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Afloat in the Bahamas
By Debra Cantrell
The
Bahamian islands are renowned for their expanses of powdery white
beaches that stretch for miles and gently taper off into crystal-clear
azure waters. Cruisers and non-cruisers alike have long portrayed this
sprawl of irregularly shaped islands as paradise found. Our expectations
were high as we journeyed from the north shores of Providenciales and
set a northwest course for Mayaguana Island, the largest of the far
Bahamian islands, and our first taste of the rumored paradise.
Abraham’s Bay at Mayaguana Island offers a large, shallow harbor that
is well protected by a breaking reef. Entrance to the harbor is made
through one of two narrow passages on either side and is best transited
in good light to see and avoid shoals and coral heads. Once anchored we
were as eager as Sydney, our Springer spaniel, to explore any one of the
several pale beaches that fringed the Bay. We quickly discovered these
to be elusive as not one was accessible unless we were prepared to pull
the dinghy through mud flats for a ¼ mile or more in ankle-deep water.
With the days light beginning to fade we made for the only clearly
visible landing, a worn pier where a couple of other dinghies were
tethered. We were agreeing that we wouldn’t want to be making what
turned out to be a fifteen minute ride after dark or when the winds were
up when we spotted the first of several nurse sharks prowling beneath
us. We’d boasted many times that we had seen only three sharks in all
our years in the BVIs and each time, people said to us ‘wait until you
get to the Bahamas…’.
At dawn the following morning we set off for Plana Cays, a pair of
uninhabited atolls that would serve as an overnight anchorage and
nothing more if our guidebooks were to be relied upon. After Abraham’s
Bay the steep virgin shores of the Plana Cays appeared at first glance
to be equally enticing, however, a significant surge made landing the
dinghy difficult if not outright dangerous. Choosing our moment
carefully, we made for shore only to discover that the blonde stretch of
sand was little more than a facade for coral slabs that lay
treacherously close to the surface at high tide and well exposed at low.
The Plana Cays are reported to be excellent shelling grounds however,
our explorations of both the lee and windward shores turned up nothing
more than a variety of debris blown ashore from storm surge.
We tucked in for the night fervently hoping that our discoveries at
Mayaguana Island and the Plana Cays were mere aberrations. It was with
these thoughts in mind that we departed the west Plana Cays shortly
after 8 AM and made for Atwood Harbor on Acklins Island, approximately
25 nm to the Northwest. With winds between 5 and 7 knots out of the NE
and near flat seas, we motor sailed the brief 3 and ½ hour passage and
managed to avoid the temptation to continue on to Pitts Town Landing on
Crooked Island, an additional 38 nm beyond. With little wind and no
increase predicted during the next 24 hours, Atwood Harbor promised to
be both safe and idyllic. I welcomed a short sail and some extended time
at anchor. Atwood Harbor was reported to have a crescent of ivory beach
at least a few miles long, and judging from the cautions in one of our
guide books (warning against this harbor when the wind and seas were
flowing from the north-northwest), there was every likelihood we would
have the anchorage to ourselves. We were both yearning for a just such a
place.
Acklins Island, like neighboring Mayagauna and Plana Cays, is
encircled by breaking reefs and well-charted coral heads. The entrance
to Atwood Harbor faces due north and should only be undertaken in good
light, calm seas, and an unswaying trust that the rock laying to
portside really is Umbrella Rock despite its deceptive appearance at
high tide. It wasn’t until several hours after we’d laid anchor and the
tide was at its lowest that it became apparent why this rock is so aptly
named. The handle of the umbrella is well hidden until the tide ebbs and
when at its lowest the rock actually resembles an enormous umbrella.
Using GPS way points noted in two guide books to confirm our own, we
made our approach from the east and gave considerable latitude to
Umbrella Rock a few miles to our port before beginning a ninety degree
course change that would take us directly into Atwood Harbor. No sooner
had we changed course when Jim spotted the first of three humpback
whales to our starboard – a mother and calf rising in unison from indigo
water and a third adult whale a short distance behind. We quickly
changed course to converge with the little pod taking care to remain a
healthy distance away so we wouldn’t scare them off. After 15 minutes or
so when it looked as though our visitors had left us, mom and calf
surfaced not 50 yards off our bow in what can only be described as an
encore performance. Then they were gone. A more spectacular welcome to
Atwood Harbor couldn’t have been imagined!
By noon we’d made our pass through the reefs and laid anchor with
four feet of sand under our keel. The dinghy was quickly launched and we
headed to a nearby shore only a stones throw from the big boat. In the
short distance between Beedahbun and the beach, we slowed to watch a six
foot nurse shark slide across the clear sandy bottom and saw several
sting rays scrounging in the same vicinity. The beach was all we had
hoped for and more – free of surge, and rimmed with an expanse of soft
white sand that sloped gently into the harbor. We strolled along the
beach collecting conch shells, and then scrutinized the shallow waters
surrounding ancient mangrove roots and rocky ledges that separated one
long stretch of beach from another. An ebbing tide made our explorations
especially rewarding. Nestled in a grassy sea bed that extended several
feet out from the mangroves were baby conch, 2-3 inches in length, and
beyond these were slightly larger rollers or juvenile conch. The empty
conch shells we’d found strewn about the beach were the less fortunate
brothers and sisters of these youngsters who are vulnerable to severe
storms and surge from the north-northwest. For shell collectors, these
incubators are especially attractive because they’ve not been damaged
with a chisel as have their larger relatives that are sold in abundance
in shops around the world. Experience has taught us that where there are
small conch there are bound to be larger ones in deeper waters. Our
mouths watered in anticipation of crispy conch fritters later in the
day.
Returning to Beedahbun for a late lunch we wondered aloud at the
treasures that had continued to preoccupy what appeared to be the same
nurse shark and rays meandering about the sea bottom. After lunch we set
off to explore a shallow creek encouraged by the efforts of a couple of
bone fishermen whom we’d watched pick their way through a narrow,
near-invisible entrance on the west side of the harbor. At the mouth of
the stream a current was running so swiftly that the waters appeared to
dance. I’d read about the dancing waters phenomenon that is common where
shallow water and a strong current moving in one direction converges
with an opposing wind but this was the first time I had witnessed this
spectacle. This meeting of wind and current caused strings of water to
leap from the surface, glistening in the afternoon sun and creating a
rainbow-effect that eludes the best of cameras.
A sandbar was beginning to emerge down the centre leaving only a few
shallow feet on either side as we gradually made our way upstream.
Sun-bleached sandy shores lining both sides of the creek fell off into
shifting shades of turquoise that when intercepted with the sandbar made
for a startling portrait of blues and white. We eventually emerged to a
large basin of shallows from which tributaries stretched in every
direction, disappearing into thick clusters of mangroves. Two runabouts,
each carrying a guide and a guest grazed at the fringes. On our
downstream descent where the basin fed the mouth of the stream, a three
foot lemon shark darted by our bow in knee-deep water. The sandbar we’d
passed on our way up was now quite prominent and proved irresistible:
Sydney and I ran down the middle sinking into the pudding-like sand
while Jim drifted alongside. Just before the sandbar disappeared around
a bend we took our places in the dinghy once again and let the dancing
water swirl us about as the stream converged with the harbor.
The coral reefs on the west side of the harbor lured us next. After
returning Syd to Beedahbun and launching the kayak, we set off – Jim to
explore the reef and hunt for dinner, and me to spot for him from the
kayak. This was the first time I’d paddled my kayak since our return to
Beedahbun a few months prior and I was as excited about its
re-inauguration as Jim was about the possibilities for dinner. For the
past several days I’d been wishing for perfect conditions: calm, clear
waters, a beach nearby to which I could paddle at first light with the
dog, and time to leisurely explore shorelines and winding waterways.
Atwood Harbor delivered on these conditions and more.
While Jim explored sea life below the water I delighted in exploring
it above and exercising my body in ways I hadn’t for a couple of months.
Regular reports of spectacular coral and an abundance of fish almost
tempted me to don my snorkeling gear but I was enjoying gliding about
the surface of the sea far too much to be influenced otherwise. Jim was
in the water barely fifteen minutes when he speared a healthy two pound
lobster that later made for a scrumptious dinner for two. Moments later
he happened upon a nine foot nurse shark enjoying an afternoon siesta
under a coral ledge that held the promise of more lobster. If this
sleepy predator hadn’t abruptly changed his position and stared Jim in
the eye, the lobster hunt may have continued. Once eye contact was made
however, Jim became the hunted as well as the hunter. This proved to be
the perfect time to climb aboard my yellow taxi and explore a less
threatening section of reef.
As Jim continued his explorations, he marveled at the condition of
the reefs, and the size, variety and abundance of fish. The reefs in
Atwood Harbor teemed with life! Few things are more maddening than being
within kissing distance of a school of grouper ranging in size from ten
to thirty pounds and not being able to take even the smallest for
dinner. The threat of contracting ciguatera, a potentially lethal fish
disease for which grouper are well known, was all that kept us from
feasting on this delicacy for the next month or so. Lobster sightings
were plentiful but none were as large as the two-ponder speared earlier;
a plate-sized rock hind did not have the same good fortune. But, once
back on Beedahbun, a quick read of Scott and Wendy Bannerol’s book, The
Cruiser’s Handbook of Fishing, discouraged us from enjoying our catch
along side the earlier cache of seafood. Instead, it was put to good use
as bait on our next passage. Rock hind, while excellent eating, share
with grouper the potential of harboring ciguatera.
Jim prepared the rock hind for the freezer before my discovery in the
Bannerol’s book, and as he’s often done with fish we’ve caught over the
years, automatically tossed the remains overboard. Within moments, two,
five-six foot nurse sharks were prowling around the boat. In all the
years we’d tossed biodegradable scraps overboard we’d never attracted
sharks – at least none that we no off. One or more remoras have
routinely come by to feast on everything from orange peels to stale
bread but not a shark. Those who’ve told us that the Bahamas are
abundant with sharks weren’t exaggerating if our sightings during our
brief stays at Abraham’s Bay and Atwood Harbor are any indication.
Few things are more satisfying than reflecting on the events of an
altogether enjoyable day while sipping a glass of wine and watching the
sun set. In the space of six hours we’d come closer to whales than at
any time previously, sighted more sharks than we’d seen in all of our
eleven years of cruising in the central Caribbean, discovered healthy
reefs swarming with fish, watched a half dozen rays cavorting in the
shallows, examined a conch nursery and day care center, and gathered
exquisite shells along what we both consider to be the most beautiful
beach we’ve come across to date. As the sun settled behind a cloud bank
then re-emerged beneath casting shades of florescent peach and puce that
radiated in every direction, we couldn’t imagine a more perfect day.
We dinghy’d Sydney to the beach one last time before settling in for a
roll-free night as the colors of the day faded. No sooner had we begun a
slow stroll along the beach when we caught sight of several dolphins
frolicking in the space between where we’d left the dinghy and
Beedahbun. We were momentarily speechless as their silhouettes rose and
fell in the last light of the day. Our tranquility was eagerly shattered
as we raced to launch the dinghy hoping we might drift closer to our new
visitors without frightening them away. Adrift in the dinghy, engine
off, and not a whisper, we were rewarded with close passes by no fewer
than six dolphin including a youngster barely two feet long. Syd
appeared equally mesmerized as she hung her head over the bow and stared
into the now dark water. For several minutes the dolphins surfaced and
dove, with a mesmerizing rhythm, and then they vanished as quickly as
they had appeared. The last flickers of pink in the sky were quickly
replaced by stars that sparkled like the brightest diamonds.
There is an advertisement that has appeared from time to time over
the years proclaiming that ‘things are better in the Bahamas’. We
settled in for the night thinking things couldn’t have been better in
our sliver of paradise.
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