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Friday, October 18, 2013

A beautiful sail to Bonaire


After a few days in Grenada we decided it was time to move on to new places.  Bonaire was our next stop and there was several reasons we went to Grenada first rather than go direct from Trinidad.  Main reason is you would spent less time in Venezuelan waters, secondly Grenada had a few groceries that we liked that Trinidad did not have (Trinidad has better and cheaper produce) and thirdly we would now be a bit closer to Bonaire.
  Venezuela use to be a popular cruiser destination, but the last few years it has gone downhill due to bad government.  There are many violent robberies on yachts and it recommended to stay at least 30 miles from any of its shores. 

     We left Grenada just after 4 in the morning to make sure we did the 395 miles with only 3 nights out at sea.   There was not wind for the first 2 or 3 hours and then a easterly wind filled in as we left Grenada behind and we shut the engine off.  The wind remained a bit light all day though we sailed along at 4 to 5 knots.  While we came out of St Georges harbour in the black of night we could see a ship coming up the coast and the AIS showed he might come very close, and we did not know if he would turn into the harbour here or not.  So I called him up on the radio and he asked us to pass behind him, so this set us back 30 minutes.
    A rain squall came through late in the afternoon and wind piped up to about 20 knots for a few minutes  followed by 20 minutes of heavy rain and then all was back to normal, this was the only squall we got on this passage.  The wind picked up for a few hours after dark and then eased again making the first 24 hours a slow passage of only 100 miles done and making us wonder if we were going to do this in 3 days. 

   We angled slightly North of the rhumb line so we would give  Venezuala's offshore island all a clearance of about 30 miles except for the furthest west island we gave a clearance of about 16 miles. Doing this only added about 8 miles to the overall distance.  The wind picked up a bit more the 2nd day out and then we also started to notice some current with us for a few hours we had up to 2 to 2.5 knots of current pushing us as we were hitting 8 knots and more in the moderate winds.  Later the current seemed to disappear or be .5 to 1 knot.  During our 2nd night out the wind picked up to a steady 25 to 28 knots for a few hours along with a rough sea.  We did not get a much sleep this night on our off watches.  Later in night wind eased and we sailed along nicely.  The last day and night were very pleasant with moderate seas and good sailing, and a slight current with us.  The last 24hour run was 142 miles, our best ever.  
     Each day we saw 3 or 4 ships go by but only had to alter course slightly for one.   Probably less shipping on this more Northerly route we took, also saw only 1 or 2 fish boats  far in the distance.   As the 3/4 moon set late in our last night at sea, I could see some lights on Bonaire.  We rounded the South end of Bonaire in the dark and this end of island has no lights except for a navigation light that flashes every 9 seconds, so I kept a close eye on this and our chart plotter as we rounded the island. I checked the chart and the radar together to see if it was accurate and it appeared to be fine, as we know from experience some countries are poorly charted and off up to a mile or more.

     We had to slow the boat down a bit the last couple of hours so we would not arrive before daylight. The wind stayed with us all the way in, we motored that last mile just to run the engine a bit and charge batteries as had not used engine at all on passage.   We could see a line of yachts off the town of Kralendijk and we went up and picked a vacant mooring.  You are not allowed to anchor anywhere here and must use a mooring or go into the marina.
      After some breakfast we launched the dinghy and went ashore to clear in with customs and then visit the town.  Bonaire is a small island, about 5 miles wide and 20 miles long, with a population of only 17,000 people.  It is now part of the Netherlands and English seems to be widely spoken.  It is pleasant out here on the moorings, a nice breeze all the time and small tropical fish swimming under the boat in clear clean water.  We will probably stay out here for a couple of weeks before moving on.

INFO

-left Grenada Oct 12 2013

-Mooring we tied to is at 12 09.42N   68 16.83W on West coast of Bonaire. There is suppose to be 40 moorings here and there were a number of empty ones when we arrived,  though some seemed to be a bit close to each other, but one thing about here is you seldom ever seem to swing.  On our 4th day here a swell from SW, but no wind,  came in during night and for 4 or 5 hours boats were rocking quite a bit. Then it disappeared.

-No charges for checking in with customs and immigration, both in the same office now which is the customs building.   The tourist office is just up and round the corner from customs office, they gave us little map and could tell us where everything is.  Customs is just a couple minutes South of dinghy dock, at waterfront.

-The grocery store selection is very good, can get most anything you saw in Grenada or Trinidad and more.  The prices though are often a bit cheaper especially the US canned goods.  Other prices are about the same as Grenada.  The fresh produce is a more than Trinidad or about the same as Grenada and not as big a selection, is more like Grenada. liquor prices seem very cheap here, beer a wee bit cheaper.  Meat is cheaper here as well.  We so far have walked to three different grocery stores, the first is about a 10 minute walk and the other about a 20 walk, and the third a couple of minutes further. This last one is the largest and is like a dutch store with a lot of dutch products and not in english, and it had more produce here.   A sim card for my smart phone for 2 weeks and 1 gig of data was $14.00 with Digicel. 

-They use the US dollar for currency now and if you go to a ATM you get US dollars out.  

- The dinghy dock situation is strange.  The country put in 40 moorings for yachts, but did nothing for us to get ashore.  Most people are using the dock that has a bar on it and the bar people do not seem to mind. But the dinghy  some times goes under the dock which is not good even though only a 1 foot tide here and there is not room here for many dinghy's.  There is another dock a bit further North you can use which about where we are moored  but then you are a bit more of a distance from town.  The main transient yacht marina is Harbor village marina  a bit further north of us.  There rates not too bad at about .80 cents a foot when we checked.

- The above marina seems to be the only source to buy drinking water which is by the fuel pumps  and the office in the marina basin. We will buy our water here when we need some as the rates are cheap at 10 cents a gallon.

-We have seen no mosquitoes and leave the ports open with no nets at night, even when the breeze gets a bit light.  We read of another yacht that had been here about 4 months ago and said they were very bad at dark. So maybe different season?? 

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