CruiseNews 37
Date: 29 January, 2001
Port of Call: Hurricane Hole, St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands
Subject: Back in the U.S. of A.
When we sailed into Christiansted Harbor on 20 December we felt like
we were returning home. It was wonderful to see the U.S. flag snapping
tautly in the breeze over the yellow walls of Fort Christianvaern.
We had been out of U.S. waters for nearly a year, and we had been looking
forward to returning to a U.S. territory. We wanted things that are
simply unavailable in the rest of the Caribbean: telephones where
1-800 numbers actually work; post offices where stamps cost only 33¢;
ATMs which dispense dollars; and chains of stores which carry the brands
and types of products that we grew up with.
Consequently, the first thing we did on our first full day here (after
checking in with customs, of course) was to hop on the bus and visit K-Mart!
With only four days left until Christmas, we navigated our shopping cart
down the aisles and gawked at what was, to us, an astounding collection
of merchandise.
Arriving at St. Croix was like returning home in other ways.
On our second day in St. Croix we had lunch with several amateur radio
operators we had been talking to on the Caribbean Maritime Mobile Net for
the previous year. Even though it was our first meeting, in some
ways it was like a reunion of long separated friends. We met Lou,
John, Jeanette, and Jim-all active hams on St. Croix-and chatted for an
hour or two. We got invited to go to church with Jeanette on Christmas
Eve, and to a party at John and Jeanette's on Christmas Day. We gladly
accepted both invitations.
The next day we went really wild and went to BOTH K-Marts on St. Croix!
We were looking for lots of little things we hadn't been able to find in
over a year and we wanted to make sure we left no stone unturned.
Somehow we also wound up with a new VCR as our Christmas present to each
other.
Christmas Eve aboard Sovereign
On Christmas Eve,
Jeanette picked us up at the waterfront and drove us to her church.
It sat up on a hill looking down on grassy knolls, the ruins of windmills,
and the expanse of the blue Caribbean. We sat listening to the choir
practice before the service and looked out the huge picture windows at
the magnificent view. During the service, the minister didn't seem
to have any trouble competing with the view, and by noon the service had
finished. We had lunch with Jeanette, John, and Lou at a restaurant
nearby.
Christmas "hams" John, Margo, Clive, Bud, and Gail
On Christmas, after
opening our gifts and watching "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" on our
new VCR, we took the dinghy in to the waterfront, where Lou met us and
drove us to the Christmas Party at John and Jeanette's. More local
hams were there (including a guy who looked suspiciously like Santa Claus
and they asked him if he was tired after "last night"!), plus some other
boaters including Clive and Margot from "Revid", who we had met last spring
on our way south through the islands. We had a great time with our
new-old friends; it was a wonderful Christmas.
On Boxing Day, John kindly offered the use of his frequency counter
to help align my ham radio, and John and I spent much of the day working
on my radio. I spent the rest of the day admiring what is undoubtedly
the finest ham shack I have ever seen. Cathy stayed behind on the
boat, opting to rest and relax.
Exploring the powder magazine at Ft. Christiansvaern
The next day we
played tourist: We toured Fort Christiansvaern, walking through the
portcullis, climbing up the ramparts, peering into the dungeon, the powder
magazine, the officer's quarters, and all the other nooks and crannies
of an early 18th century fortress. We took the obligatory photograph,
with one of us standing by the cannons as Sovereign floated in the harbor
in the background. In the afternoon we took a day-trip to Buck Island,
a national park near St. Croix, and went snorkeling there. Now that
we have the yardstick of the fabulous reefs of the Tobago Cays, every other
place we snorkel seems a bit of a disappointment. Still, we had fun.
We motored Sovereign back to Christiansted Harbor, arriving just as the
sun set.
We were sad to leave all our new-found friends, but we were looking
forward to picking up some mail we had asked to have sent to St. John.
So on 29 December we left for St. John with hopes that our mail would be
waiting for us. Aside from having to maneuver to avoid a large tanker,
the 40-mile trip was an uneventful motorsail in light winds. When
we arrived and checked for our mail, we found that not only was our mail
not there, it hadn't even been sent yet! We resigned ourselves to
having to wait a while longer for the mail.
Relaxing at Water Creek
In the mean time,
we tucked Sovereign into a little cove called Water Creek, off of Hurricane
Hole in St. John. Water Creek is one of only a handful of anchorages
in the Caribbean that is not plagued by rolling ocean swells, and we have
been enjoying the calm. The land surrounding Water Creek is part
of the Virgin Islands National Park, so it is undeveloped. The harbor
is lined with mangroves and the hills are covered with a mixture of cactus
and leafy saplings. The water is much clearer than usual for a mangrove-lined
harbor. Pelicans dive-bomb the mangrove fringes for dinner.
Schools of blue stripers churn up the water around the boat with such fury
that it sometimes sounds like an angry mob is beating their fists against
the side of the hull trying to get in.
We celebrated a very quiet New Year's Eve here, deciding to toast the
New Year at midnight Greenwich time, which is 8:00 PM local time. We are
sharing the harbor with only a few other boats, because it is such a long
way from shore facilities. Every few days we dinghy in to Coral Bay
to check for mail and visit friends.
One night we dropped in and had drinks with John and Betty from "Parrothead",
who we first met in Los Testigos, Venezuela. They introduced us to
Dave and Robin on "Intrepid", who generously loaned us a stack of movies
for our new VCR. We spent the next day saucer-eyed, watching five
movies and draining our batteries in the process. The next day we
watched two more movies, and pretty much got completely over the longings
for TV we had been having.
We had been checking with the mail service every day or two, and finally
on 6 January one of the packages showed up. Unfortunately two more
packages were still missing in action. Instead of getting upset,
we decided to cruise around St. John while waiting for the rest of our
mail. We motored around to the north side of St. John, not because
the wind was light, but because our batteries were still low from the TV
marathon and running the watermaker. In the early afternoon we picked
up a Park Service mooring in Francis Bay.
Customs House, Whistle Cay, Francis Bay
Francis Bay is
a stereotypical Caribbean anchorage. It is rimmed by white sandy
beaches and has lush green foliage and palm trees growing near the shoreline.
Tourists sunbathe on the beaches and swim in the aqua waters. A few
dozen boats bob in the gentle swell tied to the Park Service moorings.
While there we met up with Bob and Mona from "Mutual Fun". They
had left Hampton, Virginia with us in November 1999 bound for the Caribbean.
While we had our rough 7-1/2 day passage to Bermuda, they got stuck between
persistent easterly headwinds, Hurricane Lenny to the south, and a strong
cold front to the west. They decided to turn back and wound up taking
ten days to travel from Hampton, Virginia to Beaufort, North Carolina,
a straight-line distance of around 100 miles. They tried again this
year and finally made it, and we had a nice reunion.
Trunk Bay, St. John, USVI
After two nights
in Francis Bay, we motored over to Trunk Bay and picked up a mooring there.
Sixteen years earlier on our honeymoon aboard the cruise ship "Southward",
we spent a day snorkeling at Trunk Bay, and we wanted to do it again from
our own boat. We snorkeled to the underwater "trail" and followed
along it. The fan coral was surprisingly healthy considering the
heavy traffic the area gets, but the most obvious wildlife were the schools
of tourists in their cruise-ship issued dive gear. We were literally
elbow-to-elbow with other snorkelers as we scissor-kicked our way along
the "trail".
Waterlemon Bay
Trunk Bay is just
a day anchorage, so we motored over to Waterlemon Bay and picked up a mooring
there for a few nights. We spent a few quiet days reading and puttering
around the boat, then motored back (again more due to low batteries than
lack of wind) to our favorite anchorage in Hurricane Hole.
With our two packages still missing and presumed lost, we decided to
head over to St. Thomas. We wanted to re-fit our high-output alternator
so we wouldn't have to run our engine so long to make electricity, and
we had heard that St. Thomas had the best machine shop in the islands.
So on 15 January we motored (to make more electricity) over to Water Island
near St. Thomas. After a good bit of thought, we finally decided
on a design that would allow us to keep two alternators and the refrigeration
compressor mounted on the engine simultaneously. A friend of John
and Betty from "Parrothead" offered to drive us to the machine shop and
introduce us to the owner. We gave him a pattern for a new alternator
bracket. After three days and a few trips back and forth so we could
align everything precisely, and a few more trips to the auto parts store
for new belts, we finally got everything set up like we wanted.
We decided on one more trip back to St. John to check on our mail,
and so we motored (this time with a strong wind and big seas from dead
ahead) just in time to drop the anchor in Hurricane Hole as darkness fell.
The next day we checked on the mail, and by a great miracle the rest of
the shipment had finally arrived, only 33 days after we requested it!
We had a second Christmas on 20 January, opening all the wonderful Christmas
cards and year-end letters we had been sent. We smiled gleefully
as we pulled two months worth of magazines out of the mail envelope.
We have spent the last week officially "waiting for weather".
While waiting we have done a few odd jobs: we finished bolting on
the high output alternator (137 amps, wow!); we changed the engine oil
and filters; and we built an automatic anchor light so we can come back
to the boat after dark, and the anchor light will be on.
Petroglyphs, St. John, USVI
Last Friday we
took a hike with John and Betty from "Parrothead" through a part of Virgin
Islands National Park where we hadn't been before. We started high
up on the centerline road in the middle of the island and hiked down the
remains of an old oxcart trail. Thick forest surrounded us on both
sides. Along one side of the trail ran a wall of fieldstones that
marked the boundary of an old sugar plantation. Occasionally we would
cross the ruins of old stone houses, or stop to read trail markers explaining
the native flora and fauna. We hiked up a side trail to view the
petroglyphs, a sort of ancient graffiti carved into the face of rocks,
then went down to the beach and saw the ruins of the last working sugar
mill on St. John. The five-mile hike took us around four hours with
all the stops and side trips. The end of the hike was back up the
steep trail, and we were glad to get back to the boat and relax after all
the exercise.
Every day we listen to the weather forecasts and look at the weather
charts we receive on the computer through the ham radio. At about
430 miles, the passage from the U.S. Virgin Islands to the Turks and Caicos
will be our longest in over a year. We are heading back into an area
where weather is more changeable than in the Caribbean, where we once again
have to deal with cold fronts and low pressure systems. Today was
almost a "go", but the weather didn't evolve as forecast, so we are back
to playing the waiting game. As always, we will have to wait and
see what tomorrow brings.
Smooth sailing,
Jim and Cathy