On-the-spot Caribbean hurricane report from St Martin No. 1

tcm

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Tropical Storm Chantal swept through the Caribbean last night, but nothing at all felt here in St Martin. This is the third "named" storm of the season, the others being Barry and erm, another one, beginning with A. Anyway (no, the first storm of the season wasn't called Anyway, this is just a new sentence)...Chantal passed over Domenica, the island north of Martinique and south of Guadeloupe, with winds to 60mph, so 50knots, which is proper Tropical Storm (sustained over 35knots) . For reference, Antigua is the next again north of Guadeloupe. St Lucia is the island south of Martinique. St Martin (where we are) is bout 90 miles east of the BVI and 90 miles NW of Antigua. In the Eastern Caribbean. Western Atlantic? The big wet scary blue thing on the OTHER side of the Needles Fairway Buoy.

The news from Dominica where the storm passed directly overhead is that they stopped the ferry services and closed airports. I dunno where the ferry service goes, and didn't know that the Domenican airports were plural, but I bet they close the airport(s) every evening anyway. Whatever.

During the actual storm, several roofs got ripped off, it says in the local web news. Although if you've seen houses in Dominica it seems that the roofs (and walls) were all ripped off/borrowed/found from somewhere else, plonked on top of the house after a previous storm, and might be made of cardboard. More like a sunshade than a roof.

However, not getting complacent, ooh no. The full-on hurricane season is 13 weeks from July to end September and we've only had a week and a half so far. I might do more of these, but heh, if it's a full-on hurricane the wifi wouldn't be working, would it? Although that's pretty much like all the TV news anywhere really - huge disaster, dreadful catastrophe... although almost never so bad that loads of news bods and camera people can't get to it, and often loads of other people doing Youtube stuff. Hum.

The boat is on a so-called hurricane mooring ($150/month) and we're mostly staying ashore. Experienced types say you should have 4 weeks food, so we got loads of tuna and cereal and bottled water. I also bought a petrol-powered chainsaw, possibly to saw my way out of the place if needed, and/or praps to hawk off to others at vast profit since this was the last one in the shop.

Edit: thinking about it, I'm wasn't actually "on the spot" really, was I? I was NEAR the spot, about 200 miles away. Sorry.
 
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200 miles? I was 80 miles to the south of it. Except for some very light drizzle, there was no wind and the seas were flat. In fact, today, the wind is stronger, which is a good thing, because my wind generator is doing what it was bought to do, unlike yesterday.
 
I bet it's like this with the BBC versus ITV news reporters, me and Stingo surviving the elements - him battling away almost in the eye of the storm, and me in the relative luxury of not owning a stinky moggy which hates boats and people, like his.
 
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[snip]... of not owning a stinky moggy which hates boats and people, like his.
Cooking Fat can read, you know, and doesn't forgive and forget easily.

Stingo is in Grenada though, so I guess Chantel passed by with nothing to show for its efforts.
There was a "hurricane bbq" last night". I have a hangover to show for Chantel's efforts.
 
Ooooo, my sister is in Dominica at the moment.
With regards to roofs being blown off. Remember when we hit sommat on the west bound crossing in 2007, I'm sure it was half of a shanty house that had been blown away. Lovely colours.
 
Ooooo, my sister is in Dominica at the moment.
With regards to roofs being blown off. Remember when we hit sommat on the west bound crossing in 2007, I'm sure it was half of a shanty house that had been blown away. Lovely colours.

ooh yeah, i remember. Cept if it came from the carib, the gianty shanty half-house must have somehow drifted upwind bout 2000 miles, somehow? Prolly a Canarian or African shanty construction i think?
 
200 miles? I was 80 miles to the south of it. Except for some very light drizzle, there was no wind and the seas were flat. In fact, today, the wind is stronger, which is a good thing, because my wind generator is doing what it was bought to do, unlike yesterday.

Hum, it seems you are in Grenada? So i reckon i was closer to the eye of it, really.

Sepretly I am not worried about Cooking Fat hoilding a grudge, seeing as he already takes a dump any time there's a visitor, and then has a swipe at anyone, including you...
 
Moving to Guadeloupe next year sailing across. Good to know there's more loonys like me already out there.

Hurricane moorings? When I asked about them in my new marina of Riviere Sens in Gourbeyre, nr Basse Terre, I was greeted with "...just double up the ropes" When I said is this enough, the lady in the Capitainerie replied "No, then you have to pray" and dissolved into gales of laughter. So I guess no hurricane tie downs etc there then. Take to the mangroves?
 
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