Thursday, 26 November 2015

Blog 10 Cat Island






Blog 10 – Cat Island, Little San Salvador and Eleuthera
Derek relaxing at Hawks Nest Resort


Entering Hawk’s Nest Creek for the first time had us slightly nervous. Our depth sounder has been misbehaving lately and the channel markers were not where our plotter indicated the channel to be. 

We idled into the creek and tied-up at the fuel dock exchanging pleasantries with Gerry, the attendant. I topped-off our tank and the reserve fuel jug, while Sue went off to find a WiFi password. We left the creek and met Now Or Never, dropping anchor in front of the resort.
Our departure from Emerald Bay Marina on Great Exuma Island at dawn  gave us the whole day to cross to Cat Island.
Two days later we were on the hook, still looking at Hawk’s Nest Resort, where we decided to tie-up because of the deteriorating forecast. 
The unfavourable forecast which sent the three of us into the marina failed to bring bad weather. We lunched with the owners, swam in the pool and walked the beaches. Most importantly we rented a van, with which we travelled most of the island, taking in many of the sights.
We left the Resort access road at a mere 25 miles per hour. The road was a mess of swoops and potholes. Fortunately the roads improved somewhat, and before long we had arrived on the south end of the island.
Church at Devil's Point
We read information from brochures and cruising guides to each-other as we travelled, taking turns as the tour guide. It was revealed that the island is named, not after any feline shape, but for Arthur Cat, an English pirate who used the island as his base.
The road led us to our first stop on the lawn of a church  with the ironic name: the Christian Church of Devil’s Point

Remains of the Masonic Lodge
At our next stop we inspected the ruin of the Deveaux plantation house. Colonel Andrew Deveaux was a Loyalist expatriot from South Carolina, who successfully drove a Spanish occupying force from the Bahamas. Many Loyalist families repatriated to the Bahamas from Florida after the Treaty of Versailles caused the return of Florida to Spain. For a few years the Loyalist plantations flourished. By the year 1800, they had used up the soil nutrients and suffered devastating crop failures due to insects. The remains of Deveaux’s plantation house still stand after all these years.
Nearby, the remains of a Masonic Hall erected only 37 years ago appear not so different from the older structure.
   One of our cruising guides alluded to pink coral beaches and so, we made our way to Greenwood Resort, located on the east side of the island. I failed to perceive much ‘pinkness’ but the sandy stretches of beach were stunningLunch was available for drop-ins, and we had a great chat with the owner and his son’s friend, both from Berlin. If Cat Island can be described as off the beaten path, then one can describe Greenwood Resort as the remotest tourism destination on that island. In a word it is a ‘getaway’.
After lunch we backtracked to Baintown and the Deep South, where I took photos of the ruins of Anglican churches erected by John Cecil Hawes, an architect-turned-Anglican priest, who was sent to Long Island by church administrators to rebuild seven churches which had been ravaged by hurricanes. After a sabbatical, Hawes arrived back in the Bahamas in 1937 as a Roman Catholic priest now known as Father Jerome. After rebuilding the St Augustine monastery in Nassau and building more churches throughout the Bahamas, he built his retirement home on Cat Island at Comer Hill, the highest point in the Bahamas. We just HAD to go there! We entered through a stone arch at the base of the hill and saw lizards and snakes as we climbed past the stations of the cross to his Hermitage. The rooms are Spartan and very small in scale. 
His last construction project was the holy redeemer church at New Bight, no longer in use but recently restored and cleaned by islanders.
As we drove northward we inspected several small harbours as prospective hideouts from bad weather. One which looked like ideal protection from west winds was Bennet Harbour. It met all requirements until we looked behind us into the mangroves along the eastern shore of the ‘sheltered’ creek. A 35 foot sloop, still in full rig, was sitting atop the mangroves, her anchor line still leading beneath the surface to deep water. 
sloop in the mangroves at Bennet Harbour

We surmised that there is a really bad ‘surge’ problem here, because the only direct wind into the anchorage is from the NNW, and this alone should not blow any boat due eastward, where the mangroves are, much less place the boat atop them. 
At Knowles we found the only bank on the island and had ‘limited’ success in using the ATM in its lobby. Whew!
We returned to Hawk’s Nest marina and checked out the next day – suffering a 15% charge for using the credit card!!!!  Grrrrr!!!!  Perhaps ‘Vultures Nest’ would be a more appropriate name! We made our way northward, past the Bight to return to Knowles. Now Or Never went to the Bight while both Tekla Bramble and ourselves needed to return to the bank to greet a real teller. After some serious grocery shopping at the very well-stocked store which adjoins the bank we returned aboard to plan the next leg of our trip.
We set our sights on Pigeon Cay. It might better be described as a peninsula, rather than a Cay. The beach is beautiful and the anchorage secure.
During the motor-sail northward to Pigeon Cay we developed a serious engine problem which forced us to complete the trip under sail alone. Susan called out that the cabin was filling with smoke. Quickly shutting the engine down, I was preparing to trade places with her so that I could fight a fire, when she called out an all-clear. She had taken a peek into the engine space and advised that there were no flames and that the smoke was more like steam – having a white colour and no particular smell.
Perry ( Tekla Bramble )and I spent the next morning investigating possible causes for what was clearly a lot of crankcase pressure. It had blown the dipstick out of the engine and blown about a quart of oil all over the engine compartment. I was still contemplating a possible cause a week later as I sat at anchor in Rock Sound, Eleuthera. Our sailing skills and our rigging were tested fully to get there. The sail from Cat Island had been brisk.
Tekla Bramble goosewinged
We arrived at Little San Salvador Island from Cat Island in mid-afternoon and joined Perry and Irene aboard Tekla Bramble to watch as cruise passengers from the Carnival Pride rode horses in the water at the beach.
horses on the beach
We have been told by others that they found the island, also known by the name ‘Half-Moon Cay’ by the cruise ship industry, as the prettiest of all of the Bahama Islands. However, after a near sleepless night of rolling from side-to-side in our bunk while at anchor, we were ready to leave ASAP. As the sun came up we left under full main and reefed genoa, for the 42 naut trip to Rock Sound. The winds were ‘brisk’ and the substantial swell caused us to sail somewhat away from our destination for one part of the trip. Even so we were at the mouth of Davis Channel outside Rock Sound after only 6 hours. This was a ‘sleigh ride’.
We had planned to use the engine to negotiate the final 10 miles. Alas. There was no cooperation from the engine and so we tacked our way to the anchorage.
rock sound harbour
Panacea, Panacea, Panacea – this is Tekla Bramble“ came the welcome radio call on channel 68 as we anchored astern of them. What followed was an invitation to dinner. We had been contemplating simply dropping into bed with couple of fig-newton bars, we were so tired.
With renewed vigour we flaked and gasketed the mainsail, launched the dinghy and installed the outboard and its fuel tank. Susan threw together some food and nimbly contributions. Of course we also brought along some of the ‘demon rum’ and... into the dinghy we jumped. A pleasant hour or two later, we dropped into our bunk. The boat was NOT rolling us from one side of the bed to the other as it had done last night. It was as if we were on a concrete foundation, we were so stable.
But tonight we were in for something just a little different.
The music began and ramped-up swiftly to a roar. In ignorance we had anchored directly in front of the main concourse for the community Easter Homecoming celebration.  And the music was LOUD! And some of the music was not very ’tuneful’ either. It seems to be a blend of reggae and rap. It kept us awake for at least a minute, and perhaps even two minutes.
And we slept-in the next morning too!
After performing a few of the ‘daily’ boat repairs, we picked-up Perry and Irene and went ashore to explore the community. We were all hungry, so our first mission was to find Sammy’s Place, a restaurant reputed to have good food and reasonable prices. The lunch was leisurely. We were ravenous and so would have enjoyed a less leisurely dining experience, had it been up to us. When it did arrive, the Breakfast Club sandwich was excellent. The rest of the day disappeared with grocery shopping, boat repairs and as the sun dipped, to hanging out with fellow cruisers at the homecoming celebrations. The four of us spent the social hour with couples from Maine, Halifax, LeHavre (NS) and from Biaritz, France.
As we sat near the shore telling tales - a guy started cracking conch on the rocks nearby and I idly comment to Perry that I had been told that the ‘trimmings’ from conch cracking is said to make great fish bait. The guy overhead me and offered me all of the trimmings that I might care to take. I shared a beer with ‘Conch Albert’ AKA ‘Anthony and gave him a $ tip. I remembered the conch trimmings 14 hours later, at least 2 lbs of it, in a plastic bag still in the tender (we slept-in again – it must be the frantic pace). We have bait for the rest of the trip now, ziplok’d and stowed in the freezer. But Whew!...the tender needed a good wash!
Another day passes with some touristy behavior. We visited the ‘Ocean Hole’ and watched a church youth group diving in wearing bright green life vests. While eating ice cream we wandered aimlessly along side-streets until we came to a small bar/grocery with a cat laying in the entry. We entered and were greeted by an old man who exchanged a friendly grip with me and asked how he could serve us. Wiltshire Edwards went out of his way to make us feel welcome, serving us cool drinks. As he slowly shuffled around the place he repeatedly apologised for not ‘being ready’ for us.
Moving on we drifted through the back streets of Rock Harbour, which holds the distinction of being Eleuthra’s largest community.  
entrance to wild orchid
Again being somewhat thirsty, we decided to ‘scope-out’ the Wild Orchid, a classy restaurant with its own dock and dockside bar. We lingered there before walking in the direction of our tender, stopping at a craft store. I noticed a biographical sketch of a lady named Bourne on one of the shelves. On enquiring, I was told that the lady is the aunt of our salesperson, and that the lady is away with her husband, who is teaching school on an Indian Reserve in Alberta.
We returned to Tekla Bramble where we enjoyed a great dinner prepared by Irene (with Sailor Sue’s contributions). After a movie which the magic of Robin Williams could not SAVE (‘Nine Months’ _ Meh!), Sue and I learned a new card game. ‘Blackout’ has some – but not all - of the bidding process of bridge. We played hand after hand and staggered off to bed well after midnight. Our latest by far!
Despite the late night, I was still able to muster Sailor Sue on the foredeck at noon to re-splice the main anchor cable. Such a pair of silly sailors we are too! The 20 knot winds arriving from the East gave the splice a solid test. Merit badges for the whole crew! The rest of the day passed with Sue cleaning the interior while I read Nigel Calder’s thoughts on everything from marine refrigeration, to rigging, to our latest concern – namely excessive crankcase pressure. The book had a few insights. We’ll see if any lead to a solution.
Easter Sunday and we are still anchored in Rock Sound. In the ten days since we left Great Exuma we have put on some miles.
Our cruising companions have gone shopping. Susan and I have decided to ‘splice the main brace’, while listening to Dave Brubeck’s Greatest Hits (we can sing every word and hum every note at this stage of the voyage), and soaking our feet in warm soapy water.
Sweet Luxury!





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