Island Fun with Annina

Hey there! Time for a quick catch-up. We've hopped around 7 islands in the BVIs, mingling with mega-yachts that basically have floating playgrounds – yeah, I got a smidge jealous 😂.
In Anegada,Read more
Hey there! Time for a quick catch-up. We've hopped around 7 islands in the BVIs, mingling with mega-yachts that basically have floating playgrounds – yeah, I got a smidge jealous 😂.
In Anegada, Annina and I explored the island in a slightly worn-out mini-moke (seen better days, for sure). Gorgeous beaches and a hilariously bumpy ride!
Evening plans? A short beach ride. The horses, let's just say, were not exactly in the mood...
NYE found us in a bay, offering a magical view of a twinkling city of boat masts. However, the beach bar party was a bit of a fail 😂🙈.
So we kicked off the new year on Zenia's bow, soaking in the breathtaking starry sky. Cheers to more adventures! 🌟
Oh, and the finale? Taking Annina back to the main island. Dinghy went nuts with waves at 20 knots – we played tug-of-war 🙈.
Annina walks from bay to airport, waves goodbye, and zips past our mast. Until the next wild ride, smooth seas! 🌊✈️Read more
Après une quinzaine de miles parcourus, direction Anegada Island. Le paradis de la langouste paraît-il. Laurent nous trouve encore un mouillage 5 étoiles, loin du petit port de l'île. La couleur de l'eau est toujours aussi belle. Après un bref repas nous partons nous balader à l'ouest de l'île, une côte qui paraît assez sauvage. L'eau y est claire et nous partons en chasse, au menu, une langouste et 6 lambis. Le retour se fait sous une attaque de moustiques plus agressive que celle de Perl Harbor. Le menu du soir sera fait d'une langouste avec mayonnaise maison suivi de lambis à la quasi armoricaine. Un délice. Le lendemain nous irons visiter l'île à scooter, plus vers le nord est. Le centre de l'île est en fait un véritable marécage, d'où les moustiques, avec même des flamants roses ! L'après-midi sera rythmée par de la lecture, de la sieste, des mots fléchés et une belle pêche pour Laurent et moi avec deux énormes langoustes de 2.5kg et 1.5kg. Demain, nous quitterons l'île pour retourner vers le gros de BVI. La chance de la pêche a tournée, demain ça mord à la canne.Read more
Quelles photos magnifiques, c’est vraiment paradisiaque. Quant à la pêche elle est miraculeuse! Laissez la vie sauve au baliste si vous en croisez un😉Merci pour toutes ces nouvelles ensoleillées gros bisous on vous aime🥰❤️ [Micky]
Früher Morgen, kurz vor sechs Uhr. Es ist noch mindestens zwei Stunden finster. Nicht einmal der Hahn hat schon gekräht. Weil die Fähre so zeitig ablegt werde ich dennoch jetzt schon aus der Hängematte geschmissen. Die Straßen sind frei und meine Schwester tut das was sie am liebsten tut - Hauptsache schnell weg. Über die Straßenverhältnisse müssen wir uns vielleicht ein ander Mal unterhalten. Egal.
Am Pier gilt es zunächst heraus zu finden ob heute gleiche Preise für alle gelten oder ob es Touristenaufschlag gibt. Zumindest heute zahlen jedoch alle das Gleiche. Und auf geht die Fahrt nach Anegada. Der morgen verspricht viel Gutes. Die Wolken hängen alle auf Tortola fest und geben von Weitem einen herrlichen Regenbogen nach dem Nächsten. Nach dem Ersten Zwischenstop auf Virgin Gorda lassen wir die Vulkane hinter uns und fahren hinaus aufs offene Meer. Meine Schwester verschwindet derweil beim Kapitän der scheinbar ein guter Freund von ihr ist. Eine halbe Stunde Später treffen wir wie aus dem Nichts wieder auf Land. Anegada ist die einzige Insel der BVI die man eigentlich nur aus dem Flugzeug sieht. Flach wie eine Flunder liegt das ehemalige Korallenriff vor uns. Höchster Punkt 2m über Null.
Dennoch ist die Insel seit Siebenhundert und mehr Jahren bewohnt. Davon zeugen heute noch die weißen. Muschelberge (Anegada Conch Shell Islands) die aus dem Wasser ragen als wären die Zeiten längst vergangen. Doch die Fischer fangen auch heute noch Conches und setzen diese Tradition fort.
Anegada lebt traditionell vom Fischfang und vom Hummer. Heute kommt vor allem der Tourismus hinzu. Wer will kann sich ab ca. 300$ die Nacht einmieten. Oder er ankert mit dem Boot.
Alles was auf die Insel kommt, kommt mit dem Boot. Lebensmittel, Post, sogar Blumensträuße in einer bereits mit Wasser gefüllten Vase.
Das einzige was sich hier fast von selbst züchtet sind Esel, Ziegen und Iguanas. Man hält die Esel und Ziegen für Arbeit, Fleisch ind Milch. Die Iguanas sind hingegen eine bedrohte Tierart die über drei Jahre zunächst in Käfigen aufwächst und dann ausgewildert wird um möglichst viel frühe Verluste zu vermeiden.
Was es sonst noch gibt? Jede Menge einsame Strände zum Schnorcheln und Kitesurfen. Anegada ist die einzige Koralleninsel der BVI. Die Riffe beginnen meist schon direkt im flachen Strandwasser und gehen Kilometer weit hinaus. Und je nach Saison kann die Insel sehr vom Wind gebeutelt werden. Also - Bier holen und dann lauf um dein Leben!
Anegada wartet schon. =)Read more
Es zieht uns wieder weiter und wir Motoren bei absoluter Windstille die paar Seemeilen Richtung Norden zur Insel Anegada. Diese ruhige See hat auch etwas total faszinierendes an sich. Angekommen schauen wir uns etwas um, doch irgendwie ist hier nicht so wirklich das „hidden paradise“, ob wir wieder an der falschen Stelle sind? Und leider ist unser Ankerplatz auch wieder etwas rollig. Wir packen zum Sonnenuntergang noch mal unsere „neue“ Drohne aus und freuen uns darüber, dass die einfach so viel leichter handlebar ist. Am nächsten Tag Düsen wir wieder Richtung Süden nach Beef Island und suchen uns eine neue Ankerbucht. Diese ist für den Abend noch recht angenehm, doch der Wind nimm über Nacht wieder zu und schaukelt uns am nächsten Morgen aus dem Bett. Na, wo geht’s denn dann nun jetzt hin?! Die Bucht weiter im Süden oder um die Ecke? Ich mache einen Fehler während des Anker lichtens und es herrscht etwas blöde Stimmung an Bord, weshalb wir uns dazu entscheiden ins leewärtige Spanish Town zu fahren. Spanish Town ist die Hauptstadt der Insel Virgin Gorda weshalb auch hier der Ankerplatz unruhig ist, dieses Mal aber nicht aufgrund der Wetterverhältnisse sondern der Freizeitboote und Fähren. Wir suchen hier den Supermarkt auf, der weitaus günstiger ist und düsen bereits 3 Tage nach Aufbruch wieder in unsere bekannte Bucht vor dem Saba Rock.Read more
We're headed back to our favourite spots, and making efforts to cover those we missed.
Battling to keep up on the blogging front. Watch these spaces for updates and additions. Hopefully you're all on holiday and have a good novel to fill that reading void! I've got a hold of some photos and updated the Puerto Rico blogs, and if you're on insta, add joolspeters for video updates or head to www.instagram.com/joolspeters to see his work. It's a lot of footage so we're about four weeks behind!
Update:
It's been great having the extra company aboard. The extra hands are also pulling their weight; dividing time in the galley, partaking in missions ashore and giving us the option to split into two teams when necessary.
Since new years', time has flown by. We've hit JVD, Virgin Gorda, Anagada then readied about and hailed Cooper, Salt and Norman Islands eventually docking back at Tortola to drop Dave and restock the ship.
A few highlights from the week that was:
The windsurf gear has held together, now ragged but still in very much usable condition. Windguru is in the red from tomorrow on - no doubt one of us will be putting a shoulder through the main panel in due course. We had a cracker of a windsurf in both Gorda and Eustatia Sounds, with cool 18-20kt breezes and flat seas calmed by an outer reef. In the mix was a failed attempt to windsurf from Anagada to Virgin Gorda (14nm), Jools not happy with the dying breeze. I took advantage of more breeze and a slightly shorter distance to tackle Euststatia Sound to Dog Islands. A howler of a downwind rendering me physically useless for much of the day. Cat and Dave added to the returns, with hours of uphauling and not much sailing - credit to both of them for the perseverance under challenging conditions!
Jools and Scott tangoed in a battle of epic proportions with the elusive and, frankly quite frustrating, Anagada lobster. Snorkelling the same reef four times proved fruitless, while the boys made good use of the first aid kit, tending to an ever increasing number of coral cuts. Loblob: 4, boys: 0... for now. I'll note that coral reefs definitely add to the homefield advantage of a lobster, when compared to a rocky surround. This purely because the monolithic mass of rocks offers little more hiding than a superficial crack or overhang. Whereas coral is typically a large network of vacant spaces, tangled in itself and plentiful other reef based organisms. We're increasingly careful with the fields in which we choose to do battle.
The RMS Rhone is such a fantastic dive. I've now done it twice and it is well and truely my favourite dive. Perfect warm, blue, calm water, three swim throughs, one of which into darkness with nothing but silhouettes of fish around you, lobster, turtles, stingrays and sharks, coral everywhere, five seperate sections of ship, I struggle to do it justice with words alone. If you're ever in the area put this at the top of the list.
If you've been missing stories of boat problems you can miss away. Aside from a dodgy fridge and a busted (spare) bilge the new year has been kind to us. Nine days left, here's hoping!
Norman Island again delivered. I personally love this island, it would come in second favourite to Virgin Gorda of all our stops to date. Plus, it's less than an hour from our home port so it's a no brainer either side of call to port. We spent our last night with Dave there and it was another cracker. Crystal blue waters have not yet failed us, visibilty there hasn't been less than 15 meters. We've also taken a liking to the floating bar, Willy T's - which was well and alive this night. We danced, there was drunken tomfoolery incuding more bombs of the top deck, and we gossiped about the eclectic mix of patrons; the very rich, the very high, the very drunk and of course the very local - circling the bar in 17 feet of boat with at least 500 horsepower of unmuffled inboard engine. That night ended in the first three of what, no doubt, will be many cat-splits; the process of rowing dinghy under occupied catamaran, a hilarious combination of stupidity, cheek and silent oarsmanship. The giggling gaggle of five happy to have finally ticked the cat split off the list.Read more
End of the chain.
11 days ago we anchored in the south western most anchorage in the BVI. Today we are safely anchored in 10 feet of water at the north eastern most edge of the island chain. The coral island of Anagada. To say we've seen it all would be a lie. We've dabbled in and out of anchorages along the south of Sir Francis Drake Channel and plan to set sail tomorrow to dabble in what the northern coast of Tortola (and associated islands) has to offer.
Anagada is isolated. The feeling comes not from the distance from the mainland (It's a mere 10nm or so), but rather the exposure to the elements. Maxing out at a mere 20 feet above sea level, Anagada provides protection from only the swell, as the trades rip over the desolate island and straight through a leeward anchorage. Furthermore, the shallow grade of the island extends into the seaward front at a similar angle, creating treacherous shallows, and nerve racking coral breaks. Our first confrontation with such shallows occurred in the 'channel' where the sounder pinged 6.2 feet. 0.2 feet more than our draft. The nights anchorage peaked at 10 feet as we watched the boat swing over coral heads inches below the keel. Lucky for a low tidal range.
Perfecting our anchorage to ensure a sound nights sleep became somewhat of an activity. Snorkelling the perifery of the anchorage allowed us to find the deepest water. After agreeing the boat was 15 or so yards off centre, the boys set to moving the anchor to the ideal spot. The weight belts went on and with anchor and chain in hand, and a deep breath in body, we were running the anchor along the sea floor. Fair to say this won't be the first time, I reckon.
Update: we hit that coral head on the second night. Twice. Shhhh don't tell. It was a gentle bang just as we were drifting off to sleep. Then another an hour later. Still confused as to how it happened, but at one point our sounder read 3 feet so we must have been swinging over something gnarly! Maybe next time we'll find a bit more depth...
Our exploration of Anagada was waylayed by the oncoming of holiday syndrome. Nearly two weeks in, our bodies have begun to adapt (or react?) to boat life. I'm casually sleeping back to back 10 hour nights, with plenty of daily activity but very little intensity. My walking legs, trained (solely) in two years of carless Sydney streets already feel weak at the sight of a decent length footpath. Not even a strong cup of Joe can get the fibres buzzing. So when the first touch of land was proposed as a jog, motivation dwindled. After some persuasion, a short dinghy trip and a touchdown onto the softest sand the world has to offer, I was not ready to endure 7-8km of endless white sand running. If only I'd adventured with less active people.
The next day we hit the roads as wreckless hoons on scooters. Probably not dissimilar to a scooter you would hire in any developing country, these deathtraps were astoundingly unsafe. Flat bald tyres, a permanent left steer bias, no electronics and questionable brakes; I've never felt so grateful for a helmet prior having a crash. Pot holes, cattle and goat were also amoungst the safety hazards on our radar. The island felt largely abandoned aside from a small tourist industry which was fed by a respectively large lobster industry. Just one of the half dozen restaurants on the island would feed 65 people lobster that night. At $40-60 per main we'll wait to catch our own thanks. However, it would've been rude to say no to a few beers at the bars on the water. So we squeezed that in to our hectic days schedule and watched the sun go down. Then we remembered that we needed light to see the reefs on the way back to the boat, so that made for an interesting trip.Read more
Traveler Our day began with an early 6:30 am snorkel tour to the conch mound graveyard in Anagada. It was a beautiful morning with great snorkeling as seen on Becky’s video. We saw a turtle, stingray and lots of fish. A little rough in the water at times and a good workout!!
Traveler Oreo, Sherwin’s dog, joined us for the tour. Lol! we had beer before breakfast and loud 80's music
Traveler
🥰🐴Beautiful Adventures you had tougether🍀🥂Love Möschli & Pöpsch
Traveler 🥰