Tuesday, 4 December 2012

November 2012


November
Thurs 1st
Pick up stop cable. Sewing machine should arrive tomorrow. Miss Molly drive by to say they are off to Tobago,hope to see them there. We pull out all our cupboards to fit the stop cable.

Fri 2nd
Pick up sewing machine, it is a monster. Sailrite LSZ-1; check it out. It can sew through 10 layers of canvas! And weighs a ton.

Sat 3rd
Spend most of the day assembling the sewing machine and watching the 2 ½ hour video that comes with it. This is needed as shows how to put it together and use it. A second gig with Stan and Cora this time at the Oasis bar in Clarkes Court Bay. Pot luck dinner; you each bring a dish and something to barbecue.

Sun 4th
One of the local divers, Kirt, is in hospital in St Lucia with the the bends. One other guy died from bends injuries. Today there is a fish and lobster lunch put on by the fishermen and divers all proceeds to go to Kirt's medical fund. It is extremely well attended by locals and cruisers alike.

Mon 5th
Final bottom clean, customs and immigration check out, fill with water and leave at 17:00 for Trinidad. There are several flashes of lightning during the night, which is always a worry, but none get too close. We see bright lights in the distance and pass three gas rigs only two of which were charted. There were only about ten vessels crossing our path, throughout the night, travelling along the Venezuelan coast. The quarter moon rises about midnight to help visibility through the second half of the night.

Tue 6th
Overnight sail and motor. The water around Trinidad is brown. We were told to expect rubbish in the water and strong currents through the “Bocas”. There is rubbish, but not that much; and there was only about ½ knot current against us travelling through the first Boca de Monos. We arrive on the customs dock in Chaguaramas Trinidad at 08:02 two minutes after the overtime rate stopped! And a saving of US$50. Back on the boat for a long sleep.

Wed 7th
Visit Echotec to order and pay for our watermaker then head out to Port of Spain to pay for our US visas. The town is really clean and rubbish free. After reports we have heard this is a big surprise. When we get back to Chaguaramas we dinghy round to find a cash-point and a bar. There are several bars but none are busy. We cannot find any happy hours and between one and three people in each bar. We ask around and everyone says the same.

Thurs 8th
We have invited Lateral Thinking, Brian and Catherine for supper but have to cancel because weather is so bad. Rain chucking it down and heat and humidity high, and we don't want to spend an evening inside. They have a Fountaine Pajot the next size up from ours and have spent a long time making improvements.

Fri 9th
Roti for lunch at Power Boats. You turn up and queue sitting down until they have finished cooking, then all stand up and queue again to collect your food. We finally get to invite Brian and Catherine back, it is several months since they barbecued an excellent stake for us in St Lucia. Rick has produced another video of the bays where we anchor south of Grenada island. At the start on the left is Michael, one of our best cricketers. “Lucky” the parrot is also on board.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PD6Vtlk8XZA&feature=em-unknown&list=TL83XureDI57g

Sat 10th
Up at 5:30 to get the bus to the market, clothes fruit veg, meat, poultry and fish. The biggest market I have ever visited with a fantastic selection. King prawns fresh at £3 per pound. One stall has about 50 small sharks another massive dorado, yet another is carving up a huge tuna. Butchers have pigs head, a bullocks head and all manner of other cuts. We are still looking for soursop juice and passion fruit syrup but can only find soursop fruit. Driver returns with live chicks. We go for an arranged walk though the bamboo cathedral and up to an old radar station, then to the beach for a swim. The Orinoco chucks out loads of mud so water is all a bit murky.

Sun 11th
Peel the soursop and squeeze the fruit by hand. This produces about 200cc of thin juice; overnight this thickens and can be used as a juice concentrate. A wonderful grown up flavour with a slightly bitter finish.

Mon 12th
Miss Molly arrive and later invite us for drinks. I spend about 4 hours working on Brian's Big Boy! This is a WiFi booster that is not getting a signal. After various diagnostics it appears the band width of the various providers is such that all signals keep dropping out. As a result of this “work” Brian offers to rebuild our engine covers as he is a carpenter.

Tue 13th
Divali is a bank holiday in Trinidad and Tobago so all day spent on the yacht fixing and planning. 7pm there is a jam at Coral Cove. John from Out of Africa hosts it Phil from Miss Molly, Terry from Liberty, Samuel and Corinne, a French couple from Ercolousa all on guitars and Rob from Marie Elise, who played a brilliant trumpet. The best jam for ages as we had a variety of music including some Buena Vista with trumpet solos. We all bring our own booze as there is no bar.

Wed 14th
A hike around chandlers and hardware stores looking for marine ply, 2x2 and 4x2 for our engine covers, plus some LED light strips. Electronic position indicating radio beacon (EPIRB) and satellite phone. As a result of hearing about Windigo our friends Steve and Tania we have decided to take safety more seriously. They were recently rescued by the New Zealand services after their 12 metre boat was turned upside down in 20 metre waves. The Pacific cyclone season came a month early this year.

Thur 15th
Haul out at 8:00 am. Busy day filling out paperwork and tracking down service providers.

Fri 16th
Call Echotec the watermaker manufacturers and book fitting for Monday. Brian tracks down the wood required for our engine bays.

Sat 17th
Brian arrives to repay my (failed) attempt to improve his wifi; He puts in 1 ½ days work and enlarges one engine bay and repairs the other. And fits a sewing table for our new machine.

Sun 18th
Brian completes wood work and we begin tidying up and preparing for the electricians tomorrow. Pulling cupboards out, emptying under seat lockers and lifting floor panels. We will be in a mess again for a couple of weeks.

Mon 19th
Watermaker engineer and Electrician both turn up to start work; both perform a “survey” that requires teeth sucking end further expertise to be brought in. Electrician requires a different electrician to provide power to units being wired in. Second electrician provides a survey and will get back with a quote. Quote arrives later, I accept at once – work can start tomorrow.

Tue 20th
We have an appointment at the US embassy to apply for our US visas. 7:00 taxi we arrive at the embassy 7:55 in time for our 8:00 appointment. There are about 50 people in the queue outside the embassy for their 7:30 appointment and another 50 in the 8:00 queue. We get in to the embassy about 9:00, register and are finally the second to last to be interviewed at about 11:30. interview last 45 seconds, visa approved, pay for it to be delivered and collect it later. Too late to get any engineers on the boat so go shopping. Tonight is a special food night “sucking pig” we presume this is suckling pig and have booked. Pig is a metre long! Presumably not still suckling.

Wed 21st
Watermaker work started Radio fitting stalled as wires will be too long, second electrician called in again. Further survey, will get back with a quote, it arrives later we need an extra battery, I accept immediately; work can start tomorrow. At 2:30 get a call from US embassy, visas are ready for collection, before 3:30 – impossible to do today, they are closed tomorrow so will come Friday.

Thur 22nd
Thanksgiving – whatever that is! Most workmen have an excuse to take the day off. Also religious holiday for seventh day adventists. Watermaker engineer turns up at 11:00 then goes for lunch. Comes back fits primer pump exactly where I would crouch to service engine and so has to move it.

Fri 23rd
Trudy collects our US visas from the embassy. Electricians and watermaker staff all arrive by midday and the boat is a shambles with people crawling all over. Winch is dismantled for servicing and is found to b a total write off. The casing has turned to powder to such an extent that a stud has dropped out, the motor housing is brown rust with the windings showing through. So its off to the chandlers for another large bill. I buy a larger winch that needs the deck to be filled and re-drilled; also wiring is not up to scratch so bill gets even bigger.


Sat 24th
Pull all flooring out again as we need to run a small pipe from the watermaker to the tank. Also our “KISS counterpoise radial system” (a kind of earth for the short wave radio) needs to be hidden under the floor. We book tickets for the cinema on Monday. I am surprised to discover that, being over 55, I get senior citizen's discount! Saturday evening is Shark and Bake night at the “Wheelhouse” and we meet up with Steve and Jodie from “Blue Pelican”, a couple of Aussies who we first met at the cricket in Grenada.

Sun 25th
Bilge cleaning. We have some sound proofing in the engine bays that is falling apart with age. So it all needs to be removed and replaced. The trouble is that it is partially fibre, filled with diesel and is very irritating. You spend an hour in the bilge and come up black and itching all over.

Mon 26th
Engineers all arrive between 9 and 10 and by the end of the day we have a watermaker that should work.

Tue 27th
More boat fixing, nearing completion

Wed 28th
Swordfish, Ribs and parang night at the wheelhouse. Parang and Parang Soca are types of Christmas music. Lyrics are usually about drink, mostly rum and or food, mostly pork. These being the most important aspects of Christmas.

Thur 29th
We take a trip to the Asa Wright nature centre. This is a large area of land that was given away in a will provided it remained a nature sanctuary. We see a huge selection of humming birds, 11 species in all. We miss out the scorpions and snakes but see several large lizards and a couple of agouti, a large hamster type thing. The interesting thing was that certain creatures habit specific areas of the rain forest. They are not spread all over; so you need to walk to specific locations to view individual species. This is followed by a visit to the Coroni swamp where we see the roosting of the red ibis and several types of egret. Quite a spectacular splash of colour. We also see a bird that looks like a log and a couple of brown tree boas. Apparently Trinidadians celebrate 100 days of Christmas ending 6th January, then follow this up with two months of carnival. Celebrating means eating and drinking each other out of house and home. For almost half the year!













Fri 30th
The electricians turned up yesterday, even though we told them we were out all day. Can't come today so remaining work will not be completed until Monday. Echotec tell us they need to go out on the boat to commission the watermaker and won't deliver filters until we go into the water, so that will hold us up another few days as well. Last day of November and we go to the annual Christmas cook-out. This is type of street party with stalls selling food and drink. We win two prizes in the raffle, a taxi ride to the airport which auctioned for £15 and two ferry tickets to Tobago which we will try and use.

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