 3W
Mt.ve~e~
N
168 LlQoe 132
102
162
Mt.Papag~~
210
.'t~
120
,,~~
102 ..... B,ixinh, ':.~.:(CO\l'" et H.W)
66 96
48
,.'
.·33........ . .
..~:>j:;:,::;:/.( o
500
1 Yards
CV13
Porto da Faja I
I
+Pta Jaiunga
I
I
I
-=v' '$'/
:?;
~~
.... .!2.rt ......
0''/ ,c. ..I
---~-----I
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I
I i
I
N
I
I
i
19
I
, i
49.·
I
,I
16
I I
I
I
82
I
I I
:39
I
I ,, I
:34
82
62
.......III:Ii... +:·Pte da Rasea (de Forte)
Pt Jaiunga Lt 14"53'·2 N 24"41' W
CV14
Porto da Furna
o in Feet
300 ,ardS
~
FonleS Pereira de Melo . F.L.FI.9/17M.
PIa Mangrade FI.(2)9M. Lat.17"OO'N
17'
~
(">
~
S-
PIa do Calhau
....
;:!
-
D.Amelia Pta Machano FI.5s.22M.
~.
';:!E>"
PIa lombinho
~
PIa Mae Grande
PIa Espechim IIheu Braneo (\.. (1073) ~ IIheu RasoO (538)
Pta do Barril FI.(2)9M PIa leste FI.(4)9M.
,
16'30' Pta da Vermelharia ~
~
o I
10
I
25'30'
Outline northern Cape Verde Islands
b
~
20 Sea Miles I~ I Cl o
"
-'
o
~
"! c
24'30'
'"
.9
....
(0
'I
198
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
PREGUICA (PORTO VELHO)
'lha de Sao Vicente US 51500; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 201, 205; Harbor chart CV16
Harbor chart CV15 South of town, the BA ano Portuguese charts show what appears to be a river entrance, but it's a dry river-no water. It's hard to see what attracted the whalermen to this place-the anchorage is exposed and always rolly; not a terrific place for whaling ships or yachts, I should think. (Apparently SaD Nicolau was one of the most cultivated islands, so it may have been the food supply that drew the whalers.) There is a fishing village at Carrical on the southeast coast, and at Tarrafal (another one) on the southwest coast,
SaD Vicente, with its city of Mindelo and harbor of Porto Granoe, has been the commercial center of the Cape Verdes for the last hundred years. Porta Grande, Mindelo, is the only really good natural deep-water harbor in the entire archipelago and thus dcveloped as a major commercial port from the earliest years. If you're coming here from Sao Nicolau, it's probably best to sail north of Santa Luzia and Sao Vicente so that you can slide down the channel between Sao Vicente and Santa Antao to Mindelo. As mentioned earlier, the southwest tidal current will be almost impossible to beat up against if you come arouno the south coast of Sao Vicente. Coming from the north, Ilheu dos Passaros can be left on either hand. Its light is listed as being visible 8 miles, but I suspect it's more than that. If you can figure the tide right (see Chapter 6,
Ilha de Santa Luzia US 51500; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 209 Santa Luzia is uninhabited, has no harbor, and is very badly charted. These are good reasons for avoiding it.
N 41
13
71<x.':t: 0.0
q't·
111;'0
- - 25 37'
I
42 /
59 // I " , r
41
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I
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102
J
I
64
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I
54
....
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I.,
18
~~c...............
~----------
216
I I
118
I I
292 16'33'5 N
92 187
76 107
o 500 Yards ~I==~==~~==~==~I
36 Depths in Feet
CV 15
Preguica
The Atlantic Islands "Wind, Weather, and Tides," page 233) and want to come south around Sao Vicente, be prepared to be becalmed under Ponta Machado and then blasted with strong gusts as you stand out into the channel. But I repeat: don't try to beat into the northeast trades and against a southwest running current at the same time in this channel; it's murder.
199
and Immigration will come out to you in their outboard-powered rubber dinghy. There is a new yacht club ashore, which by now should have working showers and other amenities that were still in the works in late 1985. (There is also a derelict dock south of the anchorage, which if repaired would make a terrific yacht mooring area. They could even post a guard at the head of the dock to ensure everyone's security.) When you go ashore you'll be beset by a host of friendly but slightly overenthusiastic boat hoys. Rather than cope with the crowd each time, it's better to hire one boy for your whole stay. Check with Customs and Immigration to ascertain a fair wage; they may even recommend a reliable boat boy. Then have the boy run your dinghy service, wash dishes, polish brass, do errands, and generally make himself useful. You'll certainly need a guide and interpreter if you plan to do any serious shopping. Marcel and Rodrigues were well recommended when we were there, but who knows where they are now. A
MINDELO (PORTO GRANDE)
Harbor chart CV16 If you come in from the north, head for the end of Mole 2, round the mole, tack to the east and tuck up in the northeast corner of the harbor, as close in as your draft will permit. The holding is pretty good in sand; I've been told that's the only place you can get good holding. If you're arriving at night, don't confuse the bright lights of the new shipyard north of the mole with the lights of Mindelo. You can anchor off the shipyard-but you won't be in the har~or. Once anchored, hoist your "Q" flag and Customs
56
36
62
MINDELO 64
43
.. '
52 18
PORTO :'"
GRANDE
.. '
16°53'N
-=3: o P
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43
19n
.cd~ 16
.'
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20 35 ....
.. ..... '
26
17
22
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23
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o
1000
I I Yards
CV16
Porto Grande / Mindelo
.·'5 +
20 .1
...........
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~ 0000 Tanks
+
.·• .. · .. 7 +
++
Depths in Feet
200
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Senor Cartolina was highly recommended as an expediter who makes his living getting things done. He knows the islands, the port, the shipyards, Customs, airlines, and so on, and can be a great help. With your guide, you can do pretty well with supplies. Ideally, you will have stocked the boat in the Canaries and will be just topping off here. Visits to four or five different stores will do it. We found a butcher two blocks east of the main market, which is itself a must to visit. Eggs are available, but people start lining up at 6:30 A.M. to get them; your guide can arrange to get eggs for you (provide your own egg cartons). For dishwashing soap go to the old Shell station on the waterfront with your own bottle and buy Teepol, a commercial detergent. For water arrange for some through the dockmaster, or go alongside a freighter and ask for some. Fuel can be taken on at the dock and it's apparently cheap. Get crushed ice from
the fish plant and try to get them to freeze it overnight in their freezer. lolaire's crew found an excellent restaurant back among some relatively new apartment buildings. At first we thought we were going into someone's apartment, but there was the restaurant Casa Maria (named after Maria) and it provided us with a splendid meal. For repairs, the big new shipyard north of town can do anything. Its fancy side-launching railway is so big that hauling anything less than 100 feet would not be economical. But they have engine, electronics, electrical, and machine shops. Another excellent machine shop is behind the fish factory; they can fix almost anything. At the south end of town is an ancient shipyard whose cradle is hauled by an old steam engine and can handle all but tbe biggest yachts. Certainly not a yacht yard, but they can do emergency work, and the price is right.
The Atlantic Islands Depths in Feet
Bllixo do Cllvlllo
778
201
.... "',Baixo : ··.Ama,.'o 23'
.'
46
.. 79
N
.
35 '
25 20 20
705 :'
..
102
75
78
85
Pta do Sol ~
(Maria Pia)
~<)(>A
85
O~'V
56
.:+ .... :.';,' ". 2 i·.
85 ;53
59
". Pta da Rocha G rande
53
49
.. '
.. ' .P'~.
Brasrl
·······0:
27 :" BD.
18
': it. ..... 20
Lisboa
23
..
15
.. ' 12
11
;+ '. 23 .... : ··i... ·. 14--
,.... . .
12
.' pr ai3 .
o
500 Yards
cl==~==~~===r==~1
CVl8
Ponta do Sol/ Maria Pia
Mindelo is not a modern tourist town. It seemed to me to be much the way Kingston, St. Vincent (in the Eastern Caribbean), was when I first arrived in St. Vincent in 1961. Maybe that's why I liked it so much. If you leave from Mindelo bound for the Caribbean, don't forget that Santo Antao can cast a wind shadow a good 20 miles or more to the southwest. Run downwind south-southwest for at least 25 miles before turning west for the New World.
RAIA DAS GATAS
Portuguese 205 On the northwest corner of Sao Vicente is this small fishing port. Entrance can be made in moderate weather approaching from the southeast, sailing between the reefs, and anchoring in suitable depth. There is a shallow lagoon in the northeast corner that makes a popular swimming hole on weekends.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
202
In summer there is a large music festival here, and one reason for coming would be to have your own accommodation for the festival. But I would definitely scout the harbor by car from Mindelo before taking my boat around.
llha de Santo Antao US 51500; BA 366, 369; Portuguese 205, 252, 253; Harbor charts CV17-CV19 Some say Santo Antao is the most beautiful island in the group. It's only a day's sail from Sao Vicente, but don't forget the fierce current in the channel between the islands. It's also only a 90minute ferry ride away. You could ride over in comfort for a day's jaunt or to spend the night. Being so high (5,000 feet) and so big (20 miles long), Santo Antao gets a lot of rainfall, even during the drought that has plagued the archipelago in recent years, Its pine forests up in the mountains are part of its scenic charms.
PORTO NOVO
Harbor chart CV17 This is the island's only real harbor and is a good stop for yachts since the mole has been extended to be almost 1,000 feet long. Anchor bow and stern behind the mole because the muscular trades are likely to die out at night under the influence of the high island. A light offshore breeze (conditions also encountered in Madeira and the Canaries), may develop, swinging you in a circle and breaking out your anchor.
OTHER ANCHORAGES
Harbor charts CV18, CV19 Both the Portuguese chart 252 and BA 369 show an anchoralSe behind Ponta do Solon the northern tip of the island (Harbor chart CV1S). But the BA chart also shows breakers half a mile offshore, I for one would be very leery of going into any place with breakers half a mile offshore. But it might be
107
157
785
Tarrafal
141
211
276
138
204
56
46
"
o
1
500
1000 Yards
I
Pta da Salina 16"56'6 N 25"19'1 W
CV 19
Tarrafal
The Atlantic Islands worth a careful look in settled mnditions. Topographical maps of Sao Antao show anchorages on the north coast off the villages of Cruzinha de Garcia and Baia de Fundas. Similarly on the west coast are fishing villages at Monte Tigro and yet another place called Tarrafal (Harbor chart CV19), which should bc sheltered by the high mountains to the east. An old BA chart shows a "tunny factory" and two buildings labeled "water works" at Tarrafal, which would indicate grander days there, when there might have heen a water
203
pipe mming down from the hills. I wonder if it is still there? All these fishing villages face the ground swell, and all have very steep hottoms. These pages are written in the hope of encouraging more yachtsmen to visit the Cape Verdes. There is still much to be discovered about them, and I would be very pleased to hear from anyone who knows more or learns more than is written here.
6
Wind, Weather, and Tides radic and will seldom last fur more than two hours, with intervals of bright sunshine in between. It sometimes rains in late April or early May, often in a veritable deluge causing washed-out roads and flooding. But the real rainy season is considered to be late June through October; it tapers off in November, though sometimes intermittent heavy rain and squalls will continue until December. In the southern islands there is often a two- to three-week wet period in January that is referred to as the petite rainy season. South of Antigua the islands' high elevation allows moisture to be gathered from the trades. Here heavy rain squalls occur the year round, but in the dry months of January through June they seldom last long. Mid-August to early December is the season of heavy rain squalls in this area. Life is not as pleasant as during the dry season, except at the southern end of the Antilles, from Ile de Ronde to Bequia in the Grenadines, where the sailing is good twelve months of the year. Venezuelan weather it totally different from that of the rest of the Eastern Caribbean. It is true that the offshore islands are in the trade-wind belt; they are small and windswept and thus the wind will blow twenty-four hours a day. It will not die out at night except possibly in Margarita. The rest of Venezuela is affected by the continental land mass of South America, and more particularly by the ridge of mountains that runs along the coast from the eastern end of the Peninsula de Paria westward to Puerto Cabello. These mountains are high, ranging from lows of 2,000 feet up to 7,000 to 8,000 feet along the coast by Caracas. At dusk the cold air immediately starts dropping down off the mountains, fighting the easterly breeze that has built up during the day.
General Weather Patterns The Eastern Caribbean is renowned for its consistently fine weather the year round. The daytime temperature ranges from the high 80s in the summertime to a mean of 84° F in the winter. In the evening it falls to about 75° F on the water, except along the Venezuelan coast where it drops to 68°70° F, and on a "cold" winter night it might drop to 65° F. As long as a breeze is blowing the sun is never oppressive. Out of the wind in the towns it always seems a lot warmer. During the winter months the humidity is relatively low, and on a well-ventilated boat there should be no problem with mildew. In the late summer and fall when the trades ease up, they lose their cooling effect and the threat of hurricanes can make things uncomfortable. This is the time when Island people take their vacations or move from the large towns to a windward shore or to the hills, where the temperature drops approximately one degree with every 150 feet of elevation. One point that many people forget, including experienced Caribbean sailors, is that April is the time of year when you really feel the sun the worst in the Caribbean. The sun, on its way north, passes directly over Grenada on April 22 and over the Virgin Islands on May 16. Thus people who have sailed all winter in the Caribbean and have not had trouble with sunburn will suddenly discover themselves getting sunburned during the Rolex, BVI, and Antigua Sailing Week regattas, which always take part from mid-April through the first few days of May. BE PREPARED! From Antigua north very little rain falls, a condition hard on farmers but favorable to tourists, sailors, and paint contractors. Precipitation is spo204
Wind, Weather, and Tides The strong easterly will usually die out to zero along the coast by 2000 or 2100. There will then be an all-night calm or the wind will come in light out of the south. Sometimes it gets cool enough so that someone sleeping on deck will want a couple of blankets or a warm sleeping bag. At dawn along this coast it's almost always glassy calm; the wind picks up around 1100 out of the northwest, works its way slowly around to north-northeast, and then settles down in the east-northeast or east, blowing anywhere from 15 to 25 knots. Plan your days accordingly-it's great for those crews who like to sleep late in the morning. Except for rain squalls along the mountains, the coast of Venezuela is dead dry-even in the rainy season it practically never rains-but of course you can get caught. When we arrived in Margarita in 1978 I told the crew not to bother taking rain gear ashore while we went to Pampatar for the day: Hit never rains in Margarita." Ashore, the locals confirmed the fact that it hadn't rained in Margarita for eighteen months. But that day the clouds opened u{r-it rained steadily for six hours and flooded the whole island. So much for my weather predictions. At the western end of Venezuela, in the Maracaibo area, the land to windward and leeward of the Gulf of Venezuela is desert. This heats up and sucks the wind in off the water, so that in the Maracaibo area in the winter months, gale-force winds blow practically every day. It should be noted that the very active racing fleet of Stars, Rhodes 18s, and other classes completely shuts down in the beginning of November and doesn't race again until late April or early May-it just blows too hard. Venezuelan yachtsmen universally claim that June, July, August, and September are the best sailing months in Venezuela. At this time of year the trades die out. It doesn't blow particularly hard and the rainy season isn't really that rainy. You're south of the hurricane belt, so that worry is basically eliminated. Along the coast of Venezuela the water temperature is anywhere from 7° to 10° F colder than the Eastern Caribbean, often going as low as 68° to 70° F. Where this cold water comes from no one knows. It isn't noted in any of the pilot charts or pilot guides of the area, but it does exist; wc have carefully taken water temperatures. Fog is virtually unknown in the Antilles (but make sure you're carrying a foghorn and a fog bell on board, as required by the Coast Guard and enforced by a stiff fine). At times, though, a haze will form on the horizon, reducing visibility to as
205
little as 3 miles. When the sun is high overhead these hazes may be difficult to detect, so don't be duped by an apparently clear horizon. I have sailed right by Martinique within 5 miles of the coastline and have never seen a thing. At other times the visibility will be excellent and the high islands can be seen from distances ranging from 40 to a really extraordinary 70 miles. I was once becalmed in Anegada Passage and I could see St. Croix, Saba, St. Martin, Virgin Gorda, Tortola, and St. Thomas all at once. Keep in mind, though, that a sudden rain squall can reduce visibility to 50 yards in a matter of minutes. The weather departments throughout the Islands are infamously inaccurate in their reporting of wind velocities. It has been alleged that the departments put a tape recording on in early December which says, "Winds east to east-northeast, 15 to 18 knots, higher in gusts." Sometime around late March or early April the tape recording is changed to play "winds east to east-southeast, 12 to 15 knots, higher in gusts." This recording plays until June. In early December 1978 we sat weatherbound in Clifton Harbour, Union Island, for five days, listening to the standard December weather report, which did not say how much higher in gusts it was blowing. Various yachts' wind-speed indicators showed that it was blowing a steady 30 and gusting to 50. Yet throughout that blow the weather report remained unchanged. Many experienced Eastern Caribbean sailors never bother listening to weather forecasts until early June. Then from June to November they listen to the early-morning weather report to ascertain if any hurricanes have been spotted by the satellites-the most complete weather reports seem to be given by Radio Montserrat on 930 kc, 0805 local time. It's receivable in the entire Eastern Caribbean. The report is complete, covering the western Atlantic up to latitude 25° N. Another good source for weather information is Virgin Island Radio (WAH), which three times a day broadcasts an overall view of the whole North Atlantic, plus the Caribbean. It is relatively useless for the Caribbean, except that it is very accurate in predicting the arrival of ground swells and the cold fronts that approach Puerto Rico and kill the wind in the Virgin Islands (see Appendix C for more complete radiotelephone listings). This weather broadcast comes at 0600, 1400, 2200 on VHF 28; SSB channels 2506, 401, 409, 416, 604, 804. As a service for yachts coming to and leaving the
206
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
islands during October through mid-December and May through June, they broadcast a really detailed North Atlantic weather report. Not only that, but if you can raise them on SSB at times when traffic is light, they will rebroadcast it. The barometer is relatively useless as a weather indicator in the Caribbean. It tends to stay so steady that one frequently thinks the instrument is broken. The only two rules that seem to follow are that the higher the barometer goes, the harder it blows; and that by the time the barometer does start to drop drastically, ifs too damned late to do anything about it because the hurricane will be there in a few hours. Thank God for satellites! Wind-velocity averages over a long period of time paint a false picture, so be prepared for a few surprises. During the winter months it usually blows 12 to 15 knots, a good working-sail breeze. At times it will blow 15 to 20, and it may stay that way for a couple of weeks or may pipe up to a solid 25 or 30. I have kept the lee rail down for a week on end under staysail, storm trysail, and mizzen, but such conditions are more the exception than the rule. The trades are often referred to as northeastern, but this is generally inaccurate. They are more east-northeast to straight east during the winter months, when the wind will rarely go south of east; but as summer approaches, it will tend to east and east-southeast with periods of southeast and south. Come midsummer and fall, it usually will be southeast to south with variations west of south. The farther south you travel, the more north the trade wind is apt to have in it. Any time the wind shifts to the north you can expect a good stiff blow. Except for the hurricanes, though, there's never so much wind that a 40-foot boat, well handled and well rigged with adequate reefing gear, cannot stand up to it. The one real variation in the winter trades is what is known as an "easterly wave," which is often accompanied by high winds, heavy rains, and generally uncomfortable conditions. There's a good description of the easterly wave in Bill Robinson's book Where the Trade Winds Blow. The wave "takes place in a broad stream of air, in this case one that blows initially from east-southeast . . . . The wind gradually becomes northeast, then goes back to southeast and finally settles again in the east-southeast. The wave, with an axis that runs roughly north-northeast / south-southwest, moves to the westward at about 15 miles an hour, and the cycle usually takes a day or two to move by. As the
wave approaches, the wind decreases as it goes into the southeast, with fine weather and few clouds. After the crest of the wave passes, some medium and high cumulus clouds develop, with a chance of showers, while the wind remains light. In the final part of the cycle, the wind swings back to the east-southeast and strengthens, with heavy showers and sometimes even thunderstorms. It holds fairly strong until the clouds move by and then it settles back to normal seasonal strength." The harometer gives very little warning of this easterly wave, and in the past it was seldom identified; now Virgin Island Radio reports the easterly waves very accurately. Their squalls seldom bring more than 30 knots of wind, but on occasion they may mount up to 50. Sometimes they have no wind at all, just plenty of rain. Even after a couple of decades in the Lesser Antilles, I still cannot reliably predict how much wind a squall will contain. It's wise to prepare for the worst. Squalls are easily spotted and there is no excuse for being caught unaware. They generally move with the trade winds. Sometimes in the hurricane season, when the wind is light, they come in from the west, but this is highly unusual, and when it does happen, be on your guard: there will be wind aplenty. One thing r ran predict, though, after thirty years of sailing in the Caribbean, is what I call the April Calm. It doesn't show up on the weather charts, but every year for the past twenty-five, I have noted that sometime between the last days of March and early May there is a spell of four to eight days where the wind goes flat. April is thought of as a windy month, and so it is; but sometime in that period----
Wind, Weather, and Tides April calm. In twenty weeks of cruising within this period, in the days when Iolaire had an engine, I would never run my engine in gear for more than twenty hours. (I finally decided to do away with all the fuss, furor, expense, and frustration of maintaining an engine and yanked it out entirely.) It is from August to December that Iolaire is most likely to miss her engine, but somehow we've managed. Before, when maneuvering in a harbor in light air, we had to keep the mainsail up until the last minute. Now with the prop and strut removed we can sail around to our heart's content under staysail and mizzen: she handles perfectly. At a couple of knots the propeller, shaft, and strut alone probably amounted to 20 percent of the boat's total drag. Whatever may have been said to the contrary, it is possible to make way under sail in the lee of the high islands. Most sailors assume there will be a total lull close inshore, so they pass 3 or 4 miles off-which is just where you find absolutely nothing. But there is a way of skirting along the lee shore of the high islands, which I discovered in a book of eighteenth-century sailing directions. These recommended two ways of passing the islands, either at 7 leagues (21 miles) offshore or else close inshore within "two pistol shots." The historian Dudley Pope has explained to me that the pistol shot was a recognized measurement in those days and appears frequently in accounts of naval battles. It is the equivalent of 25 yards. Stay within 50 yards of shore (that may be a bit closer than you want to be-but not much) and you stand a good chance of enjoying a smooth, scenic sail the length of a high island. The best time to try it is between 1000 and 1600. After 1600 the breeze falls off rapidly. A big genoa and a mizzen staysail will help you along. Be prepared, though, for the wind to shift radically; 1800 shifts in the lee of the islands are not at all uncommon. It can be quite a hard shift too, frequently referred to among Eastern Caribbean yachtsmen as "instant tacks." For this reason, oouble-headsail-rigged boats are wcll advised to disconnect their staysail stay in these conditions so that the jib doesn't have to be horsed around the forestay on each tack. Now while this wind under the island is usually light, hard gusts sometimes blow down off the hills, so be wary of setting your lightweight ghoster-drifter, because a good blast that may last only ten minutes will either pull it all out of shape or tear it to shreds. The best sail for sailing under the lee of the island is a large genoa of heavy enough
20 7
cloth to be carried in 12 knots to windward. During the day as the land heats up you'll sometimes pick up a westerly onshore breeze, right up onto the beach counter to the trades, which continue to blow higher up. Alternatively, at night the cool air falling down off the hills often provides a beautiful moonlight sail along the beach. Dawn and dusk are HIe only times when there is absolutely no wind in the lee of these high islands. I would say that except at these times you'll be successful sailing the lee shore about 75 percent of the time. Of course when you're sailing up and down the Islands, you may frequently find it preferable to pass to windward of an island rather than to leeward. This is particularly true of Dominica and St. Vincent, which have long, high ridge lines with no valleys that allow the wind to trickle through and fan out. (Guadeloupe is the third worst island in this respect.) Needless to say, passing to windward of an island almost always eliminates the chances of becoming becalmed. But keep well off. The Atlantic waves bouncing back off the weather shore can make the inshore waters very disagreeable and bouncy.
Explanation of the North Atlantic Pilot Charts Prevailing Winds and Calms-The wind rose is located in the center of each 50 square where there was sufficient data. The rose shows the distribution of the winds that have prevailed in the area over a considerable period. The wind percentages are summarized for the eight points and calm. The arrows fly with the wind indicating the direction from which the wind blew. The length of the shaft measured from the outside of the circle using the scale shown gives the percentage of the total number of observations in which the wind has blown from that direction. The number of feathers shows the average f()rce of the wind on the Beaufort scale. The figure in the center of the circle gives the pen:entage of calms. When the arrow is too long to fit conveniently in the 5° square, anything over 29 percent, the shaft is broken and the percentage is indicated by numerals. For example, the sample wind rose should read thus: In the reported observations the wind has averaged as follows. From N. 40 percent, force 7; from N.E. 19 percent, force 7; from E. 6 percent, f()rce 5; from S. E. 5 percent, force 5; from S. 5 percent, force 5; from S. W. 9 percent, force 5;
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
208
given, gales may have been recorded but too infrequently to give a percentage value. The following information is not shown on these charts, hut will appear on the full-size windcharts available from the NOAA.
FREQUENCY OF WAVE HEIGHTS
from W. 8 percent, force 5; from N. W. 5 percent, force 4; calms 3 percent.
The red lines on the main body of the chart indicate the percentage of frequency of wave height equal to or greater than 12 feet. In analysis, when both sea and swell are reported, the higher value is used in summary.
GALES
The numerals in the center of each 5° square on this inset chart show the average percentage of ships' reports in which winds of at least force 8 have been recorded for the month. Where "0" is FORCE ON
TROPICAL CYCLONES
The mean tracks of tropical storms and hurricanes are shown in green. They appear only during the season of maximum frequency (May to November). HEIGHT
BEAUFORT
NAUTICAL
SCALE
MPH
OF SEA, DESCRIPTION
IN FT.
DEEP-SEA CRITERIA
0
0-1
Calm
1
1-3
Light Airs
V4
Small wavelets, no crests.
2
4-6
Light Breeze
1/2
Small wavelets, crests glassy but do not break.
3
7-10
Light Breeze
2
Large wavelets, crests begin to break.
4
11-16
Moderate Breeze
3 1/2
Small waves, becoming longer, crests break frequently.
5
17-21
Fresh Breeze
6
Moderate waves, longer, breaking crests.
6
22-27
Strong Breeze
9 1/2
Large waves forming, crests break more frequently.
7
28-33
Strong Wind
13Y2
Large waves, streaky foam.
8
34-40
Near Gale
18
High waves of increasing length, crests form spindrift.
9
41-47
Strong Gale
23
High waves, dense streaks of foam, crests roll over.
10
48-55
Storm
29
Very high waves, long overhanging crests. Surface of sea white with foam.
11
56-65
Violent Storm
37
Exceptionally high waves, sea completely covered with foam.
12
above
Hurricane
65
Flat calm, mirror smooth.
The air filled with spray, visibility seriously affected.
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Brilliant's track to England is a typical June direct route. She remained well south of the Grand Banks in the warmer weather and with the lift of the Gulf Stream. clear of the icc. June is one of the worst ict> months. Diahlesse has taken a good June track westward across the Atlantic. In June, the heginning of the hurrieane season, the risk is low (only 51 in the last WO years) aud the trades have moved north. A hoat can stay as far as 25°N and still can v the trades practically to Florida.
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Typhoon had a fast, rough trip in the northern latitudes. She sailed the logical route for a boat taking departure from northern Nova Scotia or SI. Pierre or Miquelon. Dorade astounded the yachting world when she won by a wide margin the 1931 Transatlantic Race by sailing as close to the Great Circle Route as she could, which lessened her distance by about 200 miles. She had a few nerve-wracking days crossing the Grand Banks just south of the ice. She used a crude, but workable, radio to pick up Coast Guard iee reports. lolaire's 1975 track wa~ similar-fast, cold, and foggy. Landfall had a more pleasant but slower passage. From Newport she followed the Gulf Stream across-such a good passage that UfI"a Fox claims he put On twelve pounds. Nina in 1928 won the race 10 Spain. Her only problem came when she hit an easterly gale, driving her well north. She then encountered light airs along the norlhern Spanish coast.
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Wind, Weather, and Tides These tracks represent averages, and movements of individual systems may vary widely.
Hurricanes There's no denying the danger of hurricanes in the Islands, and as I've said, you'd be a damn fool to plan a cruise without factoring that danger largely into your schedule. But that is not to say that Eastern Caribbean yachtsmen live in constant fear and dread of hurricanes. Not every hurricane that comes whistling out of the south is a threat to the Lesser Antilles. When they make their way through the southern islands they are still young; their diameter is small, with gale-force winds spanning out to 60 miles to the southeast. More and more hurricanes seem to be named each year, and we get farther down into the alphabet, but that's mostly because with satellite photographs available, every tropical depression that might possibly develop into a hurricane is observed and named. In years gone by the same depressions would merely have been passed over as spells of bad weather. And, in fact, until David and Frederick came through in 1979, the Eastern Caribbean had not suffered any bad hurricanes for a good numher of years. Hurricanes have been reported in every month of the year over the last few centuries, but they're certainly most frequent in August, September, and October. (It's in the later part of the season, especially, that they're likely to churn up to leeward of the Antilles in the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, or just north of the St. Barts / St. Martin area. October-delivery skippers take note.) Most of them start near the latitude of Guadeloupe, well to the east; those that keep coming pass through the islands in the Guadeloupe-Antigua area, curve northward, and give a good whack to Hispaniola and the western end of Puerto Rico. There are exceptions, of course; Grenada and Martinique have both been hit hard. Generally, the warning system (all local radio stations) is excellent and it's improving all the time. But make no mistake. Hurricanes, when they do strike, are awesome. The cold print of damage estimates does not give a true picture of the severity of a hurricane. Before the winds ever reach hurricane force, the native corrugated-iron and tar-paper shacks begin to break up, and the banana and sugar crops are severely damaged. Imagine the destruction when the winds do reach hurricane
221
force. It isn't a pleasant Sight-nor is it one to stand around and gape at. There is an old rhyme about hurricanes; June too soon, July stand by, August look out you must, September remember, And October all over. Though roughly accurate, the rhyme doesn't really hold true, because sometimes October is not the end of the hurricane season-as Klaus proved with devastating effect in 1984. But more of Klaus later. A look at the hurricane book, published by NOAA and covering all hurricanes from 1886 to 1980, is instructive. During that ninety-five year period, January, February, and March had one hurricane each. April had none, May had 13, and June had 50, concentrated in the latter part of the month. Then comes the "season"; July, 61; August, 186; September, 267; October, 173. November shows 36 hurricanes, which break down to 19 in the first ten days, 11 for the middle third, and 6 during the last third, while December has had only about five hurricanes in known history! Incidentally, the number of hurricanes per year varies dramatically, ranging from several years with none, one, or two all the way to 1933, when there were thirty-one hurricanes recorded-not a good year to have been sailing around the Atlantic! And a bad financial year as well. The lesson to be learned here is that November has its perils. Anyone coming down from up north in November should keep careful track of the weather reports all the way down. I wonder if the St. Thomas Charter Boat League Show and the Tortola Boat Show, now held in early November, shouldn't be moved to the end of the month. Let's look at the rambunctious career of hurricane Klaus in 1984. Typical of November hurricanes, Klaus was notoriously erratic. It started up near Puerto Rico, between Vieques and Culebra and headed east-northeast, passing north of the Virgins, St. Martin, and St. Barts, giving all islands quite a whack. Aboard lolaire we realized there was a hell of a blow on the way, but never thought hurricane, because it was November 6. Then when we heard it was a hurricane, to the west of us in the Passage Islands, that was OK, too, because all hurricanes go northwest in the low latitudes. When I first heard the report that Klaus was tracking east-northeast, I thought the radio operator just couldn't read. So we anchored Iolaire on two
222
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
anchors on the north side of St. Martin, where we'd be in the lee fix a hurricane doing its normal thing. It put a few gray hairs in my beard when we heard at 1800 that evening that Klaus really was headed east-northeast. That meant it was headed toward us, and that the wind would do a 180 0 switch and that our comf()ftablc anchorage under the lee of St. Martin would hecome a dead lee shore. At this time it was too late to up anchor and try to outrun the hurricane, so we started rigging out more anchors. (Some folks have laughed at all the anchors and line Iolaire carries, but they paid their way that night.) The wind did its 1800 shift-clockwise from south to north-but it went slowly and we were ahle to keep up with it. We slacked off one anchor as the wind clocked, dropped another, and put a strain on it. We finally ended up with four anchors overside and one more in reserve. vVe rode out the hurricane with no trouble. (Of the hundred or so boats in St. Martin, twenty-two ended up on the beach.) We had put the anchors down carefully, using the correct procedure, so that we never had a crossed hawser; after the storm we picked up all four anchors in less than half an hour, with no engine to help. Anchoring and securing for a hurricane is an involved subject. Space does not permit great detail, but there are a few general rules. When anchoring, anchor so that the boat can pivot into the wind, as the wind shifts as the center moves by. Always try to ride on two anchors at a time. Ascertain whether the hurricane is going to pass north or south of you and plan accordingly. Remember that as the hurricane passes, there will be a 1800 wind shift; how fast it will shift and the direction of the shift will depend on how close you are to the center. If anchoring on chain, make sure you have some method of securing an angle (weight) on the chain or secure a nylon line to the chain via rolling hitch or chain claw so that the chain does not snub up. Here are some general pointers about getting ready for an approaching hurricane. Of course, the boat should be well anchored to the heaviest anchors available. Lines that pass through the how chocks should be heavily protected with the chafing gear. Extra chafing gear should be on hand to replace the old gear as it wears through during the storm. Don't underestimate the dangers of chafe. If the dinghy is left: in the water, make sure the outboard is removed. Either the rain will fill the dinghy or the wind will capsize it. In either case
the engine would be under water, and engines don't run very well once submerged. Further, even a boat like a Whaler, which cannot flood because of its dOllble bottom, should have its outboard removed. In hurricanes the wind can get underneath even a g()()d-sized Whaler and Aip it upside-down. \Vhcn preparing f()r et hurricane, a boat should not be secured how and stern if you can avoid it, but rather on a Bahamian moor. If a boat is secured bow and stern, you're bound to drag when the wind comes on the beam. On a Bahamian moor, no matter which way the wind blows the boat can pivot freely. For this emergency there is a variation on the Bahamian moor known as a modified Bahamian hurricane moor-three anchors out, two sets in a Y in the direction that the heaviest wind and sea are expected, and a third in the direction that the wind will commence. Usually, as a hurricane passes nearby, there will be a 1800 wind shift, and you must be prepared for it. Besides the normal anchoring gear, a boat that plans to spend the hurricane season in the Lesser Antilles should have a really large hurricane anchor. I carry a I50-pound, three-piece Herreshoff stowed in the bilge during the hurricane season as insurance. So with careful seamanship and a little luck it is possible to ride out a hurricane, even if you haven't gotten to a hurricane hole (see pages 223-25). But these days et greater danger threatens yachts in the Carihhean during the hurricane season--{)Vercrowded anchorages. Klalls swiped St. Thomas on its way east with winds no higher than 50 knots. Yet it did massive damage to the yachting Aeet, mainly because there were too many boats in too little space. Trouble was compounded by some hadly moored water barges that came adrift in West Gregerie Channel and by a cruise ship that came into St. Thomas Harbor during the storm and couldn't get alongside the dock. Properly moored yachts were wiped out by these blundering vessels. They also knocked loose others that drifted into still others; the whole lot then dragged ashore; they were stacked two and even three deep along Veterans Drive. Had Klaus hit St. Thomas full force, the damage to the yachting community would have heen catastrophic instead of just disastrous. And it could happen. St. Thomas was hit in 1953, 1947, 1941, and 1931. Before that, at least thirteen near-misses were recorded. And in 1867 St. Thomas was Aattened twice in three weeks. First, a tidal wave swept the harbor, flooding the
Wind, Weather, and Tides
lower town and putting more than one hundred ships on the beach; three weeks later a hurricane blew through, completing the destruction. In those days there was room for everyone to get properly moored. Now, although more harbors have been dredged and breakwaters built, to create even more harbors of refuge, there are so many more boats that it would be just impossible for everyone to squeeze into a safe place. This is particularly true in the British Virgins, where there are so many bare-boat charter Heets. If a hurricane ever squarely hits the BVI, it's going to be a major disaster to both the marine insurance industry and the charter business. Frederick did hit the Virgins in 1979, hut it wasn't blowing particularly hard at that point. However, several good sailors, after that experience, suggested that I warn yachtsmen in this guide of the dangers of bare-hoat Heets. A charter organization may have anywhere from fifteen to seventy boats that have to be secured for a hurricane. Obviously they don't have crews for all of them, so in some cases they run a few boats to the nearest hurricane hole, secure them quickly, and rush back to get some more. The result is that when the storm strikes there may be large numbers of boats moored with no crews aboard. If they start breaking loose, woe betide anyone in their way. So if you're securely snugged up for a hurricane and a charter outfit starts bringing boats in, be very hard-nosed about where they moor them, and then give them a hand securing the boats. It will be an act not only of charity but also of selfpreservation. Another thing you can do on the first warning of a hurricane is to find a bunch of old tires, punch holes in them, run bits of half-inch line through them as lanyards, and rig them as fenders. Then if boats start dragging down on you, or you on them, you'll have an extra measure of protection.
HURRICANE HOLES
Here's a quick rundown on the best hurricane holes in the Islands, starting with Puerto Rico. WEST COAST OF PUERTO RICO (See the Cruising Guide to the Eastern Caribbean, Volume 11, Part 1, pp. 13-17) In Puerto Real there is a possible hurricane hole in the north corner of the harbor among the mangroves. By the time you read this it should have
223
been dredged and an endosed marina huilt. Boqueron offers a mangrove swamp behind the beach that is perfectly prott~cted. SOUTH COAST OF PUERTO RICO (Volume 11, Part 1, pp. 19-:32) La Parguera, behind the reefs, has good shelter. Also check out Playa de SaUnas and Palmas del Mar.
EAST COAST OF PUERTO RICO I would say there are no hurricane holes on this coast, since the marinas are slightly open to the east; I think a surge would build up to make them untenable. In addition, they are so full of boats that a visiting yachtsman would have trouble finding room. Perhaps, though, when the Gavioto marina--650 slips-is finished, it will provide a hurricane shelter on the east coast of Puerto Rico. THE PASSAGE ISLANDS (Volume 11, Part 1, pp. 43-54) Vieques' south coast offers Enseiwda Honda, which has enough room among the mangroves to hide half the St. Thomas charter-boat fleet and not be crowded. Culebra also has an Enseiiada Honda with numerous small coves. The harbor is sheltered enough so that if you have good ground tackle you'd be safe anywhere. (Some skippers who have to leave their boats in the Islands during hurricane season put them here on a caretaking basis.) Puerto del Manglar. Another well-sheltered harbor. I think a yacht would be safe in any weather in the southeast corner. See Volume 11, Part 1, p. 46. US VIRGIN ISLANDS (Volume 11, Part 1, pp. 57-98) St. Thomas. Basically the only hurricane hole here is in the lagoon on the southeast corner of the island. But it is so near all the other anchorages in St. Thomas that the area will be Hooded with boats seeking refllge. Even if you get in, I'd say your chances of coming through a hurricane unscathed in the lagoon would be minimal due to the crowded conditioIls. I recommend getting your anchor up, getting out of St. Thomas, and going over to Culebra or Vieques-preferably Vieques, as Culebra, being better known, would probably be crowded. St. Croix. Salt River is an excellent hurricane hole if your boat is shoal enough to get over the
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
bar into the inner harbor. I strongly recommend a good local guide. Green Cay Marina. You should check by phone first, as all the berths may be filled; it should provide perfect shelter, if there is room. St. John. Coral Bay, on the eastern end of St. John, has several anchorages to provide excellent shelter in a hurricane. It has been the traditional Virgin Island hurricane shelter for ages. Nowadays, though, it would probably be too crowded to be safe. BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS (Volume 11, Part 1, pp. 101-41) Tortola. Nanny Cay, Wickham.s Cay I, and WickhaTM Cay II are all well sheltered-and when they finish building a breakwater to shelter the harbor from blows from the southeast, they will be even better. Nanny Cay has Boats and good high pilings-absolutely no danger of a storm surge tide causing boats to ride up over the Boats, docks, or piles. The Moorings has comparatively high docks that could withstand a considerahle storm surge tide with no problem. Village Cay Marina is very suspect as a hurricane hole because its docks are quite low. With a 4- to 5-foot rise of tide, boats would rise up over the docks-a real disaster would result. West End is not a good hurricane hole as it is too deep to make anchoring easy, plus it is wide open to the west. Paraquita Bay and Paraquita Laguon This is an excellent hurricane hole, but check the local knowledge as to the depths in the channel leading into the bay and the lagoon. (In Volume 11, Part 1, Paraquita Bay is erroneously listed as Half Moon Bay.) Maya Cove Again, a good hurricane hole, except for the crowds. Virgin Gorda. Here the Yacht Harhor offers good shelter if there's not too much rise in the tide. Expect crowding problems here, too. St. Martin (See Volume 11, Part 2, pp. 24-36) St. Martin now has four good hurricane holes, although access to two of them, in SiTMon Lagoon, is possible only if the bridge tenders decide to open the bridges. At the approach of Hurricane Klaus in 1984, the bridge tender on the Dutch side opened the bridge, let a few boats in, closed the bridge, and then disappeared until after the
hurricane. On the French side, it seems you contact the marina on Channel 16; they go off and try to find the bridge tender. So do not rely on getting inside Simson Lagoon at the last minute. A new marina has been built in Anse Marcel with a narrow channel; it should provide good shelter. Controlling depth is 9 feet. Oyster Pond is another excellent hurricane hole. But make sure you get inside before it begins to blow; if it is blowing hard from the east, the entrance to Oyster Pond may be more than a little bit difficult. Antigua (Volume 11, Part 2, pp. 64-87)
English Harbour and Falmouth are both good hurricane holes, but like the Virgin Islands, English Harbour has the probable problem of being overcrowded. Falmouth, although enclosed from the sea, is rather open to the wind, but a properly moored boat should be able to ride out a hurricane there. However, if sufficient warning is received, you'd do better going to some of the coves on the eastern side of Antigua. In a corner of some of the coves in Nonesuch Bay, possibly Guana or Belfast Bay, you might find a secure hurricane anchorage that is not too crowded. Parham Harbour cannot really be considered a hurricane hole except for boats that draw 6 feet or less. Then you can sneak over the bar on the east end of the harbor and find the cut, which is 12 feet deep, up into the mangroves. So well up into the head of the mangroves, tie the boat off with anchors and lines to the mangrove trees, and you should be completely safe. Even if you blow loose you will end up on a bed of mangroves; the boat can probably be kedged off undamaged after the hurricane. Guadeloupe (Volume 11, Part 2, pp. 104-27) Guadeloupe's marina at Pointe du Bas probably provides an excellent hurricane harbor, unless the tidal rise is such that the boats rise up over the docks; then, of course, it will be a completely disastrous situation. If your draft is 6 feet or less, you can get into the marina at Franr;ois via Passe du Champagne. This should be a good hurricane hole; because of the difficult entrance you will have to get inside well before the sea begins to build up. The marina south of Basse-Terre is beautifully sheltered from winds from the north through south, but a hurricane passing north of Guadeloupe might well bring a huge sea that would break over the sea wall. The
Wind, Weather, and Tides surge within the harbor might be so great as to destroy any yachts anchored there. In St. Lucia, if you draw less than 8 feet, Rodney Bay offers perfect shelter from the sea, but it's exposed to the full blast of the wind. Marigot Harbor is an incomparable hurricane hole. It has been a refuge for ships hiding from hurricanes for centuries. The next hurricane harbor south of Marigot is in Carriacou, 100 miles away. But only if you can work your way into the inner part of the Carenages at Tyrell Bay, where shoaling has been reported in the entrance channel. There would be little possibility of damage to a boat moored there. Money spent to dredge a 9-foot channel into the lagoon would be well spent. Grenada has numerous hurricane holes on the south coast, some better than others, but I don't see how anyone can find a better one in the Lesser Antilles than the inner harbor at Egmont. No matter where the wind came from, no matter where the swell came from, it would be impossible for a sea or a surge to build inside Egmont Harbour. Surrounded by high hills on all sides, it also provides good shelter from the wind. Remember that Grenada, although completely flattened by hurricane Jane in 1955, is generally thought to be south of the hurricane belt, having suffered only three hurricanes in recorded history. The lagoon in St. George's should be a good hurricane hole, but note that the bottom of the lagoon is soft mud and the holding is incredibly bad. If the GYS dock ever gets fixed up, the best thing would be to tie up to it with plenty of fenders out. Storm-generated swells occasionally encircle the island. Presently the lagoon in St. George's is completely blocked off from these swells with only a narrow deep channel. There is talk of expanding the port and deepening the channel-which will destroy the lagoon as a really good all-weather yacht anchorage. Let's hope the government will realize that yachts bring into the island at least as much money on a long-term basis as cruise ships do and act to protect the yacht anchorage. On the south coast of Grenada, Prickly Bay is a very poor anchorage when a hurricane goes by north of the island; if a hurricane is in the vicinity, move from Prickly Bay to one of the other harbors on the south coast. Egmont Harbour is the best hurricane hole, but if you are just getting out of the swell, anyone of half a dozen anchorages are adequate. Then, of course, there is the one sure method of
225
missing all hurricanes and still staying in the Eastern Caribbean: go cruise the coast of Venezuela, which is south of the hurricane belt and which hasn't had a single hurricane that has done any serious damage in the last 150 or possibly 200 years. Be warned, though, that although hurricanes do not reach the Venezuelan coast, the surge and storm swell generated by a hurricane can be disastrous. If you hear on the radio that a hurricane is passing through the Caribbean, look at your chart and pick your anchorage very carefully, making sure it is not open to the northerly ground swell.
Ground Swells North Atlantic winter storms don't make their way as far down as the Islands, but the swells they generate do. These come out of the northwest, seldom appearing higher than 6 feet. In deep water there may be as much as a mile between crest, but in shoaling water they hump up and hit with unbelievable force. I once watched them crashing onto the lee shore of Saba. They passed solid water over Diamond Rocks, some 80 feet high. The spray was driving twice that height, and a fine mist shrouded the entire shore. During the period from November to April these swells can start coming in without warning, and can build up to dangerous proportions in an hour's time. Offshore they present no threat, but they can make it pretty rough on anchorages with a northern or western exposure. The northernmost islands bear the brunt of it. None of the harbors exposed to the northwest on the islands of St. Thomas, Tortola, or Virgin Gorda should be used overnight between November and April. As you move south the swell tapers off. By the time it reaches the Grenadines, it's pretty well under control, although at times it can still be very dangerous. This general rule does not apply, however, when you get all the way south-to the Venezuelan coast. Here the ground swell is just as big as up north. At times the swells have been particularly destructive: they almost demolished the large breakwater at Puerto Azul just east of Caracas in December 1964. Further, all that you need to do is look at the beaches and huge sand hills piled up on the north side of the islands of Testigos and Margarita to realize how much force the ground swells have here. The one advantage of listening to the San Juan, Virgin Island Radio, or Radio Montserrat news and
226
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
weather reports is that when ground swells are expected on the north coast of Puerto Rico, they are predicted quite accurately on the radio. Then you add roughly twenty-four hours for the ground swell predicted in Puerto Rico to reach the southern end of the Caribbean.
Tides and Currents Almost everything I say on the topic of tides and currents will be contradicted by someone somewhere. That's a certainty. The movement of water in the Lesser Antilles is at times unpredictable and opinion varies as to its exact nature. But there are some generalizations that are almost universally accepted in the Islands. The terms "tide" and "current" must not be confused. "Tide" refers to water that runs in and out of the Caribbean, pulled by the gravitational force of the sun and moon. It results in an 18- to 24-inch difference in water level on the island shores between high and low water. This 18- to 24-inch difference in tide is merely an average; on the south coast of Grenada at Prickly Bay, in a period of spring tides in the winter, I have measured a 3-foot difference, while in St. George's Harbour, 4 miles away, the maximum appears to be only 24 inches. Further, it should be noted especially that the Caribbean is basically a foot and a half lower in April, May, and June, than it is in the winter. People who forget this have been reminded of it rather forCibly at times. One year, for instance, Flica sailed out the channel from the lagoon to the main harbor of St. George's, got halfway through and stuck fast-in a channel she had been using happily all winter. Similarly, Lord ]im, another deep-draft boat, did exactly the same thing two years running. Tidal gauges secured to channel markers would be a big help of course, but no one has ever gotten around to that simple solution. In Venezuela's Gulf of Paria, the tidal range in spring is about 5 feet. The use of the term "tide" in the following section refers to the horizontal movement of the water rather than its rise and fall on shore. "Current" refers to water that continually runs in a westerly or northwesterly direction. Its direction is more or less constant--only its strength varies as it is influenced by the winds or tide. An easterly wind increases the strength of the current, a westerly wind (a rarity) decreases the strength of
the current. When the tidal water is moving west it reinforces the current. But of course there are subtleties to both the tide and the current. The hardest thing to remember about Island tides is that from Anguilla down to Venezuela, when the tide is rising, or flooding, the movement of the water is west to east-that is, from the Caribbean into the Atlantic. And of course during the ebb the water is moving east to west (see "Tidal Chart"). Thus a flooding tide slows the current and an ebb tide increases it. From Anguilla west, the tidal current is roughly north to south except for where it is bent locally by the restrictions of the Virgin Islands. The current itself is caused by the easterly trade winds that blow unobstructed across open ocean. Several days of heavy easterly winds induce a strong current. The range is from V3 to 11/2 knots. The direction of the current also varies. There are actually two currents, one on either side of the equator. The Northern Equatorial Current runs westward directly to the Islands, while the Southern Equatorial Current runs up the coast of South America to reach the Islands. (There is, besides, a back eddy close to the Venezuelan shore that sometimes runs eastward as strong as 1 knot.) Where the northern and southern currents meet near lie de Ronde, north of Grenada, there is a particularly rough section of ocean. North of lIe de Ronde the direction of the current is mostly due west through the islands, but at Antigua it starts to shift to a more northerly direction (see "Current Chart"'). In fact, on the back (west) side of St. Martin, the current runs almost directly north, swinging back to the northwest only north of Dog Island. There's a second major back eddy just west of Anegada where the current passing north of the island loops in over the top of Virgin Bank and frequently runs east on to the reefs of that wreckstrewn island. Finally, it must be reckoned that every island affects the current in its own peculiar fashion, so that close to the shores you may find a variety of different velocities and directions. Similarly, the tidal flow varies close to shore. I have mentioned that in the channels between the islands from Anguilla south the tidal current moves west during the ebb and east during the flood. But during the Hood tide, the eastward-flowing water must slide north and south to slip past the obstruction presented by the western shore of an island. Similarly, during an ebb tide, the westward-flowing water must divide and push north and south to pass by the tips of the islands into the Caribbean;
Wind, Weather, and Tides
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then the currents slide along the western side of the island and meet in the middle before flowing off to the west. In both cases there is a neutral point near the middle of an island where the tide splits or joins. Thus if you judge the tide change accurately, you can time a passage up the coast of an island so as to reach the neutral point just when the tide changes; that way you can carry a fair tide all the way up or down the shoreline. But to calculate the times of high and low water isn't easy. The tide tables are rather inaccurate. See page 233 for perpetual tide table. Numerous methods of figuring the tide have been advanced, but no two seem to agree. A rule of thumb is that the tidal flow starts to run to the east one and a half to two hours after the moon has risen. But you must remember that this flooding tide is working against the equatorial current, and when the flood is weakest in its first and last stages the equatorial current negates it. Thus it is only the middle four hours (approximately) of flood that have a noticeable effect on the current. To calculate just what this effect is, though, is considered a matter of black magic by yachtsmen in the Islands. Although the rise and fall of the tide is minimal, the amount of water moved by the tide is considerable and there is a large variation between spring and neap tides. Spring tides do not coincide with the full and new moons but usually come three to four and sometimes as much as five days after full and new moons. Neap tides, of course, occur two weeks after spring tides, and run at about half the strength of spring tides. In order to determine in which direction the water underneath you is moving and how fast, you must consider all the factors mentioned-and one more. In narrow passages and at the north and south ends of islands the tide runs considerably faster-as much as twice as fast. Let me make a hypothetical case. We are at the northern tip of Grenada, the wind is blowing hard from the east, and the moon rose four hours ago. The factors are as follows: Equatorial Current (this is constant) Wind-blown Current (because the wind is from the east) Tide Effect of Location (tide is doubled at the tip of the island) Combined Influence
Y2 knot west Y2 knot west
1 knot east 1 knot east
1 knot east
If the tide were ebbing W€;st at 1 knot, this would be increased to 2 knots because of our location and the total influence of our location would add up to 3 knots west. This calculation and reasoning was done by Ray Smith, a Grenadan yachtsman who has spent a lifetime sailing and studying tides and currents in the southern Antilles. His system suffers from the many approximations it requires, but it does have the advantage that by observing the time of moonrise (or zenith angle), one can calculate the overall influence of tide and current with surprising accuracy. In any event, you must pay strict attention to the movement of the water beneath you, particularly when you are following a range into an anchorage. The sketch charts in this book give the magnetic compass bearings of all the ranges. But, as we know, the compass bearing of a range is not necessarily the compass course that must be steered to stay on that range. The current may be pushing you one way or another and the compass course that must be steered is whatever course keeps the range on a steady bearing. Often in a strong current you will appear to be crabbing along a bearing, but as long as your bearing stays steady, regardless of the compass course you're actually steering, you'll be okay. The reason so many ranges are given in the Grenadines is that the current is usually at right angles to the course. Stay on the range and you'll stay out of trouble. A second practical consideration in figuring currents has to do with the natural axis of the Islands. In the Virgin Islands you do most of your sailing on an east-west axis; in the other islands to the south you'll usually sail on a north-south axis. Thus, because the tide and the current run mostly east and west throughout the Islands, you have to be careful farther south not to be pushed sideways off course, while in the Virgins you need only worry about the total time consumed sailing in one direction. Going to windward, the time consumed to go from point A to point B dead to windward in the Virgins is astronomically increased if you haven't checked the tide and are fighting your way to windward against a foul tide. A real racing machine is held back by a foul tide and a good-sailing cruising boat is held back more; but the typical bareboat barges can hardly get to windward against a foul tide at all unless they're sailed by very competent yachtsmen. This point is aptly illustrated if one works out a standard navigational
Wind, Weather, and Tides problem: going directly to windward against the tide, up through Pills bury Sound and Sir Francis Drake Channel. Let's calculate the time of a boat fighting a 11/2-knot foul current, versus a %-knot fair current; the figures are rather astounding. Take a typical bareboat barge: Even if she tacks in 90° (which is extremely optimistic), because of the wide beam, windage, and shoal draft, she will drift another 10° on either tack, to make an actual tacking angle of llO°. Tbus, for every mile she must make dead to windward, she must sail 1. 74 miles. Given a 5V2-knot speed through the water (optimistic, I think, when dead to windward), she is doing only 3.16 knots over the bottom. If fighting a 11/2-knot current, she is making good only 1.66 knots over the bottom. It could take her five hours to do 8 miles-no wonder the bare boat barges always motor to windward. \ Now take a good-sailing cruising boat that sails a course made good between tacks of an honest 90 0 , which means 1. 4 miles to sail for every 1 mile made to windward. Assuming an honest SV2 knots, it will take her approximately five hours and thirty minutes to sail fifteen miles to windward against a 11/2-knot foul current. However, the bareboat barge skipper has a much better chance if he sits down and carefully calculates the tide, and takes off on a IS-mile jaunt to windward at the first of the favorable east-going tide. This will probably give him as much as a %knot lift, so given the assumed facts of speed and tacking angle, he will now do the trip in four hours. The good cruising boat, given the same quoted figures, will do the same trip in approximately three hours and ten minutes. Since the Virgins lie on an east-west axis, you're almost always going to be sailing dead to windward or dead downwind, and so if you really like to sail it's essential to own or charter a boat that goes well to windward. Check your tides very carefully, as leaving with a fair current will considerably shorten your cruise to windward. A third practical consideration is that the Virgin Island currents are diabolically tricky. Since Gorda Sound, Sir Francis Drake Channel, and Pillsbury Sound are basically enclosed bodies of water, the standard rule of the Lesser Antilles (tidal currents How eastward on the Hood and westward on the ebb) does not hold. Rather, it's a case of ebbing and Hooding through various entrances. Depending on which entrance you take, the Hood tide entering Sir Francis Drake Channel can be running north, south, east, or west! (See "Virgin Islands
23 1
Tidal Current Chart.") Remember that in Sir Francis Drake Channel the tide turns along the St. John and Tortola shores ahout one hour before it turns in mid-channel. Those who have raced in the Virgin Islands will testify that no one has really figured out the tides and currents exactly. Robert Schomburgk, writing in the nineteenth century when trade through the Virgin Islands was carried under sail, made an extensive study of the tide, and some of his observations seem to hold true. When fighting a west-going tide in Drake Channel and Pillsbury Sound, favor the St. John shore until you reach up toward Francis Bay. Then tack across toward Jost Van Dyke until you can tack back and pass between West End and Great Thatch. Hold hard on the wind and with a little luck (plus back eddy of the tide, plus some lifts off the hills) you may be able to sail through between Little Thatch and Frenchman's Cay. If not, throw in a quick tack, then tack back, pass between Frenchman's Cay and Little Thatch; stand over to the St. John shore on port tack and work your way eastward filVoring the St. John shore. However, Schomburgk notes, as just mentioned, that the windward-going tide in Drake's Channel runs in the center of the passage for 11/2 hours longer than it runs on either shore; thus if you're beating to windward with the last of the east-going tide under you, favor the center of the passage rather than either shore. Schomburgk also adds that between St. Thomas and St. John, the south-going tide is the strongest in September, October, March, and April except during the equinoxes, when the northern tide prevails with the highest tide in the morning (the evening tide is roughly half the morning tide). In summer the morning tide is the smallest, the evening tide is the highest-referred to by the tidal experts as a tidal inequality, which throws most calculations into a cocked hat. Note on the "Virgin Islands Tidal/Current Chart" that there are various areas of basically neutral current, great places to duck into to get out of the tide when working eastward. This information was supplied to me by Rudy Thompson, who is a longtime resident of the Islands, and as a racing skipper has spent the last quarter of a century studying the tides. Knowing most of the spearfishermen, who of course are very cognizant of the state of the current, he has obtained corroborating reports on this information. I mentioned earlier that there is an eastbound current behind Anegada; I learned about it in person one night when anchored off the reef in a
232
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
10- to 12-knot trade wind. The mizzen and the big awning were both set, but even so I awoke at 2 A.M. to discover that the eastward-running tidal current had swung lolaire's stern to the breeze. While it's true that the major current flow in the Virgins is in a westerly direction, don't believe anyone who tells you that it goes that way all the time. At times the current definitely runs to the east-generally four out of twelve hours. There are other difficulties in calculating tides in the Islands. For instance, the tidal reference points in the tables make for massive confusion. For Barbados the tidal reference point is Port-ofSpain; for the entire southern end of the Lesser Antilles, from Grenada to Fort-de-France, the tidal reference is Cristobal Colon, Panama. From Dominica north to St. Thomas, the tidal reference point switches to Galveston, Texas-except for the north coast of St. Thomas, whose reference point is Puerto Rico. For another instance, the very nature of the tides changes from place to place. According to the British Tide Tables, from St. Croix to Antigua the tides are diurnal, (i. e., there is only one tidal cycle per twenty-four hours). From Antigua south they are semidiurnal, with two cycles a day. In some of the places where it is alleged that the tide is diurnal I think it is in actuality semidiurnal, but the evening tide will be much lower than the morning tide. The tables further maintain that the north side of St. Thomas has a semidiurnal tide while the south side has a diurnal tide. You can imagine the debates this stirs up in the Virgin Islands area. The final word, though, is that both the British and American tidal experts whom I've talked to admit that the tide tables for the Islands are less than accurate. So rather than load down the boat with bulky and expensive tidal tables, I recommend that you make the best guesses you can, remembering this rule of thumb: high water comes about one and a half hours after the moon passes overhead (or underneath), i. e., the upper (and lower) passages of the moon as listed in the nautical almanac. An overSimplification that might help to sort things out is that the tidal current tries to How toward the moon: i.e., when the moon is east of you after rising, the current runs to the east (floods); after the moon has passed overhead and moves to the west, the tidal flow changes and also runs to the west (ebbs). Needless to say, I would happily correspond with anyone who can help make sense out of the
tides and currents and the times of high and low water in the Eastern Caribbean. In any event, keep an eye on the tides wherever you sail in the Islands. You stand a good chance of getting where you're going a lot faster. I know this all sounds confusing-it is. All I can say is, read this section a couple of times with the appropriate charts in front of you. Gradually it will begin to make some sense. After you've sailed the waters for three or four weeks, you should be able to make an educated guess as to the state of the tide and the current. CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
The Cape Verde Islands are basically governed by a southwest-flowing current that runs anywhere from 3/4 to 1 Vz knots, depending on the time of year and weather conditions. There are some very narrow passages with extremely strong currents. The situation here is almost the same as in the Lesser Antilles. The rising tide flows northeast and east, against the windblown current. The ebb tide flows west and southwest, increasing the strength of the current. The combination of tidal and wind current will usually run eight hours to the southwest and four hours to the northeast, or slack. The methods of calculating and figuring the current are basically the same as in the Lesser Antilles.
Perpetual Tidal Calendar Today, worldwide tide tables are available for the areas yachtsmen are likely to cruise. But often when cruising from one area to another, the yachtsman does not have the tide tables for the area he intends to visit. This is especially true of the translatlantic yachtsman visiting the Atlantic Islands. Therefore, we here present a perpetual tide table. Admittedly, it is not as accurate as the standard government tide tables, but even they are not dead accurate, for the range of rise and fall of the tide, and the time of high and low water, are affected by barometric pressure, wind direction, and velocity. Thus the approximate times ascertained by this table will be sufficient for the yachtsman to make an educated guess. In years gone by, this information-high-water full and change (abbreviated HWF&C), lunitidal interval, and establishment of the port (three names for the same thin g)-was found on all charts. For reasons best known to themselves (perhaps to sell more tide tables), most hydrographic offices-the
Wind, Weather, and Tides
233
Perpetual Tide Table HWF&C
St. john's, Newfoundland St. Pierre Halifax Newport, RI Sandy Hook, NY Cape Henry, VA Beaufort, NC Charieston, SC Miami, FL San juan, PR Parguera Guanica Ponce Pt. Tuna Light Culebrita Island Light Point Ferro, Vieques St. Thomas Road Town, Tortola A nguilla , St. Martin, St. Barts; single tide
7;12 8;23 7;34 7:48 7;30 7:53 7;21
7;20 8;00 8;21
10;26
10;00 9;00 8:40 7:30 8;30
SPRINGS
NEAPS
3.3 6.6 5.2 4.4 5.6 3.2 3.3 6.0 1.8 1.3 0.7
1.5 3.1 33.2 2.6 3.6 2.1 2.3 4.2 1.2 0.9 0.6(1)*
0.9 0.9 0.9 0.58
(1)* 0.6 (1)* 0.6 (1)* 0.6 1.2(1)* (1)*
and too irregular to plot (about 7:40) Antigua Montserrat Guadeloupe Dominica Prince Rupert Bay Martinique Barbados St. Vincent (Kingston) St. Lucia St. George's, Grenada Tobago (Rocky Bay) Port-oJ-Spain Guyana (Port of Georgetown) Venezuela
8;40 6:00 9:40
1.2
(1)* 1.0 (1)*
1.6
1.2 (1)*
4:00 3:50 2:50 2:50 2:30 2:30 3:50 4:20
1.5 1.1 3.0 1.6 1.5 1.5 2.1 3.2
0.8 0.8 1.5 0.8 0.8 0.8
4:18
8.6
5.8
1.1 1. 9
La Guira Polomar Margarita
EUROPE Crookhaven, Ireland Falmouth Vigo Gibraltar Madeiran Archipelago Porta Santa Funchal Salvage Islands Canary Islands Lan-zarote Gran Canaria Tenerife Palma Cape Verde Islands Ilha Sal Boa Vista Maio Santiago Fogo Brava Sao Vicente Santa Antao Sao Nicolau Bermudn Azores Sao Miguel CorvolFlores Graciosa Sao jorge Terceir.a Pica Horta
HWF&C
SPRINGS
6:00 4;20
2.8 1.6
2.0 1.1
3:00
11.5 10.0 11.5 3.7
8.0 6.3 8.0 2.3
6.6 6.6
3.0 3.0
0;50 0:40 1:15 0:20
8.5 9.3 7.8 8.6
3.9 4.3 3.6 4.0
7;54 7:54 7:32
3.0 3.0 3.0
1.2 1.2 1.5
7:22
3.0
1.5
8:27 7:46 7;27 7:04
2.9 2.5 2.6
1.6 1.6 1.8 2.6
0;15 0:06 0:38 0;26 0:20 0:48 11;30
5.7 5.2 5.6 5.6 4.9
2.6 1.8 2.4 2.4 2.0
3.9
1.8
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NEAPS
• Denotes one tide per day.
Portuguese are a welcome exception-have eliminated this information from their charts. To obtain the information necessary to create this table, I spent a day at the Library of Congress inspecting old charts, but I did not find all the reference points I desired. Then Hewitt Schlereth, marine surveyor and author of Commonsense Coastal Navigation, informed me that the old American Practical Navigator, colloquially referred to as "Bowditch," had a complete HWF&C table covering a thousand or more reference points worldwide. From Bowditch I have pulled the information covering ports relevant to this series of cruising Guides.
The perpetual tidal calendar is especially useful at the southern end of the Caribbean, as the Imray-Iolaire charts of the Grenadines and Grenada have very useful tidal roses showing the direction and velocity of tide for the complete twelvehour tidal sequence. Read the following, play your passages accordingly, and you will often be able to have the tide help rather than hinder you when sailing in the Grenadines.
HWF&C, lunitidal interval, and establishment of the port all have basically the same meaning. High and low water occur, on the average of the twenty-eight days comprising a lunar month, at
234
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
about the same intervals after the transit of the moon over the meridian. These nearly constant intervals, expressed in hours and minutes, are known, respectively, as the high-water lunitidal interval and low-water lunitidal interval. The interval between the moon's meridian passage at any place and the time of the next succeeding high water, as observed on the days when the moon is at full or change, is called the vulgar (or common) establishment of that place or sometimes simply the establishment. This interval is frequently spoken of as the time of high water on full and change days (abbreviated "HWF&C") or lunitidal interval; for since, on such days, the moon's two transits (upper and lower) over the meridian occur about midnight and noon, the vulgar establishment then corresponds closely with the local times of high water. When more extended observations have been made, the average of all highwater lunitidal intervals for at least a lunar month is taken to obtain what is termed, in distinction to the vulgar establishment, the corrected establishment of the port, or mean high-water lunitidal interval. In defining the tidal characteristics of a place, some authorities give the corrected establishment and others the vulgar establishment, or "high water, full, and change"; calculations based upon the former will more accurately represent average conditions though the two intervals seldom differ by a large amount. Having determined the time of high water by applying the establishment to the time of moon's transit, the navigator may obtain the time of low water with a fair degree of approximation by add-
ing or subtracting 6h. 13m. (one-fourth of a mean lunar day). An approximate method of calculating the time of high water is to add the HW figure in the table to 1200 on the day of full or new moon. A more accurate way, using the almanac, is to calculate the time of meridian passage of the moon at the port concerned; this will generally be a little before or after noon. This must be adjusted for longitude (adding 4 minutes for every degree west) in the usual way. The time of high water is then found by applying the lunitidal interval (HW in the table) to the time of meridian passage. Each day, the tide will be approximately 50 minutes later. Since moon rise is also about 50 minutes later, another method of ascertaining high tide any day of the month, if you have a nautical almanac handy, is to calculate the time of meridian passage of the moon for the day concerned and add the HWF&C figure. Some ports, noted in the table, have only one tide a day. During the winter months the high tide is during the day, while during the summer months it is during the night. How fast it switches from the day to the evening night tides during the spring and fall equinoxes is something I am still trying to ascertain; any help would be appreciated. It should be noted that in the Eastern Caribbean there is only one tide a day from Antigua to St. Thomas, and on the south coast of Puerto Rico there is only one tide a day, while the north coast of St. Thomas, Passage Islands, and the east and north coast of Puerto Rico have two tides a day!
7
Sailing Directions Each of the other volumes in this cruising guide has detailed sailing instructions for the areas covered, and I will warn you again to read, every evening, the sailing directions for the following day's sail. Study them carefully and make your plans accordingly. In this section I will discuss sailing directions in general terms-mainly for long jumps within an area treated by Volumes I, 11, Ill, and IV, or for passing from one area to another. First of all, remember that the Eastern Caribbean is 3,000 miles to leeward of Africa and that the area is swept by fresh trade winds most of the year. Thus, during passages between islands you must be prepared for a rail-down sail in a large sea, even with a small headsail and a reefed main. Those prone to seasickness will undoubtedly succumb unless they have taken their seasickness pills before they get underway. (And remember that nothing encourages seasickness like a hangover.) But the sailing is so glorious, the anchorages are so superb, and the rum punches so good that one soon forgets mal de mer and gets on with enjoying the world's greatest sailing. It has been said that "only damn fools, racing skippers, and delivery skippers go to windward; gentlemen yachtsmen always sail with eased sheets." That may be an impossible dream, but when planning your cruise in the Islands you can do a lot to minimize beating to windward. In years gone by, cruising and chartering was done almost exclusively in the Lesser Antilles, that quarter-crescent of islands that stretches 5OO-odd miles from San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Port-ofSpain, Trinidad. One way to cruise them is to slog eastward from St. Thomas through the islands to
Antigua, a two-week or longer cruise dead to windward; then sheets can he eased down the chain of islands to Grenada. But this dead-ta-windward slog to Antigua can be avoided if you take off from St. Thomas, clear the end of St. Croix, and sail a rhumb-line course (166° magnetic, but don't forget to compensate for leeway and set hy the current); 380 miles later you should be able to pull into the beautiful harbor of St. George's, Grenada, having enjoyed a glorious reach. The chief hazard to navigation along this route is Avis Island, which lies directly on the course. It used to be a real danger, since it is low and indistinct, has no navigation light, and is improperly positioned on most charts. (The British Admiralty has accurately placed it at 15°40'11" north, 63°36'44" west.) Now, however, the Venezuelan government has established a military base there, with a big concrete, hurricane-proof building on piles 20 feet high. This monstrosity is brilliantly lit at night, and I'm told the loom can easily be seen 8 to 10 miles out to sea. So, while you still have to watch out for Avis, you don't have to he terrified of it anymore. In general, from December through March the trades tend to be north of east; they swing south of east in late March or early April. So this direct jump to Grenada should be made in early winter to improve the odds of its being an easy reach. The winds aren't always consistent, of course. In 1987 the northeast trades became southeast in January and stayed there all winter, except for brief periods of northerlies and hard sou'westerlies. This meant that Iolaire's cruise to Venezuela that season was a real slam banger. Instead of the
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Sailing Directions usual beam-reach slide, we were close-reaching with double-reefed main and banging into a massive sea that knocked our speed down to 4V2 to 5 knots. These sailing directions, needless to say, are based on the normal weather pattern just described. Before heading south to Grenada, some sailors like to put a little money in the bank by spending a few days cruising east through the Virgin Islands, giving both the boat and the crew a good shakedown. They then jump off from Virgin Gorda to Grenada on a rhumb-line course of 171 0 magnetic, a distance of 415 miles. This is almost guaranteed to be a reach from December through March in normal years, but will quite likely be a beat from April on. Once you reach Grenada, sailing north in short hops is fairly easy. From Grenada to Carriacou is hard on the wind, but it's only one day's sail, basically long starboard tacks and short port tacks. You take easy short beats to windward through the Grenadines. It's sometimes a long, hard haul from St. Vincent or Bequia to St. Lucia, a distance of70 miles, but once you reach St. Lucia it should be all downhill, eased sheets to Antigua, and almost dead downwind to the Virgins and beyond. Be sure to have your spinnaker pole aboard, so that you can wing out the headsail; vang down the main boom and secure it forward with a preventer from boom end to the bow. Then sit back and relax with a beer in one hand and the helm in the other. This is what it's all about. When passing north and south through the islands from Antigua to Grenada or points in between, think about passing to windward of some of the islands and avoiding the flat calm under the lee of the high islands-a lee that's often difficult for engineless sailboats, and boring and smelly for those with engines. Heading north from Bequia, especially in the spring when the wind is south of east, it often pays to go hard on the wind for a few hours, clear the southeast corner of St. Vincent, and continue north to windward of the island. Pass to leeward of St. Lucia if you're heading to Castries, and to windward of St. Lucia, Martinique, Dominica, or Guadeloupe if you're going to Antigua. Similarly, when heading north from Castries it's usually fairly easy to pass to windward of Martinique and the other islands. When leaving Martinique and heading north, I always pass to windward of Dominica. When sailing off the windward coast of an island,
237
remember those 3,000 miles to Africa. The large swell rolls in, hits the almost vertical wall of the island, and bounces back across the incoming swell, producing a most confused sea. So stay at least two miles offshore, particularly since the wind that comes sweeping in from the Atlantic rises steeply to pass over the mountain peaks of the island, leaving a pocket of relative calm close to shore. When it's blowing 20 knots two miles offshore, it will probably be blowing only 8 to 10 knots half a mile offshore. When passing to leeward of the high islands, remember a warning in the old sailing directions about passing within "two pistol shots" of the shore, or else staying seven leagues (21 miles) offshore. At dawn and dusk it's almost always flat calm in the lee of the high islands; the breeze begins to fill in during the morning, varying in direction and velocity till dusk. Frequently (but not always) during the evening, the cold air falling off the high mountains will produce a nice 5- to 8-knot breeze close inshore. When sailing north in long jumps from Grenada, don't waste time trying to stay up to the rhumb line because you'll just get becalmed under the lee of the high islands. It's better to keep moving and work back east by hardening sheets or tacking as you approach your destination. For instance, heading from Grenada to Martinique, sail a direct course, passing well to leeward of St. Vincent and St. Lucia, harden up as Castries draws abeam, and then tack if necessary once past Cape Salmon, as the lowland will 'give you shelter from the swell but not block off the wind. You'll be beating to windward in calm water usually with plenty of wind. If you're heading north to Guadeloupe and then on to Antigua, with luck it will be a two-day passage and no tacking. A direct passage from Grenada to the Virgins is wonderful, a beam or broad reach all the way, but don't hit Avis Island. The lights and burn-off from the industrial complex on the south coast of St. Croix produce a glow in the sky that can be seen 60 miles away. In recent years more and more yachts and charter boats have begun to cruise the wonderful and unspoiled coast and offshore islands of Venezuela. This turns the Eastern Caribbean cruising ground from a quarter crescent into a rough circle. This circle should be kept in mind when planning your cruise. If you're in the Virgins and have already cruised
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide the Lesser Antillcs and don't want the beat to windward to reach them, you can take off on a beam reach and sail direct to the El Morro de Barcelona area. You can cruise the Venezuelan coast and then with luck reach back to the Virgin Islands or at least to the lee end of Puerto Rico, store ship at Mayaguez, and continue on to the Bahamas or the East Coast of the United States. From any of the eastern islands of the Caribbean it's an easy broad reach or run to Venezuela. For sailing directions along the coast of Venezuela, consult Volume IV, Chapter 1. How far west to cruise in Venezuela, and whether or not to continue on to the ABC islands, depends on the ultimate destination of your cruise, the time of year, and the windward-going qualities of your boat. If you're continuing on to the Panama Canal, do the entire Venezuelan coast. If you're heading north to the Mona Passage and points beyond, you can go considerably farther west than you can if you wish to return to the Virgin Islands area. Think carefully of your boat and her sailing ability: a modern IOR racing machine will have to allow no more than 10° for leeway and current set, while the older, well-designed CCA cruiser-racer will allow perhaps 15 + 0; many of the modern "comfortable" cruiscrs that I have delivered to the Islands will have to allow 30 + 0 for leeway and current set. There is usually a good deal of north in the trades until April. You can run into a northerly shift in the wind in April that will last four or five days, as we discovered to our chagrin in 1979. We left El Morro de Barcelona heading for Tortola in lolaire, course approximately north, and should have had an easy reach; instead it turned out to be a very heavy-weather beat shortened down to staysail and large storm trysail for eighteen hours. Despite staying hard on the wind we missed the BVI and made our landfall on the eastern end of Vieques. The previous year, on the other hand, we had cruised all the way west to Bonaire; and then we left hard on the wind, with a reefed main, but shook it out after twelve hours, eased the sheets twenty-four hours out, set the big reaching genoa thirty-six hours later, and had a gloriOUS calm sail to St. Thomas, arriving one hour before an April norther came through. (The front resulted in 40knot winds out of the north-northeast and heavy rain-hell on anyone coming up from Venezuela, but not too bad for us, secured to the dock in St. Thomas.) Crossing the Caribbean on the direct route either
north or south during the hurricane season is a rather risky proposition, as you could find yourself becalmed in the path of a hurricane with the nearest hurricane hole 200 miles away. When you're out in the middle of the Caribbean, you're strictly on your own; if the boat becomes disabled or sinks, you have a long, 1,OOO-mile drift to Central America.
Remember that navigational lights in Venezuela are totally unreliable. Furthermore, the lights marking Los Roques, Los Aves, Bonaire, and Klein Curat;ao are all white flashers whose flash times are so close together that it's easy to mistake one for the other, with disastrous results. Trying to differentiate between a four- and a five-second white light from the deck of the small boat at sea is a tough proposition. But my friend Augie Holland (a first-class sailor and girl watcher) has a system that really works: With a stopwatch, time the light through ten full cycles; then divide the total time by ten. The result is accurate enough to pinpoint that four-second flasher. The major Eastern Caribbean lights from Trinidad to Puerto Rico are relatively reliable, but the secondary lights marking buoys and harbor entrances must not be relied on. Anegada, which has collected close to 400 wrecks in the last 400 years, is still totally unlit. Barbuda, with about 250 wrecks, is also unlit; Anguilla has only recently been lit and the light has considerably less than its reported range of visibility-plus the light is totally unreliable. This author is convinced that Anguilla is back in the ship-wrecking business. An I8-mile light has been established on the eastern end of Virgin Gorda, which should give ample warning to the navigator to avoid Horseshore Reef and White Horse on the southeastern side of Anegada. The north end of Anegada was scheduled to receive a light by December 1987, but seeing is believing. It is still not installed as of May 1988! Radio beacons are few and far between, and not well located to aid the mariner. As a result, radio stations are frequently used as RDF beacons, but remember that most radio stations in the Islands go off the air around 2300 and don't start broadcasting again until 0600.
Atlantic Islands The Azores are not in the trade-wind belt, and the wind can come from any direction. Therefore, the transatlantic sailor approaching from the west can plan to cruise the Azores from west to east. If
Sailing Directions you're coming from Europe you can equally well make your landfall at the eastern end of the group and cruise west. The Madeiran archipelago is on the edge of the trade-wind belt, and a cruise should be planned from north to south. The Canaries are also on the edge of the trade winds, and you should figure on cruising east to west through the Canaries. But if you're coming down from Madeira and stop at the Salvage Islands, you'll probably have a hard time getting up to windward to reach Fuerteventura and Lanzarote at the eastern end of the Canaries. So I recommend you make a choice: Check the weather when leaving Madeira, and if it looks to be calm enough to explore the Salvage Islands, go there and pass up Fuerteventura and Lanzarote; otherwise, skip the Salvages and go direct to the eastern Canaries and then cruise west.
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The Cape Verde Islands are definitely in the trade winds, so your cruising route there should be east to west. But the islands are not in a straight line, so if you run down to Santiago and then want to go back up to the main port of M indelo on Sao Vicente, it's going to be a slog to windward. I suggest motorsailing up Santiago's west coast, stopping at some interesting coves along the way, then taking off from the northwest corner of Santiago. Don't fight your way against wind and current to Mindelo in one jump; rather, go to Porto Novo on Santo Antao, anchor behind the dock to catch your breath, then leave for Mindelo at the first of the weather-going current. (See Chapter 6, Wind, Weather, and Tides, for methods of calculating the tides.) In sum, read the sailing directions several times, plan your long jumps and your short hops with equal care, and don't enter or leavc strange harbors at night. Good sailing!
8
Entry and Communications
Airlines You can fly to most of the major islands of the Lesser Antilles, usually transferring from San Juan, Antigua, Barbados, or Trinidad. The interisland airlines vary from poor to completely unreliable. LIAT (Leeward Islands Air Transport) is the largest interisland carrier and is convenient in that it services almost every island between St. Thomas and Trinidad. With LIAT, a confirmed reservation means nothing-I have been physically on board a plane, seated, with a confirmed reservation, only to end up spending the night in that same airport while the plane flew on. A second problem is the flight schedules. They are subject to change without notice. (It is said that LIAT means Leave Island Any Time.) A third problem is baggage. Experienced travelers to the Islands always carry a handbag with enough clothes to get them through several days because it may be that long before they see their baggage again. If you're changing planes in the Islands, under no circumstances should you check your baggage through to your final destination, as this is asking for trouble; take it with you between planes. (It is also said that LIAT means Luggage In Another Terminal.) Needless to say, LIAT is not the only airline that loses baggage. British Airways did it to my good friend and insurance broker David Payne when he came out to visit me in Antigua. He arrived there, sans baggage, and had not followed my advice to hand-carry a change of tropical clothes. There he stood in the sweltering heat of Antigua Airport in his tweed suit. Ten days later he still had not
acquired his clothes when he departed Antigua for St. Thomas to go on a week's cruise on the H arvey Carnage. We had a laugh about it because the airlines must have realized that he was going all a "dress optional" cruise-thus no clothes were needed. David's baggage finally turned up, of all places, in the Middle East. It turns out that the airport abbreviation for Antigua is AND while that of a large airport transfer point in the Middle East is AKU. So if you ever fly to Antigua from London, check your baggage stubs before you leave. Regarding baggage, be very careful of weight. If you are switching from an international carrier to LIA T or another local carrier, you may be in trouble. Often the international carriers' limit is two bags without a weight limit, but on interisland flights the weight limit is still usually forty-four pounds. They can charge a fortune for overweight; I once paid $100 in overweight between Barbados and Grenada. If you're flying to the islands in the winter, make your plans as far ahead as possible, especially if you're coming from Europe. If Europe has had a wet, miserable summer, airline flights to the Caribbean can book up as early as the beginning of September, as happened in 1986. Extra flights are usually put on but they don't do that until the last minute, so if you do not have an early reservation confirmed it can make you very anxious. While flying in the Eastern Caribbean is extremely expensive, flights within the Atlantic island groups of the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verdes and on internal flights within Venezuela are amazingly cheap. Thus, when in any of these
Entrlj and Communications areas, if you don't have time to sail from one area to another it is possible and worthwhile to hop on a plane.
Airfreight One supposedly can ship almost anything from one corner of the earth to the other overnight via airfreight. Witness the fact that Ondine had a new mast airfreighted to Australia and Pen Duick had one sent to Rio this way. Unfortunately, the concept of efficiency has not filtered down to airfreight warehouses in the Lesser Antilles. In the view of most seasoned yachtsmen here, paying for airfreight is like contributing to some charities-the money disappears to little noticeable effect. Lest you think this is mere hearsay, let me provide my own example. In August 1973 a shipment for lolaire was handed into Air Canada in Halifax, Nova Scotia. After spending about a week in Halifax, nine weeks in Antigua, and three more weeks in Barbados, it finally arrived in Grenada in December! m pretty sure that it would not have arrived even then if I hadn't spent $100 on phone calls and cables and about twenty-five hours' worth of detective work. But even this wasn't a record. An earlier shipment took eleven months and two weeks to reach me, and I was obliged to pay the airfreight fees in full. All I can suggest is that if you do aiIfreight anything, make sure you obtain the waybill number, the routing, and alleged flight number. Better still, send airfreight only to major transfer points. Freight shipped to San Juan, St. Thomas, Barbados, or Trinidad has a chance of arriving on a direct flight without complications. Airfreight to the other islands is undertaken at your own risk-and good luck. It should be noted that airfreight during the winter tends to get short-circuited in Barbados because the LIAT flights are completely full with passengers and baggage. The airline doesn't bother flying over the airfreight, nor do they bother chartering another aircraft, nor do they bother to load it on an island freighter and ship it over. They just hold onto it until spring-yet charge the normal airfreight rate. Frequently persons who are desperate for their airfreight shipment climb on a plane, flyover to Barbados, find the freight in the warehouse, request permission to pick up the freight, and carry it onto the aircraft back to Grenada where it is needed. This LIAT refuses to do because they say that it's consigned to Grenada
r
and can only be delivered to the consignee in Grenada; and they will freely admit that despite the airfreight rates being paid, it will probably not arrive in Grenada for another two or three months. Sometimes in the winter the load of airfreight for the Islands is so heavy that the airlines place an embargo on more airfreight and will not accept any at all for six or eight weeks. This of course makes it all but impossible to ship engines, winches, or other spare parts to the Islands during the winter. In Antigua in January 1980, I was trying to get engine parts for Eric Swenson's Toscana when I discovered Eastern Airlines' Sprint Service, which supposedly was foolproof. The package was placed on a flight out of Bradley Field near Hartford, Connecticut, on a Monday evening to be transferred in Miami; it was guaranteed to arrive at English Harbour on Tuesday evening on Flight 965 at 2019. The right hand, however, never knows what the left hand is doing. My mate Alston Blackette arrived at the airport at 2019 and discovered that the Eastern Airlines flight had arrived at 1700--there was no package and Eastern Airlines had no such flight as 965. After much tracing via phone calls (cost, about $150) the package was not found and so we tried again with another shipment. This one took three days, despite the guaranteed forty-eight-hour Sprint Service. It arrived nine days after the original package was scheduled to arrive; the original package finally turned up a month late. Nevertheless, even though the various sprint services are not always as good as they claim, I would always try Sprint, if the package is small, rather than airfreight.
Languages People-to-people communications in the Lesser Antilles can be hampered by the variety of languages and local patois that exist there. With a little luck and a phrase book you can probably get by on most of the islands, but my recommendation is that upon stepping ashore, proceed directly to the tourist information office. There you will be fitted out with much useful paraphernalia: a map of the island, street plans, information on tours, taxis, public transportation, and so on. In French st. Martin, St. Barts, and Fort-deFrance you can easily find an interpreter, but in the countryside in Martinique and almost all of Guadeloupe, only French or the local patois will be spoken. If you plan to cruise the Venezuelan coast, best
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
sign on a crew member who is fluent in Spanish; next best, take a crash course with a phrase book and / or tape recordings to learn basic Spanish. The problem in Venezuela is that businessmen and well-educated people usually speak English; if not, they will certainly speak German, French, or Italian. But the man in the street, the stores, and markets-those you'll be dealing with-will speak strictly Spanish. He will help and try to understand you, but you must have some basic phrases: those, plus sign language and even drawn pictures, will usually solve the problem. In Puerto Rico, too, it's a great help to know Spanish. Around San Juan and Fajardo, English is fairly common, but on the southwest coast and on the islands of Vieques and Culebra, little or no English is spoken.
C able and Telex Telegraph services out of the British and American islands is excellent. The French service is not. With the British and American services I have sent cables all over the globe, with minor problems arising only when dealing with the US Western Union. One advantage to the British and American systems is that the cable offices have public telex machines. So if you're communicating with anyone who has a telex, you can wire direct, rather than having to wait while your cable is passed through various offices or lies ignored on a clerk's desk. When cabling to and from the Islands, a night letter will save money. There is frequently a backlog at the retransmission points, and rarely can a cable get through in a day. Use telex rather than cables if at all possible; the new high-speed telexes are cheap and fast.
Mail Interisland mail is so notoriously slow that it's faster to send the letter to a friend in London and have it remailed from there. Then it will reach Grenada, say, faster than a letter sent directly from Antigua to Grenada. Where interisland mail goes is beyond anyone's comprehension, but one example is illuminating. From the middle of December 1978 until early January 1979, no airmail was delivered on the island of Grenada. Everyone started blaming the post office, hut the post office pointed out that the mail was out of its hands. LIAT had decided that passengers and baggage were more important than airmail and thus LIAT carried no
airmail for approximately three weeks. Then, when the mail did start moving, it arrived in full planeloads-at a time when the post office was closed for the tail end of the Christmas holidays. Even mail from the States or Europe, though better than interisland mail, is abominably slow. In the winter of 1985 three packages of mail were sent airmail (not air parcel post) from London to St. Thomas and they took twenty-two, twentyeight, and twenty-nine days to arrive. So I asked that the next package be sent express. The British Post Office said there was express mail service to Tortola so another package was sent that way at great expense. Turns out British postal express service doesn't exist in Tortola. The very expensive package took twenty-three days! Now we have all our mail collected at a central point in London and forwarded every fortnight via courier post. If mailed on Friday it is supposed to arrive in the Islands on Monday-but usually arrives Tuesday. DHLlBIC PAC courier services seem to be the best, having offices in virtually every island in the Eastern Carihbean and Venezuela. The service is good hut not as good as advertised, delivery usually being seventy-two hours rather than forty-eight. In general it's best not to send mail marked "General Delivery"; send it direct to one of the marinas, yacht clubs, or charter brokers, and mark it "Hold for Arrival." (Don't count on your mail being successfully forwarded from one island to another as that costs money, and no one is willing to do it unless you send them money.) Some fairly reliable places that will hold mail-but always give advance warning-are the following. St. Thomas: Homeport (make arrangements first) and Sheraton Yacht Haven, or if you have a charter boat make arrangements through your charter agent. St. Croix: St. Croix Marine and Development (or possibly the ever friendly Commanche Club). St. Martin: Island Water World; Bobbie's Marina; or Budget Marine, clo Robbie Ferron. Tortola: Agences Maritimes, Box 156, Road Town; Village Cay Marina, Box 17, Road Town; or Nanny Cay Marina, Box 281, Road Town; The Moorings, Road Town. Antigua: Nicholsons, English Harbour; Crabbs Slipway & Marina, PO Box 271, St. Johns; Catamaran Club, Falmouth Harbor. Guadeloupe: I advise against having mail sent to any of the French islands. The French postal, telegraph, and telephone services leave much to he desired.
Entry and Communications Dominica: Anchorage Hotel, Roseau. Martinique: Same as Guadeloupe. Ship Shop does collect mail but we have lost two packages of mail sent there. St. Lucia: St. Lucia Marine Service; and Stevens Yachts. St. Vincent: None. Bequia: c/o Frangipani Hotel. Grenada: Grenada Yacht Club, St. George's; Grenada Yacht Services, St. George's; Spice Island Marine Services, L'Anse Aux Epines. Trinidad: Mail service is hopeless. Venezuela and the ABC Islands: Venezuelan mail service is hopeless; use a '-'Ourier service that reaches all corners of Venezuela via air and the Par Puesto. Be sure to ascertain which courier service is being used, since there are at least six services in Venezuela; finding out which one had our package once took us two days. Azores, Madeira, Canaries, and Cape Verdes: Rely on a courier service. Bermuda: General delivery, St. George's, works; they could not be more efficient or helpful. Since you probably don't have a local address, when using a courier service have mail sent to your yacht clo the local courier service, to be picked up by ship's crew with proper identification.
Telephone Telephone service throughout the islands may not be very good by Stateside standards, but to an OWIH (old West Indian hand) the telephone services now seem like a dream. On almost any island you can go to the main telephone exchange, which will connect you to anywhere in the world. You can pay by cash or by credit card at the telephone exchange. You can also use phone booths on most islands for overseas calls. You probably won't have enough change to put in the box, so you have to rely on either credit card or collect calls-most areas can be called collect. (One exception is Ireland, which you can't call collect or with a US credit card from the lower islands-which can seriously complicate communication with my wife.) us credit cards are good on most of the islands for calling the States but even our international credit card is no good for calling Europe. On the French islands it is a long tedious operation to go to the phone exchange to make a call and it is fairly expensive. However, if you have the
243
complete dialing code and a bucket full of change, you can dial practically anywhere in the world quite cheaply from a pay phone-but first check out the phone booth as to what type of coin it takes. As each year goes by single-side-hand sets become more powerful, easier to operate, and, amazingly, cheaper. Now, allegedly by using a Japanese allband receiver/transmitter and the correct antenna, for approximately $1,000 you can pick up the SSB, VHF, and even ham bands all on one set. Not long; ago this would have required three separate sets. Here is a rundown of what use you can expect to get of each of these radio options in the Islands. VHF is line-of-sight, so range from your yacht is normally very limited; luckily, though, Virgin Island Radio (WAH), St. Thomas, and Saba radios have transmitters/receivers mounted on mountaintops and so have excellent ranges. In the region of the Virgin Islands, the VHF station Virgin Island Radio (WAH) is extremely good and helpful. You can call anywhere in the world on a us credit-card number. Iolaire has a rather small VHF, yet when we were 20 miles east of Anegada we were able to raise VI Radio and call Australia to congratulate our daughter Dory and her husband Scott Vogel (Stars and Stripes bowman) on their successful racing in the 1987 Americas Cup. Tortola Radio is less than efficient and should not be relied on. Because of high hills within the Virgin Islands, there are numerous blank spots. Once you have passed south of radio contact with Saha Radio (approximately the west coast of Antigua), making a telephone call via radio or VHF is best forgotten about until you get within VHF distance of Barbados. North Post Radio, Trinidad, should be able to take care of your needs for overseas calls in that part of the Caribbean; unfortunately, though, North Post Radio is a big ship station and is less than helpful to yachts. In St. Vincent, CSY has a repeater high on the hills, which it uses strictly for its own boats-it is not a public system. In Grenada Captain Byers of the Grenada Coast Guard is an avid radio enthusiast who has established a VHF station on the top of Grenada that is high enough so he can talk to Barbados, Trinidad, and St. Vincent; that is strictly an emergency Coast Guard channel, though. I wish that commercial companies would establish VHF relays on each island-then communication would be greatly improved. Virgin Islands Radio (W AH), Saba Radio, and Barbados Radio all broadcast traffic lists so anyone
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
244
can contact you from the States if you listen to the traffic list for friends trying to contact you via the aforementioned radio stations. Virgin Island Radio (WAH)-telephone: 774-8282. Saba Radio-telephone: 809-599-5243. Barbados Radio-telephone: 809-427-5500.
SSB. At the right time of day on the right frequency, SSB gives you virtually worldwide coverage. to make phone calls on SSB you can use WOM Miami; WAH VI Radio, St. Thomas; Portashead Radio in the UK; North Coast Trinidad (all four of which are likely to be very busy); and Barbados, which is building a reputation as a reliable and economical way to call worldwide. Supposedly, you can also use the stations in Martinique and Guadeloupe; however, it seems to be extremely difficult to raise them on SSB. Within the islands, use the following SSB stations for local traffic, weather reports, marina inquiries, and so on: WAH, St. Thomas: 2009.0 Nicholsons, Antigua: 4125.0 from 0900-1200, 13001630, Monday-Friday Stevens Yachts, Rodney Bay, St. Lucia: 4139.5, from 1100-1130, 1500-1530, Monday-Friday These last two, one must remember, are charter organizations that will help out yachtsmen who are in a jam; tbey are not commercial radio stations open for business. HAM
Anyone with a ham license has various excellent opportunities for transmitting or obtaining information. Caribbean set UK Maritime International
7,185 14,303 ..5 14,313
0700-0800 local 1100-1200 GMT 24 hours.
Radio Emergency It has been alleged that a radio is absolutely essen-
tial on all yachts because of the need to call for help in an emergency. However, this cannot be further from the truth. We were sitting in St. Thomas harbor with a large, apparently unoccupied motor sailer drifting down on top of us, so we tried to call on VHF channel 16 to the US Coast Guard cutter tied up alongside the dock. We got absolutely no aid from the Coast Guard. Luckily, a hunch of the charter skippers heard the call at Sheraton Harbor Marina, jumped into their Bos-
ton Whalers, and came out to put a boarding party aboard the motor sailer and move it. We finally did get the Coast Guard by sending a dinghy to their ship, but they reported that they couldn't do anything to help us-wouldn't even send a uniformed enlisted man out to lead the boarding party. When someone boards a large strange yacht in the middle of the night, he is always afraid that some sleeping crew member will wake up and shoot first and ask questions later when he finds a bunch of ill-dressed civilians boarding his boat. The Coast Guard couldn't care less about that aspect. Upon investigating the next day, it was ascertained that an emergency radio call to the Coast Guard goes to a pickup relay station on top of the mountain in St. Thomas or is picked up by another relay station in St. Croix and then transmitted to San Juan. Coast Guard San Juan then gets on the land line (calling Puerto Rico from St. Thomas is sometimes like trying to call the moon), and the local staff then calls the cutter and requests that the cutter do something. It seems that although the US Coast Guard requires the yachts to keep their radios on at all times when anyone is on board a boat, the minute a US Coast Guard cutter ties up to a dock, its radio is secured--even though there is a deck watch standing by the gangway. A repeater from SSB channel 16 is not installed where the deck watch can hear it. The radios are turned off and everyone retires. As a rescue organization, the US Coast Guard appears to he going rapidly downhill. Its sole purpose today seems to be to issue licenses and summonses, and to fine people for not having life jackets in their dinghies (which in St. Thomas are stolen out faster than you can put them in), or for not having a fog bell in an area where there is no fog. Farther down the Islands, once out of the radio range of the twenty-four-hour manned station in St. Thomas or St. Croix, you'd just better be very careful to sink during daylight hours only, when the various VHF stations are operating. The ELTs (Emergency Locator Transmitters), also known as EPIRBs, transmitting on 121..5 MHz and 243 MHz UHF, used to have a bad reputation in the Caribbean because most of the planes flying through the area didn't bother to monitor the frequency. Now that's changed, because the ELT and EPIRB signals transmit directly to satellites and then go through the various rescue centers. (There is real East-West cooperation in this matter; the Soviets have been magnificent in helping
Entry and Communications out with distress signals and passing them on to US rescue services.) The newest EPIRBs also transmit on 401 MHz. These units can be programmed to give a vessel's name, registration, calling port, etc.
Radio Direction Finding Most people assume that navigation among the Islands is easy, with crystal-clear visibility always enabling you to see the next island before the last one fades away from sight. Not so. Haze can sometimes reduce visibility to 2 or 3 miles, particularly in the winter. For this reason, I have included in this volume a table of radio navigation aids (Appendix B). With the aid of a radio direction finder (RDF), you should be ahle to obtain an estimate of your position in any weather. Radio direction finding can he used in three different ways: your position can be fixed from the marine beacons, which are few and far between and low powered; from aerobeacons, which are usually on the wrong side of the island, and thus either will not be picked up or may be badly distorted by mountains; or finally, via the commercial radio stations, which are listed in Appendix D with their hours of transmission and languages. Always double-check the frequency and the language, as you may pick Dominica broadcasting in French and think it's either Guadeloupe or Martinique, not realizing that for a large portion of the day Dominica broadcasts in French.
Customs and Immigration Customs and Immigration in the Lesser Antilles vary from island to island and from day to day. I can only say that YOll must check with local yachtsmen to find out what regulations are currently in effect. Almost every island is a separate entity, and although it may be bothersome, you must officially clear out of one and enter the next, although they may only be a few miles apart. The problem is not a new one. In the early nineteenth century Fritz Fenger, in his Alone in the Caribbean, the story of his cruise through the Caribbean in Yakaboo, a 16-foot decked sailing canoe with no rudder, complained hitterly of the paperwork that he had to go through when sailing from Grenada to St. Vincent to St. Lucia, all British colonies. Generally, if you're a private yacht entering
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most islands during working hours, there is either no charge or an insignificant one to cover legitimate administrative work. But if you enter out of hours, which vary from island to island, you can get stuck for considerable overtime charges, taxi fees, and the like. The aggravating thing about this aspect is that in most areas, although the Customs and Immigration officers will come to your boat in the same taxi, each will demand a full taxi fare as if he had come in a separate taxi. Furthermore, some governments have begun to levy entering and leaving fees on private yachts. At one point St. Vincent was charging so much to visiting yachts that many skippers avoided the island altogether. When "Son" Mitchell became premier he reduced the fees considerably-but one never knows what will happen next. There's no way to keep up with the charges. Make inquiries on the sailors' grapevine, cross your fingers, and pray you don't get charged too much. That's about all you can do. There have always been exceptions, of course, to this bureaucratic runaround. I remember with great affection Mr. Jacohs, combined Customs and Immigration officer in Tortola in the middle 1950s. We would sail in with the engineless Iolaire, lufl' up, drop the headsails, sheet the boom amidships, and leave the main up, as in those days she had a god-awful big mainsail and a very small main halyard winch. No sooner was the anchor down than we would see Mr. Jacobs standing in the bow of his little blue dinghy, a small boy in the stern running the Seagull, with the blue ensign on a flagstaff flying from the stern. He would pull alongside, climb the boarding ladder, and greet us with a few cheerful words. We would hand him a crew list, which was our combined entrance and clearance, and share a quick beer. He would wave us "Bon voyage" and go off in his dinghy; we would break out the anchor and be off. The last time I entered Tortola, I think it took me thirteen pieces of paper and five or six dollars; and the same process had to be repeated when I left. Oh, for the good old days! Not only has the paperwork increased in Road Town but on my last three visits the Immigration officials were so difficult that I've sworn never to enter there again. In the future I'll enter at Jost Van Dyke, West End, Nanny Cay, or Virgin Gorda. Free entry to charter boats is definitely a thing of the past and has been for many years. St. Vincent led the field on this aspect by slapping a fat licensing fee on charter boats. In return for the licensing fee, the St. Vincent government
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide has done nothing except establish a buoyage system that is better described as a system of booby traps to catch the unwary yachtsman. Not too long after this, the BYI government placed a tax on charter boats on a per head, per day basis for the use of their waters. Again, what has the Tortola government ever done fl>r the yachtsman? Rather, the arrival of yachts has contributed to the tremendous boom that the BVI is experiencing. Similarly, the development of the middle Grenadines can be attributed directly to money brought in by yachts, yet the government there turned around and slapped a tax on charter yachts. Not only was the tax aggravating and expensive, but the precedent has been set, and the charter-boat operators are trembling in their boots. There are thirteen different governments between Trinidad and Puerto Rico and if they all levy a tax on charter boats, an owner could easily end up spending $4,000 to $5,000 a year in licensing fees and taxes. Lord knows what this will do to an already marginal business, one that puts a lot of money into the economies of what are basically impoverished islands. Some of the islands, such as Antigua, now charge everyone harbor dues. Yachtsmen frequently regard this as a form of blackmail, as they are putting money into the economy yet are being charged for the use of the harbors-and in return, little is done for the yachtsmen. Drugs, of course, have become a major problem in the Islands. If the customs people go over your boat with a fine-tooth comb, you must be patient. Smuggling marijuana and stronger drugs is an all too common occurrence, and sometimes the "yachtsmen" themselves are involved. It is galling, though, that if drugs in however small a quantity are found on a yacht, the boat will probably be seized, the crew fined or imprisoned, whereas a local smuggler caught with a load of drugs merely gets his hand slapped. I have even been royally cursed by West Indian "grass" peddlers for not buying their product-"What's the matter, you don't like my grass? You don't think my grass good?" There's not much effort to control them, but woe betide a foreigner who's found with a little grass. Stay away from it. Entry to each island requires clearance papers from the previous island. In some islands you can enter and clear at the same time. Other islands require separate clearance. Too frequently yachtsmen say, "What the hell, we're not coming back to this island so we won't bother clearing," and depart. This causes problems in numerous ways. First of all, when enough yachts do this in an individual
island, Customs and Immigration decide to get hard-nosed with yachtsmen and require that all passports be surrendered until the clearance papers are filed. Second, arriving without a clearance in some islands can cause you a great deal of trouble. Monsieur Breton in Martinique points out that at one period he managed to repossess three stolen yachts, and in each case the tip-off that the yacht had heen stolen was the fact that it did not have clearance from the previous port. So even if you own your boat, if you arrive without clearance fi-om the previous port you may have a lot of explaining to do. Thus I strongly advise obtaining clearance from each island. Furthermore, make sure you're carrying ship's papers showing that you're the owner, or have a letter of authority from the owner to operate the boat, as a great number of boats have been stolen in the Eastern Carihbean over the last five years; I estimate that the bareboat fleets in total probably lose five to seven boats per year. On almost all islands today if you're anchoring outside the main harbor you are required to get coastal clearance.
Guns Absolutely NO! Do not take them on board a yachtthere are other ways to defend yourself; see page 28 for further discussions on this subject.
Immigration You will have little problem with Immigration throughout the islands as long as you're on a boat. However, if you're flying in to join a yacht with only a one-way ticket, you must have a letter from the owner or skipper of your boat explaining that you will be sailing off the island with him. This letter, presented to the Immigration offieer at the airport, will be the only way you can get outside the gate. Similarly, if you discharge a crew memher, he must be able to show his airline ticket home to get off the boat. Semipermanent visitors are not welcome in the Islands. US citizens should carry a passport. The French are especially particular about it. A driver's license and a good bluff used to pass, but the US government has begun to fine airlines that land passengers without proper documents. Consequently, the airlines have begun to demand passports, or at
Entry and Communications least proof of citizenship, such as a voter registration card or a birth certificate. Incidentally, when traveling on a boat it's a good idea to keep all your important documents in a waterproof container and to keep them with your other valuables in a safe place. All non- US citizens, crew members and captains alike, must have US visas before they enter the US Virgin Island waters, Puerto Rico, or US territorial waters. Visas may he obtained through US embassies in Europe or from the US Consulates in Barbados, Martinique, Antigua, Trinidad, and possibly Grenada by the time this book goes to print. Regarding Immigration and working ashore, the optimistic yachtsman who sails to the Eastern Caribbean and figures he's going to get a job ashore because he's a skilled engineer, carpenter, mechanic, or what have you, is in f()r a rude shock. If you're not a US citizen, to work ashore in Puerto Rico or the U. S. Virgin Islands you need a "green card" signifying permanent residency status, and obtaining a "green card" is a long and complicated process. On the French islands, if you're a national of an EEC country, I am reliahly informed that they cannot keep you from working ashore; but you may have an awful lot of trouble convincing the French Immigration officials in the Lesser Antilles of that fact. The Netherlands Antilles are semi-independent nations which control their own affairs; Holland takes care of only defense and foreign affairs. Thus everyone needs a work permit in the Netherlands Antilles. In the former British islands most of which are now independent, a work permit is required, and obtaining one is extremely difficult. I don't know the Venezuelan situation, but presumably a work permit would he required. One of the most discouraging things in the matter of work permits is that the governments feel that every time a job is taken by a foreigner, it's taking food out of the mouths of the locals. This could not be further from the truth with respect to skilled tradesmen, especially if they're connected with yachting. Most of the Islands have a tremendous shortage of machinists, diesel mechanics, electricians, good shipwrights, and joiners. There is a shortage of them because there are no trained men on the Islands, and if no trained men are allowed to work on the Islands, how are the young men going to learn a trade? Why don't the Island governments allow qualified foreigners to come a~hore and work, on condition that they take apprentices who would work with them and learn
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a trade? I have discussed this subject with one or two government officials in the hope that they might see their way to issuing work permits to qualified foreigners who would train local youths in apprenticeship programs. This might go a long way toward alleviating some of the drastic shortages of skilled labor within the Islands. Needless to say there are many foreigners who do work in the Islands and manage to get away with it. Basically, their boats are their workshops and the careful ones keep out of trouble with the labor departments. True cruising yachtsmen, they never spend more than a few months in anyone spot. If they're good, word goes out via the jungle telegraph, and people sail from island to island to find them and get their work done.
Entry Procedures The penalty in any country for blatantly violating the entering and clearance procedures is the seizure of your yacht. While there have been no seizures to date, Island officials are adopting a harder line and fines have become stiffer. If you are chartering, remember that your boat passes back and forth through the Islands frequently and that if your captain ignores Customs and Immigrations regulations, he's inviting trouble for his next t:harter party. Don't put him on the spot by asking him to cut corners. Standard procedure for entering a country for the first time calls for you to hoist a "Q" flag upon anchoring. If you happen to arrive on a Sunday and don't want to have to pay overtime fees for clearing Customs during non working hours, you can usually legally wait twenty-four hours before checking in, provided no one goes ashore during that time. If no one shows up in response to your HQ" flag in an hour or so, then the skipper should go ashore alone with all passports or identification papers and several copies of the crew list; he either goes to the Customs and Immigration office or calls them and has them come down to the harbor. One word of warning: have fenders ready if officials visit you. Customs officials often come out to your boat in a lot:al dinghy, and local dinghy owners always use ten penny nails and leave the heads exposed when installing rub strakes on their boats. Here is a survey of entry procedures, island by island, throughout the Eastern Caribhean as oflate 1987. Obviously, they are all subject to change without notice.
24 8
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
PUERTO RICO
Entry ports are Isabella Segunda on Vieques; Dewey on Culebra; San Juan, Fajardo, Ponce, Mayaguez, and Aguadilla on Puerto Rico. In all cases, haul up your "Q" flag, go ashore, and phone the nearest US government Immigration office. It will send a man down to take care of Customs, Immigration, and health. WARNING: Puerto Rico has a very strict gun law, enforced by the police department but not by Customs and Immigration. They will not ask you to declare your guns, but it is imperative that you go to the local police station if you have guns and declare them and show your licenses or surrender the guns as the case may be. CULEBRA
coastal clearance to St. Thomas, in which case you must enter immediately upon arrival to the island at Red Hook, the Yacht Club at Cowpet Bay, or the lagoon. The skipper must take passports and papers in to clear Customs and Immigration in Charlotte Amalie even though the boat is not physically there; this seems extremely strange but that is the procedure, as I found out the hard way. Coral Harbor The same regulations apply as for Cruz Bay, but the customs officer is harder to locate. Find the nearest phone and call a taxi. The driver will know where to go and it will save you a long, hot walk. But the clearance is good only for US boats, because the officer is allowed to band le only Customs, not Immigration. It seems crazy that in the Cruz Bay Customs and Immigration office, whoever is on duty does both jobs, but out in Coral Harbor each person can do only one job.
Skipper must go ashore, find Customs and Immigration; usually the same person does both. ST. CROIX VIEQUES
Isabella Segunda This is not a good anchorage, but you can anchor here briefly, go ashore, find Customs and Immigration, and check in. If you make your landfall on the south coast, I would try anchoring, skipper alone go ashore, call Customs and Immigration and see whether they will come over to clear you or if they will accept the skipper taking a cab to Isabella Segunda.
ST. THOMAS
Entry procedures into St. Thomas are very changeable. I've been put through four different procedures on four successive arrivals. Thus immediately upon arriving in St. Thomas, I recommend you call Immigration and Customs in the federal building and ask them what they want you to do. Or ask at Yacht Haven Marina for the latest procedure or ask the nearest yacht anchored out. Entry for yachts in US waters is free during working hours (out of working hours, the overtime charges are relatively reasonable) and it's legal in US waters to remain in port for twenty-four hours prior to clearing, as long as no one goes ashore.
Customs and Immigration are found on the new commercial pier in Gallows Bay, right next to St. Croix Marine and Development. The skipper goes ashore with all the passports and finds out what is wanted.
BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
Jost Van Dyke; West End, Nanny Cay; Virgin Gorda Yacht Harbor, and Road Town All are ports of entry for the British Virgin Islands. Regulations require that you fill out separate entrance and clearance papers, altbough if you're staying only a few days they may let you do both at the same time. You must bring your clearance papers from your last port. Once in a while in the outports of the BVI you run into odd difficulties. The last time we were at Jost Van Dyke, a boat was trying to clear to go back to the US Virgins, hut couldn't because the Customs and Immigration office had run out of forms and didn't expect any more for a couple of days. What the yachtsmen finally did I'm not quite sure. If the Immigration officials in Road Town are as unpleasant to you as they were to me in 1987, it will ruin your day. Go instead to one of the other clearance ports.
ST. JOHN ISLAND
Cruz Bay Take your dinghy to the head of the harbor on the north end where you will find Customs and Immigration right in the same buildingit's infinitely easier to enter here than in St. Thomas. However, foreign yachts frequently will have only
ST. MARTIN
Philipsburg Hoist a "Q" flag and send the skipper ashore to the police station, where they'll give you the routine. Everything is quite relaxed.
Entry and Communications MARIGOT
Anchor, hoist a "Q" Hag. Officials in a GendarmeNational boat come alongside (they speak French, no English), take tons of information, including name of skipper's mother and father!; no charge. If no one shows up when it is time to go ashore, the skipper should go in to the Gendarmes with papers.
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very reasonable price with cheerfulness and speed. If you arrive in St. Barts outside the working hours, don't worry: go ashore, have a good time, and as soon as the Customs and Immigration office is open, skipper should go to the office and check m.
ANTIGUA STATIA
No one seems to care about yachts coming or going. SABA
Formerly, a surfboat came out and took you ashore; now, with the building of the dock, the surfboats are not operating and you'll have to get ashore on your own. But don't worry, everything is relaxed and lazy in Saba. ST. KITTS
Anchor bow-and-stern at the deep-water port, go ashore and inquire. When we were last there we were told that Customs and Immigration planned to move to the deep-water port; whether or not this has been done I don't know. Remember, you will need coastal clearance to visit Frigate and the other bays on the south coast of St. Kitts and to continue on to Nevis.
St. John's Anchor off the main steamer pier; skipper goes ashore to clear Customs and Immigration. English Harbour The new administration is doing its best to simplify the routine here. Now you can moor stern-to, and skipper only goes ashore to clear (it gets very expensive out of working hours). You have to see Customs, Immigration, and the Port Authority, but they are in the process of moving them all into the same building; let's hope they succeed. Crabbs Marina Anchor off Crabbs Marina or go alongside, skipper only ashore to see Customs and Immigration during working hours; after working hours no one seems to object to the crew going ashore to the Pier 5 Bar / Restaurant to take showers, etc., as long as they stay within the compound. St. James Club / Mamon Bay Customs and Immigration on duty during working hours; relatively the same as Crabbs.
BARBUDA NEVIS
Charlestown Take your crew list ashore to the police station; everyone is friendly and helpful. I am told by some yachtsmen that it is better to clear in through Nevis if you wish to visit harbors along the south coast of St. Kitts, as sometimes in St. Kitts they refuse to let you go to the harbors; in Nevis they are always willing to give you coastal clearance. MONTSERRAT
Plymouth Go ashore in the dinghy and a guard at the head of the dock will explain to you the routine for clearing Customs and Immigration. They may come down to the dock, or you may have to take a taxi to the police station. The day we were there the Customs officer drove me up and back. ST. BARTS
The Customs and Immigration office is at the head of the dock. The officer enters and clears you for a
To land at Barbuda you must first clear Customs and Immigration in Antigua, so when you're in Antigua, make sure to get permission for landing at Barbuda.
GUADELOUPE
Pointe-a-Pitre Tie up at the Marina at Point du Bois south of town or anchor off; skipper should go ashore and inquire of the administration as to what the latest procedure is for clearing in Pointe-aPitre-they have changed it three or four times in the last four years. Quite frankly, entering at Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe, is something to avoid. It has always been an erratic place to enter-about every three years there is some crazy incident there. One I remember is the story of a yacht that wasn't even stopping at Guadeloupe, sailing past Basse-Terre, being hauled in by the French Customs launch, and being fined for not stopping and entering Guadeloupe waters even though it was just passing through; the skipper was fined because he had a
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide fair amount of liquor on board. Recently, in another case, a yacht had to pay a fat fine as she was sailing under a temporary document issued by the US Embassy; the vessel had been bought abroad, had never been to us waters, but was quite legitimately sailing under a us document. Finally, just recently, a St. Thomas-registered boat was fined because in Guadeloupe they claimed that the US Coast Guard had said that only documented yachts could enter, a statement that the US Coast Guard denies. Having sat down and studied French Customs laws very carefully I have come to the conclusion that whenever you are in French waters you have to proceed as though you were walking on eggs. As far as I can figure, it is virtually impossible for a yacht to enter and clear French waters without breaking at least one law. Basse-Terre Go to the new marina south of town and ask questions. Deshaies Go ashore to the dock, take a left, and follow the signs to the gendarmerie; take your ship's papers and passports. Fran~ois and Ste. Anne Clear at the gendarmerie. MARIE-GALANTE
We were unable to find Customs and Immigration in Marie-Galante, and so went to the gendarmes, who seemed totally uninterested in entering a yacht. When I explained the situation they said fine, put a whole pile of stamps all over my entry form, signed it, and wished me "bon voyage." I don't know if it was completely legal but at least I had an official French stamp on my entry form. ILES DES SAINTES
Ask around for the present location of the gendarmerie, which seems to change quite frequently. Once found, carry out business as usual. A note of caution: Don't tie up your dinghy at the dock. This is where the ferry lands and the ferry captain holds little respect for pleasure craft. DOMINICA
Portsmouth Go ashore with your crew list to the Customs office. If you plan to stop at Woodbridge on your way south, have Customs advise Roseau Customs of this fact so that they don't treat you like a rum smuggler; see Volume 11, Part 2, of this guide series for warnings regarding boat boys in Dominica.
Roseau Go ashore to the main Customs shed, which is at the deep-water port north of town. Once cleared, proceed to whatever anchorage you wish.
MARTINIQUE
Fort-de-France The Customs and Immigration office is at the head of the dock in the northeast corner of the yacht anchorage off the Savanne. Hours are 0800-1500 and 1730-1800 seven days a week-no charge at all. Hoist a "Q" Hag, and the whole crew can go ashore while the skipper fills out forms and takes in passports and ship's papers. As of 1985, the only entry port in Martinique was Fort-de-France. However, if you arrived at another port it was legal for the skipper to jump into a taxi, minibus, or taxi-payee, go to Fort-deFrance and make the clearance there. Will this still be true when you arrive in Martinique?
ST. LUCIA
Customs and Immigration has been a problem in the past here because the number of places you could enter was limited. Now, however, the situation is better. There is a Customs office in Marigot and, as of 1986, you can get temporary clearance at Soufriere in the island's southwest corner. Soufriere Anchor on the north side of the harbor off the Hummingbird Restaurant. The skipper should go into town with all passports and papers; he can get temporary clearance from the police station that is good until such time as you get to Marigot, Castries, or Rodney Bay. Marigot Anchor or tie up at the Moorings jetty; skipper goes ashore with papers. Castries At Cas tries you must go to the head of the harbor and either moor alongside the eastwest dock to clear Customs or anchor off the Customs dock-be sure you anchor east of the white turning buoy or you will be told off by the pilot launch in no uncertain terms! I prefer to anchor off, as the dock is a commercial facility that is unfendered, dirty, and not suitable for yachts. It's also populated with the foulest-mouthed bunch of longshoremen found in the entire Lesser Antilles. Do not under any circumstances anchor in Vigie Cove and come in via dinghy. Go to the dock or anchor just off it and send the skipper ashore with ship's papers and passports. Rodney Bay Anchor off or tie alongside a dock; skipper ashore with ship's papers and passports. Vieux Fort Anchor off while the skipper goes
Entry and Communications ashore to the police station with the ship's papers, and follow whatever are the latest directions.
ST. VINCENT
Kingston On the island of St. Vincent you can enter only at Kingston. You cannot anchor at Blue Lagoon or Youngs Island. Not only that, but Customs insist that you come alongside at the lowest spot on the dock at the north side of the steamer pier, where there is frequently a big surge. To avoid having to lay alongside for a time while waiting for Customs and Immigration, call the lighthouse on channel 16 and they'll alert the officials. If you don't have a radio, try hoisting a really large "Q" flag; the lighthouse keep may spot it and report you to Customs and Immigration. To avoid damaging the boat alongside the dock, you can anchor off and go in with the dinghy to pick up the Customs and Immigration officers-and just hope they're not wearing hobnailed boots that chew up the varnish. (When James "Son" Mitchell took over as premier in 1984, one of his first acts was to promote the sergeant who had been head of Immigration to inspector in charge of the traffic department. Some of us decided that Mitchell thought the fellow could do less damage to the tourist industry in that capacity.) The problem with St. Vincent's entry policy is that if a yacht coming south from St. Lucia arrives late in the day, it has no legal choice but to go around the corner and up into Kingston, which is a dreadful place to spend the night, or down to Admiralty Bay on Bequia, which you don't want to go into at night. So, many yachts stop at Cumberland or Wallilabu Bay on the island's west coast, which is illegal. Premier Mitchell, however, is from a long line of seafarers, and he understands that the skipper of a vessel is responsible for the safety of that vessel. If the safe operation of the vessel dictates that it lie in Cumberland or Wallilabu instead of trying to enter Kingston or Admiralty Bay at night, then Mitchell seems to feel that is perfectly legalunless, of course, there's something illegal going on, in which case the boom will be lowered, hard. Legitimate yachtsmen should be grateful for the premier's sensible attitude.
BE QUIA
Anchor in Admiralty Bay, hoist a "Q" flag, and row ashore to the police station; all work is done in one
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stop, quickly and cheerfully. Remember that Bequia is part of St. Vincent; I always clear in Bequia, then sail direct to Youngs Island. When coming up the lee coast of St. Vincent, it's faster to close reach to Bequia than it is to beat up against the wind and strong foul current into Kingston. Then once you've entered in Kingston you still have to beat against a strong current to Youngs Island, whereas from Bequia it's a nice reach. So for these reasons I recommend avoiding Kingstofl like the plague.
CANOUAN
Anchor at Charlestown, hoist a "Q" flag, send the skipper ashore to the police station, and clear.
UNION
Anchor at Clifton, hoist a "Q" flag, send the skipper ashore to clear. Every time I go to the post office to clear, I discover Customs and Immigration is at the airport; every time I go over to the airport to clear I discover Customs and Immigration is at the post office-a bit of a problem. Good luck. Incidentally, it's best to tie your dinghy at the anchorage and walk rather than use the main dock, where your dinghy could beat itself to death in very short order.
GRENADA
Carriacou Hillsboro is the entry port; work your way in as close as possible to the Seaview Inn (conspicuous hotel northeast of town) to avoid the swell, and hoist your "Q" flag. The Customs and Immigration office is at the head of the dock. You have to row ashore. Obtain coastwise clearance here, but you'll have to reenter at St. George's or L'Anse aux Epines when you arrive in Grenada"The Mainland," as it's known in Carriacou. St. George's Once you get through the channel (depth is reported at 12 feet, but I suspect that at low water it's only U), either anchor oH' or go alongside the GYS dock. During working hours you will find Customs and Immigration in their office at the head of the dock. If they're not there the guard at the shack can call them for you. Things are pretty relaxed here-if you come in after hours, no one seems too worried about your leaving the boat as long as you stay around the GYS compound, where there is a bar, restaurant, and showers. Overtime costs were very reasonable as of May 1987.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide L'Anse aux Epines (Prickly Bay) This is another point of entry, with a guard on duty at all times. Follow normal "Q" flag, skipper-on-shore routine, and remember that if you leave St. George's for the south of Grenada, you are requested to obtain clearance from the Customs officer at St. George's prior to departure, a formality that only takes a minute. Grenville After negotiating the long tricky channel, anchor, hoist your "Q" flag, set your awning, have a drink, and wait awhile. Then go ashore to clear.
BARBADOS
Barbados used to be the world's most pleasant place to enter. The harbor office would spot the running lights of yachts rounding the southwest end of the island approaching the anchorage and would send out their longboat, rowed by two men dressed in the uniform of the seamen of Nelson's day. Customs and Immigration would board you within minutes of your anchor's going down and the whole clearance procedure would be done almost instantaneously. Then for a while things went bad, and Barbados became so expensive and unpleasant a place to enter that the number of transatlantic yacht arrivals dropped from more than three hundred to under forty. But in 1986 the Bajan government did a complete turnaround, and started to build a breakwater for a new fishing harbor just north of the old carenage. They will move all commercial traffic out of the carenage and convert it to a yacht anchorage: a marina with stern-to berthing on the waterfront, restaurant, shops, and so on. The entry fee has been drastically reduced (overtime fees are still high, though) and Customs and Immigration officers are reportedly welcoming yachtsmen. They certainly did a fine job of greeting the transatlantic cruiSing race entrants in the 1987 ARC-some 208 of them-waiving clearance fees and throwing several parties. The drill (as of late 1987) is to contact the signal station on VHF channel 12 as you enter Carlisle Bay; get permission to go to the deep-water harbor and moor alongside the southeast corner of the harbor to clear Customs and Immigration. You are warned to stay on channel 12 in case any ships are entering or leaving the deep-water harbor. Once cleared you can go either to the carenage or to anchor south of there in Carlisle Bay. If you come in at night, contact the signal station
on channel 12 and anchor in Carlisle Bay. There should be absolutely no contact with shore until you've been properly cleared. If you don't have VHF channel 12 . . . well, good luck. We have not been able to determine the length of the new breakwater being built out from the north side of the carenage; until it's finished and lit, proceed with extreme caution at night.
TRINIDAD
The main problem with clearing into Trinidad has always been the long, dead-to-windward sail up to Port-of-Spain to the Customs and Immigration offices there. Go in to the head of the main steamer dock, where there is a low landing for Customs and Immigration and pilot launches. You could possibly stay there overnight, and can clear Customs pretty fast, as the officers would see you on their way out to ships. The offices are open twentyfour hours, but there's a shortage of officers in this fast-growing port; we started to clear on a Friday afternoon and didn't get through until 0100 on Saturday. You may find you'll do a lot of walking in a very hot sun trying to track everybody down. Take a good book.
VENEZUELA
Venezuelan Customs and Immigration procedures are in a state of anarchy as far as yachtsmen are concerned. For starters, what is officially required in the main port of La Guaira is not necessarily required in the outports--or even required at all. Every time we go to Venezuela we become more and more confused, but we enjoy it more and more, and have come to the conclusion that the Venezuelan Customs and Immigration people are not really that interested in yachts. But once you get hooked up with a government official, be prepared to spend a lot of time filling out a lot of paper. The basic drill is to go first to Customs, then to the Guardia Nacional (if you have no guns, they will probably not come aboard to inspect; if you do have guns it gets complicated), then to Immigration, then to the port captain. On leaving, the whole process is repeated, because you have to get a zarpe granting permission to visit the various anchorages en route to the next major port. This zarpe is only temporary and is issued for two months. If you plan to stay longer, you can get an extension for an additional 90 days. To obtain such an extension, go to any port office and pur-
Entry and Communications chase an official paper, called papel sellado. On this paper, request an .extension for permanency for three additional months. This document should be addressed to the "Capitania de Puerto." When writing it, you can make an additional copy on regular paper. Extensions are getting harder to obtain, but one extreme measure around it is to make friends with a shipyard owner, have your boat hauled in his yard, and have him write a letter to the port captain stating that he has ordered parts for you that have not yet arrived and that you can't leave Venezuela until the parts arrive. I have heard of yachts staying in Venezuela for a year by this method. If you or any of the crew leave the country by plane, you need a permit in writing. To get it, write a letter on plain paper or your personal paper, with a copy, requesting permission to depart by plane. Take the original plus the copy to Immigration and have the copy stamped by them; after that, take the stamped copy to the port captain, where the permit will be issued. This is the standard procedure and no fees are charged unless you require such services during nonworking hours. In some places, like La Guaira, officials have sometimes retained passports to guarantee that yachtsmen will return and comply with regulations. It seems that some people ignored the regulations and simply departed without taking the trouble to clear. If you are asked to leave your papers and you plan to stay in this area, there should be no problem since they would be returned to you when leaving for another Venezuelan or foreign port. You must obtain a zarpe anyway (from the port captain) when traveling from port to port. And most likely your passports will not be held. I have met pleasant officials and nasty, bureaucratic ones. In short, you're on your own, but I can offer a couple of tips. Take all your papers ashore every time you arrive at a new port; you may need them, you may not. Also, take your walking shoes and a good book to pass the time spent waiting; wear a smile, and don't be impatient. If you have a working knowledge of Spanish you'll save yourself many megawatts of frustration-and if you have a small, blond, blue-eyed child along with you, your business will go ten times faster.
BONAlRE
Most inhabitants of the ABC islands refer to themselves not as West Indians, Venezuelans, or
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Dutchmen, but as Antillians-and are properly horrified at stacks of paperwork. Entering used to be entirely relaxed, but now, with all the drug traffic coming out of Colombia, that has changed. You must go alongside the main commercial pier, hoist "Q," and wait until Customs, Immigration, and the police come down to see you. They will, very politely, search your boat, very thoroughly.
CURA<;AO
The only port of entry is Willemstad. Follow the same procedures as in Bonaire, but this time go to the harbor master's office at the southeastern side of the main channel. He'll tell you what to do next.
ARUBA
Same as for Curat;ao. ABC island Customs officials are usually polite and efficient. But if you have a case out of the ordinary, have patience, don't lose your temper, and don't give them a hard time, otherwise their motto becomes "Why be difficult when with a little effort I can be downright impossible!"
BERMUDA
After battling with Customs and Immigration up and down the Eastern Caribbean and in Venezuela, the yachtsman goes through culture shock in Bermuda. Everything is relaxed, cheerful, efficient, and informal. The Bermudian Customs and Immigration folks know what is going on, though, and can be tough if need b~o not attempt to smuggle in any drugs. If you have any guns on board declare them immediately as the penalty for having undeclared guns aboard in Bermuda is extremely stiff. It's easiest to enter in St. George's. Go alongside the small wooden Customs dock at the east end of Ordinance Island; if there is no space there, go alongside any place on the quay wall, hoist a "Q," and ask your neighboring yachtsman how best to find Customs and Immigration. Once cleared, go around to Hamilton if you want to.
AZORES
You must enter and clear in every island in the Azores; it is all free, all very cheerful. Upon arrival in any Azorean Island inquire for the Guardia Civil, Customs, and Immigration; go ashore with ship's papers, passports, and about six crew lists
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and all will be well. (See pages 97-98 for an amusing story of my Customs / Immigration problem in the Azores.)
IRELAND
Wherever you arrive in Ireland, hoist your "Q" flag, go ashore, and hoist a pint, then call up Customs, which will eventually come down and see you.
BRITAIN
The same appears to be true as in Ireland, but be sure to hoist your "Q" as soon as you enter British waters.
MADEIRAN ARCHIPELAGO
Porto Santo, Funchal Azores.
Same procedure as in the
CANARY ISLANDS
No one seems particularly interested in yachts here. Hoist "Q" and wait to find out if someone comes around to see you. The only thing you must be careful of is if any crew members are leaving the boat permanently, they must be properly entered and their passports stamped; officials at the airport won't let them leave unless they've been entered.
CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
Entry procedures vary from island to island; my advice is to hoist "Q" and see what happens. Be sure to have plenty of spare passport photos on hand for local documents. When leaving one Cape Verde island be sure to get clearance papers to the next island.
Ship's Stores Duty-Free Transit You would do well to check Customs regulations before deciding where to send ship's stores in duty-free transit. At the present time the duty regulations are as follows: Puerto Rico Everything is subject to duty. St. Thomas Goods shipped directly to the boat can be imported duty-free if the goods go on board with a commercial bill of lading; but the duty on
marine supplies is so minimal that it's hardly worth the paperwork. Tortola Everything is dutiable no matter how it's shipped, unless the yacht is not normally based in the Caribbean and the skipper can convince the collector of Customs that he is merely passing through. Anguilla, St. Kilts, Nevis Almost everything shipped to these destinations goes through St. Martin. Hence, St. Martin's Customs laws apply, and it's really best to work through St. Martin from the start. St. Martin Both the French and Dutch sides have free ports; no duty. St. Barts A free port, but so small that little shipping stops here. Again, use St. Martin. Statia Ditto. Antigua As long as supplies are consigned directly to the yachts and will be used on board, they are duty free. But at times Customs officials can be difficult, to say the least, and procedures can be complicated. Check with fellow yachtsmen at Crabhs, Antigua Slipway, or Carib Marine for the latest drill. Guadeloupe As long as supplies are consigned directly to the yacht and will be used on hoard, they are duty free. Dominica Immaterial-that is, it's just too dammed difficult to ship stores here. It's best to deal with other islands. Montserrat Same as Dominica. Martinique Same as Guadeloupe. St. Lucia With a good deal of paperwork, you can have marine supplies shipped duty free. St. Vincent In the winter of 1972-73 Customs began charging a duty; the present situation is unstable. However, engines are completely duty free, which is why, in Bequia, Evinrude engines are cheaper than US list prices. Grenada All marine supplies are duty free. The present government is hoping to attract yachtsmen by offering marine supplies more cheaply than anywhere else. Barbados All marine supplies are duty free. Trinidad Duty free, but lots of paperwork. Venezuela Paperwork is such that you should avoid shipping anything to Venezuela. The Atlantic Islands Bermuda Anything shipped in for a yacht is duty free, but there is a fair stack of paperwork involved. However, if anyone is flying to Bermuda and hand-carries the supplies, Customs at the airport will wave them on through. Azores, Madeira, Canaries Shipping anything
Entry and Communications in requires literally tons of paperwork---engage a shipping agent, but as per Bennuda anything handcarried comes in duty free with no problemsprobably easier and cheaper to fly to the States or Europe, pick up the gear, and fly back! Cape Verde Islands Don't know what the status is.
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In general, there is so much paperwork involved with shipping goods duty free that it's often easier to pay duty, which may be cheaper in the long run, when you figure the hours spent running from one office to the other getting papers stamped, and to get on with enjoying the Islands' pleasures.
9
Provisions and Services
Currency Money has become more confusing the world over, and the Islands are no exception. Puerto Rico and the US Virgins use the American greenback, and so do the British Virgins. (Thus despite being a British colony the civil service is paid in US dollars, and stamps and taxes are paid for in US dollars.) St. Martin (Dutch half), Statia, Saba, Aruba, Bonaire, and Curac;ao use the Dutch guilder. St. Barts, Guadeloupe, Martinique, and the French side of St. Martin use the French franc. TrinidadTobago and Barbados each has its own currency. Venezuela uses the bolivar. The remaining islands deal in EC (Eastern Caribbean) currency, formerly called "biwi. " Trinidad-Tobago and Barbados currencies are freely exchangeable in banks with each other and with the EC, but unfortunately this is not the case on the street. But perhaps the most irritating thing is that their coins are now all different sizes, so that if you travel from one sector to the other you end up with a jangling pocketful of useless change. Where EC money exists one runs into a few anomalies, especially in the market. The older people will refer to the cost of something as a "penny." They do not mean the one-cent piece but rather the two-cent piece. This is due to the fact that the present EC cent is the same size as the old British halfpenny, and the two-cent piece is the same size as the old British penny. One thing to remember is that the British pound or the US dollar is freely exchangeable throughout the Islands except on the French islands. Because the French islands had little trade with the British islands until recently, EC money is discounted on
the French islands at a horrible rate. Similarly, French money, although freely exchangeahle elsewhere in the world, is practically worthless on a British island. You'll even have a very difficult time getting banks to accept French francs. The good old US dollar is still the best method of exchange in the entire Lesser Antilles-the dollar may be floating lower, but it's a long way from sunk. Rates of exchange, of course, vary; rates will also vary depending on whether you're changing US dollars, traveler's checks, personal checks, or coins. Plastic money has taken over the world and in most countries hotels and restaurants will accept them. We have also found that there's almost always a bank that will give you cash on your credit card if you have proper identification, such as a passport. Traveler's checks are supposed to be good as gold, but I have had trouble cashing them here and there, and have less faith in them than I used to. Transferring money through the Caribbean is a difficult proposition. Banks tell you a telexed transfer will arrive within twenty-four hours, but don't count on it. We've been disappointed again and again-I even accused one major bank of having a special department for losing telexed transfers. One time we had proof that $10,000 had been presented to a London bank to pay an insurance claim; the hank assured us that a telex had heen sent to the local Caribbean branch where we awaited it. The local branch kept claiming that no telex had arrived. For ten days we whistled for the money. We finally discovered what happened. It seems the telex operator in London arrives in the morn-
Provisions and Services ing and gets to work on the stack of telexes in order of size of the transfer. Since by London standards our ten grand was chicken feed, it stayed at the bottom of the stack; the next day, the operator started all over again with the biggest orders ... and so on, for ten days! Another pitfall: sometimes the local bank will say it has no US dollars and will try to pay you in EC dollars, which are virtually worthless outside the EC islands. If you insist loudly enough, you can force the bank to give you US dollar traveler's checks at their expense. Certified checks will usually not be paid off until they are cleared, since all the Islands except Puerto Rico and St. Thomas are outside the US Federal Reserve system; clearance can take three weeks to a month. So I think the best bet for getting cash is to find a friendly bank that will give you cash on your credit card. For large amounts, I recommend a banker's draft sent out courier post. As for the Atlantic Islands, here's what you can expect:
Bermuda US dollar freely exchanged for Bermuda dollar, one to one. Azores, Madeira Portuguese escudos are exchanged for US dollars only in banks or cambios (money changers); same for traveler's checks, except in some hotels. Canaries Change foreign currency to Spanish pesetas only in the banks, officially. The pesetas won't do you any good if you're going on to the Cape Verdes. Cape Verdes Escudos available for foreign currency only in hanks. Don't get more than you need. Finally, Venezuela. The bolivar can be exchanged for foreign currency at banks or cambios; usually hotels will change only if you're staying there. Some supermarkets accept dollars directly, but check before you buy. Banks have now started giving cash on credit cards.
Food Certainly a key ingredient of an enjoyable cruise is keeping the crew on a varied, wholesome, and plentiful diet. With some planning, it can be done conveniently and economically. The price and availability of certain foods ranges widely among the islands. Imported produce is particularly expensive, as you pay the American or European
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retail price plus shipping and duty. (In the Islands, as everywhere else, added costs are passed on to the consumer.) The "supermarkets" of any island stock just about what you would expect to find in a small market in America. Only the coffee changes radically from island to island. Bread presents something of a problem. Readily available and good though it is, it won't keep more than a few days no matter what you do. It's best to load up with the various corn breads, coflee cakes, and bran muffin mixes, and avoid making toast at breakfast-this will cut down on trips ashore. Cassava bread is available in the various markets. As for milk, it's advisable to use powdered, evaporated, or "long-life" type. Fresh milk is difficult to find, expensive, and not too good. The cheapest food in the Lesser Antilles is to be found in Puerto Rico. The supermarkets and shopping eenters of the larger towns in Puerto Rico are as vast as in the States. Puerto Rico, being a high island, has the water supply to grow great quantities of produce and to market it at relatively low prices. The US Virgins, on the other hand, import their goods; there's no point in tilling crops if you can lay your land off to the developers at $40,000 to $60,000 an acre. So the little produce that is homegrown is snapped up before it ever gets to market. But the supermarkets are numerous and States-sized, so the variety of food available is wide, even if it is expensive. In the British Virgin Islands the food supply is generally adequate, about the same situation with respect to fresh food as in St. Thomas-i. e., everything is imported and prices are high. In a number of specialty shops you can find superb quality and variety, but you may have to sell your hoat to pay for the food. When just doing general shopping you'll find the lack of variety a pain, as it usually requires visiting three or four diflerent stores. Considering the number of yachts in the British Virgin Islands it's amazing that the shopping can only be described as difficult. Given Antigua's size and the number of yachts regularly found in English Harbour during the winter (in recent years the number has seldom fallen below 150 during the winter; needless to say the number explodes to 400 to 500 during Antigua Week), the shopping / stocking-up situation there is ludicrously bad. Admittedly, a large charter boat whose steward or stewardess knows the ins and (luts of Antigua won't have too much difficulty in a major stock up. He or she relies on local contacts, numerous previous exploratory missions, and large
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purchases from food wholesale establishments that basically cater to hotels and restaurants. However, the cruising yachtsman will discover shopping in Antigua to be slow, frustrating, and expensive! Carib-Marine Store in English Harbour has had a major renovation and now provides an excellent, though expensive, variety of supplies; you can bring your dinghy to the dock right in front of Carib-Marine or they will deliver your goods to your dinghy for free! In the Falmouth area several gourmet shops have opened. Fresh produce in small quantities can be purchased from the vegetable ladies inside the dockyard or right outside the gate. The quality is usually good, but pick and choose-and negotiate the price, as it's usually whatever the market will bear. For any sizeable stocking up you have to get a cab or bus into St. John's and visit the two main supermarkets there; ask the cab driver about the things you weren't able to get and he'll help you find them or tell you they're just unobtainable. Guadeloupe, although expensive, is an excellent place to stock up. If you're in Deshaies, take a bus into Pointe-il.-Pitre, where the open-air market and supermarkets are all close to one another. Taxi back to the bus depot, load everything on top of the bus, and off you go. A word of warning: Check the bus schedule-some take an hour, others wander over hill and dale and take two and a half hours. Basse-Terre is easy. Anchor off the new marina south of town (or berth inside if it's operating), hitchhike to town; shop at the good open-air market and two good supermarkets; get your block ice and load it all in a taxi and go back to the boat. If you have difficulties in the market, look for a really dark person; he or she will probably turn out to be a Dominican, who will speak both French and English. They are universally most happy to help you. In Dominica, Prince Rupert Bay has nothing but the most essential things; but it does have an excellent fresh market and, amazingly, a superb bakery with a variety of breads. Roseau has a better-than-average supermarket, and fresh produce is abundant and inexpensive. This is a good island to really load up on fresh produce as it's much cheaper than in Martinique or Guadeloupe. Martinique is a !!;ood, picturesque, relatively easy but not cheap place to stock. Various stores in Fort-de-France offer free delivery so the technique is to go to the free delivery place, purchase from them as much as you can, finish your purchases in the various other stores and markets, and leave these at your free-delivery depot. In the
meantime you sit down in a sidewalk cafe, drink in hand, and watch the fabulous Martiniquaises (women) walk by-a great way to do the shopping. St. Lucia is also good, in that it has a good market-a large, adequate supermarket. One taxi load takes care of everything, and the prices are considerahly cheaper than on the French islands or Antigua. St. Vincent is a real problem with various socalled supermarkets that are considerably less than super, with absolutely no variety. Its saving grace is that the market is good. Throughout the Grenadines just forget about shopping except for emergency basics, and don't even rely on getting those. The shopping situation in Grenada, once excellent, went downhill during the last years of the Gairy administration and during the years of the PRA. It is now improving but unless the managers of Food Fair get their act together and start ordering the luxuries needed by charter yachts they will never reacquire the position Grenada held in the late sixties and early seventies as the best in the Islands. There is an excellent fresh food market. The one in the main square is a bit of a zoo with mass confilsion, but that of course is part of the West Indian scene, something not to be missed. A smaller market has been established in the northeast (;orner of the carenage, whieh makes it possible to do all your shopping errands (with the exception of ice) via dinghy if you're anchored in the main lagoon, or at the yacht club or GYS. Food Fair supermarket, two banks, cable and wireless, telephone company, main hardware stores, post office, and Customs are all right on the carenage, easier and quicker to reach via dinghy than by taxi. If you've come by taxi, it's much easier to get all your purchases back on board via water taxi than via land taxi. The latter will let you out at the inner end of the GYS dock, with approximately a quarter milc to walk carrying your burden. If you use the water taxi, everything is loaded in the boat and you climb on top with a magazine; a leisurely fiveminute ride takes you from the carenage to the lagoon, right alongside your boat-by far the most convenient shopping arrangement in the entire Eastern Caribbean. If you're at Spice Island, take a ten-minute bus ride to the main supermarket at Grande Anse, where with luck you'll find all you need. In the winter season you can purchase fresh produce at Spice Island, since a vegetable truck usually visits two or three times a week. It's a little more expensive than town, but cheaper than the taxi ride in.
Provisions and Services
In Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, shopping can be easy if the project is attacked correctly. The first thing to do early in the morning is to take a big ice bag and, with a crew member, walk east from the Customs pier to the main market. Buy all the food you can in the market and cart it back to the boat. Then go up to Independencc Square in a taxi (remember that the taxi prices in Trinidad are strictly negotiable) and have the taxi driver take you to the ncarcst Hi-Lo Supermarket (it's impossihle to stock a boat from the small stores in Portof-Spain). Do your shopping at Hi-La. En route back to the boat, swing by the ice plant for ice, which is dirt cheap. A good taxi driver will more than earn his keep. Throughout Venezuela shopping is easy and now incredibly cheap. Start early, buy all you can at the market (take some large ice bags), and what you can't get at the market you'll find at CaOa, the large supermarket chain fimnd throughout Venezuela. Be sure to take your English-Spanish dictionary as everything is labeled in Spanish and no one speaks English. Meat is all completely honed, so unless you're a first-class butcher or have a dictionary it's impossible to tell what type of meat or cut you are buying. On the ABC islands the fresh food is all imported from Venezuela, so buy what you can directly from the market hoats. The remainder comes from the States, so it's expensive; stocks vary but are usually acceptahle.
BERMUDA
Bermuda has good food, but there is certainly nothing cheap about it. There are hundreds of small farms. Warren Brown, Jr., son of the famous ocean skipper, is a Bermudian fanner who manages seventy small farms! In 1985 he supplied Iolaire with fresh fruit and vegetables, picked so carefully that we ate fresh produce all the way across the Atlantic-we were eating the last of our Bermudian tomatoes as we arrived in the Azores. Things are changing fast enough in Bermuda that I will not recommend any supermarket, but of course, Outerhridge's, a small supermarket in St. George's, is readily accessihle to the yachts moored alongside the wall or anchored off St. George's.
AZORES
All through the Azorian islands, f()od is excellent and incredibly cheap. However, you will not find familiar things on the shelves so be sure to have a Portuguese dictionary with you so you can figure
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out what you are buying. If you want Americantype staples, visit the American bases on Terceira and Santa Maria. If you are a reserve or retired military you can go on base and use the post exchange; there, needless to say, you get cheap prices. If you are not reserve or retired military you may be able to find someone on the base who will buy food fi)r you.
MADEIRAN ARCHIPELAGO
Very little shopping in Porto Santo; but certainly enough to keep the yacht going for a week or so until you arrive at Madeira where a big shopping can be done. Funchal was incredibly cheap in 1985 but again, be sure to carry a Portuguese dictionary, and don't expect to find many typical American staples.
CANARY ISLANDS
Some of the best shopping in the world is here, because the Canary Islands vacationers come from all over. You will find British, Scandinavian, German, Italian, and, of course, Spanish food. In all the major tourist centers the variety is exceptional. Except for the two eastern islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote, which are dry and desertlike, all the Canaries rise so high that they have water and pine trees on their cloud-covered peaks. There is plenty of produce grown on all except the eastern Canaries. On the island of Palma in 1985 we found the cheapest shopping I have ever encountered in my entire life.
CAPE VERDES
We found it possihle, but difficult, to buy fresh food in Sao Tiago and Sao Vicente; after the Canaries, the meager selections and high prices were a shock. Santo Antao, Brava, and Fogo, all being high, probably have better fresh food supplies than do the other Cape Verdian islands.
Produce On all the wet islands, such as Martinique, Guadeloupe, or St. Lucia in the Eastern Caribbean, and Madeira and the high islands of the Canaries in the Atlantic, fresh fruit can be had in abundance, more than you could possibly eat. But always taste the oranges beforehand; some of them are as sour
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as lemons-great in rum punches but not for much else. Salad ingredients and fresh vegetables abound. They may be different from the ones you're used to in the States. Christophine, a yellow vegetable with small prickers, is excellent when peeled, pitted, and boiled. Green papaya is prepared the same way. A green vegetable called pumpkin (which it resembles, but isn't) has a delicious taste, something like squash. Various types of squash are available, as are turnips, carrots, beans, eggplant, and plantain. The plantain looks like a large banana. It may be baked or boiled-very good with fishor fried as "chips" to go with drinks. Breadfruit is good baked, boiled, or fried. There's a wide assortment of potatoes sold under different names from island to island. Here is a list of native produce available in local markets:
FRUITS Banana Eat them fresh or hake with rum or in pancakes and bread. Available year-round. Custard Apple Pulpy, yellowish, and sweet. July to September. Golden Apple Yellow when ripe; eat fresh or make into jams or jellies. Granadilla or Passion Fruit Can be eaten straight all year round. Also makes a lovely punch: mix juice of the fruit, water, and condensed milk. Grapefruit Available most of the year. Guava Varies from round to pear-shaped. Flesh is white, pink, or slightly yellow, with many small seeds in the pulp. Eat fresh, or make into jams, jellies, nectar, or guava cheese. May to September. Mammee Apple Large (a good eight inches in diameter), with rough brown skin and one to four large seeds in the pulp. Eat fresh, or make into jams, jellies, nectar, or guava cheese. May to September. Mango There are various kinds, of which "Julie" and "Cylon" are the best, but watch the oils under the skin, which can cause a painful reaction in those whose skin is allergic. Makes chutney, jams, or good desserts. April to September. Orange Available most of the year. Papaya or Pawpaw Dual purpose: when green, cook as a vegetable; when ripened to orange color, eat fresh like a melon with lime juice. Pineapple July to January. Seville Orange Year round; juice or marmalade. Soursop Pulpy, white inside, with numerous seeds. A delightful drink when squeezed and mixed
with condensed milk; serve cold. Also, good flavor for ice cream. December to April. Sugar Apple Pulp is sweet with numerous seeds; eat fresh. July to December. Sapodilln Round or pear-shaped, brownish skin, brown-pink flesh, with flat shiny seeds and a sticky white secretion. Delicate, sweet flavor. January to May. Mandarin or Tangerine The familiar citrus fruit. Watermelon Two kinds: the US type, shaped like an American football, or the Venezuelan type, round like a soccer ball.
VEGETABLES Avocado June to November Bluggoe Thick, short, green; looks similar to plantain. Slice thin and fry in deep fat. Breadfruit Round and green, about ten inches in diameter. Boil and mash, add seasoning, one egg, some butter, black pepper, and salt; shape into balls, dip in bread crumbs, and fry. Very tasty. Calalu The large green leaves of the dasheen plant. Cook and serve like spinach, or use as soup base. Christophine Light green, about five inches long, pear-shaped, and wrinkled; somewhat like English marrow, but better. Delicious when cut up, boiled briefly, and served with salt, pepper, and butter. Corn September to December. Eggplant or Aubergine Beautiful dark purple. Slice, dip in egg and bread crumbs, salt lightly, and fry. Lettuce Leaf type. To store island lettuce for any amount of time is difficult, but it can be done. One method is to keep it in a bowl with very little water (too much will rot it); or put it in a paper bag and sprinkle in a little water, then store it in the ice box, a method which has given me great success. I've even known it to be placed in damp earth and kept growing. Okra Long, horn-shaped, fibrous on the outside. Can be eaten boiled or as an ingredient in soups such as calalu. Pigeon Pea Makes a delicious soup and can be served as side dish or used in beef stew. December to March. Plantain Similar to banana but not as sweet, and longer, with pointed ends. Available yearround. Potato Sweet, similar to American yam. Yearround. Pumpkin or Squash Different from North
Provisions and Services American pumpkin with yellow flesh. Cook and eat as vegetable, or make into a delicious soup. Tomato Year-round.
SPICES
A vast assortment of spices can be found in the Islands. Included are bay leaf, black pepper, cinnamon, cloves, ginger, mace, nutmeg, saffron, sapote (or the tonka bean, which can be used in place of vanilla), and arrowroot (found only on St. Vincent).
Spirits BOOZE
In the Eastern Caribbean liquor varies drastically in price and quality. The extremes in price are on the low side in the US Virgin Islands, St. Martin, and St. Barts, which are basically free ports where the luxuries of life are cheap and the necessities expensive. At the other end of the scale is Venezuela, where a bottle of scotch costs anywhere from $25 to $30. The rest of the Caribbean varies from island to island, but in almost all cases over-the-counter prices are considerably cheaper than in the States, Canada, or Europe. And in most islands a yacht just before leaving can take on duty-free liquor in bond-not to be opened until after leaving the island. The duty-free price usually brings it down to scale with the US Virgins, St. Martin, and St. Barts. The one disadvantage of buying liquor exbond is that it can be bought only in full cases; you could get overloaded with scotch and not have enough rum, and it's a lot of work to get through a case of brandy. Liquor used to be expensive in Antigua, as on all the British islands, due to heavy excise tax. Antigua, with its many beaches, coves, harbors, and inlets, was an ideal place for smuggling, and it was just a matter of time before the government was spending more money paying agents to chase the smugglers than it was collecting in excise tax. Finally, some sharp accountant suggested that the tax be reduced so that smuggling would no longer be profitable. Sure enough, the smuggling died out, the extra tax men were put out of work, the government saved money, and Antigua is now an excellent place to stock up on hard liquors. Another island oddity: liquor in Antigua is cheaper duty paid in town than tax free at the airport. Just the same, there's a substantial difference among stores,
so shop around a bit. (Watch out for the soft drinks. That's where the stores really make their money. These are all imported from the States and are outrageously expensive. A boatload of thirsty children will put you in the poorhouse.) Customs officers in almost all the islands are fairly liberal about booze on board. When you enter a place you usually fill in a list of high-duty stores, i.e., the amount of liquor and tobacco on board; but Customs usually doesn't insist on sealing them up. They don't object to your having large quantities on hoard as long as you don't take any ashore to sell or give to friends. As for what to drink, I recommend you change your northern cocktail hahits, as strong straight drinks in the midday sun when one needs a high liquid intake is a fine way to wipe out the rest of the day. Better to switch to long drinks, and better yet to get the taste of the Islands by trying rum. It is, of course, historically the drink of the Caribbean, being made from sugar and molasses; it's also the area's cheapest liquor. Local rums vary dramatically from place to place. White and light, dark and smooth, black and heavy, home made and raw. In Carriaco, for instance, there's tbe famous Jack Iron, "a strong white rum," locally and illegally hrewed. You test Jack Iron by dropping an ice cube into a glass of it: if the ice cube floats the rum is no good, but if it sinks to the bottom then it's good Jack Iron at about 190 proof. You drink it by the shot, followed hy a glass of water. Drinking Jack Iron is about like pouring kerosene down your throat and then being hit on the head with a ball-peen hammer. During my first few years in St. Thomas, the Riise liquor store on Front Street used to sell what they call "Bito" rum, a St. Croix rum that was only three years old, rather than the usual six. You took your own gallon jug, filled it from the large vat, and paid 75 cents for it. In those days the poor charter skippers and yachting bums couldn't afford to drink heer-it was more expensive than "Bito." Needless to say there are more civilized and more comfortable ways to drink rum. The Caribbean standard-run drink is rum, ice, and water, with just a touch of fresh lime juice-fantastic. Of course, you can drink it with tonic, ginger ale, and all kinds of juices. There are probably as many variations of rum punch as there are rum drinkers; the piiia colada-white rum, coconut milk, and pineapple-has become a great favorite of visitors. In Martinique they drink their rum in a petit punch (pronounced "ptti pawnsh"), either punch vieux or punch blanc, depending on whether it's
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide made with dark or white rum. The process is simple: a group of Frenchmen arrive at a bar, shake hands all round, kiss each other on both cheeks, sit down around a table, and signal for a waitress, who comes over with a tray, a rum bottle, a bottle of iced water, a bowl of ice, a bottle of sugar syrup, and a dish of sliced limes. Each drinker pours into a short glass a little rum, a little sugar, ice, lime, and depending on how strong he is, one or two dashes of water. The French drink two, three, four, six punches at a sitting and can still walk a straight line on the way out. The Puerto Ricans of course insist that Don Q is the only rum to drink, and every boat that arrives from Puerto Rico for Antigua Race Week is always well loaded with Don Q, as they wouldn't be caught dead drinking Mount Gay Eclipse. Now Bacardi, the refugee Cuban family who made rum of the same name in Cuba; is operating a large and successful distillery in Puerto Rico. Bacardi is giving the traditional Don Q a run for its money. In the us Virgin Islands the popular drink is "Cruzan White," an almost-white, very smooth, and light rum. The British Virgin Islands used to have numerous illegal stills that made rum of extremely dubious quality. Now, however, a bottling plant has commenced bottling the old black navy rum. Some people like their rum strong, black, and heavy, but I regard that as a fast way to meet your maker (or the guy downstairs) in a hurry. Perhaps the standard rum for those who take their drinking seriously is Mount Gay's mediumdark Eclipse Bay brand. But there are dozens of others, varying from dark, sweet Demerara to white, dry "grappa," and each has its own Havor and adherents. Many yachtsmen make a point of buying a bottle of the local rum at each island and then make sure it's empty before they get to the next one. They claim it's the only way to get the real Island Havor. In any case, I strongly suggest you kick the martini or scotch-rocks habit when you arrive, and turn on to the local elixir. In Venezuela they make their own gin, vodka, and rum, and they're not bad. However, they make a fake scotch that leaves a bit to be desired in taste and is said to give you a god-awful hangover. Bermuda has long been known to American yachtsmen as a place to stock up on liquor, and indeed, its prices are good compared to stateside. But it's still more expensive than the Eastern Caribbean, especially St. Barts and St. Martin; so
if you're heading north, I advise stocking up before heading to Bermuda.
WINE
Wine can be purchased throughout the Islands. Again, it can be purchased in bond, and wine prices on the individual islands can vary drastically, but it goes without saying that Martinique, Guadeloupe, St. Martin, and St. Barts are by far the cheapest. In St. Barts you can buy very good vin ordinaire in five-liter plastic jugs, but it has a very definite shelf life, so I recommend you open each jug and taste it when you buy it, otherwise you may discover when you're far away from st. Barts that you have five liters of straight vinegar. The top charter skippers tell me that St. Martin is rapidly replacing St. Barts as the best wine stop. St. Martin seems to have a better stock, stored in more favorable conditions than St. Barts. In Martinique and Guadeloupe vin ordinairered, white, or ros~an be bought in bottles. It may not be the greatest wine but it is still very nice table wine, a pleasant variation from continental beer. If you buy glass jugs of wine wrapped in straw, be sure to spray them well with bug spray before taking them on board, or else immerse them in salt water for four or five hours and then spray the tops. (Years ago in St. Thomas we made a pretty good thing of those jugs. We bought them from French cattle schooners at St. Croix, drank the wine, and then took the straw covering off the bottle; we sold the bottles to a charter party, usually for more than we paid in the first place.) Wine in Bermuda will certainly be cheaper than in the States but again, not as cheap as it is in the lower islands. The Azores, Madeiran Archipelago, and Canaries have their own local wines; some people love it, others don't. Up to you. In the Cape Verdes there is one local winery on the island of Fogo, run by descendants of refugees from the French Revolution (see pages 193-94).
BEER
I take beer seriously, and have at times been referred to as Don "Heineken" Street. Purchasing beer, if you're a connoisseur, is always a bit of a problem in the Eastern Caribbean. Most American beer tastes like dishwater to me, and aluminum cans will not survive in a wooden boat's bilge, but
Provisions and Services canned beer cools down faster than bottled beer. The Europeans make excellent beer but don't know how to can it, so if you can't get it in bottles, don't buy it. Carlsberg bottles are of thin glass and cool down rapidly, but if stowed loosely in lockers where they can roll around they sometimes explode. My personal preference is Heineken, in the distinctive ten-ounce green bottles, known ubiquitau sly as "greenies." Now that Heineken has started bottling in St. Lucia and Trinidad, the only way to get good true Dutch Heineken (and there is a taste difference) is to go to St. Barts, St. Martin, Martinique, or Guadeloupe-a good excuse to visit nice islands. We have a standard order, twenty cases, and the price is right. Carib, the local brew, I personally feel should be left in the bottle (also, they are deposit bottles, and who likes to lug around cartons of empty bottles to feed the cockroaches?). Antigua offers Red Stripe; Martinique and Guadeloupe have Lorraine-both are drinkable beers but I'll stick to Heineken. In Venezuela Polar seems to be the major brandnot the world's greatest but at $3 for a case of twenty-four cans one does not complain. Be sure to serve it ice-cold. All the other island groups have expensive imported beer plus local brews that vary drastically in quality and taste.
Ice CARIBBEAN
Obtaining ice in many areas of the Lesser Antilles used to be a major project. Now ice can be obtained anywhere, but often the price will make you wonder if it's worth it. For this reason anyone preparing for the Caribbean is well advised to alter his icebox so that it's a proper one-that is, one that will hold ice for a minimium of fourteen days in the tropics and three weeks up north. (To achieve this, read The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 1, pp. 503-6, and vol. 2, pp. 473-85, and pages 31-32 of this volume.) I'd even go to 6 inches of insulation instead of 4 inches. Trying to load an icebox with ice cubes is a long, frustrating, useless, and expensive procedure. The small IS-pound blocks found many places are just one step better than cube ice: the time to load, the frustrations, the rapid melting, and expense are still there, just to a lesser degree. Block ice, in 50to lOO-pound chunks, is the way to go. Make sure you have heavy canvas or Dacron bags with good
strong handles, and enough bags so that you can carry an entire filling of the icebox in one load. Shaved ice melts even faster than cube ice, but is sometimes a worthwhile alternative as shaved ice (when available) is usually dirt cheap. One dodge we've used is to load our bags with shaved ice, take them to a friendly hotel with a walk-in deep freeze, and leave them there overnight: presto, 200 pounds of good hard ice.
VENEZUELA
Cube ice is available throughout Venezuela-when the exchange rate is good, it is worthwhile loading up on good hard cube ice rather than wasting the time and effort to get a taxi to the ice plant. In Venezuela you must be careful when ordering quantities of ice. I was most embarrassed years ago; I was standing with Dtto Costillo at the Sinclair Club and asked the taxi driver, Robert, to get me two blocks of ice. He asked, "Pequena or grande?" I said, "Grande." He looked incredulous and said, "Grande?" Duo said, "Are you sure?" I firmly stated, "Look, I have a big icebox [it holds 200 pounds] and I'll need two grande blocks." Otto tried to argue with me, but I refused to listen and sent the taxi driver off with the money. You can imagine my chagrin when an hour later the taxi drove into the club with its front wheels sticking up in the air and with two grande blocks of ice in the trunk that each weighed 100 kilos (220 pounds). I had 440 pounds of ice staring me in the eye, with nothing to do with 230 pounds of it except dump it into the harborl
BERMUDA
Ice has always been a major problem in Bermuda; someone should run an ice plant in St. George's from April through November when Bermuda is inundated with visiting yachtsmen. Now the only way to get ice is to persuade Duterbridge or some other supermarket to freeze ice for you in buckets; you get all sorts of ice in odd shapes but it's ice.
CAPE VERDES
On Ilha do Sal at Baixa de Palmeiria we were told to make ice in buckets in the lobster deep freeze. In Praia, Santiago, ice is extremely scarce. At Mindelo, Sao Vicente, we put shaved ice in the freezer overnight, which gave us hard ice.
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CANARIES
We found shaved ice practically everywhere; the only place we found block ice was in Los Cristianos on Tenerife, at a supermarket, wholesale division, under the post office. Good, and cheap.
MADEIRA
The only hope for ice when we were there in 1985 was Funchal, where a spanking new ice plant was supposed to turn out tons of block ice. But someone had screwed up the computer, and nothing was coming out. We were assured all would be well soon.
AZORES
On Flores, see Augustino, the man in charge of everything, who will supply you with block ice. In Horta, Faial, you can get shaved ice free, but we found no hlock ice. At Punta del Gada on San Miguel, you go to the beer factory and get good block ice cheap.
SPAIN
I recommend stopping at Vigo, where among other good things, block ice is available and cheap.
IRELAND AND ENGLAND
Wherever you find fishermen you'll probably find plants that will give you all the shaved ice you need for free. Then find a deep freeze for it.
Water CARIBBEAN
Water is readily available at reasonable prices in Puerto Rico and St. Thomas. It's available but extremely expensive in the dry British Virgins. At St. Martin and st. Barts it's available but expensive at the marinas and commercial docks. Forget about water in Anguilla. St. Kitts, Nevis, Statia, and Saba all have plenty of water, but there is extreme difficulty in getting alongside to load it. The situation varies in Antigua depending on the weather: sometimes the cisterns are overflowing, sometimes water is very hard to come by. Water is piped to English Harbour, but the power supply is erratic and pumping points are scarce. You may well have to wait a couple of days in the
busy season to fill your tanks. The supply could he improved if all the buildings at English Harbour had gutters leading to cisterns. The last time I was there at least 30 percent of the roofs were unguttered; a tremendous amount of water in the wet season was being wasted for the price of a few gutters. Water is ample and cheap in Martinique and Guadeloupe. Dominica has more than it knows what to do with, but the surge alongside the dock will probably make it impossible to obtain. St. Lucia has water at all marinas. In St. Vincent it's available but hard to get on board at Kingston because of the surge. CSY at the Blue Lagoon has water but depth in the channel is limited. See Volume III for further information. You can get water at the Aquatic Cluh in the slot between Youngs Island and the mainland, but it can be tricky. Drop an anchor off the dock (the holding isn't good) and put a stern line to the dock, followed by a hose. You'll need about 150 feet. Then hope the anchor doesn't drag just as you get hooked up. Bequia Slipway sells water at a hefty price. Again, one wonders why the schooner that goes back and forth every day doesn't fit a tank that could easily be filled in Kingston and pumped out into Bequia's cisterns. Within the Grenadines you can forget about taking on water. In Grenada it would be no problem, except that the less-than-efficient water department often cuts off the supply to Spice Island Charters, Grenada Yacht Services, and the yacht club, but never all at the same time. If the water is off, move on to another source. Water is no problem in Trinidad, once you get alongside a dock. The same is true throughout Venezuela, but not in Aruba, Bonaire, and Curac;ao, where it's available for a price at the marinas only.
BERMUDA
Expensive, but may be had at the fuel jetty in St. George's, or the marina there at the Dinghy and Sports Club; and of course at any of the marinas in Hamilton.
AZORES
Throughout the Azores there are tons of water but getting alongside to take it on can be difficult because there will usually be commercial fishermen there; they take precedence, of course.
Provisions and Services MADEIRA
Water is plentiful and cheap except in dry Porto Santo.
CANARIES
Difficult to obtain, not too good, and expensive in the easternmost dry islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote, but available in all the other Canary Islands. In Puerto Rico, though, (and probably along the whole stretch from Pasitos Blancos to Mogan) the water is barely drinkable and certainly not drinkable on a long-term basis-a number of transatlantic yachts have ended up with very sick crews after loading Puerto Rican water. If you leave from Puerto Rico, fill your tanks but carry enough good water in plastic jugs to provide all the drinking water you would need for the trip over. Better still, sail over to Los Cristianos, Palma, or Gomera and load up with excellent water there.
CAPE VERDES
Water is definitely a problem here. In Ilha Sal you carry 5-gallon jugs from the cistern, which is filled by a distillation unit. On Maio and Boa Vista I think the situation would be the same. In Sao Tiago we were told not to drink the water as much of it is contaminated (we lucked out by obtaining water from a US Navy frigate that was there on a goodwill tour). At Mindelo distilled water can be purchased at the dock from the dock master; it's not very expensive but a little bit of a hassle to get it. Other boats have reported buying it from ships at the dock. Fogo and Brava are both high enough so there should be plenty of water but I don't know how well it is piped.
Laundry CARIBBEAN
Laundry is always a problem for cruising yachtsmen, and especially so in the Eastern Caribbean, where if you're not careful you may well discover that your laundry bill is higher than the bill to buy the clothes in the first place. On the other hand, you don't need to wear much while sailing in the Caribbean, and you can keep laundry to a minimum. Many men (this author included) long ago discovered that the Tahitian pareu is cooler and more comfortable than a pair of shorts. Many women get by well with a few
bikinis, a few blouses, and a few pareus that can be tied to make dresses or skirts. In other words, keep your clothing needs to a minimum; take garments that don't have to be ironed; try to do as much of your own laundry as possible, either on board the boat or in the shower; and you'll have a chance of winning the battle. To minimize the amount of fresh water used in washing clothes on board the boat, wash clothes in salt water and detergent, hang them on the lifeline to dry, and hope for a rain squall to come along and rinse them. If not, when they're dry or almost dry, rinse the clothes in fresh water to remove the salt. Puerto Rico, St. Thomas, St. Croix, and Road Town, Tortola, all have laundromats. Thus laundry should be no problem, except of course when the machines are full of your clothes, half-washed and the power goes off, or the water goes off, or the machine breaks down. You can't win them all. You can finally get clean clothes in the AnguillaSt. Martin-St. Barts area without going out to buy them because there is now a laundromat at Bobbie's Marina in St. Barts. This is the only reasonable laundry stop before English Harbour, Antigua, where you'll find Mrs. Malone sitting at the south side of the mast shed. Deliver your laundry directly to her and have her wash and dry it; she folds it so beautifully it looks ironed. You won't regret itshe's been taking care of the serious yacht skippers for the past thirty years. For those who wish to do their own laundry, there are public wash basins up behind the admiral's house. But take your own sink plug as plugs often go missing. There is also Sam and Dave's Laundromat in English Harbour village, where they wash the clothes well, fast, and cheap, and dry them in a dryer, so if it is raining you still get dry clothes. But they seem to come back so wrinkled it looks like someone has been trying to tie knots in them. Hence we still prefer Mrs. Malone. In Crabbs Marina, Antigua, there is a laundromat where new, heavy-duty commercial machines were installed in mid-1987. South from English Harbour the next reliable laundry stop is Rodney Bay, Stevens Yacht Marina, St. Lucia, again with commercial machines. Martinique does have a commercial laundry, but when you leave the laundry the price is one figure and when you go to pick it up the cost has tripled or quadrupled. We've been stung twice. South of St. Lucia there is to my knowledge no reliable, affordable laundry facility until you reach Grenada. In Grenada, the service is great at Spice Island
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Charters, where it is washed and dried rapidly, cheertully, and at the right price. Once again, laundry is one of the services that CYS, "the full service marina," does not provide. Watch out for the laundry ladies in the lagoon and small boys soliciting for same; check with local yachtsmen before giving the laundry to anyone. In Trinidad and Venezuela find a laundromat; in both places we have had laundry done at a good price. In Aruba, Bonaire, and Cura~ao, go dirty or buy new clothes.
erratic in the extreme, voltage may be well below the stated standard. Moored at the end of a dock, you may find the voltage as much as 40 percent below what it's cracked up to be. If you're saddled with a great deal of electrical equipment, my advice is to install a second generator.
BERMUDA
There is no power alongside in Hamilton, except perhaps for some of the watertront hotels. In St. Ceorge's the Dinghy Club marina has power, but it is small and space is seldom available.
BERMUDA
Laundry used to be more expensive than new clothes here, but now, happily, there are a number of laundromats.
AZORES
The only place where dockside electricity is available is at the new marina in Horta; European system-440, 220 single-phase.
AZORES
Except for Horta, the laundry situation in the Azores is bad. Most laundry women seemed to want more pay for a day's work than a skilled shipwright. On Flores we were so badly overcharged that Augustino told us to offer her onefourth the asking price and if that didn't work to tell the police. So negotiate a price beforehand, and expect to get the laundry back semidry.
MADEIRA
Power is available dockside at the marina, but it comes via the strangest-shaped plugs I've ever seen. Everyone seemed to be circumventing these plugs with two wires and a matchstick. I wonder how many e1ectrocutions this has produced.
CANARIES MADEIRA
We found a laundromat with reasonable prices.
Electricity-220 volts-is available at all yacht marinas, but not in the commercial harbors or small fishing ports.
CANARIES
Laundromats are available in all the large towns, but they may be hard to find. In Los Cristianos, Tenerife, we tracked one down in the back of the Dutch butcher shop. We found nothing in Comera.
Electricity CARIBBEAN
Dockside electricity is at best a sometime thing throughout the area. On the French and British islands the current is either 440-volt two-phase or 220-volt single-phase. For American boats a transformer is needed to step it down to llO-volt singlephase. In the US islands it's usually 220-volt doublephase to llO-volt single-phase. These estimations may be too optimistic. Island power plants being
CAPE VERDES
No dockside electricity.
Fuel For most yachts, fuel is available alongside at fueling piers in almost every island in the Eastern Caribbean and at the numerous fueling points in Venezuela and the ABC islands. The options are somewhat limited for boats drawing more than 7 feet, but even so fuel is never a serious problem. Thus I will list only the islands where fuel is not readily available. Even where fuel is listed as not easily available, it can still be obtained at the main commercial dock via tanker truck. When loading fuel from a commercial dock, remember that the docks are just that-the pilings are unfendered, and in fact
Provisions and Services will probably be extremely rough and have spikes sticking out ready to pierce the topsides of the unprepared yacht. Thus, have not only a good supply of large fenders handy, but also fender boards to put between the fenders and the piling. Further, there's usually a surge, so you should drop a breastingout anchor to hold the yacht away from the dock. You are advised not to go alongside to wait, but rather to stand off until the tanker truck comes to the dock. Otherwise you may waste half a nerve-wracking day fending off when you could have been anchored off, relaxing and drinking beer under the awning. Fuel is not readily available on the following islands: Anguilla, St. Barts, Statia, Saba, St. Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, Dominica, and Barbuda. Costs vary, being cheapest in Venezuela. If you can convince Customs that you are going to use the fuel in Venezuela, you can buy it at an incredibly low domestic price. However, if they decide you are using the fuel outside of Venezuelan waters-the normal assumption with a foreignregistered boat-you pay the world price for fuel and go through a ton of paperwork. The difference in price can be such that Venezuelan fishing trawlers have been known to load up with fuel, go to the Eastern Caribbean Islands, drop anchor, and sell their extra fuel to the local boats, governments, power plants. After sitting at anchor, relaxing and having a good time for about three weeks, they'd go back to Venezuela and say, "Oh well, the fishing was very poor." They made a lot more money selling fuel than they would have made fishing. The easiest method for the average sail boat cruising in Venezuela is to go to the local petrol station with 5-gallon jerry cans and buy fuel in 10or 20-gallon increments; no one seems to mind.
ATLANTIC ISLAND GROUPS
If you are willing to fight paperwork and if you are going to use the fuel outside of the island groups it is possible to buy duty-free fuel in Bermuda, the Azores, Madeira, and the Canaries, which will save considerably on the cost of fuel.
Stove Fuel Alcohol-methylated spirits to the English, alcohol rrwtilico to the Spanish, alcool rrwtilo to the Portuguese-in the Atlantic Islands can be obtained at pharmacies, chemists, or drugstores (pick your
own terms). In the Eastern Caribbean stove alcohol can sometimes be bought (expensively) at marine supply stores. Alternately, 190-proof grain alcohol can usually be found at the local rum distillery, usually at a cheaper price than imported stove alcohol. The 190-proof grain alcohol works fine in the stove, and if you run short of gin or vodka you can use it to make a martini that really packs a punch! Kerosene-lamp oil or paraffin to the English, petr6leom to the Spanish, and petr61eo to the Portuguese-in the Atlantic Islands is available at gas (petrol) stations. In the Eastern Caribbean it is the same, except in the US and British Virgin Islands, where it is difficult to obtain and of poor quality. Many people use mineral spirits instead, but check page 27 in "Preparations" for warning about mineral spirits. Calor gas is available in some of the Atlantic Islands but is unavailable in the western side of the Atlantic. Switch to propane. Camp gas is obtainable on some of the Atlantic Islands, but on the western side of the Atlantic it is basically unobtainable, except perhaps in Martinique and Guadeloupe. Propane is obtainable virtually worldwide, and on all the major Atlantic Islands. Be prepared to carry your bottles to the bottling plant, or crossconnect and fill direct from another bottle (see page 27 in "Preparations" for further information on this subject). One warning: in Trinidad and Tortola, British Virgin Islands, aluminum gas bottles can be filled only with extreme difficulty.
Marine Supplies This is obviously an important subject for yachts spending any length of time in the Caribbean, and like everything else there, the situation varies considerably from place to place and from season to season. Some suppliers are better than others, but no one is equipped to answer all your needs. The list that follows will give you some specifics, but there are a few generalities you should know. In Puerto Rico, with the aid of a phone directory and an English-speakinll; taxi driver hired for the day, you can find almost anything in the way of engine, electrical, and electronic parts, and basic materials such as bronze or stainless rods, bearings, and the like. But the search must be done in person, face-to-face; letters, cables, and phone calls are useless. In general there is an excellent selection of
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marine supplies to be found in the St. Thomas/ Tortola area. Island Water World in St. Martin has a vast stock of marine supplies and happily, as of the fall of 1986, they have set up a rigging loft. Robbie Ferron's new Budget Marine shop has a rapidly expanding stock. Robbie specializes in items not carried by Island Water World. Unfortunately, the good stock of marine supplies that Lu-Lu Magras formerly carried in St. Barts has given way to items that the tourists are snapping up faster than he can order; hence previous comments about Lu-Lu's excellent marine supply store are no longer true. In Antigua the Antigua Slipway has a tremendous stock of marine supplies, particularly for boats 45 feet and over. Carib Marine is also well stocked, and hetween them, practically anything the average yachtsman would need is available. David Simmonds (at Antigua Slipway) has organized an excellent method of express delivery service from the Miami area; he can have practically anything delivered to Antigua in forty-eight to seventy-two hours. Electro-Nautic has a good stock of marine supplies in Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe, located in town and at Marina Bas du Fort. Martinique, despite the massive concentration of yachts there, has suprisingly little in the way of marine supplies. Ship Shop has some stock, and the island has a good supply of paint. In St. Lucia, Rodney Bay Marina claims it is going to build a first -class marine chandlery. Seeing is believing! The marine supply situation in Bequia has deteriorated drastically since Ross Lulley gave up his original shop, which was known the length and breath of the Caribbean and even out into the Pacific as the "Knife Shop." Ross still runs a small fishing shop up on the hill, and it's very much worth a visit. Ross has been in the Islands since 1948, and is a man of homespun humor and to-thepoint philosophy. Spice Island Marine in Grenada is under new management who promise to build up a good stock of marine supplies. Let's hope so. One very good deal at Spice Island Marine is on marine paints, especially bottom paints, which they can sell duty free, which considerably reduces the cost. Bermuda is a good place for yacht gear, but that's about it for the Atlantic Island groups. In the Azores, Canaries, Madeira, and the Cape Verdes, marine supplies are strictly for the commercial fishermen; you'll not find yacht gear, but if you
speak the language and do some searching you can get just about anything fixed. The same goes for Venezuela. Incidentally, good oars and oarlocks always seem to be hard to find. Take your own extras. What follows is a list of the major marine suppliers in the Eastern Caribbean.
PUERTO RICO
Skipper Shop Santa Isidra Shopping Center, 987 Rd. Km 1.3, Fajardo & Marina Puerto Chico. Tel. 809-863-5530. Miramar Marine Fdez. Juncos 619, Miramar. Tel. 722-0976 or 721-1662. San Juan Fishing Charters Stop 9%, Fernandez Juncos Avenue, San Juan. Tel. 723-0415 or 7250139. Marine Mart Paseo Covadonga No. 50, San Juan. Tel. (809) 723-2639 or (809) 723-4756. lsleta Marina Puerto Real, Fajardo. Tel. (809) 745-8696/8697/8698. TechnomarinelFajardo Marine 473 Union St., Fajardo Playa. Tel (809) 863-0614. Adventure Marine Center Villa Marina Shopping Center, Fajardo. Tel. 863-6550.
US AND BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
For up-to-date information on US and BVI marine directory, check the latest issue of Caribbean Boating.
ST. THOMAS
Island Marine Supply Four stores; Bosuns Locker, Yacht Haven. Tel (809) 774-0080; Island Marine Supply, Sub Base, St. Thomas; Antilles Yachting Services, Lagoon Area, St. Thomas. Tel. (809) 7756789; St. Croix Marine and Development, Christiansted, St. Croix. Anchor Marine Supply Box 8740, Red Hook, St. Thomas. Tel. (809) 774-8930. The Marine Warehouse (Skip Michel) Vitraco Park, St. Thomas. (809) 774-2667. A new operation that looks good. Sea Chest Sub Base Road, opposite Ship 'n Shore. Good paint and epoxy glue. Quarter71UlSter Frenchtown Mall. Tel. (809) 7742E77. Mainly engine parts, fixtures, etc. Sailors' World Two stores: one at Long Bay Shopping Center and one at Sub Base called Shoreline Marine. Tel. (809) 774-6160.
Provisions and Services Lighthouse Marine Across from Yacht Haven, Long Bay Road. Tel. (809) 774-4379.
TORTOLA
Richardson Rigging Road Town, between Fort Burt and town. Rigging and marine supplies. Call any time (twenty-four-hour service). Tel. 494-2739. Golden Hind Golden Hind Slipway, Road Town, on the north side of Road Town Harbour. Part of Tortola Yacht Services. Island Marine Supply Fort Burt Marina. Nanny Cay Marina Nanny Cay. Tel. (809) 4942512. Village Cay Marina Village Cay, Road Town.
269
Crabbs PO Box 271, st. John's. Tel. (809) 4632113. GUADELOUPE
Electra Nautic Henri Martin, 23 rue Gospail BA 385, 97162 Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-18-35; Telex: 129-775GL. Fabulous stock of marine supplies. Can be reached by dinghy at the dock east of the sugar factory. Assistant manager Claude French speaks good English. Distributes Street's Guides and Imray-Iolaire charts. Also at Marina Bas du Fort, Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-99-39. Good stock of marine supplies, clothing, stock charts, Street's Guides. MARTINIQUE
VIRGIN GORDA
Virgin Gonia Virgin Gorda Yacht Harbor.
ST. MARTIN (DUTCH)
Island Water World Box 234, Simson Lagoon, Philipsburg. Bobbie's Marina Box 383, Philipsburg. Tel. 2366. Chesterfield's Marina Philipsburg. Budget Marine Robbie Ferron, Box 434, Philipsburg. Tel. 2-2068. Distributor of Street's Guides and the Imray-Iolaire charts; excellent stock of marine supplies. ST. MARTIN (FRENCH)
Team Number I Box 231, Marigot.
ST. BARTS
Lu-Lu's Marine Gustavia, St. Barthelemy 97133. Tel. 276-274. Alma Run by Lu-Lu's brother; building supplies but also tools and many things useful to yachts, behind the main commercial dock in Anse Public.
Ship Shop 6 rue Joseph Compere, Fort-de-France. Tel. 71-43-40 or 72-59-54; Telex: 019302. They stock French charts of Caribbean and Pacific Ocean, Street's Guides, and Imray-Iolaire charts. Some staff speak English. SCIM 7 rue Francois Arogo, Fort-de-France. Spearfishing gear and marine supplies. Volvo Penta 37 rue Jacques Cozotte, Fort-deFrance. Tel. 71-35-28. Paul Parfait, the manager, speaks good English. Beside being a Volvo Penta agent, he also has a good stock of general marine supplies. Rene Plissonneran 1.2 km Route de Sainte Therese. Tel. 71-89-29. General marine supplies agent. Agent for Zodiac, Johnson, OMC. Camie Store in town at the dry dock-Martinique Dry Dock, Basin du Radoub, Fort-de-France. Tel. 72-00-82. Good stock of paint and supplies for inflatables. Captain Shop Marina Pointe du Bout, 97229 Trois ilets, Martinique. Tel. 66-06-77. Stocks 11 charts and Street's Guides. Accastillage Diffusion 109 rue Ernest-Deproge, 97200 Fort de France, Martinique. Tel. 70-26-69. ST. LUCIA
ANTIGUA
Carib Marine English Harbour. Tel. (809) 4631060. Good supply of line, canvas, Dacron, and marine supplies. Antigua Slipway English Harbour (mailing address: PO Box 576, St. John's. Tel. (809) 4631056; Cable: Slipway). Heavy gear for boats 45feet and up plus tools, drills, cold chisels, caulking irons, etc.
St. Lucia Marine Services Vigie Cove. Supply situation poor; small stock of marine supplies. Rodney Bay Marina Rodney Bay, St. Lucia. As of 1987 little stock hut they plan to build up stock to become a major chandlery. ST. VINCENT
Nothing except the CSY charter operations, which will help out in a real emergency.
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Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
BEQUIA
AZORES
Lulley's Admiralty Bay. Fantastic on fishing gear, knives, good cold beer, view, and stories by Ross Lulley. Take a taxi or walk up the hill from Princess Margaret Beach. Other places open and close with such frequency that they are not reported here.
Very little available and that only in Horta. Check at Cafe Sport or with Bob Silverman, the sail repairer, at 23459.
MADEIRA
Nothing. GRENADA
Claude's % Grenada Yacht Services, St. George's. Tel. 2883. Fair stock, but if he doesn't have it, he'll order from anywhere in the world. One of the few people who still stocks Vivitex preshrunk canvas. Until GYS is bought out and completely rebuilt, there is just not enough business to support a really good marine store here. Spice Island Charters L'Anse aux Epines (Prickly Bay). Petit paint agent. As of 1987 in the process of expanding stocks.
CANARIES
Very little-big fishing boat suppliers. Las Palmas. Nauti-Sport Barcelona 3. Tel. 24 08 30. General chandlery, courtesy flags for Caribbean, automatic pilots, some instruments. Alcorde 1 Rejon 67. Tel. 273200 or 273900. The largest chandlery in the Canaries; also has branches in Tenerife, Lanzarote, and Fuerteventura.
Life Rafts TRINIDAD
ThoTTUls Peak and Co. Mucuropo Road, Port-ofSpain (on the road out of town toward Tugs and Lighters). Rapidly expanding stock.
COASTAL VENEZUELA
CUTTUlna Ask at the yacht marina for the location of marine supply stores. Puerto La Cruzl Barcelona Try all the marinas; poor but improving. Carenero Senor Domingo is reputed to have a good stock of miscellaneous bits and pieces. Margarita The Frenchman in Valle del Spiritu Santa. Walk west through the churchyard, take first right (north), look for blue warehouse door or ask for the "Frenchman."
CARACAS AREA
Gran Prix Nautica El Cazador, Caracas. Tel. 3140-39 or 31-21-17. Tecnica de Combustion Marina Carabellada. Commercial AUtOTTUltic Marcano Guera Avenida Soublette no. 151, La Guaira. Tel. 22207.
BERMUDA
Various. Check Bermuda Guide.
Prospects for buying, repairing, and certifying life rafts have improved immensely in the Caribbean and the Canaries. There are a number of good, small outfits that will let you be there when they check your raft, and who will do customized repacking. (One repacker told me of a customer who insisted on including three copies of Penthouse among the emergency stores.) Obviously, life rafts should be checked periodically. Whether it's every year or every two years depends on whether it is in a hard pack or soft, whether it's natural or synthetic rubber, on its age, and the conditions it's been exposed to. Check with one of the following experts. (And see the entry for life rafts on p. 29 in Chapter 2, "Preparations. ") However, one must remember that in the land of the blind, the one-eyed are kings. One wonders how expert the experts are. It is said "ex" is the unknown quantity, the "spert" a drip under pressure. I say this as Paul Adamswaithe, owner of Stormy Weather, with whom we sailed the Channel Race, Cowes Week, and the Fastnet, reported that his life raft, which had been repacked and recertified a year before, was condemned in the UK when it was inspected and re packed for these races. Not only was the life raft condemned, but the water cans were marked 1979, although the raft had been repacked and recertified a number of times since 1979.
Provisions and Services My advice is make sure the life raft is inflated, and remains inflated for at least seventy-two hours, inspect it yourself, personally verify the contents of the raft when it is repacked, and personally check the weight of the CO 2 bottle!
CANARY ISLANDS, LAS PALMAS
Ocean Products Espanoia, Muelle de Ribera, parcelas 15-16 (near commercial harbor). Tel. 27 09 62. PUERTO RICO
Sea and Survival Equipment Ltd. 621 Ave. Fernandez Juncos, Miramar, Santurce. Tel. (809) 7247636 or (809) 723-3237). ]ulian A. Ducat Marine Safety Equipment Services Ltd., PO Box 1411, San Juan, PR 00903. Tel. (809) 723-2103. ST. THOMAS
Offshore Inflatables PO Box 11357, St. Thomas. Tel. (809) 776-5342; Channel 16 VHF. Located across from Yacht Haven Marina. Caribbean lnflatables Compass Point Marina. Tel. (809) 775-6159.
TORTOLA
Tradewind Yachting Services Joe Stephenson, Box 322, Road Town. Tel. (809) 494-3154. Wickhams Cay 1. MARTINIQUE
Gamic Martinique Dry Dock, Basin du Radoub, Fort-de-France. Tel. 72-00-82.
TRINIDAD
AIston's Independence Square, Port of Spain.
Sailmaking and Repairs Getting sails made and repaired in the Islands has always been a problem. You could find an old-time commercial sailmaker who worked with canvas that felt like Y16-inch plywood, but with few exceptions no one could do much with the modern, light Dacron sails. One exception was Lincoln Sim-
mons, whose little loft in Admiralty Bay, Bequia, kept the yachts in the southern Caribbean going for more than a quarter of a century. Up north, Manfred Dittrick on Hassel Island in St. Thomas did wonderful work-it has been said that it's impossible to blowout one of his sailsand that he has justly earned the title of "King of the Sailmakers" for the Eastern Caribbean. Now, of course, more and more sailmakers can be found in the Islands, some of them extremely good. Witness the fact that many top racing skippers, rather than ordering sails from the States, order from their local sailmaker so that the sailmaker will be able to come on board to check the sails and make adjustments to produce race-winning sails. Furthermore, many of the major sailmakers in the States now have agents in the Islands. The local agent measures your boat, orders the sails from the States, Europe, or Hong Kong, has them shipped out, checks the sails on arrival, and arranges for any necessary changes to be done in the Islands. If you do order sails while in the Islands, you should deal only with a company that has a local agent; otherwise, if something isn't right, you have little or no recourse. Trying to describe what's wrong with the sail by letter or overseas telephone is very much an uphill fight. If you're in the Islands for a while, you should have your sails checked carefully by one of the good sail repairers during the slack summer period each year. When the trades start blowing the sails start splitting, and if you then arrive in the sail loft with your main split luff to leech, you'll be greeted by a mountain of sails all having blown out at the same time. You may have to wait a spell to get your work done. One of the most amazing operations in the Eastern Caribbean is the Sail Locker, run by Graham and Rena, who have year after year repaired sails during Antigua Race Week. They proudly boast that no boat has ever missed a start during Race Week because of torn sails. During some windy Race Weeks, Graham, Rena, and their assistants work straight through the night, throw the sails in a car an hour before the start, and drive all the way across the island to Dickenson Bay to deliver the sails to the waiting boats. It's an amazing performance for which they really deserve a medal. Many boats through the years would have had to drop out of Antigua Race Week but for their dedication. (Beside sewing up sails Rena sometimes in an
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide emergency sews up people. She's an excellent nurse, but her bedside manner is not exactly delicate, so people go to her only in an emergency.) The following sell and I or repair sails:
PUERTO RICO
Fajardo Canvas Chuck Lyman, North agent. Villa Marina Shopping Center, Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Sobstad Sailmakers Inc. Rick Fels, GPO Box 4169, San Juan, PR 00936. 611 Fernandez Juncas Ave., Santurce, PR 00907. Tel. (809) 724-2230.
ST. DARTS
Le Loft Monsieur Lorin Bennett. Located on west side of the harbor, two blocks behind Heineken warehouse. Repairs only.
ANTIGUA
Antigua Sails Nelson's Dockyard, English Harbour. Tel. 463-1527; VHF Channel 68. Graham and Rena Knight. Mainly repair, little sailmaking. Snowed under with work mid-November to early June, but do a fantastic job under pressure. A & F Sails Nelson's Dockyard, English Harbour. Tel. 463-1522; VHF Channel 68. Sail repairers trained by Rena and Graham Knight.
ST. THOMAS
Nick Bailey North Sails, PO Box 3527, Frenchtown St. Thomas, VI 00801. Tel. (809) 774-5565. Agent for North Sails. Manfred Dittrick Hassel Island. Tel. (809) 7744335. "King of Sail makers" of the Eastern Caribbean. Shore Sails 14 Contant Bldg., St. Thomas. Tel. (809) 774-4523. The Sail Loft Tel. (809) 775-6060. Custom Canvas Behind Rusty's Roost, Fabians Landing, Lagoon area. Tel. (809) 775-6511. Repairs only.
ST. JOHN
Coral Bay Marine Tel. (809) 776-6859/6665. Sandra Frazier. Repairs only.
GUADELOUPE
Louis Le Doze At lIes des Saintes. Just ask for Louis around the waterfront. He is excellent; builds computer-designed sails, trained in France, and was a favorite of Eric Tabarlay.
MARTINIQUE
Fidol Pont de Redonte, Voie Numero 2, Fort-deFrance. Tel. 71-42-27, if you speak French. Otherwise, contact through M. Breton of Customs and Immigration, at main steamer dock. Helenon 34 Boulevard Allegre. Tel. 97200. West Indes Sail Quai West PB 704. Tel. 630480. There are also sailmakers at Bakoua Marina, Anse Mitane, with main office on road from Hotel Bakoua to Anse Mitane.
ST. CROIX
ST. LUCIA
The Leading Edge 5 A*B Hospital St., Castead. Tel. (809) 773-7414.
Stevens Yachts Rodney Bay, St. Lucia. Tel. (809) 452-8648/8848. Repairs only.
TORTOLA
Hood Sailmakers Wickham's Cay 11, Road Town. Tel. 494-2569. Mr. William Bullimore. Nanny Cay Sailmakers Nanny Cay. Tel. 4942569. Mainly repairs.
ST. MARTIN
Gowen and Co. Above Island Water World, Simson Lagoon. Two young Englishmen sent out by the old English firm of Gowen and Co.
DEQUIA
Lincoln Simmons Admiralty Bay. Excellent on gaffheaded sails; superb repair work.
GRENADA
Johnny Philips Spice Island Marina, L'Anse aux Epines (Prickly Pear). Tel. (809) 444-4342 or (809) 444-4458. A Grenadian who trained three summers at Howard Boston sail loft in Canada. Good work but not cheap. Stowe Contact this chap through the yacht club
Provisions and Services or Scott, at the back door of the Regal Theatre. Repairs only; awnings and handwork.
273
TENERIFE Roberta via Juan Bautista 57, Santa Cruz.
BARBADOS
CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
Offshore Sails (Hood agent). 6 Crossroads Industrial Estate, St. Philip. Tel. (809) 423-4600. Edge Sails Viking, Palm Beach Hastings. Tel. 435-5281, 499-5800.
None.
Rigging ST. THOMAS
TRINIDAD
Ulmer Kolius 40 Beechwood Dr., Goodwood Parks, Diego Martin. Agent, Willie Pinkeiro, is highly recommended by Dougie Meyer, thus must be good.
Alan Rigging Long Bay, across the street from Yacht Haven behind Homeport. Tel. 774-6833. Red Hook Rigging Tel. 775-9850.
TORTOLA VENEZUELA
Willie Pineiro Puerto Azul, Caracas. Tel. 38-89-93 or 38-89-85. No material; repairs only, mainly awnings, but he has a heavy-duty machine. North Sails Bora Marine, Gpado 51489, Caracas 10501A. Tel. 752-1794 or 752-0723. Kostan Sails c.a. Apartado Postal No. 47278, Caracas 1041-A. Tel. 752-5859, or (02) 751-3046, or 751-3180.
Richardson's Rigging Old Bank of Nova Scotia Bldg., Road Town. Tel. (809) 464-2739. Stocks and installs rigging (says call any time). Superior collection of racing and go-fast gear-Harken, Shafer, etc.
ST. MARTIN
FKG Yacht Rigging and Marine Fabrication (Frank Walrave). Tel. 5310 or 5278. Island Water World, Simson Lagoon, St. Martin.
BERMUDA
Hooper Sails Troth Road, Hamilton. Ocean Sails St. Ceorge's.
AZORES
Bob Silverman Apartado No. 65, 9900 Horta, FaiaJ. Tel. 23459.
MADEIRA
ANTIGUA
Carib Marine English Harbour. Tel. 31060; Cable: Yachts Antigua. Fair stocks but no rigger. Antigua Slipway English Harbour (mailing address: PO Box 576, St. John's). Tel. 31056; Cable: Slipway. Good stocks. No real rigger available but will install rigging.
GRENADA
The captain of the pilot launch in Funchal does some small sail repairs, and I am sure, with the building of the marina and the development of a local sailing fleet, that someone will probably be in the sail repair business.
Spice Island Charters L'Anse aux Epines (Prickly Bay), Box 449, St. Ceorge's. Tel. 4342, 4458, or 4257. Stocks and installs rigging. See Johnny in the Sail Lofi:.
CANARIES
CANARY ISLANDS
LAS PALMAS Senor Pedro Acosta Parilla Tomos Carcio, Guerra 28-3 ISDA, Las Palmas. Tel. 21-11-99. R. & C. Brent Alfredo Calderan 37, Las Palmas. Tel. 24-08-34.
Las Palmas, Grand Canary~onsult phone book. Ocean Products Espanola Press available for cables 4-32 mm diameter, also swaged and Norseman terminals. Splicing work undertaken, wire to wire or wire to rope.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
274
Machine Shops PUERTO RICO
Try Yellow Pages or check machine shop references with management of nearby marinas.
ST. LUCIA
Rodney Bay Marina Rodney Bay, St. Lucia. Tel. (809) 453-0324.
GRENADA ST. THOMAS
Power Products 6 Long Bay Road, St. Thomas. Tel. 774-1425 or 774-6085. Harbor Marine Tel. 776-2078. Antilles Yachting Tel. 775-6789. All Island Machine Tel. 775-7676.
GYS Lagoon, St. George's. Tel. 440-2882/2508. Lincoln Ross Lagoon Road, St. George's. TRINIDAD
Check at Trinidad Yachting Association or Trinidad Yacht Club.
ST. CROIX
St. Croix Marine and Development Gallows Bay. Tel. 773-0289.
VENEZUELA
Check at the various marinas.
TORTOLA
BERMUDA
Triton New location behind Port Purcell; Mr. Jack Pearce. Nautool Machine Box 146, Wickhams Cay. Tel. 494-3187. Mike Underwood West End; ask questions for exact location. T & W Machine Shop Box 307, Road Town, behind Port Purcell. Tel. 494-3342.
Meyer's Shipyard St. George's, Bermuda.
AZORES Faial~heck at Cafe Sport and follow their advice. At other ports, check with the tuna fishermen whose boats are well maintained. Ponta Delgada Antonio Ferreira. Tel. 24016. Comes highly recommended by Gordon Stout of the 109-foot motor sail, Shango.
ST. MARTIN
Bobbie's Marina Philipsburg. Japanese Machine Shop Between fish factories (last left on main road to deep-water dock). Dan Burt Marigot; ask for directions at marina.
MADEIRAN ARCHIPELAGO
The Arsenal Funchal. Excellent. CANARIES
ANTIGUA
Antigua Slipway English Harbour. Box 576, St. John's. Tel. 31056. Crabbs Parham Harbour. Box 271, St. John's. Tel. 32113. Antigua Maintenance Scotts Hill. Tel. 462-7792. Very inaccessible but they have excellent equipment and do superb work.
GUADELOUPE
Check with Lemarie drydock and salvage operation, Carenage, Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-34-47.
MARTINIQUE
Basin du Rebout Graving Dock. Tel. 72-00-82.
Major ports of Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, and Santa Cruz, Tenerife, have large shipyards to maintain trawlers, so they obviously have excellent machine shops. CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
Sao Vicente Cabnaue Mindelo. Tel. 2264/2102; Telex: 33 or 88 CABN CV. New shipyard capable of doing anything. Mr. V. Spencer, the manager, speaks English. Old-style shipyard south of harbor, actual name and telephone number unknown; only Portuguese spoken. Machine shop in back of freezer plant on commercial dock.
Provisions and Services
Refrigeration
275
ST. VINCENT
PUERTO RICO
C.S.Y. Blue Lagoon.
Check with the skipper of the sport fishermen that are at the various marinas.
GRENADA
ST. THOMAS
Power Products 6 Long Bay Road, across from Yacht Haven. Tel. 774-6085. Jon Repke, the owner of Power Products, can justifiably claim to be the father of small-yacht refrigeration: about twentyfive years ago he built the first successful units that got cold with minimal engine time and then really held their cold for twenty-four hours. Since then others have built good units, too, but Repke Power Products' one-off unit is the Rolls Royce of marine refrigeration. And they cost accordingly. Reefco Yacht Haven Marina. Tel. 776-0038.
TORTOLA
Parts and Power Golden Hind, Wickhams Cay I; inside Tortola Yacht Services, a subsidary of Power Products. Tel. 494-2830. Air Devices Box 182, Road Town, Tel. 494-2314. Ariel Smith. He served his apprenticeship under Jon Repke.
ST. MARTIN
Dave Rainez Yacht Services Simson Lagoon, next to Island Water World. Ask for Bill Featherstone.
ANTIGUA
Signal Locker Cap Green, Nelson's Dockyard, English Harbour. Tel. 463-1528; contact on Channe116.
GUADELOUPE
Lemarie Brothers Floating dry dock, Carenage, Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-34-47.
MARTINIQUE
N one that I know of.
ST. LUCIA
Rodney Bay Marina Rodney Bay. Stevens Yachts Rodney Bay. Tel. 452-8648/8848.
Basil St. John Ballast Ground, st. George's, right outside Grenada Yacht Services. Tel. 809-440-3381.
Hauling Facilities As yachting boomed in the Caribbean, so did horror stories about hauling: boats being stranded for days while waiting for a slipping date; boats being stuck half in and half out of the water; being launched suddenly because of a broken cable, a busted ratchet, or a burned out clutch; travel lifts that drop boats; synchro lifts that fall down; floating dry docks that capsize .... All of these things have happened, and many still happen, but the situation is getting better as more yards use travel lifts, which solve some of the problems. Getting hauling dates is easier, because a good yard with a travel lift can yank out eight to twelve boats a day. The basic equipment seems more or less indestructible, but there are still pitfalls. Cables and straps do not last forever: I have seen .sO-ton travel lifts that I wouldn't use to haul 20-ton Iolaire. And a machine is only as good as its operator, and many a wooden boat has been misslung, with dire results. A wooden boat should be hauled only with the slings underneath the ballast keel or else the hull will be sprung out of shape; and when hauling any boat with a raking forefoot, the forward sling must be carefully positioned and then tied to the after sling. If the forward sling slips up the stem, the boat not only suffers a nasty fall, but the rig is usually cleaned out, too. Who pays for such damage? A good question. What you'd expect is that the yard is covered by insurance and pays for repairs. But ship repair liability policies have become harder to get, and a number of yards in the Caribbean operate with no insurance. There have been a few cases where payment has been made only after long legal hassles, and some cases where payment has never been made. Normally, your own marine policy covers your boat while it is being hauled; the insurance company will pay for any damage and then collect from the yard. Needless to say, an insurance company with heavyweight lawyers has a better chance of collecting from a recalcitrant yard than you do. So
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide before you haul, check your own policy carefully. If you are uninsured, make damn sure the yard is properly covered before you commit your boat to its care. If your boat is too big or too deep to be hauled by a 50-ton travel lift, your options are much more limited: the commercial yards in San Juan; Isleta Marina in Fajardo (lOO-ton elevator); West End Slipway in Tortola; Antigua Slipway in English Harbour; Grenada Yacht Services (synchro lift); Varedo Caribe, Cumana, Venezuela; Bonaire (if the synchro lift is working). Obviously, with facilities this limited, you'll have to make plans for hauling a really large yacht well in advance. Hauling facilities for the Eastern Caribbean and the Atlantic Islands are listed as follows.
PUERTO RICO
San Juan Various yards with unlimited capacity. These yards are mainly commercial. Isleta Marina (Fajardo) lOO-ton elevator and 50ton travel lift. Skilled labor is available and there's a sidetrack facility; you can do your own work. Palmas de Mar 50-ton travel lift. No labor is available, so you must do your own work; no supplies and it is an hour's drive to the nearest source of marine supplies. Villa Marina 50-ton travel lift. Some labor is available. Los Carobas 30-ton travel lift; you can do your own work or the yard will have it done for you. Draft is limited to about 6 feet, hut 7 feet can be squeezed during high water springs. Ponce Yacht Club 50-ton travel lift, incredibly cheap hauling; however, draft is limited to 5 feet and it is strictly a do-it-yourself operation. Puerto Real West coast of Puerto Rico. The fishermen's cooperative; they have a 30-ton travel lift that provides cheap hauling for yachts. Marina del Mar lOO-ton travel lift; no information on rates or lahor.
ST. THOMAS
Avery's Boat House Frenchtown. Tel. (809) 7740111. 45-ton monorail. It's one of the great wonders of the world, but it does work. You can do your own work or hire labor. Antilles Yachting Service Tel. (809) 775-6789. 40-ton travel lift. Draft limited to the depth of the entry channel, allegedly 8 feet; any boat drawing more than 7 feet should send a dinghy ahead and sound out the depth of the channel before enter-
ing. You can do your own work or hire the yard's laborers; good back-up facilities. Haulover Marine Inc. Located on the west side of the new Crown Bay Dock in sub base. Tel. 7762078. A new facility is being built on the western end of the harhor in the old sub base but the numher of slips and completion date are uncertain; 35-ton crane, steel and aluminum fabrication, and fiberglass and interior work. ST. CROIX
St. Croix Marine and Development Tel. (809) 7756789. 50-ton travel lift; 300-ton railway, II-foot draft, 40-foot beam. They do excellent work, but are generally regarded as expensive. ST. JOHN
Cruz Bay 50-ton travel lift. TORTOLA
Golden Hind Tortola Yacht Services Road Town. Tel. (809) 464-2756. A 50-ton travel lift, 80-ton railway, but draft limited by bad silting, so check with yard. You can do your own work or hire labor; boat storage is at a reasonable rate. Algrip spray painting is available. Dry storage available. Nanny Cay Marina Nanny Cay, Box 281, Road Town. Tel. (809) 464-2512 or 2513. 50-ton travel lift. You can do your own work or hire it. It's a new, clean, neat yard, and cool, with plenty of wind. Excellent stock of marine supplies and backup facilities, continually expanding and improving and it is attached to a sheltered marina; dry storage also availahle. West End Slipway Ltd. West End, Tortola. Tel. (809) 495-4353. West End Slipway is capable of hauling all but the very largest yachts. They are working hard to build a reputation as repairers and renovators of wooden yachts. They have imported large quantities of wood that is stacked and being air-dried from South and Central America and the States. The place is a magnet for those who love wood and it is the only place in the Eastern Caribbean that can build large wooden sparsexpensive hut impeccably constructed. VIRGIN GORDA
Virgin Gorda Yacht HarborTel. (809) 465-5555. A 50-ton travel lift complete with back-up facilities; part of Golden Hind operations.
Provisions and Services
277
Bims Creek Tel. (809) 465-34,55. A 20-ton capacity railway with a 7-foot draft. You do your own work. The yard is cheap, neat, and clean, but there are no supplies and little labor available.
ability to haul boats, sidetrack them, and move them under cover. The yard has a reputation for doing excellent work; price will vary with the fluctuation of the franc versus the dollar.
ST. MARTIN
MARTINIQUE
Bobbie's Marina Box 383, Philipsburg. Tel. 2366. A 50-ton travel lift that is extra wide so that it can haul boats too beamy to fit on a narrow lift; you can do your own work.
Grant's 20-ton capacity railway with 7-foot draft. Sidetracking facilities under cover and storage available. GAMIC Martinique Dry Dock, Basin du Radoub. Tel. 72-00-82. Drydock with a 30-foot draft and 20'000-ton capacity. Hauling is very cheap as the charge is per ton, but labor is expensive (watch out f()r French holidays). This used to be one of the few places for large yachts to haul, and you can go piggyback with a large freighter, which makes it cheap. But there are two serious drawbacks: 1) Your launch schedule is tied to that of the freighterif it spends two weeks longer than expected, or a week less, that's when you go back in, ready or not. 2) If a hurricane is reported on its way, they'll flood the dry dock and store the gate away for safekeeping. A yacht in the dry dock with planks out, say, gets sunk with the dock, willy nilly. The yard figures the dock is worth more than the yacht, which was hauled at the owner's risk anyway. Think twice before using the dry dock. Ship Shop 6 Rue Joseph Compere. Tel. 71~4341 or 72-59-54. ,50-ton travel lift. It's next to the dry dock, and you do your own work, which you will do at the utmost speed, since the living conditions when you are hauled out here are so foul as to be almost unbearable. Use a bucket and chuck it rather than venturing to stick your nose in the head and showers! On the other hand, you are next to the main dry dock, where you will find Camic, the paint supplier of Martinique; an excellent machine shop in the dry dock, sailmaker, electrician, and other facilities are also available.
ANTIGUA
Antigua Slipway PO Box 576, St. John's. Tel. (809) 463-1056. English Harbour. 120-ton railway with sidetrack plus hydraulic cart for hauling 20 tons or less. One of the best wood rebuilding yards in the world. As of February 1987 David Simmonds has retired. His act will he a tough one to follow. There is a superior selection of marine supplies and an adequate engine and machine shop. Crabb's Slipway and Marina Pareham Harbour; Box 271, St. John's. Tel. (809) 462-3991. A 50-ton travel lift, also a crane for lifting masts. Woodworking and machine shops are available, but you can do your own work too. Best thing about doing a major refit at Crabb's is that you can rent one of the housekeeping cottages to live in when the boat is uninhabitable. Catamaran Club Falmouth Harbour. The Catamaran Club has had a ,50-ton travel lift sitting in the middle of an adjacent field since 1985; when will the docks for the travel lift be built to enable it to haul boats?
GUADELOUPE
Lemarie Family Carenage, Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 8234-47. Floating drydock with 3.5-meter draft, 6.5meter beam, taking lengths from 70 to 90 feet depending on hull configuration. It's run by a clan of brothers all specializing in different skills. Bas du Fori Marina Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-,548,5; Telex: POPPAPO 029889. ,50-ton travel lift. Storage space is relatively restricted. Remember to check the state of the slings on all travel lifts. " ILES DES SAINTES
Bai du Marigot % Cafe de la Marine, Terre Haute des Saintes. Tel. 143; Telex: Guad GLO 29813. lOO-ton railway. This slipway, built in the late seventies, is of excellent construction, has the
ST. LUCIA
Rodney Bay Marina Rodney Bay. Tel. (809) 4,520324. A 50-ton lift with an 8-foot draft has finally been installed and is backed up by excellent paint, machine, and electrical shops. It also has a gin pole for hauling spars out and enough space for boats to be stored in long-term storage. Castries Yachting Center Box 120, St. Lucia. Tel. (809) 4,53-4253; VHF 16. A 30-ton travel lift, adjacent to the airport. It is faster to go to town in your dinghy than via the roundabout route by car. I've been warned that under certain conditions,
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide because of so-called improvements to St. Lucia harbor--dredging and bulkheading-an odd swell can make up, bouncing off the bulkheads, that makes hauling at this facility very difficult. I haven't seen it myself. ST. VINCENT
Calliaqua Bay De Freitas. 30-ton capacity with 9foot draft. This rubber-tired cradle working on the open beach seems unbelievable, but it's hauled Lily Maid, a 50-foot, heavy-displacement, narrow 1904 British cutter. UNION ISLAND
Anchorage Clifton. Tel. (809) 458-4804. Railway, 9-foot draft, 30-ton capacity with good sidetracking facility, but no back-up facilities in the way of marine supplies, labor, mechanics, machine shop, etc. GRENADA
Grenada Yacht Club The Spout, St. George's. Tel. 440-3050. lO-ton capacity and a 7-foot draft limitation. It's cheap, you do your own labor, and there's a hand-powered winch. Check the track and cradle before hauling. Grenada Yacht Services Tel. 440-2883 or -2508. 120-ton synchrolift and 20-ton screw lift, in the Lagoon at St. George's. Spice Island Marina Tel. (809) 444-4257, -3804. This marina changed hands in 1985 and has had a massive renovation. There is now a 30-ton travel lift, and space to keep about ten boats out of the water at the same time. TRINIDAD
Trinidad Yacht Club Basically the yard is for Yacht Club members and it is set up for hauling power boats drawing no more than 5 feet. It does have good sidetracking facilities. If you are in a jam they will probably let you haul here. Trinidad Yachting Association Chagaramus. Tel. 634-4376. Strictly a hauling facility for the service of the members. A 20-ton crane. In an emergency a visiting yachtsman would probably be allowed to haul. COASTAL VENEZUELA
Carupano I am told there is a 50-ton travel lift here that hauls the local fishing boats. You're on your own.
Margarita Chacachacave in Bahia de Mangle hauls local fishing boats; facilities may improve in time. Cumana Vardedo Caribe. Peter Plaut, aided by sons John, Mark, and Mike. Avenue Principale, El Dique, Apartado Postal 105, Cumana. Tel. 093-662564. An excellent operation, capable of hauling yachts of any size, with good sidetracking capacity. The whole Plaut family (originally Austrian, via Bolivia and Peru) was educated at the University of Illinois. They speak perfect English with a midwest accent, plus German, Spanish, and a bit of French and Italian. They are building a reputation for good, cheap work, especially on heavy wood repairs. They will do all they can to help you, but remember that this is a commercial yard that caters to yachts on the side. Be sure to contact them via phone beforehand as Venezuelan mail is useless. When we were there in February 1987 there was a one-month waiting list for hauling. Astilleros Oriente, Cumana. Run by the Assi family. I am told no English is spoken; graving dock 45 meters long and a lOO-ton travel lift, plus, a marine railway. This old, established commercial yard is highly recommended-by some-for heavy work. Carnado ISO-meter long graving dock under construction. Isla Plata Robinson family. Communications very difficult as there is no phone and mail is erratic. Railway capable of hauling 7 to 8 feet of draft; no sidetracking but the price is right. Owner is an Englishman so language is not a problem. Amerigo Vespucci Marina 50-ton travel lift with good back-up facilities, excellent paint contractor that would do a paint job under contract price, capable of doing Imron at a price the yachtsman can afford. On the eastern side of the channel that leads into Amerigo Vespucci marina, Peter Bottome (who has an aircraft repair, rebUilding, and recertification company which attracts planes from the States) is in the process of building a shipyard that will be able to haul 250 tons, will have an excellent sidetrack facility, will also have three travel lifts, and covered berths where you can work on your boat in the water but in a covered shed. He hopes to give Wayfarer Marine, Merrill Stevens, Derecktor's, etc., a run for their money in doing major refits to plush yachts. Supposedly, this facility will be operational by May 1989, but like everything in the Caribbean, seeing is believing. El Morro Marina 30-ton travel lift but as of the winter of 1987 little back-up facilities and mainly
Provisions and Services set up for dealing with powerboats rather than sailboats. (The travel lift can't haul boats with masts.) Carenero I am informed there are two 50-ton travel lifts.
279 water area, southeast of the main town of Willemstad. In all cases these are not commercial operations but rather operations run by and for the yacht club members; visiting yachtsmen, if they behave and establish themselves as yachtsmen, will probably be allowed to use the hauling facilities.
CARACAS AREA
Puerto Awl This is a private club, but if you can obtain an introduction to Puerto Azul, they have an excellent cable-driven elevator with sidetracking facilities capable of hauling all except the largest yachts. Caraballeda 50-ton screw dock which can tackle most jobs but, since this is a private club, arrangements must be made. Marina Mar Also referred to as Macuto Sheraton Marina. 50-ton travel lift. Can do most repairs, including motor, gearbox, etc. Probably the most suitable for foreign boats as it is a public facility. Playa Grande Yacht Club 30-ton travel lift. Private club; you will need to make arrangements for hauling.
MORROCOY AREA
Various small hauling facilities but sailboats are a rarity, as facilities are mainly geared for powerboats. lndunave Railway; almost all kinds of repair work can be carried out here, but it was once a commercial yard which has turned to yachts; fine finish work not recommended. Capacity and draft of railway are unknown but believed to be about 7 feet and 50 tons. Lacuevita Has a 50-ton travel lift, reported as nonoperational in May 1988.
BONAIRE
There is a large 120-ton travel lift in Bonaire but I am told the back-up facilities are rather minimal and as of the spring of 1987 the whole operation was tied up in a legal fight. It was not operating but quite possibly will be operating by the time you read this.
BERMUDA
Bermuda Shipyard Box GE 37, St. George's. Tel. (809) 297-8194; Telex: BA 3361 Meyer BA. VHF 74. 1,000-ton railway, 50-ton travel lift. Complete shipyard with facilities for hauling any size yacht, but not much use for a quick emergency repair. When lolaire arrived in Bermuda on our 1985 transatlantic trip, we had two small leaks that I could have repaired hanging in the slings in twenty minutes. But it was made absolutely clear that they had a flat rate for hauling, chocking, and going back in the water; it didn't matter whether you were out of the water for four minutes or fortyeight hours, the charge was exactly the same. (Unfortunately, I could not find anyplace where we could dry out or semidry out alongside a wall, so it was overside with lung, navicoat, nails, and a copper sheet.) AZORES
As of April 1987 only emergency hauling facilities were available in the Azores. Perhaps the new marina in Horta will attract enough yachts to make it worthwhile for someone to install a decent-sized travel lift in Horta. If so, this would probably make an excellent place to haul. SPAIN
In all the large Spanish ports you will find yards that cater to the fisherman that are also capable of helping the yacht in distress. In Vigo, the recommended first stop once you have crossed the Bay of Biscay, one finds a superb small yacht yard run by the Lagos brothers, whose slipway will haul the average yacht. If a yacht is too big for them to haul, they will arrange hauling at another yard but supervise everything to make sure the work is done to yacht standard.
CURAC;AO
Curac;ao, of course, is a major oil terminal and has hauling facilities for tugs, barges, and tankers, but hauling facilities for yachts are minimal-mainly small slipways with a maximum draft of about 6 feet, maximum tonnage of about 10 or 12 tons, owned by the various yacht clubs in the Spanish
MADEIRA
As of April 1987 the only hauling facility was at the Arsenal in Funchal. Because the surge periodically destroys the hauling ways, they must relay tracks whenever they haul, which makes it an expensive proposition!
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide CANARIES
HIERRO
There are many hauling facilities in the Canaries, ranging from large shipyards that can sidetrack two hundred trawlers down to small travel lifts.
At Puerto de la Estaca there are no hauling facilities, but one can dry out alongside the wall on the ramp that is used to haul local fishing boats.
FUERTEVENTURA
CAPE VERDES
Puerto de Portivo Caleta de Fueste This establishment, with a 30-ton travel lift, doesn't even show on the chart, but a Canary Islands tourist map gives its location at 28° 23'N and 13° 15'W. On the south coast in the newly constructed port of Puerto de Morro Jable, the October 1987 Canaries Island supplement in Yachting Worid showed piers obviously for a travel lift, which certainly will be in operation by the time this book is in print; size of travel lift is unknown. There is also a ramp where boats could dry out on the tide.
The only hauling facilities in the Cape Verdes are at Mindelo, Sao Vicente. Cabnave J. Spencer, manager. Tel. 2264/2102; Telex: 33488 CABN/CV. This yard can handle the biggest yachts, but it may be impractical fi)r a small one. The staff is mostly US trained. There is another, old shipyard in the southwest corner of the harbor that can haul yachts on a crude, steam-powered nineteenth-century railway. Cheap, but little English spoken.
TENERIFE
Radazul28-ton travel lift. This is basically a private club, but it seems to welcome visiting yachts. No back-up facilities, and inaccessible from Santa Cruz except by car. Los Gigantes 40-ton travel lift in a new marina built to service an instant village. No back-up facilities that we could see; a long distance from marine supplies; car necessary. I doubt if there's much locallabor for hire. Los Cristianos .50-ton travel lift, but after looking at the slings I'd be wary of lifting anything more than 20 or 30 tons. According to people who have hauled there, it is very cheap. Club Nautico A private club, and getting in is like trying to get into Fort Knox. On spring tides you should be able to dry out alongside the pier, and the club would do a yachtsman a service to let him use the pier for this purpose. GRAN CANARlA
Pasitos Blancos 35-ton travel lift in the middle of nowhere; moderate back-up facilities, complete security. See p. 138 for more details. Puerto Rico Hauling facilities here were demolished during harbor expansion; they have now been rebuilt. 3D-ton travel lift. Arguineguin New as of 1986: a 30-ton travel lift but beam limited to 5 meters. Gomera Santiago reputedly has a 30-ton travel lift, and considering that Santiago has a very active, well-maintained, and successful fishing fleet, I feel that locallabor should be available.
Caretaking Facilities Many sailors take their yachts down to the Islands, cruise for a few months, and then go home, leaving their yachts until they return to cruise again. They leave their boats in the hands of a yacht yard, marina, or individual who sees that the boats are aired out, lines checked, general maintenance done, engines run, hilges pumped, and the like. These caretaking facilities vary a great deal in quality. Before you leave your boat with any caretaking facility, check locally as to how good the service is. Ask the facility for a list of boats they have previously cared for and then call the owners and ask about the quality of the service. The call may be expensive, but it may save you from an expensive or even disastrous situation. One problem with a caretaking service is that too frequently the caretaker goes out and starts the engine once a week to run it for an hour. He then leaves it to go check another boat; if oil pressure is lost or the engine overheats, the alarm goes off, but the maintenance man is too far away to hear it. By the time he comes back there is a seized up engine. (Stories like this reinforce my view of the advisability of sailing without an engine!) The other big problem with leaving a boat laid up in the water in the Eastern Caribbean is that it might be stolen and used for drug runs. So these days, most people who leave their boats laid upl afloat have a paid crew on board. Otherwise they haul their boats and store them dry, which works fine for fiberglass, aluminum, and steel, but can be disastrous for wooden boats. In order to offer dry storage, a yard needs a
Provisions and Services
large area of land it doesn't have to pay a fortune for, and there aren't too many of those. Here's a list of places that offer long-term dry storage facilities at prices you can afford. St. Thomas Antilles Yachting Tortola Nanny Cay and Golden Hind Virgin Gorda Virgin Gorda Yacht Haven Antigua Crabb's Marina St. Lucia Rodney Bay Marina and Castries Yachting C enter Venezuela Venezuela is a good place to store a boat (or rather, lay it up) as Venezuela is hasically south of the hurricane belt. The situation is in such a state of flux that information given here will be out of date by the time you read this. Thus, check the latest update to Street's Guide to the Eastern Caribbean, Vol. IV. Basically, the marinas at Cumana, Gente Mar (Melia Marina), Puerto La Cruz / Barcelona, Robertson's at Isla Piritu, and the marinas in the Morrocoy area are the best. Phone numbers and addresses are a waste of time, as it is a case of going to the marina, meeting the management, and cutting a deal. Before finalizing arrangements, check with resident yachtsmen as to how the operation is presently heing run, as often the great operation of one year is a disaster the next. Bermuda You can probably make arrangements to store your boat in the water at Bermuda Shipyard, St. George's, Box GE 37. Tel. (809) 297-8194. Azores With the new marina at Horta, chances are that someone has started an in-the-water caretaking service by now. Check with the Cafe Sport and/or Bob Silverman, Apartado No. 65, 9900 Horta, Faial, Azores. Tel. 23459. Canaries Gran Can aria Pasitos Blancos ExceIJent security, see page 138. Puerto Rico Contact Ron Boot, Correos, Puerto Rico; Tel. 2874-0335. Mogan Again, Ron Boot, whose mailing address is Puerto Rico, although he lives in Mogan.
Surveyors In England a surveyor must serve a seven-year apprenticeship before qualifying. In the States and the Eastern Caribbean, however, anyone can declare himself a surveyor and hang up his shingle. Thus, surveyors in the Islands vary from excellent
to incompetent. I've listed those Island surveyors lolaire Enterprises uses in handling its insurance husiness; they are all accepted by the leading Lloyd's underwriters, and I am sure the major American insurance companies would also accept their credentials.
PUERTO RICO
Alexakos and Simpson Inc. Captain Paul W. Simpson, PO Box S-1152, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00902. Tel. (809) 722-1658. Blue Water Yacht Service William Humphrey, Box 91, Puerto Real, PR 00740. Tel. (809) 8638153.
ST. THOMAS
Bruce Johnson PO Box 4337, St. Thomas, USVI 00801. Tel. (809) 775-6140; Telex: 3474077. Associated Marine Surveyors & Adjusters Michael Hall and Clifton A. Cox, J r., Box 69, Red Hook, St. Thomas, USVI 00802. Tel. (809) 775-6508.
ST. CROIX
Robert E. Shank, C.M.S. PO Box 3078, Christiansted. Tel. (809) 773-3220.
TORTOLA
Bill Hirst Box 94, Road Town. Tel. (809) 4942399. George Foster Agencies Maritime, Box 156, Road Town. Tel. (809) 494-2200.
ANTIGUA
Small Ships Consultants Messrs. Simmonds and Fowler, Box 576, St. John's. Tel. (809) 463-1056, or contact through Antigua Slipway. Thcsc gentlemen are among the best surveyors, worldwide, that I have ever encountered.
ST. LUCIA
]. Kessel Cas tries Yacht Center, Box 120. Tel. 453-4253.
GRENADA
Mike Forshaw PO Box 121, St. George's. Tel. 2883. Elsewhere, contact a L1oyd's agent. And let me
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
282
repeat what I have written before: Once you have done everything you can to save, protect, and secure your property, the next thing you should do is find a surveyor; then notify your underwriter and your broker. (The first thing they will ask you is whether you've gotten a surveyor yet.) There is a difference between the Lloyd's agent and your broker, a difference that all yachtsmen should remember. Your broker (there is no such thing as a Lloyd's broker, though there are brokers who are licensed to place insurance at Lloyd's) is your friend in court who has organized your insurance at the most advantageous terms possible. He will represent your interest against those of the underwriter. In the case of a claim, he will do his best to obtain for you a settlement which secures the most amount of money he can legally obtain from the underwriters. In contrast, the Lloyd's agent is the agent of the underwriters. He is representing the underwriters in any claim. He, of course, wishes to minimize all expenses to the underwriters. He will try to settle the claim with as little money paid out by the underwriters as they are legally obliged to pay. Therefore, the agent basically is your enemy in a claim settlement; your broker is your ally.
Salvage If your boat is on the beach or sunk and you can't rescue her yourself, you need a salvage expert. But there is a tough dilemma to solve: do you hire the salvage outfit for a flat fee per hour, in the hope that the boat can be saved, or do you get him to operate under what's known as the Lloyd's open fonn-No Cure, No Pay-in which the salvor agrees to deliver the yacht either afloat in a safe harbor or ashore in a cradle. Then after the yacht is salved, the underwriters (or the owner if he's uninsured) and the salvor argue to establish the value of the salved yacht and the percentage of the value the salvor will get. At various times all sorts of ridiculous figures are thrown out as to what the salvor is entitled to. The percentage of the salved value of the vessel that the salvor is entitled to is based on the danger to which the salvor exposed his vessel and his crew and the skill he exhibited in salving the wreck. In some cases on a very simple salvage job, the salvor will receive only 5 percent or 10 percent of the value of the salved vessel. In cases where the salvor has placed himself and his crew in a very dangerous position, risked both his salvage vessel and/or the lives of his crew and/or has exhibited
brilliance in the operation of the salvage, the award could go as high as 50 percent. If the owner and/or the vessel's underwriters cannot agree immediately with the salvor on the percentage of the value of the salved vessel that should be paid as a salvage charge, the case is then referred to Lloyd's arbitration, where the salvor produces his side of the story, the owners and/or underwriters produce their side of the story, and an arbitration board decides the award. Remember that the salvor's take is based on the value of the yacht after salvage; a $200,000 yacht may be worth only $50,000 when delivered to a safe anchorage. The percentage of the salved vessel value can be decided directly, then and there, or it can be submitted to a Lloyd's arbitration court at a later date. At this point the salvor has a lien on the boat, but he doesn't own it; once a bond is put up to the value of the salvage claim, the salvor must release the boat even if the matter of value hasn't been resolved. Now, if the salvage is unsuccessful and the boat is valueless, a total loss, then the salvor gets nothing if he agreed to work under the Lloyd's open form. If he is working for a fee and he gets paid, say $50,000 for his work, the insurance company then has to pay that plus the insured value of the boat to the owner. This makes insurance companies very unhappy. That is why the original decision as to what basis the salvor will work on is important. If you have obtained the services of a surveyor right away, he will make that decision and take the responsibility off your shoulders. The matter of salvage is very complex, and many books have been written about it; the best advice I can offer is this: "It is the primary rule of insurance that you must behave as a prudent owner would in the absence of any insurance." One more point about salvage: so far as I know, the US Navy and Coast Guard never charge salvage fees when they rescue a boat by putting pumps aboard or by towing it to harbor (although there has been a lot of talk in Congress about this in the past few years). However, the Royal Navy is a different matter. If you call the Royal Navy and it comes and rescues you or tows your boat in, be assured that you will get a nice fat salvage charge. So think tw"ice before hitting the panic button when the Royal Navy's around. Here are salvage outfits:
ST. THOMAS
Underwater Services Tel. 774-5630. Launch, barge pump, plenty of lift bags.
Provisions and Services Antilles Yachting Services Tel. 775-6789. Barge pump, plenty of lift bags. Lagoon area. MIV A71Ulzing Grace Jerry Immel. 62-foot trawler, 530 horsepower, equipped with plenty of salvage gear, contact via VI Radio WAH twenty-four hours a day.
CRENADINES
John Caldwell Palm Island (call on channel 16). John has salvaged more than two hundred boats over the years but has never charged a cent-I wonder when his patience is going to run out!
TRINIDAD TORTOLA
BVI Marine Salvage Kevin Roulette. 65-foot, twinscrew diesel passenger vessel with pumps and lift bags. VHF channel 16 or tel. (809) 494-2584. Island Services 65-foot vessel, lift bags, pumps, etc. Tel. 494-3878. Blue Water Divers Mike and Keith Razle. Nanny Cay. Excellent divers who, once preliminary survey is done, will line up suitable salvage operations.
No information available; try calling pilot station, and hope!
BERMUDA
Call Bermuda harbor radio and salvage vessels will appear, as some big ones usually stand by in Bermuda.
ATLANTIC ISLANDS
Check major shipyards. ST. MARTIN
Bobbie's Marina Tel: 2366. Cindy and John Miller. 46-foot, 500-horsepower tug; crew boat has two 81 71 GM diesels. Both boats have diving gear and lift bags. Contact through VHF channel 16; at night and during holidays call Saba Radio, which will contact them via land lines or through Robbie Ferron or Tim Short of Bahamas Yachting Service.
ANGUILLA
Doug H azeltown 65-foot wood shrimping trawler (Resolute Bay) with diving gear and lift bags. Contact via VHF channel 16.
ANTIGUA
Antigua Towing Ltd. Box 440, St John's. Paradise View, Dickenson Bay. Tel. 462-2477 or call base radio channel 16. Independence 40-foot, 185horsepower salvage boat. Underwriter Contractors John Bently, Box 103, St. John's. Call on channel 68----" Barefoot. " Barefoot is a 70-foot, Honduras-built, trawler-type yacht well equipped for smaller salvage work. Bently is an experienced diver and salvor, normally based in English Harbour but will go anywhere.
GUADELOUPE
Le71Ulrie Family Call on channel 16 or tel. 82-3447. Five brothers with a 16-foot boat; with its huge diesel, the big prop boat is all engine.
Marinas In the Eastern Caribbean the state of marinas varies from well-run full-service marinas to ones that because of ineptitude or, as in Grenada, years of political troubles, have become run-down to what the locals call "discondition." Marinas are found in Puerto Rico, St. Thomas (although on both islands there is little room for transient yachts in the marinas), Tortola, Virgin Gorda, St. Martin, Antigua, Guadeloupe, Martinique (never any room for transient yachts), St. Lucia, Grenada, Trinidad, and Venezuela, where marinas are rapidly expanding. In the ABC islands or Bermuda there are really no marinas as such, although in the latter case you might be able to find a slip at one of the yacht clubs. The Azores has a new marina at Horta and Madeira has one in Funchal, while the Canaries have a rapidly growing number of marinas where space is usually available. The Cape Verde Islands have no marinas.
PUERTO RICO
Club Nautico In San Juan Harbor, usually full but very convenient to town for parts chasing; in 1987 it was undergoing a major expansion. Isleta Marina Santurce. Tel. (809) 764-2130 or (809) 763-8045; Telex: 385-9341. 150 slips. A complete marina. If slips are filled, a good anchorage is in the lee of Isleta Marina. Twenty-four-hour
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide ferry service from the island to Fajardo. Puerto Chico Sea Lovers' Marina, 1 mile south of Las Croabas. 300 slips. Villa Marina North of Point Bateria. 200 slips. Good back-up facilities in Villa Marina shopping center: small supermarkets, sail-repair facilities, engine mechanics, marine supply stores that stock both Imray-Iolaire charts and Street's Guides. Gaviota Marina Four miles south of Isleta Marina, under construction in April 1987. 200 slips proposed. PalTrUls Del Mar 140 slips on the southeast corner of Puerto Rico; an excellent marina basically servicing the large residential development of the same name. Entrance is usually downwind and can be tricky. Depth is 8 feet in the inner harbor. Water is free. Marina del Mar Tel. (809) 863-4242. New as of October 1988 and very little information is available at this time. Supposedly, it is a 700-berth marina with all amenities-water, electricity, phone, TV plug-in, fuel, hauling (lOO-ton travellift)-and the staff speaks English. The marina is located in Bahia Demajagua Bay, 18°17'N, 65°38/W, off the Gaviota development project.
supply store, and it is within walking distance of a dozen or more marine-oriented businesses. Unfortunately, Yacht Haven is almost fully booked through the high season, so be sure to make reservations ahead of time. (One problem, at least in April 1987, was the condition of the showers, not maintained by Drinkwine's staff but by concessionaires. They were the dirtiest showers I've seen anywhere in the world. A prudent man wouldn't go in them without wearing his sea boots.) Lagoon Area Many small marinas here, which will expand and improve as time goes by since the entrance channel has been dredged to 8 feet. Red Hook Area American Yacht Harbor The major marina, but numerous marinas have been shoe-horned into the Red Hook area. They are usually full with little chance for transients to pick up a berth. Facing east into the trades, the area still has a problem with bugs because of nearby salt ponds. Supposedly a new marina with 90 berths will be commenced in early 1988, but Red Hook is so overcrowded that even a new marina cannot begin to relieve the pressure.
TORTOLA ST. THOMAS
Avery's Boat House Frenchtown. Tel. (809) 774Olll. 40 slips. Floating docks covered with salt spray from Antilles Airboats. Lee side of harbor is cooler than Sheraton Harbor Marina. Great if you want to watch flying boats take off and land. Convenient to Frenchtown, and has a good restaurant, the Quarterdeck. What it lacks in class it makes up in character. Sheraton Yacht Haven Long Bay Rd. Tel. (809) 774-6050. St. Thomas's major marina. It is descended from a long line of marinas going back in my memory to 1956, when it was called Yacht Haven. It was a short dock no more than 100 feet long with a total of thirteen boats moored alongside and anchored off-a far cry from today's situation. The present management, led by Paul Drinkwine, is doing an excellent job fighting an uphill battle against many problems. Yacht Haven not only has to cater to its 300 slips but also to the needs of as many as 300 boats anchored out in Charlotte Amalie Harbor, which use Yacht haven as their dinghy landing, shore base, etc. It is a fullservice marina with fuel (which they will deliver to your boat in a cart, rather than move you to the always overcrowded fuel dock), water, electricity, ice, restaurant, bar, grocery store, and marine
Stevens Yachts PO Box 609, West End, Tortola. Tel. (809) 495-4740. At Frenchman's Cay, West End-20 berths, new in 1986, clean, neat; transients' berths usually available, fuel, water, electricity (unmetered and very expensive). Clean showers. Fort BuTt Marina Road Town, Tortola (below Fort Burt). Tel. (809) 494-2584. 7 feet can be squeezed with care alongside the end of the dock; fuel, water, ice, electricity, showers, mechanic, woodworking facilities, and all sorts of ancillary services offered. A small shop is at the head of the dock, cheerfully run by BVI Marine ServicesKevin Roulette (owner of Athena), Roger Wickham, and friends--{)pen seven days a week and extremely helpful. They can do almost anything that has to be done to a boat. Treasure Isle Marina and Jetty Tel. (809) 4942450. Home of Tropic Island Yacht Charters, a bareboat fleet, relatively few transient berths available. Below Treasure Isle Hotel, Road Town, Tortola. Water, ice, electricity, and marine supplies available. Toilets and hot showers on Jetty. MOOring Marina Base of the famous bare boat charter organization of the same name, but it also has about 100 rental berths, hotel, pool, bar, restaurant, fuel, electricity, and water. Village Cay Marina Box 17, Road Town. Tel.
Provisions and Services 42771. 70 slips. South side of Wickhams Cay. Contact on VHF channel 16. Complete marina: water, fuel, electricity, laundromats, showers. Manager John Ackland could not be more helpful and the staff takes its lead from him. Nanny Cay Marine Center 1Y2 miles west of Road Harbor. Tel. (809) 494-2512. Complete marina: water, fuel, ice, electricity, chandlery, laundry, shop, restaurant, snack bar, boat sales, showers (FREE, clean, and hot!), dive shop, and maintenance and repair. Condominiums under construction. Large hauling facility is part of the yard, plus sailmaker, electricians, mechanics, etc. Latest improvement is that Customs and Immigration are now located within the marina, so it's no longer necessary to check in at Road Town or West End.
marine supply store (small), and groceries are available. Port la Royale Marina At the top of Simson's Lagoon. Has 30 slips, draft limited to 6 feet. Mediterranean-type marina surrounded by hotel, shops, bars, boutiques, etc. You might think you were in Saint-Tropez. Anse Marcel There is a new marina behind the hotel here that Robhie Ferron describes as fabulous: 100 slips, lO-foot draft, suitable for hoats up to 60- 70-feet maximum. Long boats need a dinghy ahead to check maneuvering room. Electricity, water, ice, showers, swimming pool, beach, superior restaurant, and new hotel.
ANTIGUA VIRGIN GORDA
Virgin Gorda Yacht Harbour St. Thomas Bay, Virgin Gorda. Tel. (809) 495-5555. Capacity for 120 yachts. Complete facilities: fuel, ice, water, showers, supply shop, food commissary, gift shop. A large hauling facility with a complete back up in the way of machine shops, electricians, painters, etc. Biras Creek Estate North Sound, Virgin Gorda. Tel. (809) 494-3555. 40 slips, usually plenty of slip spaces but few facilities available other than easy access to Briar Creek Hotel. Gift shop, restroom, and showers adjacent to hotel office. The Bitter End Yacht Club North Sound, Virgin Gorda. Tel. (809) 494-2746. Only for visiting yachts that are using the facilities at Bitter End Resort. Quarterdeck Club docks 18 yachts, with fuel, water, ice, electricity, hot showers. Most important in Gorda Sound is the free garbage pickup run by a charming young couple, Mick and Jenny Trotter.
ST. MARTIN
Bobbie's Marina Box 383, Philipsburg. Tel. 2366. Bobbie claims there is 9 feet of water at the end of the 31O-foot dock. Fuel, water, electricity, and block ice are available. Laundromat has been installed. Restaurant and the various marina backup facilities: electricians, mechanics, hauling facilities, 50-ton extra-wide travel lift. Chesterfield Marina, also called Great Bay Marina Built in 1979, it is attached to the hotel. There is 9 feet of water inside the breakwater, which was built just before hurricane Klaus. Now, except in hurricane conditions, the breakwater provides excellent shelter. Showers, water, ice,
Crabb's Slipway and Marina Parham Sound. Tel. 32113; VHF 68. Good small marina (expanding in 1987) with fuel, water, and electricity, moderate stock of marine supplies, machine and carpentry shops, and excellent hauling facilities where you can work on your own boat. It is ideal, as it has clear water so you can dive over for a swim; the low land does not obstruct the trades, so it is windswept, cool, and relatively bug free. It has wonderful dean showers, a 50-ton travel lift, yacht dry storage, chandlery, post office, restaurant, boutique, car rental, laundry, rooms to rent, and commissary; it also has Customs and Immigration service. One of the disadvantages of Crabb's is that it is out in the middle of nowhere and there is a problem getting hack and forth to town; with good planning you can hitch rides with other people. The advantage of being 3 miles by road from the nearest small village, Parham, is that you are not inundated with boat boys looking for jobs or trying to sell you something, as happens when you are in the English Harbour and Falmouth area. Catamaran Hotel and Marina Falmouth Harbour. Tel. 31036, 31506. 20 slips; an excellent small (but expensive) marina in the process of expansion, attached to the Catamaran Club; owned and run by H ugh Bailey, who started as a boat boy working for Commander Bruno Brown, R. N., skipper of the wonderful old schooner Freelance. Not only does Hugh have clean showers, he has a spotlessly clean bathtuh that you can fill with HOT water; it costs, hut what a pleasure to luxuriate in a hot bath in the Caribhean! The outer end of the dock has 15 feet of water, so even the largest yachts can lie stern-to. Nelson's Dockyard English Harbour. New man-
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agement, under the Friends of English Harbour, in the person of Mr. Tineman, aided by the Canadian AID officer, Mr. Villeneuve, is trying hard to be a friend to the yachtsmen. It will be an uphill battle to get the place in shape, because it had become a disaster. But progress is being made, and old Commander V. E. B. Nicholson, who started all this, must be grinning up there in sailors'Valhalla. Antigua Slipway PO Box 576, St. John's, Antigua. Tel. (809) 463-1056. Not really a marina, but it has expanded its dockage facilities so that some transient berths are available. As of May 1987, power, water, and shower facilities were minimal but in place. The dock rates are reasonable, but the electricity is not metered, it's charged at a flat rate. Under this arrangement, the small boat is grossly overcharged, the large boat undercharged, with the large wealthy yacht getting a free ride from the small yacht. Despite the inexpensive rate for electricity, if it is unmetered and you have a small boat, don't sign up for it, here or in any other marina. GUADELOUPE
Bas du Fort Pointe-a-Pitre. Tel. 82-54-85; Telex: POPPAP 029889. 450 slips. The manager speaks excellent English; the receptionists are charming and helpful, and speak some English. Maximum depth is 10 feet. Full service: shops, chandlery, and restaurant, which sells block ice. Port Plaisance de la Grande Saline St. Fran90is (east of Pointe-a-Pitre). Fuel, water, electricity; 7foot depth, but erratic; proceed slowly. Basse-Terre South of Fort Richepanse. A new facility, with 10 feet of water, but shoaling has been reported. MARTINIQUE
Pointe du Bout South side of Fort-de-France harbor. Usually full; no transient berths available. Bakoua Anse Mitane. Small: fuel, water, electricity, and fresh vegetables. Periodically gets destroyed when hurricanes pass north of Martinique. Saint Anne's Small marina, perfectly sheltered, on the east coast of Martinique. Excellent hurricane hole and good place to leave your boat in the summer. ST. LUCIA
Rodney Bay Marina Rodney Bay, St. Lucia. Tel. (809) 452-0324. 10 concrete docks with alongside
berths; water, ice, electricity, and complete backup facilities. Free dockage while you clear Customs and Immigration, which are on site. Despite what is said to the contrary, the controlling depth in the channel leading to the marina is only 8 feet. On high-water springs you can squeeze as much as 10 feet through the channel, but you will probably be dragging mud most of the time. St. Lucia Marine Services Vigie Cove. Some transient slips available. Showers, water, electricity, bottled gas; some provisions and supplies, and sometimes fuel. Moorings Marina Marigot, St. Lucia. Originally created as the base for the Moorings charter fleet; has 40 slips with water, fuel, electricity, ice, small hotel, and restaurant; some transient slips available. Good shelter in all weather, but tends to be a little hot, airless, and buggy.
GRENADA
Grenada Yacht Services The Lagoon, St. George's. Tel. (809) 444-2508, 2883. 100 slips; electricity (erratic), water, fuel, and showers (which leave much to be desired); hauling facilities; machine, woodworking, and motor shops; caretaking facilities. This marina suffered drastically during the troubles under Gairy's administration, the era of the PRA, and then the liberation by the Americans. The whole facility needs a complete and absolute rebuilding, with a massive influx of cash. In actuality, the economic recovery of Grenada is tied to the reestablishment of yachting, which will only be reestablished if GYS is rebuilt and reassumes the position it formally held in the late sixties and early seventies as the center of yachting in the southern Caribbean. Remember that Grenada is south of the hurricane belt; the rebuilding of GYS should be backed by one of the AID programs. Spice Island Marina L' Anse aux Epines (Prickly Bay). On the south coast of Grenada, this small full-service marina has showers, bar, restaurant, hauling facilities, marine store, and moderately efficient bus service to town. One great plus is that you can dive right overside into clean water.
TRINIDAD
Trinidad Yacht Club 5 miles west of the main port. Mainly a powerboat marina. Depth inside the marina is a subject of debate; I'd be wary if you draw over 7 feet, but in any case check in a dinghy before you enter. Fuel, water, and electricity, but
Provisions and Services in 1985 there were no showers as it was basically used by yacht club members who have their own showers at home. Definitely not set up for transient yachts, but they are friendly and helpful.
and Guardia Nacional offices are within walking distances, but a bus or puer puesto will have to be taken to town for Immigration, port captain, and shopping.
VENEZUELA
CARACAS AREA
(Check the 1987 supplement of Volume IV for latest information.) Cumana 75 slips; supposedly 10 feet inside the basin, but as of February 1987 the channel had shoaled to 6 feet with soft mud, so boats drawing more than that were able to power their way through the mud.
Puerto Awl 300 slips. West of Punta Naiguata; a fantastic marina: private club, hauling facilities, showers, restaurant, swimming pools, tennis courts, small-boat racing, and waterskiing all in the same complex. It's an excellent spot for visiting yachtsmen since even if all the slips are occupied there's room in the basin to anchor. Contact the harbormaster immediately on arrival. Macuto Sheraton 200 slips. By Punta Carabellada directly in front of the Macuto Sheraton Hotel. Marina usually full; limited room for entering in the mouth of the harbor. Showers, hauling facilities, water, but no fuel. Carabellada Yacht Club When entering the Macuto Sheraton Marina, follow a small channel on the starboard side back behind the Macuto Sheraton to a small basin. Channel depth is 11 feet shoaling to 8 feet at the head, with soft mud. Here is the Carabellada Club; it's an excellent place to lie, adjacent to (but not part of) the marina. There's a fueling station and a mechanics shop where the charming secretary is most helpful and speaks English. But the Carabellada Club is strictly a private club, so you must make prior arrangements. Restaurant, bar, beautiful hot showers, manicured lawns, phone. No laundry facilities or shops, but Macuto is within walking distance from the Club. Marina Mar 200 slips. West of Punta Calera. Marina usually full but visiting yachts can rest on the east harbor wall. Three travel lifts, showers, restaurant, bar. The aim is to provide a club rather than a full-service marina.
CARENERO AREA
This is in the midst of a massive expansion. There are now three marinas in the Carenero area on the western side of the harbor with more marinas under construction; but as yet only minimal backup facilities in the way of hauling, mechanics, painters, etc. There should be room for transient yachts.
PUERTO LA CRUZ/BARCELONA AREA
Melia Marina Fuel, water, electricity, showers, readily accessible to town; draft limited to 7 feet, but again, soft mud so boats with powerful engines can push through. Amerigo Vespucci Marina Constantly expanding; ample slips, full-service marina with fuel, water, electricity, showers (once you find the key, which seems to be a major project), restaurant, small supply store, hauling facilities, excellent painting and refinishing facilities. It's well out of town, but once you figure out the Puer Pesto transport system, this is no problem. WARNING: Shoaling has been reported in May 1988, so if you draw more than 8 feet, proceed with caution, dead slow or send the dinghy ahead to sound out the passage. El Morro de Barcelona 80 slips, draft limited to about 7 feet on the western side of the basin; new breakwater being installed to try to cut down the surge in the basin. This is mainly a powerboat marina that is still in the developmental stage; access to town is more than a little inconvenient as the Puer Pesto does not go out to the El Morro development. Guanta A new marina, in the main commercial harbor of the Puerto La Cruz / Barcelona area. It is convenient in that when entering, the Customs
WESTERN VENEZUELA
Puerto Cabello New marina just south of the entrance to the main harbor. 10 feet of water, good shelter, good security, hauling facilities, short walk to town.
MORROCOY AREA
Inside the mangroves in the Morrocoy area are a number of small marinas, but space for visiting yachts is limited, as they are mostly taken up by local Venezuelan yachts.
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BONAIRE
Marina About 75 slips. Fuel, water, electricity, lO-foot draft, completely sheltered, 120-ton synchro-lift. But the present situation is muddled because a legal hassle has put the marina in limbo. In March 1987 the marina was there and dockage was free, but there was no water, no electricity, and no one was running it.
Atlantic Islands BERMUDA
There are no marinas as such but you are allowed to lie alongside the dock at St. George's and Ordinance Island; no water or electricity or fuel alongside; fuel and water can be purchased by going alongside the fuel dock-if you have a deep-draft boat, check carefully as the draft at low water is limited. There are some transient berths available at St. George's Dinghy Club west of town. In Hamilton you may find a berth at either the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club or at the Dinghy Club.
AZORES
The only marina in the entire Azores is at Horta; fuel, water, electricity, and showers available alongside. Draft limited to 9 feet but proceed with caution. Given the popularity of Horta as a stop for transoceanic yachtsmen, the marina will probably be filled to capacity.
MADEIRA
The only marina is at Funchal; the slips are generally filled by local yachts; visitors tie up alongside the wall three and four deep. I counted 85 boats when we were there in the fall of 1985. It is a good, sheltered anchorage, with friendly staff, showers, fuel, water, and electricity available; ice is a dinghy-ride away if someone has succeeded in fixing the computer at the ice plant.
CANARY ISLANDS
In the Canaries the Spanish are rapidly building barbors and there will undoubtedly be more marinas in the future. Lanzarote has no marinas. Fuerteventura has a small marina at Castillo, another large one, Puerto de Deportivo Caleta de Fuesta, has 150 berths-most uf them are shoal; there is only 4 feet of water at the inner berths and I am told the outer berths have only 6 feet.
In Gran Canaria at Las Palmas there are 70 berths with limited electricity, water, fuel, and showers (barely acceptable). Pasito Blanco has a beautiful marina with all facilities, out in the middle of nowhere with excellent security. Expensive per day, but cheap on a monthly basis. Puerto Rico is another full-service marina, with fuel, water, and electricity but with only a limited number of berths for boats over 40 feet. It does have caretaking and hauling facilities-see Ron Boot, Correos, Puerto Rico; tel. 28-74-0335. Mogan has a new marina. 230 berths with fuel, water, electricity, phone plug in, showers, etc. In Tenerife at Las Palmas yachts lie in the fishing harbor, which cannot be considered a marina. However, there is one 5 miles south of Las Palmas at Radazul, a beautiful, clean marina with hauling facilities, restaurant, yacht club, but no stores. It is at the foot of a cliff with houses precariously built into the hillside. The road up to the main road where a bus can be caught to town is very steep with numerous switchbacks; even a Sherpa would be weak-kneed and out of breath by the time he walked up to the top of the hill, so don't lie at Radazul unless you have a rented car. There is also a marina at Los Gigantes on the west coast of Tenerife--a new clean marina below an attractive instant village. The marina has hauling facilities and a 30-ton travel lift, but no back-up facilities. Anything we report on marinas in the Canaries will undoubtedly be out of date when you read this book. For instance, since the above was written in September 1986, it has come to my attention that a number of new harbors and marinas have been built, most of which do not appear on any charts. On Lanzarote, 2 miles northeast of Playa Quemad a (which offers a tolerable anchorage in settled conditions), a breakwater was under construction in the summer of 1987. This new marina, Puerto Calera, will probably be operational by the time you read this. On Fuerteventura construction had begun in the summer of 1986 on a 400-berth marina at Puerto de las Lajas, three miles north of Rosario. A new quay has been built at Tarajalejo, which provides some protection and may be expanded, while a massive new harbor has been built at Puerto de Morro Jable. When completed it will have hauling facilities via a travel lift and also a raft where one can dry out. On Tenerife a new commercial harbor is in the process of being developed at Puerto de Guimar, and the local Club Nautico is also in the process of developing a marina. What their attitude will be to visiting yachtsmen is of course a question mark.
Provisions and Services Farther along the west coast of Tenerife, there are two new harbors being developed (summer 1987) at Playa de las Americas and at Puerto de la Playa San Juan. Both of these harbors will undoubtedly have marina facilities in the future.
CAPE VERDE ISLANDS
The Cape Verdes have no marinas, but there is a perfect potential site in Mindelo, Sao Vicente, in the old abandoned dock right in the center of town. Let's hope a marina will be developed there.
Repairs As a general rule in the Caribbean and the Atlantic islands you can always find someone to help put anything back together again, provided you have the repair manual and the right spare parts. Now we all know that anyone sailing far from home should know enough to have a complete inventory of spare parts aboard, but we also know, of course, that no one can think of everything-and then it is amazing what a bit of ingenuity and some deft scrounging can accomplish. The keynote is improvisation. A repairman of Caterpillars won't know too much about your gearbox, but he wouldn't have too much trouble sizing up your engine or generator. The hotels and stores all have refrigeration systems; the managers and storekeepers will be able to refer you to someone who can repair your mechanical or electrical refrigerator. The general electrician, carpenter, or mechanic is not hard to come by: check with the stores or inquire oflocal yachtsmen. More difficult to find are the electronic specialists who can repair your radio and instruments. Similarly, in terms of shipwrights, you must distinguish between a ship's carpenter and a joiner. The shipwright who is used to fitting 2-inch planking and caulking a seam wide enough to put your thumh through is not the man to repair your closefitting teak sliding hatch. That's a job for someone from one of the local furniture shops. Sadly, though, I would have to say that overall in the Caribbean there is a general shortage of skilled labor in the ship-keeping field. There are no apprentice programs, as there are in the United States or Europe, and few young people are entering these trades despite the shortage; those who do drift into the shipyards are usually not well trained. The old-timers, well-equipped for building commercial wooden vessels, aren't too good working on lightly constructed modern yachts.
This is really a government problem, incidentally. It would be easy to set up apprentice programs-the interest is there among many Caribbean locals; witness the fact that some of the young men of Bequia keep on building boats. Every time a new schooner is laid down there it's described as the last of the true Bequia boats, and yet it's always followed by another, and another. Near Bequia Slipway a bunch of young kids are always building models of the whale boats and yachts-beautifully constructed models when one considers the fact that these young boys are completely without formal training. They have learned to do everything strictly by eye; they don't have in the shop a single book on model building. If the yachtsmen who enjoy sailing in the Eastern Caribbean would like to contrihute something positive to the area, they could do so by sending books on model building to the young, enthusiastic Bequia model builders. Certainly Grenada, Carriacou, Bequia, and Antigua would benefit from a good wooden-boatbuilding apprenticeship system. I am sure wooden boatbuilders from Maine, Canada, and England could be found who would be willing to exchange a cold northern climate for a sunny tropical one. On an expedition to Carriacou in 1986 we found one schooner being massively rebuilt, two sloops under construction, and a couple more being repaired. Working on them were a couple of oldtime shipwrights, a couple of others in their early twenties who had obviously finished their apprenticeship and appeared very capable, plus almost a dozen young boys aged 14 to 18, obviously beginning their apprenticeship. No doubt there's interest in boatbuilding among the West Indians. Yet many of the yacht yards are hard pressed to find competent craftsmen. Carpentry jobs are often delayed, and the work that does get done can be top-notch but can also be awful. But throughout the area there are excellent carpenters who work independently of the yards-and of course there are many good craftsmen among the local yachtsmen. You may find that the beautiful boat lying next to you was built by her owner, who is often willing to make some money working on other people's boats. You can also find painting and varnishing labor outside of the yards that is probably the cheapest in the world-but be sure of whom you're hiring. Don't take on the first kid who takes your stern line and claims he's a good painter--or the first guide or driver or anything else for that matter. Always check around with local yachtsmen or nearby boat yards before taking anyone on for a job. Not only does the skill and enthusiasm of sand-
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide ers, painters, and varnishers vary widely but also the amount they get paid will vary drastically in accordance with the time of year and the demand for labor. In the spring of 1987, for instance, the going rates in English Harbour were: summer, $30 to $40 EC a day; early October, $60 to $70 EC a day; late October, $80 to $90 EC a day; from November through Antigua Week in April, $100 EC or more a day. Then once the boats have headed north to the States or east to Europe, English Harbour becomes a morgue, and the price of labor drops rapidly-a point well worth considering when figuring your work schedule. Today, fiberglass boats can be repaired virtually anywhere in the world. Minor repairs can be made in almost any yard, and major repairs in any of the larger yards. If massive repairs are needed, insurance underwriters have found it best and cheapest to fly an expert from the building factory to the site and have him hire local labor and do the repairs. Many glass boats that at first glance seemed total losses have been economically repaired this way. When it comes to repairing aluminum yachts, there's not much hope in the Caribbean or the Atlantic Islands. Finding a well-qualified aluminum welder with the right equipment is a real project. Except for the crazy German, Dieter, who built an aluminum yacht at the sub base in St. Thomas and did some excellent repairs on aluminum spars and aluminum oil coolers on Swan 47's, etc., I wouldn't trust anyone in the Eastern Caribbean with a welding torch to repair aluminum boatseven if you find someone who has the right equipment, you will probably discover that the welder operating the equipment is not qualified. I would not consult the Yellow Pages as I don't believe the advertisements found in the Yellow Pages in the Caribbean. As for steel, the average yard isn't equipped to do more than haul, chock, patch, and paint. But there are commercial yards that can do major repairs-the ones that build and replate steel tugs and barges and so on. They are in San Juan, Puerto Rico; at the dry dock in Martinique; at the Vardo Caribe in Cumana, Venezuela; in Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canaries; and at the shipyard in the Cape Verdes' Sao Vicente. In general, I want to suggest that whenever you contemplate a major repair job in the Islands, you should consider hiring a top-notch local surveyor to consult on or oversee a job (see pages 281-82). He will know who the competent craftsmen in the
area are, and he will know if a boatyard is capable of doing the job. Following are listed some of the individuals and yards in the Caribbean who have built a reputation in various crafts. Most of the individuals are so well known that you can find them by just asking around.
CARPENTERS
Old wooden boats don't die or fade away-they go to the Caribbean as charter boats or private yachts and live on forever, provided they get good maintenance. Here's where you'll find the workers to provide the kind of tender loving care your boat needs. Puerto Rico In Puerto Rico there are obviously excellent shipwrights who can be had for reasonable prices; note that they are still building their little 32- to 35-foot classically beautiful wooden sloops with high flared bow, sweeping sheer, steeply raked mast, and incredibly long boom. These boats are used to carry day-trippers out to the islands in Vieques Sound and to race on the big Puerto Rican holidays. The center of this activity seems to be in Las Croabas area, although I am told that wooden boatbuilders can also be found in the La Parguera area. If you are doing a major refit on a wooden boat, it would be worthwhile to check these areas. It would also be worthwhile to check with the various shipyards and marinas in Puerto Rico. St. Thomas Good shipwrights are availablebut expensive. Here are some listings of carpenters who mayor may not still be in business: Quality Woodworking, tel. 776-4757; Danny's, tel. 776-8946; Haulover Marine, tel. 776-2078; Knot-Hole Inc., tel. 775-9255; Monty's, tel. 7744538; Antilles Yachting Services, tel. 775-6789. Woodworkers come and go but Monte Negro is a carpenter, shipwright, outboard mechanic, sailor, diver, skirt-chaser, singer, guitar-player, raconteur, and one of the Caribbean's most extraordinary and delightful characters. He has been in St. Thomas close to twenty years and will certainly be there for many years to come. And last but not least, my nephew, Morgan B. Macdonald, Ill, who as a very young man not only did the illustrations for Volume I of my Ocean Sailing Yacht but also the harbor charts for my Yachting Guide to the Grenadines and the 1974 Cruising Guide to the Lesser Antilles, is also a superb shipwright and joiner. He can be contacted through lolaire Enterprises' local insurance (my
Provisions and Services major business is not writing or charts, but marine insurance) representative, Timi Carstarphen, at (809) 775-6174. There are always a bunch of woodworkers to be found around Avery's Boat yard and Antilles Yachting Services, whose general manager Billy Walker is a trained British shipwright. Check around, ask questions and find someone who will fit your personal taste and pocketbook and has the skill to do the job in hand. St. Croix In Salt River, St. Croix, they have been building multihulls using the West epoxy system, so I am sure they would either have woodworkers or be able to put you in touch with them. Tortola Ron Russell is another excellent woodworker who served a seven-year apprenticeship in England. He has kept Galatea in shape for the last eight to ten years doing not only minor carpentry but also major refits. He can be contacted through Doctor Tattersal in Road Town, Tortola. There are other good men, but Edwin Titley helped me rebuild Iolaire after she was wrecked in 1957 and appeared in 1978 to recaulk her after an extremely rough trip from Venezuela. I cannot recommend him too highly as a shipwright and a person. Tel. 2130. West End Slipway is building a reputation as a fine boat yard for wooden boats and as such has served as a magnet to attract wooden boatbuilders, some of whom work with the yard full-time, others part-time. The yard and its carpenters are capable of making wooden spars to the largest dimensions that the normal yacht could require; the prices are not cheap but the spars are magnificent. Antigua The Bajan Selwin Leslie, Parham village, Parham. Tel. 463-2140. He worked for many years at Consolidated Shipyard in New York until cold weather drove him out. He has worked extensively on Iolaire, installing planking, reframing, rebuilding the stern, and lately relaying a section of the deck. He is an excellent shipwright and a superior person; I highly recommend him. Wooddadli Woodworking "Chippy," whose real name no one can remember, has a good woodworking shop in Falmouth. Box 312, St. John's. Tel. 31491, VHF 68. Chippy and his associates have an excellent reputation for doing on-deck and belowdecks joinery work. Antigua Slipway in English Harbour is one of the finest woodworking yards in the Caribbean. Box 576, St. John's. Tel. 463-1056. Bequia Consult with Lincoln Simmonds, Ross Lulley, Bill Little, and Hodge Tailor-from them
you will find out who is good and who is available for repairing wooden boats. Grenada GYS's splendid record as a wooden boat yard under Les Mashford and Jim French has dropped ofI' very badly in recent years. Let's hope GYS will get going again and reassume its rightful place as an excellent place to have a wooden boat hauled, repaired, and rebuilt. To find good carpenters, check with Dodd Gorman, manager of GYS, or Mike Foreshaw, tel. 2881. (For many years Mike Foreshaw has been a surveyor for Lloyd's underwriters in the area.) On the north end of Grenada, incidentally, it is possible to find Grenada teak, some of which is in fairly large pieces; occasionally GYS has Grenada teak, which may have been sitting around long enough to be well aged. Trinidad In general not a good place for wooden boat repair except that locally grown Trinidad teak, decently aged, is excellent wood. We have used it on Iolaire for over twenty years and I have never had a spot of rot in it. The problem with Trinidad teak is that it is illegal to export it; it must be used on the island of Trinidad. So if you wish to use Trinidad teak, buy it in Trinidad and check at the Trinidad Yachting Association where I am sure you will find someone to put you onto a good carpenter. Venezuela Throughout Venezuela you'll find little wooden fishing boats varying from open boats of 15 to 25 feet, to what look like small trawlers but which are basically mother ships of 35 to 55 feet. All are beautifully painted and constructed in a commercial fashion. If the currency exchange rate is favorable, Venezuela is a good place to have commercial-quality woodwork done. Varadero Caribe shipyard in Cumana, run by the Plaut family, is an excellent place to do rebuilding and restoration of wooden boats. They are highly recommended by no less experienced yachtsmen than the captain of the well-known charter brig Romance and by Paul Adamthwaite of Stormy Weather. Bermuda Needless to say, with all the yachts that pass through Bermuda, plus the Bermudian yachts (the wooden, pre-World War 11 International One Designs are still racing), excellent shipwrights are available in Bermuda; but I think you will find the cost to be high. Azores The Azores support a large wooden fishing fleet, so shipwrights are available, but the hauling facilities throughout the Azores are primitive, to say the least. U ntiI they install a travel lift in Horta as a back up for the new marina, I would
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide regard hauling and doing woodwork in the Azores as not a good proposition. Madeira Carpenters obviously can be found, but hauling facilities are primitive; except for ondeck work, you're better off heading for the Canaries. Canary Islands A look at the wonderfully carved wooden balconies and doors and at the excellent, small Canary Island fishing boats tells me that carpenters and shipwrights are available; it is just a case of finding them. My guess is that you will have to speak Spanish. I think your chances of finding shipwrights at a reasonable price are best in the little fishing ports rather than in any of the marinas, which are all built close to the exploding tourist developments. Carpenters probably find it more profitable to work twelve months a year in the building industry rather than in the seasonable yacht industry. Cape Verde Islands Looking at the state of the Cape Verdian fishing boats, I don't think I would want any carpentry work done on my boat here. Our friend Toby, an ex-Icelandic fishing captain who had been living in the Cape Verde Islands for eighteen months, told us that the Icelandic government had poured money down the drain for two years doing experimental fishing in the Cape Verde Islands with an Icelandic trawler. Toby felt, as did I after seeing the quality of the boats, that the same amount of money would have been much more beneficial to the Cape Verdian economy if it had been spent setting up a boatbuilding school to teach the Cape Verde islanders how to build good inshore fishing boats.
MECHANICS
Puerto Rico San Juan Consult with professional fishing boat captains at Club Nautico. Isleta Marina: ditto. St. Thomas Power Products, 6 Long Bay Road, across from Yacht Haven, te!. 774-6085; Marcel Andre, te!. 774-8391; Desmond Green, te!. 7759333; Ray Sprague, te!. 775-0394--a GM specialist; Dean Chase, te!. 775-1683; Diesel Distributors, te!. 775-6998; Marine System"s Engineering, te!. 776-1363; Haulover Marine, te!. 776-2078; Marine Diesel Services, te!. 775-6002; Quartermaster Diesel, te!. 776-4025; VI Tecno Diesel, te!. 776-3080; Antilles Yachting Services, te!. 775-6789. St. John Coral Bay Marine Service, te!. 7766859. St. Croix St. Croix Marine and Development, Gallow Bay, Christiansted, te!. 773-0286/6011; STX
MAR 347-1079. For a diesel mechanic try JeanClaude Molina, te!. 773-5828. Tortola Air Devices, Ariel Smith, Box 182, Road Town, te!. 494-2314; Marine Power Services, te!. 494-2738; Parts and Power, Golden Hind, Wickhams Cay I, te!. 494-2830; Tortola Yacht Services, Wickhams Cay I, te!. 494-2124. Anguilla The Hasken Brothers are recommended by Dave Fernending, an experienced charter skipper, as good mechanics. Ask a taxi driver to find them for you. St. Martin Bohhie's Marina, Box 434, St. Martin, Netherlands Antilles, te!. 2068. Antigua Antigua Slipway, Box 576, St. John's, te!. 463-1056; Crabb's, Box 271, St. John's, te!. 463-2113. Guadeloupe Lemarie Brothers, floating dry dock, Carenage, Point-a-Pitre, te!. 82-34-47. Martinique Ask at the various marine supply stores as to who is a good mechanic. St. Lucia . Rodney Bay Marina, Rodney Bay. St. Vincent CSY Marina, Blue Lagoon, Kingston. Grenada Frank Haines, Grenada Yacht Services. Trinidad Check at Trinidad Yacht Club and Trinidad Yachting Association. Venezuela Try shipyards; plenty of engines, therefore there must be plenty of mechanics. Bermuda Bermuda Shipyard, Box GE 37, St. George's, te\. 297-8194; VHF 74. Azores Check with the fishing boat skippers. Madeiran Archipelago In Funchal the shipyard and very large machine shop is referred to as the Arsenal-machine shop, electricians, diesel mechanics, basically everything. Canaries Same as Azores; also check with marina management.
OUTBOARDS
Puerto Rico Too many to list; check at the marinas and in the Yellow Pages. St. Thomas Power Products, 6 Long Bay Road; Yamaha agent, te!. 774-6085; VI Pleasure Boats, te!. 775-6569; Ruan's Marine Service, te!. 7756346; Shoreline Marine, te!. 774-2255; J. B. Honda, te!. 776-5210; Offshore Inflatables, te!. 776-5432. St. Croix St. Croix Marine, te!. 773-0289; M.D. Marine, te!. 775-6372. St. John Card Box Marine, Yamaha, te!. 7766859 or channel 16. Tortola Parts and Power, inside Tortola Yacht Services; Yamaha dealer, te!. 464-2830; Pelican
Provisions and Services Hook Chandlery, te!. 464-2512; Tradewinds Yachting Services, Wickham's Cay I, te!. 4643154. St. Martin Bobbie's Marina, Philipsburg, St. Martin; Budget Marine, Robbie Ferron, across from Bobbie's, tel. (809) 22068; Island Water World, Simson Lagoon, PO Box 234; Beach Island Marina, Rudolph Plessury, on Marigot-Philipsburg road but also accessible via dock from Simson Lagoon. Guadeloupe Henri Martin, 23 rue Gospail BA 385, 97162 Pointe-a-Pitre, tel. 82-18-35; Telex: 129-775GL. Martinique Rene Plissonineau, 1.2 km Route de Sainte Therese (road to the airport), Fort-deFrance, tel. 71-89-29. De Wouveres, 1.2 km Route de Sainte Therese (road to the airport) Fort-deFrance, tel. 71-50-04. Antigua Marine Handling (outside Crabb's Marina gate), Tom Santent, Box 271, St. John's, tel. 463-2200. Island Motors, Queen Elizabeth Highway, St. John's. Trinidad Check Yellow Pages, as there are literally dozens of outboard agents. Check at Trinidad Yacht Club for good outhoard mechanics. Venezuela A real bargain~utboards are cheaper retail in Venezuela than they are wholesale in the States, available everywhere; for good mechanics, check with the marina managers. Atlantic Islands Except for Bermuda you will find very few outboards and little in the way of spares. ELECTRICIANS
Puerto Rico Check Yellow Pages and consult with marina managers. St. Thomas Marine Systems Engineering, te\. 776-1363; Wilson Marine Electric, te\. 776-5300; VI Aircraft and Marine Acces., tel. 774-4424; DeHart Yacht Services, tel. 774-5360; Antilles Yachting Service, tel. 775-6789. St. Croix St. Croix Marine and Development, Christiansted, tel. 773-0289 or 773-6011; Telex: STX MAR 347-1079. Tortola Cay Electronics, Wickham's Cay n, Road Town, tel. 464-2400; National Electric, tel. 464-3269. St. Martin Bill Featherstone at Dave Rainez Yacht Services, Simson Lagoon, next to Island Water World. Antigua Signal Locker, Cap Green, Nelson's Dockyard, English Harbour, tel. 463-1528; Marine Electronics, Antigua Slipway, English Harbour, te!. 463-1056.
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Guadeloupe Lemarie Brothers, Carenage, Point-a-Pitre, te!. 82-34-37. St. Lucia Rodney Bay Marina, Rodney Bay, te\. (809) 452-0324; Stevens Yachts, Rodney Bay, tet. 452-8648, 8848. St. Vincent See Caribbean Sailing Yachts Grenada Check with Alan Hooper at Go Vacations, Spice Island Marina. He may be able to find you one. Venezuela Check with the local marina managers. Bermuda Bermuda Shipyard in St. George's, tel. 297-8194, VHF 74; also check in the Bermuda Guide. Atlantic Islands Since they all support large fishing fleets, there must be plenty of electricians; check Yellow Pages, major shipyards, and with the fishermen. The new shipyard in Mindelo, Sao Vicente, Cape Verde, has an electronics shop.
ELECTRONICS
Puerto Rico A real prohlem. St. Thomas Al Cleland, tel. 775-1033; Electronics Unlimited, tel. 774-4742; Gearlj Electronic Services, tel. 776-1444; Marine Electronics, tel. 774-7455. Tortola Calj Electronics, tel. 4-2400; BVI Electronics, tel. 4-2723; National Electric, tel. 43269. St. Martin Radio Holland, Philipsburg. Antigua Signal Locker, Cap Green, Nelson's Dockyard, English Harhour, tel. 31528. St. Lucia Rodney Bay Marina, Rodney Bay, tel. (809) 452-0324. Bermuda Check Bermuda Guide. Atlantic Islands Since all the fishing boats have fancy fish finders, electronics, navigation, radar, and radiotelephone--on all the major islands it is just a case of finding the experts. Check with shipyards and fishing skippers on the major islands.
ENGINE AGENTS
Caterpillar, USI Puerto Rico, PO Box 2529, John F. Kennedy Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Tel. (809) 781-3066. Garcia Machinerlj, PO Box 3368, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Massel, Route de Faizet, PO Box 210, Pointe-aPitre, Guadeloupe. Tel. 82-31-545. Garage Americain, E.T.S. Louis Crocquet, 38 Ave., Dispartquet 38, Fort-de-France, Martinique. Tel. 57971 or 57954.
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Tractor and Machinery, PO Box 945, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 62-31-545. General Electric, Venezuela SA, CaIle Rios Abanamiranda, Apartado 1666, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 71-98-11. Cumming's Diesel Hane Caribe, Carr. 2, Ken. 17, Hato Tjas, Puerto Rico. Mailing address: PO Box 2376, San Juan, PR 00936. Tel. (809) 7873030. Cumvenca, Apartado de Correos, 60414, CHACO Tour Primera Piso, 3 Avenida Francisca de Miranda, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 33-86-31. Detroit Diesel (General Motors): DeSirk Detuerto, Rico Division, Leaseways de Puerto Rico, Block C, Creraric Industrial Place, PO Box 4019, Carolina, PR 00063. Tel. (809) 774-8953. Antilles Mechaniques, Zone Industrial Lamartin, Martinique. Tel 74-13-38 or 74-16-92. Diesel Power Service, Ltd., 173 Western Main Road, st. James, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. Tel. 6288233; TWX 3004 SFNTLX. (Detroit Diesel and Allison distributors). Ray Sprague, Smith Bay, St. Thomas. Tel. 7750394. Stuart Stevenson de Venezuela SA, Avenida Francisca de Miranda Terre, Cerrica, Messd. Apartado 62563, CHACO Tour, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 32-31-78 or 32-63-69. Ford, Peter Fenton, Marine Diesel Services, Compass Point Yacht Club (off Scott Beach Road), East End, St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands. Tel. (809) 775-3125. There are also, of course, Ford automotive and tractor agents throughout the Islands who carry basic engine parts but seldom have parts for the marine conversion kit. Perkins Power Products, Long Bay Road, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands. Tel. (809) 774-6085 or (809) 774-1425. Parts & Power, Tortola Yacht Services, Road Town, Tortola. Tel. (809) 494-2830. Yanmar Boschetti, Los Mercedes, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 91-62-02. Acme, St. Michaels, Barbados. Tel. 75467. Onan West Industrial Machinery & Supply Co.
(WIMSCO), epo Box 4308, Roosevelt Avenue at NW 15th Street, San Juan, PR 00936. Tel. (809) 782-2850. Power Products, Long Bay Road, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands. Tel. (809) 774-6085 or 1325. Parts & Power, PO Box 235 (behind the Golden Hind), Road Town, Tortola. Tel. (809) 494-2830. Industrial Agencies Ltd., 59 SackvilIe St., Portof-Spain, Trinidad. Tel. 62-516-91. Sanchez & Co., Avenida Rooseveltl Prado de Maria, Apartado 1006, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 62-45-01. Volvo Penta Power Products, Long Bay Road, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas. Tel. (809) 774-6085 or (809) 774-1425. Paul Parfait Valva Penta, 35 rue Jacques Coyotte, Fort-de-France, Martinique. Tel. 71-35-28. Volvo Penta, CaIle 4 con Calle 11-1, Apartado de Correos 50925, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 38-8110, 38-83-17, 38-84-59, or 38-87-00; Telex: 26311; Cable: Nautiveu. Westerbeke Fajardo Marine, Victor Richert, PO Box 597, Porta Real, Fajardo, PR 00740. Tel. (809) 863-4809. Diesel Distributors Michael Browning, Box 12148, St. Thomas 00801. Tel. (809) 775-9080 or (809) 775-6998. Kohler Generators Garcia Machinery Inc., PO Box 3368, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Spesco Inc., PO Box 3127, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands. Tel. (809) 774-3535. Hayes & Co., PO Box 430, Christiansted, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands. Tel. (809) 773-0510. Rene & Henri, Dormoy, Box 472, St. Simon, Fort-de-France, Martinique. Tel. 71-95-16. Central Foundry, Box 240, Bridgetown, Barbados. Tel. 64365. Thomas Peake & Co., Box 301, 177 Western Main Rd., Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. Tel. 622-4290. Lorenzo Mustilles, Apartado 234, Caracas, Venezuela. Tel. 92-10-33. Wellman Auto Supply, Box 54, Willemstad, Cura<;ao.
10
Chartering The whole chartering business in the Islands began sort of by accident back in the early fifties when Commander Vernon Nicholson, with his wife and two sons, en route around the world, stopped off at English Harbour in Antigua to refit their boat. While there they discovered, to their delight, that tourists were quite anxious to go out sailing for a fee. It struck the commander as a great way to replenish finances before taking off across the Pacific. One thing led to another, and before long more boats came out from England in quest of the Golden Fleece. Nicholson stayed on to become a charter broker and a leading light in the restoration of the old dockyard at English Harbour. Eventually V. E. B. Nicholson & Sons developed into a travel agency, supply store, yacht brokerage office, and manager of hotels-all operated by the commander and his two sons, daughters-in-Iaw, and lately, granddaughters. He is also largely responsible for the creation of Antigua Race Week. The commander died in 1984, but the prosperity of English Harbour stands as a monument to his vision and energy. His wonderful wife, Effie, and the rest of the family are still going strong. The American end of things more or less began in earnest in the middle 1950s in St. Thomas. In those days St. Thomas was largely a divorce mill teeming with wronged young women who were establishing residency there for uncontested divorces. The wait was long and there wasn't much to do in the meantime. Young male boat owners began clustering around Charlotte Amalie like bees to honey. At that time there were no yacht yards in the Islands that truly deserved the name. All of the
owners had to make do with their own wits and skills. My own experiences are a case in point. I reacquired Iolaire in 1957 after she had ended up high and dry on the beach in front of the Caribbean Beach Hotel in Lindbergh Bay when her anchor shackle let go in the swell. (Moral: Don't lie in Lindbergh Bay with the swell running in; but if you must, use two anchors.) The underwriters declared her a total loss. I bought her from the insurance company for $100, as is, where is. As there was no hope of getting her hauled anywhere, I decided to piece her back together right there on the beach. We knocked out the interior, installed framing to hold her together, and proceeded to jack her up, using greenheart wedges and odd bits of timber that were lying around. Two weeks later we had her upright and temporarily patched. We then hired a crane from the West Indian Company to float in and lift her off. After a good deal of maneuvering, we got her under tow, hrought her up, and began rebuilding. With the aid of three local shipwrights and a number of prep-school kids on their Christmas vacation, fourteen weeks and two days from the date I bought her she was out on charter. She had thirteen new planks, thirteen new frames, a new rudder, a new bilge stringer, a new interior, and a new engine. Four years later she was converted from a seveneighths sloop to a masthead cutter-but not by ordinary processes. While we were beating to windward under reefed main and no. 2 genoa, the jaws sheered off from the poured socket on the headstay and the whole rig came back on our ears. (I now go to windward under double-heads ail rig.) We managed to get the sails off, lashed the rest of
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the mess to the sides, and hung onto it all night. At dawn we attached the anchor line to the butt of the mast and heaved the whole thing overside. Wonder of wonders, for once the engine ran. We towed the rig from 0530 to 1730, when we finally arrived in the Bight in Norman Island. Dick Griffin in his 36-foot, Aitken-designed gaff-rigged cutter, Quandy, came in and anchored alongside. The next morning he took his mainsail off the gaff and rigged the spar as a cargo boom; with the aid of a good anchor windlass we lifted the mast out of the water and set it on Iolaire's deck. We then powered down to St. Thomas, arriving in the afternoon to discover that a four-day holiday was coming up. We hurried ashore to purchase wood and glue before the stores closed, and with the help of Ruben Petersen, one of St. Thomas's famous old shipwrights, the mast was trimmed and scarfed, and shortened by five feet for a cutter rig. When everything was ready to go, we found that there were no cranes available. The mast was stepped with "Norwegian steam": about twenty men picked up the mast bodily and set it on Iolaire's deck. We powered over to Seaward, a 77foot schooner owned by the late Kris Lundal. He rigged his fore gaff as a cargo boom and we started lifting the mast. At this point it was discovered that the anchor windlass didn't work, so we took a couple of turns around the bollard, and all twenty of us, heaving like a tug-of-war on the fall of the tackle, hoisted the spar.
Iolaire, I should add, has been in the chartering business ever since I plucked her off the beach, and she was pretty typical in those good old days of chartering. The boats certainly were not as hmcy or as professionally run as they are today, but in general I think maybe the charter parties had more fun. What the boats lacked in luxuries (running out of ice was normal routine), they made up for in the colorfulness of their crews. Practically everyone had gone through World War 11 in the service of some country or other, and some had been in prison camps or the underground. They were a roistering, bold, and capable lot; they didn't expect life to be handed to them on a silver platter, and they made their living where they found it-and had fun finding it. Also, of course, there were no handy cruising guides. The charts were none too good (and for the most part have remained that way), and the inaccuracies were discovered when someone ran aground or received a bad scare when an uncharted
reef slid by close aboard. Obtaining food in the mid-fifties was none too easy either. Outside St. Thomas, shopping became a major project. One always went with some trepidation out into the marketplaces, armed with a large canvas bag or a straw basket. You had to stop at half a dozen stores at the least. And if you managed to purchase a large load of groceries at one store, the storekeeper always insisted on having a small boy carry it for you. For some reason, either out of a sense of quaintness or entrepreneurism, the larger the load the smaller the boy. To go back to one's boat like that often was downright embarrassing. The crewed charter business developed slowly from the late fifties to the mid-sixties, mostly through secondhand boats that had been bought in Europe and brought over to the Islands. qradually people began to get the idea that lots of money could be made in the chartering business-with few exceptions, an erroneous idea, in my opinion. Many wealthy yachtsmen sent their boats down under hired skippers to make some money while they weren't using their boats. Then entrepreneurs began building boats especially for the charter business, and this idea led to the bare boat charter fleets, which have now sprung up all over the Islands. During this boom in chartering, the old ownerskippers have pulled in their belts a few more notches and kept on working. For their part (and my own) I must say that what the older boats may lack in creature-comfort is more than made up for by the fact that their skippers have been in the Islands for years, and can take a charter party to all sorts of out-of-the-way places that the hired skipper has never heard of. When the first specially built charter boats came along, they were mostly floating hotels, complete with air-conditioning, freezers, hi-fi, huge after cabins, and every other wonder of the age. Most of these, unfortunately, have the windward-going ability of a sand barge. That, and keeping all the equipment running, is what gives charter skippers gray hairs and ulcers. It also explains why so many bare boats in the Virgin Islands spend most of their time under power. It's not that the charterers can't sail, it's that the boats can't sail. Not all the bare boats are dogs, of course. And the idea of bareboat fleets, pioneered by W. R. Van Ost and Tom Kelly in the formation of Caribbean Sailing Yachts, is a good one in theory: a fleet of boats exactly the same to cut down on maintenance problems, direct contact with an office in New York, and a small yard to maintain the boats.
Chartering Some of the boats designed for the business sail pretty well, and some of them are adequately equipped. Furthermore, in recent years the bare boat fleet has hecome tremendously varied, and you can charter everything from a comfortable tub to a high performance cruiser/racer. But you have to do your research ahead of time to make sure you get what you want. We cannot list here all the brokers handling charter yachts in the Carihbean-the situation changes too rapidly. Check the chartering sections of Sail, Cruising World, and Yachting magazines, especially their Caribbean issues. There is also a magazine called Chartering that is devoted strictly to chartering worldwide. In any case, the hareboat boom has revolutionized the chartering business in the Islands, and here follows a discussion of various facets of the chartering picture today.
CREWED CHARTERS
Some crewed boats, especially the smaller ones, charge a flat fee for everything and have done with it. But many of the larger hoats add a per-person charge to the basic price for consumption of fuel, food, and liquor (although this is sometimes itemized separately at the end of the charter), and for laundry, dockage, and port-clearance charges. A small fraction of crewed hoats charge a flat fee and then deliver an extensive itemized list of extras at the end. This is a system I would urge you to avoid. The last day of a vacation is a poor time for the skipper to work up a "swindle sheet" and for the charter party to try to check it over. The most important thing in chartering a crewed boat is that you know full well what kind of deal you're getting into and what the final costs are or are apt to he before you make your final commitment. Most crewed charter boats are equipped to handle two couples. Some can handle three couples, but very, very few can take eight people-either comfortably or legally. This is hecause any American-registered boat carrying more than six passengers for hire must meet all sorts of exacting construction and equipment requirements set hy the Coast Guard. The average yacht can't possibly comply with all these requirements (some of which are ridiculous), so the great majority of American charter boats are restricted to six passengershence the term "six-pack license" for the minimal
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Coast Guard sticker. More than one charter cruise has been spoiled when the Coast Guard has discovered eight people on a boat with a six-pack license. So check it out. It is especially important on the crewed charter boat to ascertain who is working on the boat. In the southern islands the large crewed charter boats frequently have skippers that continue on board year after year. You know the boat you are chartering and you usually know the crew. However, up in the Virgin Islands, the burn-out rate in skippers is so great that what may be a great boat with a great crew one year may not be the next year. The reason for this difference, I believe, is that although cruising the southern islands requires longer passages and harder work for the crew when they are actually sailing, in the long run it is easier. After sailing from Antigua to Guadeloupe, for example, the skipper can figure out how to lose his charter party for a full day by sending them off on a tour of the island; this leaves him and his crew with a day of peace and quiet to relax, repair broken hits and pieces, or clean up the boat. However, in the Virgins the islands are so small that if you manage to lose your charter party for more than a few hours at a time you are doing very well. Consider living with a charter party twentyfour hours a day for fourteen straight days (multiply that by six or eight charters a season), and you can see why Virgin Island charter skippers tend to burn out early. Don't be afraid to inquire about individual boats, as some of the oldest and most experienced skippers do not have brokers but deal directly with the charterer. Others book both direct and through brokers. Still others book only through one broker. The cost of chartering varies greatly. The cheapest head boats (where one person signs up for an individual bunk) charge ahout $600 per week for bunk and food; drinks are extra. If you pick a relatively small bare boat and cram six aboard, you could get away with as little as $200 a week per person summer, $400 winter. Six aboard a more commodious bare boat will run to $250 each summer, $500 winter. Having the boat stocked by the charter organization will cost from $12 to $18 per person per day. If four people charter a boat with crew in the 45- to 60-foot category, prices range from a low of about $900 to a high of $1,400 per person per week. Six people on the same boat will reduce a per-person charge, of course, but will make for
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide uncomfortably close quarters. On boats over 60 feet, the sky's the limit with prices ranging from $8,600 to $12,000 per week for boat and crew. Naturally the more you pay, the better the crews and the more elegant the boats. For the price you get superb cooking, wine with meals, some entertainment, and red-carpet service all the way. Even in this category, however, very few boats take more than six passengers. A good comparison can be made with the costs of hotel accommodations. In most cases on crewed boats liquor is included in the price, so there is no huge room service and bar bill staring you in the face at the end of your vacation. So I estimate that chartering a crewed yacht works out on a per-day per-person basis to about the same as you'd spend ashore. If you're the sort who picks a simple, inexpensive hotel, you'd probably do likewise in a charter boat. But if you're willing to spend $100 a day each on a hotel with drinks, tips, trips, etc., extra, you'll do very well, comparably, on a luxury charter boat at the same fee-usually with all extras except tip in the base price.
BAREBOAT CHARTERS
On bare boats, arrangements tend to be a lot simpler. Essentially, you pay for the use of the boat, and either the agency or you, the charter party, stocks it for the cruise. Even though it leads to somewhat more complicated fee structures, I think it's better if you let the agency do the provisioning. In this way you can depart immediately upon your arrival, and don't have to waste a day chasing around a strange city trying to store an empty boat when you'd much rather be out sailing. One thing to remember in bare boat chartering, however, is that some come with a more or less complete inventory of equipment and others with only the bare essentials. Make sure you are sent a complete list of what the boat comes with before you sign anything. Some boats, for example, may be supplied with spinnaker and several headsails, while others carry only a rudimentary jib. The greatest disadvantage of bare boat chartering is that the lessee is completely responsible for the boat. This is immediately impressed on you by the fact that all bareboat charterers demand a so-called damage deposit, usually to the amount of the deductible ("excess," to the British) of their insurance policy. If you lose the dinghy (or if it's stolen) repayment comes out of your pocket. If you run aground and knock paint off the bottom, the owner has the right to haul the boat and have it sanded
and repainted-and there goes your deposit. Thus, be sure you always run through the equipment list when you're being checked out on the boat; if anything is missing, have it noted and cosigned on the list or you'll be charged for items you didn't lose as well as for those you did. Presently this damage deposit is about $500, but now that larger boats are coming through with bigger insurance deductibles, I would guess the deposit will rise to $7.50 to $1, ()()() in the not -toodistant future. Also, you should be prepared to demonstrate your sailing as well as your paying ability. Before the keys are handed over, you may have to show your skills on board the boat you are chartering; that you know how to pilot, anchor, and sail.
"HEAD BOATS"
Besides crewed and bare boat charters, there is another option for the individual who doesn't have too much to spend or hasn't put together a group. Charterers who fill their boats with such individual bookings refer to them as "head boats." I suggest being very careful befi>re booking into one of these. Obtain names of people who have gone on the cruise within the last few months. If the charterer won't provide you with such references, forget the whole thing. They are used to being asked for names and should cooperate in supplying you with a proper list. Some head boats are good operations, even though they may not look as well maintained or come with as many luxuries as the plusher fleet. Ten days or two weeks of fun and adventure, with sailing lessons thrown in, can be had for a reasonable price. Most of them have been in business for years, enjoying much repeat business; but there are a few that are so bad no one can understand why their owners haven't been thrown in jail for fraud. But don't let this minor risk scare you away from head boats-just check carefully and only go on one that comes well recommended.
THE FLOTILLA CHARTER
This is an idea whose time has apparently not yet come-but I think it is worth explaining and encouraging. Pioneered by Mediterranean Charter Service (MCS) in the Virgin Islands, the flotilla charter is designed for sailors who aren't quite confident enough to go off on their own, but who want to bare boat. The drill is to send out a flotilla of bare boat
Chartering
charterers in the company of a mother ship sailed by an experienced skipper. Every morning the flotilla skippers assemble on the mother ship and are given a rundown of the day's run, the dangers to be avoided, the best places to stop for lunch, etc. Reservations are taken for the evening meal, either ashore or on the mother ship, and then everyone is off for the day. Aside from the comfort of having an experienced hand nearby, this system has two other advantages: 1) For the women who almost inevitably do most of the galley duty, there is the option of eating ashore at some anchorages or on the mother ship some nights. Many women feel that trading their well-appointed kitchens at home for a crowded, illequipped galley isn't much of a vacation bargain; I don't blamc them, and the flotilla charter is a pretty good solution. 2) If you have a breakdown, the repair parts are right there on the mother ship. This can save a lot of time and hassle. Unfortunately, when MCS tried this scheme in 1979-81 it didn't take-it was not well-enough financed, or not well-enough publicized, or something. Still I think the idea has merit and hope it is revived in the future.
SAILING SCHOOLS
There is also the sailing-school routine-pioneered by Steve Colgate in Puerto Rico at Palmas del Mar with a fleet of Solings. His operation, Offshore Sailing School (OSS), now not only teaches sailing in Solings based in Tortola, but also teaches cruising using chartered bare boats and racing aboard his big sloop Sleuth, which has continually been successful in the racing circuit. OSS has been followed by some of the bareboat organizations, which have set aside part of their fleets in the summer off-season as sailing schools. This is an excellent way for the whole family to learn to sail at one time. Annapolis Sailing School also has an offshore division in St. Croix. Basically it is for people who know how to sail and who want cruising experience. There's plenty of that to be had on the long 40-mile passage from st. Croix to the British Virgins and the 40-mile return. Gerry Damm, owner of the Pearson 40 Damsel, runs a sailing school based aboard Damsel at Spice Island Charters, Prickly Bay, Grenada. Guests come in groups or as individuals and are given a complete sailing course not only in sailing, but also in navigation, piloting, provisioning, maintenance,
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repair. This is such an intensive course that Gerry is licensed by the Canadian Yachting Association to give certificates upon completion of the various stages. Whatever way you want to go, be sure to plan ahead, as the best boats invariably are booked early on. However, if suddenly you decide to charter at the last minute, start phoning reliable brokers. There's an outside chance that one of them might have a cancellation.
TIPPING
The question of tipping raises an imponderable. Even though a charter skipper myself, I have observed no hard and fast rules, except that an owner-skipper often comes off on the short end of the stick. On Iolaire I've practically never received a tip, although my crews almost always have. Whenever I've skippered ~omeone else's boat as a substitute skipper, I have been tipped. I guess it's part of the harbershop tradition, in which the owner of the establishment is not considered in need of a tip. As for tipping the crew, there are no rigid standards here either, but it should be kept in mind that on many of the yachts the crews are young, eager, do their best to please-and are paid beans. They rely on tips to make a financial go of it. Similarly, by American yachting standards the skippers in the Islands are paid nowhere near what they would receive for a similar job in the States; but they're willing to work for less as they enjoy the life and, frankly, whatever tips might come their way. Generally, for a good crew who have really tried (and the vast majority do), 10 to 15 percent of the charter price to be divided among them is in order. Some people who find it awkward to tip the owner-skipper have another much-appreciated way. They send useful items for the boat which they know the owner wouldn't ordinarily buy himself, such as clocks, crockery, lamps, and what have you. Others have been known to invite the skipper to the States for a week or two, and have donated round-trip tickets. Still others offer to chase down spare parts for him should he cable in an emergency. All the above are received gratefully, but the best tip you can possibly give an owner-skipper is to charter him again, and the next best thing is to send your friends down tu charter his boat. To the skipper, sailing with guests who've been on board
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before makes the job a lot easier, and friends of previous guests usually turn out to be better prepared at the outset.
CHARTER TERMS AND PAYMENT
Charter agreements can he written in various ways, but basically the hroker agrees to place such-andsuch a hoat at your disposal (with or without crew, as the case may be) for a set period at a set price. The agreement states that the vessel is fully found and ready for sea. Frequently if the charter is to begin or end some distance from the boat's home port, a "dead-head" fee of one-half the per diem rate is charged for delivery or return of the boat. In the case of a crewed hoat, the broker (or owner) is responsible for providing a competent crew, who are to be in charge of the safe operation of the boat at all times. The chartered can tell the captain where he wants to go, hut the decision to go there or not rests with the skipper. In the case of harehoat chartering, the charterer must be ahle and willing to convince the broker that he is competent enough to handle the hoat. If he cannot, all the good bareboat organizations have standby skippcrs available, and the charterer will have to pay his wage. Further, most bareboat agreements stipulate that the boat must he at a safe anchorage before sunset. If you're out after dark and get yourself in trouble, you'll be paying the damages rather than the insurance company. If the boat is not ready to leave exactly as promised, or is forced to lay over during the cruise, most agreements provide for one day of "hreakdown" per week of charter without penalty. This applies to bare or crewed boats. For example, if you're chartering for three weeks, the boat may not he available due to unforeseen breakdown for three days of those three weeks and no money will be refunded. For every day over that, a per diem refund is given; in extreme situations the remaining charter may be cancelled with refund per diem. The normal payment terms call for a 50 percent deposit, halance due prior to departure. The deposit is stated as nonreturnable, for the reason that once the boat is booked, all hrokers are noti6ed and its availahility crossed off the books. If the charter is subsequently cancelled, it's often impossible to 611 the slot in time. The charter season is relatively short-mainly December to mid-April-and a twoweek blank in the middle of it is costly to the charter operation. However, if you notify the brokers or charterers of your intent to cancel far
enough ahead that they are able to book another charter in your place, your deposit will be returned. There is no legal pressure you can bring to bear in this instance, but most operations are honest about it. After all, competition is high-which is a good thing-and a bad reputation can be harmful for a charter outfit. In the early days of the charter business a boat was usually paid for at the completion of the charter and personal checks were freely accepted. Unfortunately, all this has changed, due to a flood of last-minute cancellations and a hundle of bum checks. Charter operations were getting stung with increasing frequency; that's· why practically all charterers now require that payments be made in cash or certified check prior to the commencement of the charter. Another arrangement is for the charter operation to deal directly with its clients, rather than through a broker. A look at the economics of thc business will show why. Insurance costs alone have doubled, and in some cases tripled, since 1967, labor costs have tripled, the cost of replacement gear is up at least 100 percent, dockage fees have doubled, and hauling charges, port dues, licensing, and other incidentals have similarly increased. Some brokers are now charging the boat owners 20 percent of the gross-including food-which works out to close to 30 percent of the basic boat price. Further, many of the brokers insist that the boats they are handling help out with advertising expenses, printing of brochures, and so forth. The hrokers, too, are getting squeezed, because more and more charters are coming to them through travel agencies, so they have to split the commission. Thus a broker may be fi)rced to jack up his commissions even higher. In light of all this, the mathematics works out roughly that fifteen weeks of charter business made directly with the client is equivalent to some twenty weeks of business booked through a broker. Despite the pinch of the economics, many people are still buying new boats and placing them in the charter husiness. In a very few cases, with a properly organized and efficiently run boat, purchased for a hargain price, this can be a moneymaking enterprise. However, most people who know the business well will agree that operating a charter boat is seldom a financial success. Most boat owners look on chartering merely as a tolerable way of minimizing the expense of owning a good cruising boat. Uncle Sam's 1986 tax law changed the rules, but the charter business still goes on. The wealthy
Chartering individuals who own tax-dodge yachts seem to be able to hire tax experts who are always one step ahead of the IRS men making the laws to plug loopholes. As far back as the early sixties, optimistic owner-operators who were trying to make a living out of chartering would say, "Next year it is going to be better, the IRS is tightening up on these tax-dodge yachts, there will be less of them next year." Yet every year there are more and more tax-dodge yachts.
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YOUR CHOICES
sea knows it just ain't so with sailboats. To be sure, bareboat operators have had nothing but trouble from ham-fisted charter parties who thought they were mechanics and turned generators into spaghetti. Operators have become a mite wary of leaving even a pair of pliers on board. That's why many operators will protest at my next suggestion, but I offer it seriously: if the list of tools and spares is not to your mind sufficient and you are an experienced repairer, take your own. It's amazing how many tools, odds and ends, and components of a sail kit can be crammed into one briefcase. But before you take this drastic step, examine your conscience fairly as to whether you're competent enough to tinker with other people's gear.
In a way, chartering is still a buyer's market because of the vast variety of differen t boats to choose from. This will give you the opportunity to match your personality with that of the skipper of a crewed boat, or your sailing preferences with the performance of a bare boat. You should try to do just that, as most brokers can't be bothered with making this important effort. Someone who would prefer a comfortable motor sailer with a crew that waits on him hand and foot is bound to be unhappy on a converted I2-meter with a crew forever grinding in sheets. If you really would like to help sail a crewed boat, be sure to specify this to the broker and skipper. Some skippers are happy to let an experienced charter party sail the boat, but others don't like to have them do anything but sit and watch. Make sure your desire to do some sailing will be relayed to the skipper. Likewise, when chartering a bare boat, I feel it is essential to be very careful about the kind of boat involved, as well as the organization behind it. Talk to two or three people who have chartered the boat in question, or at least one of the same type. Further, check the equipment list carefully. Some bare boats are well equipped. Others are just as bare as Mother Hubbard's cupboard. Many, for instance, have neither whisker pole nor boom vang. This makes it almost impossible to sail dead downwind in any kind of a sea-which you're likely to do a great deal of, particularly in the British Virgins. So as you sit in the living room planning your trip, consider what you think a boat needs in the way of gear and scrutinize the equipment list closely-lest your dream trip turn into an expensive nightmare. One area in which the equipment is almost always submarginal is tools. Supposedly, the boat is in such fine shape that nothing can possibly go wrong. But anyone who's spent more than a day at
Think twice, too, about whether you truly want to undertake a bare boat voyage. For one thing, as I mentioned earlier, what may be great adventure to the skipper sailing his own boat is apt not to be so thrilling to his wife who has spent the last fifty weeks in the kitchen and may not be entertained by the prospect of two more in someone else's galley. Also, it can get nerve-wracking being responsible for the safety of the vessel. Being his own boss, the skipper has to fuss over piloting and navigation, and get up at three in the morning to make sure his anchor is holding. And without an experienced skipper to guide him, a bareboat charterer is likely to miss many of the best anchorages and places of interest. Finally, accurately predicting tomorrow's wind, weather, and tide conditions is tricky enough in the Antilles even for experienced local skippers; for the stranger it's virtually impossible. Not to flog a dead horse, but the follOWing, I think, makes the point pretty well. For many years two highly experienced sailors chartered Iolaire regularly; both of them were fully capable of sailing a bare boat themselves. When asked why they didn't do so instead of hiring old Iolaire, each of them had the same answer. "We cruise in the winter. When we come down here we want to relax. Don lets us sail the boat as much as we care to, but he and the crew do the cooking and navigating and take care of the details. We get in all the sailing we want, while Don does all the worrying. The arrival of bare boats nearly eliminated the small crewed charter boats of 40 to 45 feet and even made it difficult for 55-footers to survive. For a number of years now most of the crewed charter boats have been 65 feet or more. Bare boats are
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getting longer and larger, and now vessels as long as 50-footers are available as bare boats. But the owner-operated crewed boat of 35 to 55 feet long has happily reappeared on the scene in the Virgin Islands, largely due to the emergence of the Charterboat League, Sheraton Harbor Marina, St. Thomas. A strong owner's organization, the Charterboat League comprises more than one hundred crewed boats, and acts as a clearinghouse for direct booking of members' boats. It's an organization that can fight the members' battles with the Coast Guard, Island governments, travel agents, brokers, air bills, and the like. In any case, before making a final commitment to any charterer, request letters of reference from people who have chartered the boat recently and from people who have done business with the broker. A reliable skipper and broker will consult their lists of precious charterers and send you the names of some of the people in your area. If they aren't willing to do this, I'd call that sign enough to try someone else.
THE SKIPPER
Now, if I may, a few words on behalf of the skipper. Most people view the life of a charter skipper as an absolute dream. After all, he's given a beautiful yacht with maintenance paid for, cruises the Islands at the owner's expense in addition to getting a salary, entertains charming charter parties, visits exotic places, and so on. In actuality, though, he has probably delivered the boat from the States in the midst of a gale or two, and half of his equipment has broken down. So he must spend the next few weeks tinkering with stereo systems, refrigerators, freezers, airconditioning systems, and all the rest of the fancy gear that owners use to lure their customers, but which has an invariable tendency to stop working at sea. Then on to a "leisurely" cruise, in which he must entertain four or six people seven days a week, twenty-four hours a day. Many of them are personable, but just one difficult person who expects the skipper to do everything down to handstands On the masthead can make life miserable. And this goes on week in and week out for the entire winter season, with only a one-day break between charters. On that day our weary skipper does not haul himself off to the nearest saloon. Instead, he must take on stores, fuel, and water, and hunt down parts that have been lost by the air-freight service. At other times our brokers are apt to end the charter in Grenada and have one booked for two
days later in Martinique. They then get upset when the skippers become short-tempered. All this-plus the bother of clearing and entering, supervising each meal, taking guests on diving explorations, etc.-is one relentless strain. (Recently the skippers have been clawing for some break in the ceaseless routine, and a number of boats have placed a clause in the agreement calling for the charter party to take at least one dinner ashore each week. I think it's a good idea, and would predict that all charter agreements with crewed boats will eventually have this stipulation.) As a result of these pressures, when the boys get together at the end of the season or during a rare break, as you can imagine the gatherings tend to go on boisterously to the wee hours of the morning!
CRUISING GUIDES
Now let me say a word about crmsmg guides. Many bare boat fleets produce their own books or booklets for use by their charterers, and some of them are okay-and certainly the aerial photos of the most popular Virgin Islands anchorages produced by the Moorings is a useful adjunct to guides and charts. But some charter outfits are producing cheap photostatic copies of government charts without the proper corrections. Some of them, I must point out, have even copied charts from my old cruising guide-in one or two cases reproducing errors that have since been corrected in my charts. In fact, ever since I wrote my first Caribbean cruising guide in 1964, other publishers have either copied or plagiarized it and its successors. One yachtsman came aboard lolaire in Martinique, asked me to autograph his copies of this Guide, then presented me with a bottle of good French brandy as thanks for the help I'd given him. As he rowed away he said, "By the way, Mr. Street, how does it feel to he the most plagiarized author in the world?" Here's a suggestion as to how to find the most secluded anchorages in the Caribbean. Note those harbors mentioned in the bareboat charters' guides and then go to other places described in this guide. That way you'll find yourself in the least-crowded spots-and despite all you hear, there are still a lot of them in the Caribbean. Even in the Virgins there are anchorages where you will be by yourself or with only one or two other boats if you follow this advice. Let me remind you, although I've said it before, that the Imray-Iolaire charts and the harbor charts
Chartering used in this Guide, Volumes I-IV, have been completely redrawn and corrected, using the best available information from US, British, French, Spanish, German, Dutch, and Portuguese charts. They have also had the benefit of corrections by numerous old West Indian hands. If you find any errors or changes in either the Guide or charts please write to me clo David Payne, 32138 Dukes Place, London EC3A 7LX, England. Let me close this chapter with a personal story about how the chartering business launched me into the writing business. One of my first charter parties in 1959 was John Fearnley, who for many years had been casting director for Rodgers and Hammerstein, and his friend Burt Shevelove, who co-wrote that wonderful play A Funny Thing Hap-
pened on the Way to the Forum. Their mutual friend was John Steinbeck, whom we stopped off to see at Caneel Bay. One evening Shevelove and Fearnley were discussing what it takes to be a writer; I was most interested and asked a lot of questions. Finally Stein beck said, «Bullshit! What it takes to be a writer is to put your ass on a hard wooden chair and look at a GO typewriter six hours a day, six days a week and then you become a writer." I said in a plaintive voice, "But Mr. Steinbeck, I can't spell or punctuate." "Don't worry, kid," he replied, "what do you think secretaries and editors are for?" I still can't spell or punctuate. (Tell me about it! Ed.)
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Yacht Clubs and Racing The old commercial sail rule in the Lesser Antilles is "de biggest hoat got de righ to' way," and although this rule doesn't carry over to racing in the Lesser Antilles, it's worth remembering. Frequently when starting in an Eastern Caribbean regatta (especially in the cruising division) you dismver one of the "big 'uns" such as the 90-foot, gaff-rigged schooner Antares, the mighty 72-foot ketch Ti (Ticonderoga), or the 72-foot ketch Eileen charging through the smaller boats on crowded starting lines like unguided missiles. They can't stop and are usually so hemmed in on all sides that they can't turn. Time for us little guys to get out of the way! This daredevil game is what racing in the Eastern Caribbean is all about, and seldom anywhere else will you see such a collection of hot ocean racers, cruising boats, and classic "big 'uns" all on or near the same starting line. This book is admittedly a cruising guide, but the racing in the Eastern Caribbean is so much fun that a description of it belongs here. You're going there to cruise, but you may be tempted to try a little friendly competition. Here's where to find it. The main scene in Eastern Caribbean racing is Antigua. The sight that greets the crew arriving from up north is mind-boggling. Each year old Admiral Nelson spins even faster in his grave. In place of the calm efficiency of the Royal Navy, today you find assembled (or crammed) in the midst of the restored eighteenth-century Nelson's Dockyard a collection of more than three hundred yachts of all shapes, sizes, and nationalities. Some h'ave come to race, some to watch; others have come to drop their hooks while the crews disappear for a week on board the various racing machines.
The Antigua committee desk sounds like a United Nations meeting or the scene at the Tower of Bahe\. You hear French, Spanish, German, Italian, Dutch, Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Afrikaans (and sometimes even Zulu), plus English. Skippers' meetings in the Eastern Caribbean are necessary because there are often special local rules that at times have caused more than a little confusion. Nevertheless, the major regattas of the Eastern Caribbean provide some of the finest racing in the world, in all grades of expertise-they are all things to all men, In the racing division one finds extremely tense, skillful competition that frequently surprises the visiting firemen from the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit (SORC), from the Admirals Cup Races, and other major regattas. For those who don't want the tension of high-pressure racing, there's the cruising division where spinnakers and bloopers are not allowed. Fast boats in the cruising division are usually only about ten minutes slower, on a 25-mile course, than their efficiently raced, similarly rated counterparts in the racing division. Then there is the traditional division, whose entries are very picturesque if not necessarily speedy. For some people, even the traditional division seems too much like work so they take part in the regattas by just watching the races, enjoying the scenery both fixed and movable, and enjoying the nightly parties, which in Eastern Caribbean racing are always good. Wind and weather in the Caribbean are just about ideal for racing. The standard weather report broadcast nine months of the year is "winds eastnortheast to east-southeast 12 to 18, higher in gusts"-but they never say how much higher in gusts. Any breeze under 12 knots is considered 30 4
Yacht Clubs and Racing light airs, and races are never cancelled for heavy weather. One thing that any yachtsman taking part in CaRT Regatta and Antigua Week should remember is that for the entire thirty-one years I have heen in the Caribbean there has been an April calm-exactly what causes this and when it is going to arrive God only knows; but sometime hetween the last few days of March and the first day of May there is a three- to five-day calm. So the yachtsman who is prepared for heavy weather, has rated his boat and taken gas accordingly, is most prohably going to run into at least one racing series of light air. So what do all these tempting diversions offer the yachtsman freezing to death up north? Well, there are many options: you can put together a racing crew, bare-boat charter a hot boat in the Islands, and go for broke in the racing division; or you can perhaps find a pretty hot racing boat down in the Islands in the charter business that can be chartered with the skipper and crew-which usually means skipper and cook. They will he most happy to let a competent racing yachtsman race the boat while the charter skipper keeps the charter out of trouble. This is especially appealing for those who have always wanted to race a really big boat. How about Bolero, a 72-foot yawl, or Gitana IV, a 90-foot yawl (formerly owned by the Baron Rothschild), or the famous 72-foot ketch Ticonderoga, or other large charter boats? These and similar boats have been chartered to race in either the cruising division or the racing division depending on the expertise of the charter party and the gear available on the boat. In the Petit St. Vincent, Bequia, and British Virgin Islands Regattas, plenty of hare boats, some of which are equipped for racing, are available through the normal charter channels. Finally, the cruising yachtsman who is coming down in his own boat for the winter should mark these races down in his schedule, as racing is a great way to meet other yachtsman in the Caribbean. There's always room for one more, and I guarantee you'll have the time of your life.
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racing is no less fierce or hard fought hecause of this.
THE CORT REGATTA In the late seventies the CaRT (Caribhean Ocean Racing Triangle) Regatta was formed. It consisted of the BVI Regatta, Rolex Regatta, and Antigua Week. Point totals were added up from all three regattas and there was the Caribbean Ocean Racing Triangle championship. In 1985, Antigua Week was dropped from the CaRT Regatta; the CORT series now consists of Copa Vel as co in late March, BVI sometime in April, and Rolex, always over the Easter weekend. The CaRT Regatta is sailed under the PHRF rule.
ROUND GRENADA RACE First Sunday in January; around Grenada clockwise, 40 miles. This is a challenging race because you encounter many different conditions. Sailed mostly by boats from the southern part of the Caribbean, this race in years past has provided a wonderful spectacle of the big boats and hot racing for small boats. (One sad note is the loss of the Beken bowl, presented by Keith Beken. It was a fantastic big punch bowl with an etching of the schooner Suzanne running downwind--one of Keith Beken's father's most famous photographs. The bowl was stolen from the Grenada Yacht Club sometime in the early seventies and it has not turned up since.) Originally, this race was unique in that the minimum waterline length was 45 feet. That really got the big ones out there. The starting date was the first Sunday in January and many of the big boats had just finished a charter and were free to race. Unfortunately, the date was moved, interest fell off, and then with the political troubles prior to the US takeover, yachting in Grenada fell off drastically. The Grenada Yacht Club plans to revive the Round Grenada Race. It will again become what it once was, one of the premier yachting events of the Eastern Caribbean. The first race is scheduled for Sunday, January 7, 1990.
The Races Following is the list of the major races and regattas in the Lesser Antilles. While in the past prizes included gifts of hard cash, airplane trips to exotic lands, and the like---offered to spur interest in the then fledgling racing program-the participants now compete for the usual silverware. But the
CARL SCHUSTER MEMORIAL RACE In Grenada on the first Monday in January, right after the Round Island race, in memory of Carl Schuster, who was killed by persons unknown in Cumberland Bay, St. Vincent. Carl was an extremely keen racing skipper on his various Zig-
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Zags, and was still active in his seventies when he was tragically murdered.
ST. BARTS REGATTA
The St. Barts Regatta, once one of the best parties in the Eastern Caribbean, died of politics a few years ago. It has been revived, and is usually midMarch-jungle grapevine comes up with the date each year.
HEINEKEN REGATTA
St. Martin, mid-February. A three-day regatta sponsored by Heineken beer, which Rows like water. It is run under the St. Barts rule. Jol Byerely serves as race officer and a Dutchman who will remain anonymous states, "Thank God Jol is there as no one else could keep the screaming Dutchmen in hand." It seems the Dutch like to protest.
COPA VELASCO
In Fajardo, Puerto Rico, latter part of March. First leg of the CORT Regatta. The race committee works like clockwork. It is backed up by wonderful Puerto Rican hospitality.
BVI REGATTA
A three-day regatta in April, the exact date depending on when Easter falls. Three days of good racing. The races are long-30- to 32-mile races are standard.
ROLEX REGATTA
St. Thomas Yacht Club. Easter weekend. An excellent regatta, superbly run, excellent bospitality at the yacht club.
TRINIDAD TO GRENADA RACE
This conglomerate event starts off with the "Girl Pat" race from Trinidad to Grenada, starting in the afternoon of Holy Thursday. Boats arrive in the dark or in the early hours of Friday. A lay day follows, and then Saturday, Sunday, and Monday are filled with small-boat racing-Lazers, Sunfish, and Mirrors----off Grenada Yacht Club and two good, hard day races for the cruiser-racers. Extensive, practically all-night parties are also part of the scene. The Trinidad to Grenada race is a good one for
the cruising boats because of the fact that the race is usually a beam reach and the cruising boats can be competitive against modern racing machines. low ire has retired from round-the-buoy racing but, given the chance, we will certainly take in races such as the Trinidad-Grenada, GaudeloupeAntigua, or St. Thomas-St. Croix race.
ENGLISH HARBOUR TO REDONDA RACE
A leeward-windward race, English Harbour to Redonda to English Harbour, about 75 miles, the weekend before Antigua Race Week. This idea was tried a number of years ago unsuccessfully, but it may well be revived and included in CORT in future years.
GUADELOUPE TO ANTIGUA RACE
The Guadeloupe to Antigua Race on the Thursday before Antigua Race Week is a lot of fun. The early-morning start is off Krahouanne Island in the northwest corner of Guadeloupe, and frequently half the Reet lies becalmed while the other half takes off-making the race a bit of a crap game. Why it doesn't start off T€~te d'Anglais, four miles farther out where wind is clear, is beyond me. However, sailing around before the start watching the Guadeloupe and Martinique boats is always more than a little fun. It's very difficult to keep your foredeck crew concentrating on the spinnaker when the little French boat next to you has an extremely efficient foredeck boss whose total clothing consists of a pair of sailing gloves to protect her hands from rope burns. This race is excellent for fast cruising boats as it varies from a close reach to broad reach. The wind is never far enough aft for the downwind sleds to get up and plane. Some years the out-and-out cruising boats have succeeded in winning. Galatea of Tortola, Dr. Tattersal's 36-foot Herreshoff ketch, has won it a number of times against the IOR boats. In 1987 it was really spectacular-the winner was a 30-foot, 1898 Falmouth Quay punt, Curlew. One minute hehind was Galatea, and then followed all tbe IOR boats.
ANTIGUA SAILING WEEK
The last few days of April and first days of May. Five around-the-buoys races varying from approximately 18 to 32 miles. Antigua is the ideal place in the Lesser Antilles to hold a race week. The island itself is low and doesn't obstruct the trades,
Yacht Clubs and Racing but it's large enough so that many different courses can be arranged, ending in several different anchorages. And it's halfWay between Trinidad and St. Thomas, so that boats from all corners of the Caribbean can come together without too long a sail. Originally conceived by publicity agents as a kind of Cecil B. DeMille extravaganza, Antigua Race Week has been attracting an ever-larger fleet, and many of the sailors are serious-minded competitors in fast new boats. In the early eighties the fleets averaged 130 boats. Antigua Sailing Week, in the estimation of many (including the author) is the best regatta in the Eastern Caribbean, if not the world. Come, enter, race, but be sure to bring two buckets full of money! Antigua Race Week has started a trend which I hope the other major regattas will follow, that of diViding the cruising division into cruising-racing and cruising-cruising classes. This means that the modern IOR boats that have decided not to go in the racing division because of lack of crew or expertise and are sailing without their spinnakers will be racing among themselves, and not chewing up on the real cruising boats-the old CCA or RORC boats and the big beauties-which may be more lovely, more seaworthy, and more comfortable than the new boats, but which simply aren't competitive with them around the buoys, spinnakers or no spinnakers. This division between cruising boats is not an easy one to make. What you need is a committee of experienced sailors and good judges of boats to decide which boats are cruiser-racers and which are cruiser-cruisers. To be successful, the committee must have the wisdom of Solomon, the courage of a lion-and the sense to remain anonymous! As a gathering of the clans, Antigua Race Week can't be beat. It's becoming something of a madhouse as more and more yachtsmen get the word about the good sailing and good times: the mooring facilities at Nelson's Dockyard have become severely strained, and the crowds at some of the parties are taking on Woodstock proportions. But the scene and the racing are unforgettable. The courses are varied, the competitors come from all corners of the world, and the parties on the beach are truly memorable. The fun and games at the Lay Day at the yacht club, and Dockyard Day that winds up the event are spectacular. Originally started as something for the charter skippers to do at the end of the season, the hotel association joined in promoting the regatta as a good way to fill empty hotel rooms when the season was winding down, and the whole affair has gone from strength to strength. Now if you want hotel rooms for Antigua Week
you have to reserve them a year ahead of time. It is an expensive party.
ST. LUCIA
In late Mayor early June St. Lucia has aquaaction: three days of fun and games combined with a match-racing championship for the Eastern Caribbean, using boats loaned by Stephens Yachts and the Moorings. Yacht Clubs from the Eastern Caribbean send down their hottest teams for the Congressional Cup series.
BEQUIA
Easter weekend there consists of three days of fun and games. The racing is not quite as serious as elsewhere in the Caribbean and many of the cruising boats, local whale boats, and double-ended fishing boats (locally referred to as two-bow boats) are out in force, racing for cash prizes.
TRINIDAD YACHTING ASSOCIATION WEEKEND
Southern Carihhean Sailing Week: The latter part of May. A four-day regatta which is a movable feast alternating between Trinidad, Martinique, and Barbados.
CARRIACOU REGATTA
First weekend in August. On Saturday yachts race from St. George's, Grenada, to Hillsboro in Carriacou, a distance of about 36 miles. The next morning is the Mermaid Inn Race, around the buoys. On Sunday afternoon and Monday are three workboat races, and everyone disperses on Tuesday. This date is when most of the people who live in the Lesser Antilles are on vacation, so attendance is good and everybody is out for-and finds-a good time.
MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND REGATTA
St. Thomas to St. Croix, followed by a round-thebuoys race in St. Croix, then a race back to St. Thomas-usually a reach both ways-great for fast cruising boats.
AROUND ST. THOMAS-FOURTH OF JULY
Starting at the Virgin Islands Yacht Club, counterclockwise around the island, a distance of about 30
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miles. It's a good race and there's always plenty of wind.
RACING IN PUERTO RICO
Club Nautico de Puerto Rico sponsors fourteen races a year for cruising-type hoats. The races vary from around-the-buoys to the 240-mile annual race around Puerto Rico. The most important races that Club Nautico de Puerto Rico holds are: The Governor's Cup Race, around Puerto Rico, usually in April; El Conquistador Regatta in June; Constitution Day Race in July, to Vieques and back; Labor Day Race, a weekend of racing in Fajardo; the Overnight Race in October, around Culebra and Vieques; and the Thanksgiving Day Race, a weekend race to Roosevelt Roads and return to Fajardo. There are also a number of series races held throughout the year. Write Club Nautico de Puerto Rico for details.
Yacht Clubs Many visiting yachtsmen don't realize that practically every island in the Lesser Antilles has its own yacht club. In fact, the histories of many of these date back as far as the 1920s and 1930s. Some clubs, of course, are more recent, having been knocked together in the last several years or so. But whether they are one-room sailing associations or gabled bastions, they are generally hospitable and together they have done a great deal to encourage the lofty pursuits of sailing in the Islands. It is frequently assumed that the yacht clubs of this area are "For Members Only"-at least this is how the signs read. One must learn to read between the lines. What they mean to say is "members, guests, and visiting yachtsmen from other clubs only." For the most part, if you simply come in by boat you're welcome without question. The only place I was required to show my home yacht club membership card was the club of Fort-de-France. The Barbados Yacht Club used to be notoriously stuffy, but this attitude has happily changed over recent years. Although they may not do handstands for every visiting yachtsman, they're certainly courteous. The only places in the Eastern Caribbean where the yacht clubs run a launch service are the two very friendly yacht clubs, St. Thomas Yacht Club in the Virgin Islands and Trinidad Yachting Association in Trinidad. Following are the yacht clubs in the Eastern
Caribbean, from Puerto Rico to Venezuela and the ABC islands: ~ Club Nautico de San Juan is located on the eastern end of the northernmost arm of San Juan Harbor (as shown on the II sketch chart), Puerto Rico. It's a large club with a marina. A bar, restaurant, fuel, water, ice, and showers are all right at hand. Powerboats tend to outnumber sailing craft. Ponce Yacht Club, Ponce, Puerto Rico, has a small, crowded marina and limited facilities; make arrangements beforehand if at all possible. The club is popular with visiting yachtsmen, and everyone I've known who has passed through Ponce has sung praises to the hospitality of its members (sometimes in the thick tones of a god-awful hangover). There's fuel, water, ice, a restaurant, showers, and hauling facilities for boats up to 40 feet. The club is the home of the Chalang class in which many of the present generation of Puerto Rico's racing yachtsmen learned their racing sailing. Chalang sloops vary in length from 23 to 28 feet, and are heavily constructed with a fin keel and the rudder on a skeg. They're often raced with more enthusiasm than skill, but they're an excellent training class. Roosevelt Roads Sailing Association has a clubhouse and mooring areas located on the northeast corner of Enseiiada Honda (Roosevelt Roads), Puerto Rico. The sailing association sponsors smallboat racing and once a year cosponsors a Thanksgiving Day Race with the Club Nautico de San Juan. Club Nautico de Puerto Rico has no clubhouse, and most of its members are also members of other clubs. Club Nautico de Puerto Rico organizes largeboat racing, and it's usually under this flag that Puerto Rican yachtsmen race elsewhere in the Caribbean. Federation of Puerto Rico is primarily interested in racing small boats, particularly the Olympic classes and Sunfish. They have a launching facility at Isla Verde, San Juan. Contact Juan R. Torruella (PO Box 507, San Juan, PR 00919) if you have any questions. Club Nautico de Cangrejos is located at Boca de Cangrejos, San Juan. It's for powerboats only, as there's a low fixed hridge at the entrance to the club and dock area. The club has its own travel lift for powerboats. Club Nautico de Catano specializes in smallboat racing, both power and sail. The clubhouse, with bar, showers, and snackbar, is located at Catano, Puerto Rico, in San Juan Bay. Club Nautico de Arecibo is a sport-fishing club,
Yacht Clubs and Racing with docks, fuel, water, showers, and light meals available. It's located behind the breakwater at Arecibo. Being on the north coast of Puerto Rico, which is exposed to the winter ground swell, it's not a comfortable long-term stop. St. Thomas Yacht Club, Cowpet Bay (also called Secret Harbor), at the east end of St. Thomas, is a very active yacht club with fleets of Sunfish, Flying Dutchmen, and many small cruiser-racers. Its members take part in most of the major cruisingtype regattas. They even managed to convince the Olympic Committee that the Virgins were not part of the United States and fielded their own Olympic team. This rare finesse was executed by Rudy Thompson, an ex-charter skipper, who is one of the fastest talkers in the Lesser Antilles. The atmosphere is "country cluhbish," with families sailing, swimming, and picnicking en masse over the weekends. It is very hospitable, has launch service, and runs the Rolex Regatta on Easter Weekend. The anchorage is not good-rocky and rolly if wind goes southeast. St. Croix Yacht Club, Tague Bay, is an active small-boat club with a hearty fleet of Sunfish and Snipes. It also sponsors a few cruiser races. There isn't a great deal of activity here during the week as the club is located well out of town. St. John Yacht Club, St. John, has (ollowed a new trend in yacht racing. The boats start out from their home basin on Saturday, race to a good anchorage, spend the night, and race back the next day. It's an improvement over the usual practice of starting and finishing at the same harhor twice in one weekend. British Virgin Islands Yacht Club, Road Town, Tortola, in existence only since the early 1970s, started off in a room in the Moorings establishment, then moved to a beat-up barge that was half sunk; Hurricane Frederick put an end to that. Through the good offices of Charlie Carey of the Moorings, the club has obtained a lease on part of the old Moorings establishment. Now the club, open every night, runs excellent parties, good races, and the excellent spring BVI Regatta in April, part of CORT. Antigua Yacht Club, Falmouth Harbour, Antigua. The lifeblood of this energetic club was originally a fleet of Sunfish that races within the harbor right in front of the club. I can't think of a body of water better suited to this sort of round-the-buoy racing. There's also a good deal of handicap racing among the many charter boats based in English Harbour. The Antigua Yacht Club is the host yacht club for Antigua Race Week.
Throughout the year the club also runs an informal Thursday-night series-with drinks and results dispensed under the flagpole in front of the officers' quarters. There is a downstairs restaurant and bar that is open to everyone with the price of a drink or a meal. The real yacht club is the private bar upstairs. It offers no guest privileges. Montserrat Yacht Club has nothing in the way of a harbor and no good anchorage: no matter where you anchor you tend to rock and roll all night. However, south of town is an attractive clubhouse open for lunch and drinks in the evening. An active fleet of Sunfish races on the weekend, and visiting yachtsmen are encouraged to take part in c1uh activities and are even loaned Sunfish so they can try their hands against the local hotshots. Guadeloupe Yacht Club, Pointe-a-Pitre, is strictly a powerhoat c1uh, with a very convenient location on the north side of the Carenage. This club is one of the more unfriendly yacht clubs in the world. If you are not a member, it does not matter how many other yacht clubs you belong to--you eannot set foot on the premises. Les Amis de la Voile is in Apartment Forbin, near the Marina Bas du Fort, Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe. A new, expanding club that holds races twice a month, drawing 40 to 50 boats, 25 to 40 feet, it's the only cluh in the Eastern Carihhean using the IOR rule. The club reportedly opened its new building in Marina Bas du Fort in 1981; drinks and meals will he available in the clubhouse. The Yacht Club of Fort-de-France, Martinique, is located in the Carenage south of the main shipyard, where unfortunately the waterfront has become a collection point for all sorts of harhor flotsam. The sailing fleet is made up of Sharks, 420s, Flying Dutchmen, and sundry cruisers and powerboats. You will most likely be required to present your club memhership here. Club de Voile, Baie de Fort-de-France, Martinique, located on the dock on the western end of the Savanne (a park), this dub is also heir to quantities of flotsam. It's unsafe to leave a dinghy at the pier here unless you rig a stern anchor to hold it off. From the pier it's a short walk to the ice plant, Customs, and the Martinique Yacht Charter outfit. There are showers, a bar, and an active racing £leet. An excellent restaurant is upstairs. Franc;ois Yacht Club, Baie de Franc;ois, Martinique, is located about two miles from the town of Franc;ois. There's a small dredged basin south of
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the club which will carry about 6 feet, and there's a good anchorage directly west of the club. A bar, showers, water, and gasoline are available. A fine French restaurant is attached to the club, and on Sunday this is one of the most popular places on the island. St. Lucia Yacht Club, Gros Islet, St. Lucia, is located on the south side of the channel into the basin. There's an active weekend sailing program for Mirror dinghies. It has a bar and snackbar open during weekends and occasional weekdays. Grenada Yacht Club, The Spout, St. George's, is located on a spit of land on the north side of the harbor. Harold la Borde remarked after his circumnavigation in Honey Bird that the Grenada Yacht Club had the most spectacular setting of any he had seen in the world. Many a late afternoon we've sat on the veranda, watching for the sun's green flash as it dropped beneath the horizon. I might add that the location is not only beautiful, it's practical as well. Where else can you moor quietly in a secure harbor within short rowing distance of shipyard, food, fuel, and shelter? There are showers available and a snackbar. The club conducts an active sailing program. The major off<;hore races sponsored by the club are the South Coast Race on Easter Sunday, the August Monday Race to Carriacou, and the round-theisland race on the first Sunday in January, with the Carl Schuster Memorial Race the next day. A good feature is that the races start and finish from a range mark in front of the club bar. Barbados Yacht Club, Bridgetown, is just north of the Holiday Inn. It's a rock-ribbed establishment that boasts a vigorous and varied small-boat fleet. The racing is truly first class, as keen as any to be found in the Islands. The only drawback is the exposed location, which makes mooring a problem. Most of the classes are beach boats that are taken up after every race. Also, there is no dinghy jetty; dinghies must be dragged up the beach, sometimes through considerable surf. The clubhouse itself is well appointed, with tennis courts, changing rooms, a large reading room, and a gaming room. Barbados Cruising Club lies immediately south of the Holiday Inn, and suffers from the same exposure problems as the Barbados Yacht Club. There is a bar, showers, and light snacks. The club hasn't a pretentious building, but its hospitality is famed-and is severely strained with roughly 200 to 250 visiting boats passing through Barbados each year. Trinidad. Yacht Club, Port-of-Spain, used to have a ramshackle wooden building, built out over
the waters of what has to be the worst anchorage in the New World; it burned down in 1975 and has been replaced by a beautiful new building that no longer shakes and shudders like a belly dancer, although the anchorage is still just as bad. However, if you draw 7 feet or less and there is space, it is no longer necessary to anchor off as a number of barges have been sunk off the yacht club, forming a basin into the marina. Check the draft carefully prior to entering as there have been problems with shoaling. The hospitality is not so great as it was in former years, because the clubhouse has been all but destroyed by visiting sailors during their exuberant celebrations. Not only that, but they succeeded two years running in piling up well over a thousand dollars of unpaid phone bills, which, needless to say, makes the club less enthusiastic about visitors. Trinidad Yachting Association, Chaguaramas, is located on what was formerly the US naval base in the cove just west of the old seaplane hangar. The club received a handsome grant of land from the national government, which is being put to good use in the construction of a new clubhouse, complete with snackbar, bar, showers, and dinghy-launching ramp. Being well away from Portof-Spain, the pilferage problem is considerably less than at the Trinidad Yacht Club, and the anchorage far superior. The Trinidad Yachting Association supervises all the major cruiser-type races in the area and most of the small-boat racing-no powerboats allowed. Over the weekends, the Trinidad Yachting Association runs a series of small-boat races, enthusiastically attended by the juniors; it's notable as one of the few yacht clubs or yachting associations in the area that has a really effective junior training program. The Trinidad Yachting Association keeps racing going full bore, with an interesting routine. In Trinidad only, come July all large-boat racing and cruising-racing is suspended until November when it begins again with the Petit St. Vincent Regatta. The summer is a time for working on boats, training crew, and going cruising. After a four and a half month break everyone is eager to go racing again. This is in contrast to the situation in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands where racing trickles on all year long. One of the amusing aspects of the Trinidad Yachting Association establishment was that for many years there was no phone in the building. The senior members of the club swore there never would be. They felt that then they could retire to the yacht club to sail, drink, and relax as desired
Yacht Clubs and Racing and not be disturbed by business matters, bosses, or irate wives or girl friends trying to get them home. However, the women finally won, and a phone (not a very efficient one) is now in the Trinidad Yachting Association Clubhouse. The yachting association is strictly geared for sailing. You cannot be a voting member unless you own a boat, and it must be a sailboat. If you don't own a boat you can be an associate member with no voting privileges. Thus if someone proposes a swimming pool or tennis court, it is promptly voted down and the money goes for sailing facilities; witness that recently they bought a IS-ton travel lift. The club is extremely hospitable, but yachts are not allowed to anchor off the club uninvited. Customs will not allow yachts to anchor off the club until they have first presented Customs with a letter of invitation from the club. Once there, however, launch service, alongside dockage, water, electricity--everything-is free so long as the yachtsman behaves like a proper yachtsman. The one fly in the ointment is that the anchorage at the yachting association is just about as bad as it is at the yacht club. It is possible to get seasick while sitting on board. Texaco Yacht Club, Pointe-a-Pierre, Trinidad, is, as the name sounds, a small company-operated club located north of the long Texaco fueling pier. If you're planning to be in the area and would like to use the club, I suggest that you write Arthur Spence (% Texaco, Pointe-a-Pierre, Trinidad) and make arrangements beforehand. San Fernando Yacht Club, San Fernando, Trinidad, is an active, hospitable club open seven days a week. The only problem is getting there, as it's surrounded by shoal water of 3 to 4 feet. Not surprisingly, most of the sailing here is done in catamarans. If you're sufficiently shallow-drafted to get anywhere near the club, a warm welcome will be accorded you. Bar, snacks, and showers are available. Carenero Yacht Club, 90 miles east of Caracas, in Carenero, Venezuela, is mainly a powerboat club. Presently the draft is limited to about 6 feet. The club is expanding. Playa Grande Yacht Club, at Punta Camburi Grande, Venezuela, is in a small shoal fishing harbor, offering some small-boat racing. But the sheltered harbor, with a breakwater, shoals drastically and visiting yachtsmen should avoid it. Puerto Azul Club, at Punta Naiguata, Venezuela, is a fantastic club with complete marina, restaurants, bars, swimming pools, and a vacation center, which also has a large marina. It also has
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fleets of Stars, Solings, Rhodes 18s, and reputedly the largest racing Sailfish fleet in the world, with extremely active racing for small boats almost every weekend. Carabellada Yacht Club is at Macuto, Venezuela, up the narrow channel west of the Macuto Sheraton. This marina is mainly for powerboats, although there are some sailboats. There's a nice clubhouse at water's edge of the marina, with a secondary clubhouse high in the hills. This is a veritable museum piece that should be visited if you can obtain an invitation. Marina Mar, west of Punta Calera, Venezuela, is mainly a racing yacht club that runs most of the Venezuelan racing. Racing in eastern Venezuela is on mostly from October to July, and the season opens with Bonaire Race Week. Maracaibo is seldom visited hy yachtsmen, but there are three c1uhs. One is on an old barge, the home of an extremely active Star fleet, draft at the club is only about 4 feet. The second club is more a country-club-type of operation with the inevitahIe sports fishermen on the edges of the town of Maracaibo; there's no possibility of getting a sailboat there. The third club is the Shell cluh, with an active fleet of Stars and Rhodes 18s. In the Maracaibo area it blows so hard that they quit racing in late September or early October and don't race again until Easter time. For further information on Venezuelan yacht clubs and racing, contact Roman Davila (office phone number 91-45-16 in Caracas). Roman says that he'll he happy to help visiting yachtsmen coming to the area; he's an active racing skipper and speaks perfect English. Cura~ao Yacht Club is located in Spanish Water. Fuel and water are available alongside, plus showers, ice, bars, and a restaurant over the weekends. It's mainly a powerboat club that features fishing tournaments. There's no dockage alongside, so you must anchor ofl'; there are hauling facilities, but they're usually crowded with local boats. Asient~Shell Club in Spanish Water, Cura~ao, is mainly a private cluh for Shell employees, plus outside sailing hoats. There are no docking facilities, fuel, water, or ice, but they do have a bar and restaurant. Marine Club, Curac;ao, is a private sailing club of the Dutch marines in the Netherlands Antilles. There are few facilities but they are very hospitable to visiting yachtsmen. Jan So Sat, in Spanish Water, Curac;ao, is strictly a dinghy club that runs very active dinghy racing on weekends when they have an extremely busy
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bar-a good place to visit to get to know the local Curac;ao yachtsmen. Bonaire Yacht Club. The new marina's biggest event is the four-day regatta in the middle of October, which is run by Bonaire Yacht Club, with the help of the the tourist board. Bonaire Week is the major event of the Venezuelan and Bonaire season, starting with a feeder race from Venezuela. The four days of racing in Bonaire attract 40 to 50 cruiser-racers, plus close to 100 small boats. Contact Niki Tromp, Government Tourist Board, Bonaire, for information. Aruba Yacht Club is in the southeast corner of Faardenbaai harbor and is mainly a powerboat club, shoal draft. Most of the yachts lie up close to the floating restaurant Bali. The main event of Aruba Yacht Club is an Easter fishing tournament.
BERMUDA
St. George's Sports and Dinghy Club has always been an extremely hospitable organization-just bring your membership cards from your clubs and your visit to Bermuda will be memorable.
AZORES
There is no yacht club, but there is a sailing week in July when cruising yachtsmen gather from all corners of Europe.
CANARIES
Las Palm as-Club Nautico is a beautiful big yacht club with a magnificent bar, restaurant, and swim-
ming pool. However, getting into it is like getting into Fort Knox. Make sure you bring your membership cards from various yacht clubs and someone who speaks Spanish to explain the situation.
TENERIFE-SANTA CRUZ
Yacht club similar to the yacht club at Gran Canaria, the club is seldom used by visiting yachtsmen as the anchorage off the club is uncomfortable in the extreme.
PALMA There are two yacht clubs in Palma, one at the water's edge with swimming pool, restaurant, and showers is extremely hospitable to visiting yachts. There is another yacht club in town-a magnificent old building with models of the local boats.
GOMERA
Amazingly, we discovered that there is a yacht club on the little island of Gomera. We discovered it just as we were leaving and did not have a chance to visit. It is through the tunnel northwest of town.
MADEIRA There must he a yacht club there as they race, hut as far as we were able to ascertain they had no clubhouse.
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Leaving Timing is the critical factor in planning your departure from the Islands. The hurricane seasonsummer through early autumn--offers a formidable danger whether you are going to Florida, the northeastern United States, Europe, or even west to the Panama Canal and the Pacific. Most hurricanes follow approximately the same route as a boat's course to the States via the Bahamas. Sailing at a rate of 150 miles a day with a hurricane chasing you at 300 miles a day is an unpleasant situation to say the least. Farther north, on the other hand, the ubiquitous winter and spring gales and northwesters present their own dangers. These two weather threats, south and north, create a rock and a hard place, and wherever you're going you'd be wise to plan your voyage to avoid both. The following sections discuss each route in detail. The usual departure points for boats heading north after a spell in the Islands are Antigua and St. Thomas. St. Thomas is favored by many as it's an excellent place to stock up the boat easily, and has adequate repair facilities for the average-size yacht; it's also a relatively cheap place to buy liquor. Road Town, Tortola, is not highly recommended, since stocking boats for the trip north is not particularly easy there; however, hauling facilities are much better in Tortola than in St. Thomas. Antigua is popular, partly because of Antigua Race Week, which comes the last week in April and the first week in May, and marks the end of the winter season. Immediately afterwards boats start heading north or west in such great numbers that one frequently has to line up for a full day to take on fuel and water. There are adequate hauling
facilities and repair facilities; electrical, refrigeration, sail, and engine repairs can be done. But again, if you leave immediately after Antigua Race Week, you may find supplies hard to come by. By the Thursday or Friday after Antigua Week things have pretty much returned to normal.
To Florida As to timing, you can leave from St. Thomas heading to Florida via the Bahamas at any time of the year other than the hurricane season (July through October). During the winter and early spring you have to watch for a norther in the Bahamas, but this is the only real danger presented by the weather. Northers seldom make their way down to the Eastern Caribbean, so it's very easy to set off with a false presumption of good weather. The Florida weather reports, however, will give you more than adequate warning of an approaching storm. If the wind is swinging to the northwest and the temperature is dropping fast in Florida, then the norther will be arriving in the Bahamas in another twelve hours. It will last anywhere from twenty-four hours to three days. Regardless of the time of year, any yacht going to North America should carry on board The Yachtsman's Guide to the Bahamas. Frequently, a breakdown will necessitate an unscheduled stop in these islands. Any competent seaman with a smallscale chart of the en tire Bahamas, the Yachtsman's Guide, and the common sense to wait until the sun is high can find his way into any of the Bahamian ports in an emergency. If you're going from St. Thomas to Florida, two 3 13
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide routes are favored. The more popular, and to my mind the safer, is to leave st. Thomas steering northwest: pick up the light at the north end of San Salvador as a checkpoint; continue sailing northwest through the Northeast and Northwest Providence Channels and across the Gulf Stream to Fort Lauderdale or Miami. While appearing simple, this route nevertheless demands careful navigation. More than one boat has ended up on Silver Banks or the rocks of Caicos, San Salvador, or Eleuthera. Celestial navigation can be quite valuable on this route. The traditional noon sight, however, is useless because the sun in April is almost directly overhead at this latitude. Better take a morning shot when the sun is directly astern; this way you can determine your day's progress along your course and take a second sight in the afternoon when the sun is perpendicular to your course. With this sight, you can determine your position north or south of the rhumb line. This second sight is particularly useful on account of the unpredictable nature of the currents through the Bahamas. Sometimes they run northwest, sometimes due west, and occasionally southwest. Their fickleness has led to the demise of several boats. The other route to Florida, used more in the old days, follows along the north coast of Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, and Cuba. The first two of these islands have steep coastlines with few harbors. Cuba, while well lit along the shore, is politically dangerous. Hugging any part of this coast is not a good idea. The northern side of this route is also risky, as the Great Bahama Bank is poorly lit-an easy target for the unsuspecting.
THE BAHAMAS
Amazingly, each spring one or more boats are lost en route to the States, most frequently piling up on the many reefs in the Bahamas. One wonders why the loss ratio is so great. I'm firmly convinced that one of the major problems is that the yachtsman has spent the winter cruising the Eastern Caribbean-basically high islands that are visible well offshore--and is now sailing to an area of flat islands (the highest point in the entire Bahamas is 130 feet) with off-lying reek The Bahamas is also an area with very variable currents and few lights, which are noted for their unreliability. Time after time a yacht has piled up on the windward side of an island, set on shore during the night by a current not allowed for; or a crew has spotted an
island in the morning but didn't realize how close they were-suddenly there's a god-awful crash and there they are on the reef. My basic advice to anyone sailing from the Islands to the States via the Bahamas is that if you see an island, you're 5 miles too close. You should see the top of the lighthouse on San Salvador; the light on the northern end of Abaco marking the entrance to Northeast Providence Channel; Great Isaac; and that's all. The underwriters have suffered such great losses over the years on boats returning to the States that they almost invariably charge an extra premium for this trip. Carefully check your insurance policy, as the majority of policies are written for cruising in the Caribbean and do not cover trips to the States or Europe; for these, an extra premium must be paid prior to departure. Further, for yachts that have been newly purchased in the Islands or that have cruised for many years in the Lesser Antilles, underwriters frequently require a seaworthiness survey to make sure that the yachts are truly prepared for a long offshore passage. One can get careless in the tropics, and it goes without saying that sails, rigging, hull, engine, and electrical systems should be given a real going over as there's an excellent chance of getting caught in at least one hard blow prior to arriving in the States or Europe. Safety gear should be carefully checked, as all too often it is discovered that flares are over the hill and life raft checkout dates are long overdue. Life rafts can be checked and recertified in the Lesser Antilles (see "Life Rafts" in Chapter 2). Flares can now be obtained in the Islands, EPIRBs checked, man overboard lights repaired or replaced, and life rafts repacked. If you are taking a cruising boat to the States, either via the Bahamas to Florida or on north to Charleston or the Morehead City/Beaufort area, it is essential to have a spinnaker pole or whisker pole aboard to wing out the headsail because you will usually spend a lot of your time dead downwind. One of the most frustrating trips I ever made was delivering a boat without a pole. Every time we jibed, the wind jibed with us-it was a very slow, frustrating trip. Had we had a spinnaker pole with which to wing the jib it would have been faster and it would certainly have been more comfortable. Sometimes sailing from St. Thomas as far as the Bahamas you can use the poor man's twins (see pages 18-22) all the way.
Leaving
All crew on any boat heading to US waters, even the US Virgin Islands, must have a valid US visa. Visas can be granted only through a US Embassy prior to arrival in US waters. In the Eastern Caribbean they can be obtained at the US Embassies at Barbados, Antigua, or Martinique on presentation of passport and ship's papers or a letter from the skipper of the boat you plan to join in US waters. In addition, all foreign-registered boats should obtain a cruising permit upon entering US waters. Otherwise, everytime you pick up your anchor you must clear Customs and Immigration and when the anchor is dropped you must notify them again. Not only is this a complicated procedure but it can also be very expensive as Customs and Immigration may not be anywhere near the port you are visiting. If, however, you have a cruising permit, you need only enter once; then you can cruise to your heart's content and clear out of US waters at the end of your cruise. Cruising permits can be obtained from the customs officer at first point of entry. Basically all yachting countries with the exception of Finland, Norway, Denmark, Spain, and Portugal and most of the South American nations have reciprocal agreements that permit the issuance of cruising permits. Every foreign national must have a US visa prior to landing in US waters. Visas can be obtained at any US Embassy, most easily obtained if you have a letter from the skipper of the boat, or if you own your own boat, bring your ship's papers with you. Various types of visas are obtainable, a subject too long to discuss here, but which the embassy or consulate will explain to you. In the Eastern Caribbean, US embassies or consulates can be found in Barbados, Trinidad, Martinique, and Antigua. Overseas vessels can cruise US waters without a cruising license, but must check in at each port of entry en route and pay substantial fees. In contrast, if you have a cruising license, you enter upon arrival in US waters, cruise the coast for many months, then clear out when leaving, a relatively painless operation in comparison to entering and clearing at each port. The lesson is, if you're eligible for a cruising license, get it. Cruising licenses can be issued to vessels from the following countries when visiting the United States: Argentina, Australia, Bahamas, Belgium, Bermuda, Canada, France, Greece, Honduras, Ireland, Jamaica, Liberia, Netherlands, New Zealand, West Germany, and Great Britain {including Turks and Caicos, St. Vincent and the Northern
315
Grenadines, Cayman Islands, St. Kitts, Nevis, and Anguilla). The list, which is subject to change, is based on reciprocal arrangements with these countries. Another very important warning: If you contemplate selling your boat in the United States you must pay US import duty prior to listing your boat with a broker or advertising it for sale in a magazine. Failure to do so causes massive problems, whereas paying the duty is relatively minor-import duty on yachts is only 2 percent, a far cry from the import duties in Europe. Ireland charges 25 percent V.A. T. (value-added tax) and sometimes 2.5 percent duty, England charges 15 percent V.A.T. and sometimes 2.5 percent duty. Australia takes the cake, with 60 percent import duty on whatever valuation the Customs officials decide to place on the vessel! (Furthermore, they have been known to collect 60 percent duty on improvements made after the boat was valued and the duty paid!)
To Points North Those heading farther north in the States generally make a landfall at either Charleston, South Carolina, or Morehead City/Beaufort, North Carolina. From either port you can enter the Inland Waterway and proceed in relative safety to Norfolk, providing you can pass under the fixed 65-foot bridges. If your destination is one of these two--i.e., south of Cape Hatteras-wait until April 1. Prior to that there is too great a chance of getting caught by a bad northwester. If you're going direct to New York and points east, or to Bermuda and Europe, then you should wait until May 1; up there, storms with high winds and cold or freezing rain run into the heginning of May. I personally prefer Charleston to Morehead City/ Beaufort as a landfall. Charleston is a large port with no off-lying shoals, and has a strong radio beacon. Morehead City, on the other hand, has a weak radio beacon, and the Cape Lookout shoals extend far enough offshore that you can run aground before ever spotting the lighthouse. If you arrive off Charleston and the weather is good, you can always scoot along the shore up to Morehead City without having to put up with the annoyance of the waterway, but if the weather is bad you can power up the Inland Waterway from Charlcston to Morehead City, an easy run of about four days. The route to Charleston and Morehead City can
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide vary. The straight-line distance from St. Thomas to Charleston is 1,200 miles, from St. Thomas to Morehead City is 1,160 miles. But the straightline distance is not necessarily the fastest route. By this route you'll be sailing out of the trade-wind belt quickly and diagonally crossing the doldrums, which usually necessitates many long hours under power. The route I much prefer is to leave St. Thomas heading northwest on a rhumb-line course, make a landfall at San Salvador, pass just to windward of Great Abaco and Littlc Bahama Bank, continue northwest until the Gulf Stream is reached, and then turn north. Although this is 200 miles farther than the direct route to Charleston, there's a greater chance of holding the wind. The current is favorable throughout the entire trip. On a 41-foot yawl we once did this run (St. Thomas to Charleston) in seven days and three hours without using the engine. Admittedly, if you are going to Charleston in a racing machine and have a crew capable of playing with the spinnaker, the straight-line course from St. Thomas to Charles ton is probably the best and fastest. When approaching the East Coast of the United States there is always the prohlem of northwest fronts that blast offshore, bringing high winds, cold weather, rain, and sometimes sleet. The wind usually comes in from the northwest, blows like stink for eighteen to twenty-four, sometimes thirty, hours; then it switches around to the northeast, blows another twenty-four hours and gradually dies away. Over the years I have found that marine weather forecasts are not all that accurate in predicting these fronts. However, on dozens of trips up north various friends and I have used a method that has worked with almost complete reliability. Give the watch on deck a transistor radio and headset (so he doesn't disturb the rest of the crew), have him tune into a Chicago radio station or a powerful radio station in Indiana. Have him listen to that; if the weather gets cold in Indiana, tell him to note the time in the log and switch his radio to West Virginia, another powerful station (I hope the deck watch likes hillbilly music); when the weather gets cold in West Virginia tell him to note that in the log, then tune into a Philadelphia/Washington, D.C., station. As soon as the weather turns cold in Philadelphia/Washington, you know that in about eighteen hours you are going to get your tail kicked if you are 100 to 150 miles off the coast. The farther off
you are, the more time you have before the front arrives. If you are well to the south (Bahamas/ Florida area), the same system will work, just listen to a western Florida or Alabama station; when it reports a temperature drop switch to Miami or Fort Lauderdale and prepare as just described. There is nothing you can do about it, but at least you are forewarned and you can prepare the boat and yourself for heavy weather. Make sure everyone has had a good meal and then cook a meal that can be warmed up; fill the thermoses with tea and coffee and have everyone dig out warm clothes. WARNING: If you're headed for Charleston or points north, or continuing on to the States from Bermuda, make sure the entire crew has good f()lJI-weather gear and warm clothes. You are almost inevitably going to be hit by at least one northwest front, which will push the temperature down into the 40s with a very high wind-chill factor. The best crew in the world loses efficiency when cold, tired, and wet, and everyone begins to make mistakes. If you can get a good heating system in the boat before going north, it's worthwhile doing so (see p. 34 in Chapter 2, "Preparations"). Incidentally, if you stop in Morehead City/Beaufort on your way up from the Islands, you can find hauling facilities up to 25 tons, sailmakers, people capable to repairing rigging, electrics, electronics, refrigeration, engines, etc., through Mike Beal, at 209 Marsh Street, Beaufort, NC 28516, USA; tel. (919) 728-2,536. Mike runs a yacht consulting service in Morehead City. He will either be able to repair your gear or tell you where to have it repaired. One last word about the route to the northeastern states. If you get to Norfolk via the Inland Waterway and hear a bad weather forecast, i.e., if a northwest front is predicted, wait before heading out to your next port of call. The usual northwest front is hard from the northwest and then swings to the northeast, blowing sometimes as much as 35 knots dead on the nose, and bringing cold weather with it. These are just the kinds of conditions that exhaust a delivery crew and usually make for trouble of one sort or another.
BERMUDA
Some yachtsmen prefer to reach the States from St. Thomas or Antigua via Bermuda (see Harbor chart BI). From either place, you follow the North Star all the way; Bermuda is 800 or 900 miles
Leaving away, respectively. From Antigua many boats make a quick pit stop at St. Barts to load up on duty-free booze and replenish the supplies drunk up during Antigua Race Week. But in any case, whether you leave from Antigua, St. Barts, or St. Thomas, with any luck you will romp off on a beautiful beam reach for three days, spend a day in the doldrums, and then run into Bermuda on a southwesterly. This doesn't always happen, of course. The 1980 Antigua-Bermuda race, right after Race Week, was windless the whole way, and all the entries ended up under power to get into Bermuda. And in 1985, aboard Iolaire, we roared off for two days on a lovely beam reach until the wind shifted into the south; being shorthanded, we didn't set a spinnaker, and had a long slow sail until 200 miles south of Bermuda, when a monster front came through and the wind went from 8 or 10 knots to 50 in a matter of minutes. Shortened way down, we pounded along for 150 miles before we could go back to plain sail and ease into Bermuda. A slow trip of nine days. On the other hand, in 1975 we took off on a beam reach and knocked off 165 miles in two days, then sailed under spinnaker under ideal conditions for three more. Then it went glassy calm, so we doused the spinnaker, sheeted the main boom amidships and had a wonderful dinner with champagne. Under an absolutely crystal clear night with a full moon, the crew went to sleep below, Trich and I made a big double bunk in the cockpit and had a second honeymoon, and then at dawn the· wind came in from the southwest; we reset the spinnaker, which we carried all the way to Town Cut, St. George's, Bermuda-seven days! If you miss the narrow window for safe departure to the north, i. e., early May to late June, and have to leave during the hurricane season, the only acceptable route is via Bermuda. And only in a large boat with good power and range and good capacity for receiving storm and hurricane warnings. Given a good weather report with no possible hurricanes building up, you can be out of the hurricane area within forty-eight hours, under power if necessary, and be safe for the rest of your trip to Bermuda.
From Bermuda to the States Needless to say, in Bermuda you must again check the weather reports thoroughly before setting out for the States. Most hurricanes that begin
in the Caribbean follow a course up the coast and pass between Bermuda and the States. If the picture looks good as you set out and a hurricane develops down south after your first day at sea, you should still be able to reach the mainland well before any Caribbean storm could make itself felt up north. This can be a very easy trip---southwesters all the way with just a few squalls in the Gulf Stream for fresh-water showers. At least that's what every skipper says when trying to convince crew to help him sail his boat back to the States. But it doesn't always work out that way. First, there's always a chance, even in June, of running into one of those northwest fronts that shift to northeast and can be very unpleasant. Second, remember that the Bermuda Race is usually won by the boats that have found the southeast meanders in the Stream and gotten a free ride toward Bermuda. However, it's hard to get good information in Bermuda on the whereabouts of the meanders. Twice Iolaire has run smack into southeast meander when we were trying to head northwest. One time it slowed us down drastically; the second time it was blowing like stink and we were fighting our way to windward under shortened sail. At the end of twenty-four hours of beating to windward we discovered we had gone backwards 5 miles! Try to find out where the southeast meanders are, and be careful to avoid them.
From Western Venezuela Another takeoff point from the Caribbean is western Venezuela. This will be for those boats, for example, that have done what I describe as the Caribbean round: they sail all the way down the eastern chain of islands, go on to Venezuela, and cruise the Venezuelan coast and offshore islands. Then the time has come to head back to either the States or Europe. Bound for the States, the best route is to stop at Bonaire or Cura~ao to pick up food and icerelatively expensive in both places-and stand north on starboard tack heading for the Mona Passage between Hispaniola and Puerto Rico (course 0140 magnetic, a distance of 350 miles). With any luck, especially in the spring, this passage should be a reach with the wind slightly aft of the beam. A stop should be made at Mayaguez on the lee side of Puerto Rico as there are water, fuel, ice, and food there at prices considerably cheaper than elsewhere in the Caribbean. (See Volume 11, Part
318
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
I, of this guide for further information.) From Mayaguez you can head on north by any of the routes described above. Incidentally, if you're tempted to pick up the Gulf Stream and ride it all the way north to New York and points east, don't forget those northwesterlies. Nearing Hatteras, move into the eastern edge of the Stream. For my money, in fact, the way to pass Hatteras is either to the west (that is, via the Inland Waterway) or at least 300 miles to the east of it, where you have plenty of sea room. Boats that leave Bonaire or Cura~ao for Europe may take this route up to the lee end of Puerto Rico, restock, and then stand north to Bermuda: the course from the lee end of Puerto Rico to Bermuda is 010 0 magnetic, a distance of850 miles. Remember that you don't have to sail hard on the wind to hug the rhumb line. As you go north, with luck the wind may swing a little to the south. If not, when you hit the doldrums you can power northeast and get back on the rhumb line or power due north quickly across the doldrums. With luck you should pick up a southwesterly and take off for Bermuda on a broad reach.
To Panama and Beyond Many boats leave the Islands to head west for the Panama Canal and adventure in the Pacific, the West Coast, or Canada. While this might look like an easy trip down the trades in balmy Caribbean weather, it can often get extremely rough. Usually there's no difficulty along the Venezuelan coast as far as the islands of Cura-.;ao, Bonaire, and Aruba. But west of Aruba you can encounter heavy weather and large, confused seas. Several boats have been pooped in this region and others have ended up as total losses on the north coast of Colombia: in 1973 the 50-foot ketch Renegade and the 40-foot cutter Cygnis left Grenada for San Diego after complete overhauls. Both were wrecked on the Colombian coast; in the summer of 1972 Eleuthera, a wellequipped, well-sailed 57-foot ketch, ran into heavy weather and was badly pooped. She came through in the end but not without damage and serious injury to her crew. Laury LeGay on Eclipse also took a severe knockdown in this same area. Many other experienced yachtsmen have reported that they considered the run from Aruba to Panama the roughest part of the entire round-the-world passage. Particularly off the Colombian coast, the sea
conditions can be extremely bad in December, January, February, March, and again in July (see page 84). Boats aiming at cruising the Pacific tend to do so in the spring. In light of the just-mentioned warning they are well advised to get to Panama by the end of June to avoid the July blows and sea conditions. If you're heading for Panama from the Islands during hurricane season, check the weather carefully and head directly south to the Venezuelan coast to get below the hurricane tracks. Then turn west toward Panama. In any case, do not sail a rhumb-line course during hurricane season from St. Thomas or Antigua to the Panama Canal, because if a hurricane sets chase, you will have nowhere to go. When leaving Aruba or Cura~ao, stand well offshore, heading northwest, and then west and southwest, sailing in a great curve, staying well outside the 1,OOO-fathom line. Do not close the Colombian mast, because of both the heavy weather and large seas encountered there and the danger of being pirated by a dope smuggler. If you want to see Cartagena-and you should (see Chapter 4, p. 83)-stop at Cura~ao, leave your boat safely moored at one of the yacht clubs there, and fly to Cartagena, a relatively short and inexpensive flight. In Cartagena you'll find excellent inexpensive hotels if you stick to the Spanish hotels and avoid the big chains. You can have a wonderful four or five days in Cartagena, relaxed and not worrying about the boat, and then climb on a plane, go back to Cura~ao, and set off for Panama. When you arrive in Panama (sec Chapter 4 pages 82-83 for comments on stopping at the San BIas Islands en route), you're required to anchor in an area called the Flats, which is a good halfmile row against the wind up to the dock. For reasons known only to the Panama Canal Corporation, it's illegal to use an engine in the Flats. How some people row across the Flats in a rubber dinghy is beyond me; however, the ever-resourceful Norris Hoyt figured out a solution to the problem: put your little Seagull on the stern of your rubber dinghy, run it half throttle, sit in the seats, and pretend you're rowing. Anyone going through the Panama Canal should read N orrie' s article on traversing the Panama Canal in the December 1979 issue of Sail magazine; it is an excellent discussion of the subject. Other helpful articles on transiting the Canal can be located by contacting the various yachting magazines. You should also make it a point, once you
Leaving have cleared, to hotfoot it over to the Panama Canal Yacht Club; the members there have always been extremely friendly, and they'll give you advice on shopping, dealing with the Panama Canal Corporation, engine repairs, fuel, water. They can even haul up medium-sized boats in an emergency. Under no circumstances should a yachtsman or even a group of yachtsmen venture out of the Canal Zone as you're guaranteed to be mugged and robbed if you do venture into the Republic of Panama. As previously mentioned, numerous skippers have come back with horrendous stories about Panama Canal pilots who were impossible to get along with; others have gone through with nothing but good to say about their pilots. One pilot succeeded in getting the boat lost in Gatun Lake, which necessitated anchoring for the night. This didn't bother either the crew of the boat or the pilot, however, and once the trip was over he insisted on taking them home for dinner. So with Panama Canal pilots, cross your fingers and hope. I strongly advise anyone traversing the Panama Canal to make sure the insurance is in force, because the Panama Canal Authority is a law unto itself. If your boat is damaged in transit, even if it is the fault of the Panama Canal Authority, your chances of collecting are near zero. Even with Lloyd's heavyweight lawyers it took the owner of Chubasco, a 67-foot yawl, three years to collect. When heading west, think about weather conditions on the other side of the Panama Canal. Practically any time of the year is acceptable, although people tend to favor March, April, and May. But remember if you're heading out into the South Pacific that the hurricane season in the southern hemisphere is the opposite of that in the northern hemisphere-i.e., December through April. Tahiti is generally thought to be outside the hurricane or typhoon track, and many people sail to Tahiti to wait out the season before cruising other parts of the Pacific. In recent years, though, Tahiti has been hit hard a couple of times, so I advise you to consult NOAA in Washington, D.C., for typhoon tracks. Incidentally, if you want to stop in the fabled Galapagos, 900 miles southwest of the Canal, you'd better get a cruising visa from an Ecuadorian embassy before you go. Otherwise your chances of being allowed to stay in those fascinating islands more than forty-eight hours are minimal. Boats traversing the Panama Canal and heading
319 north to California should remember that it's a long 3,000 miles to Los Angeles. From Acapulco north it's 1,.500 miles to Los Angeles that could well be hard on the wind. This trip is so long and arduous that some skippers claim it's easier to go out to the Hawaiian Islands and then back to the States-a long way of doing the trip, but much more pleasant, especially if you like a long offshore passage rather than coast hopping. If you do coasthop, see the information and advice given in Chapter 4, pages 79-85. And be advised that most underwriters, because of the hurricane season from June through October, will insist that any boats on the Mexican coast be north of Cabo San Lucas prior to June 1. Since Cabo San Lucas is 2,200 miles from Panama, this pretty much necessitates your being through the Panama Canal and heading northwestward by Aprill. Those heading for the Pacific Northwest often prefer to provision ship in Costa Rica and then make for their ultimate destination via the Hawaiian Islands. Anyone planning either of these routes would do well to consult such publications a~ Ocean Passage for the World before charting their course. When all is said and done, I wonder if the easiest way to the West Coast isn't to head for Houston, Texas, then truck the boat west. You could make an interesting and leisurely cruise to Houston via the Passage Islands and the south coast of Puerto Rico (see Volume Il, Part 1, of the Eastern Caribbean Guide), the south coast of Hispaniola (see Klein's Yachtsman's Guide to the Greater Antilles and Vieques) , thence to Jamaica, down to Cozumel, and northwest to Houston. You could make this a four- to six-week cruise or a fast two-week, 1,700-mile delivery. Then a three-day truck ride gets the boat to the West Coast.
To Europe Many sailors speak of sailing between America and Europe as "crossing the pond"-perhaps because the word "transatlantic" has too scary a sound, and conjures images of a 3,OOO-mile voyage and thirty days at sea. Well, it doesn't have to be that way at all. Many sailors, myself included, love to go to sea but don't particularly like to go to sea for long periods. Courtesy of Uncle Sam, I spent three long sessions continuously at sea, one of thirty-nine days, two of twenty-one days, in a Guppy submarine, and in 1965 we were at sea for thirty days on Arabella, a 45-foot ketch. This eliminated for me
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Routes from the Islands and Transatlantic Routes
40"W
30·W
20'W
Dashed lines (- - - -) show recommended sailing routes. Solid lines ( - - - ) show great circle routes. Dotted lines ( ) show approximate location of Bermuda and Azores high. Dotted-dashed lines (-0-0-0-0-) show approximate mean limit of icebergs late May and June.
Leaving
Cura~ao
321
to Mona Passage. Course: 0000 true. Distance: 435 miles.
St. Thomas to Miami. Course: 315 0 true. Distance: 1,100 miles. St. Thomas to Charleston. Course: 3250 true. Distance: 1,200 miles. St. Thomas to Morehead City. Course: 330 0 true. Distance: 1,160 miles. St. Thomas to Bermuda. Course: 000° true. Distance: 840 miles. St. Thomas to New York City. Course: 340° true. Distance: 1,450 miles. Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, to Bermuda. Course: 359 0 true. Distance: 850 miles. Antigua to Bermuda. Course: 340° true. Distance: 940 miles. Antigua to the Azores. Course: 046° true. Distance: 2.163 miles. Antigua to Gibraltar. Course: 0570 true. Distance: 3,186 miles. Bermuda to Boston. Course: 3350 true. Distance: 670 miles. Bermuda to Halifax., Nova Scotia. Course: 355 0 true. Distance: 740 miles. Bermuda to SI. John's, Newfoundland. Course: 0140 true. Distance: 852 miles. Bermuda to Faial, Azores. Course: 0670 true. Distance: 1,800 miles. Bermuda to Crookhaven. Course: 047 0 true. Distance: 2,640 miles. Boston to Halifax, Nova Scotia. Course: 0900 true. Distance: 700 miles. Halifax., Nova Scotia, to St. John's, Newfoundland. Course: 075 0 true. Distance: 500 miles.
st. John's Newfoundland,
to Crookhaven, Ireland. Course: 065 0 true. Distance: 1,670 miles. (see footnote)
St. John's, Newfoundland, to the Azores. Course: 1440 true. Distance: 1,200 miles. Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Crookhaven, Ireland. Course: 059° true. Distance: 2, ISO miles. Halifax, Nova Scotia, to the Azores. Course: 1200 true. Distance: 1,523 miles. Azores to Crookhaven, Ireland. Course: 0390 true. Distance: 1,100 miles. Azores to Gibraltar. Course: 0900 true. Distance: 852 miles. Note: I recommend SI. Pierre over SI. John's as a departure point as it is a straight shot from St. Pierre to either Faial or Mizen Head, whereas if departing from St. John's, one has to round and sail ISO miles north along a fog- and rock-bound coast. Plus when stocking for the trip, SI. Pierre is a free port.
any desire to remain at sea for long periods. I love to take off to sea for twelve or fourteen days, but when the trip extends more than sixteen days it's time to get ashore. I want to belly up to the bar and have someone serve me a cold Heineken. If you are crossing the pond eastward you shouldn't have to spend long periods at sea. If you take the northern route, depending on whether you jump off from Halifax or St. John's, Newfoundland, the distance is 2,200 or 1,700 miles. If you take the southern route, via Bermuda and the Azores, the longest jump is just over 1,800 miles, In any reasonably sized cruising boat the longest unbroken hop across the Atlantic can still take less than sixteen days, an amount of time which is easy on the crew and easy to stock the boat for. It is simple to store a boat for two or three weeks, plus reserves; it is much more difficult to store a boat
for five weeks plus reserves. Further, you can change crew at various points so that crew members with only three weeks off can make a long open-water passage, yet will have time to sight-see and play tourist at both ends of the trip. Everything I said in Chapter 2, "Preparations," about getting you and your boat ready for an ocean voyage, applies here, so be sure to read that advice carefully. For crossing the North Atlantic the ideal months are late May, June, and early July. April is too early, as the gale frequency even down on the Azores routes is high enough to deter the conservative seaman. Commencing in late July the West Indian hurricanes, which largely miss the continental mass of the United States, go waltzing across the Atlantic, making August and September poor months to be wandering around there,
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
322
Transatlantic Crossing Directions
Port of Departure
Destination
Distance
Courses
Sailing Direction & Comments
Miami
Bermuda
950
North then Northeast
Stand north with the Gulf Stream under the tail until clear of the Bahamas, then swing northeast toward Bermuda.
East Coast, USA
Bermuda
Various
Various
Various courses and distances, from 400 miles Morehead City / Beaufort to Bermuda, to 700 miles New York or Boston to Bermuda. Bermuda is easiest to reach from ports south of Hatteras. North of Hatteras you may end up hard on the wind on starboard tack most uf the way.
Maine
Faial
2,000
Southeast thence
Stand southeast about 300 miles to about 40oN, 65°W, then follow it until the Azores approached at about 41 oN, 35°W, swing southeast to the Azores.
Newport or Provincetown
Faial
2,200
New York
Faial
2,280
Southeast thence
Stand southeast about 280 miles about 38°N, 70 oW, to pick up Stream, then as above.
Chesapeake Capes
Faial
2,000
Southeast thence
Stand southeast about 140 miles to about 36°N, 70oW, to pick up Gulf Stream, then as above.
St. Thomas, St. Barts, Antigua
Bermuda
870-900
North
Follow the North Star. Carry as much fuel as possible as you will certainly run into 100 or 150 miles of light airs, and some boats have run into 400 miles of almost Hat calm. But it can be done without an engine-witness Iolaire' s three passages: of 6V2 days, 7V2 days, and 9 days.
Bermuda
Halifax
740
North by east
With luck, should be a reach all the way and warm until the last 36 hours, when you come out of the Gulf Stream and may be greeted by cold and fog.
Bermuda
Mizen Head
2,650
Northeasterly quadrant
Sail approximately the Great Circle Course, but sail north at the beginning to pick up the Gulf Stream and try to stay in the Stream all the way across for warmth and favorable current. At 150 miles per day, which with the aid of the current should not be hard to achieve, passage would be 17V2 days.
Bermuda
Faial
1,820
Northeast then east
Absolute Great Circle Course usually cannot be sailed as it leads right
Stand southeast about 270 miles to about 38°N, 68°W, to pick up Gulf Stream, thence as above.
Leaving
Port of Departure
Destination
Distance
Courses
32 3
Sailing Direction & Comments through the Bermuda high, where the fleet in the 1972 Transatlantic Race to Spain was completely becalmed. Stand due north until you are in the Gulf Stream, then swing west, staying above the Bermuda-Azores high. Swing southeast as the Azores are approached, at approximately 41 o N, 35°W.
Manchester
Halifax
350
East then Northeast
Sail rhumb line, but have detailed notes and Nova Scotia charts; be prepared for fog.
Halifax
Faial Flores
1,640 1,.500
Southeast
Not a normal route except for Canadian boats which have seen enough of the cold cruel north and want to get south to warm water for their trip across.
Halifax
st.
360
East then Northeast
Be prepared for plenty of fog, but once you reach St. Pierre there are good French meals ashore. French wine, duty-free liquor, excellent cheese, and what is allegedly the best French bread in the Western Hemisphere.
St. Pierre via Cape Race
Mizen Head
1,900 (120 plus 1,780)
Eastnortheast
120 miles to Cape Race, then 1,780 to Fastnet Rock, total 1,900. At 150 miles a day = 12V2 days; at 130 miles a day = 141;' days. Warning: check via radio with st. John's, Newfoundland, which will be able to obtain from the trawlers the latest ice reports. Skirt the southeast area of the growlers, then sail Great Circle Course to Mizen Head. July best month.
St. John's, Newfoundland
Mizen Head
1,700
Eastnortheast
At 150 miles a day = 11 days, 8 hours; at 130 miles a day is only 13 days!
St. John's
Faial
1,200
Southeast
Probably only to be taken by a boat which was originally intending to go the St. John's / Mizen Head route but finally decided the cold and fog were too much. At 150 miles a day = 8 days; at 130 miles a day = 9 days, 6 hours.
Faial
Mizen Head
1,140
Northnortheast
If wind is east or north of east, stand north on starboard tack with eased sheets until prevailing southwesterlies are reached north of 45°N. Then reach off on other tack to Fastnet or Land's End: 8 to 9Vz days.
Pierre
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Port of Departure
DestinatioTl
Distance
Courses
Sailing Direction & Comments
Faial
Lisbon & NW Spanish Coast
1,100
East
1,100 miles rhumh-line distance, but you should stand well to the north and approach the Spanish / Portuguese coast on the latitude of destination, as otherwise with the Portuguese trades blowing out of the north and northeast you may end up beating to windward.
Faial
Gibraltar
1,140
Eastsoutheast
Sail roughly the rhumb-line course and cross your fingers and hope. Where one gets an English-language weather report covering the area south of Finisterre is beyond me. Note: Sailing St. Pierre, Faial, Mizen Head increases the sailing distance, but even /()r a comparatively small boat reduces the longest time at sea to about 10 days, making this somewhat appealing to a small boat based northeast of United States or Canada.
For the extreme northern route, i.e., Halifax, Newfoundland, to Northern Europe, early July is the best time as the frequency of early July hurricanes is very low. Usually they pass south of the great circle track from Cape Race to Fastnet Rock or the Scilly Isles. May and June can be bad ice months, and you may have to sail southeast from Halifax to clear the ice fields, considerably lengthening your trip and forcing you down into the steamer lanes; whereas in early July you will probably be able to sail the direct great circle route from Cape Race or St. John's. There are several advantages to this far northern route. First, you are well above the North Atlantic steamer traffic lanes and shipping is minimal. One year we crossed the Atlantic right through the shipping lanes in heavy fog. Even though we had a radar reflector up we still had the living daylights scared out of us about a dozen times: it was like standing in the middle of a superhighway with cars going by in both directions. But in July 1975, on lolaire's seventieth birthday cruise, the ice was well to the north; we sailed the great circle course north of the steamer lanes and saw only one ship until we were approaching the Irish coast. The northern route gives you a chance to work up the East Coast of the United States in short weekend hops that give both boat and crew a shakedown. It also offers good cruising grounds. If
you want to take the time or wish to switch crews, you can cruise the coast of Nova Scotia, and then inside through the Bras d'Or lakes. These are fabulous in that you have Nova Scotia scenery with no fog! You can exit from the northern end of the Bras d'Or lakes, then make a short jump to St. Pierre and Miquelon, where you will Bnd a French colony in North America complete with excellent wines, French cheeses, wonderful meals, and maybe the best French bread in the western hemisphere. Trawlers of all nationalities call at the port for R & R, a break from the fishing on the Grand Banks. From St. Pierre you can sail direct for Mizen Head, Ireland, via Cape Race (1,900 miles); or make a sharp turn to port at Cape Race and run up to St. John's, Newfoundland, and thence to Mizen Head (1,700 miles); or head directly to the Azores from St. Pierre (Flores, 1,050 miles; Horta, 1,200). For those interested in marine life-and who isn't?-the northern route provides more thrills than any other. On Iolaire's 1975 voyage I saw more marine life than I had seen before in a total of twenty-Bve years at sea. Finally, there is only one long jump---from Halifax or St. John's, 2,200 and 1,700 miles re spectively--on the way to northern Europe; via the Azores there are two long jumps-roughly 1,800 from Bermuda to the Azores, and another 1,100 miles from there to Ireland.
Leaving There are disadvantages to the northern route, of course. First, it is cold. Make sure you have a really good cabin heating and drying system installed and tested under sail on all points of sailing before you leave the Boston area. (I have tested five different smoke heads and the only one that worked in all conditions was the Jolie Brise type. Sce The Ocean Sailing Yacht, vol. 2, p. 339. This type of smoke head is now available through Nicro Fico.) Then there is fog. If you insist on having bright sunshine at sea, don't take the northern route. It was nine days after we left Halifax before we ever saw a dim glow you could call the sun; and as one of the crew claimed, it was five days before we ever saw the bowsprit! Unless you have electronic navigation you will probably be operating completelyon DR--chances of sun sights by the Grand Banks are zero. Warning Be sure to layoff your course to avoid Virgin Rocks on the Banks, latitude 46°25'N, 59°49'W-just a notation on the general chart. 1 say this because few yachts have a detailed chart of the Grand Banks. When we went across the Banks in 1975 the sea really humped up for a few hours; the sea conditions were much worse than the wind indicated so 1 figured we were near Virgin Rocks. Needless to say 1 almost had a heart attack a few years later when 1 saw a detailed chart for the Grand Banks and discovered that Virgin Rocks are marked with an unlit buoy and have only 9 feet of water over them. Obviously the area near it is covered with breaking seas during heavy weather. You may wonder why I recommend Mizen Head in Ireland as a landfall. Mizen Head has an RDF beacon with a range of 50 miles and a light visible 16 miles. It is near Cape Clear, so called because of the low incidence of fog in that area. On both my transatlantic passages via the northern route, the last two days were of brilliant clear sunshine with unlimited visibility so that we picked up the mountains ofIreland 50 miles out. Then, of course, there is Ireland itself, with all its amenities. I highly recommend that you make a quick left turn and duck into Crookhaven. Why would any sailor pass up Ireland and continue on another two days to England and Falmouth to discover a cricket match in progress and the pub closed-two things no American can figure out! (In Falmouth the pub hours are about the worst in all the United Kingdom.) If you do pass by Ireland and weather permits, I would duck into the incomparable Scilly Isles to watch fantastic evening pilot gig races, enjoy excel-
lent hospitality, and the best pub hours in all of England. Now for the southern route across the pond, via the Azores. If you go north around you'll be back in the cold foggy north within four days after leaving Bermuda; on the Azores route you may carry warm weather right to the Azores and beyond. This is a powerful argument for many sailors who want to delay their return to the cold as long as possible. You can sail to the Azores via Bermuda, or direct. First, the Bermuda route. From Antigua, St. Barts, or St. Thomas the distance is roughly 900 miles. The sailing directions are discussed in the chart, "Transatlantic Crossing Directions." From Miami to Bermuda is about 950 miles, but that can be reduced in effect if you sail up the coast with the Gulf Stream under your tail to Charleston or other East Coast points south of Hatteras and then jump off direct for Bermuda. The voyage from Bermuda to the Azores should not be taken before the end of May because of the winter gales, whose frequency in early May is in my opinion too high to be risked. Even in the last week of May and the month ofJune you may catch a gale or the edge of one, especially as you approach the Azores; but it should be north of you, and therefore a westerly gale, which would blow you in the right direction. In July the gale frequency becomes lower, but the chance of catching the edge of a hurricane increases. Thus there is a relatively small window of safe and comfortable conditions for this voyage. You should experience warm weather for the first third or possibly half of the trip. In fact some boats have had warm weather all the way to the Azores. But it can be cold. During the last half of the trip you will probably sail along the Forty-first Parallel, and even though the water may be warm, if the wind goes north it will blast cold air down on you and may produce heavy fog. And speaking of fog and visibility, don't forget that the Azores are known as the "Disappearing Islands." You can be sailing in what seems clear water, getting a suntan, and not see an island that rises 500 feet only 5 miles away. This can make your landfall interesting, to say the least, and is guaranteed to give the navigator nervous palpitations. When sailing from Bermuda to the Azores I would recommend going due north from Bermuda until you are quite sure you are well and truly in the Gulf Stream, then swing northeast and east, following the Stream for as long as you can. Finally,
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide you will have to turn southeast to the Azores. As I've said, despite the fact that you are in the Stream the weather may be cold with cold air coming out of the north Atlantic. Also, note that icebergs drift down into this area: in 1985 we passed within spitting distance of an iceberg northwest of Flores at latitude 41 ON. The average yacht will take fourteen to eighteen days to cross from Bermuda to the Azores, but then allow yourself a minimum of two weeks (better, a month) to enjoy cruising the Azores; see the section about the Azores in Chapter 5, pages 94122 for information on the Azores. The direct, great circle route from the Caribbean to the Azores is 2,200 miles. This is at least 600 miles shorter than the distance via Bermudaactually more, since one generally stands north from Bermuda before turning east-and eliminates the time spent in that island's seductive ports. (By the time you've entered, picked up mail, fuel, and stores, and let the crew enjoy Bermuda's hospitality, you probably can't get in and out of there in less than four or five days.) So, obviously, if you're in a hurry to get to Europe, the direct route is enticing. It's also probably going to be warmer. On the other hand, not only do you spend a longer time at one stretch at sea, but the course takes you across the Bermuda-Azores high, an area that can vary from having light airs to being absolutely windless. So you'll need a boat that can negotiate those conditions, under either power or sail. With that in mind, here are three suggested variations of the direct route. Their mileage differs, but, obviously, all eliminate the Bermuda inport time. First, for the heavy motor sailer with at least a I,OOO-mile range under power: Leave Antigua on the starboard tack, headed about northeast-your course will depend on whether the trades are east, north of east, or south of east. Sail on a fast reach, trimmed for hull speed rather than trying to work east too hard. When you run out of the trades, somewhere around 26°N, douse the headsails, strap down the main with tackles port and starboard, turn on the mill, and motor along the great circle route, sailing whenever the wind comes in. Your distance will be about 2,200 miles, almost 800 miles shorter than the Bermuda route. Your time should be around fifteen to eighteen days. Second, for a boat with good sailing qualities that can power well for a fair distance in a flat calm: starboard tack from Antigua, close-reaching with slightly cracked sheets until the wind dies out, then motorsail, staying as close to the great circle
course as you can and still get some help from the wind. Total distance is 2,350 miles; time fifteen to eighteen days. Third, for the boat that sails well, but has no extreme range under power: when the wind dies after you reach from Antigua, alter course to due north, sailing or motorsailing through the Azores high until the barometer starts to drop. At about 37°N turn northeast or east as the prevailing westerlies fill in. Distance, probably 2,500 miles; time twenty to twenty-two days. For this route, your boat should be able to sail decently in 6 to 8 knots of wind and have a crew willing to make the many sail changes necessary to keep her moving. Even so, you'll need to carry, in extra jerry cans on deck if necessary, enough fuel for a range of 500 to 600 miles. Incidentally, there is one drawback common to all these southern routes from the Islands to Europe via the Azores: I know of few places in the world that are more expensive for stocking a boat than Antigua, St. Thomas, and Bermuda. Be warned. One last comment about crossing the pond: If you're leaving from the V.S. East Coast for the Azores, head for the Gulf Stream by the shortest possible route, and ride its current across the Atlantic. Turn southeast out of the Stream as you approach the Azores at about 41°N, 35°W. Some boats may want to sail direct from the East Coast of North America to the Azores without stopping at Bermuda. Ifleaving from Miami or any port south of the Chesapeake Capes, the obvious route is into the Gulf Stream as soon as possible; ride the Stream across the Atlantic until you reach approximately 35°N, 4 I °E, then alter course to approach the port in the Azores that is to be your landfall. If following this route it is not recommended that you leave the East Coast until mid-May. Further, when passing Hatteras you should stay on the eastern edge of the Stream to give yourself plenty of sea room off this graveyard of ships. Keep the radio on at night to obtain warnings of the arrival of the northwest fronts (see p. 316), because after a front passes through, the wind will shift to northeast, directly against the Stream's current, giving very rough seas. If a northwester is predicted, sail east of the Stream, and stay out of the Stream until the wind swings back into its usual southwest direction. When leaving from ports north of the Chesapeake Capes, there are a number of options. If you want warm weather, head southeast to pick up the Gulf Stream and then proceed as just described.
Leaving If you do not mind cold weather, sail the direct great circle route to 35°N, 41°E, then head for your Azores landfall. A third option is sail up the East Coast of the United States, making a few stops, shaking down both the crew and boat, and making any lastminute alterations as necessary at one of the many good yacht yards available along the coast. Then take off from Halifax, St. Pierre, or Miquelon (see pages 323-24), as your desires and weather conditions dictate. Unless you have some specific reason to do so, I would not bother to go around the corner of Newfoundland to St. John's as it is a three- or four-day sail and you are still no nearer to the Azores.
Beyond the Azores From the Azores you will head either northeast to Ireland, England, and the Channel, or across to Spain, Portugal, or the Mediterranean. (But, as I've said several times, think hard about exploring the Azores before you go.) If you're going north, and the wind gets into the northeast-as it does when an off-shoot of the Bermuda-Azores high breaks ofl" and sits north of the Azores---aon't wait in port, and don't bother to fight your way to windward. Head north or even northwest at whatever angle of sail is comfortable and gives you good speed-probably close-reaching with the wind high on the beam. Continue on that course until you hit the high, when the wind will probably die out. Then motorsail due north (if you've no power, do the best you can) until you hit the prevailing westerlies at about 45°N. At 500 N you are assured of wind from the westerly quadrant. It is useless to beat to windward against an
easterly or northeasterly in the area between the Azores and Ireland, because the headwind will be of short duration. Eventually the breeze will swing back to the west or southwest when you get far enough north. Regarding landfalls in Ireland and England, see p. 332. Along the Spanish and Portuguese coasts the logical landfalls are Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, where a large new marina is in the process of being built and Vigo/Bayona, just north of the Portuguese/Spanish border (see pp. 64-65 for more information on VigolBayona area). When approaching the west coast of Spain or Portugal be sure you are well north of your landfall before you reach 18° to 20° west longitude. From April through early September the Portuguese trades along the coast will be blowing from the north and northeast, giving you a beat if you approach the coast from south of the latitude of your landfall. Along the southern Iberian coast a logical stop is Villamora, a large new commercial marina which has facilities for caretaking-storing and maintaining your yacht in your absence. Each year, more and more American yachtsmen are cruising Europe. Despite the fall in the value of the dollar, the caretaking and storage facilities are considerably cheaper in Europe than in the States. Crossing the pond, leaving the boat for the winter, and rejoining it at various times during the year has in recent years become an economical proposition and has enabled New World yachtsmen to enjoy some wonderful new, uncrowded anchorages in the Old World. Getting there by sailing across the pond is certainly not to be taken lightly, but neither should you be scared off by thoughts of long weeks at sea or endless series of gales. Getting there can be at least half the fun.
Bibliography Cruising Guides
General
Buzby, v. M. Virgin Island Directions. 1952. Privately printed by the Coast Guard Auxiliary in the early 1950s. Carey, Charles, and E. A. Raiwhold. Virgin Anchoraging. A superb collection of aerial photographs. Chubb, Percy, Ill. Cruising Guide to the Windward and Leeward Islands of the Eastern Caribbean. 1961. Privately printed. Eggleston, George Teeple. Virgin Islands. 1959; reprinted, Huntington, N.Y.: Krieger, 1974. Available at Palm Passage Bookstore, St. Thomas. Eiman, William J. St. MaartenlSt. Martin Area Plus St. Kitts and Nevis Cruising Guide. Copyright 1983 by Virgin Island Plus Yacht Charters, Inc. Also covers Anguilla, St. Barts, Saba, and Statia. Forbes, AI. Virgin Islands Cruising Guide. Hollywood, Fla.: Dukane Press, 1970. Kelly, Tom, and Jack Van Ost. YachtsTTum's Guide to the Virgin Islands. 1968. Now Van Ost, John R., and Harry Kline, Yachtsman's Guide to the Greater Antilles. Coral Gables, Fla.: Tropic Isle, 1979. Mitchell, Carleton. Islands to Windward. New York: Van Nostrand, 1948. Now out of print, this classic yarn of Mitchell's cruise from Trinidad to Nassau on board the Carib in 1946 is the first cruising gUide written for the area. Street, D. M., Jr. Cruising Guide to the Virgin Islands. 1963. Privately printed. No longer available. - - - . Yachting Guide to the Grenadines.Hollywood, Fla.: Dukane Press, 1970. - - - . A Cruising Guide to the Lesser Antilles. New York: Norton, 1964, 1974. Stevens Yachts of Annapolis, A Cruising Guide to the Windward Islands, Annapolis Md.: 1979. A picture and text guide. Wilensky, Julius M. Yachtsman's Guide to the Windward Islands. 2nd ed. Stamford, Conn.: Wescott Cove, 1978.
Fenger, Frederic A. The Cruise of the Diablesse. New York: Yachting, Inc. [1926]. A description of cruising through the islands in 1915. Possibly hack in print. If not, try the library. A truly great book un the Lesser Antilles. - - - . Along in the Caribbean. Beimont, Mass.: Wilmington Books, 1958. A description of cruising through the Islands in a decked canoe in 1911. Another great book on the Lesser Antilles. Mitchell, Carleton. Islands to Windward. Washington, D. C. : National Geographic Society, 1967. A description of the author's second cruise through the islands in 1965 aboard the Finisterre. Robinson, William. Where the Tradewinds Blow. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons [1963]. A collection of stories ahout various cruises hy the editor of Yachting.
History Kay, Fram:is. This-Is Grenada. St. George's, Grenada: Carenage Press [1971]. An excellent description of Grenada and a must for anyone who loves it. Lewisjohn, Florence. Divers Information on the Romantic History of St. Croix. Hollywood, Fla.: Dukane Press [1963?]. - - - . Tales of Tortola and the British Virgin Islands. Hollywood, Fla.: Dukane Press, 1966. - - - . St. Croix under Seven Flags. Hollywood, Fla.: Dukane Press, 1970. Mann, Zane B. Fair Winds and Far Places. Minneapolis: Dillon Press, 1978. Excellent account of a successful executive who chucks it all and runs away to the Lesser Antilles. An honest appraisal of the joys and sorrows involved. Required reading for anyone thinking of doing the same.
Bibliography Morison, Samuel Eliot. Admiral of the Open Sea. Boston: Little, Brown, 1942. Superb biography of Columbus with vivid descriptions of the men, ships, islands, and sailing. Voluminous and interesting footnotes. - - - . Christopher Columbus, Mariner. Boston: Little, Brown, 1955. A condensed version of Admiral of the Ocean Sea, and infinitely more readable. Q'Neill, Edward A. Rape of the American Virgins. New York: Praeger, 1972. A must for anyone who wishes to understand the problems of the US Virgin Islands. Thomas, G. C. H. Ruler in Hiroona. [Port-of-Spain]' Trinidad [1972]. Novel of a mythical island, but an all-too-apt description of the typical West Indian situation. Waugh, Alec. Island in the Sun. New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy [c. 1955]. Westlake, Donald E. Under an English Heaven. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972. Provides valuable historical insight into island governments throughout the Lesser Antilles. A must for anyone who wants to understand the islands.
32 9
Dudley Pope Among the most readable books for those wishing to know about the Eastern Caribbean's colorful past are the novels and nonfiction works of Dudley Pope. His knowledge and research are impeccable. The following are highly recommended.
NONFICTION
The Black Ship. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1964. The story of the worst single-ship mutiny in the Royal Navy. On board the Hermione, in 1797, between Hispaniola and Venezuela, the captain and all the officers were murdered. The Buccaneer King. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1978. The first third of this biography of Sir Henry Morgan gives a wide-ranging introduction to the early days of the Eastern Caribbean.
NOVELS
Humor Wibberley, Leonard. The Mouse That Roared. Boston: Little, Brown. Side-splitting description of the invasion of Anguilla, with local island characters very thinly disguised. Wouk, Herman. Don't Stop the Carnival. New York: Doubleday, 1965. A perfect description ofSt. Thomas in the late 195Os.
Flora and Fauna Chaplin, C. C. Fishwatcher's Guide to West Atlantic Coral Reefs. Rev. ed. Newton Square, Pa.: Harrowood Books, 1979. Collins, James Bond. Birds of the West Indies. 2nd ed. Boston: Houghton Miffiin, 1971. Devas, Father Raymond. Birds of Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Grenada: Carenage Press. Groome, J. R. A Natural History of the Island ofGrenada. Privately printed. Available at Sea Change Book Stores, St. George's, Grenada. Hargreaves, Dorothy, and Bob Hargreaves. Tropical Blossoms of the Caribbean. Kailua, Hawaii: Hargreaves, 1960. Mognotte, Sony. Shelling and Beachcombing in the Southern Caribbean Waters. Murray, Dea. Birds of the Virgin Islands. Randall, John E. Caribbean Reef Fishes. Neptune, N.].: T.F.H.,1978.
Governor Ramage, R.N. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1973. Covers the US Virgins and Culebra. Ramage and the Freebooters. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson [1969]. (In the United States, The Triton Brig. New York: Pocket Books, 1978.) Covers Grenada and St. Lucia. Ramage and the Rebels. New York: Walker & Co., 1986. Describes how the island of Curac;ao was handed over to the British-and captured by them when the Dutch changed their mind. Ramage's Diamond. New York: Avon, 1982. Describes the capture by the British of Diamond Rock, off Fort-de-France, Martinique. Ramage's Mutiny. London: Seeker & Warburg, 1977. Set in English Harbour, Antigua, and then in Venezuela. Ramage's Prize. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1975. Covers the Lesser and Greater Antilles. The following titles are also well worth reading. Buccaneer. New York: Walker & Co., 1984. Convoy. New York: Walker & Co., 1987. Decoy. New York: Walker & Co., 1985. The Devil Himself: The Mutiny of 1800. London: Seeker & Warburg, 1988. Galleon. New York: Walker & Co., 1987. Life in Nelson's Navy. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1981. Ramage and the Guillotine. New York: Avon, 1981. Ramage and the Renegades. New York: Avon, 1982. The Ramage Touch. New York: Walker & Co., 1984. Ramage's Signal. New York: Walker & Co., 1984.
Appendix A
Principal Visual Navigation Aids Light List
Fl ft G Gp FI Gp FI (1 + 2) hor. Iso Occ Qk FI R sec vert. W
THIS LIGHT LIST COVERS MAJOR LIGHTS IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN AND ATLANTIC ISLANDS. It is as correct as we can make it as of May 1988. It should be remembered that although the major lights on the Atlantic Islands are quite reliable, lights in the Eastern Caribbean vary from being erratic to totally unreliable. Often harbor authorities change lights and fail to notify either the Defense Mapping Agency (DMA) or the British Admiralty (BA) and us (Imray-Iolaire); thus, the corrections do not show up in Notices to Mariners. Farther along the north coast of South America the lights are almost all flashing-5 seconds, 7 seconds, 8 seconds, and the like. Attempting to time the difference between a 6-second and 7-second light from the deck of a small sailboat bouncing around in the Caribbean Sea is one step less than impossible unless one uses the method of timing explained to me by Augie Hollen. If one accurately measures the time it takes for the light to go through 10 FULL CYCLES, then divides by 10, it will be relatively simple to identify whether the light is a flashing 6-second or a flashing 7-second. Misidentification of lights on the north coast of South America and its off-lying islands has caused dozens of maritime disasters. It is incredible that some of the lights are not group flashing or occulting or different colors. Be forewarned and be careful. DO NOT ENTER STRANGE HARBORS AT NIGHT relying on the lights. To do so is an invitation to disaster.
Puerto Rico WEST COAST Isla Mona. 18°07' N, 67°55'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation; 323 ft; range; 14 miles. May be obscured by land when viewed 150° and 217° magnetic. Punta Higuero. At western extremity of Puerto Rico, 18°22'N, 67°16'W. Occ W, period 4 sec. Elevation; 90 fi:; range; 9 miles.
NORTH COAST Punta Borinquen. 18°30'N, 67°09'W. Gp Fl W (2), period 15 sec. Elevation; 292 ft; range; 25 miles. Arecibo. On Punta Morillos, east side of entrance to Puerto Arecibo, 18°28'N, 66°42'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation; 120 ft; range; 16 miles. Puerto San Juan. On El Morro Fortress, east side of entrance to San Juan Harbor, 18°28'N, 66°07'W. Gp FI (3), period 40 sec. Elevation; 181 ft; range; 24 miles.
Key to Abbreviations Dir Alt ec F
Flashing Feet Green Group Flashing Composite Group Flashing Horizontal Isophase (Equal Interval) Occulting Quick Flashing Red Seconds Vertical White
Directional Alternating Eclipse Fixed
33 1
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
33 2
Cabo San Juan. On summit of cape on northeast side of island, 18°23'N, 65°37'W. FI W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 260 ft; range: 26 miles. Las Cucarachas. Northeast of the Cabo San Juan light, 18°24'N, 65°37'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 32 ft; range: 7 miles.
Southwest Cape. On cape at southwest end of St. Croix, 17°41'N, 64°54'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 50 ft; range: 7 miles.
British Virgin Islands Salt Island. 18 22'N, 64°31'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 160 ft; range: 14 miles. Ginger Island. 18°23'N, 64°28'W. FI W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 260 ft; range: 14 miles. Q
SOUTH COAST Punta Tuna. 17°59'N, 65°55'W. Gp FI W (2), period 30 sec. Elevation: HO ft; range: 25 miles. Isla Caja de Muertos. On summit, 17°54'N, 66 31'W, FI W, period 30 sec. Elevation: 297 ft; range: 13 miles. Cayo Cardona. On west side of entrance to Ponce, 17 58'N, 66°38'W. FI W, period 4 sec. Elevation: 46 ft; range: 8 miles. Guanica. On Punta Meseta, east side of entrance to harbor, 17 57'N, 66°54'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 132 ft; range: 8 miles. Cabo Rojo. SE point. 17°56'N, 67°H'W. FI W, Period. 20 sec. Elevation: 120 ft; range: 20 miles. Q
Q
VIRGIN GORDA Pajaros Point. 18°30.2'N, 64°19.5'W. FI (3)W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 200 ft; range: 16 miles.
Q
Leeward Islands SOMBRERO Sombrero Island. On southeast side of island near Point Ray, 18°36'N, 63°26'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 156 ft; range: 23 miles.
PASSAGE ISLANDS Cayo Lobito. 18°19'N, 65°24'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: HO ft; range: 8 miles. Isla Culebrita. On summit at the west side of the Virgin Passage, 18°19'N, 65°14'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 305 ft; range: 13 miles.
US Virgin Islands ST. THOMAS St. Thomas Aero Light. 18°20'N, 64°54'W. Alt FI G & W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 278 ft; no range given. Buck Island. 18°17'N, 64°54'W. FI W, period 4 sec. W tower on highest point of island. Savana Island. Offwesternmost part of St. Thomas, 18°20'N, 65°05'W. FI W, period 4 sec. Elevation: 300 ft; range: 6 miles.
ANGUILLA Road Point. 18°12.2'N, 63°05.7'W. FI (3) WR, period 20 sec. Elevation: 60 ft; range: W-1O miles, R-6 miles. W 070°-089° (19°), R 089°-116° (27°), W 116°_ 218° (102°). Windward Point. 18°16.5'N, 62°57'W. FI ec 0.5, FI ec 0.5, FI ec 13.5; range: est. 8 miles, obscured from 064 magnetic to 103 magnetic and from 203 magnetic to 265 magnetic; very unreliable.
ST. MARTIN Simson Bay. Aviation light, 18°02'N, 63°07'W. Alt FI W&G, period 6 sec. Elevation: 52 ft; range: 8 miles. Proselyte Reef. 17°59.5'N, 63°30.4'W. Gp Fl (2), period 10 sec. Buoy on the northeast corner of the reef.
ST. CROIX Hamms Bluff. At the northwesternmost point of st. Croix, 17°45'N, 64°52'W. Fl (2)W, period 30 sec. Elevation: 394 ft; range: 24 miles. Christiansted Harbor Entrance Channel. 17°45'N, 64°42'W. Front; On Fort Louise Augusta, Qk FI W. Elevation: 45 ft; range: 7 miles. Rear: Iso Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 93 ft; range: 8 miles. Range of lights 174° magnetic. Buck Island. On summit of island off north coast of St. Croix, 17°47'N, 64°37'W. Fl W, period 4 sec. Elevation: 360 ft; range: 6 miles.
ST. BARTS Fort Gustavia. On west coast of St. Barts, 17°24'N, 62°51'W. Gp FI W, R&G, period 12 sec. Elevation: 210 ft; range: W-1O miles, R-7 miles.
SABA St. John's. 17°37.1'N, 63°14.6'W. FI (2) W, period 10 sec. Elevation: unknown; range: 15 miles.
Appendix A Orangestad. 17°28.8'N, 62°59.2'W. FI (3) W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 130 ft; range: 17 miles.
ST. KITTS Basseterre Bay. l7°18'N, 62°43'W. Front: On Treasury Pier, F R. Elevation: 23 ft; range: 10 miles. Rear: F R. Elevation: 42 Ft; range: 10 miles.
ANTIGUA Sandy Island. West coast of Antigua, 2 miles west of St. John's Harbour, l7°08'N, 61°55'W. FI W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 56 ft; range: 13 miles. Unreliable. Boggy Peak. 17°03'N, 61°51'W. F R. Elevation: 140 ft; not shown on chart, but range estimated at 15 miles. Parham Sound. Aviation beacon in the northeast part of Antigua. FI W, period 9.8 sec. Elevation: 150 Ft; range: 18 miles.
333
sec. Elevation: 82 Ft; range: W-13 miles, R-9 miles, G8 miles. G visible 275°-349°; W visible 349°_054°; G visible 054°-068°. Pointe du Vieux Fort. 15°57'N, 61°43'W. Gp FI W (2 + 1), period 15 sec. Elevation: 85 ft; range: 22 miles. Obscured 279°-331° by Les Saintes reserve light FW. Anse a la Barque. 15°05'N, 61 0 46'W. At head of cove: FI G (2), period 6 sec. Elevation: 119 ft; range: 9 miles. North side of entrance: Gp FI W, R&G (2), period 6 sec. Elevation: 300 Ft; range: W-8 miles; R-5 miles; G-5 miles. Passe de la Baleine. West passage buoy, 15°53'N, 61°35'W. Gp FI W (2), period 6 sec.
LA DESIRADE Near southeast point of island. 16°20'N, 61°Ql'W. Gp FI W (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 174 ft; range: 10 miles. Visible 185°-065°.
PETITE TERRE GUADELOUPE Port du Moule. West side: 16°20.0'N, 61°20.8'W. Fl WR, period 4 sec. Elevation: 40 ft; range: W-9 miles, R-6 miles. Sectors: R 110°-202°(92°), W 202°-312°(110°), R 312°-340° (28°). East side: 16°20.0'N, 61°20.6'W. Fl (2) WRG, period 6 sec. Elevation: 22 Ft; range: W-7 miles, R-5 miles, G-5 miles. Sectors: FI 1, ec 1, FI 1, ec 3. R 353°133°(140°), W 133°-138°(5°), G 138°-165°(27°). Port de St. Fran~ois. Directional light, 16°15'N, 61°17'W. Qk FI W, R&G. Elevation: 33 Ft; range: W-9 miles, R-7 miles, G-7 miles. W visible 358°-002°; R visible 002°-015°; obscured 015°-345°; G visible 345°358°. Port de St. Fran~ois. 16°15'N, 61°17'W. FI W, period 4 sec. Elevation: 30 Ft; range: 8 miles. Le Gozier. 16°12'N, 61°30'W. Gp FI R (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 80 ft; range: 26 miles. Sectors: FI0.5, ec 2, FI 0.5, ec 7. Visible 259°-115°(216°). Obscured by trees on certain bearings towards Pointe Caraibe. Pointe·a·Pitre. 16°13'N, 61 0 32'W. Front Entrance Range: On south end of Monroux. Qk FI W. Elevation: 49 ft; range: 12 miles. Intensified 3° either side of range. Rear Entrance Range: On Pointe Fouilloe 570 meters (348°) from front. Qk FI W. Elevation: 67 ft; range: 14 miles. Intensified 3° either side of range. Ste. Marie. At the foot of the east pier, 16°06' N, 61°34'W. Gp Occ W, R&G (2), period 6 sec. Elevation: 39 ft; range: W -10 miles. R-7 miles, G-7 miles. R visible 180°-295°; W visible 295°-302°; G visible 302°342°. Trois Rivicres. At southeasternmost point of Guadeloupe, 15°58'N, 61°43'W. Iso W, R&G, period 4
Terre de Bas. Near the eastern extremity, 15°lO'N, 61°07'W. Gp FI W (3), period 12 sec. Elevation: 108 ft; range: 15 miles. Obscured 185°-213° by La Desirade.
ILES DES SAINTES Bourg des Saintes. At foot of wharf on Terre d'en Haut. 15°52'N, 61°35'W. FI W, R&G, period 4 sec. Elevation: 30 Ft; range: W -10 miles, R-7 miles, G-7 miles. Sectors: R 075°-142° (67°), W 142°-154°(12°), G 154°_160°(6°). Obstruction light on aerial 0.9 magnetic SW.
MARIE-GALANTE Grand Bourg. On wharf, 15°53'N, 61°19'W. Gp FI (2), period 6 sec. Range: 7 miles. Capes terre. 15°54'N, 61°31'W. Front: Q. R. Elevation: 36 ft; range: 8 miles. Rear: Range 313° from front. Q R. Elevation: 52 Ft; range: 8 miles.
Windward Islands DOMINICA RoseaulFort Young. 15°17'N, 61°42'W. Oce R, period 3 sec. Elevation: 80 ft; range: 8 miles. While concrete structure partially obscured 117°-125°, thence to shore.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
334
MARTINIQUE La CarveIIe. On northeast point of Martinique, 14°46'N, 600 53'W. Gp FI W (3), period 15 sec. Elevation: 453 ft; range: 19 miles. Visible 135°-345°. Ilet Cabrit. Off the southeast point of Martinique, 14°23'N, 60 52'W. FI R, period 5 sec. Elevation: 138 ft; range: 21 miles. Visible 228°-106° and 107°-208°. Pointe Precheur. On northwest corner of Martinique, 14°48'N, 61°OO'W. FI R, 10 sec. Elevation: 69 ft; range: 19 miles. Visible 338°-162°. Pointe des Negres. On north side of the entrance to Baie de Fort-de-France, 14°36'N, 61°06'W. FI W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 121 ft; range: 27 miles. Visible 300°-126°. Baie de Fort-de-France. 14°36'N, 61°04'W. Three harbors with range lights to choose from: Fort Saint Louis. 14°35.8'N, 61°04.2'W. F W, R&G. Elevation: 100 ft; range: W-17 miles, R-13 miles, G-13 miles. Sectors: R 320°-057°(97°), W 057"-087"(30°), G 087°-140°(53°). 2 F R (hor.) & 3 F R (vert.) on each of three radio masts 1. 2-1. 4M E. Carenage. Leading Us 004. Morne Pichevin. Front. 14°36.1'N, 61°03.9'W. Dir Iso G, period 4 sec. Elevation: 125 ft; range: 14 miles. Intensity 001°_007°(6°). Carenage. Rear. 145 magnetic from front. Dir Iso G, period 4 sec. Elevation: 160 ft; range: 14 miles. Synchronized with front. Intensity 001°_007°(6°). Le Lamentin Aviation Light. 14°35'N, 61°QO'W. Gp FI W (3 + I), period 12 sec. Range: 20 miles. 0
MilIigan Cay. 13°07.4'N, 61°1O.6'W. FI, period 4 sec. Elevation: 118 ft; range: 8 miles. Duvernette Island. 13°07.5'N, 61°12.8'W. V Q FI (2) W, period 2 sec. Elevation: 220 ft; range: 6 miles. Other lights on St. Vincent are not listed as they are extremely unreliable, as are the lights in the St. Vincent Grenadines.
BARBADOS Harrison Point. On the northwest side of the island, 13°18'N, 59°39'W. Gp FI W (2), period 15 sec. Elevation: 193 ft; range: 22 miles. Ragged Point. 13°1O'N, 59°26'W. FI W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 213 ft; range: 21 miles. Obscured when bearing less than 135°. Bridgetown Breakwater. 13°06.3'N, 59°38'W. Q R3, period 10 sec. Elevation: 49 ft; range: 12 miles. Needham Point. 13'04.5'N, 59°36.9'W. FI (4) W&R, period 25 sec. Elevation: 42 ft; range: W-14 miles, R-I0 miles. Sectors: 4 FI in 5. R 274°-304°(30°), W 304°-124° (180°), R 124°-154° (30°). Mount Misery (in center of island). Three vert. F R. Elevation: 1,654 ft., located on radio mast. Seawell Aviation Light. 13°05'N, 59°30'W. Alt Wl, W&G, period 5 sec. Elevation: 210 ft. South Point. On the southernmost point of Barbados, 13°03'N, 59°32'W. Gp Fl W (3), period 30 sec. Elevation: 145 ft; range: 17 miles.
ST. LUCIA Vigie Point. On the summit on the north side of the entrance to Castries, 14°02'N, 61°0l'W. Gp FI W (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 320 ft; range: 24 miles. Tapion Point. On the south side of the entrance to Castries, 14°0l'N, 61°01'W. Qk FI W. Elevation: 50 ft; range: 8 miles. Cape Moule a Chique-Brandon Point. East of Vieux Fort at the southeasternmost point of st. Lucia, 13°43'N, 600 5TW. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 745 ft; range: 19 miles. Morne Belle Vue. Aviation light about 2 miles north of Brandon Point Light, 13°44'N, 600 5TW. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 350 ft; range: 20 miles.
SAINT VINCENT Dark Head. 13°16.8'N, 61°16.0'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 340 ft; range: 12 miles. Sectors: Visible 020°_211° (191°). Occ Rand 2 F R (vert.) repositioned 2.5 magnetic NE.
ST. VINCENT
West Quay. 12°59.3'N, 61°18.0'W. Fl W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 42 et; range: 8 miles. Admiralty Bay. Totally unreliable.
Fort Charlotte. 13°09'N, 61°15'W. Gp FI W (3), period 20 sec. Elevation: 640 ft; range: 16 miles. Radio Mast. 13°09. TN, 61°10. TW. F R. Elevation: 1,302 ft. Owia (Cow and Calves). 13°22.3'N, 61°09.0'W. Fl W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 120 ft; range: 8 miles. Visible 101°-307°(206°).
The Lesser Antilles-Windward Islands
GRENADINES BEQUIA
BATIOWIA ISLAND Summit. 12°57.TN, 61°08.3'W. FI W (2), period 20 sec. Elevation: 712.8 ft; range: 8 miles.
Appendix A PETIT CANOUAN Petit Canouan Island. Summit. 12°47.5'N, 61°17.0'W. Gp Fl W (4), period 40 sec. Elevation: 254 ft; range: 8 miles.
CATHOLIC ISLAND
335
Puerto de Hierro. 100 38'N, 62°06'W. Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 26 ft; range: 12 miles. Cuiria. On the southern extremity of the east breakwater, 10034'N, 62°17'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Range: 12 miles.
NORTHEASTERN CARIBBEAN COAST
Catholic Island. 12°39.7'N, 61°24.3'W. Fl W, period 20 sec. Elevation: 145 ft; range: 8 miles. Rear. 555 magnetic from front. F W. Elevation: 125 ft. Miss Irene Point. I2°35.5'N, 61°27.8'W. FI W (2), period 20 sec. Elevation: 472 ft; range: 8 miles. Red Island. 12°36.1'N, 61 024.7'W Fl R, period 10 sec. Elevation: 129 ft; range: 6 miles.
Isla Testigo Grande. llo23'N, 63°07'W. Fl W, period 4.5 sec. Elevation: 814 ft; range: 10 miles. Carupano. On Cerro Miranda at the southwest extremity of Bahia Hernan Vasquez, 10040.5'N, 63 15'W. FI W, period 8.7 sec. Elevation: 189 ft; range: 12 miles. El Morro de Chacopato. 100 43'N, 63°49'W. Fl W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 167 ft; range: 15 miles.
GRENADA
ISLAS MARGARITA AND CUBAGUA
Petit Cabrits. 12°01.0'N, 6I046.2'W. Gp Fl W (2+ 1), period 20 sec. Elevation: 356 ft; range: 18 miles. Sectors: FI 0.4, ec 2.9, FI 0.4, ec 7.9, FI 0.4, ec 8. Obscured from 029 magnetic clockwise to 135 magnetic. Glover Island. 1l059.I'N, 6I 047.0'W. Q(6) + FLl W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 356 ft; range: 7 miles. Point Saline. 12°00.2'N, 61°47.8'W. Q(9)W, period 15 sec. Range: 7 miles. Airport. 12°00.6'N, 61°46.7'W. Aero Fl R Obstruction. F Rat 125 ft (temporary) 1984. St. George's Harbour. On the extremity of the northern bastion of Fort George (Fort Rupert). 12°03.0'N, 61°45.3'W. F R Elevation: 188 ft; range: 15 miles. Visible 056.5°-151° (94.5").
Punta Mosquito. On the south coast of Margarita, 10053'N, 63°54'W. FI W, period 5.5 sec. Elevation: 85 ft; range: 12 miles. Cabo de la Isla. (Cabo Negro), Margarita. On the summit of the hill at Cabo Negro, llo10'N, 63 53'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 235 ft; range: 12 miles. Morro del Robledar. llo02.6'N, 64°23.0'W. Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 73 ft; range: 16 miles. Black metal framework tower. Sector: FI 1. Northwest Isla Cubagua. lOoSO'N, 64°13'W. Fl W, period 8.5 sec. Elevation: 91 ft; range: 15 miles. East side of Cubagua. 100 50'N, 64°11'W. FI W, period 3 sec. Elevation: 164 ft; range: 17 miles.
Q
Q
CENTRAL CARIBBEAN COAST TRINIDAD Galera Point. On the northeast extremitv of the island, 10050'N, 60055'W. Occ W, period 10 s'ec. Elevation: 114 ft; range: 16 miles. Obscured to west between land and 117 magnetic. Chupara Point. 10048.2'N, 61°22.0'W. Gp Fl W (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 327 ft. North Post Point. 100 45'N, 6I o34'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 747 ft; range: 15 miles. Chacachacare. 10042'N, 61 45'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 825 ft; range: 26 miles. Brigand Hill. 100 30'N, 61°04'W. Gp Fl W (2 + 1), period 30 sec. Elevation: 217 ft; range: 20 miles. Q
Isla Chimana Segunda. looI8'N, 64°37'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 160 ft; range: 10 miles. El Morro de Pelotas. 10018'N, 64°41'W. Gp Fl W (2), period 12 sec. Elevation: 250 ft; range: 20 miles. Visible 320°-056° and 101°-180°. Islas Piritu. On the western end of the islands, 1001O'N, 64°59'W. Fl W, period 9.5 sec. Elevation: 39 ft; range: 12 miles. Note: An Oce W light is shown at Puerto Piritu. Cabo Codera. 100 34'N, 66°03'W. Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 846 ft; range: 18 miles.
ISLA LA TORTUCA
Venezuela GULF OF PARIA Isla Pato. lOo38'N, 61°52'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 375 ft; range: 16 miles.
Cayo Herradura. Off the western end of the island, lloOO'N, 65°22'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 39 ft; range: 11 miles. Punta Oriental. At the southeast corner of the island, 100 54'N, 65°12'W. FI W, period 7 sec. Elevation: 57 ft; range: 14 miles.
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Isla Farallon (El Centinela). 10049'N, 66°06'W. Fl W, period 13 sec. Elevation: 110 ft; range: 12 miles.
LA GUAIRA AREA Catia La Mar. At the outer end of the pier, 10036'N, 67°03'W. Fl R, period 2 sec. Elevation: 20 ft; range: 9 miles. Playa Grande Yacht Basin. Western light, 10037'N, 67°01'W. FI G, period 6 sec. Elevation: 31 ft; range: 11 miles. Maiquetia Airport Aviation Beacon. 10°37' N, 67°00'W. Alt Fl W&G, period 10 sec. Elevation: 465 ft; range: 15 miles. La Guaira/El Vigia. lOo37'N, 66°56'W. L FI W (3), period 15.5 sec. Elevation: 460 ft; range: 25 miles.
ISLAS LOS ROQUES El Grande Roque. On the summit of the island, 11058'N, 66°41'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 275 ft; range: 11 miles. Cayo de Agua. 1l050'N, 66°57'W. FI W, period 9 sec. Elevation: 72 ft; range: 10 miles. SebastopallCayo Grande. 1l047'N, 66°35'W. Fl W, period 9 sec. Elevation: 44 ft; range: 11 miles. La OrchillalCerro Walker. l1049'N, 66°11'W. Fl W, period 11 sec. Elevation: 450 ft; range: 15 miles.
ISLAS DE A YES Aves de Barlovento. 11 °57'N, 67°26'W. FI W, range: 14 miles. Aves de Sotavento. 12°Q4'N, 67°41'W. Fl W, ft; range: 14 miles.
On the southernmost island, period 9 sec. Elevation: 72 ft; On the northernmost island, period 10.7 sec. Elevation: 75
Punta Brava. 10029'N, 68°Ol'W. Fl W, period 8 sec. Elevation: 95 ft; range: 15 miles. R visible 235° ~ 275°, W elsewhere; reported Fl W, period 10 sec. (May 1977). Fort Solano. 10028'N, 68°01'W. Gp FI W (3), period 15.5 sec. Elevation: 52S ft; range: 18 miles.
COAST WEST OF TUCACAS Cayo Borracho. lOoS8'N, 68°1S'W. FI W, period 8 sec. Elevation: 55 ft; range: 12 miles. Cayo Noreste. On the north side, 11013'N, 68°27'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 33 ft; range: 11 miles. Punta Aguida. 11°21'N, 68°41'W. Fl W&R, period IS sec. Elevation: 190 ft; range: W-18 miles, R-7 miles. W shows over R. Punta Zamuro. llo26'N, 68°50'W. FI W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 64 ft; range: 12 miles. Visible lOOo~ 310°. Punta Manzanillo. llo32'N, 69°16'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 150 ft; range: IS miles. Punta Taimataima. 1l03Q'N, 69°31'W. FI W, period 7 sec. Elevation: 191 ft; range: 12 miles. Punta Adicora. 1l057'N, 69°48'W. Fl W, period 16 sec. Elevation: 69 ft; range: 16 miles. Cabo San Roman. On the north side of the peninsula, 12°11'N, 70000'W. FI W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 79 ft; range: 16 miles. La Macolla. On the northwest side of the peninsula, 12°06'N, 70013'W. Fl W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 137 ft; range: 18 miles. Islotes Los Monjes/Monjes del Sur. 12°21.7'N, 70054.0'W. Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 257 ft; range: IS miles. White conical stone tower, orange hands. Sector: Fl 0.6. Reported FI W, period 12 sec., 1987. Punta Perret. 1l047.7'N, 7lo20.3'W. Fl W, period 15 sec. Elevation: 43 ft; range: 15 miles. Black framework tower. Sector: Fl 1.
COAST WEST OF LA GUAIRA
BONAIRE
El Morro de Choroni. 10031'N, 67°36'W. FI W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 246 ft; range: 10 miles. Isla Turiamo. 10029'N, 67°50'W. FI W, period 9 sec. Elevation: 66 ft; range: 10 miles.
Wecua Punt. 12°13.7'N, 68°24.8'W. Gp Fl W (3), period 20 sec. Elevation: 49 ft; range: 12 miles. White round tower. Visible 285°~155° (230°). Boca Spelonk. 12°13.0'N, 68°11.7'W. Fl W, period S sec. Elevation: 99 ft; range: IS miles. White round stone tower. Sector: FI 0.3. Visible 127°~OO2°(23S0). Ceru Bentana. 12°18.2'N, 68°22.8'W. Gp Fl W (4), period 22 sec. Elevation: 145 ft; range: 17 miles. Gray stone square tower. Sector: Fl 0.7, ec 2.7, FI0.7, ec 2.7, FI 0.7, ec 2.7, Fl 0.7, ec Il.l. Visible 069.So~ 073° (3.5°), 074°-303 0 (229°). Klein Curaf;ao. 1l059.5'N, 68°39.0'W. Gp Fl W (2), period IS sec. Elevation: 82 ft; range IS miles. White round stone tower, red base and roof. Sector: Fl 0.4, ec 3.6, Fl 0.4, ec 10.6.
PUERTO CABELLO AREA Puerto Cabello Aviation Beacon. 10029'N,68°05'W. FI W&G, period 4 sec. Range: 15 miles. Isla Guaiguaza. 10030'N, 68°03'W. Fl W, period 7.5 sec. Elevation: 34 ft; range: 8 miles. Reported Fl W, period 16 sec. Extinguished. (Temporary) 1983. Isla Alcatraz. 10030'N, 67°59'W. Fl W, period 6 sec. Elevation: 64 ft; range: 15 miles.
Appendix A
337
CURAc;AO
GRACIOSA
Noordpunt. 12°23.2'N, 69°09.5'W. Gp FI W (3), period 15 sec. Elevation: 129 ft; range: 12 miles. White round gallery stone tower, red lantern. Sector: Fl 0.3, ec 2.7, FI 0.3, ec 2.7, Fl 0.3, ec 8.7. Visible 006°_271° (265°). Willemstad. 12'06.4'N, 68°55.9'W. Occ W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 82 ft; range: 14 miles. Gray metal column on fort. Sector: ec 2. F R on 1V mast 0.55 magnetic NE. Dr. A1bert Plesman. 12°11.0'N, 68°57.1'W. Aero AIFI W&G, period 10 sec. Elevation: 148 ft; range: W26 miles, G-21 miles. Concrete pillar with gallery.
Porta da Banco. 39°06'N, 28°03'W. Fl, period 5 sec. Range: 22 miles. Porta do Carapacho. 39°01'N, 27°59'W. Gp FI (2), period 10 sec. Range: 22 miles.
ARUBA
SAO MIGUEL
Noordwest Punt. 12°37.0'N, 70 03.0'W. Gp Fl W&R (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 181 ft; range: 19 miles. Gray stone tower. Sector: Fl 0.8, ec 1.7, FlO.8, ec 6.7. W 354°-005° (11°), R OOS-013 (8°), W 013°-295° (282°). 0
BERMUDA North Rock. Fl, period 16 sec. Elevation: 60 ft; range: 9 miles. St. David's Head. Occ, period S sec. Elevation: 220 ft; range: 18 miles. Gibbs Hill. 32°15'N, 64°50'W. Fl, period 10 sec. Range: 26 miles.
TERCEIRA Porta da Seneta. 38°46'N, 27°23'W. Gp Fl (5), period 15 sec. Range: 24 miles. Porta do Mina. 38°39'N, 27°05'W. Gp Fl (4), period 15 sec. Range: 19 miles.
Porta da Arnel. 37°50'N, 28°08'W. Fl, period 5 sec. Range: 21 miles. Porta do Cintrao. 37°S1'N, 25°29'W. Gp Fl (2), period 10 sec. Range: 17 miles. Santa Clara. 37°44'N, 2S041'W. Occ W. Range: IS miles. Seawall Ponta Delgada. Fl R, period 3 sec. Range: 9 miles.
SANTA MARIA Porta da Malmerinda. 36°56'N, 25°1O'W. Gp Fl (2). Range: 8 miles. Porta da Castelo. 36°S6'N, 2SolO'W. Gp Fl (3). Range: 26 miles. Porta do Morte. 37°01'N, 25°03'W. Fl, period 3 sec.
Azores FAIAL Capelinhos. 38°35'N, 28°49'W. Gp Fl (2), period 10 sec. Range: IS miles. Riberinho. 38°36'N, 28°36'W. Gp FI (3), period 10 sec. Range: 29 miles.
Madeiran Archipelago ILHA DE PORTO SANTO Uheu de Lima. 33°03.2'N, 16°16.TW. FI (3), period 15 sec. Elevation: 380 ft; range: 29 miles. I1heu Ferro. 33°02.2'N, 16°24.3'W. Fl, period 15 sec. Range: 13 miles.
PICO Porta da I1ha. 38°2S'N, 28°0l'W. Fl, period 10 sec. Range: 29 miles. Porta de Sao Mateus. 38°25'N, 28°27'W. Fl, period 5 sec. Range: 16 miles.
ILHAS SELVAGEM Selvagem Grande. 30 08.6'N, 12°52. 17'W. Fl, 4 sec. Elevation: S32 ft; range: 20 miles. Selvagem Pequena. 300 02'N, 16°01.6'W. Fl, period 5 sec. Elevation: 161 ft; range: 18 miles. 0
SAO JORGE Porta des Rosais. 38°45'N, 28°19'W. Gp Fl (4), period 20 sec. Range: 37 miles. Porta do Topo. 38°31'N, 27°46'W. Gp Fl (2), period 20 sec. Range: 20 miles.
Canary Islands Ponta Delgado. 29°24.1'N, 13°29.2'W. Fl, period 3 sec. Elevation: 501 ft; range: 12 miles.
338
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
LANZAROTE
PALMA
Punta Chico. Pierhead, Qk Fl (3) G, period 8 sec. Elevation: 10 ft; range: 10 miles. SW Point Punta Pechiguera. 28°51.2'N, 13°52.2'W. Fl (3+ 1), period 11 sec. Elevation: 50 Ft; range: 10 miles.
Punta Cumplida. 2B050.3'N, 17°46.6'W. Fl, period 7.5 sec. Elevation: 60 Ft; range: 24 miles. Punta Fuenealient. 28°27.2'N, 17°56.5'W. Fl (3), period 18 sec. Elevation: 130 ft; range: 14 miles.
Cape Verdes ISLA DE FUERTEVENTURA SW Point Punta Jandia. 28°03.8'N, 14°30.3'W. FI, period 4 sec. Elevation: 100 ft; range: 15 miles. Toston Punta Ballena. 28°42.8'N, 14°OO.7'W. FI, period B sec. Elevation: 65 ft; range: 13 miles. Punta Lantailla. 28°13. 7'N, 13°56.8'W. FI (2 + 1), period IB sec. Elevation: 600 Ft; range: 21 miles.
ILHA DO SAL Monte Curral. 16°43.9'N, 22°57.0'W. Aero AIFI W&G, period 7.5 sec. Elevation: 274 Ft; range: 26 miles. Only lit when planes are expected.
ILHA DO MAlO ISLA DE GRAN CANARIA La Isleta. 2Bo1O.4'N, 15°25.0'W. Fl (I + 3), period 20 sec. Elevation: 820 Ft; range: 21 miles. Puerta de la Luz. 2Bo07.B'N, 15°24.3'W. Fl G, period 4 sec. Elevation: 66 Ft; range: 10 miles.
Ponta Cais. lS020.0'N, 23°11.5'W. Fl W, period 7 sec. Elevation: 43 ft; range: 10 miles. Lantern on red 6sided structure. Sector: Fl 0.3. Visible 038°-292° (254°). Racon Ra refl.
ILHA DE BOA VISTA
LAS PALMAS Punta Armaga. 27°Sl.7'N, ISo23.0'W. FI (3) W&R, period 10 sec. Elevation: 150 Ft; range: W-12 miles, R9 miles. R: 012°-052°; W: 052°-172°; R: 172°-212°; W: 212°-012°. All bearings true. Punta Morro Colchas Maspalomas. 27°44.0'N, 15°3B.B'W. Occ (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 180 Ft; range: 19 miles.
Morro Negro. 16°06.1'N, 22°41.0'W. Fl W, period 2 sec. Elevation: 535 Ft; range: 31 miles. Sector: FlO.2. Visible 163°-035° (238°). Ponta Varandinha. 16°02.6'N. Fl W, period 10 sec. Elevation: 69 Ft; range: 10 miles. Sector: Fl 0.3. Racon. Ponta do Sol. 16°13.7'N, 22°55.1'W. Fl W (4), period 16 sec. Elevation: 379 Ft; range: 14 miles. Visible 017°-272° (255°). Only working when aircraft are approaching.
ISLA DE TENERIFE Punta de Roque Bermeja Anaga. 2Bo34.B'N, 16°0B.3'W. FI (2 + 4), period 30 sec. Elevation: 800 Ft; range: 21 miles. Los Rodeos Airfield. 28°29.3'N, 16°18.4'W. Lt aero. FI, period 5 sec. Elevation: 2,100 Ft; range: 37 miles. Punta Teno W. Point. 28°20.4'N, 16°5S.3'W. Gp Fl (1 + 2), period 20 sec. Elevation: 200 Ft; range: 18 miles.
ILHA DE SANTIAGO Ponta do Lobo. 14°59'N, 23°25'W. F W. Elevation: 52 Ft; range: 8 miles. Visible 190°-335° (145°).
ILHA DE SAO NICOLAU
Punta Orchilla. 27°42.3'N, IB008.7'W. Fl, period 5 sec. Elevation: 210 Ft; range: 35 miles.
Ponta Leste. 16°34.0'N, 24°0l ..5'W. FI W (4). period 10 sec. Elevation: 238 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: FI 0.3, ec 1.2, Fl 0.3, ec 1.2, FI 0.3, ec 1.2, FI 0.3, ec 5.2. Visible 140°-030° (250°). Ponta do Barri!' 16°36.5'N, 24°25.5'W. FI W (2), period 9 sec. Elevation: 40 Ft; range 9 miles. Sector: Fl 0.8, ec 2.4, Fl O.B, ec 5. Visible 320°-150° (190°).
ISLA GOMERA
ILHA DE SAO VICENTE
Punta San CristobaI. Fl (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 270 Ft; range: 20 miles.
Ilheu dos Passaros. D Luiz. 16°54.4'N,25°01.0'W. Gp Fl W (3), period 13 sec. Elevation: 284 Ft; range: 14
ISLA HIERRO
Appendix A miles. Sector: FI 1, ec 2.5, FI 1, ec 2.5, FI 1, ec 5. Obscured by I1ha de Santo Antao 091°_096°(5°) and I1ha de Sao Vicente 258°-057° (159°). Sig Stn. 2 F R (vert.) on radio masts 1. 7 and 1. 79 magnetic SE. Ponta Machado D. Amelia. 16°49.5'N,25°05.5'W. FI W, period 5 sec. Elevation 185 Ft; range: 22 miles. Sector: Fl 0.2. Visible 302°-172° (230°).
ILHA DE SANTO ANTAO Fontes Pereira de Melo. Ponta da Tumba. 17°07.0'N, 24°58.5'W. F Fl W, period 58 sec. Elevation: 535 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: Fl ii. Visible 141°-321° (180°). Ponta do Sol. 17°12.4'N, 25°05.9'W. Fl W (2). Elevation: 46 Ft; range: 13 miles. Sector: Fl 0.4, ec 1.2, Fl 0.4, ec 6. Visible 1l0°-250° (140°). Ponta Mangrade. 17°03.2'N, 25°21.7'W. Fl W (2), period 10 sec. Elevation: 366 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: Fl 0.4, ec 1.6, FI 0.4, ec 7.6. Visible 005°_200° (195°). Porto Novo. Mole. Head. ITOO.8'N, 25°03.9'W.
339
FI G, period 5 sec. Elevation: 40 Ft; range; 12 miles. Sector: FlO.5.
ILHA DO FOGO Ponta do Alcatraz. 14°50.0'N, 24°19.4'W. Fl W, period 5 sec. Elevation: 332 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: FI 0.5. Visible 225°-045° (180°). Ilheu de Cima. Summit. 14°58'N, 24°39'W. Fl W (3), period 20 sec. Elevation: 264 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: Fl 0.6, ec 2.5, Fl 0.6, ec 2.5, Fl 0.6, ec 13.2. Obscured by Ilha Brava 010°-047° (37°), by Ilha do Fogo 252°-304° (52°). Temporary 1987.
ILHA BRAVA Ponta Nho Martinho. 14°48.5'N, 24°42. TW. FI W (4), period 20 sec. Elevation: 96 Ft; range: 9 miles. Sector: Fl 0.4, ec 1.6, Fl 0.4, ec l.6, FlO.4, ec 1.6, Fl 0.4, ec 13.6. Visible 237°-106S (229.5°).
Appendix B
Principal Radio Navigation Aids: Eastern Caribbean and Atlantic Islands TRANSMISSION LOCATION AREA
(LAT/LONG)
CHARACTERISTIC
RANGE OR
times I sequence Modes and
SIGNAL
POWER
FOOTNOTES
KHz
San Juan AeroNega Baja (18°28'N, 66°25'W)
391
San Juan (18°28'N, 66°07'W)
318
Roosevelt Roads Aero (18°14'N, 65°37'W)
264
Punta Tuna L.S. (17°59'N,65°53'W)
288
St. Martin
St. Martin Aero/Juliana (18°02'N, 63°07'W)
308
PJM (.-- . . --- --)
St. Barts
Aero (17°54'N,62°51'W)
338
BY
Coolidge Aero (17°09'N,61°47'W)
569
Guadeloupe
Pointe-a-Pitre (16°15'N,61°33'W)
300
FXG (. .-. -.- -_.)
M arie-Galante
Grand Bourg Aero (15°52'N, 61°16'W)
376
MG (-- --.)
Martinique
Fort-de-France Aero (14°36'N,61 0 06'W)
314
FXF
Vigie Aero (14°01'N,61°00'W)
415
Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Puerto Rico
Antigua
St. Lucia
DDP
4,000 watts
Continuous
55 miles
Continuous
150 watts
Continuous
55 miles
Continuous
1,200 watts
Continuous
50 miles
Continuous
1,200 watts
Continuous
250 miles
Continuous
._-)
(_ ..
L (.- .)**
NRR (- .
. _.)
X
(- . --)***
(_ ... -._-)
ZDX (-- ..
-
.. -)
Continuous 100 miles
(._.
Daylight
SLU (. ..
340
Continuous
-) .. -)
Appendix B
34 1 TRANSMISSION
LOCATION AREA
St. Lucia
(LATiLONG)
CHARACTERISTIC
RANGE OR
times i sequence Modes and
SIGNAL
POWER
FOOTNOTES
KHz
Hunanorra (13°43'N, 60051'W)
305
Barbados
Seawell Aero (13°04'N, 59°30'W)
345
BCI (_ 00. __ . 00)
St. Vincent
Arnos Vale (13°08.5'N, 61 012.6'W)
403
SV (... 00 ._)
Continuous
GrenacUJ
(12°05'N, 61 046.8'W)
GDN
Continuous
BNC (_ 00
Continuous -. . )
1,200 watts
Continuous
(--.-.-.)
Tobago
Crown Point Aero (l1009'N,60051'W)
323
TAB (- .- -00.)
TrinicUJd
Piarco Aero (lO035'N, 61°25'W)
382
Venezuela
Punta Barima (Amacuro) Aero (8°32'N, 60 26'W)
100 watts
Continuous
POS (.-- ___ . 00)
1,200 watts
Continuous
305
AYV (. __ . __ 00'-)
500 watts
Continuous
Carupano Aero (lO040'N, 63°15'W)
278
CUP
500 watts
Daylight
Cumana Aero (lOo27'N, 64°11'W)
398
Barcelona Aero (lOo07'N, 64°42'W)
336
Venezuela
Higuerote Aero (10028'N, 66°06'W)
353
HOT (. ... --- -)
Venezuela
La Orchilla (l1048'N,66°07'W)
320
ORC (---
Maiquetfa (Caracas) Aero (lO036'N, 66°59'W)
292
Arrecife Aero (lO035'N, 67"04'W)
318
Puerto Cabello Aero (lO029'N, 68°03'W)
353
San Juan Aero (11 °lO'N, 68°25'W)
245
Las Piedras Aero (l1044'N,70012'W)
385
Flamingo Aero (12°08'N,68°17'W)
321
Venezuela
Plesman Aero (12°13'N, 69°04'W)
343
BermucUJ
Cibbs Hill L.S. (32°15'N, 64°50'W)
295
Kindley Aero (32°15'N, 64°52'W)
375
0
Venezuela Venezuela Venezuela
Venezuela
Venezuela Bonaire Curat;:ao Venezuela Venezuela
BermucUJ
(-.-.
.--.)
CUM (-.- .
Sunrise to 0200 --)
BLA (- .
400 watts
Continuous
-) 25 watts 500 watts -.-.)
200 watts
MIQ
Continuous
-_._)
(--
M (--)
PBL (. __ . _00'
Continuous
.- .. )
PNA
400 watts
(. --.
Continuous
. -)
LSP (.-00
40 miles -_.)
0945 to 30 min past sunset
250 watts
Continuous
PJC (.--. . - - - --.)
150 miles
Continuous
BDA (- ...
120 miles
Continuous
50 miles
Continuous
PJB (. --.
NWU (- .
. - - - -.
)
. -)* . --
._)
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
34 2
TRANSMISSIOS LOCATION AREA
Azores
(LAT/UJNG)
270
Santa Cruz (39°27'N,31 0 07'W)
331
Faial (38°31'N,28°41'W)
380
Faial: Horta (38°31'N, 28°38'W)
360
Graciosa (39°05'N,28°Ol'W)
283
Azores
Terceira (38°47'N, 27°06'W)
341
Azores
Sao Miguel (37°44'N,25°41'W)
Azores Azores
Azores Azores
Azores
RANGE OR
SIGNAL
POWER
FOOTNOTES
250 watts
Continuous AOA2 FLO dash 30 sec.
KHz
Flores (39°27'N,31 0 1O'W)
Azores
CHARACTERISTIC
times / sequence Modes and
FLO ---)
(.
25 watts
SC (.. -. -.)
FIL (..-. HT (..
Continuous SC dash 30 sec.
250 miles
Continuous FIL 30 sec.
25 miles
Continuous HT 3 times every 30 sec.
-) -) 100 miles
21 hours GRA dash 30 sec. A2
GP (-- . --)
100 miles
Continuous GP every 30 sec. A2
351
PD (.--. - )
25 miles
Sao Miguel (37°44'N, 25°35'W)
371
MGL (-- -- . . -
Santa Maria (37°00'N, 25°1O'W)
323
Azores
Santa Maria (36°57'N, 25°lO'W)
240
Ireland
Mizen Head (51°27'N,9°49'W)
308.0
Cabo Estay (42°11'N,8°49'W)
296.5
Porto Santo (33°04'N, 16°21'W)
338
Funchal (32°45'N, 16°42.5'W)
318
Lanzarote
310
Spain Madeira Madeira Canaries
GRA (-- .. -
._)
Continuous every 5 sec. AOA2
200 miles
24 hours AOA2 dash 30 sec.
300 miles
Continuous A2 dash 30 sec.
STA (. .. - ._)
200 miles
Continuous AOA2 dash 30 sec.
MZ
200 miles
fr A2A
SMA ( ...
--
.. )
._)
(-- -- .. )
VS (... -
7 miles .. . )
PST MAD (--
Continuous NON A2A
250 miles
Continuous NON A2A
- -)
50 miles
LZ (.-
250 miles
-)
(--
--
Continuous eg A2A.
Continuous A2A
.)
Canaries
Fuerteventura (28°27'N, 13°52'W)
258
FT (,,-. -)
200 watts
A2A
Canaries
La Isleta (28°10.5' N, 15°25'W)
291.9
LT
100 miles
A2A
Canaries
Pta Lantailla (28°14'N, 13°57'W)
291.9
NA (- . . -)
100 miles
A2A
Canaries
Las Palmas (27°57.5'N, 15°24'W)
278
GD
100 miles
Continuous AlA
(.-" -)
(--. - )
Appendix B
343 TRANSMISSION
LOCATION AREA
Canaries Canaries Canaries Cape Verdes
(LAT/LONG)
CHARACTERISTIC
RANGE OR
times / sequence Modes and
SIGNAL
POWER
FOOTNOTES
KHz
Reina Sofia (28°03'N, 16°33.5'W)
317
La Palma (28°37'N, 17°45.5'W)
389
Hierro (27°49'N, 17°53'W)
376
I1ha de Sao Vicente
308
TES
(BV (_
Sal
(-
274
..... -)
Ilha de Santiago Ponta Moreia Lt.
308
40 miles
Continuous A2A A2A
. . . . -)
VE
100 miles
A2A
350 miles
AlA
100 miles
A2A
- .)
SAL (.
Cape Verdes
Continuous A2A
HR
(-
Cape Venus
50 watts )
MO (-- ---)
)
* Gibbs Hill L. S.,
Bermuda. The complete signal is as follows: BDA (3 times) in 21 seconds. silent for 4 seconds, a long dash (--) for 23 seconds, and silent for 12 seconds. The total period is 60 seconds. ** San Juan, Puerto Rico. The complete signal is as follows: L for 50 seconds and a long dash (--) for 10 seconds. The total period is 60 seconds. *** Punta Tuna L. S., Puerto Rico. The complete signal is as follows: X for 50 seconds and a long dash (--) for 12 seconds. The total period is 60 seconds. Cabo Estay-Vigo. Directional, northward of beam N(-) etc. On beam (width 4°): continuous note. Southward of beam A (. -) etc. Bearing line 069'12° toward radio beacon. The complementary signals, A and N, cannot be clearly distinguished within 7° of this bearing line. On beam range of 20 miles. The beacon is synchronized with an air fog signal (nautophone located 90 ft. ENE of the light) for distance finding; the first blast of the nautophone begins at the same instant as the identification signal. The stop-watch time (in seconds) elapsing between the beginning of the radio identification signal and reception of the beginning of the first blast of the nautophone, when multiplied by the factor 0.18 gives the distance from the nautophone in nautical miles. Several observations are recommended. Continuous at night or fog only. The follOWing is a summary of radio beacon emissions used by Marine and Aeronautical stations: former designations are given in parentheses. AlA (AI) Unmodulated carrier frequency during DF period; on-off keying of un modulated carrier frequency during identification. Carrier frequency with modulating audio frequency during DF period; on-off keying of modulating audio A2A (A2 & A2*) frequency. Carrier frequency either continuous or keyed with audio frequency. Unmodulated carrier frequency during OF period; continuous carrier frequency with on-off keying of moduNON A2A (AOA2) lating audio frequency during identification.
Appendix C
Principal Radiotelephone Communications Aids ST. THOMAS
ANTIGUA
WAH (aka "Virgin Island Radio.") Operates on 2009 kHz SSB, channel 16 VHF. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Tel. (809) 776-8282. An extremely efficient operation that can patch phone calls worldwide. Additionally, most marinas stand hy channel 16 VHF during working hours.
English Harbour (Nicholson's). Operates on 4125.0 kHz and channel 16 VHF. Hours from 0900 to 1600; closed Sunday. Signal Locker (Cao Green/John Eyre). Operates on 2182.0 kHz AM, 2182.0 kHz SSB, and channel 16 VHF. Hours from 0930 to 1600; closed Sunday. Base Radio (salvage service). Operates on 2182.0 kHz AM, 2182.0 kHz SSB, and channel 16 VHF, twentyfour hours a day, seven days a week.
TORTOLA Tortola Radio. Operates on channel 16 VHF. 080016OO--can patch calls through worldwide but it is very hard to raise an operator even when in Road Town thus most boats use W AH. All marinas stand by channel 16 VHF during working hours.
GUADELOUPE Desteron Radio. Can be contacted on 2182.0 kHz SSB and channel 25 VHF for phone-patching. They receive on 2255.0 kHz SSB all day long, and transmit on 2049.0 kHz SSB, but mostly in French with very little English.
SABA Saba Radio. Tel. (809) 599-5243. Operates on channel 16 VHF around the clock, seven days a week. Because of its height it has a wide range: it can be picked up from outside the Virgin Islands to the west coast of Antigua, with an excellent phone-patching system worldwide.
MARTINIQUE Martinique Radio. Tel. 71-38-79. They receive on 4336.7 kHz SSB, channels 16, 26, and 27 VHF. There is poor reception and transmission from Martinique; the station is listed, but I've found a few who have successfully contacted it during working hours, 0700-1900.
SOMBRERO
ST. LUCIA
Sombrero Light Station. Operates on channel 16 VHF twenty-four hours a day, all week. This station has featured in numerous rescue operations.
Stevens Yachts. Operates on 2527 kHz AM, 2527 kHz SSB (hours HOO to H30). 4139.5 kHz SSB (hours 1500 to 1530), and channel 16 VHF. Usually open during
344
Appendix C working hours only, but Ian Cowen is a "workaholic," putting in twelve-hour days, seven days a week, from November to June. Moorings. VHF 85.
ST. VINCENT Lighthouse/Harhor Control. Operates on channel 16 VHF. Also, channel 9 CB, being high up on the fort, can be heard down in the lower Grenadines. CSY. Operates on 6210.4 kHz SSB and channel 87 VHF.
BEQUIA
345
BARBADOS Barbados Radio. Tel. (809) 427-5500. Operates on channel 816 AM, 8765.4 kHz SSB (duplex on 8241.5 kHz SSB), and channel 16 VHF. Note that channel 816 is marked on most SSBs as Portashead Radio, England, and/or the us Coast Guard. This Barbados station is new and thus has relatively little traffic. Telephone calls can be patched in worldwide, usually with little or no wait (in contrast to most stations), and the cost of the call is about half the usual.
TRINIDAD North Post Radio. Operates on 2182.0 kHz AM, 2182.0 kHz SSB, and channel 16 VHF. Establish contact and then they will give you a working frequency.
Frangipani. Operates on channel 16 VHF during working hours. Tel. (809) 458-3244. BONAIRE Tugs and pilots. Contact on channels 16 VHF. PETIT ST. VINCENT Contact on channel 16 VHF during working hours (seven days a week from October to mid-June).
CURA<;AO Fort Nassau. Contact on channel 16 VHF.
PALM ISLAND Contact on channel 16 VHF during working hours.
ARUBA Tugs and pilots. Contact on channel 16 VHF.
UNION ISLAND Contact on channel 16 VHF during working hours.
GRENADA Spice Island Marina. Channel 16 VHF, during working hours. GYS. Operates twenty-four hours on channel 16 VHF.
HAM Marina Mobile NET ATLANTIC HAM Marine Mohil NET. 1300-1400 Z. 21400 kHz on five-meter band.
CARIBBEAN NET 0700-0800 Z.
Appendix D ~C'
Principal Commercial Radio Stations
Eastern Caribbean
Station
Area
Puerto Rico
w .... "l
Location of Transmitter
ELOSA WPAB WKAQ WAPA WIAC WKVM WHOA WIPR WIVV
Ponce San Juan San Juan San Juan San Juan Hato Rey Hato Rey Vieques
St. Croix
WSTX
Fort Augusta
St. Thomas
WSTA WVWI
Tortola
AM Frequency in kHz (FM in MHz)
Language
Power (kilowatts)
1030 550 580 680 740 810 870 940 1370
Eng. Spa. Spa. Spa. Spa. Spa. Spa. Spa. Eng.
970
Eng.
5
St. Thomas St. Thomas
1340 1000
Eng. Eng.
0.25W lW
ZBVI
Road Town
780
Eng.
10,000 E
St. Martin
PJD2
Philipsburg
1300
Eng.
Saba
Saba Radio
1445
Eng.
0.25
Anguilla
R. Anguilla
1505
Eng.
0.5 E
Antigua
ABBS
The Valley
St. John's
ZDK
St. Kitts
ZIZ R. Paradise
Basseterre Basseterre
Hours of Transmission
Time Signals
0545-1000 Mon.-Thur. 0545-0000 Fri.-Sun.
0700 M/S 1000 Sun.
Every hour 3 min past NOAA P.R.
0600-2400
every hour
on half hour
0530-1400; 1700-2215
160O
Weather
BBC Rebroadcast
5S/W 5N/W ION/W ION/W 25N/W 5N/W ION/W SW
620
Eng.
lOE
llOO
Eng.
IOE
555 1265
Eng. Eng.
10 S/W 50 S/W
Mon.-Sat.: 0930-0000
0700, 0800, 1600, 1800, 1900
0700, 0800, 1200, 1900,2200 1100, 2300, 2245--sports 0958, 1640, 2340 & hrs. when station closed down.
Eastern Caribbean (Continued)
Station
Area
Montserrat
~
R. Antilles
Location of Transmitter O'Garro's
AM Frequency in kHz (FM in MHz) 930
Language Eng./Fr.lSpa.
Power (kilowatts)
Hours of Transmission
S 200,000
Mon.-Fri.: 0515-1300 1400-2400 Sat.-Sun. : 0515-2400
1200 1400 2200
0500-2300
0700, 1600
Plymouth
885
Guadeloupe
ORTF
Arnouville Citerne
640 1420
Fr. Fr.
20 E 4S
Dominica
DBS Radio Voice of Life ZGBC
St. Joseph Grand Savanne
595 1060
Eng. Eng.
IOW 10
Ma rtinique
ORTF
Fort-deFrance
1310
Fr.
50S/W
St. Lucia
R. St. Lucia R. Caribbean
Babonneau Castries
840
Fr. Fr.lEng.
ION lON/W
Barbados
R. Barbados
Black Rock
900
Eng.
20E
Barbados
R. VOB (Voice of
780
Eng.
20 E
705 1450
Eng.
0.5/10 E 10 E
Eng.
00
660
Weather 0630,0805 1740, 1830
BBC Rebroadcast 1200, 1400, 2200. VOA 2000, 2200. RCI0530-1900 DW2300
1 S/W
R. Montserrat
Eng.
Time Signals
Hourly
0700, 1600
Barbados)
St. Vincent
NBS Radio
Brighton
R. Antilles
Grenada Trinidad
R. Grenada
St. George's
535
NBS-61O Radio
Chaguaramas Caroni
610 730
R. Trinidad
Bonaire
Trans World Radio Bonaire Voice of Bonaire Radio Victoria
Bonaire Bonaire
800 1400 960
Fr.
20 S/E
50/10 E 20 E Eng. / Spa. / Port.
500
on hour
0759
2300 all week news (not BBC) 0830 M / F
on hour
none
only occasionally
1 Eng. I Spa. / Popiamento
Area
Curaqao
Bennuda
Station
Location of Transmitter
R. Curom R. Hoyer
WiIlemstad WilIemstad
R. Caribe
Willemstad
ZBM VSB
AM Frequency in kHz (FM in MHz)
Language
850 1010 (105.3 FM) 1500 1230 1540 1230 1160,1280, 1450,960
Power (kilowatts)
w
~
'0
Mackira
Canaries
Radiodifusora Portaguesa Radiodifusora Portaguesa CSB80 CSB 81 Radiodifusora Portaguesa Porto Santo Pico Defarierro R. Funchall CSB 91 R. Madeira Radio National Espana Radio Popular Club Tenerife Radio Cad era Radio Popular Radio Las Palmas Cadera
Ponta Delgada Horta
Eng. Eng.
1 1
Terceira Terceira
837 (97.0 FM) 1260 (94.1 FM) 1395 1566
Por. Por. Por. Por. Por. POT.
I I I 1 1 1
Madeira
1331
Por.
1
Funchal
531 1530 1332
POT. Por. Por.
1 1 1
1485
Por.
1
Pico dos Bascelos Tenerife Tenerife Tenerife Las Palm as Las Palmas Las Palmas SC de la Palma
Time Signals
Weather
BBC Rebroadcast
1 1 1 1 0.25 1
Atlantic Islands Azores
Hours of Transmission
621
100
882 1341 747 837 1008 1098
20 20 20 10 10 10
24
0715,0815, 1215, 1315, 1715, 1915
0600,2000
Atlantic Islands (Continued) Area
Station FCCA
Cape Verdes R. Praia Capo Verde Voz do Sao Vicente
Location of Transmitter
AM Freqtiency in kHz (FM in MHz)
Language
Power (kilowatts)
Las Palmas
1269
20
Sao Tiago
6050
Por.
0.5
Sao Vicente
3930
Por. Por.
10 10
7155
N = Reception better in northerly direction. 5 = Reception better in southerly direction. E = Reception better east of island chain. W = Reception better west of island chain. * Broadcasts a relay of Montserrat's Radio Antilles, French service, at 740 kHz with 20 kilowatts of power. **Part of the Radio Rhumbos National Network.-Compiled by Ray Smith Consulting Radio Engineer St. George's, Grenada ~
o
Time Signals: WWV 5, 10, 15, 20 M Hz CHV 7.335, 14.670 (English and French) Venezuela 6.100 (Spanish) Approximate Range of Radio Transmission: 1 kW Day ........ ISO Night ....... 100 10 kW Day ........ 200 Night ....... 100-300 SO kW Day ........ 300 Night ...... . 200/500 20 kW (Radio Grenada) ... same as SO kW. England
BBC
Best reception in eastern Caribbean 0400-2400 GMT
6.175, 6.005, 9.515, 9.915,
5.975, 7.325, 9.590, 15.260
0700-0930
11.775, 6.195
1200-1530
5.975, 6.175, 9.510,9.640
Hours of Transmission
Time Signals
Weather
BBC Rebroadcast
Appendix E
Holidays US VIRGIN ISLANDS
What with the variety of local customs, manners of setting dates, sporadic observation by private enterprise, and the vast assortment of royalty and heroes that abounds in the Islands, it is impossible to provide a list of holidays that will hold together year after year. However, it is important to know at least the approximate dates of holidays, because without this knowledge Customs procedures and shopping for parts or provisions after a passage can be totally frustrating. Here then is a list as complete as I could make it, with exact dates where they could be provided, and with approximate ones otherwise.
January 1: New Year's Day January 6: Three Kings' Day; end of the St. Croix Festival January 30: FDR's Birthday Washington's Birthday: as in US; donkey races in St. Croix March 31: Transfer Day, in observance of the physical transfer of the Danish West Indies to the United States in 1917 Maundy Thursday: Thursday before Easter Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter Carnival Week: usually the last week in April; Friday and Saturday of this week are legal holidays; parades and fairs go on all week Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Memorial Day: as in United States; boat races from St. Thomas to St. Croix June 22: Organic Act Day, celebrating the 1936 act granting civil government and universal suffrage to the Virgins July 4: Independence Day; celebrated big on st. John July 25: Supplication Day; Islanders attend churches to pray for deliverance from hurricanes-it must work, as there has been no severe damage since 1924 August Monday: the first Monday in August; yacht races from St. Thomas to Tortola Labor Day: as in United States Primary Day: the second Tuesday in September Columbus Day: as in United States October 25: Local Thanksgiving Day, when thanks are given for relief from hurricanes. November 1: Liberty Day; commemorates the bloodless revolution on St. Croix in 1915 Veterans' Day: as in US Election Day: the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November
PUERTO RICO January 1: New Year's Day January 5: Three Kings' Day Eve (whole day) January 6: Three Kings' Day January 11: De Hostos's Birthday (half day) George Washington's Birthday: Monday of the week of February 22 (half day) March 22: Abolition Day (half day) April 16: Jose de Diego's Birthday (half day) Memorial Day: as in US July 4: Independence Day, as in US July 17: Lufs Muiioz Rivera's Birthday (half day) July 15: Puerto Rico Constitution Day July 27: Jose Barbosa's Birthday (half day) Labor Day: as in US Columbus Day: as in US (half day) Veterans' Day: as in US November 19: Discovery of Puerto Rico Thanksgiving: as in US December 24: Christmas Eve (whole day) December 25: Christmas December 31: New Year's Eve (whole day)
35 1
352
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
St. Croix Christmas Festival: about December 18 to January 6 December 25: Christmas Day December 26: Second Christmas Day
December 26: Boxing Day (Note: Shopping hours usually are 8:00 A.M. to noon and 1:00 to 4:00 P.M., with a half-day closing on Thursday at 1:00 P.M. Banks open 8:00 A.M. to noon, Monday to Friday.)
BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS January 1: New Year's Day Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter June 2: Sovereign's Birthday; lots of uniformed parades July 1: Territory Day August Monday: the first Monday in August October 21: St. Ursula's Day November 14: Prince of Wales's Birthday December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day
ANGUILLA January 1: New Year's Day Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter Labour Day: first Monday in May Anguilla Day: last Monday in May Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Queen's Birthday: as decreed; usually second Saturday in June August Monday: first Monday in August August Thursday: first Thursday in August Constitution Day: first Friday in August November 14: Prince of Wales's Birthday December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day National Carnival: usually December 26 to January 2
ST. KITTS January 1: New Year's Day February 27: Statehood Day Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: Labour Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Queen's Birthday: as decreed; usually second Saturday in June July 28-August 1: Nevis Cuiturama, a five-day celebration of island history, folklore, and culture. August Bank Holiday: first Monday in August September 19: Independence Day November 14: Prince of Wales's Birthday December 19: Separation Day December 24: Carnival week begins December 25: Christmas
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA January 1: New Year's Day Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: Labour Day Queen's Birthday: as decreed; usually second Saturday in June August Monday: first Monday in August November 1: Independence Day December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day (Note: Shopping hours usually are 8:00 A.M. to noon and 1:00 to 4:00 P.M., with a half-day closing on Thursday at 1:00 P.M. Banks open 8:00 A.M. to noon, Monday to Friday.)
MARTINIQUE, ST. BARTS, AND GUADELOUPE January 1: New Year's Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Maundy Thursday: Thursday before Easter Good Friday: Friday before Easter Holy Saturday: Saturday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: Labor Day Ascension Day White Monday: seventh Monday after Easter July 14: Bastille Day August 15: Assumption Day November 1: AIl Saints' Day November 2: AIl Souls' Day November 11: Armistice Day December 25: Christmas (Note: Normal business hours are Monday through Friday from 8:00 A.M. to noon and 2:30 to 5:30 P.M.; half day on Saturday. Saturday is the best day for visiting the market, 8:00 A.M. to noon.)
DOMINICA January 1: New Year's Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: May Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Commonwealth Day: as decreed
Appendix E August Monday: first Monday in August November 3: Dominica Day December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day December 27: Merchants' Holiday (Note: Shop hours are 8:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. and 2:00 to 4:00 P.M. on weekdays, half a day on Saturday.)
ST. LUCIA January 1 and 2: New Year's Days February 22: Independence Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: Labour Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Corpus Christi Queen's Birthday; as decreed; usually second Saturday in June Emancipation Day: first Monday in August October 2: Thanksgiving Day December 13: St. Lucia's Day December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day (Note: Most stores close for half a day on Wednesday.)
ST. VINCENT January 1 and 2: New Year's Days January 22: Discovery Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: Labour Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Queen's Birthday: as decreed; usually second Saturday in June Corpus Christi Emancipation Day: first Monday in August October 27: Independence Day Thanksgiving Day: in November, provisionally a Monday after the hurricane season December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day (Note: Most stores and government offices close half a day on Saturday. Some operate a five-day week, closed all day on Saturday.)
353
Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter Easter Tuesday: Tuesday after Easter May 1: Labour Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Corpus Christi Queen's Birthday: as decreed; usually second Saturday in June August Monday: first Monday in August August Tuesday: Tuesday after first Monday in August August 15: National Day October 23: Liberation Day December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day (Note: Usually an additional twenty or so holidays are declared during the course of the yearl Most stores close half a day on Thursday and are open on Saturday; government offices, banks, and law offices are open Monday through Friday.)
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO January 1: New Year's Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter May 1: May Day Whit Monday: seventh Monday after Easter Corpus Christi Discovery Day: first Monday in August August 31: Independence Day Divali: in November; depends on the phase of the moon December 25: Christmas December 26: Boxing Day D. M. S. Day: subject to petition
ABC ISLANDS January 1: New Year's Day January 31: Queen's Birthday Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Good Friday: Friday before Easter Easter Monday: Monday after Easter Ascension Thursday December 15: Stattutday (Independence Day) December 25: Christmas December 26: second day of Christmas December 31: New Year's Eve (half day)
VENEZUELA GRENADA January 1 and 2: New Year's Days February 8: Independence Day
January 1: New Year's Day Carnival: Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Maundy Thursday: Thursday before Easter
354
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Good Friday: Friday before Easter (Note: While Maundy Thursday and Good Friday are the official holidays, many businesses are closed from Maundy Thursday for ten days.) April 19: Signing of the Declaration of Independence May 1: Labor Day June 24: Simon Bolivar's Birthday July 5: Independence Day
July 24: Anniversary of the Battle of Carabobo October 12: Columbus Day December 8: Feast of the Immaculate Conception December 25: Christmas (Note: In addition, banks are closed for four bank holidays: March 19, the Monday after Ascension, the Monday after Corpus Christi, and the Monday after Assumption.)
Index Ascension, 70, 71 Atlantic Islands, 7, 293 charts of, 44
ABC Islands, 7 holidays in, 353 mail in, 243 provisions in, 259 services in, 266, 283 see also Aruba; Bonaire; Cura<;ao Abona,l66 Acapulco, 78, 79, 81 Africa, 85, 137 transat lan tic passage from, 70-71 air conditioning, 33 airfreight, 241 airlines, xiv, 240-41 air transportation, xiii-xiv, xvi, 11, 94, 96, 97, 119, 127, 141, 194 American Virgin Islands, see US Virgin Islands Amuay,84 anchors and anchoring, 22-25, 45, 96, 140 and hurricane conditions, 222-23 Anegada, xiv, 71, 86, 205, 231, 238 Anegada Passage, xiv, 7 Angra do Heroismo, 112, 114, 115 Anguilla, XilV, xxiii, 5, 71, 86, 87, 238, 264 commercial radio stations in, 347 duty regulations for, 254 holidays in, 352 major lights on, 332 services in, 265, 267, 283, 292 Anjos,119_ Anse Mitan, xiv Antigua, xiii, xiv, xxiv, 4, 5, 6, 9, 18,43,65,68, 86, 87, 221, 232, 237, 242,246,268,269,295,297,315,325 commercial radio stations in, 347 departure from, 313, 317 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 249 holidays in, 352 hurricane holes in, 224 major lights on, 333 provi1 ions in, 257-58, 261, 263, 264, 326 radio navigational aids for, 340 radiotelephone communications in, 344 services in, 265, 272, 273, 274, 275, 277, 281, 283, 285-86, 289, 291, 292,293 Antigua Sailing Week, 306-7, 313 April Calm, 206, 207, 305 Araya,3-4 Arguineguin, 153, 155, 157 Arinaga, 153, 155 Arrecife! Naos, 144, 145 Aruba, xvi, xvii, 1,3-4, 7, 10, 11,43, 83,84, 256, 264, 318 entry procedures for, 253 major lights on, 337 radiotelephone communications for, 345 see also ABC Islands
commercial radio stations in, 349-50
major lights on, 331-39 marinas of, 288-89 sailing directions for, 238-39 see also individual islands Australia, 315 Avis Island, 235, 237 awnings, 33, 34 Azores, xvii, 2-3, 7, 11, 17, 21, 22, 44, 61, 93, 94-98, 239, 240, 324 anchoring in, 24 charts of, 56-58 commercial radio stations in, 349 currency in, 257 departure via, 321, 325 duty regulations in, 254-55 entry procedures for, 253-54 mail in, 243 major lights on, 337 marine supplies in, 268, 270 off-lying dangers of, 122 provisions in, 259, 262, 264 radio navigation aids for, 342 services in, 266, 267, 273, 274, 279, 281, 283, 288, 291-92 Azores high, 65, 66, 122
baggage, 240 Bahamas, 75, 76, 77-78, 313, 314 Bahamian flying moor, 24 Bahia de Gando, 153, 154 Bahia Honda, 84 Baia da Mordeira, 184, 186 Baia da Palmeiria, 184 Baia das Gatas, 201-2 Baia de Fundas, 203 Baia de Pedra de Lume, 184 Baia de Sao Laurenco, 121 Baixa Alagada, 11 0 Baixo da Estanci. ou BaiKOna, 184 Baixo de Bartola, 184 Baixo Joau Valente, 182, 184 Baja de Gando, 150 Baja de Nos Realejos, 168 Bajo de la Mancha Blanca, 160 Bajo Nuevo (New Bank), 83 Banco Bancador, 83 Banco de Azores, 122 Banco de Joao de Castro, 122 Banco Princess Alice, 122 Banco Serrana, 83 Baranquilla, 84
355
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Barbados, xiii, xv, 6, 60, 61, 67, 68, 69, 85, 232,315 commercial radio stations in, 348 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 252 major lights on, 334 rad io navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in, 273 Barbuda, xiv. 6, 9, 71, 86, 87, 238, 267 entry procedures for. 249 holidays in, 352 Barcelona, xiii, 287 bareboat charters, 246, 296--97, 298-99, 300, 301-2, 305 and hurricane conditions, 223 barometer. 206 barracudas, 40 Basse-Terre, 24, 250, 258 Battowia Island, 334 Bayaux Cayes, 83 Bay of Biscay, 61-64, 66, 70, 279 Bayona,327 Beata Point, 83 Beer, 262-63 Bequia, xv, 6, 204, 237, 243, 289 entry procedures for, 251 marine supplies in, 2611. 270 racing in, 307 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in, 271, 272, 291 Bermuda. xvii, 2, 7, 11,21,22,61, 73-74, 90-94, 317, 321, 324, 326 commercial radio stations in, 349 currency in, 257 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 253 mail in, 243 major lights on, 74, 337 marine supplies in, 268, 270 provisions in, 259, 262, 263, 264, 326 radio navigation aids for, 341 services in, 266, 267, 273, 274, 279. 281, 283, 288, 291, 292, 293 Boa Vista, 7, 182, 184-85, 188. 265 lights on, 338 Bonaire, xvi, I, 3-4, 7, 11, 238, 253, 264, 318 commercial radio stations in, 348 currency in, 256 major lights on, 336 radio navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in, 279, 288 see also ABC Islands Boqueron, 223 Brava, 3, 8, 182, 194-95, 265, 339 Brazil, 158 bridges, 75, 90 British Virgin Islands, 5, 223, 267, 268, 299 currency in, 256 entry procedures for, 248 holidays in, 352 hurricane holes in, 224-25 major lights on, 332 politics in, 8-9 provisions in, 257, 262 see also Virgin Islands Buck Island light, 86 Bugio,13O buoys, 23 BVI Regatta, 306
Caba Mala, 82 cable, 242 Cabo de la Vela, xvi, 84 Caho San Lucas, 80, 319 Cabrit light, 85 Cade Reef, 86 Cais do Pico, 109 Calheta, 190 California, 78-79, 319 Camara de Lohos, 127, 128 cameras and Rim, 37
Canary Islands, xvii, 2, 3, 7, 11, 15, 17,22,44,60,61,65,67,68,69, 70, 97, 131. 134-36, 182, 202, 239, 240, 243 anchoring in, 24, 140 charts of, 47-50, 136 commercial radio stations in, 349-50 currency in, 257 customs and immigration in, 140 duty regulations in, 254-55 entry procedures for, 254 finding crew in, 141 flying in, 141 major lights on, 337 marine supplies in, 138-39, 268, 270 provisions in, 139, 140, 259, 262, 264 radio navigation aids for, 342-43 servi~"es in, 137-38, 139,266, 267, 271, 273, 274, 280, 281, 283, 288, 290,292 tides and currents in, 137 weather in, 136-37 Candelaria, 163, 165 Canouan, 251 Cape Clear, 64, 325 Cape Lookout, 76 Cape Race, 324 Cape town , 70, 71 Cape Verde Archipelago, 178, 180--203 Cape Verde Islands, xvii, 2, 3, 7-8, 11, 17,22,42,61,65,68,69,70, 97, 141, 158, 239, 240, 243, 255 anchnring in, 24 charts of, 44, 51, 182 commercial radio stations in, 350 currency in, 257 currents and tides in, 232 entry procedures for, 254 major lights on, 338-39 marine supplies in, 268 provisions in, 263, 265 radio navigation aids for, 343 services in, 266,273,274,280,283,289,290,292,293 captain, 13-14, 302 Caracas, xiii, xvi, 2, 7, 287 marine supplies in, 270 services in, 279 Carenero, xvi, 287 caretaking facilities, 11, 138, 280-81 Carlisle Bay, 252 Carl Schuster Memorial Race, 305-6 carpenters, 290-92 Carriacou, 225, 237, 251, 261, 289 Carriacou Regatta, 307 Cartagena, xvi, 83-84, 318 Castillo, 146-47, 149, 288 Castletownsend, 64 Castries, 237, 250 Catholic Island, 335 celestial navigation, 13-14, 18,71,314 chafe, 21, 222 Chao,130 Charleston, South Carolina, 77, 315-16 Charlestown, 249 chartering, 16,295-303,305 see also barehoat charters charts, xiii, xxiii-xxvi, 17, 18, 42-59, 232-33, 296, 302-3 of the Azores, 56-58, 98 of the Canaries, 47-50, 136 of Central America, 79, 83, 84 North Atlantic pilot Charts, explained, 207-21 Christiansted. St. Croix, 5 Christmas winds, 60 clothing, 36-37, 265-66, 316 coal, 5, 75-76 Coast Guard, US, 244, 282 cockroaches, 39 Cockroach Island, 86 Colombia, xvii, 83, 84, 253, 318 Coloracao, shoal of. 122 commercial radio stations, 17-18, 245,347-50 compass, 17 Conical, 130 Copa Velasco, 306 coral,45
357
Index Coral Bay, 224 Coral Harbor, 248 Cork, 63-64 Corralejo, 144, 148 CORT Regatta, 305 Corvo, 94, 96, 99, 100, 101, 104 Costa Rica, 79, 81, 319 Cozumel, 319 crab apples, 41 Crabbs, Marina, 249 credit cards. 256. 'l:)7 crew, 14-15, 16, 141,246,299,315 crewed charters. 297. 301-2 crew lists. 78. 79, 247 Cricket Rock, 86 crime rate. 8 see also theft Cristobal Colon, 82 Crookhaven, 63, 3'l:) Crosshaven, 63-64 cruising guides, 302-3 cruising licenses, 315 Cruz Bay, 248 Cruzinha de Garcia, 203 Cuba, 8, 314 Culebra, 221, 223, 242 entry procedures for, 248 Curac;ao, xvi, 1, 3-4, 7, 11, 253, 264, 279,318. 337 commercial radio stations in, 349 currency in, 356 radio navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 see also ABC Islands currency, 256-57 currents, 79, 83, 182, 314 see also tides and currents Customs and Immigration, 140.245-46,315 cyclones, tropical, 208 damage deposit, 298 Darien Rock, 71 Desirade, 69, 86, 333 Deshaies, 250, 258 dinghies, 25-27 and hurricane conditions, 222 distress signals, 28 diving, xiv, xvi, 141, 178, 188. 194 Doco, 131 dodgers, 33 Dog Island, 87 dogs, 28 Doldrums, 74, 76, 318 Dominica, xv, 3, 5, 69. 86, 207, 232, 243, 254, 264. 267 commercial radio stations in, 348 entry procedures for, 250 holidays in, 352-53 major lights on, 333 politics in, 9-10 provisions in, 258 Drew shoals, 71 drug smuggling, xvi-xvii, 83-84, 98, 246, 253, 280, 318 dry storage. 280-81 Dutchman's Cap, 86 duty regulations, 254-55, 261, 267 easterly wave, 206 Eastern Canaries, 141 Eastern Caribbean anchoring in, 22-25 charts of, 42-59 commercial radio stations in, 347-49 departure from, 313--27 entry and communications in, 240-55 general description of, 1-2 history of, 3-4 holidays in. 351-54 major lights on, 331-39 politics in, 8-11 provisions and services in, 256-94 racing in, 304-8 radio navigation aids fOr, 340-43
radiotelephone communications in, 344-45 sailing directions for, 235-39 tides and currents in, 226--32 topography of, 4-7 weather in, 204-7 yacht clubs in, 308-12 see also individual islands eels, 40 electricians. 293 electricity, 266 electronic naVigational equipment, 16, 17-18, 139,293 Eleuthera, 314 El Morro, xvi El Morro de Barcelona, 3-4, 7, 84 El Portete, 84 El Salvador, 81 ELTs (Emergency Locator Transmitters), 29, 244-45 Emerald shoal, 71 emergency gear, 29 engine agents, 293-94 engines, 35-36, 139 England. 254. 264. 315, 325 English Channel, 61 English Harbour, 6. 9, 86, 258, 264, 265, 290, 295 entry procedures for, 249 as hurricane hole, 224 English Harbour to Redonda Race, 306 English Reef, 188 Ensa de Antequera, 161, 163 Ensa de Salinetas. 153. 154 Ensenada, 79-80 Ensenada Caheta Guarana, 84 Ensenada de Abra, 127, 129, 130 entry and clearance, 78-79, 245-47 procedures for, 247-54 EPIRB (Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon) unit. 29, 244-45 Europe, 85-86 departure to, 319, 321, 324-27 transatlantic passage from, 60-70 eyeball navigation. xiii Faial, 96, 97. 104-6, 122, 274 major ligh ts on, 337 Faja, 195, 196 Fajardo. 242 Falmouth. Antigua, 9, 224 Falmouth, England, 64, 94, 325 False Cape, 83 Fanal, 112, 114 Fastnet Rock. 324 Ferry Reach. 90. 93 film and cameras, 37 Finisterre. 64 fire extinguishers. 35-36 fishing, 2, 7 equipment for, 37-39 fishing licenses, 79 fish poisoning. 39 Flamenco Island, 82 Rares, 28 Rat-calm days, I Flores, xvii, 94, 96, 98-100, 264,266 Florida, 77 - 78, 87 Rohlla charter, 298-99 fog, 2.94. 205. 244,325 Fogo, 8. 182, 189. 193-94, 265 lights on, 339 Folga, 110, 113 food. xiv. 140, 257-59 produce, 259-61 Formigas. 122 Fort-de-France. xiv. 6. 232. 241. 250 Fort Lauderdale, 77-78 Fort Royal, Kingston. Jamaica, 83 foul-weather gear. 34-35. 37, 316 Fran~is. 86. 250 Freeman's Bay, 86 Freeport, Grand Bahama. 77-78 frequency of wave heights, 208 fruits, 259-60 fUel. 27, 34,35-36. 139-40.266-67
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide Fuerteventura, 7, 134, 135, 137, 138, 141, 144-49,239,259,265 lights on, 338 services in, 280, 288 Funchal, xvii, 3, 123, 127, 128, 131, 254, 259, 264, 279, 283,288 Furna, 119, 195 Galapagos, 319 gales, 63, 73-74, 76-77,84,94,95, 182,208,325 gallows frame, 22 Garachico, 167-68, 171 Gibbs Hill light, 90 Gigantes, 136, 137, 167, 288 gimbaled tables and stoves, 27-28 Glandore, 64 GoHito,82 Gomera, 7, 134, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 168-72,265 lights on, 338 Graciosa,96, 109-10, Ill, 141-42 lights on, 337 Gran Canaria, xvii, 7, 131, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 149-53, 274 major lights on, 338 services in, 280, 281, 288 southwest coast of, 153-60 Grand Bahama, 77-78 Grand Banks, 325 Gran Tarajal, 147, 149 Great Bahama Bank, 314 Greater Antilles, 1 Great Sound, 90, 93 Grenada, xiii, xv, 2, 4, 5, 6,7,8, 9,70,71, 84, 85, 204, 221, 226, 232, 235,237,243,299 charts of, xxiii commercial radio stations in, 348 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 251-52 holidays in, 353 hurricane holes in, 225 major lights on, 335 marine supplies in, 268, 270 politics in, 10-11 provisions in, 258, 264 radio navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in, 265-66, 272-73, 274, 275, 278, 281-82, 283, 286, 289, 291, 292, 293 Grenadines, xiv, 3, 6, 41, 42, 204, 225, 230, 237, 246 charts of, xxiii major lights on, 334 provisions in, 258, 264 services in, 283 Grenville, 252 grounding, 75 ground swells, 205, 225-26 Guadeloupe, xiii, xiv, xv, 5, 6, 9, 86, 207, 221, 241, 242, 297 charts of, 54 commercial radio stations in, 348 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 249-50 holidays in, 352 hurricane holes in, 224-25 major lights on, 333 marine supplies in, 268, 269 provisions in, 258, 259, 262, 263, 264 radio navigation aids for, 340 radiotelephone communications in, 344 services in, 272, 274, 275, 277, 283, 286, 292, 293 Guadeloupe to Antigua Race, 306 Gulf of Cariaco, 7 Gulf of Pari a, 226, 335 Gulf of Tehuantepec, 81 Gulf of Venezuela, 84 Gulf Stream, 73, 76, 90, 94, 318, 325, 326 guns, 8, 28,246,248, 252 Halifax, 321, 324, 327 Hamilton, 74, 90, 93, 288 ham radio, 36, 244, 345 haroor charts, listed, xxiv, xxv-xxvi harbor dues, 246 Hatteras, 73, 76, 318, 326
hauling facilities, 138, 275-80 Hawaiian Islands, 319 head boats, 297, 298 heat, 33-34, 316, 325 Heineken Regatta, 306 Hierro,7, 134, 136, 138, 139, 140, 177-78,280 Iigh ts on, 338 Hispaniola, 78, 83, 221, 314, 319 holidays, 351-54 Horseshoe Reef, 238 Horta, xvii, 96, 97, 98, 106, 107, 266, 279, 283 hurricane holes, 222, 223- 25 hurricanes, 15,60,65,71,74, 79,93,204, 205,313,317,318,319, 324,325 anchoring and securing for, 222-23 avoiding, 222, 223-25 characteristics of, 221-23 incidence of, 221 kinds of, 71, 73 ice, 139, 263-64 icebergs, 326 iceboxes, 31-32 tie de Ronde, 204, 226 iles des Sainles, 250, 277, 333 Ilha Brava, 3, 8, 182, 189, 194-95, 265, 339 I1ha da Boa Vista, 7, 182, 184-85, 188, 265 lights on, 338 I1ha de Santiago, see Santiago lIha de Santo Antao, see Santo Antao IIha de Santo Luzia, 182, 198 Ilha de San Nicolau, 8, 182, 195, 198 lights on, 338 Ilha de Sao Vicente, see Sao Vicente I1ha do Fogo, see Fogo I1ha do Maio, 7, 182, 265, 338 I1ha do Sal, 7, 182, 184, 185, 265, 335 I1has Salvage m , 337 I1heu de Baixo, llO I1heu de Cima, 123 I1heu dos Passaros, 198 I1heus das Formigas, 121-22 immigration, 78-79, 246-47 Inland Waterway, 74-78, 90, 315, 316, 318 insects, 39 insurance, 15-16,26,77,82,83,275-76,281,282,300,314,319 intracoastal waterway, 74-78 Ireland, 61, 63-64, 70, 254, 264, 315, 324, 325 radio navigation aids for, 342 Isabella Segunda, 248 !sla Chan, 122 Isla da Tortuga, 335-36 Isla de Lobos, 144 Isla Deserta, 3, 7 Isla Deserta Grande, 122, 130-31 Isla de Tenerife, see Tenerife (sla do Bugio, 122 (sla de Aves, xiv, 238, 336 (sla Los Roques, see Los Roques Isla Margarita and Cubagna, major lights on, 335 Isla Taooga, 82 Jacksonville, Florida, 77 Jacomar, 147 Jamaica, 83, 319 Jost Van Dyke, 248 Kingston, St. Vincent, 251 Kinsdale, 63-64 Klein, Cura9ao, 238 La Caleta, 167, 169 La Coruiia, 64 La Desirade, 69, 86 La Guaira, xvi, 336 languages, 241-42, 259 L' Anse' aux Epines, 252 Lanzarote, 7, 134, 135, 137, 1.18, 141, 142-44, 239, 259, 265,288 lights on, 338 La Parguera, 223 Las Aves, xiv, 238, .'3.'36
Index Las Galletas, 166 Las Nieves, 159, 160 La Sociedad, 141-42 Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, xvii, 137-38, 139, 140, 151, 152, 271 lights on, 338 services in, 273, 274, 288 Las Palomas, 136 late-season hurricanes, 73 launch service, 25 laundry, 140, 265--66 lee shore, sailing, 207, 237 Lesser Antilles, xiii, 1,3,4, H, 15,25,30,36, 44,60, 71, 182,206, 235,314 customs and immigration in, 245-46 major lights of, 334-35 races and regattas in, 305-8 tides and currents in, 226-32 topography of, 5 licenSing fees and taxes, 245-46 life rafts, 29,270-71,314 lights, 79, 83, 238, 331-39 Lindbergh Bay, 293 liquor, 261-63, 313 Lisbon, 327 Little Creek, Virginia, 76 Loran, 18, 90 Los Abrigos, 136, 166 Los Christianos, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141, 160, 167, 265, 266 Los Gigantes, 136, 137, 167, 288 Los Lianos, 176 Los Monjes, 84 Los Piedros, 84 Los Roques, xiv, xvi, 7, 238, 336 Los Testigos, 7
Machico, 127, 129 machine shops, 274 Madalena, lOO, 109 Madeira, 3, 7, H, 17, 22, 44, 60, 122, 123. 124-27, 134, 202, 243, 283 anchoring in, 24 charts of. 47-50 commercial radio stations in, 349 currency in, 257 duty regulations in. 254-55 marine supplies in, 268, 270 provisions in, 264, 265 radio navigation aids for, 342 routes to, 61-70 services in, 266, 267, 273, 279, 288, 292 Madeiran Archipelago, xvii, 2, 122-34, 239 entry procedures for, 254 major lights on, 337 provisions in, 259, 262 services in, 274, 292 magnetic variations, abnormal, 182, 184, 188 mail,242-43 Maio,7, 182, 188, 189, lOO, 26.'5, 338 Maiquetla, xiii, xvi Mamora Bay, 86 Manzanillo, 80 Margarita, 3, 7, 204, 205, 225 major lights on, 335 Maria Pia, 201 Marie-Galante, 250, 333, 340 Marigot, xv, 5, 86, 250 entry procedures for, 249 marinas, 283-89 marine supplies, 138-39, 267-70 Martinique, xiii, xiv, xv, 5, 6, 9, 26, 29, 67, 71,86,205,237,241,243, 315 charts of, 54 commercial radio stations in, 348 currency in, 256 entry procedures for, 250 holidays in, 352 major lights on, 334 marine supplies in, 368, 369 provisions in, 258, 259, 261, 262, 263, 264 radio navigation aids for, 340 radiotelephone communications in, 344 services in, 265, 271, 272, 274, 275, 277, 283, 290, 292, 293
359 Mayaguez. 87 Mazatlan , 80 mechanics, 292 Medano,l66 medical kit, 39-40 Memorial Day Weekend Regatta, 307 Mexico, 78-79 west coast of, 79-81 Miami, 74, 77-78,325 Mindelo, xvii, 3, 8, 198, 199-201,239, 265, 280, 289 Miquelon, 327 Mizen Head, Ireland, 324, 325 Mogan, Gran Canaria, 137, 138, 140, 151, 153, 155, 156, 159, 265, 281, 288 Mona Island, 43 Mona Passage, 238 money (currency), 256-57 Monjes del Sur, 85 monk seal, 131 Monserrat, 249, 254, 267 commercial radio stations in, 348 Monte da Guia, 106 Monte Tigro, 203 Morehead City-Beaufort, North Carolina, 75-76, 90. 315-16 Morrocoyarea, 279, 287 Mosteiros, 194 Muchoir Banks, 75 Multihulls, 16
Nanny Cay, 248 Naos, 144, 145 navigation, 16-18 Netherlands Antilles, 11, 247 Nevis, 9, 264, 267 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 249 Newfoundland, 327 Nicaragua, 81 Norfolk, Virginia, 76-77 Norman Island, 296 North Atlantic Pilot Charts, explained, 207-21 northeaster. 73. 327 Northern Equatorial Current, 226 northers, 77, 78, 313 Northwester, 315, 318 northwest fronts, 316, 317, 326 Nova Scotia, .124 Nova Sintra, 195 oars and oarlocks, 26, 268 offshore passage, 73-74 Old Providence, 83 Ordinance Island, 288 Orzola, 142-44 out boards, 292-93 paint and varnish, 29-30 Palma, 7,134,135,136,138,167,173,175-76,265 lights on, 338 provisions in, 259 Palmas del Mar, 223 Palmeiria, 186 Palm Island, 345 Panama, xvi, 78, 79, 82, 84 Panama Canal, 81-82, 238,318-19 Pasitos Blancos, 138, 151, 153, 155, 157,265 Passage Islands, 78, 87, 221, 319 hurricane holes in, 223 major lights on, 332 passports, 246, 315 Pecora.211 Pedra Badejo, 193, 194 Pedra de Lume, 187 Pedro Barba, 141-42 Peninsula of Guajira, 84 Peninsula of Paraguana, 84 perpetual tidal calendar. 232-.14 personal gear, 36-.17 Petit Canouan, 335 Petite Terre, 86, 333 Petit SI. Vincent, 345
360
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide
Philipsburg, 248 Pico, 94, 97, 106, lOB, 109, 122 lights on, 337 Pico de Nieves, 151 Pico de Teide, 160 Pigeon Island, xv Pillsbury Sound, 231 pin barnacles, 29 Playa Blanco, 144, 146 Playa de Cocos, Costa Rica, 81 Playa de la Cocina, 141-42 Playa de las Americas, 167 Playa de Salinas, 223 Playa Francesa, 141-42 Playa Quemada, 288 plotting, 17 Plymouth, England, 61, 62 Plymouth, Montserrat, 249 Pointe-a-Pitre, 6, 86, 249-SO, 258, 268 Point Saline, 6, 85 polities, xv, 8--11,78,81,283 pollution, 2 Ponta Delgada, 95, 97, 117, 119, 274 Ponta do Sol, 201, 202 Ponta Espigo, 101 Ponta Machado, 199 Porta da Praia, lOO, 191-92 Porta das Pocas, 101 Portinho da Barra, 11 0 Porto Cais, 190 Porto de Capelas, 1I8 Porto Deportivo Taliarte, 151, 153 Porto do Santiago (Pedra Badejo), 193, 194 Port-of-Spain, 6, 259 Porto Novo, 202, 239 Porto Ponta Delgada, 1I4 Porto Santo, 3, 7, 122-24, 125, 127, 254, 259 Portsmouth, Dominica, xv, 250 Portugal, 64, 315, 327 Portuguese trade Winds, 65, 327 Pozo Negro, 147 Praia, 190, 191-92 Praia da Vitoria, 114, 116 Preguica (Porto Velho), 198 prevailing winds and calms, 207-8 see also wind patterns Prickly Bay, 85, 225, 226, 252, 299 Prince Rupert Bay, 258 produce, 259-61 Providence Channel, 78 Provincetown, Cape Cod, 94 provisions and services, 94, 256-94, 326 Pta do Pedregal, 130, 131 Pta Teno, 167, 169 Pto Deportivo, 170 Puerto Armuelles, Panama, 82 Puerto Cabello, xvi, 336 Puerto Calera, 144 Puerto Colombia, 83 Puerto Colon, 167 Puerto de Guimar, 163, 166 Puerto de la Cruz, 136, 167-68 Puerto de la Luz, 138, 141, 151 Puerto de la Estaca, 138, 177, 178, 179 Puerlo de las Lajas, 144, 146 Puerto del Manglar, 223 Puerto del Rosario, 146, 148 Puerto de Playa de San Juan, 167 Puerto Deportivo-Caleta de Eueste, 146-47 Puerto de Refugio Vueltas, 173, 174 Puerto la Cruz, xiii, 287 Puerto Madero (San Bonilo), 81 Puerto Morro de Jable, 149 Puerto Nos, Lanzarole, 138 Puerto Real, 223 Puerto Rico, xiii, I, 2,3, 18,28,77,78,8.1, P,7, 136, 137, 140, 205, 221, 226, 232, 242, 247, 299, 314 commercial radio stations in, 347 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures in, 248
holidays in, 351 hurricane holes in, 223 major lights on, 331-32 marine supplies in, 267, 268 politics in, 8 provisions in, 257, 264, 265 races in, 308 radio navigation aids for, 340 services in, 265, 271, 272, 274, 275, 276, 281, 283-84, 290, 292, 293 topography of, 4 Puerto Rico, Gran Canaria, 141, 151, 153, 155, 158 Puerto Vallarta, 80 Punta Anaga, 160 Punta de Camison, 167 Punta de Lagarta, 144 Punta de Maspalomas, ISO, 153, 155, 156 Punta Lonara, 150 Punta Mariato, 82 Punta Papagayo, 144 Puntarenas, 81, 82 Punta Roques de Salmor, 178 races, xiv, 11-12,61, 64, 151,304-8,313 Rada de la Aldea, 159, 160 Rada de Sardina, 160, 161 Radazul, 137, 163, 288 radio, 16, 36, 73, 85, 90, 221, 238, 243-44, 326, 340-45 radio direction finding, 245 radio emergency, 244-45 radio navigation aids, 340-43 radio stations, commercial, 17-18,245,347-50 radiotelephone communications, 344-45 rats, 39 refrigeration services, 275 refrigerators, 31-32 repairs, 289-94 Restinga, 138, 178, 180 Ribeira de Barca, 192 rigging, 22, 70, 273 Road Town, 248, 265 Rodney Bay, 86, 250 Roja/Medano, 166 Rolex Regatta, 306 roller-reeling gear, 19 Roque del Este, 141 Roseau,25O Round Grenada Race, 305 Royal Navy, 282 rubber dinghies, 26 rum, 261-62 Saba, xiv, H, 225, 249, 264, 267 commercial radio stations in, 347 currency in, 256 major lights on, 332-33 radiotelephone communications in, 344 Sahara low, 65, 66, 122, 137 sailing directions, xviii, 17, 235-39 sailing guides, 18 sailing schools, 299 sailmaking and repairs, 139, 271-73 sails, 18-22 St. Andrews Island, 83 SI. Barthelemy, xxiv St. Barts, 5-6, 94, 221, 241, 317, 325 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures in, 249 holidays in, 352 major lights on, 332 marine supplies in, 269 politics in, 9 provisions in, 261, 262, 263 radio navigation aids for, 340 services in, 265, 267, 272 St. Barts Regatta, 306 St. Cro;x, xv, 2, 4, 5, 8, 232, 242, 262, 299 commercial radio stations in, 347 en try procedures lor, 248 hurricane holes in, 223-24
Index major lights on, 332 services in, 265, 272, 274, 276, 281, 291, 292, 293 St. Davids light, 90 St. George's, xv, 6, 74, 85, 90, 92, 93-94, 225, 226,259, 288 entry procedures for, 251. 253 SI. Helena, 70. 71 SI. James ClubJ Mamora Bay. 249 SI. John Island. 4. 5, 86, 231 entry procedures for. 248 hurricane holes in, 224 services in, 272, 276, 292 SI. John's, Newfoundland, 61, 321, 324, 327 St. Kitts, 9, 24, 264, 267 commercial radio stations in, 347 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for. 249 holidays in, 352 major lights on, 333 SI. Lucia, xiii, xv, 4,5, 6, 86, 237, 243 commercial radio stations in, 348 duty regulations in, 254 holidays in, 353 hurricane holes in, 225 major lights on, 334 marine supplies in, 268, 269 politics in, 10 provisions in, 258, 259. 264 races in, 307 radio navigation aids for, 340-41 radiotelephone communications in, 344-45 services in, 272, 274, 275, 277-78, 281, 283, 286, 292, 293 St. Martin, xiv, xxiv, 5, 11,221, 222, 226, 241, 242 commercial radio stations in, 347 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 248 hurricane holes in, 224 major lights on, 332 marine supplies in. 269 provisions in, 261. 262, 263 radio navigation aids for, 340 services in, 265, 272, 273, 274. 275, 277, 283, 285, 292, 293 SI. Pierre, 327 SI. Thomas, xiii. xiv. xv, 1, 2. 4, 5, 7. 8, 25, 26. 28, 29, 36, 61, 71, 74, 86,222-23,225,231,232,235,242,244,295 commercial radio stations in, 347 departure from. 313-14. 316, 317, 318, 325 entry procedures for, 248 major lights on, 332 marine supplies in, 268-69 provisions in, 261, 264, 326 race around. 307-8 radiotelephone communications in, 344 routes to, 72, 75, 76, 77, 83 services in, 265, 271. 272, 273, 274, 275, 276. 281-83, 284, 290--91. 292, 293 St. Vincent, xv, 5, 6, 42, 86, 207, 237, 243, 245-46, 269 charts of, xxiii commercial radio stations in, 348 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 251 holidays in, 353 major lights on. 334 politics in, 10 provisions in, 258, 264 radio navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in. 275, 278, 292, 293 Sal, 7, 182, 184, 185, 265, 335 Salina Cruz, 81 Sal-Rei, 188 salt, 3-4 salt Cay, 86 Salt River, 223-24 salvage, 282-83 Salvage Islands. 7. 11. 60. 131-34. 239 charts of. 47-50 San Bias Islands. xvi. 82-83 San Juan. Puerto Rico, xiii, xiv, 71, 87, 242, 276, 290 San Marcos. 167-68, 171 San Pedro Bank, 83
San Salvador, 314, 316 San Sebastian, 170, 172, 173 San Sebastian de la Gomera, HiS Santa Cruz, xviii, 98, 101, 102, lOO, lW, 113, 140, 160,274 Santa Cruz de la Palma. 138, 173, 176--77 Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 137, 138, 139, 161, 163, 164, 290 Santa Luzia, S Santa Maria, 94. 97, 119, 184, 187, 259 lights on, 337 Santa Marta, xvi, 84 Santiago, 8, 172-73, 182, 189, 190-91 east coast of, 193, 194 light on, 338 west coast of, 192-93 Santo Antao, 8, 69, 182, 202-3. 239 lights on, 339 Santo Domingo, 83 Santo Luzia, 182, 198 Sao Filipe, 194, 195 Sao lorge, lOO, no lights on, 337 Sao Lourenco, 119, 121 Sao Miguel, 96, 97, 114, 116, 117, 119 lights on, 337 Sao Nicolau, 8, 182, 195. 198 lights on, 338 Sao Tiago, 265 Sao Vicente, xvii, 3, 8, 182, 198-202, 274, 280, 289, 290 lights on, 338-39 sargasso weed, 206 Satnav, 18, 90 Savanna Island, 86 Scarborough, 71 SchuIl,64 Scilly Isles, 324, 325 scrimshaw, 97 Scrub Island, 43, 87 sea levels, xvii-xviii, xxiv seasickness, 13, 14, 235 self-steering, 18 selling your boat, 315 Selvagem Grande, 131, 132, 134 Selvagem Pequena, 133. 134 services and provisions, 256-94 Sete Cidades, 119 sextant, 16. 17. 18 sharks, 40 Shirley Heights light, 86 Silver Banks, 75, 314 single-side-band sets, 36, 243, 244 Sint Eustatius. see Statia (Sint Eustatius) Sir Francis Drake Channel, 231 sketch charts, xxiv skipper, 13-14, 302 slaves, 4, 5, 180 smoke heads, 34, 325 smugglers, see drug smuggling snatch blocks, 21 snorkeling. xiv, 2, 6, 37, 41, 134, 141 snuffer, 21-22 Soana Island, 83 solar-powered exhaust vent, 34 Solent, The, 61 Sombrero Islands, 87, 332, 334 Soufriere, xv, 250 southeast meanders, 317 Southern Equatorial Current, 6, 226, 228 Spain. 64-65, 264, 315, 327 radio navigation aids for, 342 services in, 279 spearfishing, 2, 6, 40, 121, 134 Spice Island, 258 spices, 261 spinnaker, 21 spinnaker pole, 314 spirits (liquor), 261-63, 313 Statia (Sint Eustatius), xiv, 1I, 249, 254,264,267 currency in, 256
Ste. Anne, 250 storms, 93, 137, 208, 315, 316 and ground swells, 225
Street's Transatlantic Crossing Guide storms (continued) types of, 71-73 see also hurricanes stove fuel, 27. 34, 139, 267 stoves, 27-28, 34, 78 sugar, 5, 6, 9, 180 sunburn, 33-34, 37, 40, 204 sunglasses, 37, 45 surveyors, 281-82, 290 swells, 64, 94, 205, 225-26 swimming, xvii, 2, 40, 201 Tahiti,319 Tarajalejo, 149, 288 Tarrafal, 192-93 tax-dodge yachts, 301 Tazacorte, 177 telephone, 5, 243-45 telex, 242 Tenerife, xvii, 7, 134, 135, 136, 137, 141, 158, 160-61, 162 178 264 266,273 ' , , ligh ts on, 338 north coast of, 167-68 services in, 274, 280, 288, 289 west coast of, 167 Terceira, 97, 112, 114, 122, 259 lights on, 337 Testigos, 225 theft, 26, 83, 127, 138, 141, 191-92, 244, 246, 280, 319 tides and currents, xxiii, 2, 137, 226-32 time signals, 36 tipping, 299-300 Tobago, xiii, xv, xxiv, 6, 28, 71, 85 currency in, 256 holidays in, 353 radio navigation aids for, 341 Tobago Cays, xxiii tools, 301 Tortola, xiii, xiv, 26, 29, 86, 225, 242 commercial radio stations in, 347 duty regulations in, 254 hurricane holes in, 224 marine supplies in, 268, 269 radiotelephone communications in, 344 services in, 265, 267, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 281, 283, 284-85, 291,292-93 trade winds, 1-2, 4, 7, 18, 26,32,60, 122, 134, 137, 182,204,205, 206,235,237,238,239 Portuguese, 65, 327 and transatlantic routes, 61, 65, 66, 69, 70, 74, 77 transatlantic passage from Europe, 60-70, 85-86 to Europe, 319, 321, 324-27 to Florida, 313-14 by intracoastal waterway, 74-78 offshore, 73-74 to Panama and beyond, 318-19 to points North, 315-17 timing of, 60-61, 63, 65, 71, 79, 313 from US East Coast, 71-73 from US West Coast, 78-79 from western Venezuela, 317-18 traveler's checks, 256 treasure hunting, xiv Trinidad. xiii, xv, 1,4,6-7,43,71,243,264,315 commercial radio stations in, 348 currency in, 256 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 252 holidays in, 353 major lights on, 335 marine supplies in, 270 provisions in, 259 radio navigation aids for, 341 radiotelephone communications in, 345 services in, 266, 267,271,273,274,278,283,286-87,291,292,293 Trinidad to Grenada Race, 306 Trinidad Yachting Association Weekend, 307 tripping line. 23, 140 tropical cyclones, 208 tropical hurricanes, 71, 73
trucking, 84-85 Tucacas, xvi, 336 Turks Island, 74 Turtle Bay (Puerto San Bartolome), 80 typhoon track, 319 Union Island, 251, 278 radiotelephone communications in, 345 US Coast Guard, 244, 282 US East Coast, 61 transatlantic passage from, 71-73 US Navy, 282 US Virgin Islands, 5, 83, 247, 268, 315 currency in, 256 holidays in, 351-52 hurricane holes in, 223-24 major lights on, 332 politics in, 8 provisions in, 257, 261, 262 see also Virgin Islands US West Coast, transatlantic passage from, 78-79 Ushant,63 Vale de Cavaleiros, 194, 195 Valle Gran Rey, 168, 173, 174 Valverde, 177 varnish and paint, 29-30 vegetables, 260-61 Velas, 109, III Venezuela, xiii, 2, 4, 7, 15, 24, 28, 43, 44, 83, 84, 85, 226, 238, 240, 241-42 currency in, 256, 257 duty regulations in, 254 entry procedures for, 252-53 geography and people of, xv-xvi holidays in, 353-54 mail in, 243 major lights on, 238, 335-37 marine supplies in, 268, 270 politics in, 8 provisions in, 259, 262, 263, 264 radio navigation aids for, 341 services in, 266, 267, 273, 274, 278-79, 281, 283, 287, 290, 291, 292, 293 weather in, 204-5, 225 western, as takeoff point, 317-18 ventilation, 32-34 Very pistol, 28 Vieques, 221, 223, 242 entry procedures in, 248 Vieux Fort, xv, 250-51 Vigie Cove, 86 Vigo, 64-65, 264, 279, 327 Vila das Lajes, 100-101 Vila de Praia, llO, 112 Vila do Porto, U9, 120 Vila Franca da Campo, ll8 Vila Nova, 105 Villamora, 327 violence, xv, 83 Virgin Goroa, xxiii, 42, 86, 225, 237, 238 hurricane holes in, 224 major lights on, 332 marine supplies in, 269 services in, 276-77, 281, 283, 285 Virgin Gorda Yacht "arbor, 248 Virgin Islands, xiv, xv, 2, 5, 7, 18, .78, 87, 204, 205, 237. 297, 302 charts of. xxiii tides and currents in, 226, 229, 230-32 topography of, 4 see also British Virgin Islands; US Virgin Islands Virgin Rocks, 325 visas, 247, 315 visibility, xviii, 2, 17, 94, 137, 180, 205, 245, 325 visual navigation aids, 331-39 Wasp shoals, 71 water, 139, 264-65 water and wind generators, 30-31 water safety, 40-41
Index wave heights, 208 weatherfax machines, 36, 73 weather information, 36, 73, 74, 136-37, 205-6, 226, 316 weather patterns, 204-7, 304-5 see also gales; hurricanes; storms; trade winds; wind patterns West Africa, 158 West End, 248 whaling, 97, 101, 104, 106, 109, 195 whisker pole, 314 White Horse, 238 WiIlemstadt, 7
wind generators, 30-31 wind patterns, 205, 206, 207-8, 304-5 see also gales; trade winds windsurfing, 37, 41 wine, xiv, 262 women, 14, 299 working ashore, 247 yacht clubs, 308-12 Zihuatanejo, 80-81