Florida (Flying out)
17th March to 27th March 2015
Georgetown International airport is where we depart to Ford Lauderdale. From a small island in the Bahamas to a big city in Florida. Looking forward to see Zandia and André with our grandchild Zandré.



Zandia was invited to be speaking at New Life Church woman's conference in Myrtle Beach, USA (19-21 March). The theme was SATURATE. She spoke of an awareness of God’s LOVE and eternal intimacy with Him.

Although it was spring in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina a cold front bring the temperature down to a chilly 10 C. Enjoying the time together.


Flying back to warmer Fort Lauderdale where we will meet up again with André, Zandia and Zandré to spend a few extra days.
Shopping in Florida. Big sales on all types of clothes. Zack was thrilled with his Polo shirts.
Zack trying to help the fisherman that is also been caught by fishing. Zack will most probably top the scale. We already have an extra bag flying back to the Bahamas and are going strong
The hall of fame of fishing. Walking through the different halls, learning about all the masters of fishing.


Enjoy the feel of an American V8. Renting it for a few days. Always thought a Cadelac was a long pink car
The Wednesday afternoon Zandré belonged to us.We took him with to the local grocery store. Afterwards taking a walk at the PGA golf course and surroundings.





Our last afternoon in Florida we spend at the boardwalk.Going to miss them.



Custard milkshake.Sharing is caring.

André, Zandia and Zandré were flying to New York where André was doing his last sermon before returning to South Africa.

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Exuma Cays
1st April to 18th April 2015
1 Lee Stocking Island:
From Georgetown we head out to the drop off to be in deeper water for fishing.


Our Captain’s fishing skills pay off. A big Dorado took the lure and after a nice fight he was on Vagabund. The rum in his mouth put him down for 15 min before he start flapping again.

With our deep fridge already full we invited all our friends for supper on Vagabund. The entrance fee was a side dish. It was an evening of laughter and chatting.

Enter through Adderly Cay Cut and anchor in front of the Carribean Marine Research Station.
Beautiful Beach with white sand and clear water was around the corner of the mooring balls of the Research Station.


A brunch after all the exercise to fill our empty stomachs.

The Research center has been sold and the center is now closed. It is almost as if everyone on the island was told to pack up and leave in less than an hour.
“The institute was started by John H. Perry Jr. (1917-2006) of newspaper publication prominence. Seventeen years after the war John Perry bought the 600-acre Lee Stocking Island, off Barre Terre, Exuma, for a mere $70,000 in 1957. Lee Stocking proved to be an ideal setting for Perry's other big interests - marine research and renewable energy. He developed the island as a scientific field station and tried to make it self-supporting by translating new technologies into working models on the property.
And from the early 1980s until 2006, NOAA helped fund the research center at Lee Stocking Island, which included laboratories, housing, airstrip, docks, boats, and dive support facilities.
Scientists and researchers at the Caribbean Marine Research Center focused on four key areas - building sustainable fisheries, maintaining healthy coastal ecosystems, predicting environmental change, and gaining new biological and economical value from the sea. For more than two decades, scientists had explored the mysteries of the ocean from a base in the Bahamas run by the Jupiter-based Perry Institute for Marine Science.
A major, unexpected reduction in federal money has forced undersea research organizations along the East Coast to scale back operations. This former NOAA research center, also called the Perry Institute, had been sold and abandoned December 2012.”


Runway 12 used in the time of the Research Centre running.


Lots of equipment is lying around. This tractor needed a push.
Keeping ourselves entertained. Brett enjoyed being a kid again.
Looking for bonefish
2 Rudder Cut Cay (David Copperfield)
With the dawn breaking we could saw a section of the bloodmoon of 4th April. Blood Moon is sometimes used to describe a Total Lunar Eclipse. When the Earth casts its shadow on a Full Moon and eclipses it, the Moon may get a red glow.
From Lee Stocking Island we sail on the inside of the Exuma Cays with the depth showing on the cards as 1 m MLW. On the last section Vagabund lead with Panache following.
We had anchored on the beautiful Rudder Cut Cay, next to a pristine island. It also turns out that they took privacy for their guests pretty seriously. There were multiple no trespassing signs, and what looked like a solar powered security camera on the beach. The island was privately owned. I guess for that kind of money, you don’t want smelly cruisers wandering around on your private island.
Inspecting the anchor in cristal clear water.

Anchorage with big stingrays swimming under Vagabund.
Zack was doing his daily exercise.
Around the corner was a cave.

Great snorkeling in the shallow water of Guana Cay.
South of the beach is the a full size stainless steel sculpture of a mermaid playing a piano. The statue was so intriguing that we spent a long time just snorkeling around it and diving on it, inspecting every nook and cranny.
“David Copperfield (the magician, not the Dickens character) commissioned the sculpture of the mermaid, and had it sunk off the islands a couple of years ago, so it is not that old. David Copperfield owns Musha Cay, and the islands around it, including Rudder Cut Cay, He has turned it into an ultra-exclusive high end resort. They only take a few guests at a time, and rates start at just $37,500 per night. There are no extra zeros by accident.”


Zack entertained us on the piano.

At sunset blowing of the conch. It is a modern day ritual to blow the “Pū” (conch) to say goodbye at sunset to end the day and to say Mahalo (thanks). Sunset with Kaya Moya, Vagabund and Panache.

3 Little Farmer Cay
On our way to Little Farmer Cay we stopped at Musha Cay to snorkeled at an airplane wreck.



"Little Farmers Cay was settled by a woman named Christinna Brown, a freed slave from Great Exuma. She moved to Farmers Cay with her two suns and daughter. They bought the island from the English Crown and willed it to their descendants as generation property. They farmed and fished. Most of the 55 current residents are descended from those hardy ancestors."
Three dinghies on the beach with us all exploring this small island on a Sunday afternoon.
Little Harbour
No Loathing here.

Relaxing on deckchairs
4 Great Guana Cay
White Point: Ospreys live closed to water as fish make up 99% of their diet. Ospreys usually mate for life as long as breeding is successful.
The females choose their mate based on the location and quality of the nest. Large nests are built out of sticks usually on offshore islands.
We visited a few days the Black Point Settlement. Stock up, doing laundry and Wifi.
5 Bitter Guana Cay
On our way to anchor at Bitter Guana Cay
Close to Dotham Cut an Osprey build his nest on the edge of the cliff.
Bitter Guana Cay in the Exuma chain of the Bahamas is famous for its population of critically endangered Exuma island iguanas.
They can grow to 80 years old.
From the top of the hill overlooking Vagabund in the bay


This tiny island boasts with some magnificent beaches, spectacular crashing waves on the eastern shore.
Brett and Gideon of Panache were enjoying the water after our hike.

6 Staniel Cay
The Friendly swimming pigs
"The pigs are said to have been dropped off on Big Major Cay by a group of sailors who wanted to come back and cook them. The sailors, though, never returned; the pigs survived on excess food dumped from passing ships. One other legend has it that the pigs were survivors of a shipwreck and managed to swim to shore, while another claims that the pigs had escaped from a nearby islet."
The pigs are now fed by locals and tourists. Arriving at the beach with a dinghy they came out of the bush.
Swimming out to the dinghy towards us.

Open her mouth wide so that she can receive food
Brett and Gideon explaining to the pig that they did not have any food.
Thunderball Grotto
There are several entrances where people can swim through the holes to get into the cavern inside. Some of the tunnels are underwater and you have to swim through a short overhang and hold your breath for a few seconds until you come out the other end of a giant chamber.

When you looked back towards the cave opening sunbeams lighting up hundreds of colorful fish. Everywhere we turned, rays of light danced in the crystal clear waters within the cave. James Bond movie: Thunderball as well as Splash were filmed here.
Two Plane Wrecks
Diving the plane wrecks



Nurse sharks
Feeding the nurse sharks at the Yacht club

7 Compass Cay
Kayak Fishing: While paddling with our kayak Zack hooked up with a nice fish. Despite the fish dragging us all over I still managed to paddle the kayak back to the boat to get the gaff. Zack released the fish after taking the hook out.


Nurse sharks:
Inside Compass Cay Marina the nurse sharks had learned to swim onto the platform to be patted. The sharks skin felt like sand paper.

Caves:
We timed our snorkeling at Rocky Dundas at the turn of low tide in order to enter the two caves safely. Both the caves had beautiful stalactite and stalagmite formations and it is legend that these caves were sacred sites for the Lucayans.
Braai:
John eyeing out another possible good photo.

The three ships (Khya Moya, Panache and Vagabund) arrived at Compass Cay, went on land and declared this piece of land belonging to South Africa for the rest of the afternoon. We had a traditional braai to celebrate the newfound land.


Rachel’s bubble bath
A crystal clear pool that receives breaking waves from the ocean side at high tide. Soon after this photo we had to fish out Zack's sunglasses.


Nassau
18th April to 24th April 2015
19th April 2015
What a privileged to worship today in the BFMI church of the late Dr Myles Munroe.
To be part of a service with dancing and singing to His glory.
After the service we met Myles Munroe Jr and Charisa Munroe. They just returned from a visit to South Africa.

Dr Myles Munroe teachings on Kingdom Principles and his strong emphasis on succession planning as a leadership requirement is inspirational for both me and Zack.
20th April to 23rd April: Atlantis
We did not want to change the discrepancy of the water clearance under the Eastern Bridge and decided to play it safe and enjoy the scenery by sailing around the Northern shoreline of Paradise Island in order to enter Atlantis Marina.

This is another money spinning masterpiece of the Sol Kerzner the 79 year hotel magnate. It is a serious upgrade on scale to the Sun City complex.
Vagabund stood out between the super yachts as the biggest and fastest wind propelled boat. May be because it was the only sailing vessel?

My brother Izak, his wife Heleen and Kyra arrived in the early morning hours on Tuesday to join us for ten days on Vagabund. We appreciate their effort to overcome all the travel obstructions to visit us every year. It took us an additional hour to overcome our urge to catch up before we released them to go and sleep. A few hours later Heleen and Kyra where in the pool experience a deep water swim with Bottlenose Dolphins.
They were able to touch, hug and kiss these amazing animals.


We were so impressed with the show that Zack and myself jumped into a 2pm opening to experience it as well. It was an unforgettable experience. We had an opportunity to snorkel with them and hand-feed them.
The best was when one of the dolphins (Katrina) propels you across the lagoon by pushing you on your foot. It was evident the dolphins enjoyed there human encounters. They were well looked after but still would have loved to rather see them in the ocean.
The next day we were all becoming kids again. Playing and trying all the different rides.





Awesome to meet up with Alleycat , Shilo and Island Khya. Enjoying a dinner together


Eleuthera
24th April to 1st May 2015
Before we left for Eleuthera the first fish was caught by Kyra while we still on anchor in Nassau,

Izak got spoiled with his first billfish. The Sailfish was released after the photoshoot.
Heleen provided the meal on the table with a nice Dorado
Sea fresh!
Harbour Island in Eleuthera
Every spare moment Kyra is in the water. Closer inspecting anything that moves. She really enjoys the water.
Arriving at Harbour Island. Famous for their pink beaches.
The pink beaches of Harbour Island in Eleuthera. Rated in the top ten beaches in the world. Certainly the most beautiful beach we have been on.


Izak and Heleen on the pink beach

Collecting pink sand
Enjoying the clean water and unspoiled beaches
Snorkeling from the beach with beautiful coral reef structures

Izak, Heleen and Kyra spotted three Bull Sharks while snorkeling

Thanks for a wonderful time together on Vagabund:
Swimming, snorkeling, exploring, laughing and sharing!!!! Making the best of the weather.

