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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Adventures on the High Seas - What exactly are Pirates, Buccaneers and Privateers ?

Sea- Going bandits of the high seas can be classified into three categories:-

A Privateer:-
Countries hired Privateers. England would hire them to  attack Frenchm Dutch or Spanish ships and ports.

A Pirate:-
Pirates hold no allegiance to any country or person. They would plunder and attack any ship of port  - excpet those owned of occupied by another pirate.

A Buccaneer:-
The Buccaneer had a vengeance against the Spanish. They attacked only Spainish ships and ports.

The Bucholic Days of Life on Board a Tall Ship






Our Star Clipper sailing ship left St Martin for the Leeward Islands sailing around the British Virgin Isles.









Suite 507 - Star Clipper Outside Deck Entrance.



Owners Suite - Star Clipper

This is a cosy cabin with plenty of room providing you are not over 6 feet tall. The ceiling is quite low -


Suite 302 - Star Clipper

On Board Repairs. Fixing a main sail.



St Kitts

A mountainous island with slopes that rise to almost 4000 feet St Kitts has several attractions other than pure tourism, including a Veterinary School frequented by young Americans eager to become vets back in their home country. 

The most amazing 'African' tree   - it wasn't clear why the locals call  it  the African tree - but it sure is spectacular. 
Romney Manor and local batiks


Local Jacaranda flowers.
Brimstone Hill Fortress  overlooks St Barth.
Friars Bay
Local inhabitants

Map of Sir France Drake Channel where we sailed for several days.

Named after the famous privateer, the Sir Francis Drake Channel constitues an 'inland sea' in the middle of the Caribbean Ocean.  

We anchored one night  in the 'Bight' of Norman Island. The  meaning  of which is  an indentation in a coast so wide that it may be sailed out of on one tack in any wind.  ... and so we began to learn the origins of many sayings  so oft heard  but not necessarily fully understood. 

We got to understand a world that splices the mainbrace, while keeping a weather eye open to pour oil on troubled waters as landlubbers shoved off to much scuttlebutt and talked a lot of bilge.....   

...and all the while marvelled at the beauty and tranquility of these most idyllic ever changing vistas of verdant slopes and sparkling seas where we'd drop anchor in intimate coves and exquiste bays. 

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

'Spectacular by Nature' The Collection by Liz McGrath – extra value





Monday, February 25, 2013

Farewell Breakfasts - I think we need to put a stop to this habbit - it would be much more appropriate if they never happened.



How did we manage to do so much  in 36 hours, climbed Table Mountain - walked the dog - went for a bike ride, visited a winery, tried to get to the  Victoria  Alfred waterfront  but got stuck in the worst traffic jam  yes in Cape Town  - not New York.  worked, packed,  found some biltong, got  some sausage tree cream. climbed to the cave at Chapman's peak and had our farewell breakfast  on the patio with little Tamsyn making me a huge T shaped american pancake.  - Just gotta  stop saying good bye.  



The colorful life of Orient Beach on St Martin

This may have been my 9th visit to St Martin.  Yes, obviously I love it. There's a little bit of everything here, I can get a cute french haircut, buy rognons de veaux, consume a whole french baguette with porc rillette for lunch, bask in the sun and dance the night away, or, read a book all day long and not move from my chaise longue. St Martin/ St Maarten is half French, half Dutch, the smallest island in the world to have been partitioned into two by two countries.  The French side is my own  little bit of private R & R and I've only been to the Dutch side once; just  long enough to know I never want to go back .
The French side is predominantly casual elegance with an emphasis on comfort  and relaxation. The Dutch side is a loaded magnet of commercialism  designed to separate  the cruising crowd from their  hard earned money.
The sandy  path to the ocean from our little cottage set among palms trees gently blown by the trade winds. The cottage is tiny  but the small kitchen, the living room, a bedroom, private bathroom and patio are all I need.



Always a warm heart and a tasty morsel wherever you stop

and of course a temptation for those day trippers off the big boats.  Those cruiser who think they understand Orient Beach after a topless  stroll  haven't begun to  scratch past the surface of this relaxed and colorful place . 


Vendors and hawkers, artists and artisans, gawkers and revellers, opportunists and humorists, fashionisters and hipsters, everyone is here, everyone waits their turn for the fun, waits for the order of a bucket of ten beers, waits for the bogie boarding boys and the shell collecting girls.  It's people watching with a difference,  it's learning  about life, watching, waiting, understanding, relaxing and moving on while recharging the batteries.   


 And it's waiting in anticipation for the arrival of the big boats - that time when locals, as I like to call myself,  get up and leave, that time when I'm ready for the next French haircut, time to search the french shops  for the next exotic d'aubade.
 ...and then  to ponder  who was it that brought the signs from my hometown to the beaches of St Martin, even the sign of  my old local hospital, Hackensack Medical Center.



and all the while true 'island life' struggles to continue.