Monday, 20 September 2010

VICTORY!


A very welcome day off on Sunday brought fun and games on Hog Island.Gypsy Blues organised a Kayak tug o' war competition off the beach by Roger's bar. Teams of 2 (one in the dinghy, the other in the water) fought it out, trying to pull the opposition's kayak across the anchored marker, a rather fetching decoy duck. Rules were loose and cheating obligatory, leading to kayaks being turned over and the duck being moved! Three heats later, we actually managed to win, mainly due to Nic's deadly tactics in the water. I just kept madly paddling in the kayak until the whistle blew.
Today work has been rained out; will we ever get these jobs finished?! I am looking at the brand new paint I applied this morning to various spots in the scuppers which are now immersed in a river of rain water, not ideal but it's a welcome opportunity to fill the tanks.
We have also pulled the dinghy out to re-glue it yet again. Thanks to the incredibly kind Gypsy Blues, we won't be boat-bound for days this time, they have generously lent us their spare dinghy to use.

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

SOME PROGRESS


We are feeling far more positive today...the final coat of paint has gone on the coach roof (my hand is aching from 2 days of stippling non-slip paint!) and the generator is working (hooray, back to normal cooking on more than one burner at a time!).
On Monday we motored around to the marina in the next bay, Le Phare Bleu, to fill up with water and to enlist further help from Mike of Palm Tree Marine. After a compression test he established that we have an injector problem. The offending injector has been cleaned and we have power. It really needs replacing but that requires specialist tools for the installation that are not available anywhere in the Caribbean. We are keeping our fingers crossed that Nic can keep it going until we get up to the States next year.

Sunday, 12 September 2010

ON, ON!


We enjoyed a brief respite in the work schedule and joined the Grenada Hash House Harriers for a hash in Sauteurs on Saturday. After convening on the beach, a huge group of walkers and runners set off on the course which took us up steep, muddy slopes but afforded spectacular views north to Carriacou. The crowd quickly dissipated in all directions following circles of shredded paper. Everywhere around us we could hear calls of "On, On" to confirm we were on the right track and not one of the false trails culminating in a paper X. The cold beers and bbq were very welcome at the finish. As "hash virgins" we were given certificates and ceremoniously sprayed with beer as we sprinted through the hashers. A very kind Haitian couple gave us a lift back to St Georges despite our beery, damp state!

Saturday, 11 September 2010

SUNSET SPECTACLE


Grenada has the most spectacular sunsets of anywhere we have been in the Caribbean, maybe it's something to do with its position??? Nowhere else are the colours so intense, especially the deep blue, or seen on such a majestic scale. Friday night outdid itself and gave us a full arch double rainbow. My photos couldn't do it justice but the memory lives on.

Thursday, 9 September 2010

WORK, WORK, WORK!


We've finally finished stripping the coach roof and have got a few layers of paint on. The weather is not cooperating...a torrential downpour stopped work yesterday and it has been raining continuously today. Open bolt holes cause us to have plastic trays under the ceiling in the saloon to catch water coming through!

We've also started work on the decks and, just to make life more difficult, had to take off a pulley which had not been installed properly. This entailed dismantling part of a bedroom cupboard (my clothes are now sitting out) and emptying part of the saloon storage. The disruption expands daily! Nic had just removed a couple of bolts before the deluge began yesterday and within seconds we had water pouring in from the river running along the scuppers.

The generator parts arrived and Nic installed them but we still have the same problem so investigations are ongoing with no solution in sight. We've been here a month now and haven't yet even started a single job that we came here to do. Very frustrating!