Street's Pilot/Guide to the Cape Verde Islands
By Donald Street and Stephen J Pavlidis
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About this ebook
Cruising guide book pioneer, Don Street, Jr. has a message for all sailors planning to cross the Atlantic via the trade-wind route: "Forget about crossing from the Canaries in November...2,700 miles with erratic trade winds that have not really settled in. Head south and cruise the Cape Verdes for two or three weeks. Depart from Brav
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Street's Pilot/Guide to the Cape Verde Islands - Donald Street
Chapter 1
The Case for Cruising the Cape Verde Islands
In the past, the Cape Verdes were not popular with yachtsmen. For years, the islands had a reputation for being short on food and water, expensive, unfriendly, and too far south of the traditional east-west trade-wind route across the North Atlantic. Until 1990, the representatives of the communist government who performed clearance formalities were officious, obstructive, unfriendly, and generally a pain in the backside. And, for the longest time, the islands had absolutely no infrastructure to cater to yachts.
Of the sailors who did visit the Cape Verdes, most stopped in Mindelo, on São Vicente, and judged all the Cape Verdes from what they experienced there. This was unfortunate, because the other islands of the Cape Verdes are quite different from the dry and arid São Vicente. Also, for many years, Mindelo was very run down. The magnificent market building that stood as a reminder of the town’s prosperous past was in such bad shape it was scheduled for demolition.
On top of all this, very little cruising information had been available from published sources. Even so, many yachtsmen who have visited them, myself included, shared the opinion that the Cape Verdes were worth going to and writing about.
With this book, I hope to fill the information gap, at least for the purposes of cruising the islands (I provide some suggestions for further reading on the islands in Chapter 11). And I am pleased to report that in the Cape Verdes today, yachtsmen can expect a warmer welcome than in the past from officialdom and more facilities for servicing their yachts, at least in Mindelo.
When I arrived in Mindelo in 2002 via the big bird, one of the first people I met was the skipper of a 100-foot Swan sloop that I had met a few months previously in the Azores. As we chatted, he told me he was on his way to clear in. I asked if I could join him to see what the routine was like. He said, Fine, come ahead.
The port captain was efficient and helpful and gave us directions to the immigration office. The immigration officer was friendly, and busily stamped the crews’ passports until he came to two crew members who didn’t have passports; they only had seamen’s papers. The immigration officer stated in no uncertain terms, every crewmember must have a passport,
to which the skipper replied, but they only have seamen’s papers.
Again the immigration officer said, they must have passports.
This went back and forth three times. The fourth time, as he said it, he stamped the seamen’s papers. As he handed back the stamped passports and the stamped seamen’s papers, he said one more time, Everyone must have a passport!
He then stood up, shook the skipper’s hand, smiled, and said, I hope you enjoy your stay.
What a difference from my experience in 1989!
In the 1970s and 1980s, thievery and burglary was rife. That, too, has changed. Kai Brosmann at Marina Mindelo reported in 2009 that in the last two years there has been a little minor pilferage from yachts but no burglary. Nor have there been any attacks on yachtsmen. And now that the new marina in Mindelo is fully open, yachts now have a secure place to moor and get almost any work done they might need to complete an Atlantic crossing (see Marine Infrastructure).
A Cruising Ground with Choices
The islands are certainly isolated, but that’s a plus for many cruising folk, particularly those who want to get away from tourists and fellow yachtsmen and who prefer to anchor out rather than cruise from one expensive marina to the next.
I have visited and explored all the Atlantic island groups many times over the last 54 years. I’ve been to Bermuda too many times to count. I sailed to the Azores on Iolaire in 1985, 1989, and 1995, and on Nimrod in 1992, and I flew there in 2009. I went to Madeira on Arabella in 1956, on Iolaire in 1985, 1989, and 1995, on Sincerity in 2005, and by air in 2002 and 2010. I sailed to the Canaries on Arabella in 1956, on Iolaire in 1975, 1985, and 1989, and Lone Star in 1984, and flew there in 2002 and 2010. I visited the Cape Verdes on Iolaire in 1985, and 1989, on Sincerity in 2005, and by air in 2002 and 2009.
In the light of the above, I feel I am in a position to make a good comparison of the island groups. Of all them, I think the Cape Verde Archipelago offers the best cruising.
In the Azores, cruising largely involves sailing from one marina to another. There is only a handful of anchorages outside of harbors, and all of them are iffy
— you have to be prepared to move on short notice in the event of a change in conditions.
In the Madeiran Archipelago, there are only five anchorages: outside the marina in Porto Santo (weather permitting), Mochico, Bahia de Abra at the eastern end of Madeira, the overcrowded marginal anchorage in Funchal, Isla Deserta Grande. In the Salvage islands, you’ll find two more. Again, these anchorages are marginal.
In the Canaries, too, there are only a half dozen places where you can anchor outside of a marina, and you have to keep a sharp eye on the weather. In October, November, and early December, the wind in the Canaries can blow from any direction. Your quiet anchorage with the easterly wind holding you off the shore can, with a wind shift to the southwest, suddenly turn into a deadly one with no protection from the wind and swell and with the lee shore close under your stern. (For relevant weather information, see the back of Imray-Iolaire Chart 100). This is a planning chart for the North Atlantic and is a gnomonic projection, on which a straight line is a great circle course.
All too often, in the second half of October and all of November, you will find the marinas in the Canaries are so full you can’t shoehorn your way in, leaving you with the choice between heaving-to outside or sailing to another island and hoping to find room there. When you do get into a marina, it’s in the middle of a concrete jungle and, when you go to a bar or restaurant, you’ll be in the company of tourists and hard pressed to find locals with whom to strike up a conversation.
In contrast, in the Cape Verdes, there are dozens of anchorages and only one marina, in Mindelo, São Vincente, a town with colonial origins and a center dating back to the late 19th century. If you don’t choose to go into the marina, there is plenty of room to anchor out, and when you go ashore you can easily get to know the local people. The only concrete jungle in the Cape Verdes is at Santa Maria on the south end of Sal. Cruising sailors will probably not use this anchorage unless the crew is into surfing, windsurfing, or kite surfing.
Another good reason to visit the Cape Verdes is that they are closer to the Caribbean by some 500 miles than any other logical jumping-off place on the east side of the Atlantic. From São Vicente in the northern group, or Santiago in the southern group, it’s 2,175 miles to Antigua and 2,110 miles to Barbados.
And with the 50 sketch charts presented in this guide, the attractive cruising possibilities the islands offer are available to any sailor with a sense of adventure and a good dose of navigational horse sense. The vast majority of these anchorages are not shown on any chart nor are they shown or described in any other guide.
For those interested in water-based activities, the Cape Verdes have good beaches, diving, surfing, windsurfing, and kite surfing. For those who like to hike, the hills of the high islands offer wonderful walking country. All this comes with an interesting culture set amid dramatic and varied scenery in a very pleasant