Our friend Mark wishes us and Crystal Blues goodbye as we leave Tobago |
Mohamed and Eva in the customs office also spent time with us on the beach--Mohamed and his wife Wendy became good friends |
After a month in Charlotteville, where the anchorage
contained 10-15 boats and we got to know the locals by name, Grenada has
been culture shock. From the sea we spotted multiple anchorages—and any one of
them contained more boats than the number that crossed the South Atlantic or Indian Ocean last year. When we pulled in after our
overnight sail from Tobago, both us and
Crystal Blues anchored on the outer edges and wondered what we’d gotten
ourselves into.
A tiny portion of one anchorage in Grenada |
It turns out we’ve arrived in a type of cruiser’s heaven (or
not heaven, depending on what you like). The morning net detailed a dizzying
number of activities from volleyball and jam sessions, to hikes and Mexican train
dominos (it’s like adult summer camp here). There are also shopping busses—although
the local transit is cheap and fantastic so we didn’t entirely understand the
point—and various marine services which deliver to your boat.
The yards here are popular for hurricane season haulout--we counted some boats packed in eight deep |
Then there are the marine chandleries. Over the past seven
years we’ve been thrilled if a hardware store had a part that could double as a
marine part. Occasionally we’ve come across a poorly stocked, uber expensive
marine store. But here there are TWO marine super stores which have all the
things we’ve been looking for at more-or-less affordable prices, as well as
stuff we always thought should exist but had never seen proof of.
Unfortunately Grenada
(unlike Tobago) also has super high levels of
Zika. The day before we planned to sail to Curacao,
Maia was complaining of very sore joints and developed a strange rash on her
face. Most people don’t get many symptoms from Zika—but Maia’s were so classic
we decided to stay put until she was over the worst of it.
Our lovely boat kid has acquired a variety of traditions from her travels--her first high heels for her quinceaƱera |
Sadly this means her 15th birthday won’t happen
in Curacao, but at sea. We’d already
celebrated a pre-birthday with Crystal Blues, when we thought we were going separate
ways, weeks ago but we thought we’d do another celebration—complete with a pair
of long-awaited high heeled shoes and a steel drum band.
Admittedly we’ve not seen as much of Grenada and we
wish we could. We managed to meet blogging friends from Zero-to-Cruising and
wandered around the main town of St Georges, but mostly our time has been spent
installing batteries and having one last goodbye evening with Ley and Neil (I think
we’re up to goodbye number 11 or 12…)
We've been lucky to have spent much of the past year with Ley and Neil and will miss them hugely when we part ways |
The final goodbye is looming though. Maia is recovering, the
weather looks agreeable and Evan has a flight booked out of Curacao
which he can’t miss.
3 comments:
We wish Maia a complete and speedy recovery plus a very happy birthday. You guys have a safe and fun passage to your next destination along with fair winds and calm seas.
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