Cat Island: The Hermitage

We rarely sail with others close by. Felt good to pass someone without even trying

We rarely sail with others close by. Felt good to pass someone without even trying

Our Thursday Feb 6 sail to Cat Island is best described as brisk and wavy, somewhat closely hauled but averaging over 7kts. We left the harbor behind six others, four headed for Cat about 30 mins, or 3nm ahead of us. By 11am we’d passed two well-heeled monos, by noon the fishing lines went in when the wind and waves backed down to our comfort zone; I don’t want to gain a fish but lose a husband! Nothing more than a nibble though.

View from the anchorage- Hermitage, entry arch and road visible

View from the anchorage- Hermitage, entry arch and road visible

The main attraction on Cat is The Hermitage in New Bight, designed and built by John C. Hawes, known as Father Jerome. I researched a bit on Father Jerome and his Spartan retirement home he named The Hermitage. He was an accomplished, humble Englishman who served first as an Anglican priest and in 1915 converted to Catholicism. Born John C. Hawes in 1876 he gained renown as an architect, designing and helping construct churches in England, Australia and Bahamas.

In 1903 he became a priest in the Church of England and shortly after was posted to a mission in the Bahamas. The landmark St Paul’s Church in Clarence Town, Long Island is Father Jerome’s work; pre-conversion. 1911 found him bound for the U.S. and after travels into Canada and stints as a laborer; perhaps to balance his philosopher, poet, essayist side, he studied and was ordained a priest in the Catholic Church in 1915.

Around 1937 Father Jerome came to Cat for solitude and to live as his role model, St. Francis of Assisi. He purchased the highest hilltop, Como or Comer Hill, which is the highest in all the Bahamas at 206 ft above sea level and renamed it Mt Alvernia after the hill in Tuscany. This mini medieval monastery was no easy feat. I mean, up on the hilltop, with stone, not dirt to walk and build on. Awe inspiring and the view isn’t bad either.

He built several other churches and structures on Cat; his last, The Church of the Holy Redeemer, still holds services 11am on Sunday. Father Jerome died in 1956 and is buried in a cave located beneath the hermitage; unmarked and very close to the fourteenth Station of the Cross. Nowhere do you see his name; not in any church, not in the hermitage, nowhere. Humble and dedicated, he was a man to trust, respect and admire for how he lived his life.

We got going early on Friday before the day got too hot for trekking up the hill and around New Bight.

Someone planted banana trees to send bananas to Haiti. The sign admonished those who'd done damage

Someone planted banana trees to send bananas to Haiti. The sign admonished those who’d done damage

The fourth Station of the Cross along the rocky, final uphill approach to the hermitage

The fourth Station of the Cross along the rocky, final uphill approach to the hermitage

Steps cut into the rock help you climb up. They may also be Stations 5 and 6

Steps cut into the rock help you climb up. They may also be Stations 5 and 6

The Hermitage- main entry at center, sleeping quarters at the right end

The Hermitage- main entry at center, sleeping quarters at the right end

Spartan sleeping quarters are airy and light-filled

Spartan sleeping quarters are airy and light-filled

Narrow hallway is "just" wide enough

Narrow hallway is “just” wide enough

Desk in the room I call the prayer chapel

Desk in the room I call the prayer chapel

 

Guest books tell the visitors' history story

Guest books tell the visitors’ history story

A local church restoration guy and an interested cruiser

A local church restoration guy and an interested cruiser

When we reached the top, a young cruising couple were helping clear away small stones and pieces of concrete from the restoration work.  Another cruiser took a keen interest in the repair work and I guess the craftsman didn’t mind some company on the scaffolding. The cause of damage was attributed to a lightning strike a couple of months ago.

The kitchen sat about 200ft away from the main building. A baking or hold-warm oven bumps out on left

The kitchen sat about 200ft away from the main building. A baking or hold-warm oven bumps out on left

A much needed rest on seating that we guess was designed by Father Jerome

A much-needed rest on seating that we guess is a Father Jerome creation

Stay tuned for Part II of our day on Cat Island at New Bight.

George Town Parting Shots

Some call it chicken harbor, others offer this one, “a trailer park combined with junior high”- ooo- zing!  Hole One is the “fruit bowl” among the regulars; several of the house boats are named after fruits- cantaloupe, mango, etc. Some cruisers arrive and never travel further, others can’t wait to leave. With more to do here than you can spike a volleyball at, great provisioning and your choice of anchorages, Elizabeth Harbor is also a good jumping-off spot for Long Island, The Jumentos, Cat Island and Conception.

Regardless, the time has come our calendar says, to mosey along and visit the Bahama cays and islands we missed when we zoomed down here. Hard to believe we sailed in here on Dec 12, with less than 30 boats anchored. The latest count is 225, including a rare 190 ft yacht, Intuition II.

This used to be the Red Shanks Yacht Club- lined with conch shells instead of burgees and usable only at low tide

This used to be the Red Shanks Yacht Club- lined with conch shells instead of burgees and usable only at low tide

We explored the beach on the harbor side of Red Shanks. This is one determined tree.

We explored the beach on the harbor side of Red Shanks. This is one determined tree.

Had a run-in with a monohull!  Or maybe the photo just looks that way

Had a run-in with a monohull! Or maybe the photo just looks that way

We'd be leaving before friends Cort and Carolyn returned, so we hung with their newly delivered concrete blocks instead :-)

We’d be leaving before friends Cort and Carolyn returned, so we hung with their newly delivered concrete blocks instead 🙂

Inside the market- just like you might find at home. Happy mon!

Inside the market- just like you might find at home. Happy mon!

Prime Island picks up cruisers in their truck- too comfy will piss off the taxis

Prime Island picks up cruisers in their truck- too comfy will piss off the taxis

I scored some chocolate chip cookies with nuts- delicious!

I scored some chocolate chip cookies with nuts- delicious!

My final parting shot goes like this: The very day we’d heard the “trailer park/jr high” description a story was told to us from a different source that portrayed it with pathetic accuracy. Say the cruisers in the harbor have a bake sale to benefit the local school and cruisers are asked to bake and/or buy; no set prices (can’t be that organized with a setting of picnic tables under the casuarinas by Volley Ball Beach), just pay/donate what you’d like to give. And say someone who you ( the Mayor-ess of the harbor) knew (and this someone supplies you with sea treasures to hand out to your peeps) arranged with you ahead of time that they wanted to surprise their spouse with a hefty amount of the item you were baking.  Follow that?

Does it matter that much if the entire pie is purchased by someone, or if it’s sold among 5 different people? And if your cliquey friends helping out didn’t bake it, where do they get off telling the person how many slices can be bought and override an agreement? So petty and so what if not enough admiration is bestowed upon your creation before it gets sold off in chunks? Ok, I’m done.  See you on Cat Island.