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Where We Are and Some History
 


The sheltered Sea of Abaco lies within the barrier reef system of the Northern Bahamas. Accessible and friendly, the chain of tiny islands is within easy reach of mainland USA, lying less than 100miles East of Florida. Numerous airlines will fly you to Marsh Harbour Airport on Great Abaco Island where your sailing adventure program will commence. In less than 1 hour you could find yourself aboard a sailing yacht making ready to sail off to a quiet harbour or protected anchorage.

This archipelago of relaxed and cheerful islands is famous for snorkeling, diving, fishing, sunbathing, endless beaches, and quaint, scenic settlements - most of all you will remember warmth, friendliness and genuine hospitality.

 

 

 


The climate of the Bahamas is directly affected by weather patterns across the United States and the Gulf Stream making it perfect for year-round sailing. Daily temperatures range from around 75F/23C in January to as high as 95F/37C in August. South Easterly trade winds generally provide a constant and predictable 10 knots of wind during the summer. So, you can expect daily sunshine, with occasional, brief and scattered showers in the summer months.

 

calm bay

 

Between December and February temperatures may drop below 70F/21C during daylight hours and the area can be subject to occasional cold fronts and sometimes even a little rain! North Easterlies provide 10-15 knots of wind throughout the winter months although the sun usually shines every day.

Officially, the hurricane season begins on June 1st and ends on November 30th!

 

Some History

History records that as part of an expedition financed by the King and Queen of Spain, on October 12th 1492 Christopher Columbus, a famous Italian explorer, arrived on the Island of Guanahani, or San Salvador as it is known today. Reputedly named the 'Bajar Mar', meaning shallow seas, by the Spaniards, this archipelago of more than 700 islands is now known as the Commonwealth of the Bahamas.

Lucayan Indians inhabited the magical group of islands when Columbus first discovered them. The Lucayans were related to the neo-Indian Arawaks in the larger Caribbean Islands and had originally migrated from the mainland of South America. Spanish slave traders are said to have captured native Lucayan Indians to work in gold mines in Hispaniola, and in next to no time at all, the Lucayan peoples were wiped out by a combination of slavery and imported diseases against which they had no immunity.

Between the 16th and 17th century the area was regularly plagued by pirates including Henry Morgan, Edward Teach (aka - Blackbeard) and Calico Jack Rackham. For nearly half a century these murderous pirates, also called buccaneers, raided Spanish galleys in the surrounding seas. In 1695 pirates invaded and destroyed Charles Town on the island of New Providence. However, the city was soon rebuilt to be renamed Nassau. In 1718, King George I of England appointed a former pirate, Captain Woodes Rogers, as the first Royal Governor of the Bahamas. Rogers was credited with eradicating piracy and restoring commerce to the area.

In 1647, a group of English and Bermudan religious refugees, known as the Eleutheran Adventurers, founded the first permanent European settlement in The Bahamas and gave Eleuthera its name. A succession of governments were founded in the Bahamas by these and other similar groups of settlers until 1717 when the islands officially became a British Crown Colony. It was 1783 before the first settlement in the Abacos was established when six hundred Loyalist refugees fled the newly independent United States and settled at Carleton Point.

 

 

Hopetown lighthouse

 

 

The islands are often referred to as the 'Loyalist Isles' due to the numerous Tory expatriates who fled there to avoid persecution following the American Revolution. Picturesque and colorful, these original Loyalist settlements are still very much in evidence on the cays around Great Abaco's major town, Marsh Harbour.

Once the haunt of swash-buckling Privateers, nowadays, the Bahamas is world famous for its tourism. There is a thriving international banking and finance sector as well as the recent emergence of a fast growing real estate business.

 

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