A Bike Ride In Bocas


Hi everyone! This is Lucy. I haven’t posted a blog in like forever, sorry about that! I wrote this about 2 weeks ago, but never posted it. We are near Colon now, getting ready to head through the canal on Friday!

          Yesterday was a crazy and fun day! We biked from 9:30 until 5 pm. We biked through the streets, walked (us and the bikes) through beaches, saw a sloth and monkeys, biked through the jungle on a possibly bike path, went to the natural Piscina (pool), got down poured on, had a few reealllllly muddy falls, and so much more. 

    It was a nice morning in Bocas del toro, Panama, the sun was shining, the fruit stores were thriving, everyone said, “Hola!”, and it was going to be a perfect day for a bike ride. We got to the bike store  with our good friends from Lasgair, and chose our bikes.  While trying out the bikes, two of the bikes pedals fell off.  Don’t worry, we got new bikes.  ; ) The rest of the bikes were great!  All of the bikes had back pedal breaks, and (probally the bigger reason) we haven’t biked for a bit over a year, so we needed to practice a bit before we left.  

The streets we went through at first were small, but then they got bigger.  Soon, there was a lot of traffic! We found out minutes later wen we came to a big construction site. Yikes, I thought as the big construction machines roared through. The construction workers told us to go on the playa (beach). So we ended up walking our bikes through the really soft beach till a park that came back to the road. 

Soon the paths had lush jungle on one side and a bunch of palm trees on the other side. It was truly beautiful. I looked back at the rest of us and smiled. There were nine bikes in a line and Poppy, the youngest on Lasgair, was side saddling the back of her dad’s bike. It reminded of the scene from the Sound of music went there were all biking. 

all of us biking

The path was level for a bit then it started getting hilly. We biked up this pretty steeped hill. Ah-h-h-h-h-h-h-hhhh I screamed, the bumpy road vibrating my whole bike, as I accelerated to like 100 mph. The hill was going by super quick. Even when I had the breaks all the way on it was still soooooo fast. I got to the bottom of the hill very soon. 

“Wasn’t that so-oooo fun!” Sally yelled as she came down. I laughed and agreed. It was actually a lot of fun. It felt like the fastest I’ve gone since the Grenada buses!  ;p

          Slowly the path became more in the jungle. All of the bikes in front of me skidded to stops. 

     “What is it?” I asked. 

Heidi pointed to the tree right in front of us.  I looked up and oh my gosh, like 10 feet up, it was a sloth. It was like the cutest thing. It was just like hanging out. It slowly turned it’s head towards us looked at us then went back to sleep. The sloth kind of looked like a chubakka, ET, and a cute puppy mixed together. After watching it for a bit, we started on our ride again. 

the sloth!

After biking more we came to a sandy road. Hopefully this is not too soft, I thought. Seconds later,  it was like someone put the breaks on. I tried to start pedaling again, and this time, the bike went on a super sharp turn then turned the other way. I was not expecting that, I thought with a  laugh. All ahead of me, I saw everyone walking their bikes and I decided that was better and faster then swerving back and forth. Every once in a while when the sand was not so soft people would go fast and say, “I am coming through on your left!” so they wouldn’t lose their momentum. 

We stopped to look at surfers on a beach break. They were very good.  The surfers rode the face the whole way. The waves were huge. We watched them for a bit then biked/walked our bikes to the next spot.

A beautiful beach and sandy spot was in front of us, and we were all ready to take a little break. We agreed it was a perfect place to have lunch. We brought fresh bread from the bakery, cheese, oranges, tomatoes, corn chips, and cookies. It was all delicious. We ate, some people swam, and mostly relaxed, so that when we started biking a little more than an hour later, we would be ready.

A perfect place for lunch!

The next part of the trail was crazy! There were pools of mud to go around, huge roots to go over, and multiple rivers to cross. 

It was very bumpy!

A strange howling had started up just as Heidi passed a tree. I stopped and looked around, and about 15 feet above us were howler monkeys. They were swinging from tree to tree. I was pretty cool!    

“Look! Theres some howler monkeys!” I told the other people behind me.

Howler monkeys!

“Whooooaaaaaa!”   Fenton looked up and a just the wrong time.  There was a huge thing of mud right there. His bike fell over, and left him in a huge puddle of mud. A whole side of him was covered in mud!  It was very funny! He posed for a few pictures then washed off in the ocean. 

We  continued  along with lots of laughing, bumping up and down, sometimes a few feet, and mainly having lots of fun. It started to rain minutes later. Heidi saw the sign for the piscina so Heidi, Fenton, and I stayed in one place while Mom told the others who were a bit ahead. We waited for a few minutes and no one came. The rain was getting louder. A whole group of howler monkey started howling then as well. 

“This is a bit creepy.” I said as the tree stopped the rain less and less.  

The others finally came back! 

We stopped at the piscina then started back. We biked our way back to the rental place with not that much more excitement ; p 

La piscina

We came back ten times dirtier, ten times more tired, but, ten times happier! What a day, I thought as we went back to our boat!


Happy Holidays Friends and Family!

As we near the end of 2018, we have been thinking about all of our old friends whom we miss and love hearing from, the new friends we’ve made, all the new cultures we’ve experienced, and all the great places we’ve explored since the beginning of the year.  We feel so lucky to be adventuring and learning all together as a family in our 36 x 22 feet of living space aboard our home S/V Love & Luck.  Boat repairs and homeschooling have become normal life, with far fewer daily bumps.  Wandering down interesting looking streets, buying bags of juice or ice cream or good smelling street food, finding a good museum or grocery store or market, and watching and talking to people dancing, creating a craft, or just hanging out in the streets in a new place fill our days.  We love being on and under the water watching the fish, dolphins, waves, and stars and finding whatever excitement awaits us in the next port.  We hope you too take the opportunity to follow your dreams and that, like us, they turn out even better than expected!

Our 2018 Country Highlights…

Bahamas—snorkeling galore, church in Staniel Cay, fun in George Town, Mark learning how to use the pole spear (and scaring, but not catching, a lot of fish)

Bahama’s Land and sea park
Hiking outside of George Town

Dominican Republic—Fresh fruit, veggies, great food (especially the fried chicken), horseback riding, waterfall jumping, boat repairs, Easter at the beach

Waterfall Jumping in the Dominican Republic

Puerto Rico—Lucy’s birthday, Boy Scout National Jamboree, learning to windsurf (thanks Gert and Toni)

Windsurfing with Gert and Toni

USVI—Oma and Opa visit during some bumpy seas, swimming with the turtles in St. John

St. John, USVI

BVI—Soggy Dollar Bar, the Baths, the Caves, hearing Foxy sing his Irma songs

Saba—The road that couldn’t be built, the road that shouldn’t be built, the wet and wild dinghy ride into shore, the Mt. Scenery hike

The view 1/2 way up Mt. Scenery

Statia—the Quill hike, Chinese food, crazy dogs

Sally getting ready for the Mt. Quill hike

Guadeloupe—French baguettes and swimming lessons all day every day

Dominica—Heidi’s birthday, Sea Cat and the Boiling Lake Hike, volunteering at school

The Boiling Lake (a lake that litterally boils because of the geothermal energy (i.e. volcano) below it – very cool)

Martinique—Sally’s birthday, Mt. Pelee hike, volcano museum, more great French food

Grenada—all our family visiting, Fenton joining our crew, volunteering at Learn to Swim week, teaching weekly swim lessons, trivia night, volunteering at the Grenada SPCA, SCUBA certification, scout camp, the girls swimming with the Sailfish swim team for a Championship meet, Carriacou hiking and snorkeling and lion fish hunting and baby turtle saving

Bonaire—caught huge tuna enroute, SCUBA diving and new dive gear, cultural event in Rincon,  flamingos, hiking through the National Park, windsurfing, cute tourist shopping and little cafes

Curacao—a long bus ride to the cute little Holland like village center, Venezuelan floating market, the crazy maze of customs and immigration (hours to get checked in and out)

Aruba—mall city, poolside afternoon with friends

Colombia—our first country to visit in South America, everyone sick with a stomach bug, great visit to Minca (backpacker central), Thanksgiving, Tayrona National Park jungle hiking and hostel camping, tubing, Cartegena Lighting of the Candles festival, Getsemani murals, walled city tour, San Felipe Castle Fortress and amazing street food

Panama—San Blas Islands: beautiful molas, fresh lobster, crabs and octopus; Portobelo for Christmas: attended the Church of the Black Christ, light parade, fireworks and fun

2018 Crew Highlights

Mark—our sailing expert, windsurfing teacher, physics professor, SCUBA enthusiast, fisherman extraordinaire, Mr. Fixit, and strategic analyst (new remote consulting career)

The pier in Grand Anse, Grenada

Julie—teacher, researcher, cook, cleaner, SCUBA certified, still learning the best places to stow things and constantly getting rid of our collection of unnecessary items still on the boat…

Fenton (17) —gap year adventurer, our technology expert (including cameras, computers, movie downloads, GoPros, cell phones, blog), fishing good luck charm, SCUBA enthusiast, windsurfer, lion fish hunter, comic relief, and expert sunscreen applier and bug spray applier

Heidi (15) —10th grader, media expert, representative Spanish speaker for all of our boat needs (thank you), only Grenada female 13-14 swimmer for the ‘big’ meet, photographer extraordinaire, stargazer, instagram addict (@heidizvannini), SCUBA girl

Lucy (13) —8th grader, chef of the sea, likes swimming off the boat, cleanest crew member who loves real showers, constantly embarrassed by the rest of us (OMG!), windsurfer, most interested sailor, most time spent on watch for all shifts, and SCUBA certified (who still prefers snorkeling though)

Sally (11) —6th grader, social butterfly who spends the most time of our crew on other kid  boats, surfer girl, windsurfer, fish identifier, fish dissector/biologist, SCUBA girl, future vet who is missed by the puppies at the GSPCA,  always has her head in a book

Bonaire

Willie (almost 4)—loves jumping in the water from the boat, going kayaking, playing monkey in the middle (in the water of course), hiking in new countries, sniffing lots of new smells, fearlessly guards our boat from anyone who ventures too close, merdog (aka sea turtle) spotter

Willie and Julie holding hands on a ruff passage

Future Plans

Our crew is not ready to give up this lifestyle quite yet – so we’ve decided to extend this adventure a little longer.  We are going to keep heading west through the Panama Canal, planning on going through late January. Once we reach the Pacific, we are undecided as to which way we’ll go. We may head to New Zealand (an amazing, but long sail), we might head west to Hawaii and then back northeast to the Pacific northwest, or maybe, we’ll head north along the Pacific coast to Mexico and California… In the meantime, mom and dad are working online here and there to assure that the adventure can continue as long as its fun. We will be in Panama for Christmas, New Year, and most of January and February.

Happy Holidays from the Crew!  We look forward to hearing from you!

Mark, Julie, Heidi, Lucy, Sally, Fenton and Willie

Our contact info has changed slightly:

svloveandluck@yahoo.com (we receive this through our Iridium GO sat phone wherever we are)

WhatsApp +12032400237 (free on wifi with the App)

If you have free calls to a US number, you can call and text us for free (free for both of us) at 1-786-776-2887 

Our blog is lifesgoodonourboat.com

Our instagram is @svloveandluck

Our Trip To Cartegena

On a Monday morning we were all eating breakfast and thinking about leaving on Tuesday, the next day, but we were indecisive. The weather wasn’t looking good: ten ft seas with up to forty knots of wind 🙁  Dad finally put on the breaks and said we were NOT going. So now we’re here for another week—not so bad. The next day we did school and then went to the pool. It was very fun and all of us went down the slide at least twice! Me and Heidi, Lucy, Fenton, and I went down together. Fenton says it was very nutty! We all had a blast! 

That night we had a discussion on what we were going to do. The options were: 

  1. Stay home and explore town more
  2. Go on the Lost City Trek
  3. Go to Minca again
  4. Go to Cartagena

So we voted and Minca got out, the Lost City trek got out and that left going to Cartagena or staying home in Santa Marta. We didn’t know who would take care of Willie. That was our main downside!

The next morning we went to a talk about the tours offered from Santa Marta. Mom asked Saskia, a boat friend on Pinut, if she would be willing to watch Willie for us. Of course she could sleep on our boat and make herself at home. She said yes, so it was arranged. That night we packed and got ready, it was a 4-6 hour bus ride so we brought entertainment (my kindle and an iPod).  We went to bed excited for the big day. 

We woke up and got dressed and left. I drank a little coffee while we waited for the bus! The bus arrived and we got in. We had heard that it takes a pit stop every 2 hours so we relaxed and enjoyed the view. The next two hours went pretty slowly. I decided to read my book. We stopped at the bathrooms in about half an hour. Nobody really needed to go so we stayed on the bus, we were with a lot of other people so we still had to stop. The bus got going again and we started to listen to music again.

I finished one book just as we got to another stop. This stop had a lot of snacks so we got off to take a look. They had mango drinks and a lot of chips! They also had the cutest tiny kitten—adorable! A women handed him or her to me and the little cat just purred! It was so cute! We ended up getting two cups of mangos, an orange soda, and some plantain chips. I drank the orange soda, Heidi and Fenton shared the mango cup, and so did mom and dad with a different one! We saved the plantain chips for a little bit later. I started to read another book. We had been in the bus for three hours! I started to really need to go to the bathroom. Luckily we stopped at a bathroom. We opened our plantain chips which were very yummy. I read for the last hour or so and we finally arrived.

We got off the bus and walked to our rental house that we had reserved the night before. Unfortunately, there was construction on the building next to it, and the owners said the apartment was not functioning right. So, we took a cab to Getsemani and found an apartment there. We ate lunch and headed towards our apartment. It was so nice—very modern, white, and with three rooms and a hammock.

We went out to dinner at a place called Demente where we danced on the roof! Lucy and I shared an artichoke pizza. It was very good! Fenton ate a pepperoni and pepper pizza, Heidi ordered spinach and gorgonzola, mom and dad got that too. The pizzas were all personal pizzas—so we tried lots of different kinds. Mom and dad also ordered a couple appetizers: crab dumplings and grilled octopus which we all shared. Very yummy!

After dinner we headed home. We saw fireworks from our balcony and the streets turned on their Christmas lights. There were swirls and bells in the light design. We filmed part of our Youtube video and then had a mini dance party 😉 ! Soon it was time for bed. I read for a little while and then Heidi came to come to sleep with me. Fenton got to sleep in the hammock!

  We woke up pretty early and went to a breakfast restaurant. We ordered eggs with arepa and toast. It was very yummy. They also served it with hot chocolate! We went into town after breakfast and took a free walking tour. We spent a while looking for the man with the yellow umbrella!

Once we found Edgar, the walking tour guide, he told us to go sit down with the rest of the people on the English speaking tour. It was a little hard to understand him because he had an accent.  The tour was great! He explained all about the history of Colombia. After the tour finished, we went to the chocolate museum. It was so cool— they had an upstairs little free museum and then you could go downstairs for free samples. They were so yummy! They also had this really yummy corn drink with lots of spices and milk (kind of like a chai latte)! We got some mango in a cup and went into the park to eat it! We stopped by the emerald museum. It was really cool and there were rows and rows of emerald jewelry for sale for about 1,000 USDs! It was crazy expensive! 

We went back to our apartment and we had a lunch of leftovers and chips! The chips were delish! Dad fell asleep right away and I read my book in the hammock. We relaxed for a while until it was time for dinner.  The day before, we had seen a stand with yummy looking burgers, so we decided to try them for dinner. We ordered two burgers which had a potato chips, ham, and about ten different sauces although it looked gross everyone said it was delicious, and I got a fried potato and beef ball with passion fruit juice! It was so delicious, we sat down to eat the burgers while Fenton, Heidi, and I got ice-cream pops! I got a Ferro Roche pop it was so yummy and good! Lucy got some passion fruit pineapple juice.

We walked to where there were supposed to be some lights. We didn’t see any lights but there was some really cool dancers. Just as the dancers got really fast and loud there was a lot of fireworks! They were so pretty and surprising! Then, all of a sudden the lights turned on there was so many of them! We walked a while until we got to where the mayor was speaking I got some cotton candy. We went into the Walled City and ordered some Ceviche with octopus and fish in it.  Amazingly delicious!

When we finished, we started to head home. We saw more fireworks as we were walking home! Once we got to our apartment, we watched the lights and fireworks from our balcony. We got ready for bed and hit the sack.

The next morning we went out to explore Getsamani, the town we were in. There were really cool murals and more great street food for breakfast. We needed to go back to the apartment to check out and then head to fortress/castle. We walked a little over a mile to a massive fortress. We waited in line to get tickets to explore the old fortress! Thankfully, there were a lot of tunnels to go in to escape the blazing sun! In the tunnels, you could jump out and scare people because it was pitch black in some parts.  We had lots of fun doing that.

Some people had said that the documentary was very interesting so we went to find it. The documentary was in Spanish so a lady that worked at the fortress put sub titles on for us! When the film finished, we had to get a cab back to the bus station. We squished into a cab and we were off! 

We got in the bus and got ready for the next five hours…Luckily, it only took 4 hours to make it home!

-Sally 

Happy Thanksgiving!

Hey guys! We just wanted to wish everybody a happy Thanksgiving from the crew of SV Love & Luck, and we hope that you all had a fantastic day of family and food and thankfulness. We spent the day preparing a wonderful feast to eat with friends, and finished it off by welcoming in the Christmas season. We’re all incredibly thankful to be with family and friends on this excellent adventure and we can’t wait to see what the future holds. Happy turkey day everybody!

 

Gobble gobble,

Mark, Julie, Heidi, Lucy, Sally, Fenton, and Willie

 

thanksgiving
Efforts pay off

Pasteles y el museo

Santa Marta is a vibrant city full of delicious food and color. We’ve taken to having fried pastries in the mornings for breakfast. From my understanding, these are terrible for your health. But they’re all different. So far we’ve had some that taste like egg rolls, some that are filled with beef, some filled with cheese, some filled with egg, and some with potatoes. I think they’re really tasty. But then again, fried food tastes better than cereal (for the first week at least)

food
I’m considering moonlighting as a food blogger…

Yesterday, we went to the Museo del Oro (Museum of the Gold for all our non-Spanish speaking friends) which was a very educational experience. The museum is in a historical building in the old town of Santa Marta, and it’s set up well. Though I’ve never been particularly receptive to museums, I think I learned at least a bit from this one. The exhibits contained a lot of artifacts from the history of Santa Marta and pre-Hispanic culture of Colombia and the history of the museum.

We also went to the dentist today. I think one of our other crew members is going to write about that one though, so I won’t spoil the surprise. Make sure to keep an eye on the blog to see it as soon as it hits the press! Until next time!

-Fenton

A little bit about the ABC’s, our passage, and Santa Marta, Columbia

                   Hi everyone! This is Lucy. Sorry I haven’t posted recently. I will try and post more often!

                The ABC’s were nice. In Bonaire I had a lot of fun when we rented a pickup truck with another boat family and went around the national park. We each had turns riding in the back! We stopped at multiple snorkeling sites and there attractions such as flamingos!  We also went to a cultural fest and saw people did the local dance.  Overall Bonaire was a ton of fun! 

                     

In the back of the pickup truck!

Last passage was a nice one.  As Fenton said on the other post we caught some fish! I reeled 2 fish in. One Mahi and one blue runner. Sally and Dad also caught 3 more fish but we only kept one  which was a mahi-mahi.  The shift Heidi and I had went from 7-10 pm. It was nice but still a bit tiring. 

We got to Santa Marta three days ago and so far it has been a blast. There is a lot of buzz on the street. The other night we were walking through town and there were multiple groups of people who would do like break dancing and acrobatics mixed together. It was amazing how flexible and strong theses people were.  It was so cool! I will post a video of that below.

There also is super good food here. We went out for hamburgers the other night and they were so good! They have awesome lunch with pork, rice, lentils, coleslaw, and yucca.  Also this morning we got empanadas from the venders. They were amazing and  only cost about $0.50 each. Or, in the Columbian currency, 1,500 pesos each. There are multiple fruit and vegetable venders out on the street as well. The food here is amazing!

Everyone in Santa Marta is super nice and helpful. They help us with Spanish and teach us new words. People who know a little English say, “Hello,” or “how are you?” It is fun as well as challenging to be in a country that speaks a different language. I think that it is great that the locals want tp help you learn there language.  It is really inspiring that lot of people are kind and want you to love their country and culture.

The music in Santa Marta is also fun… It is much different from Grenadian soca which we got used to. It is kind of like Mexican music. I will post some music below! I posted the URL to some music that sounded like some I heard!

Soca from Grenada

Columbian instrumental Music

I am super excited to continue to explore Columbia! I will keep you posted on adventures to come!

 

Sigue sonriendo (keep smiling)💕

The one and only

Lucy

 

 

Our journey to and my impressions of Colombia

Hey everyone! Yesterday we arrived in Colombia after stopping by Curaçao and Aruba on our way out of Bonaire. While I enjoyed both the C and A of the ABC’s, Bonaire’s diving and atmosphere made it the top letter in my opinion. In fairness to the other two, we spent a lot more time in Bonaire. All three islands are highly worth a visit in my opinion. Just make sure to go with your parents if you’re under 18 and headed to Curaçao.

Our passage was quite smooth. We caught a few fish (I’m sure my other boat mates would be able to tell you much better than I) and had some excellent stargazing. Sally and I agreed to take the hard night shift, from 10:00pm to 1:00am, so our stars weren’t quite as spectacular as our less hardy 7:00pm to 10:00pm compatriots, but nevertheless we all had an enjoyable experience looking up at the sky. We also had a few dolphins swimming in front of our bow for a little bit (which I’m told is very normal. How cool is that?) that were only notable for the fact that they were quite large. Regardless, our passage was smooth and if anything, a bit boring. (Which is just what you want in a passage.)

Colombia is a pretty gorgeous country based on what I’ve seen of it so far. The people of Santa Marta have all been friendly to me and earlier today I witnessed some of the best dancing I’ve ever seen in my life. While walking around downtown, we saw a group of local break dancers who bent in ways that should not be humanly possible.

It’s funny that the one part I photographed was the food…

I also had a blue cheese and bacon burger, which, while not particularly Colombian, tasted delicious. I honestly don’t know the last time I had bacon. That meal, combined with WiFi and showers from the marina make Colombia seem like paradise. Something I never noticed was how different people get when they have constant internet access versus not. A part of me preferred not having to worry about life back in the States and the rest of the world, but then again, I do love cat videos.

It is also with great pleasure that I announce we are eagerly working on a brand new YouTube channel to better show our lives aboard SV Love & Luck. I hope everybody is looking forward to new content as we explore this new method of sharing our adventures. Stay tuned to our blog to see more information about our channel as we get closer to releasing it and videos to the public. In the meantime, keep viewing, commenting, and sharing on our blog. We love to hear from everybody and would love to keep growing. Until next time!

Fenton

Bodacious Bonaire

Hi! As most of you are aware, we’re currently moored in Bonaire, the lovely Dutch Caribbean island that makes up the B in the ABC islands. Our passage from Carriacou was one of relative ease – we did some fishing, some steering, and some delicious cooking. And lots of sleep. I’m glad my first passage went smoothly (both in terms of waves and overall.)

Since we’ve been in Bonaire, we’ve been lucky enough to participate in several of the activities that distinguish Bonaire as a unique and exciting places. Among these are scuba diving and windsurfing. The entire coast of the island is filled with dive sites, but you could go even 30 feet behind our boat and see some super cool reefs and drop-offs, not to mention the countless fish (including cowfish!)

I like diving a great deal, and our hours spent reading and training for our certification have definitely paid off. It’s nice to be on a purely leisure dive, as opposed to our training dives where we practiced scuba skills in addition to looking at the pretty fish. We saw all sorts of fish and coral that I am not at all qualified to talk about other than the fact that I thought it was very pretty. One of my favorite types of fish is the cowfish. Some of them have two lil horns above their eyes so they look like swimming beef. They’re pretty adorable.

We’ve also had the pleasure of snorkeling all over the island, which has been fantastic. You don’t even need to dive to enjoy the water here. Through snorkeling, we’ve seen hundreds of remarkably colorful parrotfish. They range in size, but the one characteristic they all share is their scales all sparkle brilliantly with colors that remind one of a parrot. They do not have feathers like a parrot. The naming is merely for the colors.

We’ve also been windsurfing since being in Bonaire which is a great first place to windsurf considering how many international champions call Bonaire their home. The island has a shallow, sheltered bay that is ideal for beginners and experts alike. I (of course) fell off the windsurfer after being on the board for about two seconds. To some, that might be a discouraging start, but I laughed it off and hopped back on. Over the two hours I went from knowing barely anything about sailing to knowing a little more than barely anything about sailing. It wasn’t very windy, but I believe our conditions were ideal for learning to windsurf.

Happy Halloween everybody! I hope you have a spooky day!

Carriacou! (and Bonaire!)

Hey everyone! I wrote this a while ago about Carriacou. Although we’re now in Bonaire after a successful passage, I think you guys would enjoy reading it. 

A few days ago, we moved our boat to the quiet Tyrell Bay of Carriacou. After all the excitement from Carnival in Grenada and all the kid boats we met, our latest anchorage feels remarkably sleepy. Although it’s different here, I definitely still enjoy it. And the peace and quiet is a nice change for a little bit.

There’s a fairly sizable reef in Tyrell Bay that makes for wonderful snorkeling. The maximum depth is about 12 feet, so it’s quite easy to get to the bottom to get a closer look at some interesting coral or a long abandoned motor. You’ve got to be careful of sea urchins though – the floor is like a minefield of big pokey black sea urchins, which twitch around and make awfully scary noises. They’re pretty easy to avoid, as long as you watch where you’re swimming.

Within the past few days, Sally and I have been on some adventures in search of some critters to consume. Sally spotted some lobsters which we tried to catch (with Boat Dad’s help), but they evaded us with relative ease. The only ones we netted were too small to bring home. A day after we saw lobsters, I spotted a gang of about five lionfish! Lionfish are an invasive and deadly species to Grenada and Carriacou, and as such, we’re allowed to kill them on sight.

Image result for lionfish

Along with Boat Dad, Sally and I set out to spear the lionfish for both our own nourishment and to rid the ocean of some roaring bad guys. You get the mane idea, yeah? Whenever we spot something that looks tasty, I tread water above the thing and Sally swims back to the boat to get the spear or Boat Dad. Either way, I always seem to be stuck treading water. The most recent time, I suggested that I swim back, but Sally (correctly) stated that she would be faster. So, I waited for her.

With Boat Dad and Sally (and a spear) catching the lionfish was simple work. Boat Dad stabbed the biggest lionfish pretty good, but he swam deeper into the reef, out of range. Two of his friends were not so lucky, and they were soon vanquished and returned without glory to our boat to be prepared for an appetizer. Fun fact: fried lionfish is actually pretty good. Someone even claimed it tasted like lobster!

After our fish catching adventures, we went on to the island with a boat friend for a fantastic supper. If you’re ever in Carriacou, I would highly recommend going to a restaurant run by a woman named Mavis, who operates the restaurant with her husband and children. She’s friendly, and makes delicious fried chicken with spices that make KFC seem like dirt. So far, my post-Grenada adventures have been splendid, and I’m sure they’re only going to get splendid-er. Until next time!

~Fenton

J’Ouvert!

Hi! I haven’t formally introduced myself yet, but my name is Fenton. I’m 17, and I’ve joined the crew of SV Love & Luck for about 9 months, in between my high school graduation and start of college. So far, living on a boat has forced me to make some adjustments, but seeing the world from a whole new perspective has made it well worth it. I can’t wait to keep meeting new people, seeing new places, and spending time with some of the coolest people in the world.

Yesterday morning, Heidi, Boat Dad, and I woke up at 4-something AM to go to J’Ouvert. J’Ouvert is an annual celebration held in the streets of Grenada. It involves music you can feel, dancing with all of your passion, and getting covered with oil and paint by locals. All in good fun, of course.

After getting up, everyone changed into old clothes and shoes. Even if you aren’t trying to get paint on you, it usually ends up on you from the jumble of people everywhere. So, we wore clothes that we were willing to throw away if necessary. We also put on dish soap as a preventive measure, which ended up making the paint and oil very easy to get off. The three of us hopped in the dinghy, and then we went to go pick up some other cruiser friends who were also going. We also caught a needlefish! It’s important to note that I use caught loosely. While on our way, a needlefish jumped into our dinghy. It was raining a bit and dark, but the fish jumping around at my feet certainly woke me up quickly.

Once we got there, it was loud. We could hear the music from our boat in the anchorage, but when we locked up the dinghy, it was hard to hear anything but the music. We watched for a bit, and then were encouraged to walk around a bit and see some more. Most people with paint wouldn’t cover you if you didn’t want to – generally you get a look, which you nod yes or no to – but there’s no way you can go to J’Ouvert without getting at least some paint on you. After paint was applied to us with brushes, a leaf, and some finger-painting (in actuality, it was more like hand-painting), we listened to some of our favorite Soca music. Most of the trucks blaring music had more speakers than tires, so it was never hard to hear.

The dancing of Grenada is not something that is half-done. We’ve experienced it at several events that involved music, but it’s clear every time – people love to dance. I’ve never been much of a dancer (that’s Heidi), but I still find myself moving when Soca comes on. It’s hard not to.

After about an hour and a half, we had seen a fair bit of J’Ouvert. We were all covered in paint, and the sun was just starting to be high enough that I should be concerned about not wearing enough sunscreen. So we headed back to the dinghy, at one point going through a pile of mud in which BOTH of my flip flops decided was too much, resulting in me being very temporarily shoeless. After that mishap, we all ended back at the dinghy, we took our friends home, and washed off in the ocean. All and all, we were home by 7 AM. A quick dip in the ocean, a bit more dish soap, and we were all clean and ready to start the day. It was definitely an experience I’ll never forget, but I might sleep in next year.

 

Until next time!

-Fenton