Friday, January 23, 2026

British Virgin Islands sailing. AIRSHOW sea trials

As I finish writing this, the temperature is well below zero Fahrenheit with a dangerous windchill. Last week I was in the Caribbean again, and it was tough coming back to the cold, snow and unrest here in the Twin Cities. Read on for the trip report.

Monday, Jan 12: I had a morning flight to Puerto Rico, where I met John McSherry (Mick) and his son, John William (JW). We connected at the San Juan Airport gate for our 30-minute hop on InterCaribbean Airlines to Tortola, British Virgin Islands, where we landed in the early evening. The Moorings charter base had a van waiting for us, and we soon boarded the McSherry’s new boat, AIRSHOW, a Moorings/Leopard 4200 sailing catamaran, built in South Africa. The main purpose of the trip was to do a shakedown cruise on the vessel and hopefully have some fun too. After stowing our gear, we ate pizza and wings at the marina’s pool bar, watched a little NFL playoff football (the Texans beat the Steelers), then slept aboard AIRSHOW.


Hoist the colors high!


Tuesday, Jan 13: At our 8:00 AM charter checkout, we learned that not all of the new boat’s systems were finished being installed. The primary concern was that the watermaker was not connected, which meant that we would have to conserve our onboard supply or buy water in the islands if we ran low. With just three aboard, it did not prove to be a problem, but would have been with a larger crew. Next on the list was the propane grill, which had not arrived, so the charter company had substituted a charcoal grill, which we opted not to use. Besides needing to buy charcoal and lighter fluid, cleaning boat grills can be a messy pain, and the thought of soiling AIRSHOW’s pretty white decks with ash was unthinkable on her maiden voyage. The two flat-screen televisions slated for the saloon and owner’s cabin were missing, but we rarely watch TV on sailing trips anyway, so that wasn’t a hardship. There were other nuisance items, the most annoying being the presence of a machine oil and/or grease on all of the topside lifelines, stanchions, turnbuckles and other stainless steel fittings, which left black marks on our clothes and towels until the source was identified. Overall, the boat was in great shape and despite the deficiencies, it was perfectly seaworthy and ready to sail. We finished provisioning at the liquor and grocery stores in Road Town, then cast off around Noon and hoisted the sails in light to moderate southeast winds. Mick set our first daily speed record of 6.0 knots before we had to turn on the engines and get to our first anchorage, 22 miles away. Around 4:00 PM, we tied up to a mooring at Leverick Bay on Virgin Gorda, then went ashore for the Michael Beans Happy Arrr, a one-man, pirate-and-rum-themed show with music, singing, a conch shell blowing contest and corny puns and jokes (“what’s the first letter of the pirate alphabet?”…”Arrr!”). Michigan-born Michael Beans has been a BVI fixture for more than 25 years, entertaining tourists, living aboard his sailboat and raising money for charity; his current beneficiary is the Good Samaritan Foundation of Haiti https://www.goodsamaritanofhaiti.com/. His previous island bands include the Beans Traveling Minstrels, The Hornswagglers, and the Seafarin’ Turd Whirlers. After the show and a photo with Mr. Beans, we had dinner at the waterfront casual dining restaurant at the Leverick Bay Resort, then enjoyed old fashioneds on AIRSHOW’s upper (lido) deck. Map link: Leverick Bay, Virgin Gorda, BVI

Zut alors! I have missed one!







Wednesday, Jan 14: I awoke at 5:30 AM, but with no rush to get started, I fell back asleep until 8:30 AM. We identified another boat issue, which we isolated to a noisy electric cooling water pump on the generator. Mick called The Moorings, and a mechanic was onboard within 30 minutes, an impressive service response. He confirmed our diagnosis, went ashore for a replacement pump, returned and quickly installed and tested it. We had more excitement and another delay when JW went for a swim and his sunglasses went for a deep dive, down 30 feet to the bottom of the bay. It was too deep to free-dive, but the local dive shop, BVI SNUBA, had someone available to search for them, and the glasses were valuable enough to make the effort. We had to pick up the diver ashore, but after about 45 minutes, Elaine, a former commercial banker from Scotland, surfaced with the glasses, something she does regularly for boaters. 


Success!

The two incidents delayed our departure until after 1:00 PM, but we saved a little time by raising the mainsail inside the large and well-protected North Sound, which was Sir Francis Drake’s fleet staging area for his raids on the Spanish in the late 16th century. We motor-sailed out of the channel, set the jib and flew on a broad reach in 15 knots of wind. I set a new speed record of 6.8 knots, before we doused the sails and pulled in behind Marina Cay, only 12 miles from our starting point. We had planned to go further, but it was getting late, and we grabbed the first available mooring ball and called it a day. Mick cooked dinner onboard, with hamburgers and fried potatoes on the menu, followed by beer, margaritas and a stunningly beautiful evening. Map link: Marina Cay, BVI

Bonus Question 1: What is the English translation of margarita? (Answer at end of post)



Thursday, Jan 15: I awoke at 7:00 AM, with temperatures already above 80F and an east wind of 10-15 knots. After breakfast, we got underway at 9:45 AM and motored between Scrub and Great Camanoe Islands, then raised the sails. North of the islands, we were exposed to the longer fetch of the North Atlantic and its bigger seas, which promptly dumped our liquor supply from the countertop to the floor of the galley, shattering the tequila bottle (good thing we had margaritas the night before). While JW and I cleaned up the booze and broken glass, Mick set a new speed record of 9.0 knots. We stopped for snorkeling and lunch at Monkey Point on Guana Island, picking up a National Park day mooring close to the rocks in swirly winds and currents. Map link: Monkey Point, Guana Island, BVI

After lunch we sailed downwind another 11 miles to Little Harbour (Garner’s Bay) on Jost van Dyke, getting the very last reservable BoatyBall mooring. We had several hours before dinner ashore and Mick use the time to clean the black oil/grease off of our deck hardware. In the evening, we dinghied in to Harris’ Place, a restaurant that I’d been to many times before when I taught sailing here between 2009 and 2017. We brought our students to Harris’ without fail for the amazing lobster dinners, personalized hospitality of proprietor Cynthia Jones and the sturdy concrete pier that she allowed us to use for docking practice. Like most BVI small businesses, Harris’ Place was flattened in 2017 by Hurricane Irma, the most powerful Atlantic hurricane on record, until it was surpassed two years later by Hurricane Dorian. The restaurant had to be rebuilt completely, and this was my first visit since the reconstruction.

The last-known photo of my hat and sunglasses

Little Harbour and Harris’ Place was also the center of a true crime intrigue years ago. Cynthia’s father, Harris Jones, opened the restaurant in 1982 after serving in the U.S. Army. An instant success, his business siphoned customers away from next door Sidney’s Peace and Love, established in 1974 by Sidney Hendricks. Bad blood between the two families simmered for years, leading to a 1995 altercation between Harris and Sidney’s son, Bassano, who shot and killed Harris with a spear gun. Bassano received a life sentence for the murder, but his claim of self defense prevailed on appeal and he served only three years in prison. Harris’ Place sat vacant for two years until Cynthia moved back to the BVI from New York and reopened the restaurant. Today, Harris’ is known for its delicious home cooking, island charm and Cynthia’s upbeat, entertaining service. Sidneys’ Peace and Love remains next door, run by Sidney’s daughter, Strawberry, and is also a popular stop among cruisers, the vast majority of whom are unaware of the drama that once consumed this small community. 

At dinner, Mick and I had two of the largest lobsters I’ve ever seen, while JW ate ribs as his entree for the four-course meal. When Mick asked Cynthia what gave the delicious chicken soup starter its kick, she brought out a red pepper, which we identified as a variety of habanero, and we sampled and shared it with the adjacent table. The vibe at Harris’ is so friendly that it’s quite common to strike up a conversation with neighboring patrons. Against my better judgement, I tasted a larger piece of habanero than I should have and paid for it—fortunately there was a basket of bread on the table to help put out the fire. Map link: Little Harbour, Jost van Dyke, BVI

Bonus Question 2: What does the Scoville Scale measure? (Hint in the previous paragraph; answer at end of post. ).



Large (3-4’) tarpon at the dinghy dock

Friday, Jan 16: I slept through it, but before dawn our boat swung around on its mooring and touched hulls with the crewed charter catamaran on our port side. This is rare but not unheard of, as commercial moorings try to maximize the number of boats in an anchorage while minimizing interactions. Reliable winds and waves help a lot to keep everyone pointed in the same direction, but ever-larger boats and the occasional becalming make incidents possible, as we proved. No damage was done to either vessel, so all was well. Mick and I ran ashore to drop off our garbage and pick up ice and fresh, homemade empanadas from nearby Great Harbour, which we ordered ahead of time and were delivered to the dinghy dock by car. After getting underway, we practiced motoring drills, then deployed AIRSHOW’s anchor for the first time, although it would not set in the rocky bottom near Green Cay (no relation). We raised a reefed main in the 15-knot breeze, and Mick set a new speed record of 9.2 knots, proving once again that reefing is almost always the right thing to do and still plenty fast when the wind pipes up. 


Sailing through the Thatch Island Cut, a wind gust blew my hat and sunglasses overboard, then we were almost run over from behind by a sail cat under power, with the professional skipper astonishingly yelling at us that he had the right of way as the overtaking vessel and we should keep clear. When Mick shouted back “you’re wrong,” the other captain quoted “Rule 3” of the Coast Guard Navigation Rules and plowed forward, narrowly missing us. Rule 3 of the COLREGS, as they are officially known, is basically a glossary of definitions, and has nothing to do with overtaking vessels. Rule 13, on the other hand, clearly states that “any vessel overtaking another must keep out of the way of the vessel being overtaken.” Furthermore, Rule 18 says that “power-driven vessels must keep out of the way of sailing vessels,” and we were under sail and he was motoring. It’s pretty scary to think that a professional captain is that ignorant of the collision rules, or was in such a hurry that he felt okay putting both vessels at risk and then throwing out some BS to save face with his paying passengers and maybe getting us to back down. Either way he’s an ass-hat and an idiot.

Once in the Drake Channel, we turned directly into the 15-knot wind and 2-4 foot seas, which slammed under our bridgedeck and soaked the foredeck. Mick and JW made slow but steady progress to windward, eventually shaking out the reefs in the mainsail as we approached the channel islands of Norman and Peter. At 1:30 PM, JW easily put AIRSHOW on a mooring ball in Great Harbour of Peter Island, on his first-ever attempt. We had a low-key, last evening aboard, with sausages and potatoes for dinner and the last of the Oreo cookies for dessert. Peter Island, named after Pieter Adriensen, a 17th-century Dutch privateer and slave trader and partner of Joost van Dyk, namesake of two other BVI islands. Adriensen’s brother, Abraham, was the Patron of Tortola, the title for the head of development and operations for the Dutch West India Company, a position previously held by Joost van Dyk. Today, Peter Island is the largest private island in the BVI, and was purchased by the Amway Corporation in 1978. Richard DeVos, co-founder of Amway and father-in-law of current U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, had sailed past the island on vacation and later bought it with co-founder Jay Van Andel, using it as an Amway corporate retreat. In 2001, the Van Andel family became sole owners of the island, and it remains an exclusive, luxury property that is open to paying guests but not the general public. 

The 112’ superyacht Epiphany anchors nearby…

…but I’d rather be on AIRSHOW

Saturday, Jan 17: I awoke to an intense rain squall at 5:30 AM, then another passed through at 7:00 AM that delayed our intended departure, but we were rewarded with a nice rainbow afterwards. We motored the four miles across the Drake Channel to The Moorings base in Road Town. The marina was very busy, with charter boats coming in and out, passengers boarding and disembarking and Moorings staff everywhere coordinating. The docks were so full that we had to double-park on a finger pier that already had another catamaran on it (way to go Mick!). After packing up, The Moorings’ airport shuttle drove us to the Beef Island Airport. We flew to San Juan, then the McSherry’s and I hung out for a bit before saying goodbye and heading to separate terminals for our connections. I landed in Minneapolis-St. Paul, and was underdressed for the single-digit temperatures. Little did I know that it was only going to get colder in the coming days!



The Queen Elizabeth at the cruise ship dock

Bonus Question 1 Answer: Margarita is the Spanish word for the daisy flower. It is also a proper name, which comes from the Greek word for pearl.

Bonus Question 2 Answer: The Scoville Scale measures the spiciness of hot peppers. Developed in 1912 by American pharmacist Wilbur Scoville, the range goes from zero (bell peppers) to more than 2 million Scoville Heat Units (SHU) for the Carolina Reaper, with capsaicin being the predominant compound measured. The habanero pepper we sampled at Harris’ Place was estimated to be around 300,000 SHU. 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Happy New Year from Somerville, MA!!

We spent New Year’s Eve and Day at Kathleen’s sister’s house in Somerville, MA, doing as little as possible after a busy and active two weeks in France. The Boston-area weather was uninviting, with light snow and gusty winds, so staying indoors was an easy choice. 

Somerville, north of Cambridge, was established in 1842 when it separated from Charlestown—the oldest neighborhood in Boston and the first capital of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 17th century. Somerville holds the distinction of being the most densely populated municipality in New England, with its 82,000 people nestled into just four square miles. It is home to Tufts University and was the site of one of the first hostile acts of the American Revolution, when British soldiers raided a gunpowder magazine in September of 1774, seven months before the battles of Lexington and Concord. Map link: Somerville, MA

Tomorrow we fly home to St. Paul, and we are very much looking forward to being in our own home again!

Bonus Question: Which two U.S. Presidents died five hours apart on the same day?


Bonus Question Answer: Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both passed away on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Adams’ last words reportedly were “Thomas Jefferson survives,” even though his friend and former rival had actually passed away earlier that day. James Monroe, our fifth president, also died on July 4, five years later. 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Nogent-sur-Marne, France

On Tuesday morning we met Liz and David for coffee at Laka near our house in Nogent-sur-Marne, population 35,000. Six miles east of the center of Paris and adjacent to the Bois du Vincennes, this mostly-residential, middle-class suburb has been inhabited since the 13th century. The remains of the medieval Fort de Nogent is now a Salvation Army shelter and the recruitment center for the French Foreign Legion, the elite corps founded in 1831 to allow foreign nationals to serve in the French military. 

We took a stroll through town, and did some souvenir shopping before having lunch at Crêperie Autour du Billig, where the owner/chef knew Marjorie’s family. Then it was down to the Marne River, a tributary of the Seine, and the town marina, returning to the house via a lovely waterfront path. Kathleen and Amy took the train back to Vincennes for more shopping, then we walked to Murli and Marjorie‘s for cake and ice cream to celebrate Birdie’s sixth birthday. Back at the house, Amy made pesto pasta and salad for dinner, then we packed our bags and hung out. Tomorrow morning Kathleen and I are leaving France and heading to Boston for a couple of days to visit Kathleen’s sister Scarlet.

Bonus Question: Who was the youngest person to ever host Saturday Night Live? (Answer at end of post)



23 Rue Carnot, our home base


Bonus Question Answer: Drew Barrymore, then starring in E.T., was 7 years old when she hosted SNL in 1982. Macaulay Culkin comes in second; he hosted the show at age 11 in 1991. 
The youngest musical guest was Kelvin Grant 
of the British reggae band Musical Youth, who was 11 years and 9 months old when he performed in April 1983 alongside his bandmates. 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

More Paris, France

On Monday, we picked up Nathan and Pia again and took the Metro back to Paris. We tried again to get inside Notre Dame Cathedral, but the line was even longer than on Friday, so we bailed out again. Then it was north to Montmartre and the Basilica of Sacré Couer (Sacred Heart), which stands majestically on a hill overlooking Paris and is the second-most popular tourist destination after the Eiffel Tower. It too, was massively crowded with a long line to get in, so we enjoyed the views from the hill and admired the outside of the beautiful 1914 basilica, then moved on to the nearby Saint-Pierre, the church of the Montmartre Abbey and the second-oldest in Paris. According to legend, Montmartre (Hill of the Martyrs) was where Saint Denis, the first bishop of Paris and the patron saint of France, was beheaded by the Romans in the 3rd century. A popular Christian story tells of the decapitated Denis picking up his head and walking several miles to his chosen burial site while preaching a sermon on repentance. Map link: Montmartre, Paris





We ate lunch at Cafe Mareva in Montmartre, then took the train to the Tuileries Garden on the Seine, strolling through the park and Christmas Market and taking a ride on the ferris wheel, with breathtaking views of the city. Map link: Jardin de Tuileries; Paris.  After a quick cup of hot chocolate, we returned to the house and changed for dinner, walking to a neighbor’s who had invited us all over. We had some amazing Indian food and Marjorie’s holiday cookies for dessert, staying until 11:00 PM.

Bonus Question: What automobile brand’s name means “listen” in Latin? (Answer at end of post).



Bonus Question Answer: In 1899, August Horch opened the A.Horch automobile company in Cologne, Germany. After a dispute and split with his partners in 1909, he lost the right to use his own surname for a new auto company. Horch means “listen” in German and he named the new venture “audi,” the Latin translation of Horch. In 1932, Audi merged with three other German carmakers—the rings of the current Audi logo symbolize the four companies that became one.




.

Monday, December 29, 2025

Vincennes, France

On Sunday, after morning coffee and tea, we picked up Pia and Nathan and had brunch down the street at Le Menec Nogent, then walked two miles into the eastern Paris suburb of Vincennes. We strolled through the 2,500-acre Bois de Vincennes, established in the mid-1800s by Emperor Napoleon III; it is the largest public green space in Paris and three times larger than New York’s Central Park. On a brisk winter afternoon, we toured the Château de Vincennes, a 12th-century hunting lodge that was expanded into a fortress, military headquarters, prison and royal residence for French kings, beginning with Louis VII. The expansive grounds, 172-foot high central tower (the tallest in Europe) and beautiful Gothic chapel are restored and open to the public, with iPad audio tours available. Fun fact: In 1917 during the First World War, the Dutch-born German spy Mata Hari was executed by firing squad in the chateau’s moat. Map link: Vincennes, France

Later that evening, we said goodbye to Danielle and Jay, who left for India and their next leg of travel to visit family. The rest of us made dinner at the house and watched The Man in the Iron Mask, the 1998 star-studded adaptation of Alexandre Dumas’ novel set in 1662 France. 

Bonus Question: What is chiromancy? (Answer at end of post)







Bonus Question Answer: Also known as palmistry, chiromancy is the practice of fortune- telling by reading palms and fingers. 

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Paris, France

Friday, Dec 26: After a typical slow start in the morning, we boarded the Metro (subway), headed for the center of Paris, the capital and largest city in France, with a metropolitan population of 13 million. It was a chilly day, with temperatures in the mid-30s and a moderate wind as we shuffled around several tourist areas among large crowds. We stopped at Sainte Chappelle, a beautiful 13th-century chapel covered with stained glass that we visited in 2023, but all tours were sold out for the day. Next was Notre-Dame cathedral, reopened a year ago after suffering significant damage in a 2019 fire, but the long line to enter the church wasn’t moving and we weren’t interested in standing out in the cold for an indeterminate amount of time. We found a cozy creperie, La Petite Bouclerie, for lunch, then took the Metro to the Eiffel Tower, which also had a huge crowd—we stood in line to visit the base of the tower but did not go up. Our final stops were a Christmas Market on the Seine, where we warmed up with hot red wine, then across the river and up the hill to the Trocadéro, where we had amazing sunset views of the Eiffel Tower. Back at Marjorie and Murli’s apartment, we were treated to dinner, a recital by Nathan, Pia and Birdie, and pleasant conversation until 10:45 PM, when we walked back to the house where we’re staying, just an eight minute walk away. Map link: Paris, France








Bonus Question: How many bones are in the human body? (Multiple choice, answer at end of post).   A. 106     B. 156     C. 206      D. 306 

Saturday, Dec 27: In the morning Danielle and Jay toured Rolland Garros Stadium, the home of the French Open tennis tournament, while the rest of us visited Kathleen’s sister Elizabeth and her husband David, who moved to France several years ago and also live nearby. Also in Paris from Nashville are Liz and David’s youngest child, Robert, his wife Danielle and their daughter Birdie. We all met up after lunch and the 13 of us took the Metro to the west side of Paris to see Les Folies Gruss, a family troupe of equestrians and acrobats who put on a fantastic two-hour show to live music. A special treat after the show was VIP access to the horse stables, where got to view the 40+ animals up close. Most of us then ate dinner at Saravanaa Bhavan, an Indian restaurant chain and a favorite of our local relatives, before returning back to the house. 







Answer:  C. There are 206 bones in human adults. Infants are born with 270 bones, but many fuse together as they grow and develop.

British Virgin Islands sailing. AIRSHOW sea trials

As I finish writing this, the temperature is well below zero Fahrenheit with a dangerous windchill. Last week I was in the Caribbean again, ...