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December 2015 Ahead to January 2016
December 4, 2015I am in the Bahamas! To be sure I would be in the Abacos for my kids at the beginning of January I grabbed a weather window to cross the Gulf Stream on 12/2/2015. In the best of times these opportunities come about once every week. At the worst of times, like the past month, it may be weekS before the wind goes enough south to be able to get across. At present I am at Green Turtle Cay, 150 miles east of the Palm Beaches. The original settlers were loyalists who fled the terrorists of the American colonies who were rising up against the English King. There are some bronze plaques in the town sculpture garden which give an interesting interpretation of the American Revolution. The loyalists brought along people of color. If you believe the plaques those people came willingly and of their own free will.
December 6, 2015
Green Turtle Cay




In a previous photo I said a driver and a free diver work each skiff. Out on the fishing grounds Early in the season sheets of wood or corrugated metal sheets are put on top of cinder blocks on the bottom with a weight on top. These are examples right in New Plymouth harbor. The lobster 'hide' under the sheets. The guys in the skiff go out from the big boat each day and visit the traps. The diver swims to the bottom and brings up the catch. In some parts of the Bahamas the fisherman with lesser resources use traps or pots more like those used in New England
This is one of the local lobster boats. They go out for weeks at a time. You can see two of the 4-6 skiffs that they tow out to the fishing grounds. A driver and a free diver work each of the little boats. The thing that looks like a crane is an outrigger from which they drop a 'bird' in the water while underway. There is a matching outrigger on the other side of the boat. When the birds are in the water they reduce the roll in rough seas.


I like this Plymouth Rock at least as much as the other one I visited in Massachusetts during the summer

Admonition at the ferrry dock
Da Beach

 The sea wall near Da Beach



In spite of the bronze plaques on the base of this sculpture attributed to Sandra Riley, we have the following: "When emancipation was proclaimed in 1834 there were about 300 slaves and 16 liberated Africans on Green Turtle Cay out of total population of 800, and a total Abaco population of 1800," Williams said. "We don't have any information about free blacks at this time, but there were 39 family head applications for land on the cay in 1835. The cost of quarter-acre town lots and 5-acre provision grounds for these former slaves was about 10 days labour laying out roads for the settlement." Be that as it may, I have found race relations in the Bahamas to be quite good. nonetheless, a couple of communities remain essentially segregated; Man O'War Cay and Spanish Wells. Based on casual observation, the greatest miscegenation has been on Long Island
December 13, 2015A visit to Mermaid Reef, one of several protected reefs around the Sea of Abaco
A walk around the environs of Marsh Harbour
 Beach restoration at the Crossing near Marsh Harbor and scenes around town.
December 15, 2015 En route from Tilloo to Hope Town

Castle Keep
This schooner was just pulling out of the Tilloo Bank anchorage as I was pulling in. Looked like they were headed for Lubbers Quarter toward Hope Town. Wonder if they know how shallow it is at the north end of Lubbers? Not my monkey, not my circus
December 15

Hope Town
From both sides now: one view of the Hope Town Lighthouse from the deck of Andante and on the other side from inside Hope Town Harbour. The very first picture is the estate of an inventor -- orthopedic surgeon. Note the castle keep. Also on the grounds is a building with a ramp to the water and huge garage door so he can get his sea plane out of the weather. Other pictures are a few of the many rental cottages, some detail from the memorial garden, a bit of history, the school and the Hope Town waterfront
December 15, 2015
First visit to Hope Town



At the entrance to Hope Town


Hope Town Elementary Shocol
December 19, 2015
On Andante I have two 12v battery banks. Think of this as two reservoirs of electricity from which the boat's appliances are powered. The reservoirs are refilled by my solar panels and/or wind turbine. Down the left edge of the photo are the three instruments that keep track of what is going on with the electrical system. The top display showing 13.5 and a single green light is the solar panel controller. The number, 13.5, is the voltage being applied across the poles of the house battery bank. Think of it as the pressure being applied to push electrons, or amps, back into the batteries. The display below it, showing 1.8, tells me that 1.8 amperes per hour are going into the house bank. Finally, the analog display at the bottom shows that at the instant the picture was taken the wind turbine was not supplying any amperes to the system. At noon On a sunny day my solar panels will show a voltage of 14.4v and be putting out about 14 amperes per hour. When I took the picture it was 10 AM on a cloudy day and the batteries were almost fully charged, hence both the voltage and ampere numbers are quite low. How does it happen that my batteries are fully charged by 10 AM on a cloudy day? Some big wind came in about midnight, powering the turbine. When I looked at the displays this morning the turbine was applying 14.4 volts to the batteries and pumping out 10-12 amps per hour while the solar panels were doing almost nothing. Those are big numbers for my little turbine, and that's a lot of wind even for the Bahamas.
December 21, 2015 Life on a cruising boat starts at 6 AM with coffee, then weather on the shortwave radio at 6:30 AM with Chris Parker. He bases his forecast on the GFS (NOAA) model and the EURO (German) model! plus his years of experience in these waters. It takes him about 1/2 hour to do his routine Consisting of an overall synopsis then 4-5 days of detail for four sections of the Bahamas. Among cruisers he has God-like status. Among users of his service are the masters of Ocean Energy and Lady Marie. Ocean Energy is a fuel ship delivering diesel and gasoline throughout the Bahamas. He is in a different port nearly every day, returning to near Nassau to reload nearly every week. Lady Marie is a lobster boat known to all the cruisers that visit the Jumentos Cays. Captain George must know the weather to keep his boat and crew in small runabouts safe. If Parker is good enough for them he is sure good enough for me. This year forecasting is a little harder. When I arrived on the Little Bahama Bank and the Sea of Abaco there was a low pressure trough that sat on top of the area for a week; very unusual. Now there is a subtropical high pressure ridge sitting on top of us since last Friday and expected to remain until nearly 1/1, bringing us VERY brisk winds; very unusual. The usual pattern is that the ridges and troughs move through in a weekly cycle. The weather determines where and when we sail and how we schedule mundane tasks like getting fuel, water, groceries and laundry

December 23, 2015

Great Guana Cay





Even paradise has its downside. This tree is like poison ivy or poison sumac on steroids. The antidote is a tea steeped from the bark of a tree that is very similar in appearance


Grounds of Grabbers


  Nippers has two pools and seating that overlooks the beach and reefs on the Atlantic Ocean



 Grabbers is a mini resort on the beach at Fishers Bay



 This says a lot about the crowd that hangs out at Nippers
Welcome

December 24, 2015

It is Christmas Eve on Andante. Merry Christmas to friends and family around the world (Venezuela, New Zealand, China, Europe, Japan, you get the idea). May peace be with you. I have strung lights across the stern of Andante so that Santa can find me and bring me a small piece of the peace that I have wished for you all. With any luck, in the parlance of economists (and I are one), peace is a pure public good which can be consumed by all of us with no diminution of the quantity supplied
December 25 Merry Christmas

December 27


Junkanoo at Sea Speay Marina in White Sound on Elbow Cay.  Take some junk and turn it into a new costume; get it?


 December 29, 2015

A revisit to Elbow Cay for those needing a lighthouse fix.


 On the porch of the Hope Town Museum


 Like many groceries in the out islands of the Bahamas this one is about 1/10 the size of what North Americans think of as a grocery.


Handle on the access door at the top of the lighthouse


 Andante riding at anchor on the west side of Elbow Cay below the lighthouse.


 Hope Town Harbour. This is not someplace to swim, that is why I am anchored outside


 One of the two reservoir and pump mechanisms that feed kerosene to the light. Only one because some brain dead tourists were trying to walk into my picture.


A dizzying view of the lighthouse rigged with strings of lights for Christmas.
 

First lobster of the season with the help of Kathy and Jofn on Makani. Three of us to get this one little lobster? John got us to the reef. Kathi speared it. I reached into its lair to pull it out so it wouldn't wriggle off the spear.

December 30, 2015 Well, I got tired of being shaken and stirred by every mother's son and his children's in laws who rented a cottage and go-fast power boat on Elbow Cay. Every one of them felt compelled to roar by my anchorage at least four times each day between the hours of 7:30 AM and 7:30PM. Made the long sail of 5 miles down to another anchorage just south of Tilloo Cut. Within 10 minutes two of them showed up to anchor next to me and quaff their first brewskis while their kids shrieke. They're gone now. While they were disturbing the neighborhood I took the dinghy over to Lubbers Landing and Cracker P's; two beach side bar and grills right next to each other that can only be reached by boat. Now I know where all the maniacs roaring by me at Elbow Cay were headed.