Alan is a pretzel. Literally. Knees hug
ruddy cheeks; arms twist above and below. He has worked his way down into the
awkward cavity at the back of the boat; a salty pretzel with a wrench. The
metal steering tiller arm threatens to behead him as he’s jostled about by the
waves below.
Shiloh bucks and jolts in tune with the
building seas. The wind is picking up which
was not forecast. Surprise surprise. We are anchored in 8 ft of water
over the Exuma banks and land is miles away in every direction. We have come
through Hog Cay’s narrow channel at high tide and the next island to find
protection is over 30 miles away. In sailboat terms, that’s a lot of hours
away.
Night is approaching and we are frantic. On
anchoring, we discovered our floorboards floating in the port hull.
With bulging eyes and sinking stomachs we
exchange anxious glances. ‘Are we sinking?!!!’, is what we ask without asking.
I stick my finger into the greasy sloshing liquid and realise it’s fresh water.
Phew! But wait, this means our entire water tanks have emptied into the dirty
bilges. Irretrievable. I want to cry.
A day before, we’d negotiated the tedious tying
up at Exuma yacht club and spent an hour or two filling the tanks to the brim
for our adventure in the land of remoteness…. $50 later, we left, tanks full,
hearts happy and excited.
Now, as the water slapped back and forth
with the bouncing of the boat, our hearts, if not our boat, have sunk.
The next 4 hours grind by in a sweaty
frenzy, JW and Al pumping the lot of it out into the ocean and running tests
with our remaining portable water jugs to locate the cause/leak.
Our queasy guest downs a Gravol and slinks
into a cabin into a comatose state to avoid the drama.
By dark, the lot of us feeling green and
gutted; the guys have discovered the culprit. An old shower pipe on the ‘sugar
scoop’ (back step) had burst and triggered the water pump. It had dutifully
pumped the tanks dry. Sigh.
Well, we have to go back to Georgetown! How
will we manage 3 weeks in the Raggeds without a drop of water?!
Alan the ultimate optimist jumps up,
unfolded from his yogic position and protests. We do have watermakers. Between
our two boats, we will make jugs and fill a tank just enough to give us three
quick showers and a sink of dishwashing water a day. So hesitantly we agree,
and try to regain our enthusiasm. But clearly this is not a good start.
The official Explorer Guides (many
cruisers’ bibles for sailing) describe where we are headed as follows:
“This
is unpopulated wilderness… You must be totally self-sufficient here…there is a
palpable sense of remoteness… we do not encourage casual visiting… there are no
marinas, no Search and Rescue help, no fuel, no water… you are on your own
here.”
Sleep comes clawing and drags us under,
despite the fact the wind has decided to hand us a further warning. It’s
howling and kicking up the shallow waters around us, creating a wild vast
washing machine as our night’s shelter.
Two days later, we are sitting on a beach,
drinks in hand, snacks set up on a ragged piece of wood, chatting with the crew
of two other catamarans we found as we sailed around the top of Flamingo Cay.
Seems cruiser life as usual. Normal but for the constant drone of the
watermaker motor, sucking in that sea water and miraculously churning out
trickles of water we can use! Jugs are lugged up and down the stairs, keeping
our tanks just full enough…
Fast forward one more day. The watermaker
has died. And we are one further island down into the heart of the Ragged
Islands. The area where ‘you are on your own, no help, no water, no marinas
etc…. Again those exchanged looks of panic and some added frustration. Sod’s
Law applies double fold in remote areas. We are not Robinson Crusoe and this
issue needs fixing fast.
6 hours later, sweat, blood, chunks of
metal rearranged, hammers, wrenches, rust flakes… the watermaker, having been
dislodged from it’s cupboard below and brought out into the light, lies exposed
on our cockpit table. A casualty of time and salt air. The prognosis is iffy.
Alan zooms away in his dinghy with the cracked
brushes (an essential motor part), and an idea. And we wait. And in the meantime he carries jugs
and jugs of water from his boat to ours. Thanks goodness for buddy-boaters. And
best friends. The Raggeds would otherwise have defeated us as the ‘holy’ book
predicted.
We try to carry on with the business of
enjoying the clear blue waters and white sand beaches while the patient lies
like a rusty elephant on it’s makeshift hospital gurney. We cover him in old
sheets for the night and hope for the best for the next day.
And doctor Al comes through first thing,
sun shining extra bright, the water a blue shade of turquoise… with a home glued potentially life-renewing part!!!!
After two more hours of surgery the
patient is returned to his working compartment and the moment of truth… the on
button. IT WORKS!!!!!! It works! Phew. It keeps working. Which means we can
keep going. So after some cups of tea for the doc and pouring some libations to
the gods of remote boat life… we are off.
Such glamorous life you live. Fixing broken things in exotic places.
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