Quick view of Clifton |
Our
brains were quite shaken from the night before's rocking experience,
making any other anchorage look very good. Our next stop was Clifton Bay in Union Island, an anchorage protected by a long reef on which a local guy named Janti has constructed a small island made of conch shells and cement, he has named it Happy Island, a bar and restaurant where he serves drinks and food.
We motored in and dropped the anchor behind the reef, in the calmest and most protected place we
found, in front of the kite surfing school. Then happy
with the place that we anchored, we went ashore to have lunch and clear out of the
Grenadines. We also did a tour around the island, that really didn't
impressed anybody, but as we say: “been there, done that... don't
need to come back”.
Then
we went back to the boat thinking about a nap, a swim and a
trip to Happy Island. Just as we started to lie down this dinghy approaches the boat and a kite surfing instructor announces that one
of the kite surfing students got her kite tangled in the mast while we were
gone, and said "I think she broke something up there, I'm sorry”. We looked up to the top of the mast and the wind instrument mast head unit was bent and had pieces hanging from the wires.
Archie
and I took a express lesson of how to hoist Jim up to the top of the
mast; and for his sake we are good students. He came down with the
mast head unit, It was completely trashed. There was no way that it could be repaired.
The
instruments on the boat were made 26 years ago, by a company called
Datamarine, they are great quality and very accurate, and were
put on Salty Shores in 1986, when she was built. Unfortunately this
company is out of business and nobody makes them any more.
The
solution he didn't like was to get a modern brand, which is not as reliable and more complicated. How was
Jim going to make this Moroccan, raised in France, living in Haiti,
working for the U.N. woman; understand that what had just happened
wasn't a matter of a few hundred dollar?
Finally
the French woman came on board. After a little introduction the
conversation went nicely and then changed to the business of the problem. With a Budget
Marine catalog Jim showed her a comparable new wind speed instrument. The cost of the mast head unit, the digital display, the bracket and cable that connects the two would cost around 1800 dollars. The labor for installation would be at least 500 dollars and another two to three hundred dollars to stay in a Marina while the work was being done. There would also be the added cost of shipping and duties about 300 dollars.
“I
understand, I understand it's not inexpensive. My father has a sail
boat and I own a plane, I know.” At the end of the meeting they exchange
contact information, Jim also gave her his bank routing and his account number, since she suppose to transfer 2000 dollars to start the process. During the entire time that she was on the boat she wore huge aviator sunglasses, so we could never really look her straight in the eyes. When she left I felt a little uncomfortable.
AnechyNotes
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