Old friends and new in Tobago

Last time we left you we were still in Grenada. This time we will regale you with our recent adventures in Tobago. We are a little behind at the moment, so please bear with us. I am writing this sat in Azimuth on the hard in a boat yard in Trinidad. Its been a crazy and enjoyable few weeks. Let me tell you more…

Our good friends Sally and Andrew and their daughter Erin had made a brave choice…. to join us on Azimuth for two weeks on the paradise isle of Tobago!

We were very excited to be leaving Grenada and heading for Tobago to meet our friends! Being only a short walk from a marina where the guide book told us there was a customs and immigration office, checking out of Grenada should have been simple right? Further investigation revealed that infact that office no longer existed. So a new bus route had to be negotiated to get us to the marina in St Georges. I think we must be getting better at finding our way around. It was an easy trip and no problem checking out of the country.

The trip to Tobago looked a bit more tricky. Having got thoroughly used to sailing on a beam or broad reach for the last 6 months, now we were faced with a tricky upwind 70 mile sail. We left that evening and things got progressively harder. As well as the tight wind angle, there was also a strong current against us, the so called equatorial current that flows around the top of South America through the gap between Trinidad and Grenada with Tobago slap in the middle. The winds were light and the sea state was calm for the Atlantic, and it was a lovely sail. Sunrise bought us in sight of Tobago in the distance, and a negotiation with the Trinidad coastguard allowed us to drop anchor in Store Bay on the South West corner of the island. We were one of only 4 boats in the anchorage, a rare feeling in the Caribbean where most anchorages are rammed full of boats.

The rules about checking into Tobago seemed to be quite complicated and arcane in comparison to the rest of the Caribbean. Firstly we had the phone the medical officer. He told us to wait on the boat until he arrived and issued us with a medical certificate? It took about 2 hours for him to get there and then he told us to come to shore. He didn’t ask us any questions, just issued a certificate on the beach?! I don’t think we have ever started a checking in process to anywhere on the beach?! Then he gave us loads of help on where to get money and how to get a taxi from Store Bay to Scarborough to get to Immigration and Customs, who he informed us were waiting for us. The 20 minute taxi ride cost £2 for both of us! The way it works is that everyone shares taxis and they go on set routes. A very easy and sensible system.

On arrival at immigration, the number of forms was bewildering. All filled in in triplicate with the old style carbon paper. I had to find a local photocopier to make multiple copies of boat papers and passports too. However, the people were very friendly, and we got through the process in a couple of hours.

So we had a week to wait before the Thompsons were due to arrive and we decided to get to know the lay of the land. The great joy of that week was meeting all the cruisers anchored in Store Bay. We had a truly international bunch. Tom, Kate and their son Marley from Australia. Gustavo and Danielle from Switzerland, Mark and Susan from USA and Pascal and Veronique from France. What a lovely bunch of people all sharing the same sailing life as us. We were the newbies on the block having only been at sea for a year!

Tobago is a relatively hard place to get to from a sailing point of view. And people are also put off by the reputation of the difficulty of checking in, as well as a history of piracy in these waters. That meant we were only one of about 6 cruising boats on the whole island. So different to other parts of the Caribbean, and we really felt like we had the place to ourselves.

The local beach bar was right next to the anchorage and this became the “clubhouse” for the cruisers! We got to meet everyone in there for a few beers regularly. This is where we found out about “Sunday School”, a local tradition held every Sunday night where we could experience a proper Caribbean party. So a plan was hatched. Some of us sailed up the coast to Irvine Bay, whilst others opted for the taxi route. it turned out to be a relatively small affair but great fun none the less. A huge PA system was blasting out reggae tunes. Many people were competing to see who could smoke the largest joints. There was a distinct smell in the air. Later in the evening the local Steel Band struck up a tune. They were really good. Here’s a little taster…

So we had a couple of days in Irvine Bay and then headed back to Store Bay for the arrival of Sally, Andrew and Erin.

The guys had there own ordeal to deal with first of course, the travel from the UK, a night in a hotel in Port of Spain and then negotiating the ferry to Tobago. What could possibly go wrong??

Well there had been an issue with booking the ferry. It turned out that the weekend they were arriving in Trinidad was the end of the school year. Apparently its tradition in Trinidad for all the new school graduates to head to Tobago with their families and party. Everyone was trying to get to Tobago from Trinidad!

So the poor old Thompsons had to queue on standby to try an secure their seat on the ferry for three hours. Bless them though they managed to get on, and in premier class too. Phew. No sooner has the ferry left than the dreaded sea sickness kicked in …. The poor guys renamed the fast ferry the “vomitarium”. Three hours of hell apparently! However, they made it and negotiated the taxis in Scarborough and we met for a great reunion in Store Bay. Well done guys for the supreme effort!

No sooner had the Thompsons found the sanity of land and started to recover from the ferry ride, than we whisked them off to Azimuth in the dinghy and got them settled in. Unfortunately it was a bit rolly, and this did not help the sea sickness recovery process. It took them 24 hours to acclimatise, but hopefully they weren’t ready to jump ship at this point and check in to the nearest hotel, thinking what have we done???

Actually the next few days were very relaxing. Life consisted of lots of swimming off the back of the boat. Cursing at the jet skis as they used the anchored boats as a slalom course. Giving in to the heat of the afternoon with a tactical siesta and several trips to shore to sample the delights of Store Bay restaurants and the clubhouse.

A few days of relaxing as hard as possible had the trick and hopefully everyone settled in OK, despite the challenges of living in a confined space aboard a yacht.

We had Mark and Susan from the USA in the anchorage. They very kindly invited us all to celebrate the 4th of July with a BBQ on the beach. Bring your own potluck food and drinks.

What a great afternoon. Mark cooked up a feast of chicken and we all enjoyed the ambience of the beach.

Some of the guys bought along a couple of sets of the French game Boule. Later that afternoon, Pascal gathered up willing players and adjudicated over the game. Easier said than done given that a few of us had maybe had one or two beers. It was great fun. Apparently we were in two teams, but I don’t think many of us actually knew which team we were in?! It didn’t seem to matter. Eventually the teams were properly identified… of course it had to be Trinidad versus Tobago. The competition was fierce, but Trinidad took an early lead and Tobago just couldn’t make up the difference.

Thanks to Mark and Susan for putting this together. We all had a great time!

So, we wanted to take the Thompsons for a sail up the coast to show them a little of the island. But before we did this, it was time to first see Buccoo Reef and the Nylon Pool and for Erin to have a try at diving.

The Nylon Pool was pretty cool. Essentially it is like a swimming pool in the sea with an amazing aquamarine colour. Buccoo reef is huge and very shallow across much of the area, so we took the dinghy along the Tom, Kate and Marley to go and visit it. I took a short video on the GoPro

Our visit to the Nylon Pool

It was to be a day of watersports. After we got back from the visit to the Nylon Pool, many of the guys decided to go and dive on the reef in Store Bay. Tom is a dive master and he offered to take Erin for a dive too. The rest us non divers went for a snorkel which was pretty good, although the visibility was not the best.

So the next day we weighed anchor and set sail up the west coast of Tobago. The wind was a little tricky so after about 2 hours of beating upwind we relented and pulled in at Plymouth Bay and dropped the anchor off a huge sweeping beach

The next day we took a visit in to the town. This was very different in comparison to Store Bay, a more traditional Caribbean town free from the trappings of organised tourism. We visited James Fort, built by the English to protect the bay (probably from the French). We then found a great little shop serving up a delicious lunch and sat looking out over the bay.

After Plymouth we moved Azimuth down to Irvine Bay where we had been before and there is a really cool beach bar. More chilling for a few days here. We had a great night out at a local restaurant called “The Fish Pot”. The meal was delicious and the rum punch was flowing freely.

Meal at the Fishpot

We had one or two evenings in the beach bar where things may have got a little silly at times? Good cheap food was served too, cause by now we couldn’t be bothered to cook on the boat!

Whilst in Irvine Bay, we managed to get some details about a rain forest guide called Peter, a renowned botanist who took people on rainforest tours. We managed to arrange a tour for the next day. Peter insisted on a 6:30am start! That hurt … but we managed to assemble on the shore in time, and Peter picked us all up. It was a very memorable day and Peter was an excellent guide , hugely knowledgeable, and really lovely with it. Peter could whistle bird song of many of the forest birds and they would reply. He could also spot lots of different kinds of wildlife that we would have just missed if we were on our own.

On the trip to the rainforest we stopped at several beautiful bays on the way. All of them anchorages, shame we didn’t have the time to visit

The trail is called the Gilpin Trace. A Gilpin is an old Carib Indian word for a Machete. It was the Indians who originally cut the trail as a route across the island.

Peter caught this evil looking whip scorpion to show us. No one wanted to get too close!

Peter also found and opened a trapdoor spiders lair. He couldn’t get the spider to come out though. Perhaps for the best as I would have run a mile!

Here is a video I put together with some clips from the forest. Listen to the sounds in the background. It really was a magical place, and felt very prehistoric. I expected a dinosaur to appear on the trail at any moment.

Clips from our visit to the rainforest

What an amazing day. For me probably the highlight of our visit to Tobago.

Irvine Bay also had a really pretty reef that you snorkel to from the anchorage or by swimming off the beach. I put this video together. Look out for an eel sticking its head out of a hole in the coral, spotted by Sally. Erin got the best footage as she followed a shoal of fish as they swam around the reef.

All good things come to an end, and eventually it was time for us to head back to Store Bay and deliver the Thompsons to the airport. They had very sensibly decided to avoid the ferry journey back to Trinidad and opted for easier plane trip! As it happen the airport was only 5 minutes walk from the anchorage, easy!

Time for one last evening out and a meal at the Wonky Windmill. A few drinks at the clubhouse too

It was with a tear in the eye that we delivered the Thompsons to the airport the next day. Thankyou guys for coming to see us and making the huge effort to get to Tobago. We had a ball and we hope you enjoyed it too!

Join us next time as we head to Trinidad and get hauled out of the water in Chaguaramus for the dreaded boat work!

Grenadian Life

Last time we talked, we were exploring Grenada. Now having been here in this beautiful place for well over a month, we feel like we are well settled in to Grenadian life! It really is a very relaxed and easy going place. So lets give you a taste of what we have been up to for the last few weeks….

We had been anchored in Prickly Bay in the south of Grenada for a couple of weeks and were taking the dinghy in to shore when we happened to pass our friends on Water Music, Ken, Caroline and their dog Mitsy who had arrived a couple of days earlier. These were the guys we had previously met in Tobago Cays. We decided to set off to see some of Grenada together. We planned a trip on the bus to travel to the North of Grenada to see a chocolate plantation and visit Concord Falls, another popular waterfall.

After a long bus journey along the west coast of Grenada to the little town of Victoria, we took a walk up a winding road through the rain forest until we came upon the Jouvay chocolate plantation and factory. Ailsa was immediately in her element! Many years of chocolate eating had fully prepared her for this immersive experience. The brief tour of the plantation and the factory to see the making process was very interesting. The culmination was the factory shop where Ailsa was able to fully indulge her passion complete with tasting session.

We wondered back down to Victoria and met many of the locals on the way who came out to say hello. In the town there was some sort of small local festival going on, and we had lunch from a street stall with free beers! Everyone was very welcoming, and we even got to chat with a local politician who had just returned from a trip to the UK. We had a long wait for the bus for the next leg of our journey to Concord Falls

We arrived at the road to Concord Falls and were lucky enough to get a Taxi to take us up the 2 mile road. Another stunningly beautiful place, and really tastefully developed. You climb down some stone steps from the road to get to the falls. We all took the chance to go for a swim (including Mitsy!) which was really refreshingly cool in the heat of the afternoon. Some other steps led to a bar with views over the falls where the rum punch had to be sampled. The 2 mile walk back to the main road to catch the bus back to St Georges was down a windy track in a steep river gorge surrounded by magnificent rain forest clinging to impossibly steep cliffs. A couple more buses got us back to Prickly Bay via St Georges after a lovely day out.

On the days we are not out exploring (most days really!) we pretty much like to relax. Of course there always jobs to do on the boat. See the picture of me above. I have no idea how I managed to squeeze in to that space! Its not all sunshine either here in the Caribbean. Now its rainy season and the squalls and rain showers roll through pretty much every day.

Ken and Caroline were having their boat lifted out at the Spice Island boat yard in prickly bay and heading back to the UK to end their sailing adventure for a few months. Before they left, they wanted to explore some more of the little bays on the South end of Grenada. We decided to go along and join them. First stop was the next bay along where we dropped the hook in Petit Calvigny.

Night out at Whisper Cove

As well as numerous evenings on each others boats for the obligatory rum punches, we had a great night out in a very cool place called whisper cove.

A few days later we both moved round the corner to the lovely anchorage called Egmont Cove. This was the first non rolly anchorage we have had in Grenada, a very narrow entrance completely protects it from the sea. The trip round the corner was eventful when we got hit by 30 knot winds and torrential rain. All over in about 5 minutes though!

After a few more days in Egmont Cove we said a sad goodbye to Ken, Caroline and Mitsy on Water Music as they headed back to Prickly Bay to prepare to be lifted. All the best to them for their trip back to the UK and i’m sure we shall meet again, probably somewhere in the Pacific?!

Since then, we have stayed in Egmont Cove. We took a walk over the headland and visited Phare Bleu Marina and had lunch at their excellent restaurant

After lunch we decided to walk off the burgers and visited this unusual light ship moored in the marina

Then we stepped out on a long walk around the Egmont headland where there is a huge amount of building going on of some very impressive millionaires homes. Huge plots of land with bespoke houses, some of them with their own waterfronts and docks.

On another day, we decided to walk back to Whisper cove for lunch. It was a really hot day and we had to walk up and down some really big hills and cut through fields and forest. After all this effort, we found that the place was shut! Luckily there was another place called the Little Dipper just down the road that was open and it was a fantastic local cuisine meal. Really cheap too!

Finally, we cant leave with out mentioning the large number of birthdays that the Pearce family celebrate in June. We wish could have been there to celebrate with Caleb for his 21st and Vinnies 19th. It looks like they had a great time.

A certain someone else celebrated her birthday too. I can’t possibly divulge the age of this person for fear of being thrown overboard. Ken and Caroline couldn’t extract that information either, even after several glasses of wine!

Join us next time as we head towards Trinidad and Tobago!

Decent Beer, Rainforest & Waterfalls

Last time we left you in Union Island in St Vincent and the Grenadines. This time we sail south again and visit the island(s) of Grenada.

First stop was the Island of Carriacou, where we signed in to the country after dropping the hook in Tyrell Bay.

It felt like a partial return to civilisation after islands of the Grenadines. Tyrell Bay was full of yachts at anchor in front of a long sandy beach with a port at one side and boat yards. The town even had a couple of supermarkets and some nice restaurants that we took advantage of. It wasn’t the most inspiring of places though and maybe we have been a bit spoilt in the Grenadines? We did have a great dinner of red snapper though purchased still barely alive from the local fisherman delivered directly to the boat

We spent a few days here and then decided to move South again down towards the main island of Grenada. Our interest was piqued by the little Ronde Island on the way down and we decided to stop the night in a delightful anchorage.

We took the canoe to the little scrap of beach and landed in the swell and then spent a couple of hours snorkelling off the beach where there was a large reef teeming with fish.

The next day we set sail to Grenada proper. It was a glorious sail across smooth seas and down the west coast of Grenada which is a very dramatic island

We ummed and arred about an anchorage on the west coast but it looked like we would have to take a mooring buoy, so eventually we sailed round the south west corner and dropped the anchor in the attractive Prickly Bay where for the purposes of this post, we have been ever since.

Time to go and explore the local area. First stop, the marvellous discovery of decent beer!!! After a little stroll along the main road in Prickly bay we came across a place we had spotted in the guide book called the West Indian Brewery Company. It had to be investigated further and we were not disappointed!

As you can see, a proper micro brewery was hidden inside and the really friendly staff bent over backwards to make sure you sampled all the delights they had to offer! Real beer at crazy cheap prices is a recipe for success if you ask me and we have spent one or two visits enjoying the delights.

Just round the corner from this is prickly bay marina who have a great restaurant too and the promise of live music. So one Friday night we paid them a visit and enjoyed this steel band

We’ve taken a couple of day trips out on the local buses. They are as ever excellent value as long as you are willing to brave the crazy driving the cramped conditions and the distinct lack of suspension. Also great fun too, but it is sometimes difficult to talk over the large reggae sound system that each bus carries! So we took the bus to go and visit Grenada’s captial St Georges. It was a very vibrant place full of hustle and bustle. The main attraction for Ailsa had to be the Grenada Chocolate Museum and Shop. For me it was the vies of the town as we strolled around.

With our confidence improving, we decided to embark on a longer bus journey to go and explore the mountainous interior of this beautiful island. This time it would involve picking up a second bus from St Georges and working out where to get off to go and visit the Seven Sisters waterfall. We made it relatively easily with a tortuous ride up the mountain, reminiscent but arguably not quite as crazy as our previous St Lucian bus experience. We paid our 5 $EC entrance fee (about £1.50) where given bamboo walking sticks and sent on our way with some brief instructions in to a magical rain forest experience.

The temperature we realised was a much balmier 25 degrees compared to the 30 or so degrees at sea level. So it was a pleasant stroll through the bamboo, navigating our way down some precipitous and slippery steps towards the waterfall (thank goodness for the bamboo walking sticks). The sounds of the birds were pretty raucous and it felt altogether very prehistoric. Finally we came upon a river in the forest and walked up towards the sound of falling water

I couldn’t resist the opportunity for a swim and it was lovely and refreshing although I couldn’t manage to get right in to the falls as the current was quite strong.

We took our time enjoying the falls and then hiked back out to the road. A couple of miles further along and we came to Grand Etang, a crater lake in a volcano that has been extinct for 12000 years, and was now full of goldfish! It let us know we were in a rain forest and started tipping down with rain. So refreshing though in this heat.

We even saw a couple of monkeys in the park!

After the long bus journey(s) back to the boat, we were pretty exhausted, but it was definitely worth the effort.

Join us next time when we explore a bit more of Grenada.