| Offshore Foolishness |
CategoryMediterranean CruiseJanuary - House GuestsOn Thursday Jan 3rd, having recovered we left Richard and motored down towards Cadiz. It was quite warm overnight as we motored across the Baia Cadiz - no thermals or oilies required. On the way down we caught our first big fish - a bonito (a type of white tuna) - it probably would have fed around 8-10 people - we cut some steaks from it and returned the rest to the sea! Made a very nice supper baked with a little oil and herbs. We arrived in the early hours of the morning and then managed to leave the marina we had originally tied up in before Will awoke - which must be some sort of record. Puerto Sherry was a victim of the 80's property crash in the UK when the builders Brent Walker went under (the people who developed Brighton Marina). Basically P. Sherry is in same unfinished state it was in 1988! There is a shell of a second hotel and lots of partially completed houses and apartments. We arrived at 4am and tied to the reception pontoon to sleep until the office opened - it was very bumpy and noisy as the pontoon moved a huge amount in the Atlantic swell coming in round the corner of the wall. Here we discovered that the Spanish take Epiphany more seriously than Christmas - on Saturday we stepped off a bus (having been exploring Cadiz) into crowds waiting for the Procession of Kings through the town – a series of carnival floats following a couple of bands and a troop of mounted ‘Kings’. Later, when going out to eat, we found our way across the main square blocked by a huge crowd out to see a big firework display. Only in Spain would the fireworks be let off inside the castle with the audience outside of the walls and Carmen blasting out over everything! We still find it difficult to cope with shopping or anything official here as they close for 'lunch' from 12:30 til 17:00 or there abouts! On arrival at every marina we have to wait on the Reception Pontoon to be "cleared in " - mostly the marina staff work office hours with a typical Spanish lunch break but in Chipiona, they surpassed themselves - 9am to 12 noon then 16:00 to 17:00. Still we had a great sail to get there and were able to tie up far enough away from the fishing boats whilst we were waiting that we could enjoy the spectacle but not the smell! A short trip into town later and we were in pocession of two rather tatty looking full gas bottles so could cook our supper. From there we were off to Sevilla (over 50nm inland) in the boat. Unfortunately we had to go up the river with the tide in order to get all the way up without fighting the river current - this meant getting up at some unearthly hour (like 5am)..... As the whole crew by now was well into the Spanish way of life - lunch after 2pm and supper after 10pm - by getting up later and later in order to recuperate, getting up 'early' was going to be tough. It was very chilly and dark when we left Chipiona and headed north across the Bay for the channel bouys that mark the river entrance. Over the next hour or so the entire Bonanza fishing fleet came down the channel towards us – worrying us more than a little by some of their lights which indicated the boat was trawling with outlying gear of more than 150m when the channel was less than 100m wide!! And yes the town really is called Bonanza! The trip up river was uneventful. It is wide and the landscape flat. Over the levee on the port-hand side is one of Spain’s major national parks – the Donana – it is large wetland and hosts many migratory birds every year. All along the river we saw plenty of wildlife - hundreds of herons and even a red kite. The local fishing was odd – craft (difficult to describe some of them as boats) with huge black nets hung from wide poles high over their stern which when lowered simply filter the water as it flows through. They look like large bats moored on both sides of the channel. On some the fisherman had a little cabin with a stovepipe sticking up – obviously they spend some time aboard. Big ships also use the river but we only met a couple at the lock below Sevilla, though sharing the lock with a 100ft long coaster was a bit daunting but they were helpful. Their pilot managed to contact the lock authorities on our behalf after we had failed to raise a response! Sevilla was a bit colder than last time we were there. Once tied up it was good to meet up again with Zeehund – another Southsea boat which had left a month or so before us and has been over wintering in this oasis. Viola has been taking Spanish lessons and she and David spend several hours a day teaching Rene their teenager. A few hours later our next visitors and Richard arrived and we spent a couple of days visiting more of Sevilla’s sights before heading back down the river to Chipiona. Jenny had booked her passage with us before we left the UK in a late evening phone call to say she had always wanted to sail through the Straits of Gibralter. So she, Laurence and Marcy joined us for a week’s sailing. And what a week it was. After Chipiona we sailed under spinnaker in brilliant sunshine virtually all of the 50nm to Barbate (bar-bate-ay) and as we arrived we spotted a flock of flamingos flying north across the sunset. During the trip Will indulged in another bread making session the results of which were devoured almost immediately. There is something special about sailing along with the smell of fresh bread coming up the companionway. For the last few days a Levanter had been blowing (gale force winds around Gibraltar had actually prevented the Moroccan ferries running for several days) and it was a bit chilly and overcast (all relative at 14-15 degrees!!). The wind didn’t last though – we motored most of the way through the Straits the next day. What a wonderful sight as the Rif mountains of Africa come into view – not on the horizon but way up above the coastal clouds. We took the obligatory photos looking due North at Tarifa Lighthouse – the most southerly point of Europe and then sent a text message to Maddy…’Europe to left, Africa to right sun shining’ – it was not well received in grey wet Kingston! The Rock then crept into view on our left above the Spanish hills. The photos we’d all seen had not prepared us for just how big and imposing it is. The town and the docks below are diminutive in comparison when you finally round the corner into the bay. Gibraltar town is amazing – sort of colonial, sort of seedy British High Street of 20 years ago all mixed with a touch of Spain and Morocco. Sheppards Yard, where we moored, is the oldest Mediterranean marina – a bit run down and full of live-aboard boats looking like they couldn’t ever move anywhere again, with an active boatyard and the best stocked chandlery we had seen since leaving Falmouth. After a couple of days exploring – we took the cable car to the top of the Rock, photographed the apes and then killed our legs by walking down the Moorish Steps (an almost vertical stone staircase), we headed over the Strait to Ceuta – our first African destination.
The next day five of us sailed from Sheppards to Sotogrande, a Spanish purpose built marina east of Gib which was clean and pleasant but in the middle of nowhere! Good job we stocked up on food at Safeways in Gib! We then crossed the Strait again to Morocco for a couple of days. It was a spectacular trip - we stopped to let a tanker pass and were surrounded by pilot whales for about 20 minutes! We had booked a spot in Sheppards Yard to give Temptress some TLC so planned to return there. Richard rejoined us in Estapona but having taxied Pat and Tony back to the airport on Saturday, he left us in Gib to explore some more of Spain by car for a couple of days on his way back to Villamoura. He said didn't want to get his clothes dirty!! Temptress was lifted out without a hitch except that in order to extricate the boat hoist once we were on the hard, we had to remove the windvane and its pole from the back of the boat - it was only inches but it was the only solution! Will spent half an hour or so tucked up behind the steering gear inside the transom holding the fixing nuts whilst Kevin undid the bolts on the outside. The yard were very helpful - no pressure to extricate their hoist and they lent us a ladder and hired us a scaffold frame with two planks big enough for two of us to work on the topsides at the same time. The weather was overcast and quite windy (F4-5) so a bit chilly. We did wonder whether you get hypothermia washing boats? Back to those gas bottles – one wouldn’t work at all – it seemed that something was jamming the valve shut and the other had so much gas in it that we had a huge wild flame at the burner…. Very dodgy so we were relieved to find that Sheppards sold gas and were quick to acquire two more refills. 9:44 PM - Feb. 6, 2002 - post comment
|
Description When you reach a certain age and have done more than a few offshore races the time comes to look for a little more comfort. Home User Profile Archives Recent Entries - Happy New Year - End of the Line - The project becomes a Project! - eBay: Not Exactly Where You'd Look for a Classic Boat... - Its been a while |