Saturday, October 17, 2015

A Storm … The Big One



We get notice of Hurricane Joaquin when we are on our second day in the Market Fish Cays. We are the only boat in our favorite anchorage by Soldier Cay.  Jeff sends us a message on our satellite communicator, DeLorme Inreach, that a hurricane, Joaquin, has slipped past Ida, which fizzled out, and has strengthened just east of Bahamas and is headed our way.

Fly Away at Soldier Cay in calm seas
 
We are midway between 2 outstanding hurricane holes, Great Harbor and Chub Cay.  We are experiencing 15-20 knot winds from the north so we decide to go south back to Chub Cay.  If we do that we will need to head back to Florida via the Bahama Bank, instead of the northern route via Northwest Providence Channel by Freeport and West End, Grand Bahama.  We agree it’s the better course, so we enjoy a fabulous downwind sail for about 20 nautical miles and endure 8 nm going into an east northeast wind to Chub Cay.  We go into the marina and get a slip. We are the only boat in the marina except for the owner's boat. The marina is protected 360 degrees with a channel that curves back and forth before opening up to the slips.  It still rock and rolls.   The fisherman who tie up along the channel are rocking about 4 feet, but where we are is still and calm, and we hope to be safe.

We remove the headsail and secure the main sail on the boom with tight crisscrossed lines.  Daryl secures the dinghy in the next slip.  In the event of severe weather, we plan to deflate the tubes a little and fill the hull with water to partially submerge.  We leave the outboard motor on to give it weight.  On Fly Away we check all the halyards and tie them off to the mast to avoid clanging and chafe. 

We visit the club manager, Michael, who is unconcerned about the hurricane as we are not in the path according to all weather forecasts.  All forecasts show the storm going northeast away from us.  For now, though, it is building and moving southwest toward us.  Michael lives in a beach house with bullet proof plate glass windows!  He also has a 2 engine plane, a Cessna Seneca 6 seater that cruises at 182 mph! He is from Eleuthera and has managed Cat Cay Club and Bimini’s Big Game and Fish.  But he does sound unsure. He shows us the marina plans and assures us we are in a very good location. He also says he will take care of us. Good to know. As sailors, we watch weather and appreciate forecasts, but we make our own decisions, so we tell him we will continue to watch the storm, prepare our boat, and be ready to leave the boat if necessary.  There are rooms available to rent – one level hotel type rooms on the island. He tells us Dan Scott is the man to talk with about flights off the island.  We ask about the captain of the big boat, C’mon, Man, from Matagorda, TX. 


The captain’s name is Bobby and he helped us with lines our first day.  He keeps the boss’s boat immaculate.  The boss is the Chub Cay Club owner, George Bishop of Texas. Bobby is also unconcerned about Joaquin and he is a survivor of both Andrew in 1992 in Miami and Katrina 2005 in New Orleans.  He was a charter boat captain in New Orleans, so he knows.  Or does he?  It’s a Disney-esque, head in the sand, nothing bad can happen attitude – weird.  The boat is a 4.5M Viking sportfisherman that goes 54 mph and gets to Ft. Lauderdale in a couple of hours!!  It has stabilizing gyros for big waves forward and back, side to side, and it all runs on an iPad! Very clever. He tells us he will keep us updated and make sure nothing bad happens to us.  Hmmm.  


C'mon, Man, a Viking Sportfisherman
the only other boat in the Chub Cay Marina

In the cool of the evening, we remove the bimini and dodger and tie everything down.  This hurricane threat is not what we hoped for, but sailing in hurricane season (June 1 – November 30) carries that risk and we have planned, and are prepared, to do what is necessary to save our boat and ourselves.  We hope it turns north sooner rather than later, but hope is not a plan. We plan to be safe.  To sail again!

Fly Away prepared for hurricane
Note the empty slips


Fly Away put back together
Note the beautiful weather

Hurricane Joaquin has quickly become a dangerous category 4 hurricane and is still headed our way.  We check our surroundings and realize there are some vulnerabilities in the marina. It’s got state of the art floating docks, but the pilings are only about 10 feet at low tide.  A Cat 4 storm with 6-12 foot surge and higher than normal tides would render the marina a mess of pick up sticks. But that’s a worst case and we are hopeful for a better scenario. 

On Friday the storm turns.  “Hooray!”  as Ann says. It is going northeast quickly, speeding away from us, exactly as all the forecasts indicated.  We are sooo very lucky and grateful to miss The Big One.  A frontal storm in the US moved though to push the hurricane on its new path, so US to the rescue!

Unfortunately, a large container ship off the coast of Long Island, (yes, there is a Long Island in the Bahamas) went down in 15,000 feet of water with 33 people lost.  We come to find later that it’s a US registered boat with a Maine Maritime Academy graduate as captain. Extremely sad.

Tropical storm conditions reach 200 miles from its center so we prepare for an interesting night.  Ready to adjust lines on the dock in the dark and maybe blinding rains.  We dress for bed in easy to dry clothes.  We tie lines up and down the 2 slips and adjust the boat for wind ‘down the hatch’ wind scoop.  It’s overcast and cool, but very light air. Hardly enough to keep the wind generator working and the seas are flat.  We adjusted lines twice, but nothing major, thankfully.

As guests at the marina we are welcome to join workers at the staff caff, so we do lunch with all the workers.  We meet Byron Ellington, the supervisor, who is a photographer when he is not working on the reverse osmosis water plant or the power plant.  He posts on facebook and has uploaded pictures of Fly Away at sunset when we were in the anchorage.  They are lovely. 


Fly Away in Chub Cay Anchorage by Byron Ellington
For more pictures and videos visit his facebook page

We awake to high seas and find it’s too rough to leave the marina so we stay another couple of days and put the boat back together.  I polish the stainless stain bows of the bimini and dodger before we put it back up.  Put the head sail back on and untie the main sail. 

As soon as the seas subside and the winds become more favorable, we head out for the Northwest Channel and the Bahama Bank to Bimini.  We spend 2 nights on the bank and stop at Cat Cay for fuel, provisions, and shopping for Cat Cay t-shirts for Amy and all my cat friends.  We move the boat up to the beautiful pool-like waters of Bimini and rest before we cross the Gulf Stream.  We have about 175 miles to Cape Canaveral and hope to catch some advantage of the Stream.  The seas are high from residual hurricane conditions, but they are manageable and die down as we move north.  

It’s a glorious crossing. We see stars, sliver moon, and planets at night off the Bahamian coasts. We pass between huge thunderstorms on the US east coast.   Still, the waves grow as we get closer to the US coast and we decide to go in at Ft. Pierce about 65 miles south of Cape Canaveral.  It takes us 2 days to move up the Intracoastal Waterway to Titusville and its Municipal Marina. 


Home for now.  Work to do - bottom job, new head sail, cats to visit.  Then, back to the Bahamas!




Sunday, October 4, 2015

New Providence: Shonaray and Baha Man

Leroy Butler and Shonaray Johnson join us in Nassau

 We stop in Nassau to see our friend Shonaray.  She moved from Andros.

She shows us the island!  She drives us for 2 days and we cover the whole island, 20 by 7 miles, several times.  We do our errands and she includes us in her daily rounds.  We pickup her girls from school, her fiancĂ© back and forth to work, visit her son Nickolas and wife, Linnette. She shows us her home on Mollie Street.  A fish pond, bird perch and lots of plants – healing cactus, avocadoes, mangoes, and bananas. We meet Leroy Butler her fiancĂ©. She is a force. She knows almost everyone, and everywhere we go, everyone knows her. We are happy to find her doing well and happy.

We anchored in West Bay by Lyford Cay. Lyford Cay is most famous for the residence of Sean Connery.  We are the only boat in the harbor and when we sailed in from Andros we had a west wind so we anchored close to the north shore behind a point of land called Nygarts Cay, named after Peter Nygart the designer who owns the point and has whimsical structures built on it.  The water is beautiful and totally clear.  The beach, Jaw’s Beach, named after the famous movie that had parts of it filmed here, has beautiful pale tan fine sand.  There is an island, Goulding Cay, off in the distance that has reefs, coral, and a solitary palm tree and a white flashing marker light at night.  When we sailed in we hoped to anchor around Goulding Cay but we couldn’t find calm water.  The water was the crystal Bahamian blue and amazing to see. 

Dinghy at the dock with Fly Away in background


Jaw's Beach

The good news is that being so close to shore we found accessible wi fi and we were able to use computer, Skype video and calling!  What a treat!  We called and talked to our friends each day.  We thanked Sean Connery for wi fi. 

One night we hosted a hot dog grill out on the boat for Shonoray, her daughter Esther, 11 years old, Leroy, and his daughter, Leah, 16 years old.  We dinghy them out, they climb aboard.  D does hot dogs and we have baked mac’n’cheese, baked beans, all the hot dog fixings and Goombay Smash.  Leroy and D get along great both share a boyish sense of humor that the girls find hilarious. Leroy is a performer and entertainer.  He is a musician and vocalist in the Baha Men and has his own group Leroy and the Energizers.  He is also a world class champion limbo dancer!!  We watch a video of him going under a very low limbo stick that is on fire.  He even does it with a young child laying on his chest. He attributes his talent to leg strength and flexibility, but I also think it takes a lot of mental strength and concentration.  The Baha Men are famous for the 2000 remake of “Who let the dogs out?” music video that won many awards that year.  He has traveled internationally with the group and is preparing for the Newport Jazz Fest this year.  

D takes Leah and Esther to the boat
     
It was worth the trip to Nassau to see Shonaray.  Next is Chub Cay and the Berry Islands.   


A fabulous sunset