After a late afternoon
flight back to Turkey, from London Gatwick, it was a taxi transfer to
Yacht Marine and a late night “spot the boat” challenge. Unlike
last year Kurukulla was in exactly the same place I had left her 6
months before. A swift scale of the ladder and I was back onboard and
15 minutes later, asleep!
En route to launch |
The next morning I
awoke to bright sunshine and the noise of some TMS staff knocking on
the hull, they were wanting to come aboard and complete some of the
work they had been undertaking in my absence; the primary items of
which were re-insulating the fridge cabinet and undertaking an
extensive refurbishment of the hull above waterline. In addition the
Mainsail had gone off to North sails for a full winter service and
replacement of the luff rope.
The best surprise of
the year was the clean condition of the interior of the boat. Having
had the galley virtually dismantled, to get the fridge cabinet out, I
was anticipating a similar situation of dirt and chaos as occurred in
previous years, with other work. The interior was verging on
pristine! Www.tms-marineservice.com
.
Why I will miss Yacht Marine, Marmaris |
The new look stern with logo, Goddess Kurukulla |
The other great success
of the winter was the new name graphic for the stern, produced by
David Mills of Evolve Creative (
david@evolve-cd.co.uk
), an excellent piece of artwork
that has transformed her appearance and replaces the rather tired
earlier version.
After four days onshore
it was time to put her back in the water, recommission the systems,
rectify a few electrical defects (including the engine start
circuit!) and get under way for this years programme. Christoph
joined the day after launch and helped with the final preparations
and by 2 May we were set to go. €80 to the local agent to organise
our departure from Turkey (it still grieves me that the system
effectively prevents you from doing this simple task yourself – a
money creation scheme!) a trip to the ferry port to clear immigration
and customs on the way out and that was it.
Our escort on departure from Marmaris |
This was the third
attempt to get to Rhodes; on two previous occasions I had abandoned
the attempt due to excess of, or absence of, wind. Third time lucky!
We entered Rhodes old port and berthed in the yacht moorings on the
inner face of the outer mole at the inner end of the old harbour.
Here we were greeted by an efficient representative of “Rhodes
Marina” (the new marina intended to provide much greater capacity
now lies in virtual ruins and has remained incomplete and unopened
for years, only the old harbour functions. A massive waste of
money!).
Rhodes Old Town |
Rhodes Harbour, outer mole |
After 48 hours in
Rhodes we set sail for Lindos, the original capital of Rhodes before
the city of Rhodes was built. Lindos old village is pleasant enough
and the bay offers a good anchorage (even if we did snag a rock with
the anchor cable which took 30 minutes to unravel as we departed).
Lindos is subject to the ebb and flow of tourists with the day trip
boats that come and go most of the day. The saddest part is the
“restoration” of the Byzantine castle and the “acropolis”
within, which is steadily being turned into a modern replica, worthy
of a Disney theme park.
Two days here and we
were off again but this time it was to a rather more remote part of
Rhodes, we thought!
Lindos anchorage |
Lindos Castle, Acropolis (reconstructed) |
We awoke next morning
to flat, oily calm. No windsurfing this morning... Our aim was to
make passage up the west coast of Rhodes to the island of Alimia, a
beautiful anchorage with an abandoned settlement behind. I had been
here before two years back but was keen to return again whilst en
route north. After an hour of motoring the wind filled in and we were
able to sail the rest of the way, finally coming to anchor in the
small bay adjacent ot one of the two settlement churches. Shortly
after we arrived two charter boats, who were in the same bay,
departed and we had the place to ourselves.
The anchorage at Alimia |
Following a night at
anchor in a flat calm we set off on a brief ramble ashore to look at
the ruins of the settlement and the two churches. The last time I
was here we were shocked to find an oil lamp still burning in one of
the churches, this time we discovered it had been replaced by an LED
version! After this diversion we were off again heading for Tilos, a
quiet but enchanting island some 18 miles NW. Here we were again
greeted by a very helpful and welcoming harbour official who informed
us berthing and power were free, the only charge was for water, if we
required it (we didn't). We berthed alongside, for a change, on the
inside of the outer wall.
Waterfront at Lindos |
was advised. Since this was written the harbour has been improved and there is now ample water for going stern to on the inner wall as well, as the attached photographs show. A bit of victualling and an enjoyable meal in the Gorgona taverna (to be recommended) and it was an early night in preparation for an 0600 start for Astypalaia.
Next day dawned bright
and with a NW wind blowing at 10 - 15 knots. Just as forecast. We
motored out and decided to use the engine until we reached the
northern tip of the island rather than sail in a light-ish headwind
and choppy seas. Once clear of the northern tip of Tilos we set full
sail and set Kurukulla up on starboard tack for the fetch to
Astypalaia. That was the theory! The wind spent an hour trying to
decide whether to blow at 10 kts, 30 kts or not at all.
Lindos harbour |
Wednesday dawned bright
but very slightly overcast but we were not concerned. It was a day
for relaxing and doing a bit more maintenance whilst we awaited the
arrival of the next crew member, Yiorgos, on the Thursday night
ferry; after which we head north for a bit.
More when we leave
Astypalaia …....
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