Cruising World - June 2018

(Chris Devlin) #1
june/july 2018

cruisingworld.com

42


SO,


what do you guys want to listen to?” asked our new
friend, Cuban artist Solé.
“I don’t know, maybe something local?” replied Mark.
“How about Simply Red?” was Solé’s reply. “Do you guys like
Simply Red?”
This might be the last thing I expected him to say, but at this
point, nothing really could surprise me. And so he popped in a
Simply Red CD while the group of us sat around the living room,
sipping strong Cuban coffee in the tiny Havana apartment he
shared with his wife, Mary, and her family. All I could do was look
around me and smile at the unexpectedness of it all. We were mid-
way through our time in the island nation during the 2017 Cruising
World Expedition and Rally to Cuba, sponsored by Fountaine
Pajot, and from the very beginning, this country had surprised me
in so many ways.
The brainchild of my friend and colleague David Gillespie, the
rally came to fruition in late March 2017 after a year of legwork
and planning. In all, 49 private sailboats and 10 chartered sailboats
met up at Stock Island Marina in Key West, Florida, to begin the
adventure. Our home for the week was Quince Amor, a chartered
Fountaine Pajot Saba 50 catamaran, and our cast of characters in-
cluded myself and my husband, Green; David and his wife, Sandy;
and photographer and troublemaker Jon Whittle. Also aboard the
fi ve-cabin cat were two brokers from Atlantic Cruising Yachts,
the largest North American dealer for Fountaine Pajot catama-
rans: Frank McCarthy and his wife, Janet, and Joe Buxton and
his wife, Mary. Editor-in-chief Mark Pillsbury rounded out team
Cruising World aboard Tranquility Base, a beautiful Fountaine Pajot
Ipanema 58 also participating in the rally.
While sailing to Cuba and traveling in the country certainly was
something I wanted to experience as part of my role as a Cruising
World editor, visiting the island held a strong personal note as well.
With both Green and me growing up in South Florida and around
so much Cuban culture, we have been intrigued by Cuba for a
very long time. Politics and regulations being what they are, the
island nation has always been just out of our reach, merely adding
to the mystique. When David started putting the plans in mo-
tion to work with a charter company and make this rally a reality,
I jumped at the chance to participate. Although things had been
getting easier for cruisers to take their own boats to Cuba, there
was still plenty of red tape, which made going with a rally — and
letting someone else deal with the paperwork — seem like an ide-
al way to fi nally do the trip. For the latest Cuba visitor regulations
see “Cuba Rules,” page 80.
Green, David, Sandy and I headed to Key West on Tuesday,
March 28, to arrive well ahead of the planned March 30 departure,

and to have time to provision, attend the captains’ briefi ng and
meet some of the other crews. Although we work for the same
company, albeit in different states, I had never met Jon, the pho-
tographer who was joining us for the trip. When he sent me an
email asking if it would be OK if he arrived on Wednesday with
a bottle of good rum to share, I knew that we would all get along
famously.

ON


a chart, the route to Havana looks pretty straight-
forward: Sail south from Key West for about 90 miles,
and presto. While this is more or less technically true, in reali-
ty, there is the Gulf Stream and plenty of shipping traffi c to keep
those at the helm on their toes. In order to not completely inun-
date the customs offi cials on the other end with nearly 60 boats
arriving in short order, the rally fl eet departed Stock Island Marina
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