![]() |
A few of the early show megayachts, taken from our loaner dinghy in Falmouth Harbour, Antigua. |
From Journey’s cockpit in
Antigua’s Falmouth Harbour, we watched the megayachts (click here Wikipedia for megayacht
definition) gliding in, sleek, spotless, twinkling with lights and the
latest electronics. It’s
impossible not to ogle; they’re really, really big. Starting at a minimum of 24 meters (79 feet) in length,
YachtingCrew.com emphasizes, “Some
people think they are simply big yachts but no different from any other yacht
apart from size. They're wrong.
Superyachts are in a different world.”
Antigua ‘s economy is fueled
by tourism and megayachts ostentatiously add their contribution Wikipedia notes “Antigua is one of the main ports in the Windward
Islands of the Caribbean] and hosts a Charter Show at the beginning of the
winter season.” The Charter Show
is starting here this Sunday, December 2nd. While only about 100 many of the estimated 10,000 mega yachts
worldwide converge for the show, it’s certainly a far cry from many places where ours is the
sole boat at anchorage in a wilderness, or even, often, just outside capital
cities, like Fort Du France, Martinique.
![]() |
Megayachts' electric night lights under a nimbus moon. Please pardon my camera's slow shutter speed and the swell.... |
We estimate the bigger mega yachts
here are about 150 feet long. That
may not seem like that big a deal until you get how much exponentially a boat’s
mass typically increases with its length. Comparatively, we’re flies on their
windshield, shacks encroaching on an emerald city. Snapping photos of these behemoths from our little 36.5 foot
sailboat, or from the 12 foot dinghy we’re borrowing, just doesn’t do them
justice, or adequately capture their grandeur.
![]() |
Journey, our sailboat is the little boat in the foreground as seen from the hiking trail between Fort Berkeley an Pigeon Beach. |
![]() |
Jolly Harbour sunset a few days before the Charter Show. We anchored in 9 feet, next to fellow cruiser friends Scott & Kim Dickenson's sailboat (in silhouette). |
Meanwhile, we still share
the same glorious sunrises and sunsets, and they’re pretty awesome no matter
what cockpit you’re watching from.
No comments:
Post a Comment