Tahiti Beach

There’s this place…. a sandbar dry at low tide, sand, shells, sea glass, a backdrop of tall, swaying palms. Barely noticeable on a wisp of land on Elbow Cay’s west shore in the Sea of Abaco (Sea? More like Elizabeth Harbor) sits innocent Tahiti Beach. She reveals her charms slowly as moon pulls the water away. About two hours before the appointed time, you can walk over from the nearby cottages/villas or anchor your tender off the beach and play in a piece of paradise. A place for all ages, as even the teens and 20-somethings use the beach for kite boarding when the wind picks up.

Tahiti Beach, approaching low tide

First stop this day (Sat) was Cracker P’s and a trail walk across Lubbers Quarters to the beach on the west side where you can look across the wide expanse that is Lubbers Bank (read: shallow) toward Marsh Harbor. Cracker P’s is tree top dining in a casual open-air atmosphere that we missed five years ago and made sure to grab lunch there this time.

Cracker P's

Next stop, Tahiti Beach. I added many small pieces of sea glass to my slowly growing collection, a handful of small shells too. The power cable from Elbow Cay to Lubbers crosses over at Tahiti (well, it goes in the water) and we wouldn’t be surprised to hear the power goes out from time to time. You can see the cable lying exposed in the sand, eroded most likely by the last hurricane- Irene? Bad girl.

The view from Tahiti Beach, Bakers Rock to right

Exuma Land & Sea Park- 2 quick stops

Cambridge Cay is the southern-most cay in the ECLSP and with 14 mooring balls to boot. We sailed (you figured that already, right?) the four nm and had the entire place to ourselves. The Park Warden boat came by shortly after we arrived- hey did they have eyes on us?… to let us know that the self pay box was on small and sandy Mailbox Cay.

The sign mostly hides the mailbox drop box

We pulled out the area drawing obtained at the park HQ in January so we’d know the good spots. The Cairn Garden is located west of the cairn. Was easy to find and we spotted our first Lionfish and many colorful small fish we hadn’t seen before.

The path across to the Sound side and Bell Rock was well marked in the typical manner- conch lined path. Closer to the Cairn Gardens sits Mailbox Cay where we filled out the envelope and deposited our $20 fee. A fair price for the sole use of this beautiful area.

Cairn landmark to find snorkel spot

Path across to Bell Rock

Across from Cambridge Cay, to the west, lies privately owned Bell Island. Not sure what the owner is up to, but he’s making an awful mess on the island and it looks nasty- and that’s just our view from the water!

Wednesday we moved up our plans to head to the Abacos. The 8am VHF WX broadcast told of 25-30kts winds following the next cold front that was moving into the central Bahamas mid-Sunday. We’d have to wait several days after that to get the right winds (and calm seas too) to sail to Royal Island at the northern tip of Eleuthera and up to Abaco. Waiting with a full fridge and freezer is no problem mon, but we did not have that luxury.

What we could do was to keep on the move every day and on Saturday arrive in the Abacos and be in Marsh Harbor for a shopping spree on Sunday. On the 9am Exuma Park announcements show we requested a mooring in Warderick Wells and were soon sailing along- very briskly today toward one of our favorite places in Exuma.

Two hours and 14 nm later we tied up to #7 and after lunch took our Ortolan plaque to Boo Boo Hill to join the hundreds of others; some very clever, painted and well designed, others more natural.

But will we find it next year?

As I’ve mentioned before, half of Canada is enjoying the Bahama winter and while we have nothing at all against Canadian cruisers (you know we are friends with several), we are just a tad pleased to see not only a U.S. vessel, but if its local, say CT, NY or RI, we seriously think a meet and greet is in order.  M/V Freedom slid past us to take mooring #9- oh Block Island on their stern and the dinghy had CT #s. Russ went over to help them pick up the mooring pennant after a failed first attempt; the boat’s bow looks too high for an easy pickup.

Exit Strategy, a Lagoon cat stopped by to chat- they saw Essex, CT and being from Milford, CT, well they had to stop. See, other cruisers think “local” too. An email from Indigo said they’d be headed to Warderick Wells, just a day behind us. Bummer. If not for the approaching cold front (the worst looking one since we’d arrived in Bahamas) we could have connected on this trip. Perhaps in the Abacos or on the return trip north; we to CT they to MA.