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PASSAGE
PLANNING - BAZARUTO
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Thank
you to
Yacht
Seerose
for
providing us with
this information
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BAZARUTO
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A
beautiful morning underway. |
On
the 16th of June 1994 we set sail for Bazaruto
- a group of islands in the Mozambique Channel,
North of Maputo. Our crew comprised of ourselves,
Ern and a new recruit Ken. We experienced swells
of up to two metres throughout the trip to Richards
Bay, where we arrived at midmorning the following
day. |
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For
sometime we'd toyed with the idea of relocating
our moorings to their marina, so we'd decided to
call in on our way up the coast to assess the quality
of the services available. At the time we were disappointed
with the walk-ons as they appeared to be shaky and
unsafe and were also offended by a pungent smell
emanating from a factory nearby. We recently returned
there to visit some American yachties we'd met in
SE.Asia and it's evident that they've resolved their
problems as it's now developed into an excellent,
popular marina.
By
noon the following day we were underway again, in
perfect sailing conditions with views of a beautiful,
tranquil coastline. Just off Jesser point Sodwana,
a boatload of scuba divers came alongside on their
way out to the reef. We chatted together and they
gave us news of an old friend Neville Ayliff, a
diving instructor we'd met at Msikaba where he'd
previously been employed as the game ranger. Apparently
he'd relocated to Madagascar after his marriage
collapsed.
After
two days of perfect sailing we arrived at Maputo
(formerly Lourenzo Marques) in the late afternoon
of 20th June.
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As
Maputo has become an unpopular stopover, cruising
yachts now call in at Inhaca Island situated
at the entrance to the Bay. We, however, entered
the harbour as Bob wanted to visit an old colleague
and top up the diesel. We tied up in the small
craft harbour and made contact with Ed who came
down to the wharf to collect us. |
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He
took us to a magnificent double-storeyed house where
we drew up at a large, ornate cast-iron gate. When
a man emerged from the gatehouse Bob turned to Ed
open-mouthed, but before he could utter a word,
Ed cut him short with; "Please Bob, don't rag me
about this - I'm already sufficiently embarrassed
about the situation. This is not our house. We rent
it and it comes complete with a housekeeper and
that gatekeeper. Unfortunately, we need the gate
for security reasons and I'm perfectly capable of
opening and shutting it myself. That guy is the
housekeeper's son - all her kids live on the property
and we feed them - and I've asked him time and again
not to do this. He sits in that thing day and night
and opens and shuts the gate everytime we move in
or out of the place. I've spoken to his mother and
she says he does it to compensate for his food and
lodging. He can't find work 'cause there isn't any
and I can't win this battle so please, do me a favour
and drop it"
We'd
brought our laundry ashore and I'd ask Ed to point
us in the direction of a laundromat. There weren't
any - they'd all closed down when the Portuguese
left, so he suggested that we make an arrangement
with his housekeeper. When we collected it the following
day the asking price was so paltry that Bob added
a zero. She burst into tears of gratitude.
Shortly
Sandy joined us and we all set off for the Costa
de Sol. We drew up at a large old hotel (a legend
in southern Africa) and whilst it had obviously
gone to seed, we could see that it must have been
imposing in it's day. Our waiter produced a white
starched tablecloth, threadbare but clean and the
meal was outstanding - prawns peri-peri, Portuguese
style. After dinner we went on to a nightclub in
"Sin City".
The
patrons sat drinking at tables surrounding a small
dance floor and on the stage was a band with a female
vocalist. Ed drew our attention to the numerous
women moving between the tables and dancing with
the patrons, and every now and again a couple would
disappear behind a curtain. Most people wouldn't
find this out of the ordinary but in 1994 prostitution
was illegal in our Calvanistic country - so we gawked
in amazement! After the show we returned to Ed's
home for a nightcap and much to his frustration
and embarassment, the gateman was still at his post.
Next
day we met Ed's partner David, who could have stepped
out of a Dickens novel. He sat hunched over his
desk with his spectacles perched on the end of his
nose and steel bands securing his shirt sleeves.
He was a little bird of an Englishman - and I just
loved him!
Ed
was at a conference so David gave us a lift to the
restuarant where we were meeting for lunch. He drove
a rickety old Ford Cortina which stalled on every
hill and continually rolled backwards. In his precise
Oxford accent he informed us that he was not at
all embarrassed about his car and had no intention
of replacing it. "If you buy a new car in this place
you only have it for a day 'cause they steal them!
But the buggers won't steal this thing. Just look
at this car in front of us - see it's tail lights?
They're rivited on with steel brackets. All the
cars are like that here. Look there, do you see
that one? They're all the same. You stop at a traffic
light and while you're waiting for the light to
change they unscrew your bloody lenses and steal
them!"
"Do
you see those tall buildings up there on that hill?
Most of them eight to ten storeys high. Can you
see the burglar guards? Look at them, right up to
the bloody top floor! Do y' see them?"... We saw
them. ..."Why do they have burglar guards right
up there?" enquired Bob. "To keep the buggers out
that's why! Security! They climb right up the sides
of those buildings. Would you believe it? They climb
all the way to the top to break in. They're bloody
starving to death now`cause there's nothing left
here anymore. That's what those burglar guards are
doing up there. Nothing's safe in this place. Silly
buggers chased the Portuguese out of here, actually
drove some of them into the sea and a lot of them
drowned y'know. Then they pillaged the whole bloody
place and now there's nothing left to steal. And
there's no work either - no one left to create jobs.
So they're starving!"
"And
another thing, there's four or five families crammed
into one apartment in those buildings up there.
They won't pay their bills for essential services
so they've got no water and electricity and the
bloody elevators don't work either". He told it
in such an amusing way that we roared with laughter,
little realising that all too soon we'd experience
similar problems in the cities of our country.
The
time arrived to press onwards, so we upped anchor
and motored over to a filthy black wall where the
diesel pump was situated. It was ebb tide and there
was about an 8 metre drop from the wall to the yacht.
Poor Ken never seemed to get anything right. He
threw a rope which fell pathetically short and when
the over-enthusiastic attendant stretched to catch
it, he tumbled off the wall into the filthy, oily,
litter-filled water below. I was certain I'd felt
and heard a bump against the yacht as he went by
and added to the melee by shrieking out to anyone
and everyone in an effort to establish whether he'd
been injured. At last he surfaced and if he was
hurt he wasn't letting on. He'd already lost enough
face!
A
crowd gathered and every wise guy was shrieking
orders to the next wise guys. This was an occasion;
this was excitement; something was happening! Usually
nothing happens, ... and they have no way of keeping
themselves occupied to fill the long, hungry days.
Finally
we were tied up and refuelling commenced. It was
all moving very slowly so I asked Ern to take the
garbage ashore. He dumped it into a 44 gallon drum
put there for the purpose. In a flash a bunch of
kids rushed to the drum and fought to get inside.
They threw out the bags and I watched through binoculars
as they sat on the wharf rooting through the contents,
quarrelling and fighting. Everything appeared to
be precious. They classified cigarette butts and
plastic bags into piles, then using their fingers,
licked everything from inside the tins. They even
gnawed on the fruit cores and vegetable peelings.
It was so pitiful that from then onwards I classified
all our garbage as it accumulated on board. I was
certain that irrespective of what we gave them they
would still raid garbage cans. There were just too
many mouths to feed and so very little to feed them
on.
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Mozambique |
At
15h00 on 22 June we left Maputo for Santa Carolina,
an Island in the centre of Bazaruto Bay. On
the way we tried to call in at Linga Linga in
Inhambane Bay but were unable to find the landfall
bouy and we later learnt that it had gone adrift.
The crew amused themselves by goading the yacht
"Seeker" into a race and their noses were quite
out of joint when the "Fat Lady" lost. She was
built for comfort not for speed! We had some
good sailing and anchored off Carolina at 09h00
on 26th June. |
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We
spent the next four days cruising around the stunningly
beautiful Bazaruto Archipelago, taking great care
to keep within the numerous channels. Ern, the lightest
and most agile male on board was hoisted to the
top of the mast in the bosun's chair to act as lookout.
We
stopped off at Coconut Bay on the island of Santa
Carolina where a new lodge appeared to be under
construction, so we went ashore to have a look It
was being developed by two delightful young couples
who were thrilled to have customers and happy to
show us around. They told us that crayfish was on
the menu so we decided to swell their coffers by
ordering lunch. Bob runs a dry ship whilst underway
so we "gave the cat a canary" and ordered a pre
lunch beer.
Too
late we realised that someone had only been sent
to catch the crayfish after we'd
ordered, because the meal took a long time coming.
The sun was shining, the scenery was beautiful,
we were all relaxed and the beer was ice-cold ....................
A
note in the log reads:-
"BOB
DOES HIPPO-CROCA-POMARULA DUCK-DIVE FOR LOCALS AT
COCONUT BAY".
Totally
relaxed and slightly inebriated, Bob's rubber sandal
slipped from under his foot whilst we were boarding
the dingy to leave. He toppled over backwards and
was completely immersed underwater, causing shrieks
of laughter from both the crew and our erstwhile
hosts.
Almost
from the time we'd left Durban there'd been a tense
atmosphere on board. Ken was overbearing and officious,
behaving exactly like the proverbial nerd in a position
of authority for the first time in his life. Although
Bob possessed higher qualifications than Ken, his
various certificates of authorisation hadn't arrived
in the mail by the time we left Durban and he therefore
lacked official authority to take command of the
vessel beyond Durban Port. 'Academic' Ken was the
necessary 'paper' on board.
Ken
had rattled my cage even before we left our moorings
in Durban. I was in the galley stowing supplies
when he officiously summonsed all crew to the cockpit,
raising his voice and adding "And that means you
too - Sally!". Bob gave me the "please don't rock
the boat look" so I complied and went above. And
oh my, he really spoke down to us, barking commands
and delegating duties like an immature Captain Cook.
I thought "Stupid little twerp!" and sneaked a glance
at Bob. Of course, he was taking it like a true
blue NCO so I kept my fat trap shut. Ern lowered
his head to avoid my eyes, but not before I saw
his suppressed smile. OK, you're going to have to
go with this girl, I thought. At this late stage
the twerp was an unfortunate necessary evil!
When
he wasn't throwing his weight around he would lapse
into reflections on his life story. He was from
a broken home and was raised by "Mummy". It was
obvious that "Daddy" regularly kicked ass from a
distance, seemingly trying to make a man of him.
But Daddy too, was overprotective. He regularly
contacted the yacht by radio phone and without even
a greeting, would bark at Bob; "I'd like to speak
to the Captain please?" and the little twerp would
literally wriggle with pleasure when he heard it.
If he hadn't caused us to dislike him so thoroughly
we would probably have felt compassion for him.
One
day whilst painting my nails in the cockpit a tiny
drop of nail varnish fell onto the slatted teak
bench-seat. He was the only other person present
so I pointed it out to him and asked him to be careful
not to smudge it as I would be able to lift it off
carefully once it had dried. He immediately and
deliberately stretched his foot across and smeared
it into the timber, looking straight into my eyes
with a spiteful expression on his face. I went ape
and gave him a verbal bashing, whereupon he burst
into tears!
He
should never have been on a yacht. The poor chap
was awfully clumsy and continually fell over his
feet. Everytime he left the cockpit he tripped over
one of primary winches almost taking himself overboard
but he never seemed to learn that it was there.
And the more he embarrassed himself the nastier
he became to us. Ern hated the sight of him and
on one occasion Bob had to restrain him when a fist
fight almost broke out.
In
light of this I desperately needed space and solitude
so I had a chat with Bob. He felt the same so we
decided to find an established lodge to spend a
few days ashore.
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Our
accommodation on Benguera |

The
view from the bungalow |
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At
15h00 on the 4th of July we anchored off Benguera
Island, directly in front of the lodge and within
spitting distance of the beach. We went ashore and
were relieved to find that there was accommodation
available. We were allotted a delightful, well-appointed
en-suite grass-thatched chalet where we remained
for four days.
One
of the inhabitants was a "Nag-apie" (a tiny nocturnal
monkey). He was a gregarious little chap and a great
favourite with the guests. He frequented the entertainment
area each evening and appeared to be a potential
alcoholic. Unfortunately he was the only one of
his species on the island and consequently didn't
have a mate. No one knew how long he'd been there
or how he'd got there.
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The
little "alcoholic"
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The
barman shared an amusing story about him with
us. It may very well be one of Africa's notorious
urban legends but is nevertheless worth repeating.
One year when he was away on his annual vacation
the Nag-apie took a shine to the replacement
barman. Every night when the stand-in closed
the bar and retired to his quarters, the Nag-apie
would accompany him. Of course this was his
"stay awake time" and he wanted to play! So
he would scamper around the room, swing from
the curtains to the top of the wardrobe and
dive-bomb the bed. Consequently the unfortunate
temp never got any sleep. |
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One
morning top management informed him that a business
convention was to take place the following day and
that he would have to do a lunch hour shift in addition
to his normal duties. He was concerned about how
he was going to cope as he just wasn't getting enough
sleep at night. So he prepared a makeshift bed inside
a louvered drawer and placed the little creature
inside it - with a lighted torch! Apparently the
trick worked.
When
we rejoined the yacht Bob noticed brownish marks
on the bollards. They subsequently turned out to
be stains as no amount of scrubbing and rubbing
would remove them, irrespective of what detergent
we used. They were left there by the fairies as
no one had noticed them, nor did anyone know how
they'd got there. Later Bob noticed Ken smashing
a coconut open on a bollard and the mystery was
solved - the marks were caused by the juice of the
coconut skins, but there was no apology or remorse
and he showed his resentment by lapsing into one
of his frequent sulks.
On
8th July we weighed anchor, said farewell to Paradise
and set sail with the intention of having another
go at entering Inhambane. Once again sailing conditions
were phenomenal and at times our speed over ground
was in excess of 9 kts. - excellent for a fat lady!
We trolled for fish and laughed at the birds following
behind, fighting over the bait. There was great
excitement when Ern caught a small barracuda, then
the whales put on one of their magnificent water
ballets, leaping and plunging and tail-walking and
smiling with their beautiful laughing faces. And
oh life was wonderful and we were so fortunate to
be out here, doing what we were doing and seeing
everything we were seeing.
Our
next door neighbour in the marina back in Durban,
Dr. Roy Wood had previously owned a hotel at Ponta
de Barra Falsa (Pomeni Point) and we knew it was
somewhere hereabouts. He was forced to abandon the
property during the war when guests ceased to come.
Someone spotted it; "There it is!". "Where?" "Right
up there on top of the hill". "Oh, there!" "Yes,
that's it, exactly where he said it would be, on
top of that hill!" "Oh, it's beautiful!" "What a
fantastic spot!" "Perfect place for a holiday."
By
the time we arrived at Inhambane Bay the light was
failing and it was too late to enter. Consequently
we were forced to spend the entire night tacking
backwards and forwards outside the bay, waiting
for daylight. Obviously Ern had retained his sense
of humour as his 4h50 log read:- "Inhambane to Inhambane
in twelve hours".
At
long last it started to get light and at 06h00 we
positioned the yacht at the point where the landfall
buoy should have been, then followed the directions
Ed had given us. We were pleasantly surprised to
find that brand new channel
buoys had been installed right into the bay.
Ern
went forward and positioned himself on the bowsprit
to watch and ensure that we remained safely within
the channel. Suddenly he shouted out to attract
our attention and we thought we heard the word shark.
We rushed to the starboard side and there, cruising
around at No.4 bouy was an enormous, menacing, tiger
shark. As we're not familiar with the habits of
sharks we don't know whether it's extraordinary
that each and every time we passed that particular
bouy, he was there - exactly in the same spot.
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At
anchor at Linga Linga |
Once
we got into the inner bay we proceeded to the
Linga Linga point and dropped anchor in the
lagoon. Seerose swung on her anchor only ten
metres from the beach. We tidied up and ate
lunch. |
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An
hour or two later we noticed two people walking
along the beach. They hailed the yacht and waved.
Bob and Ern jumped into the dinghy and went to meet
them. Wearing a brilliant smile and without any
form of greeting the stranger enquired of Bob "Do
you play chess?". He replied in the affirmative
but added that he was a bit rusty as he hadn't played
for many years. It was only then that the stranger
stretched out his hand and said "Welcome, my name
is Mike". We later learnt that anyone who happened
to stumble upon this remote and unknown area was
received in a similar manner. If a hapless visitor
didn't play chess he was ignored.
Mike admired the yacht so Bob invited them to come
aboard. It transpired that he hailed from Bath in
England and was in the process of building a lodge
on the Linga Linga point, using only local indigenous
materials. Later, when they were leaving, he invited
us all to join him for dinner that evening.
I
was reluctant to go along. Mike's companion was
a very young local lass who didn't appear to speak
or understand a word of English, making it impossible
for her and I to communicate. I believe she was
equally as uncomfortable and we must have looked
like a pair of half-wits sitting there nodding and
grinning at each other!
When we arrived that evening there was a large fish
on the barbeque and Mike, oblivious to his guests,
was locked in a game of chess with a young man.
He glanced up, waved us to some chairs around the
campfire and continued with his game. There was
no sign of his companion but later when I went into
the hut in search of the bathroom I found her sitting
on the kitchen floor, propped against a wall and
fast asleep.
The game ended and Bob was invited to replace Mike's
previous opponent, who then drew up a chair next
to mine. His name was Mel and we soon discovered
that I'd known his parents many years previously.
He hailed from Umhlanga Rocks, an area north of
Durban and was currently employed by Mike to oversee
construction of the lodge. I remembered the little
boy and the fact that he was a brilliant child who'd
won scholarships to the finest schools and colleges
and wondered what on earth he was doing out here!
The fish was ready so our host tore himself from
his game and over supper - which we ate on our laps
- he told us a little about his life. He'd apparently
relocated to Mozambique shortly after the local
war, having heard that there were Russians in the
area and he'd always yearned to play chess against
a Russian. We found him both fascinating and disgusting
and we ourselves couldn't understand why we returned
to visit him time and again.
Generally there were between ten and twelve guests
at a time but we could never work out where they
came from. There was always a bottle of brandy and
a glass at Mike's elbow. Once he'd ensnared a chess
opponent he became oblivious to everyone else present,
giving his full attention to the game and the contents
of his glass. The unspoken rules were; if you're
hungry help yourselves; if you're thirsty pour yourself
a drink (providing of course that you've brought
your own and some whisky for your host); find yourself
a broken chair or whatever else you can find to
sit upon; make yourself at home; don't disturb the
chess!
Before we left that evening Mike mentioned that
he was sailing over to Maxixe in his small motorised
dhow the following day. Ken begged a lift expressing
interest in exploring the town. When Mike returned
that evening he was alone. On arrival in Maxixe
they'd gone their separate ways after arranging
a meeting point at a given time. Ken hadn't arrived
so Mike had left without him.
Next morning Ken was still missing and we were understandably
anxious. We couldn't imagine what had happened to
him and were also concerned for his safety. He finally
pitched at midday and only when questioned, announced
that he'd lost track of time and had slept over
for the night. As was to be expected there was no
apology or embarrassment for having alarmed us.
Meanwhile Ed, Sandy and their two daughters had
arrived in their motor boat and checked into the
lodge. We spent the evening ashore with them and
they spent the next day on board the yacht.
The following morning 17 July at 09h00 we left Inhambane
to return to Durban and a few extracts from the
log will give seasoned yachties a good laugh and
an inkling of the atmosphere on board:-
20/7 01h00 Mysterious red light to stb.- Ken
20/7 02h00 Mysterious red light still
to stb - Ken
20/7 03h00 Mysterious red light's a fishing boat!!!
- Ern
20/7 09h00 At last, finished cleaning the pig sty!
- Sally
21/7 04h00 We're lost at sea so heading inshore
- Ken
21/7 11h00 On track again, we were 8 miles off course
- Bob
21/7 13h55 Passed the breakwater & entered Durban
Harbour - Sally
21/7 15h00 Whoppeeeeee! Capt. Coconut has left forever
- Ern
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