Mykonos to Milos |
Our departure from
Mykonos looked promising, following wind at 12 – 15 kts, A very
enjoyable sail down the Delos Channel in brilliant sunshine and a
broad reach down to Andiparos, what could be better.....The wind
lasted one hour before it died to next to nothing. We ghosted south
for another two hours and then decided to head left and go into the
anchorage off Paros town which we reached an hour before sunset; just
in time to enjoy the closing stages of a local keel boat race. This
was followed by supper and a visit from Yorgos who, having heard we
were in Paros again, decided to pay us a brief visit and raid our
drinks cabinet!
Sunset over passage between Andiparos and Dhespotico |
The following day
dawned bright and clear with a pleasant NW wind. We sailed off the
anchor and headed SW towards Andiparos and Dhespotico. By 1200 we
were through the channel between Dhespotico and Nisos Strongilo and
headed eastwards to the anchorage which is between Dhespotico and
Andiparos. Having anchored under sail, on what the Heikell pilot
described as a sandy bottom, we discovered it was a rock shelf with a
thin covering of sand, very poor holding. We therefore moved further
to the north into the more populated part of the anchorage and there
found good holding and settled ourselves for the night ahead.
Balsamo Bar, Ios Chora |
From here we set off
mid morning for the short passage to the bay on the south side of
Dhespotico which we found deserted and as beautiful as ever. It is
backed by a large flat area similar to a salt flat and is the ideal
place to BBQ, with the exception that we had no suitable meat to cook
over an open fire... slight oversight! By mid afternoon we had two
other yachts in the anchorage and a fair breeze to take us south to
Ios and so we decided to set forth. We sailed south in light and
variable winds but resisted the temptation to start the engine. By
1930 we were in the port of Ios, backed up to the jetty and debating
the climb up the hill to the chora where we planned to have supper.
Although as we walked past the bus stop where a local bus was waiting
we opted for the energetic choice by climbing the footpath up to the
chora, some of the party were not so keen on this option by the time
we reached the half way mark, but by then it was too late! Supper was
a gyros in a street-side taverna followed by a couple of G&Ts in
my favourite bar, “Balsamo”, a quirky little place high in the
chora.
Stern to in Ios harbour |
Next morning we did
some essentials, such as victualling, and watched a catamaran trying
to leave at the same time as a high speed ferry arrived; the Port
Police guy must have been breathless with all the whistle blowing in
his efforts to get the catamaran to move out of the way! We departed
30 minutes later, sailing off the jetty and ghosting slowly towards
the entrance of the bay. Fortunately we were well clear when the next
two ferries arrived. Our plan was to head to Ormos Negros, my
favourite bay in Ios. It was a very slow passage but by 1400 we had
covered the three miles southwards and had almost drifted to a halt
in the bay before dropping the anchor. It was deserted but for one
new structure, built since I was last here, a particularly disgusting
restaurant or bar structure, half finished and with outer walls that
looked like a gymnasium climbing wall! Why?
Departing Ormos Neros |
We stayed here overnight
and most of the next morning, waiting for the wind to fill in. Our
decision to leave was prompted by the arrival of two grockle boats
(grockle = tourist in Cornish) depositing their cargo on the beach,
including sound system!
From here we headed
across to Sikinos, intending to go alongside or anchor off in Skala
Sikinos. We discovered on arrival that this small harbour is well
silted and offers very little room. The small inner jetty that
Heikell recommends going on stern to is no longer an option with
depths of only 1.5m in the approach (we touched the bottom trying!).
This left only the option of joining the three boats who were already
alongside the outer end of the outer mole. Having backed in gently,
we started to come alongside a Belgian registered boat named Octopus
to be greeted by the owner and his wife refusing to take our lines!
His attitude was completely unhelpful! The harbour was dead calm and,
with shore lines fore and aft, having us alongside would have not
represented any risk to him or those inboard of him. (Having
previously been the 10th boat out at Cowes Marina during
Cowes Week only four seemed pretty reasonable to me …. he didn't
see it that way!) In the course of our “debate” I instructed
Christoph and Malcolm to step aboard his boat and secure us which
generated even more vitriol from him with accusations of poor
maritime etiquette etc, he didn't seem to connect that refusing to
take someone's lines and trying to jam your dinghy in the way of a
boat coming alongside were hardly acts of friendship. In the end he
threatened to release our lines as soon as we left the boat! Given
his unpleasantness we decided that having him as a neighbour was not
a price we were prepared to pay for a night in Sikinos; we departed
wishing him and his wife well with a few choice words in French.
Panorama of Karavostasi, Folegandros |
The
wind was South Westerly, and about 15kts, as we departed rendering
any thoughts of anchoring on the south coast of Sikinos impossible;
our alternative was a beat west to the bay at Karavostasi on the
eastern end of the island of Folegandros. By the time we arrived at
1930 the wind had died to nothing and we motored the last 30 mins
into the anchorage and settled down for the night anchored in 4m, 50m
from the beach. Next morning, who should arrive but “Octopus”;
they anchored as far from us as they could but not before falling
foul of the Port Police for obstructing the ferry turning area!
Ormos Vathi, Folegandros |
After a brief
victualling trip and a coffee ashore we set off under sail for the
bay of Ormos Vathi on the south coast of Folegandros. This has to
qualify for the slowest passage this year, 3.5m in four hours! We
were determined not to be beaten by the lack of wind! By 1630 we were
anchored in the bay in a flat calm and debating the merits of supper
ashore in one of the tavernas. 1930 found us seated at the nearest
taverna to the beach enjoying a simple but good meal and better still
they agreed to provide us with two loaves of fresh bread next
morning.
The following morning
dawned grey and with a southerly wind, it did not look promising for
a settled day. By 1500 we had collected our bread and decided to head
back to Karavostasi where decent shelter from a southerly could be
found. We sailed off the anchor and an hour and a half later we were
settled in the south-easterly bay at Karavostasi. Here we spent a
quiet night listening to the wind whistling overhead but in
absolutely calm water.
Anchored in Fasolou Beach, Ormos Faros, Sifnos
|
Our plan had been to go
back to Vathi next day but a westerly wind convinced us that a trip
to Sifnos would be a more pleasant sail and hence we set off with
reefed main and genoa, on the wind. Within an hour the wind had
moderated slightly and we enjoyed a fetch under full sail for the
rest of the passage arriving in the southern bay of Ormos Faro in
time for a slightly delayed lunch. Nearby was another Blue Ensign
yacht, a very pleasant couple from the East Coast of UK sailing their
dream. By evening we decided to move berth into the slightly better
sheltered bay, called Fasolou Beach, which is to the east of the
village. At the second attempt the anchor bedded itself into sand and
we were set for the night to come.
Pharos Taverna, Ormos Faros |
Next morning Christoph
and I swam ashore to get bread and a few other essentials but
unfortunately bread stocks were finished for the day; the bakery is
in the Chora several km away. We had enough onboard for lunch and
with the weather being benign and sunny we decided to stay another
day and eat ashore that night, allowing us to collect bread the next
day. Supper ashore was in the Pharos Taverna, above the western end
of the town beach, run by a Greek lady whose Romanian assistant spoke
good English, always a help when there is no Greek speaker aboard. A
simple supper of grilled fish served with local rose wine was
thoroughly enjoyed by all; after which we adjourned back onboard for
a Metaxa nightcap.
The Castro, Sifnos |
Our plan the following
day was to adjourn to the other side of Sifnos, to Vathi, an almost
enclosed bay on the west coast but first, given the very light conditions, we opted to head north to the bay under the Castro and anchor there for a swim ashore and a look at the Byzantine village before heading south round the island.
The Castro, Sifnos |
Kurukulla anchored in Ormos Castro |
On departure, in light airs, we sailed most of the
way to Vathi passing through the shallow channel between Sifnos and the
adjacent island to the SE by the name of Kitriana. Heikell does not
mention this channel and the chart that I had onboard showed it as
less than 5m and rock strewn but in our time in Faros we had seen
several large yachts negotiate it, thus we decided to give it a go.
In the event we recorded nothing less than 15m on the echo sounder,
as we sailed slowly through with Christoph in the bow as the eyes of
the ship. By 1900 we were anchored in Vathi, on the eastern side of
the bay, in 5m of water, on beautiful clean sand. Ideal for the
night.
Ormos Vathi, Sifnos |
After a walk ashore
next morning for coffee and a leg stretch we sailed off the anchor,
beat out of the bay and set sail for Milos where we planned to pick
up Yorgos again for his next spell onboard. The passage south was
variable, from no wind to having a reef in the main and several rolls
in the Genoa but we were fortunate that only the last few miles were
on the wind. By 1900 we were anchored off the town of Adhamas,
waiting to move alongside the next morning if or when a berth became
free.
Next morning we moved
in at 0930, backed into a suitable berth only to be met by a blank
stare of disbelief and a total failure to offer to take our lines
from the owner of the adjacent boat who was on the jetty. It was the
Belgians again!
Arriving Milos |
More when we
leave......
No comments:
Post a Comment