April, 2009


Port Antonio, Jamaica
Yah Man, we are still in Jamaica. Yah Man, music blasting 24-hours a day, Yah Man, the same tunes, same rhythm... Respect Man, food is spicy, jerk pork, jerk chicken, curries...spices melt and mingle in our mouths - a big change from the Raoul’s country! It’s lush here, green folliage and flowers of incredible colours everywhere… Blue Mountains just step away. This place was made famous by the actor Errol Flynn, who said Port Antonio was more beautiful than any woman he had ever seen – hmmm…maybe he really didn’t look around that hard, it has it’s charm, but… Still, it is the safest parish of this country and it’s free from tourist crowds. This was a thriving banana shipping port, even as far back as 2003 when we stopped here, but now due to global competition this industry is gone. Port facilities here are modern and guarded around the clock. We took advantage of their new yard and pulled Nikan out to see what’s going on with the keel coating protection. Surprise! - the damage was more extended than we suspected. We had to redo the entire underwater protection, 6 days, 14-hours a day working under the blaring sun, 30+°C – not an ounce of fat on J-P’s body left. Can’t say that about my aging middle age figure! There is always something to fix or maintain. Like one of the fellow sailors said: “People think we are retired and on vacation, but man, this is work.” and I have to agree, although now we should be good for a while…till something else goes. We had a great day rafting on Rio Grande. Rafting here means sitting on the bamboo raft with a guide and gently flow down the river with a stop for a beer, home made lunch on the river bank. After a month here, we are slowly getting prepared to head towards Boca del Torro in Panama, about 600 nautical miles from here, which should take us between four to five days. As they say here, later….

March, 2009


Port Antonio, Jamaica
We say good-bye to our friends in Cuba. Before leaving communism behind, we rent a car and visit Santiago. For sure we would be still lost, wondering around the signless countryside, signless city, if it wasn't for the never ending mass of hitchhikers that direct us. There are no signs anywhere, except propaganda billboards and if you don't follow the main highway, it's very easy to get lost. We drive a family with their sick baby to the hospital in one city, another sick woman with an infection after her cesarean and with her new baby to another hospital, in another city, students to university after their weekend with the family in some village....endless, we always try to stop for a woman with a child. These people sometimes wait for hours for a bus, and it has been known - personally by J-P (when I was in Toronto) - that sometimes bus doesn't show up at all! On the way to Fort El Morro J-P makes an exception and picks up two young, cute, sexy girls who visit the place with us. This is a bit of diversion for them. as there is not much happening in people's life, except maybe dreaming about a bottle of good shampoo! I get fed up with the never changing propaganda signs and wonder if majority of people are really, really brainwashed, as signs are not only in public places, but in the city we see them on private doors, windows and always it's the same something or death. Good-bye Cuba!!
We arrived to Port Antonio, Jamaica after uneventful passage of 2 1/2 day. J-P discovered some damage on the keel coating protection, so that has to be fixed here, before we continue to Panama. There is no shortage of fruit here, or vegetable. and although grown on this island, is more expensive than in Canada. And finally Internet! We are enjoying everything that free market has to offer us here and J-P is trying to gain some weight he lost in Cuba, ice cream in on his daily menu. I just have to watch that he doesn't over-do it!