Wednesday, March 29, 2023

A decidedly un-nomadic few years is over with

 

The last blog post is dated at the end of 2019 so I  am more than a little  overdue for an update. There were no traveling  stories to tell for the pandemic  times, then I  got too busy to write when the traveling  life resumed.

Nomad departing Suriname.

Lunch break while biking near Domburg.

With Nomad safely  moored in Domburg I  went to the USA  to do some jobs and catch up with family and friends, returning  on the first day of 2020.  A few months were spent doing maintenance, meeting up with friends and touring the Suriname river. With my three month tourist visa expiring at the end of March it was time to move on. I decided on Martinique  as the next port of call to meet up with my friends on Fai Tira and find a boatyard  to haul out for a bottom painting before heading north in the springtime.  It was an uneventful  six hundred miles to the anchorage  at St Anne's. Little did I know that this would be Nomad's last sail for nearly two years!

Enroute to Martinique.

I was searching  for a suitable  place to leave Nomad so I  could position  myself  to be ready for an upcoming  delivery job when the call came in that it was being postponed  indefinitely  due to the burgeoning  pandemic. It was a very fortunate  bit of timing as the world locked down on travel a few days later. Had I departed I would  have been trapped  in the USA with no way to return home!

 Martinique  turned out to be a very fortuitous  choice for an unplanned  extended stay. With the reasonable  cost of living and laid back culture those of us who spent the pandemic in Martinique on our boats  were far better off than cruisers in many other countries. 

So what does one do for 21 months in a harbor on an island when going ashore becomes a high risk activity? Weekly bottom  scrubbing  as I  was overdue for fresh bottom  paint. Making new friends and helping them fix and build things. Make a junk rig sail for the dinghy. Dinners with a small close group of friends. Late night urban foraging.  Trying to keep Nomad from rusting  away in the endless  tropical rains. And so much more. Some of these activities are interesting  enough to warrant their own story on the blog and  will be the subject  of upcoming posts.

Sunset over Diamond Rock.


Local racing boat.

Not much bottom paint left!

Red land crab .

Beach hiking near St Anne's. 

Late November of 2021 travel restrictions  began to moderate and I was able to gain entry to Carriacou  with additional  paperwork  and testing  requirements . It was an all too brief but uneventful sail from Martinique  with only a broken batten to repair on arrival.  Immediately  after being processed  through the quarantine anchorage and clearing in I  got quotes from both boatyards and began to source materials for the  haulout.  Within  couple weeks of arrival Nomad was on dry land for her much needed bottom  job. As boat projects frequently  do  it grew from a quick bottom  painting job to a 137 day marathon of boat projects which will  be the topic of the next blog post.

Hauling out in Carriacou