I’ve recently had some correspondence about
Bimini with another writer, and her comments conjured up some fond memories. The year
we started cruising full time, we enjoyed a few weeks in Bimini, our first
foreign port of call. As I dusted off my
recollections, I found a youtube clip that took me back to a pleasant evening
in the Compleat Angler, where we heard this as a live performance: "Layin' Low in Bimini - Stevie S.and the Calypsonians"
I was saddened to learn that the Compleat
Angler was destroyed by fire a few years ago, and the owner and all of his
Hemingway memorabilia perished as well.
Sic transit gloria mundi.
****
I was
“Layin’ low in Bimini” one Sunday morning, relaxing by the pool at the Bimini
Bluewater Marina, when two women intruded upon my solitude.
“Where
are you from?” One of them asked me.
“Well,
...” I said, in a down island tempo.
“C’mon! That’s not a hard question. Where do you live?” She asked impatiently, her speech dripping
New York.
I was
rescued by an older Bahamian man who was sitting nearby, enjoying a rum and
Coke. “De mon, he live on de green boat,
jus’ da,” he explained, gesturing toward the dock to show which green boat he
meant.
“Yeah,
but where do you live, really?”
“Where
de green boat set. Jus’ now in Bimini, I
t’ink,” I answered, slipping into the local patois.
The
old man nodded, sipping his rum drink and grinning a gap-toothed grin. The woman picked up her book and pointedly
began a whispered conversation with her female companion, obviously unhappy
with my response. After a few minutes,
they gathered up their things and left.
“De
ladies, dey from New York. Push-push. Dey come to relax, but dey don’ know relax,”
the old man said.
****
Bimini,
at the time we visited, was almost deserted during the week. On the weekends, people in big, fast boats
came from south Florida to fish and party.
A few tourists flew in on Chalk Airlines, on the little seaplanes that
landed in the harbor a few hundred feet from our boat. We had watched them take off from Miami
Beach, from the Government Cut ship channel when we were there a few days
earlier. The visitors spent their time
fishing or scuba diving from the fleet of charter boats in the harbor, and they
spent the evenings at the Compleat Angler after dining at one of the tourist
restaurants like the Anchorage, which had been Michael Lerner’s cottage. Ernest Hemingway lived there while he wrote To Have and Have Not.
The
whole of Alice Town was like a shrine to Hemingway, and it would not have been
a surprise to encounter him in any of the little open-air, dirt-floored bars
along King’s Highway, Alice Town’s one street.
The bars doubtless looked much as they had when he was in residence.
Bimini
was always a haven for smugglers, and it thrived during the prohibition era,
enjoying another economic surge in the 80s from the drug trade. By the time we visited, the drug runners had
moved on to more efficient means of shipment, although there was ample evidence
that small-time smuggling was still an active pursuit. Duty-free rum for a few dollars a liter and
Cuban cigars were readily available to tempt the boaters from Florida, and more
nefarious items were rumored to be at hand, as well. In passing time with some of the locals, we
learned that things were relatively quiet in Bimini these days, although just a
few years earlier, gun fights between drug dealers along King’s Highway were
said to be a common occurrence.
We
explored the island on foot, walking from the south end all the way to the
north end. As we passed through Bailey
Town, which was much more residential than Alice Town, we made note of a
hand-lettered cardboard sign hanging outside a loosely fenced compound. The sign offered stuffed lobster dinners for
$10 on Sunday night. I checked my watch
and discovered that it was Sunday.
We
studied the establishment for a few minutes, noticing that it looked
deserted. It comprised about an acre,
with a few strands of broken barbed wire draped casually around the
perimeter. Just to the left of the
driveway entrance, there was a shack about 12 feet square. It sat on concrete blocks and had a large
padlock on the door. Goats and chickens
foraged among the weeds and dust. There
were a few partly dismantled, wrecked automobiles in the yard, along with some
small boats and large, rusty appliances.
At
the back of the lot was a two-storey structure that vaguely resembled a
suburban split-level house assembled from mismatched materials. High on the front of the house was a large
sign proclaiming it to be “Tiger and Pat’s – hardware, building materials,
groceries, auto & appliance parts and repairs, and plumbing supplies.” We decided to return later and try the
lobster.
We
walked back to “Tiger and Pat’s” an hour or so after sundown, accompanied by
two friends from another boat. There
were dim lights scattered around the yard, and the door to the small shack was
open. The inside of the shack was
brightly lighted. We went up a few
rickety steps and found ourselves in a tiny grocery store, well stocked with
canned goods and liquor. There was a
pleasant-looking woman behind a small counter.
“Good
evening,” she said.
“Good
evening. How are you?” I asked.
“Fine. And you folks?”
“We’re
well, thanks.”
“Can
I help you find something?” She offered.
“Are
we too late for the lobster dinner?”
“No. You want 4 dinners?”
“Yes,
please.”
“I
will get them. Cold drinks are in the
refrigerator. You may help yourselves,”
she said, gesturing to a rusty old household refrigerator in one corner.
She
went through an unnoticed door into a tiny, adjoining kitchen, and began
assembling our dinners, loading an incredible amount of food into Styrofoam
containers. She brought them back in a
few minutes and collected our money, suggesting that we have a seat outside as
she flipped some light switches.
We
went outside to discover a large cable spool tipped on its side under a tree,
now brightly lighted by bulbs dangling from the limbs. The makeshift table was surrounded by barstools. We settled on the stools and opened our
containers to find that we each had a huge stuffed lobster tail, mounds of peas
and rice, and fresh green salad. As we
tucked in, a musical rumble came from the shadows nearby.
I
glanced up to see a giant emerging from the dark, singing “Swing Low, Sweet
Chariot” as he shuffled his feet in what I would have called a Gullah ‘shout’
in my youth. Back in the days of
slavery, rigid Baptists had forbidden dancing, but their strictures were
circumvented by the expedient of ‘shouting’ prayers with rhythmic motions of
feet, hands, and bodies. This man’s
movements were quite familiar to a boy from Geechee country. He concluded his performance to our soft
applause, bowed modestly, and introduced himself.
“Welcome,
and good evening,” the big man said, in a smooth, almost impossibly deep,
melodious voice. “I’m Tiger. My wife, Pat, made your dinner. We’re glad you are here in Bimini with
us. Are you enjoying your visit?”
“Certainly,
we are,” Leslie responded.
“Good,”
he boomed, nodding. “Bimini is mostly
peaceful, now, but if anybody bothers you, you just tell them that Tiger looks
after you. Then no one will bother you,
I promise.”
“Thank
you, Tiger,” I said.
“You
are welcome. Enjoy your dinner, and if
you are here next Sunday, come and hear me preach at the Baptist church
overlooking the beach. We would be
pleased to have you visit.”
And
with that, he faded back into the darkness, leaving us to reflect upon the
diverse skills bred by life on a small island, and the fellowship that extended
to all who ventured off the tourist path.