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A
day trip to Redonda - aka 'we must have been mad'
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It's been on my mind for eighteen years to write this story. Cast your mind back to 1984, I had just joined the band and off we flew to Montserrat to record the album 'Brothers in arms'.
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Upon questioning the locals, we learned that it was a colony and indeed had a king. (we never got round to doing the research to find out who it was) According to them, the only requirement for ruling your own island in those early days of European colonisation was that there had to be a post office situated on the isle. Or so went the legend. So our unknown hero promptly built one, which still stands today. Redonda was, and still is inhabited only by sheep. Legend has it that every now and then, they would wander to the top of the cliff and a few of them would step off and plunge into the depths, lemming style, a drop of exactly 971 feet. More on this later. Just to fill you in It was December, 1984. We were on the ill fated Caribbean island of Montserrat recording the dire straits album Brothers in Arms at Air studios, a wonderful facility, the brainchild of the great Sir George Martin which became a recording paradise for so many great artists including Sting, Elton John, Neil Young and Arrow. Our stay lasted about three months and realising we had a certain amount of free time on our hands, Alan and I learned to windsurf. We spotted a local chap (Danny Sweeny) teaching people to windsurf in the bay and thought, "that looks like a laugh". Little did we know what an influence it would have on both our lives. Danny used to hand over the kit (which in those days required at least two people to carry) to excited customers and after a very basic stance lesson on the beach, would send them out into the bay in prevailing offshore winds. The most amazing thing to me was that he would SWIM behind them issuing instructions such as "THE WIND IS COMING FROM THE NORTH!!" and "MAST FORWARD!!!!, THE WIND IS COMING FROM THE NORTH". I still hear echoes of these instructions occasionally whilst Im out on the water now. Danny was truly an exceptionally fit man. We estimated he would swim easily in excess of 20 miles per day. I always thought looking back, that if you can learn to sail in such fluky winds, you can sail anywhere. Anyway, back to the story |
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We set a day for
this epic adventure and were careful not to let too many people know about it.
I doubt if the rest of the band would have agreed to our endangering our lives
in such a way, with a world tour approaching and a very expensive album in the
making. This was my first DS project and none of us had any idea it would end
up being such a big record. That never seemed important to me at the time. I
was having the time of my life. The fateful day had arrived and I guess we werent needed much that week because no-one questioned our subsequent disappearance. We made our way to the designated beach of departure in our Suzuki death trap jeep and met up with Danny and his brother Englishman. Yes, that was his name. Englishman. He owned a fishing boat and Danny wisely thought it would be a good idea for his brother to be at sea whilst we made the sea crossing attempt. He needed to attend to his lobster pots as it happened. We checked the wind and decided that there was some, out at sea, and set off. The following two hours were never really logged in my memory as the next thing I recall was the sight of a monstrous supertanker heading directly towards us. This caused me to regain my senses and the dominant feeling was panic. Of course there was absolutely nothing we could do to alter either the course of the ship or our pathetic direction. We watched in amazement as the floating mass roared past , missing us by only a hundred yards or so. From then on my only thought was why am I doing this? Looking briefly over my shoulder to whence we came revealed a small land mass only slightly larger than our destination. I thought then that the best course of action was to proceed. Redonda was looming large by now and we were steadily approaching what in my mind became known as the cliffs of insanity. |
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At
this point I must mention the kit we were using. First of all, we had no harnesses
or lines, we werent aware of their existence at the time; it was only
when we visited a windsurfing shop in New York, during the mixing of the record,
that we discovered this wonderful advancement. As you would imagine the local
kit was basic. I used a Bic beginner board whilst Alan was sporting a Phillips
10 mother-ship. (Phillips ended up being the main sponsors of the BIA
tour) We both used the old triangular sails which were so popular in those early
days. |
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The trip back was uneventful, long and painful and we didnt arrive at Foxs bay until an hour after dark. Paul Cummins (DS Tour manager) was waiting for us on the beach, and had been for a while. I couldnt repeat what he said to us needless to say we both received an earful. We promised never to do it again (at least not until the Hamilton Island adventure, on the Great Barrier Reef during the tour later that year). |