Grand Cayman, not a bad place to be locked down in!

by Glen

Sunday 15 Mar, Cayman day 1, George Town: Complete check-in formalities and relax onboard reading the world news. Looks like we will be locked down here for a while.

We sleep like babies after our overnight passage. We wake to clear skies and find we are surrounded by beautiful blue water, the likes of which we haven’t seen since Bahamas. We also now see the orange mooring balls that we could not locate in the dark last night. A row of them near the shoreline.
At 9am we call port security on VHF and they advise we need to tie up at the port warf to clear-in. We had hoped to just go in with the dinghy. Port warfs are normally nasty places, so I inflate our 2 large Avon fenders, then drop the mooring line and motor in to the warf. We’d already seen a Swiss catamaran that was also flying the Q-flag, heading there too. But when we get there, the decent part of the warf is only long enough for one yacht, and the cat is already taking that space. So we hang around for the next 30 minutes while they get cleared in.

After tying up we enter the customs and immigration office and fill out the usual forms. Well “usual”? Not really the case because each and every country has their own requirements and their own set of forms. All different but all needing the same usual information. As we are completing the information, the officers tell us we have arrived just on time. Tomorrow, Cayman Islands will be on Convid-19 lock-down with no one allowed to enter. They also tell us that Cayman already had one death, an Italian from a cruise liner. Cruise liners are also banned going forward. It’s a bit of a shock for us to hear.
Just 2 days away from the internet and we find the whole world is locking down. Well, at least countries seem to have finally woken up and are taking the necessary actions at last. We are just thankful to have got here in time. We could have found ourselves stuck in Jamaica or worse still, in limbo, stuck on the high seas with no place to go! Later in the day we do manage to connect to a WiFi signal and we discover Panama and many other countries are now also banning entry. So the in-limbo scenario could be very real for other yachts currently on passage. We wonder where the hundreds of cruise liners in the Caribbean will be doing?

Once cleared in and having paid the $70 overtime fee due to being a Sunday, we motor back into the bay and this time correctly pick up one of the free orange bouys. Then we just relax. What’s going on in the world has Oana and I starting to get a bit rattled. Grand Cayman should be as good a place as any to be marooned, with a good medical system. But it still feels weird not to be free to travel. All plans for the coming months are going to be up in the air. Later on, Ian, our Canadian friends from s/v Mahina, lets me know that he has cancelled his transatlantic to Europe. I fully understand, but it doesn’t stop me being disappointed. I had been looking forward to helping him do the crossing in June 🙁

The rest of the day we spend pottering on board with no desire to go ashore just yet. We manage to get a weak WiFi signal and look intensively at the news, then continue doing some more video editing. Looks like we will be having lots of time on our hands to catch up on those in the coming weeks.
I also take a swim around the boat. So lovely to be back in crystal clear water again. The bottom of the hull still looks good. A few small barnacles to knock off but otherwise it just needs a wipe off.
On deck we take down the cockpit tent. It’s so nice to have fresh air flowing in the cockpit. It’s a lovely temperature here. A couple of degrees cooler than Jamaica and much less humidity. More like the lovely climate of Bahamas.

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12 comments

Chris. L March 17, 2020 - 12:35 am

Hello Oana & Glen,
Curious why the Swiss Catamaran had raised “Q” – are you able to elaborate…?
Perhaps reminiscent of scenes from the 1959 post-apocalyptic science fiction film “On the Beach” which depicted the aftermath of a nuclear war resulting in global annihilation from radiation…?!?
Today (Tue 17 March) – St Patrick’s Day and alas celebrations will be very low-key…and Cayman Is – George Town showing 1 Case resulting in 1 death.
Good Website to visit for Covid-19 related information is John Hopkins University & Medicine [https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/] and for Sit-Reps they have an up-to date Global Map displaying Covid-19 Data [https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html] and similarly the World Health Org (WHO) also has a dedicated webpage showing countries, areas or territories with cases [https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/685d0ace521648f8a5beeeee1b9125cd] and the WHO is requesting that every suspect case be tested.
In your vicinity, Canada has closed its borders, USA is only allowing its citizens or permanent residents entry. Public & Sporting events are being shut down
Cuba apparently is allowing a British Cruise Liner with on-board Covid-19 cases to dock after it was sent like musical chairs from port to port in the Caribbean.
USA is struggling to locate test kits & masks & sufficient anti-biotics….because they are all manufactured in China.
Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson are on Vegemite (Australian variation of Marmite) after they both 63, were struck down by the virus while visiting the Gold Coast in Australia. “We felt a bit tired, like we had colds, and some body aches. Rita had some chills that came and went. Slight fevers too. To play things right, as is needed in the world right now, we were tested for the Corona virus, and were found to be positive.”
Formula One cancelled its Season 2020 opening round in Melbourne after McLaren confirmed that a British mechanic was diagnosed with the Corona virus and is now recovering well; but a Pirelli member tested positive for the illness in Australia. Fourteen other McLaren staff, who came into contact with the infected mechanic, remain in quarantine at the team’s hotel in Melbourne
Interestingly, World Superbikes (WSB) had their Melbourne round on the weekend of February 28 to 1 March with no issues; but, have postponed the second round in Qatar. On 8 March the Moto GP series held their 2020 season opening round in Qatar where only the Moto2 & Moto3 classes ran after the Premier MotoGP class riders couldn’t enter the country because of the outbreak in Italy & Spain from where the majority of the teams originate. The Moto2 & Moto3 classes had already been in Qatar for a couple of weeks prior performance testing.
Although impractical, the best place is….out at sea…!
While you are yacht bound; suggest its opportune to work on….all those minor niggling jobs while listening to The Shadows or binge watch classic British comedies like Our Miss Fred…!
Happy Sailing,
Chris. L

Glen March 19, 2020 - 7:57 pm

Thanks for all that info Chris

Chris. L March 17, 2020 - 1:49 am

Hey Oana & Glen,
Forgot to include….Some comedic links for you both:
The Armstrong and Miller Show – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpBgNbe-4fA&list=PLQTAXw5ECeFJxMoha6GjO6mcGkw3Mh_Ie
The Armstrong & Miller Show – RAF Pilots – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zt–2ASTg7k&list=PLEPjbpJqxxcfuUlE7Mzs6rIMxaaEPSqgB
Father Ted Crilly & Dougal – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zkL91LzCMc&list=PLQTAXw5ECeFIqAAzys4D3Uu51GBgOifDe

Enjoy….Chris. L

Robert Keys March 17, 2020 - 5:05 am

Hello Glen & Oana
You are better of at Grand Cayman, nothing much in the other two Islands.
Take care & keep your distance from other people ashore!
Cheers,
Robert

Glen March 19, 2020 - 7:56 pm

Yes, the smaller islands didnt look like they have much other than good diving. They certainly have no shelter for a yacht of our draft!

Bruno Norbedo Ubaldini March 18, 2020 - 4:34 am

Hello! I live in Trieste, Italy. Closed at home for coronavirus restrictions, I’m following the videos of some of your voyages. Very interesting. I envie you two, always in hollidays. In particular I really appreciated the report of the works on your HR54, for restalling. The boat now seems brand new. You have a particular skill on manual works (we say ‘golden hands’): unluckily I have not your patience and skillness. I’m doing just now some works on my boat, a 2003 Beneteau Oceanis 473; I have the teak redoned (very expensive!!). I never do long navigations, we use to go around in Istria and Dalmazia in the good season, but it is enjoyable to see you travalling so far away. Have good wind and good time. Ciao

Kari Viitala March 18, 2020 - 7:18 am

Here in far North the problems are the same: I´m 77 so I have to stay home and meet nobody. I`ll go to my villa in the archipelago where I don`t have to meet anybody. Just countryworks. How long do I have to stay? My sailingboat is there too. Start working for the summersailings.

Glen March 19, 2020 - 7:42 pm

Stay safe. THis is going to get a lot worse before it getting back to anything like normality

Dale March 20, 2020 - 4:38 am

Great to read your adventures as always. Delos crew just got the Sailor 900- “..an advanced 3-axis stabilized Ka-band antenna system and user terminal that is designed for high-speed maritime broadband services on Viasat and Eutelsat Ka-band satellite networks.” Big and ugly (I”d guess about $10k as well) but wow what a luxury. Does not look appropriate on a monohull but you have to think that there’s a lot of R&D in that space with smaller, less obtrusive units coming. Wishing you both safe and healthy voyaging.

https://maritime.viasat.com/cobham-sailor-900.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmNTJrdLHMc

Glen March 21, 2020 - 12:47 pm

I’ll have to go look at that. Its one thing to have a big ugly dome on a small sailboat …. but its usually another to afford the airtime. No marine satelite serive is cheap. To have streaming ability you need to pay about $5000 a month!

Dale March 21, 2020 - 1:42 pm

Yowza! Read you’re using a Wifi extender. How efficient is it? How much additional range does it provide? Thx. Be safe.

Glen March 21, 2020 - 1:55 pm

Its very good. We are currently about 300yds from the shore and I can see and connect to about 50 WiFis. Without it I can see just 4 and connect to none.

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