Articles and Reviews

Exotic Encounters
(Motor Boat & Yachting Magazine - UK)

Fancy a cruising ground where there's a staggering number of islands, beaches and coves to explore, where the sun always shines, and where a ten-mile passage is considered unnecessarily adventurous? Welcome to the British Virgin Islands.

There's something impossibly exotic, bordering on romantic, about cruising in the Caribbean. Quite apart from the heavenly climate, the beautiful islands, the endless palm-fringed beaches and the poisonous spiders, the names are so evocative - the Bitter End, Dead Chest, the Last Resort, Fallen Jerusalem, Frenchman's Cay. It's Robert Louis Stevenson, Robinson Crusoe, the Spanish Main, caravels, and pieces of eight all rolled into one.

Although much of the Caribbean has been taken over by a tourist industry that offers couples-only, drinks-included, wedding-on-the-beach, casino-cruise-liner package holidays, there are parts of the Caribbean where you can still get away from it all, and one of those places is the British Virgin Islands (BVIs). Here, although time hasn't exactly stood still, you get the feeling that it isn't exactly marching on. Unlike the US Virgin Islands, which are far more commercialised and have 15 times more visitors, the BVIs are a quiet backwater where snorkelling is considered a tough work-out, and full-moon beach parties are the highlight of the social calendar. The fact that there are no direct flights from the US, and that the law prohibits any building from rising higher than the surrounding palm trees, means mass tourism has yet to gain a toe-hold.

Sandwiched between the Leeward Islands and Puerto Rico, the BVIs are a group of some 50 islands, islets and rocks, of which only three are of any significant size. The biggest, Tortola, is where the majority of the locals live, and is also home to the capital (Road Town) and the airport - a strip of tarmac that is used more by livestock than air traffic. One of the most charming things about the BVIs is the fact that because they're a UK protectorate everyone drives on the left, but because they're so close to the US most of the cars are left-hand drive.

The BVIs can be divided into two chains of islands running almost east to west. To the north you have the three 'big' islands of Jost Van Dyke, Tortola and Virgin Gorda, while to the south you have the smaller islands of Norman, Peter, Salt, Cooper and Ginger (a tragically British selection of names, don't you think?). These two chains are separated by five miles of water known as Sir Francis Drake Channel. In fact, the distances involved in the BVIs are minute - from one end to another is under 30 miles, and it's less than 15 miles from top to bottom.

The compactness of the islands, and the gentle trade winds that blow throughout the year, have made the BVIs ideal sailing territory, and the charter capital of the world. This is good and bad news. The good news is that the facilities for boating in the BVIs are excellent; the bad news is that it can make things busy. In the height of the season, you can barely squeeze into Soper's Hole for all the yachties.

Strangely, there aren't all that many motor boats for charter. I did see a big Cigarette for hire on Virgin Gorda, sporting a sign that said 'See the BVIs... in a day!' One company offering week-long, bareboat charters for motorboaters is Virgin Traders and I managed to grab myself a few days' cruising around the BVIs on one of their Trader 475s in the exceedingly hospitable company of the Penman family (lan and Tish, with daughters lona and Islay).

Our boat was based with the rest of the Virgin Trader fleet at Nanny Cay on the south coast of Tortola. Nanny Cay, like most of the marinas in the BVIs, has a kind of sleepy atmosphere and faded charm that is typical of this part of the world - no one is in any great hurry to do anything and the days slip by gently.

The first morning was spent stocking up with food, filling the fridge with beers and checking over the boat to make sure everything was working properly... well, setting the thermostats on the air-conditioning. In May, the temperature remains firmly in the high 80s and low 90s, so good air-con and a decent genny are a must. Fortunately, the Trader 475 comes with both - we ran them 24 hours a day for a week, remained blissfully cool while indoors, and could barely hear the genny running.

It was midday by the time we set out, fully provisioned and ready for an arduous 11-mile trip over to Virgin Gorda and the Baths. Although capable of a heady 12 knots, the Trader is more comfortable cruising at nine or ten, but even at these laid-back speeds you'd be hard pushed to spend more than a couple of hours at the helm before some deserted cove or sandy beach beckoned.

The Baths are a must-see - an amazing jumble of huge boulders on the beach, through which the waves crash and roll. You can crawl, swim and scramble through a network of passages, being soaked by the swell and the waves. It's potholing for claustrophobics, and it's great fun. We were there in a fairly strong swell, which meant staying on your feet was quite tricky, although not as tricky as getting the tender on and off the beach through a 4ft surf. After an hour or so messing about in the water, we managed to get the tender back to the boat and set off to find a mooring or anchorage for the evening.

Passing the delightfully named (and incredibly posh) Little Dix Bay Hotel on the starboard side, we rounded the top of Virgin Gorda and made our way gingerly into Gorda Sound. There are numerous reefs all around this area, but the entrance to the Sound is well marked. It's worth remembering that the BVIs use the US system (IALA Region B) for lateral markers, so remember 'Red Right Returning to Harbour'. Gorda Sound is home to the Bitter End Yacht Club, as well as Leverick Bay and Drake's Anchorage. We opted for Leverick Bay for no other reason than that there was plenty of space and it was nearest. I think the red GPO phone box on the end of the also drew us there. Leverick Bay was my first brush with Pusser's shops, the Manchester United of the nautical supplies world.

Pusser's are everywhere in the BVIs, flogging over-priced knick-knacks to idiots like me who fondly imagine they've just stepped out of a Patrick O'Brian novel into the air-conditioned splendour of a 17th-century chandlers selling loud shirts and bizarre hats. Having stocked up on rum and enamel mugs with Nelson on, we adjourned to the restaurant for a very decent supper and the first of many Red Stripes.

The next day dawned as bright and warm as the previous day -and, incidently, the one before that. I was woken by the happy chit-chat of Islay and Tinky-Winky discussing the weighty issues of the day - Frosties or Multi-Cheerios for breakfast. Sitting in the sun, looking out over Gorda Sound, with a plate piled with toast, I reflected that fate can be a cruel mistress - we'd run out of Marmite.

Somehow most of the morning floated past in a leisurely parade of cups of coffee and rounds of toast, so when we finally headed off it was almost time for lunch. We arrived at the Bitter End Yacht Club, all of 1.5 miles away across the Sound, in time for a pre-lunch swim and a lounge on the beach. The sand is white and fine, the sea is turquoise and warm, and there were two other people on the beach. Rush-hour at the Bitter End.

After a hearty lunch (this boating lark really works up an appetite, doesn't it?), we thought we'd head off for a quick look at Necker Island and then go to Jost Van Dyke that evening. Necker Island is famous because this is where the 1999 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue was photographed. It's a privately owned island with a very swanky villa on it, which you can rent from some bloke called Richard Branson. Having been suitably sickened by the idyllic setting and, sheer opulence of Branson's Virgin island, we headed west past the Dogs and on towards Great Camanoe. Between Great Camanoe and Guana Island we surprised a large turtle floating, apparently asleep, on the surface. He did a crash-dive as we drew alongside and disappeared from view - no soup for Tom's supper, then.

After a leisurely two-hour cruise we arrived at Sandy Cay, just off Jost Van Dyke. Sandy Cay is a classic tropical island, barely more than 100yds across and sporting a fantastic sandy beach most of the way round. We anchored in the lee of the island and took the tender ashore For a late-afternoon swim, a bit of snorkelling, and some major sandcastle construction with the girls. Although Sandy Cay is the archetypal desert island, most of the BVIs aren't flat and covered in sand and palm trees. The majority of the islands are tall, rocky and clad in scrub, looking for all the world like something off the West Coast of Scotland, except that the sun shines for 12 hours a day and it rarely rains.

That night we dropped the hook, along with a couple of dozen Other boats, in Great Harbour on Jost Van Dyke. The idea was to have dinner at Foxy's, a place well known for its barbecues and beach parties, but by the time we got there the whole place was swarming with charter-yacht types. So we meandered down the beach to Ali Baba's and ate there instead.

The next day, guess what? Warm and sunny, a gentle breeze blowing from the south-east, and another gruelling ten-mile passage to make before lunch. En route we decided to poke our nose into Soper's Hole. It was full of yachties, so we made our way south across Sir Francis Drake Channel to Norman Island and a spot of lunch.

Norman Island is where Robert Louis Stevenson set Treasure Island, and the Bight (the main anchorage) now boasts Billy Bones Beach Bar and the Willie T, a floating restaurant on a 90ft schooner. We eschewed the delights of either in favour of a barbecue on the aft deck. Virgin Trader boats have barbies on board, so we cranked it up in the fairly brisk wind (after much effing and blinding to get it lit) and heaped aboard some steaks - top lunch.

By early afternoon the wind had picked up and it looked like a storm was on the way. We decided to island-hop eastwards and seek some shelter in Trellis Bay on Tortola. On our way we passed Peter Island, home of the Peter Island Resort. Like the Little Dix Bay Hotel, the Peter Island Resort is one of those luxurious beach-front hotels you've always wanted to stay at. Next up on the starboard side was Dead Chest island. Legend has it that Bluebeard marooned 16 of his mutinous crew here with nothing but a bottle of rum - hence '16 men on a dead man's chest, yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum'. Had the weather been better, we would have anchored off Salt Island and gone snorkelling on the wreck of the RMS Rhone, a 300ft Royal Mail steamer that sank here in 20m of water back in 1867. This is one of the most famous dive sites in the world, and much of the film The Deep was filmed on the wreck. Parts of the wreck are snorkelable, so you don't need to be Jacques Cousteau to get a good look.

Salt Island, and neighbouring Cooper Island, have some lovely beaches where anchoring off, playing sandcastles and drinking rum cocktails is the order of the day, but not if we wanted to make Trellis Bay before the weather hit. Crossing the Francis Drake Channel was pretty lumpy, but the Trader handled it superbly and we arrived in Trellis Bay with the microwave and the coffee percolator still intact.

In the shelter of Trellis Bay we picked up a buoy and prepared ourselves for the evening's entertainment. The Last Resort is infamous for its proprietor, Tony Snell, his roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, and his anarchic cabaret. The roast beef and Yorkshires were excellent, and the cabaret was extraordinary - lots of jokes about bareboat charter skippers, some highly amusing songs about foreigners (anyone not British), singing dogs, and Tony Snell's donkey even puts in an appearance. It's a nautical Goon Show and a very strange thing to come across in the Caribbean.

Sadly, the next day I had to head off to Antigua. I was left wanting more of the BVIs. This isn't a destination for those in search of gastronomy and sightseeing (although they are there if you look hard enough), this is a destination for those who want to kick off their shoes, pull on a comfortable old pair of shorts, and chill for a bit. The boating is sublime, the weather reliable and agreeable, and the scenery beautiful. What more could you ask for?

In my youth I was captivated by books like Treasure Island and Robinson Crusoe, and thrilled by the exploits of Henry Morgan and assorted pirates who terrorised the Spanish Main. And the Caribbean still has the power to intoxicate on so many levels - its food, its history, its culture, its people.

FLIGHTS, CHARTS AND GUIDES

The Cruising Guide to the Virgin Islands (Cruising Guide Publications, 9th Edition) is superb for visiting yachtsmen, with a wealth of information. It contains sketch charts of anchorages, lists waypoints, gives detailed information on local marinas, covers local history, tells you where to eat and a whole lot of other useful stuff too.
The Cruising Guide people also publish an excellent book called Virgin Anchorages, which contains spectacular aerial views of the BVIs, with annotations to show coral reefs, submerged rocks and other hazards.

Free guides that are worth picking up (at the airport) include The BVI Marina Guide, and The British Virgin Islands Welcome Tourist Guide, both of which are filled with useful info for boating persons. Good tourist guides include Fodor's The US and British Virgin Islands, and the AA Explorer Carribean. The Fodor guide (£13.99) is published for an American audience so the emphasis is firmly on accommodation, eating and shopping, but there's stuff about tourist sights and where to find the best beaches. The AA guide (£14.99) contains some good info, but there are only 20 pages on the Virgin Islands out of 288 pages.

Charts:
Waterproof Charts: No.32B British Virgin Islands.
Nautical Publications: Carribean 1 British Virgin Islands.
NOAA: 25641, Virgin Gorda to St Thomas.
Imray: A23, Virgin Islands; A231, St Thomas to Virgin Gorda; A232 (double-sided).
Admirality: 2008, NE Virgin Gorda to Anegada; 209, Tortola to Virgin Gorda.

CHARTERING

At the moment, Virgin Traders in Nanny Cay are the only motor boat chartering operation of any size offering bareboat charters, but that will undoubtably change.

But Virgin Traders have stolen the march on everyone else and have a fleet that comprises a Trader 44 (Rhona, see cover shot), three Virgin Signature 475s, 6 Virgin Horizon 48's and 9 Virgin Horizon 56's. We were on Tish and Ian's 475, and it proved to be the perfect boat for this type of holiday. With accomodation for seven, the Trader is superbly appointed and practical. The genny and air-con are the best I have encountered on a boat of this size, there's plenty of deck space, a huge saloon and usable galley and even the showers in the two bathrooms are excellent. the Trader 475 is easy to handle for two people, anchorage is a breeze and it has everything you could ever need on board - fridge/freezer, blender, CD player and a cellphone.

 







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Caribbean Motor Yacht Holidays
Tel: +44 (0) 1756 701200   Email: info@boatingholidays.com

Boating Holidays Ltd
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