Thursday, May 13, 2010
The winds were howling through the anchorage overnight and in the morning so we decided to postpone our departure by one day; in addition we would have had to start rather early in order to arrive in Antigua during daylight hours, so the morning was a slow one spent doing a lot of … nothing. After consuming the remaining cheeses from the store in Gustavia we decided to walk to the airport- a rather ambitious task, as it turned out. After climbing up a path where the typical Japanese would have adorned full alpine climbing gear we made it to the top of the hill over Colombier drenched in sweat and were fortunate enough to talk to some tourists with a rental car who were not only from Berlin but also offered us a lift to the airport.
The airport is an impressive one, cut into the only place on St. Barths that could accommodate such, but only barely. The approach is a blind one for the pilot and once clearing the promontory the airplane has to literally drop down to the runway in order to manage a landing. Fortunately the trade winds are funneled through this channel and it becomes a bit easier to land in 20+ knots of headwind. I’m attaching an unedited and very amateurish video of a landing to this post – I should note that while Björn and another visitor ducked when the air
plane flew overhead I was too busy trying to film with my camera to think about doing that until afterwards.
As it was a national holiday all the stores were closed, but we did find a cab to bring us back to close to Colombier and save us the climbing excursion on our return, plus he chose an entrance with much better access for us. Upon return to the boat and after a cleansing swim in the clear waters of the Anse Colombier, I worked on splicing another lifeline and Björn went snorkeling. After the exertions of the day we had an early dinner and were asleep early in preparation for the passage on the next day.