The Bahamas is indeed a picture postcard scene of shades of turquoise and aquamarine. However when our friends Jocelyn and Colin arrived from the airport after dark we had to dinghy over a good supply of waterproofs and black bin liners and still had a row of damp clothing hanging to dry overnight. Wind driven waves slopped and sprayed for the ten minutes of the journey. “This is not what my work colleagues imagine boating in the Bahamas is like” said Colin.
At this time of year ‘fronts’ come through bringing winds and rougher seas, and in-between there are gorgeous calm days when you can see the bottom of the sea 20 meters below the boat.
With Clare and two friends on board last week, we visited Warderick Wells in the Exuma Land and Sea Park. This beautiful spot has mooring buoys placed down a narrow channel of deeper water with shallows on both sides and islands and rocky outcrops all around. Traditionally boats make a sign from drift wood or other flotsam and put it with many others on top of ‘Booby Hill’, the highest point around. Pegasus made a necklace of sand dollars, one letter per shell, and strung it up. One storm will break it up, but it’s very biodegradable! Being a protected area the snorkeling is good, more and larger fish, conch, a turtle and a couple of rays. The highlight for our geologist daughter was the stromatolite reef. These very ancient algal ‘mats’ are now only found here and in one location in Australia. If unprepared, most people would pass the unprepossessing ‘rocks’ without a second glance. Snorkelling in the area proved a l
We also took our young crew to Big Major’s Spot (there is also a Little Major’s Spot) which has two claims to fame. There are some pigs living wild on the beach which paddle and even swim out to dinghies hoping for some food scraps. They are very clean pigs as they have a life of sand and sea, but were a bit too friendly for our liking. The island was also the setting for a scene of ‘Thunderball’. A watery cave which is lit by a hole in the rock above and is full of fish, which get fed breadcrumbs by visiting tourist launches.