Friday, December 19, 2014

Hiccups happen!  On Thanksgiving night I had a health issue that landed me in a Grenada hospital.  I blacked out and couldn't walk.  I could hear everything around me...music, friends, Will....but I needed to find out what was wrong.  After two days in a public hospital that required you to bring your own pillow, sheets, and toilet paper....I left knowing I probably didn't have a mini stroke.   Will did bring me a pillow, a cover, and a whole roll of toilet paper.   But My doctor strongly urged me to return to the states for further tests.  


                                                  My bed...no sheet, no pillow, no cover



Hospital ward...someone knew to bring their own sheets


Breakfast 


So on December 1st I returned to St. Petersburg/Tampa area to have tests done.   Long story short....my blood count showed a low sodium level which causes the same effects as a stroke.  Will and I were almost ready to leave Grenada on Varua and begin our return to the states.  Will decided to take on that journey without me...hoping I could join him later.

Will left Grenada on Dec 2nd and did a solo sail to Guadeloupe.   He arrived on Dec 5th.  His only crew was Bentley, and he spent the entire time in the cockpit with the captain.  Will did 15 minute cat naps during the night sails.  He would set an alarm clock to go off  and wake him up so that he could check radar and scan the horizon for other ships.  He sent out spot messages with his location at 6:00 am and pm.  On Thursday the spot message did not come through at 6:00 am, so I worried about them both until I received the 6:00 pm message. 



A spot message I received when he was approaching Guadaloupe


Will and Bentley's course from Guadaloupe


Will and Bentley spent time in Guadeloupe catching up on sleep and walks on land.  They also took time to find another alarm clock that would produce a louder ring then the one they had been usisng.
Lots of time was spent at the local bakery and sending emails to each other.  

Along with many visits to different doctors, labs, and hospitals, I spent lots of time with my dad and visited my mother in the special home she is now living in.  The weather was extremely cold for Florida so I borrowed some warm clothes from my friend Susan.  She and her husband own a condo 5 minutes away from my dad, so I had shelter and used their car for transportation.  They are still in Grenada on their sailboat.  




My dad and I at Rum Fish for lunch


Sitting with my mom's home mates




Christmas tree decorating


My beautiful 92 year old mother


Fresh tuna I bought in St Petersburg...all the way from Trinidad


On December 17th Will and Bentley took off again this time heading for St. Thomas.  I have received spot messages on their travels and the latest one just came in this morning at 6:00 am.  They will arrive and anchor  somewhere on the south coast of St. Thomas.



Bentley doing his job while Will solos the boat

I plan on flying to St. Thomas on December 23rd to meet up with them again after  22 days of being apart.   We will visit our friends Gayle and Todd while we are there, and  then will make the decision of where we will be sailing next.



Beautiful Bahama Island from the plane....maybeMayaguana 




Thursday, November 20, 2014

October 19th...one year ago we left Miami heading to our hopeful destination of Grenada.    We made it on June 26th having travelled over 2,000 nautical miles and having visited many countries and islands!   Our plans now are to travel back north some time soon.  We are not sure how long it will take or where we will go on our return trip.  But we are all ready to return to the USA!  Maybe by next hurricane season.




                                                   We are ready for our adventure to begin

We did an overnight sail to West End in the Bahamas and spent 2 months exploring the Bahama Islands.   Our Thanksgiving was with friends John and Cathi at their beautiful beach front home on Treasure Cay. Our Christmas was spent on Rum Cay where we were invited to share dinner at a sandy floored bar for a pot luck dinner with the 38 residents.  New Year's Eve was spent in San Salvador with friends Helga and Peter. We left San Salvador on January 26th and had a two night sail to the last island in the Bahama chain called Mayaguana.  We had Will's brother Jamie with us as an extra crew member.  We spent a week there with 11 other sailboats waiting for a good weather window to make the sail to Turks and Caicos.

                                             Thanksgiving in Treasure Cay at Cathi's home

                                             Christmas in Rum Cay with friends  They are
                                             preparing costumes for Junkanoo parade the
                                                         day after Christmas




Helga and I on sailing catamaran Twiga on
New Year's Eve


Jamie and Will on our way to Turks and Caicos.
This is after two days of beating into the winds
and waves.  Happy to be in calm waters.



Leaving Turks and Caicos was a big jump for us and arrived in the Dominican Republic after another two day over night sail.  We arrived on January 22nd and spent 3 weeks there enjoying the Spanish culture.  We met up with friends Sylvio and Susan and Jon....cruisers we have met and spent fun times with as we have travelled south.  Jamie left us to find wind surfing meccas, and we set off for Puerto Rico.

Jon and Susan 


Sylvio
                                                       

We loved many of the ports that we visited in Puerto Rico.....Mayaqueze, Boqureon, Cabo Rojo, Guilligans Island, and finally Silinas.  We spent two wonderful months at this fine harbor and had friends Marty and Smitty join us for a week visit. We met our friends Dick and Jane playing Mexican train dominoes.   Susan's friend Kim came for a weekend, and we spent a day on the beach with our Puerto Rican lady friends


Marty and Smitty


Jane and Dick

Mommie, Kim and Susan

Alexandra


Next stop Tortolla in the US Virgin Islands.  We stopped to anchor each night at Vieqiues, Calebra, and St Thomas. We attended a wedding of our friend Morris's son on May 10th...Brian and Lara.  We explored different anchorages there and in the British Virgin Islands as well....Virgin Gorda was a treat as we met up with our friends Meredith and Justin.

Brian and Lara

My colorful friend




Fellow Hilton Head sailor Jim

                                              Will's good friend Morris...father of the groom


                                            Justin and Meredith married in Virgin Gorda

On May 22nd we headed east to the Windward Islands.  St. Maartin, St Kitts, and Nevis.  On June 3rd we arrived in Guadeloupe and were treated to an island tour to the waterfalls with Charlotte and Jonathan....a young couple we met at the weeding in Tortola.  This was our first French island and found the French very hospitable.




Charlotte and Jonathan in Guadalope


Everyone loved Benely.  This was on Nevis at
an outdoor art cafe

Dominica was our next stop and Bentley was not allowed ashore, so after two days we sailed on to Martinique another French Island.  We met a couple from Greenville, SC...Libby and David and toured the Mt. Pele volcano area with them.  Walking among the ruins of the town of St Pierre that was destroyed by the eruption of Mt Pele in  in the 1902 was a special treat.  We also loved the aromas and food on the French islands.





                                     Food stands and bakeries are a part of all island cultures


On June 17th we arrived at the first of the Leeward Islands...St Lucia.  Our hurricane insurance takes effect on July 1st, so we hustled through the islands quickly.  St Vincent, Bequia, Mayreau, Union Island, and Carriacou which is a part of Grenada, so we checked in there.



Beautiful anchorages throughout the islands

                                            Wendy and Dave with us in Carriacoua. This was
                                            the first time we had run into them since March, 2013

Checking in and checking out is a MUST in each of the different islands, so we have now checked in and out of 15 different ports.  We will be checking out of Grenada in the very near future.  We look forward to returning to the United States.   We are not sure which direction we will take or how long it will take us, but we hope to be back by the beginning of hurricane season July 1, 2015.

So a final picture of our sailboat Varua at sunset in Woburn Bay, Grenada.   We will miss many of the friends we have met from all over the world.   Bitter sweet to leave this country, but USA here we come.
                         


Shopping day Grenada style.


Here on this hilly, hot, humid island, you usually join a group of other cruisers on a weekday to take the shopping bus to get your groceries and other things that might be needed for the boat or personal use.  All buses on Grenada are actually vans with seating capacity usually at 12-15 people.  The city buses have a driver and a conductor that sits on the passenger side near the sliding door (there is only one door),  and he hails people along the streets to see if they want to take his bus.  He also collects the $2.50 EC fare.  EC is Eastern Caribbean money and $2.50 EC would be equivalent to about $1.00 US.  The cruiser's bus is $10 EC and is still loaded with lots of people.


                                                   This is a cruiser's shopping bus

Our driver today is Shademan



A typical city bus


The van arrives at 9:00 but cruisers have to give themselves time to leave their boat in the dinghy, head over to a marina that is close to them, tie up and lock the dinghy and walk up to the pickup spot.   So we left our boat at 8:15 and were there about 25 minutes ahead of time.  Because of the the mosquito virus that is spreading through the Caribbean, I have sprayed myself down with bug spray as they are very much buzzing around in the mornings.  The virus is called Chickungunya and has effected 65% of the people on Grenada.  I know of three people that have had the virus and two are still fighting it.  It brings headaches, fevers, and the worse part is aching in the joints that is similar in feeling to arthritis.  It last any where from days to weeks and even longer.  I sure don't want that disease, so I spray on that toxic spray...but the views are beautiful.





Off we go up the hill from Whisper Cove marina and winding around the dirt roads till we hit the main drag.  They drive on the left hand side and honk as they round a corner to warn of their approach to any unseen cars coming from the other direction.


                                                   Up the hill from Whisper Cove


                                              The roads are windy and tight....squeezing by


Our first stop is the ATM machine.   Six of us get out of the van to withdraw money to spend on the island.  I wondered how many different countries were being represented at that machine today.  I know there were a few French, an Englishman, a funny lady from Switzerland, and a couple from St Thomas and myself from the USA.   Money in our pockets, we are off to our next stop.



Some of the views along the way and the round about before getting to the Spice Land Mall with the big IGA grocery store.











After stops at the Ace Hardware store, the veggie market, and budget marine, we enter Spiceland Mall.  You never know what you will find in the produce or meat department, but the shelves are stocked with most of the items we need for the boat.  There are a lot of local fruits and vegetables like
avacados, papaya, chili peppers, callaloo (which is like spinach but much toughter), and lots of pumpkin, ginger, sour oranges, and bananas....of yes lots of bananas.  The meats are totally different. It is extrememly hard to find a chicken breasts....there are lots of wings, and feet and necks.  There is plenty of goat and oxtail, and I have never been tempted to buy a Canadian cow ear.



This is the veggie market...lots of ginger and sour oranges




I wonder who will get the lastbroccoli 


This is the poultry section....not one bit of chicken 

Pig ears...oh my

 Beef feet...no idea how to cook those


A couple of choices for rice or couscous.  


Then all of the groceries are piled into the bus to take back to our boats.



Hope the bread is on top!

Then all the food has to be redistributed to the owners and brought back down the hill to the dingy dock.  This usually includes cases of Carib beer and bottles of wine.  

Our supplies back on Varua....a big bag of dog food for Bentley

The results for tonights dinner is curried goat stew with pumpkin.  
And a glass of wine to wash it down.