I wrote the following for a writing competition, entitled 'A place I didn't want to be'. It follows our night crossing of the Mona Passage which is between Puerto Rico and Dominican Republic...and to make things worse, we did it twice. I hope this conveys the fears I had that night in May 2009. This night still ranks as my No 1 worst time spent sailing...
The foreboding
darkness of night enveloped us as we left Puerto Rico, sailing across the Mona
Passage, to the north coast of the Dominican Republic. Horizontal lightening
burst across the heavens, fusing each cloud with the next, a blinding whiteness
creating a momentary negative to the blackness; but there would be no silver
linings for us, in this place we didn’t want to be.
Our planned 150
mile passage would take twenty five hours for my husband and me in our 41ft
sailboat Alhambra, and we had been warned…
‘…the Mona
Passage should not be taken lightly’, were the cautionary words of other
sailors.
‘…pick your
weather window carefully’, the sailing guides advised.
We heeded the
advice and waited for a ‘good weather window’, but here we were, at the mercy
of the oceans and Mother Nature, and all they could throw at us.
As you leave
Puerto Rico and Isla Desecheo, an island off the northwest coast, the
mountainous landscape provides a degree of protection for the first few hours
of the crossing, which perhaps lures you into a false sense of security towards
the many hazards that can be encountered in the Mona Passage.
As the Atlantic
Ocean crashes ruthlessly into the Caribbean Sea, unpredictable currents are
ubiquitous. The Puerto Rican Trench, the second deepest hole in all the oceans,
spills water in torrents through the ever decreasing passage between the
Canandaiqua Bank and the Hourglass Shoal. They in turn struggle to contain the
water rushing in from the Equatorial Current; resulting in a mass of
irrepressible water and energy trying to dissipate wherever it can.
In addition there
is ‘the garbage line’; high sea flotsam, enormous palm fronds and bamboo all
follow a specific trail through the water, which is best avoided in a boat. Add
to this migrating North Atlantic Humpback Whales en-route to their breeding
areas, and finally, if the above fails to provide enough entertainment during
your crossing, the seismically active Mona Rift Fault can keep you guessing as
to whether you will encounter a tsunami.
Not a place we
wanted to be in a sailboat in the middle of a midnight storm.
Our first
waypoint was eight hours away, a notional position fifty nautical miles
north-west in the Mona Passage. We left the safety of Boqueron Bay on the
Puerto Rican coast at 1:30pm in calm conditions, and as the sun began its
descent and the skies darkened, we increased our watch on the garbage line and
scanned for humpback whales.
Soon the
protection of Puerto Rico’s mountains began to wane and the seas rose beyond
the forecasted five to six feet. As the
hours crept by, the storm clouds accumulated and hid the sunset in a veil of
black. It was a moonless night and the
sea continued to rise, growing with each wave.
Keeping a vigilant watch meant that we were only able to take an hours
sleep at a time and soon the following seas were above the top of our canopy.
Had we only to encounter the height of the waves, this would have caused little
problem, but they were short and steep too. As soon as Alhambra was lifted up
on the first wave, pointing us directly up into the night sky, she was
immediately thrown back down into the ocean as the crests collapsed, just as
the next wave picked her up and repeated the process.
Standing at the
helm I watched as a continuous rolling mass of water tried to invade the
cockpit and eject me from the safety of our boat. Fear overwhelmed me and I
checked my life jacket like a woman possessed, ensuring that the safety lines
were strapped on securely. The enormous seas engulfed my view, every crash of
the waves behind the boat louder and larger than the last. The boat held out,
but my nerves were shot, I could no longer sustain a watch on my own for fear
of the deteriorating conditions.
Around midnight
an exhausted bird, shattered from its fight against the elements, landed on our
canopy and refused to leave. It became obvious that conditions in the Mona
Passage would not improve and the night would be long and arduous. We endured
the horrendous conditions throughout the night until we could see the coast. We
headed for the nearest safe anchorage, which we reached at daybreak, and there,
I was no longer in a place I didn’t want to be.
funny, we did it several times, and it was like glass, had to motor to Samana or Boqueron depending on the direction you were heading.
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