After taking our
best shot at reaching Rum Cay under sail from Conception, we had only
progressed about three miles in two hours. Although we had all day to get
there, it was just too frustrating so we gave up and motored into the wind. As
we neared the island I noticed on the chart that we were running along a ridge
where the water went from very very deep to relatively shallow and mentioned to
Jon that maybe he should check the trolling line. The last time we caught a
fish there was no other indicator, I just grabbed the line and realized there
was something on it. So Jon checked, and sure enough, we'd hooked another fish
of many colors and names, the dolphin-fish/mahi-mahi/dorado. This one was much
bigger than the first, and male. Jon brought him into the boat as we neared the
coral head-strewn shoreline and the sky grew dark with clouds. We managed to
anchor safely without hitting any coral heads or tripping and falling onto the
dead fish in the cockpit. As we were setting the anchor we were being
unofficially hailed over the radio and told in no uncertain terms that we
should make tracks to shore to participate in Rum Cay Day. We could hear loud
music drifting out over the water as soon as we turned off the engine.
It seemed that the
few other boats in the anchorage were already at the party, so our plans to
share our big fish with the neighbors didn't seem likely to pan out. And though
I considered it a potentially worthwhile challenge, there was no way we could eat all of that fish ourselves without a way
to keep it cold. So Jon put the fish in the dinghy and rowed to shore in search
of someone willing to cook some of it for us and keep the rest for themselves.
He found just such a person and place, so two days later we were served a very
lovely fish dinner at Kaye's Bar and Restaurant.
After taking care of
the fish, Jon came back to get me and we joined the party. We were pleasantly
surprised to find that the boats in the harbor were largely crewed by young
people. Though we were exhausted from spending all day in the sun, I kept being
handed free drinks so we stayed out until the party began to move down the
street. We left after watching the cops put the kibosh on about five too many people trying to ride
in and all over a suburban to the next bar. We were told that Rum Cay Day has
stretched into a three-day-long weekend celebration, but the party seemed to
mellow down substantially after that first night.
Throughout our stay
we listened to the weather each morning and heard only bad news. Our sailboat
tour of the Bahamas had so far been characterized by cold front after cold
front, providing a lot of north and west winds which were not so desirable for
most of the available anchorages. However, now that we were in the out islands,
ready to use the cold fronts to leave the Bahamas, it looked like it might be
weeks before we would get another front and instead we would have nothing but
east and southeasterly trade winds. That wouldn't have been such bad news if we
were camped out in a nice protected anchorage, but instead we were rather
exposed on the south side of the island with nothing but a few stretches of
reef to break up the swell. Rolling around day after day we started to feel
pretty defeated and began to wonder whether we would (or should) venture
farther than the Bahamas this year. In addition to our dwindling enthusiasm, we
were running low on water and food with little to no options for replenishing
our stores.
Still, we were
enjoying the company of other young cruisers and Jon had fun spending the
better part of a day snorkeling with a few of the guys, despite coming back
empty-handed. But the next day he found our first full-sized conch. The
extraction process did not go smoothly and the little sucker wouldn't come out.
The shell was starting to show some signs of the struggle and Jon was getting
frustrated. In his determination to get the snail out, his hand slipped and he
sliced open a finger on the outer ridge of the shell. There was blood
everywhere. As Jon laid on the floor of the cabin, paralyzed by the sight of
his own blood, I pulled out our first aid supplies and tried to get him to hold
still. Just then one of the guys from another boat stopped by, and it was
highly entertaining for me to have someone else
there to witness the long process of putting a bandage on Jon's finger.
The cut really wasn't that bad, but it did bleed a lot. Later, after a lot more
bashing, pounding, ripping, and scraping, we had thoroughly destroyed a
perfectly good conch shell and subjected the creature inside to a long and
terrible death. After slicing off the slimy bits and cutting the conch into
chunks, we produced a whopping quarter cup of meat which we soaked in lime
juice and added to a salsa of tomatoes, peppers, and onions for ceviche. We
both had at the back of our minds that the whole conch debacle was really bad karma, and not something we wanted
to repeat anytime soon.
That night Jon went
to shore to see what was going on and took some of our ceviche to share. I had
had enough excitement for the day and was looking forward to relaxing with a
book on the boat. I had just gone to bed when I heard somber voices outside the
boat and someone who was not Jon clearly said sympathetically, "Sorry,
man." This was not good. Jon called my name as he lowered himself into the
cabin and announced that he had lost the dinghy. Yep, you read that correctly.
He explained that
when he went to shore he pulled the dinghy up on the beach but somehow forgot
to set the anchor in the sand. When he came back in the dark several hours
later, the dinghy was gone. He went back on the dock to call to Contagious, and Eric very kindly drove Jon
around in their dinghy for an hour searching for our little boat. It was too
rough to go very far in the dinghy and pretty difficult to see much in the dark
anyway, so they called it quits. There was nothing more we could do, we would
just have to go to sleep and see if it washed up somewhere on the island in the
morning. It seemed much more likely that little Bobbie (yep, she finally had a
name, one that I spent the length of one Jon nap painting on her stern, along
with some little pink hearts) was out in the middle of the Atlantic somewhere,
never to be seen by us again. I kept telling myself that things could be worse,
which certainly they could, but it was still a restless night spent worrying
about how we would manage without a dinghy, where we could get a new one, and
waking up hoping it was all just a bad dream.
We were up at dawn
to move the boat closer to shore so that Jon could swim to the beach on the
surfboard. He then enjoyed a long jog down the beach, searching for any signs
of the dinghy, though feeling it was probably a pointless task and she was long
gone. Just as he was about to give up the search, he thought he saw a little
boat floating just offshore further up the beach. Sure enough there she was,
but as he got closer he saw that she was just about cracked in half and full of
water. On the bright side, the oars were still onboard along with the
handy-dandy little anchor and Jon's flip-flops!
Jon pulled the boat
up onto beach and set back down the road looking like a proper shipwreck
survivor: soaking wet, covered in sand, bleeding from his reopened conch wound
and carrying everything he'd found on the beach other than the actual dinghy. A
very nice stranger in a jeep, Alfonso, asked Jon if perhaps he might like a
ride. Jon explained what he had been doing and Alfonso said he had a trailer
and could help get the dinghy back to the dock. With considerably more effort
and teamwork the boat was eventually loaded on the trailer and delivered to the
dock and Jon swam back to Baby Blue.
Eric offered Jon a
ride back to the dock with all of his tools so he could spend the rest of the
morning patching the dinghy back together as best as he could with what we had
on board. Jon's birthday happened to be the next day, so I spent the morning making
a cake, which actually went relatively well considering my kitchen was
continually tilting 30 degrees one way and then the other. Jon used up all of
the fiberglass resin we had, and by the afternoon we had one leaky but floating
dinghy and one lopsided birthday cake.
On Jon's birthday,
with a little help we polished off the entire cake, performed our limited
repertoire of songs on ukulele and guitar for a very small crowd at Kaye's, and
had a long talk about where we were headed. In the end, we decided that instead
of suffering through the next week of predicted strong trade winds at Rum Cay,
we would backtrack to Long Island where we could fill up with water, buy more
fiberglass resin, and hopefully enjoy ourselves while the boat stayed level. If
the weather provided an opportunity we would set out again toward the Turks and
Caicos or even the Dominican Republic. If the right conditions didn't come in
the next couple of weeks we would accept our fate and take our time heading
north, back through the Bahamas at a leisurely pace on our way to spend the
summer in the US.
We felt a little
down as we left Rum Cay the next day, wondering whether we would make it even
that far east again. Though on the other hand deciding not to force our way
south and giving into a bit of fatalism where the weather was concerned also
felt like a huge relief. So with mixed feelings, for the first time we gave up
miles made good and turned back in the direction we'd come.
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