Malua is at 18:12.88N 70:32.75W in Salinas Bay on 27/03/2013
I left Boca Chico knowing that I had 65 nm to travel and I may have to 
enter in the dark but from all reports and the charts It looked easy. I 
sailed most of the way with the wind behind but as the sun set the wind 
dropped. I had plotted a course all the way into the bay with a heads up 
to look out for the unmarked fish farm.
Captain Bob at the Marine Rescue has always insisted that when you plot 
your course you stand off any headland no matter if it is the one you 
know very well, by about a mile, just in case something goes wrong. I 
listened and have to this day stayed more than a mile off any headland 
no matter the conditions. Well! I was motoring past this headland before 
turning to starboard to get into its lee and enter the channel when bang 
bang..... the fan belt on the engine broke. Stop the engine. No wind to 
sail and a slight current but Malua was adrift BUT I was more than a 
mile off the headland. It only took me 10 minutes to get the new belt 
fit, it tested and to restart the engine and Malua was heading away from 
the rocky shore of the headland. No danger, no stress but a lesson well 
learnt. Stand off the shore no matter how well you know it or how deep 
it is.
The channel was not well lit but there are a few marker buoys which the 
radar picked up plus the chart was spot on. I moved cautiously in 
towards what appeared to be a few anchored yachts and dropped the anchor 
about a half mile off shore.
The next day I moved closer on shore and re-anchored before the Coast 
Guard appeared in a small fishing boat. He came aboard and insisted in 
looking around but did not even opening a cupboard. He took the 
dispatchio then asked for some grog. I took him to the fridge and 
offered him some beer in a plastic bottle which he refused. I indicated 
I wanted to leave the next day at 8:00 and I required a new dispatchio. 
I then took a long walk along the bay shore towards what I though was a 
town. After more than two hours no it was a very large naval base with 
dry dock and cadets on the parade ground. Not a great exertion.
There is essentially no village at Salinas only a run down hotel Salinas 
which was having a party that night. The waterfront is clean and so are 
the houses but it is poor. A few houses had shops with not much to 
offer. The fisherman's coop seemed to be the place to be.
The next day I expected to see the Coast Guard appear on the dot of 8:00 
by 9:00 still no sign so I got in the dinghy and went to the fisherman's 
coop with my intentions on a piece of paper. Having names written down 
helps with my poor pronunciation. I was informed I would have to go to 
the Coast Guard base at the end of the peninsular and get the 
dispatchio. Get a lift on the back of a motorbike with a young fellow. 
Down the road we went, through the less than secure gates right into the 
guard house of the Coast Guard. They seemed to know what I wanted but 
had to wait for someone. The original fellow appeared, did not say a 
word to me but one of the fellows started the torturous process of 
filling out the form. He could hardly write and for him to copy from my 
form to the new one was a challenge but as always I have the patience of 
Job in these circumstances. Finally it was complete although I did say I 
was stopping at Barahona but had no intentions. I just wanted to leave. 
Which I did by 10:30.
I had plotted a course to round Capo Rojo some time during the night. 
The total distance to my next destination was 220 nm a two nighter at 
the current wind and speed.
That afternoon the wind came up and blew Malua along my intended route 
which was a run. More importantly the swell came up because that part of 
the coast is a lee shore for the swell to come along the south of Puerto 
Rico and the DR. And did the swell build. It was the biggest swell I 
have seen since the Souther Ocean! At sun set the wind was well over the 
25 knot range, I had taken in two reefs and no headsail and was surfing 
down the long swell reaching speeds well over 8 knots. The top speed 
reached was 10.4 knots as I surfed down a wave in the near darkness. It 
was exciting and a bit scary but Malua and I handled it well. I was hand 
steering for more than five hours because I could not depend on the 
auto-pilot handeling the conditions. My shoulders were sore when I 
finally switched on the auto-pilot again. I can tell you I gave Capo 
Rojo more than 5 miles distance as I rounded it just after 2 am.
The wind started to drop as did the swell so I was able to open up the 
foresail and settle into a pleasant sail down wind. I also set the Watch 
Commander for a few 27 minute sleeps. I took a few before the sun rose 
and we moved down the coast by which time the wind had dropped off.
Now the challenge was to enter the Baie des Cayes on my way to Ille a 
Vache. I knew I would not make it by sun set so I set myself an 
anchorage some way along the island NW coast hopefully out of the swell. 
I had been warned about the many fishing nets in that area so as I 
reached the shallower water I slowed Malua down to about 2 knots put on 
all the forward lights and hoped I would be able to see the plastic 
bottles of the buoys before I hit one. With a bit of luck and good 
vigilance I dropped the anchor on the NW corner of the island well into 
the large bay but not far enough in to get out of the swell. Fortunately 
the wind was against the swell so Malua sat quite calmly as I had a 
great meal and a god sleep.
A magical moment on Malua
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