Wednesday, 4 September 2013

five weeks in Croatia

Week 5
28th August 2013
Where do I start? Another eventful week.
We had been told about a night club –Carpe Dien (sieze the day) that was on an island just off Hvar Town, apparently the only thing on the island. We decided to investigate. It turns out that during the day the club is a beach club where you can hire Chaise-longe type sun beds and be served cocktails by attentive waiters. In the evening it is a dining club and after 1am it is a night club. It is very much an outdoor place with swimming off a jetty in the most beautiful turquoise sea, sails as sunshades and wooden 4-poster beds with thick mattresses to lounge in the sun on. It is very cool so we decided to give it a go.

We booked dinner (9pm) and brought Deep Blue round to an anchorage just off the ferry jetty and waited for our big night out. Then, big disappointment, at 1pm and soon after anchoring we received a text to say that the dinner was cancelled but that we could get in free to the club at 1am. We were very disappointed but decided to wait (bearing in mind we are usually tucked up by 11pm latest and up early for a swim this was a big ask but we treated it as if it was a watch!) Anyway it was all worth it, we were given the full VIP treatment which included our own table, sofa and waiter.  We literally danced the night away and got back to Deep Blue as the sun was rising. We were raised the average age in the club a far bit, but after being approached by a chic young French lady who told us what a beautiful couple we were, we couldn’t have cared less!

That day we had arranged to meet Vego and the rest of Split Yacht Club Regatta in Stari Grad, Vis. So after a late start we made our way there under spinnaker. The  leading boats in the first leg of the Regatta were just finishing their race as we arrived at 1500hrs. Amazingly, soon after we arrived a lovely yacht passed us and I recognised Eddie and Fi on their Oyster. We hailed them and had a shouted chat. The last time we saw them was 2008 in Dubrovnik as they laid her up!

Lively night out with the inebriated members of the yacht club. Much singing and laughter.
Racing back to Split was scheduled for 1100 hrs sharp. We went round the harbour to buy bread and passed the very smelly spot we had held our noses at the previous night. I looked into the water – where by the way many people swim – and saw completely raw sewage pouring out of a pipe – and I mean lumps, paper and all. I was nearly sick. No wonder there was such a stench. Unbelievable.

Enroute to the start line we stopped to have a chat with Ed and Fi so arrived at the line with sails still down just minutes before the 4 min gun. We managed to get ourselves over the line just 2 minutes late! However we soon had our spinni up and were making good time.

It was a hectic down-wind race with four gibes and three drops (due to our shackles not being man-enough for the job we twice lost a sheet – the second time we changed to our heavy weather sheets) – we saw speeds up to 8.5 knots and kept well up the fleet of mainly racing boats. We finished around 10th in a fleet of 20 and well in front of Vego in his 40 footer with 5 crew. We particularly enjoyed this as we have had a five year discussion about how to sail down wind with a spinnaker and I think we proved our point!

Unfortunately at some point during the race Andy had fallen heavily on top of my ankle which was now painful and swollen. In fact I found it hard to walk on so next day we made a visit to Split hospital. This is a visit I hope I never have to repeat as the service was in-humane. Not once was I given assistance to walk, I even had to stand while waiting and no-one examined my ankle or even asked me to take off the bandage I had on it. Diagnosis of a damaged ligament was made from an X-ray of what seemed the wrong part of my foot.

Luckily after three days my ankle is much better, albeit still swollen – so I guess it really wasn’t broken!
After leaving Split we came to Drvenik Veli Island – were we have found beautiful clear waters, lots of fish, a lovely restaurant and a free buoy to hang from (after a nasty moment on anchor, returning at a run from a longer walk than planned to buy food due to approaching stormy weather, we found Deep Blue nearly on the rocks in a very bouncy sea).
Paradise.








 Week 4
We have had an eventful day or two.
We made an appointment to go to the Rokki Vineyard, Island Vis. After 4 they told us. So after a walk we hired a scooter and meandered there via a rocky swim spot. When we arrived we were told “Sorry, we are expecting 90 people in 1 and half hours. We are rushed off our feet so cannot help you”. “but we phoned..” we protested. “Who did you phone? Who did you talk to”!

We settled for a glass of white and a glass of red and sat to watch the work. The entire staff spent the next half hour or so sitting smoking and chatting. There appeared to be nothing happening apart from a roaring fire under some pots cooking a speciality long-cook dish. When we went to pay one girl was wandering around with a loaf of bread in her hand looking like she didn’t know what to do with it and the other was doing Facebook! We loved their Vis style rushed-off-feet.

Back to Deep Blue on the quay at Komiza  we found that a lovely Swedish family we had befriended in Primosten was alongside us on the quay so we arranged to have dinner with them at a very unusual restaurant. It was a warehouse on the sea – you could bring your tender into the middle of the restaurant – with nets full of lobster suspended from the terraces and dipping in the sea below. We had a great evening – Janus used to be a fisherman and was very passionate about the subject of fish. He maintains there is a 30 year glut and famine cycle and the fish move around, so when the scientists go and look at the fishing grounds they are looking in the wrong place – the fish have moved on. It was wrong that he had to stop fishing. He now works on an oil-rig. Janus, Helen and their two teenage sons live on a small island off Gothenburg and we all got on really well. Helen is a hotel manager in the city – when she met Janus he told her that she would have to come and live on his island. She did but commutes daily via ferry to the city.

It was a little stormy over night and we were very glad we were on the quay – the boats on anchor were rolling about horribly. Our lines creaked and groaned all night and I had to sleep in the saloon where it was quietest. But the sun was out in the morning so crossed to a small island 2nm away to view the Blue Cave when the sun was high, apparently the best time to see it. When we arrived yachts were milling around everywhere. There is no place to anchor and so we took it in turns to row our tender into the cave. It was worth the trouble as the water is an amazing colour and full of phosphorescence that lights the whole cave via the sun filtering through the water from an under water entrance – an underwater cave with a lucky sea entrance around a bend.

We went to anchor off another very promising tiny island opposite our rocky swim spot. Again the water was beautifully clear and we were very happy there until the wind suddenly, at 6.30pm, picked up to 25 knots and our anchor started to drag. We were in 4m water and very close to the rocks by the time we got the anchor up, which ironically got jammed and took Andy (whose pecks are looking pretty fit these days) a fair amount of pulling and heaving to release!

Where to go? Andy remembered an anchorage from 2008 and here we are in paradise.

Friday 16th August
Another awesome week of slow sails, lovely food in great little restaurants, empty anchorages, early morning swims. Our biggest worry was wondering when we would be able to get all our dirty washing clean. Actually we are seeing a lot more yachts here than we remember in 2008 (and there are definitely many more marinas). It may be because we are here a month later. Italians everywhere!

The other difference is that we have got better at sniffing out good restaurants (I guess we are also better off so more able to be discerning) but finding it harder to find good food to cook ourselves. There is definitely more mass produced foods in the Croatian shops and butchers have been extremely thin on the ground. Also we have yet to find a proper farmers market. The other difference is that sadly there is a lot more plastic and fewer fish in the sea. I have seen a lot of very small pieces of plastic floating by, not so obvious but not good for the fish that eat it. Unfortunately fish and birds assume that anything in the sea is edible – I guess a little like us humans thinking anything a multinational state is food, is fit for human consumption. There are all too many examples of whales and other marine animals dying through ingestion of plastic including a very recent whale full of a whole plastic greenhouse blown off the Spanish coast.

This past week has been spent mainly in the Kornati National Park. The Kornati is a string of islands South of Dugi Otok where there is no mobile phone signal, no roads, no electricity, no fresh water, next to zero houses, a few sheep, the odd tree and lots and lots of rock. It is spectacular in a moon scape sort of way. From a distance the land looks like ploughed fields but this is just the rock strata – it is amazing and very hard to walk on. But walk we did, though scramble would be nearer the correct description, up the high hills to look out down the chain of islands at the blue, blue sea contrasting with the buttermilk colour of the rock fields with Deep Blue a small speck below us.

Andy and I have been reading fiction, it has been good to have the time.  We are really relaxing and not trying to do too much. No long sails and definitely no over-nighters this visit. Our main worry has been where we will leave Deep Blue this winter and where we will find a washing machine!

After Kornati we had run out of food, water and clothes so we decided to do our longest sail yet back East to Sibenik to use our marina facilities. We were extremely efficient, arriving at 4pm and washing four loads with the whole lot dry within half an hour on the washing line despite the late hour, filled with water and out for dinner at 8pm. First thing the next morning we had restocked the food cupboards in good time to sail up to Skradin and the entry point to the Krka National Park.  Tomorrow we plan to have a five hour hike in the National Park before sailing back to Primosten to have dinner with Vego.

19th August 2013
We are on the island of Vis where the water is the cleanest we have seen and the most coloured fish we have seen since we came this year. Such a pleasure to dive in and swim with goggles.
We did our walk – a little disappointing as the long walk we expected is not from Krka but we still managed 7-8kms back to Skradin.  But the park was very full and much more developed than when we were here in 2008.

It was great to spend time with Vego – though given he is only 11 years older than us it is worrying how old and doddery he seems these days. He still has that lovely laugh and is so generous. Lana has returned to Switzerland leaving her friend Steph and her sister Eva working in the restaurant. Vego would not let us pay for our meal so we left a tip the same amount as the meal - Steph was very happy! We have arranged to meet Vego next Saturday – he is racing in a regatta and we will race back to Split against them.
A good Genoa sail here to Vis until the wind died – we saw our first dolphins this trip – and plan to visit a vineyard tomorrow.

Friday 9th August 2013
Tottering on the passerelle clinging onto my towel, wet bikini and toilet bag I was confronted with a dilemma – grab the boat and let go of the towel or fall off. I had just had a shower in the town Sali’s facilities and was naked except for that towel. Our neighbour on the town wall had seen my dilemma and was smirking. I made a leap for it, just kept my dignity and managed to cling onto my possessions.

We are on the island of Dugi Otok and Sali is in the North East of the long thin island that nestles above the Kornati National Park. We came here yesterday after a beautiful week of anchoring in crystal clear bays where the swimming was perfect. The only fly in the ointment was having to return to Zadar to buy two new “house” batteries – our four year old battery was not keeping its charge. But that was executed easily after a day long spinnaker run in light airs down the East coast of this island after three nights at the top end.
Mid-night Wednesday UK time was exam results time. That is, of course 1 am Croatian time and I was asleep when the results came through AS A TEXT ON MY PHONE!! 6.30am and I could not contain myself – I had to know if I had passed my final ACCA exam. Whew I had!!, but on opening my email I found a note from ACCA stating that, even though I have now completed the 14 out of 14 exams, under no circumstances was I to call myself a member until I was invited. Nice!  Luckily Andy saw it differently and laid on an amazing celebration (literally) at the back of Deep Blue in the form of a parade of horn blowing traditionally clad young men and a rock band that played until 4am the next day!! What a party! Apparently tonight we have donkey racing and traditional singing (which actually we love).

Later….
Joking aside, we came to participate in the festivities here in Sali. The last festival we attended in Croatia was an amazing one in Rab in 2008 where the whole town full participated by dressing in medieval costume, cooking and fishing in the ancient way, sang, jousted and it was a huge fun week for all concerned. Sali disappointed. The events did not get underway until 11pm, by which time families had given up waiting and gone to bed, and the men who used it as an excuse to drink all day were well past their best. Then we had to endure very loud music with no atmosphere and a small audience until 4am … am I sounding old? 
Saturday we decided we would leave the quay and watch the promised boat parade and fireworks from an anchorage. However before leaving we hired some very special mountain bikes for a cycle around the island. These bikes are e-mountain bikes but not the normal electric bike at all. There is a small but powerful battery pack which aids the peddling – I really am not sure how it works but it is like having an extra, very fit, person on the bike with you. This means that going up-hill is amazingly easy and going down-hill can be VERY fast. In fact my maximum speed was about 35 kpm but Andy said his bike had been 60kpm (not with him though). We went off road which I found hard and actually fell off on a particularly rocky hill - Andy loved it so went on ahead while I rather overused my brakes – but once back on the road I was very happy and experimented with all the modes. We cycled for a full 4 hours, covering a large distance, and we both agree that it has so far been the highlight of this trip. Bikes like this would be perfect hilly on Mallorca.  I am very tempted despite the €3,000 price tag (cheaper than a car and much more fun).

We found a fab anchorage with lovely swimming and in full view of Sali across the water. We were totally underwhelmed by the parade and firework (I think there was only one) and caught some “techno” from across the straits. We settled down to a night of watching the stars and reading!

This morning we had another spinnaker run down to the Kornati – the wind picked up enough for us to have a short 7 knot blast before having to snub the sail and turn up into the wind. Now, after our evening swim, we have fired up the barbeque on yet another fab anchorage.
  
Croatia Week 1 31st July 2013
Once again we are in paradise, back to naked swimming, wonderful food, cosy star lit nights and beautiful scenery. Here we are on Deep Blue anchored in an isolated bay on a small island just off the coast of Croatia.

We flew into Split and decided to use public transport to get to Deep Blue. As the bus went through Primosten we got off to visit our lovely Croatian friends Vego and his daughter Lana. In 2008 we found Vego and his wife’s restaurant in a book about good eating in Croatia and decided to visit the cute little bistro style eatery where we were befriended by keen sailor Vego. Since that day we have spent many happy days with him and Lana both on his yacht and in the lovely family apartment in Zagreb. Sadly 2 years ago today his wife died of cancer and Vego has aged a lot since. He is only 67 but he behaves like an elderly man.

We walked from the bus-stop to the old part of Primosten but it was hard to recognise. The new mayor has “got things done” and replaced all the beautiful old cobbled streets and stepped ascents with a new very square and very yellow paving. This enables cars to drive up narrow walk ways (which they do at great speed) and makes the place look more Disney than ancient. I hope that EU money is not to be spent on modernising throughout Croatia’s holiday resorts in this way. It is not progress at all and even Vego hates it.
The restaurant was not open when we arrived but Lana and her friend Steph were preparing for the evening – changing oil, cleaning and whatever else one does! Steph is a Canadian with a Croatian father and she moved to Croatia 5 years ago when she came to find her roots. It took her a while to settle but now she is a permanent resident, having found a group of friends that includes Lana. She teaches English in Zagreb but is running the restaurant for Vego this summer alongside Lana’s younger sister Eva. Lana is on holiday from her new job in Geneva where she works on human rights within the Baltics.

Vego was not home but with his friends and after a phone call Lana took us to meet them and share a meal. Vago’s friends were originally from Macedonia and having married Croatians had now settled in Primosten. One owned a restaurant and we were sitting in a lovely shaded area in the garden next to the kitchen normally reserved for the waiters, where we were served traditional Macedonian fare (not on offer to the tourists) and offered copious amounts of alcohol. It is an Eastern European trait – you prove your manhood if you can hold your alcohol and cope with hot chilli. They really do not understand “no”, especially from a man. Andy really did not want to drink and was constantly watering the plants! Many middle-aged Eastern European men are therefore ugly, overweight, unhealthy and, surprisingly, die young. I am afraid Vego’s friends were no exception! However, they were very hospitable and all spoke English on our behalf. We had a delicious Sunday lunch of bread, spek, cheeses and pickles, followed by Macedonian baked beans with pork washed down with plenty of …water in our case!

We have made an arrangement to take Vego sailing. He was doing a regatta this week with the same crew of 2008 and we would have loved to join him but we also wanted to go to Deep Blue. Hard decision but we had an arrangement to get Deep Blue to a rigger to repair new lightning strike damage that has only just manifested itself. So we said our goodbyes and caught the bus to Sibenik. The bus driver told us he could not stop at the marina (about 2 miles from the centre) as the bus did not go that way. Vego had told us it did, so when we drove past, I was pretty annoyed and tried to get the driver to stop. He was not having any of it. Luckily some locals wanted to get off soon after and it appeared that we were even closer to the marina – however I kept one foot on the bus until the driver opened the luggage compartment as he was threatening to drive off with our bags – he really did not want us off at this stop.

Deep Blue was perfect. She has been in the water for 9 months but was only a little dusty with a small amount of growth on her hull. So after a few formalities we were off the next morning to motor to Murter where a rigger was ready to repair our shives.

Monday night we found a bay at the top of Murter island with a restaurant and mooring bouys. We hadn’t been able to do much shopping so we decided to eat at the restaurant rather than pay the mooring fee (the deal was 150 koner mooring fee or eat in our restaurant where one meal cost less than this) and we are really glad we did. A lovely extended family (older parents, 3 sons/daughters and spouses plus grandchildren) own and run the restaurant – the food was better and better value than our memory of Croatian food and service was with a smile. Next morning another smiling Croatian greeted us in the boatyard of Bettina and, using a cherry picker to access the top of our mast, repaired our shives in four hours and charged us 800 koner, I thought the quote was in Euro (there are 7.5 Koner to 1 Euro), we were delighted!

So now we are sitting out a small Bora on another fab anchorage, writing and accessing the internet via our mobile phones!

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