We left here and spent the night on an island called St. James in a lovely bay called Christmas Cove, then stopped by Francis Bay (also beautiful), then over to Tortola -
One night moored there, then off to Christmas
Cove again - best snorkeling around for miles. We anchored there but there were very strong winds which blew all the boats around. When the tide started going out, we found ourselves scraping the bottom and adjusted our position a couple of times. Then about 2.30 am, we were woken by more bumping and scraping - and thank goodness because when we went above deck, we saw one of the catamarans had blown free and was just drifting, literally 40 feet from us. We watched him get closer - then P leapt into the dinghy and pounded on his hull, woke him up - by this time the boat was 20 feet from us. By the time the owner had woken up and was on deck - the boat was literally 10 feet from us and getting closer. P got on his boat and they started his engine and pulled forward, but he was literally about 6 feet from us when they started pulling away - not a nice feeling. P went and helped him anchor again, we managed to reposition ourselves in deeper water but it was a pretty disturbed night. Then back to St. Thomas yesterday. Lovely hour long sail with the wind behind us. Will be here for a few days - so if you need to email us, now is the time. Otherwise, don't know when we'll be back on the internet.
For the last three or four nights, there have been very strong winds - up to 30 miles an hour. Apparently they're called the Christmas Winds - and when our wind generator catches them, it sounds like a freight train. Or if you have seen Crocodile Dundee II, where he calls for help (in the outback), he puts something on a rope and winds it up in the air making a really loud sound - hard to describe, but that's what our wind generator sounds like in these winds.