Check it out in your dinghy first. And check depths as far as possible. Or, IMHO, head south to Hog Island. Roger's Beach Bar is very socialPretty busy here in Tyrrel Bay, Carriacou.
Might try the mangroves.
Pros and cons?
If (if it has one) the center goes ABOVE you the wind will come in the following directions:Pretty busy here in Tyrrel Bay, Carriacou.
Might try the mangroves.
Pros and cons?
@Kelpie Windy (www.windy.com ) has the eye passing just north of us this afternoon - you are not going to get much in Carriacou, but there will be south winds later.
It might then be easier to go 'around the corner' to L'Esterre Bay (which is reasonably well protected from the south) rather than going into the mangroves?
Re Tyrrell Bay being busy, it is pretty full of pink Marinetraffic blobs alone, not to mention there must be many other boats without AIS transmitters there.
MarineTraffic: Global Ship Tracking Intelligence | AIS Marine Traffic
We currently have about 15 - 20 knots from the NE, pretty much on par with what Windy is saying.
Amazing with only 30+knots.Sitting here in Carriacou with sustained 30kt+, lots of people dragging around us.
I'm really surprised by some people's behaviour. Hardly anybody brings their anchor to the surface after dragging, they just seem to be hoping it will catch again. How do they know they haven't picked up a car tyre? And at some point somebody is going to trip someone else's anchor.
One guy was having a lot of trouble, turns out he had a second anchor down. Keep it simple.
Another two boats became entangled, lots of clashing rigging until a big RIB was able to separate them.
And I just watched a runaway dinghy going through, it came within reach of another boat but instead of trying to grab it he just punted it away with his boathook
Hate to think what it would be like in 50kt. So far we haven't seen anything worse than we get on an average summer cruise back in Scotland![]()
Pretty busy here in Tyrrel Bay, Carriacou.
Might try the mangroves.
Pros and cons?
A couple of my mates went up there, they sent me a video and it's like a millpond. Think next time we'll give it a go.If your daft's shallow enough to get into the inner/northerly pond at Tyrrel Bay (about 1.65-1.7m when we were there) it's brilliant. Boats drawing >2m were scraping into the front of the southern pool, though disconcertingly, a couple of BIG steel fishing boats bowled in and pretty much dumped them there. If either of those had come adrift it would've been unpleasant; that said, I'd still choose Tyrrel over Hogg Island.
Don't worry about finding your way in, the locals/regulars will show you the best route; definitely get one of them to helm you through to the inner pond.