Some of the past week has been fun. We met up again with Denny Morgan who we had spent some time with in Grenada. He is just finishing some work on his boat and will be heading west in the next few days. He has been sailing since the late seventies, although this is his first time in the Caribbean, and he is a wealth of information. He came out to the boat one day to give us some advice on the spinnaker pole and sail. This is a light weight sail that is used across the front of the boat in light winds or winds from behind. More about that later if we ever use it. Saturday Denny took us shopping to one of the malls. It could have been a mall in any city in Canada - the same types of stores although the names are different.
While we were in the mall there was a loud clap of thunder and all the lights went out. This was followed by a horrendous downpour of rain that lasted about an hour. We were glad we were in the mall and not outside. After having lunch and buying a few groceries we headed back to the boat.
Later that evening, the three of joined Rose and Tom and another couple at one of the restaurants for 'shark and bake'. This is usually done as a buffet/barbecue outside, but because of the rain the cooking was done inside and then served. Bake is a bread that is deep fried very similar to Indian bannock or fry bread. The shark was fish strips that were battered and grilled. I can't really say what the flavour was like because you eat it with a garlic dressing. The texture was closer to chicken than to fish.
Sunday we spent washing the outside of the boat. Griff had mentioned that this is a commercial harbour. So what happens is the commercial boats drain their bilges into the bay. Quite often the bilge water also has oil in it. This was all over the topsides of the boat. To clean it we both got into the dinghy with a bucket of soapy water. I held the dinghy in position, Griff wiped off the boat and then rinsed with salt water. Sounds simple right. However, the boats that were going past while Griff was up the mast were still going past. That meant the dinghy was being tossed around every which way while we were trying to keep it still. We did get it done. Two days later we looked over the side and there was another oil slick going past. Needless to say the white part of the boat has another coat of oil along the bottom.
On Monday Griff went into a couple of boatyards to check out having an autopilot put in. An autopilot is used to keep the boat on course. It is tied into the course you set on the compass and adjusts the course if it changes. The course is affected by the wind, waves and current. Without the autopilot the person at the wheel is constantly adjusting to maintain the course. With the autopilot on you don't have to work quite as hard to stay on course and if need be both of us can be away from the wheel at the same time - bathroom breaks or meal times.
Anyhow, Griff found someone whose competency he felt confident with. This was David Foster, a 75 year old who has lived in Trinidad for 51 years. He was a commercial airline pilot for 39 of those years. He moves extremely slowly now and we were concerned about him getting on and off the boat while on the mooring ball since he had an operation on his inner ear that affects his balance. He did manage though. We are going to go into one of the marinas for a week so we can get the equipment installed. We ran all the wires yesterday. We are quite fortunate in that our rudder pole has already got a piece of gear on that that allows us to hook up the linear drive without having to clamp anything new on to the rudder. David said he has not seen that particular attachment for years and could never understand why they stopped using them. Needless to say it will make our job easier.
The other things we are hoping to get done are re-covering the cushions below decks, making some awnings to cover the hatches so they can stay open when it rains, and maybe get the companionway and companionway hatch re-varnished.
One of the things that we have gotten done is to put up our back awning. The previous owners had it up when we first saw the boat but one of the supports looked broken and although she said they would have it replaced, based on their previous record, we didn't have much hope. Lo and behold, however, we put it up and it works fine. We are going to have to waterproof it however.
The second thing we got done was we got the spinnaker pole down from where it is kept running up the mast. Unfortunately we had to take the support that was fastened to the mast off because we couldn't open the latch that clamps the pole to the mast. After getting it down, we still couldn't open the latch so rather than break it through lack of knowledge, we are going to get a rigger to open it up and get it working properly. That way we can use the spinnaker if we ever get the nerve up but we can also use it as a whiskerpole with the foresail when we run wing on wing (mainsail out on one side of the boat and foresail out on the other side - used running downwind).
We are going to start going on some tours, the first one being tomorrow to the open-air market in Port-of-Spain. We also hope to go to a pitch lake, to a swamp where Trinidad's national bird, the scarlet ibis, nests and maybe to a bird santuary that is inland where there are many multicoloured macaw, parrots and other noisy but beautiful birds.
A Fellow Sailer
2 comments:
wow, you're really turning into sailors! I can't understand half of the sailing terms and tech talk in your blogs anymore;)
That seems ridiculous about the bilge water. You'd think there would be some kind of protection in place against dumping oil like that.
Oh, and you couldn't find someone older than 75 to put in your autopilot??? Ha, just kidding, I can't believe you didn't already have that feature, seems like a must-have.
ciao for now
gross about the oil and the disgusting picture of the garbage in the water. YUCK. That must suck that you can't jump in and rinse off. Great news about the awning. It looks good and gives you lots more space on deck eh. take some pics of Mr. 75 installing the auto pilot....
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