We only stayed two days in Gran Canaria, then sailed the 55
miles across to Tenerife, and had our best sail so far of the whole trip. The
sun was shining and the wind was on the beam.
We had a great sail at five to six knots, and even had a visit from a
pod of dolphins as we approached the island.
Tenerife is completely different from the barren islands of
Lanzarote and Fuerteventura. Instead of lots of low-lying mountains, the whole
of Tenerife centres around the huge Mount Teide. It is so tall (over 3,000m)
that it ‘catches’ the clouds, and the north of the island is green and lush,
compared to the mostly dry south.
We headed for Santa Cruz, the capital city of Tenerife, and
a bustling port with four separate harbours. From the sea, the whole city is
dwarfed by the jagged, green mountains behind, a very stunning backdrop to the
city.
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Mountains backdrop to Santa Cruz |
We arrived on the first weekend of Santa Cruz Carnival and
could hear the music as we sailed in, passing a big funfair. As soon as we had
moored up and done the formalities, we headed into the town centre to see what
was happening. EVERYBODY was dressed up. There were families dressed as
ladybirds, a family of bumblebees, a fantastic spaceman, teenage boys dressed
as ballerinas, and MANY, MANY men in drag!
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one of the three stages at Santa Cruz
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trees of light! |
We felt rather out of place in our ‘normal’ clothes, but
wandered round soaking up the atmosphere. The trees were draped with lights, food
stalls and temporary bars had sprung up on street corners and colourful groups
of performers entertained on three different stages throughout the town. The
numbers of children fizzled out as it got dark and the streets got increasingly
rowdy, so we returned to the boat, but by the sound of it, the party continued
until dawn. The Spanish certainly know how to party!
The main parade was on Mardi Gras Tuesday. We marked the day
by learning about the roots of Mardi Gras (or ‘Fat Tuesday’) for ‘school’, then
cooked up multi-coloured pancakes for breakfast, in Mardi Gras colours of gold,
green and purple!
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Katie's Mardi Gras pancakes |
In the afternoon, we went to watch the big parade. This time
we got into the party spirit of things by dressing as a pirates. A lady in a cafe
said she appreciated our efforts and bought the children a can of Coke!
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Reuben with his free can of Coke! |
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Aargh! |
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McCabes ready for Carnival!
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Ghostbusters! |
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Carnival Troupes
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The streets were lined with people but we managed to find a
spot to watch and squeeze the children forward for a view. For over three
hours, troupes of men, women and children in a variety of outfits marched and
danced their way past. The volume of the music couldn’t compete with our
experience of Trinidad Carnival, but the paraders definitely gave their all!
Again, the afterparty continued until daybreak, maybe the whole town has a week
off work to recover?
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wonderful costumes |
Ash Wednesday was the day for a bizarre ritual – the ‘Burial
of the Sardine’. I have no idea how this started or what exactly it represents,
but they make a huge sardine, and parade it through the streets as though it
were a dead body. Men and women alike dress in black mourning clothes and
follow the ‘funeral cortege’ through the streets wailing and moaning and
generally being over-the-top. There were several ‘priests’ at the front of the
procession, and even a bagpipe-player in a kilt, so it seems like anything
goes!!
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bagpiper & 'priests' at front of parade
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The big Sardine
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This was quite a late parade, obviously aimed more at
adults. Since we had made the effort to go out (dressed up again!), we hung
around to watch it, and while we were waiting for it to begin, the children had
fun collecting stray feathers (from all the boas being worn) and even found a
five –euro note on the ground!
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Revellers by the little Sardine
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Carnival lights
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'Mourning widows' |
We didn’t get a chance to see much of the city itself due to
the chaos and upheaval of the Carnaval, but we did like the crochet-covered trees in the square!
Next day, our weather showed light winds before several
days of stronger winds came in. We decided to take the opportunity to get south
while we could. The marina in Santa Cruz was very expensive, and we wanted to
get to the more sheltered south side of the island (or so we thought…)
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Sailing in the acceleration zone |
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Still smiling! |
The Canary Islands sit in an area of predominantly NE trade
winds. The winds get funnelled around the mountains, creating ‘acceleration
zones’ down each side of the islands. This was our first experience of sailing
within one of the zones, and we were not disappointed. The winds were light
leaving Santa Cruz, so light that Dave decided to put the spinnaker up. This pushed
our speed up over 4 knots and we were sailing nicely. As we continued south, however,
the wind kept gusting off the land, and increasing all the time. Dave had just
given me a shout to help get the spinnaker down when… RRRIPP!, it split in two
down the middle!
We replaced it with the staysail, and were still hammering
along at 6, 7, 8 knots, I think we even reached 9 knots at one stage. The
island protected us from the NW swell, but the wind was incredible, blowing at
least a Force 7, and blowing whitecaps across the water. We were sailing
beautifully downwind, but passed a couple of yachts motoring upwind making hard
work of it!
Deep waves were rising up behind us as we rounded Montana
Roja on the southern tip of the island but, as soon as we turned the corner,
the wind dropped off to a Force 4, and we were sailing gently again! We dropped
sails just off the marina de las Galletas, where we had booked a space, but
when we entered the harbour we realised it was designed for much smaller,
lighter boats than ours. The lady in the office called us on the VHF in a
panic, ‘ROCKS ALEXANDRIA, ROCKS ALEXANDRIA, WE DO NOT HAVE FREE SPACE FOR
YOU!!’. (I love her mis-pronunciation of Ros Ailither!)
We had passed another newly-built marina a couple of miles
back so we motored back there, arriving just as the daylight disappeared, and
thankfully they were able to accommodate us. Not without a few choice remarks,
‘You didn’t reserve? With a boat like this?’ I then explained our mistake with
the smaller marina.
In the morning, we took stock of our surroundings. The
marina San Miguel was itself was very substantial, though not on the edge of a
‘real Spanish town’, as we had looked forward to in las Galletas. In fact, it
soon became apparent that we weren’t anywhere near civilisation at all, we were
perched on the bottom end of a huge golfing resort, with nothing within walking
distance but the resort’s shops and restaurants. And it became clear during the
week that far from being clear of the acceleration zone, we were slap bang in
the middle of it. We renamed the marina ‘Windy Alley’!
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Ros Ailither in Marina San Miguel
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'Viking ship' in marina, still waiting for permit to open as a bar after 7 months! |
Unfortunately, there were no other options for us. The
sheltered anchorage at Los Cristianos, where we had stayed happily for two
months on our trip ten years ago, had banned yachts from anchoring. The next
marina on the west coast was too small for us, and there was nowhere else along
the south coast sheltered enough to anchor in these winds. We certainly didn’t
feel like bashing back to Santa Cruz against the accelerated winds we had
sailed down with!
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The view from 'Windy Alley' marina |
Sinjun & Sally, freshly arrived from the UK, came to
visit the following morning in their hired Fiat 500. They didn’t mind the wind,
and were just happy to be in a warm climate for a change! We all wandered
around to restaurant above the harbourmaster’s office to toast their arrival. We
had a fantastic view out to sea, but were sheltered from the winds by glass
panels all around. There was only one choice on the menu for lunch, and
thankfully it was delicious – lentil soup followed by chicken and potatoes,
Canarian style.
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Welcome lunch for Sinj & Sally
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Chicken & potatoes, Canarian style |
Our visitors drove off to their lodgings for the night and
we decided that we had better hire a car too if we wanted to see anything of
the island. After searching the internet, we arranged to pick one up from the
nearby airport in the morning. The following day we set off to the top of Mount
Teide while the sky was cloud-free.
The roads in Tenerife are an incredible feat of engineering
- huge sections of rock blasted out to make way for the road, and hairpin bend
after hairpin bend all the way up the mountain. You have to concentrate hard,
enjoy the views (briefly!), and try to forget that the only thing stopping you
from falling off are the stone blocks lining the edge of the road!
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Stone blocks to avoid falling off the edge! |
After an hour of climbing, mostly in second gear, we reached
the plateau around Teide itself. A winding road takes you past huge boulders with
patches of mineral green, and to the base station of the cable cars, already at
a height of 2,356m. The cable cars swung upwards out of sight and we nearly
backed out at this point, having discovered the extortionate price! However, it
would have been a wasted journey, so we bit the bullet and soon found ourselves
being spirited to the top of the mountain.
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Patches of green minerals in rocks nr Teide
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Going up in the Cable car! |
The top station has an altitude of 3,555m, and wonderful
views over the whole of Tenerife. We walked out to the lookout point, the
children skipping over the trail on the way out. We were looking down on the
clouds that blanketed the north of the island, we could see over the mountain
range in the north down to Santa Cruz harbour, and across to the neighbouring
islands of Gomera and Gran Canaria, also wreathed in clouds.
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Neverending path to the lookout!
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At the top of Mt Teide, 3555m high! |
We stopped awhile there enjoying the view, and Dave found a
few ‘fumaroles’, where steam was coming from a hole in the ground and the
children could put their hands in and feel the heat – and the moisture- inside.
True ‘hands-on’ learning! They also smelt the ‘rotten egg’ smell of the sulphur
leaching out in yellow/white patches.
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Investigating the steaming fumaroles |
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Eggy-smelling sulphur deposits |
The walk back was altogether more taxing, we all felt out of
breath and Reuben complained it was ‘too far’ and he couldn’t take another
step! We realised it was the effects of the altitude. We passed a man and his
elderly mother who had walked up the mountain from the base of the cable cars.
It had taken them over 6 hours, and they were concerned about missing the last
cable car down. Happily, we all made it down safely.
We met up with Sinj and Sally a few times over the course of
the week, as they moved from place to place. We took another trip up into the
mountains, to a picnic spot high in the Canarian pine trees. We saw lots of
lizards scuttling about, but they always scurried away under rocks before we
got a good look at them. Reuben was fascinated by a dead lizard he found in a bowl
of water, and lovingly carried it home, hoping it might come back to life. When
it showed signs of decomposing, the children gave it a sea burial, and Reuben
drew a fantastic picture of it from a photo.
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Walking in the pine forest with Sinj & Sally
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Reuben's 'superlizard' |
We visited a beach on the windy east coast, where Katie found
a calm spot to do some more snorkelling, and Reuben had a go on a boogie board.
He is still on the cusp of swimming on his own but didn’t seem to be fazed when
he got tumbled a few times in the surf. Katie has seen several species of fish
in the water here, so after looking them up online, she is drawing pictures of
those we have seen.
We visited the cloudy north of the island. The sky literally
turned grey the minute we turned inland from Santa Cruz, and by the time we
reached Puerto de la Cruz, we had real sprinkles of rain. We dined at a ‘Pizza
Rustica’ restaurant overlooking the crashing shoreline. Here, the coast takes
the brunt of both wind and swell and, not surprisingly, the red flag was up to
warn off swimmers.
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Looking out over Puerto de la Cruz shoreline
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Carnival Mask shop in Puerto de la Cruz |
We visited the famous ‘Dragon Tree’ of Icod, reputed to be a
thousand years old. We had been to both these places ten years ago when Dave’s
Mum came out to visit with his brother. Now, as then, we were rather
unimpressed by the tree (a tree is a tree after all!), but the children were
pleased to think they were following in Nanny Rita’s footsteps!
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The famous Dragon Tree, dwarfed by perspective! |
The north of the island is very fertile, however, because of
all the rain, and we passed mile upon mile of banana plantations. The children
were tickled to see that the bananas grow ‘upside-down’. Sinj and Sally even
stayed in a banana plantation, and were allowed their fill of bananas to eat!
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Wet and fertile north coast
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Canarian Canaries |
We finished off the day with a cuppa tea in the pretty little
town of Garachico on the north coast. As in Icod, the town was full of
beautiful wooden balconies and window details. The sun was setting by this
stage and we had a hair-rising drive home up and over the mountains before we
hit the new motorway further south. The views of the coast from up high were as
impressive as the drops from the road!
Later in the week, we visited the busy tourist centres of
Los Cristianos and Playa de las Americas. The difference in the weather there
was staggering. Having set off from ‘Windy Alley’ with the wind howling, it was
lovely to wander along the beach in calm sunshine. We were the only people
there not only wearing long trousers, but with jumpers around our waists for
later! We again mourned for our one-time sheltered anchorage, then headed up
the road to find Dave’s old friend Jeff, who runs the ‘Lakeland’ teashop there.
Real English cakes!!
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At Lakeland Tearooms |
At Playa de las Americas, we met up with Maggie, the
children’s friend’s grandma, who is delivering a package of messages back to
Topsham for them!
We drove to the secluded cove of El Puertito, where
apparently you can snorkel with turtles. The water was rather cloudy from the
recent swell, but we saw lots of fish, and an eight-legged starfish. Sadly no
turtles…
Keen to escape the car, Katie and I set off one morning
along the coast path from our marina to Las Galletas, some two-and-a-bit miles
away. The path at first skirted the impeccably green golf course, where we returned
a couple of stray balls to their owners, then followed up and down craggy inlets
and rocky beaches. One of these beaches had a caravan at either end, both obviously
lived in, with several sheets of tarps strung up to give extra space. One even
had a few chickens and a couple of dogs running about – we reckon they had been
there a while!
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Holey lava stones on beach
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Caravan shanty home on beach
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Rocky coves along south coast |
It was along this walk that we found a natural patch of ‘green’
in the dry south of the island. It was in a dip out of the wind and the ‘greenery’
mostly consisted of cactus and prickly pears. I had heard from Sinjun that
prickly pears were edible, so I thought I’d give one a go. Bearing in mind his
warning to be very careful with the nasty prickles, I held one in my hat, picked
off the prickles with a knife and peeled it. It looked bizarrely like a small
beetroot, even staining my fingers red. It turned out to be very juicy, both
sweet and slightly acidic, but full of hard little pips that I had to spit out.
Not the easiest thing to eat but definitely a thirst-quencher if you were stuck
in a desert!
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Prickly Pears
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peeled prickly pear! |
Just before we reached las Galletas, pretty windswept by
now, we came to the most wonderful stretch of rocky caves on the edge of
Montana Amarillo (Yellow Mountain). There was smooth light grey rock that
looked like it had poured down the mountain, layer upon layer of yellow
sandstone hanging perilously as it got eroded away, and underneath it all volcanic
black crunchy rock. It was a geologist’s dream, and made me wish I understood
more about rock formation.
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Katie near Las Galletas |
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Perfect sandstone bench! |
As it was, Katie & I had fun running along the narrow
path and scrambling up the smooth and bumpy rocks. It seemed to be almost a secret
location, enjoyed by a few but completely off the tourist radar. We returned later
with the boys, and Dave and Katie enjoyed a snorkel in crystal clear water,
while Reuben found himself a perfect rockpool to bathe in – one without spiky
sea urchins!
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Sandstone erosion - a geologist's dream
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Wierd & wonderful rockscapes |
The next few days brought rain showers and cooler
temperatures. Snow appeared overnight on Mount Teide, but the high roads were
closed when we tried to drive up and see it for ourselves. The temperature
dropped over ten degrees during our drive just halfway up the mountain, down to
5ᵒ, so it must have been near freezing at the summit. We diverted to see the
enormous rock stacks called ‘Los Gigantes’ instead.
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Snow appears on Mt Teide |
Finally, the wind dropped, the sun returned, our hire car
went back and it was time to think of moving on. We had hoped to continue west
to Gomera, but are reluctant to spend any more time in pricey marinas. Useful
and safe as they are, at 30-35 euros a night, our cruising fund is getting
severely depleted. We know from our brief sojourn in Gran Canaria that there is
a cheap (not free!) anchorage in Las Palmas, the capital, so we are planning to
spend a week or two there, and give our wallets a little break.
1 Comments:
Received your message on our Blog and have replied to it thereon. Most impressed with your boat and blog! We'd like to keep in touch.
Regards, Helen and Mike Norris, Island Drifter
helencnorris@hotmail.com
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