British Virgin Islands
Road Town

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    • Day 178

      Road Town erkunden

      March 12, 2022 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

      Da wir geschafft von der kleinen Wanderung am Vortag waren und noch einiges zu organisieren hatten, entschieden wir uns für eine kleine Erkundungstour durch die kleine Stadt Road Town.
      Dabei kamen wir an einer Brauerei vorbei, in der wir ein kleines Tasting machen konnten. Als wir einige Zeit dort saßen bemerkten wir etwas im Wasser und es stellte sich heraus, dass es zwei Rochen waren, die dort nach etwas zu essen suchten.Read more

    • Day 38

      Tortola, BVI

      November 24, 2016 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      We made it to the Caribbean!

      Forgetting that St Thomas, USVI is US soil, we were initially surprised to not be greeted by customs. Rather, we were hit with a giant heat bat followed swiftly by breath of air so humid it was bordering on drinkable. Then came the sweat. Heavy, relentless, beading sweat. Mmmmm.

      By the time we reached the ferry, I was in need of an outfit change. A brief look at the passports and we were on the boat to the BVIs. Not even an 18kt head wind could stop us. Or cool us down.

      After a few customs hiccups in Road Town, a long walk in the wrong direction with all our bags, and a twice-as-long walk in the other direction, we arrived at the hotel. (I should note that most of that walking was on the road...footpaths here are few and far between.) We quickly discovered that the hotel had AC and that's all that mattered. However, cue boat panic moment. For those of you who haven't been on boats, they get hot. The suns attacks them from the sky and the engine, stove, oven and lights heat them from the inside out. The only source of cool is the breeze which, at a low of 27 degrees, doesn't quite balance the system. I am genuinely fearing a non-metaphorical meltdown.

      We definitely hit island life square on. It seems very familiar to Pacific culture, the only difference is the locals aren't shouting 'Bula' from a distant paddock. Our greetings at the airport, ferry and hotel were somewhat inhospitable, which was a little disappointing, but experiences since have been better, now that we know that locals respond well to a smile and a joke. Now we just have to get over the feeling of being ripped off on every purchase (its bloody expensive here!!) and we'll be away laughing.

      Day two on Tortola was equally as hot, but I had come to terms with my early demise and got on with the day. Scoping out the supermarket situation was our number one priority. Where and how to feed three hungry boys, on an island of 2,500 people....for 2 months. The most highly rated supermarket was Bobby's who also offer delivery to you boat, if you order 7 to 10 days in advance. Our mistake. Upon inspection, Bobbys was under construction and was currently clearing stock. Something they failed to mention on their website. Not a refridgerated good in sight, nor a fruit or vegetable, nor a pricetag. Not a good start. Supermarkets two and three offered little more and we began to panic. Rushing back to pick up a windsurfer, and receive our boat briefing, left us anxious about this situation.

      Reinforcing the earlier mention of island time, our man David was late to the boat. But we'd helped ourselves to an introduction of home for the next two months. 50 feet of well used fibreglass with four cabins and a crews quarters - more than enough for three!

      After he arrived, his briefing was short and sweet (the way it should be) but the number of items that were casually skipped over for 'not working' was cause for concern. After insisting on several of them being fixed, we set out for a wee sail. All went swimmingly except for the fact the marina is too shallow to get out of without grounding the boat, and Dave had a personal emergency which cut the trip short.

      Fortunately for Dave we had already planned on spending the night in the marina, and took advantage of the afternoon to do our grocery shop. We finally found our mark on our forth supermarket and unleashed a Pauline Ellis special - two full shopping trolleys. Interestingly, we caught a cab each way which cost $12 out and $25 back. Riddle me that. It was however, a drop in the ocean for what was spent on the shop.

      The next day after a bit of faffing we finally set off, pushed out over the sandbar and hoisted the sails, let the dream begin!
      Read more

    • Day 95

      End of an Era

      January 20, 2017 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

      The time to say goodbye to our trusty stead is upon us. Looking back, here's how the numbers stacked up...

      Today marks 56 days on a boat. 55 consecutive nights in a rocky bed. Six of those were on moorings and three in a marina, making for 45 restless nights on our own tackle. No mean feat considering how easily one could succumb to the ease of a nearby mooring ball. All of which, I might add, were dropped inside Scott's free diving range (60 feet).

      We've been to 20 islands comprising three countries on three different boats, and dragged ourselves through customs countless times.

      We've swum on every day except one (Puerto Rico) and we've snorkelled far far further than we've walked in that time. I haven't done the math but I'm quite confident we've breathed more air underwater than on land, 42 collective dives equating to US $350 dollars worth of air. I guess that qualifies us as fish? We've windsurfed in every country, and repaired the sail at least half a dozen times. Between activities we've read 28 books collectively.

      Keeping the team full of energy was tough given the appetites on board but we've eaten like kings and queens. All meals cooked aboard save for four dinners ashore. We've caught and cooked crayfish and fish (and coconuts...never again) and baked dozens of loaves of bread, baguettes and even bagels. To the patisserie, we've indulged in brownie, biscuits, cake and scones, and made do with limited resources and a faulty three burner gas stove/oven. That there is $2700 worth of groceries.

      We've barely seen a car, let alone a traffic jam. Public transport has not featured, period. We've set two alarm clocks and only risen to one. I've done two loads of washing and the same number of shaves and a total of three hot showers in two months. Pressing a shirt is but a far far distant dream.

      We've swum the bluest waters, sailed the strongest winds, climbed the rockiest mast, lay on the whitest beaches and watched the most glorious sunsets. The elusive green flash, still just that. To no end we will miss this lifestyle. I guess you could say, we've been living the dream.

      We're back on Tortola for two nights (courtesy of Cat's cousin Patrick and his family), then St Thomas for one before flying out to Cuba on the 22nd. Ten days in Cuba then we hit Mexico where we hope to rendezvous with our unemployed compatriots, Mike and Char. Tally Hoe!

      Hope everyone had cracking Christmas breaks, sounds like NZ took a bit of a battering but there'll be plenty of summer left yet!
      Read more

    • Day 48

      "Buy a drink" She said!!

      February 25, 2013 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Road Town,Tortola today and we continued our cultural tour of the Caribbean by looking for a cheap local bar, which we initially failed to do.
      The bars we passed were either closed or as in one case to expensive at $3 a beer!!.lol
      So we headed back to the harbour bar which turned out to be even more expensive at $3.50 a beer but it did have WiFi.
      I purchased 4 Carib beers, flippin heck that cost $14!! (I'm sure I'm turning into a Yorkshire man)
      I then says to the girl behind the bar does the WiFi need a password? To which she replies "yes", so I says "what is it?"
      She replies "buy a drink".
      Then me being the complete knob head that I am says "I've just bought one, in fact I've just bought 4".
      She looks at me and I look at her for what seems an eternity.
      She then says "right what did you ask me?" I said "is there a password for the WiFi?"
      She says "yes" once again.
      So I says "what is it? 'please' ", thinking she was being funny because I hadn't said please the first time.
      To which she replied 'buy a drink'.
      I actually opened my mouth to speak when the penny FINALLY dropped 'buyadrink' ......'buyadrink', what a clever password, far to clever for me obviously.....LMFAO
      On the way back to the ship we found a proper local bar doing beers at 2 for $5 and rum punch and something called a pain killer for $5 each, John insisted we tried one after our beers, I had a rum punch and he had a pain killer.
      I can tell you they both killed pain, until the next morning when they then caused pain....will we ever learn? ....lol.
      Read more

    • Day 176

      In den British Virgin Islands angekommen

      March 10, 2022 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Nach fast 3 Tagen segeln kamen wir auf den British Virgin Islands an. Dort machten wir uns auf zu unsere Unterkunft und wollten gleich die Insel erkunden.
      Unser Weg führte uns nach Beef Island und zu zwei paradiesischen Stränden.Read more

    • Day 8

      Road Town, Tortola

      December 6, 2023 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

      Stopped at Road Town. A small town with colorful buildings.
      イギリス領ヴァージン諸島のロードタウンに入港しました。鮮やかな色の建物が多い、小さな街です。

    • Day 12

      Tortola - Long Bay Beach auf eigene Faus

      November 27, 2019 in British Virgin Islands ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

      Heute sind wir auf Tortola. Wir fahren mit dem Taxi zum Long Bay Beach. Wunderschöner Strand - kristallklares Wasser. Leider wenig Schatten und es ist nur im Wasser auszuhalten (wie schade ;-) )

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Road Town, رود تاون, Roud Taun, Горад Род-Таўн, Роуд Таун, Род-Таун, Ρόουντ Τάουν, Rod-Taŭno, רואוד טאון, ロードタウン, როუდ-ტაუნი, 로드타운, Rod Taunas, ரோடு டவுன், روڈ ٹاون, 罗德城

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