MARINA BAS DU FORT 🇬🇵 GUADELOUPE - SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE

MARINA BAS DU FORT 🇬🇵 GUADELOUPE – SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE
16° 13.3266′ N 061° 31.7816′ W

Welcome aboard to Marina Bas du Fort in sunny Guadeloupe — a proud sponsor of Ocean Posse! We hope you enjoy the calm waters, helpful harbor staff, and safe approach into this beautiful port. May your stay here enrich your maritime journey, fuel your adventure spirit, and renew your love for the sea. Fair winds, bright stars, and  enjoy Guadeloupe !

 

Discounts for Ocean Posse members:
-High Season: 10% discount on the first visit.
-Low Season: 15% discount on the first visit, and 10% on every subsequent passage.
-Hauling Out: 10% discount on the first haul-out.
Reservations are subject to availability.

Amenities

Reception & Assistance
• Physical, telephone, and VHF (Channel 9) reception
• Assistance with docking provided by port officials
• Warm welcome for check-in and customs formalities
Customer Support
• Information on prices, contracts, and marina amenities
• Guidance and referrals to local professionals and service providers
• Invoicing for visiting boats, long-term berths, and Technical Area usage
On-Site Facilities
• Marina shop with nautical and leisure items
• Daily weather reports and related maritime information
• Mail and correspondence handling for yachtsmen and management
Marine & Technical Services
• Dedicated Technical Area for repairs and short-term maintenance
• Professional assistance and support from the harbor master and team of 4 agents
Harbor Master Office
• Patient, professional, and welcoming staff always ready to assist
• Available daily (Low season: 07:30–18:30 | High season: 07:00–20:00)
• Emergency on-call service outside office hours

SAFE APPROACH

MARINA BAS DU FORT  – SAFE APPROACH




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LOCATION

OFFICIAL WEBSITE >>

NEARBY

La Réserve Cousteau / îlets Pigeon (Bouillante, Basse‐Terre)

Turquoise waters, vibrant coral, turtles, and excellent snorkeling & diving. A marine protected park with reefs full of life. Anchor off and explore under-water gardens.

Les Saintes archipelago (especially Terre-de-Haut & Terre-de-Bas)

Charming villages, colorful houses, sheltered bays, great food, and peaceful anchorages. The view from Fort Napoléon is worth the climb. Anchor in the bay, then paddle, snorkel or explore on foot.

Pain de Sucre (Les Saintes)

A beautiful sand islet / shallows / reef area near Les Saintes, perfect for snorkeling, relaxing, and enjoying calm water whilst anchored linguing under the sun.

Grande-Terre beaches: Sainte-Anne, Caravelle, Pointe des Châteaux
Wide sandy beaches, good sailing / windsurf spots, scenic views, coastal markets and colors. Pointe des Châteaux is great for dramatic coastline, sea breezes, sunrise.

Basse-Terre rainforest & waterfalls (La Soufrière, Chutes du Carbet, Cascade aux Écrevisses)
When you need a break from salt spray, drop anchor, take a tender/shuttle to hike the jungle, swim in waterfalls, see volcano geology.
Bouillante thermal springs & hot-sea interaction
Anchored bays with nearby hot springs (where volcanic activity warms the rocks/sea), great for a soak, relaxation after diving or long sails.

Grand Cul-de-Sac Marin

This shallow bay with many islets is good for protected sailing, exploring mangroves, anchoring in calm water, relaxing in nature away from more exposed anchorages.

Deshaies

A picturesque town on the northwest of Basse-Terre, used as a safe harbour / stop for yachts. Good provisioning, calm anchorages, botanical gardens nearby, local culture & food.

Anse-à-l’Eau / Baie Olive and other small coves & mangroves


Explore smaller bays, mangrove forests, hidden coves by kayak or tender, enjoy peaceful nature, birds, shallow waters.
Pointe de la Grande-Vigie & northern cliffs
For dramatic scenery. Cliffs, wind, ocean pounding. Beautiful on approach by boat, interesting coastal hikes once ashore. Useful waypoints when rounding northern Grande-Terre.


CARIBBEAN LAP REPORT SV JUBEL

SV JUBEL'S CARIBBEAN LAP

Leah and Kyle aboard SV JUBEL 

SV JUBEL just finished their 1 year lap around the Caribbean.  BRAVO ZULU!  Here they share their story:

We are currently in progress building an HH44 Catamaran in Cebu, Philippines, which will be completed in January 2026.  It's our plan to cross the Pacific to meet the boat so we can move aboard directly from JUBEL. But we didn’t come all this way from Vancouver island to skip the Caribbean.  Having crossed the (Panama) Canal in September 2023, we spent some time in Bocas del Toro, the San Blas, Panama, and Cartagena, Columbia.  Knowing we wanted to see the Caribbean, we decided to do a speed loop of the Windward and Leeward Islands. 

The trip started from Cartagena, Colombia and we set off for Puerto Rico, or maybe the DR, on March 26th, 2024. We didn’t know where we would end up.  We had heard this passage was notoriously bad, and that we may have to divert westward. So loaded with 8 extra jerry cans of diesel, we set off, along with our friends on SV VIA, a Caliber 40LRC (that holds 400+ gallons of diesel!) This trip was exactly what they say it was.  We motored for 700 miles, into the wind and the waves. At times doing 3 knots. We broke our davits due to the constant slamming into the waves. We also had some flat calm days. Overall, we sailed about 10 hours out of the entire 6 days. 

We ended up in Boquerón, Puerto Rico. We spent time cruising Puerto Rico for a month along the southern side of Puerto Rico, and flew home in (to Canada) in May.  Our  highlights are Isla Caja De Muertos, where you can hike up to the top of an abandoned lighthouse, and Isla Culebra for its snorkeling and coral farms, and of course, Costco in San Juan. 

Caja de Muertos Anchorage

With our boat loaded with a years worth of Costco supplies in Puerto Rico we made our way to the USVI’s where it was a surprise that they drive on the opposite side of the road. We spent a few days in St. Thomas, of course, stopping at the pizza boat where we attended a massive memorial day party hosted on a catamaran while we floated in the water.

Memorial day

A few days on the northern side of St. Johns before making our way to the BVIs. We have a dog on board so this was pretty difficult to sort out, as you have to have a lot of paperwork and health check proofs. We met the vet in Soper’s hole where he had to inspect Ricky, our dog, in person. Once that was dealt with we made our way to pussers for a rum! This was the first island we considered “the Caribbean”, and we made it! 

We spent three weeks bouncing around the BVIs including Norman Island (and the infamous Willy Ts, where we floated behind it in our Sunchill, met friends, and had beers thrown into our pool!

Floating behind Willy T's in our Sunchill making friends and catching beers.

Anchoring at the Baths, (where our engine died coming into the anchorage, that turned out to be ricky leaning on the shutoff button!), and spending time in Virgin Gorda was also great. Our favorite anchorages were Savannah bay, and the north side of Prickly Pear Island.  Having the Rum Runner bring us blended cocktails right to our boat was (also) a highlight, along with visits to Saba Rock. 

From The BVIs we checked out and headed to St. Martin, stopping at the French side first. The beaches here were phenomenal. While a little run down, its very pretty, and the French food supply is amazing. We had FKG rigging come out to the boat by dinghy to give us an estimate for the standing rigging replacement that we needed. They gave us a very, very reasonable estimate and we headed over to their dock on the dutch side to have the work done. A week later, everything was brand new. Highly recommend them!  We also had a new generator motor shipped here and replaced that, as our previous one had water ingress due to a manufacturing defect. St. Maarten is an amazing location for boat work and supply, especially since its all tax free. There are also great restaurants here, where we met up with some other Young Cruisers and talked shop, so we will definitely come back at some point. St. Maarten is a hit on our list! 

Our next stop was Guadeloupe. It was here that we rode out hurricane Beryl. On the west side of the island behind the mountain, we set out a 10-1 scope in 20 feet of water. Luckily (for us, certainly not the islands south of us) it headed south. We were hit with 35 knots of wind and a ton of rain, but otherwise, unscathed. After the weather cleared, the view was beautiful. 

Guadeloupe after Hurricane Beryl passed to the south

We worked our way down Guadeloupe, and anchored in some very rolly anchorages - There is not much for protection on this side of the island. We stopped in several hot springs and enjoyed the natural hot water that comes out all over the island. After an absolutely brutal sail crossing from Guadeloupe to Terre-de-Haut, a group of small islands south of Guadeloupe, we went to explore and island and old fort. There is a really cute little town (but not much for food available) that you can explore. 

SV JUBEL on anchor in Terre de Haut

From there we made our way to the jewel of the Caribbean, Dominica. I can not say enough about this place. It is, by far, our favourite locale in the caribbean. Absolutely untouched and unspoiled. There were no tourists, the locals were the friendliest people we have ever met, and would do anything for you. The natural beauty of this island is absolutely stunning.Waterfalls, valleys, hot springs, gorges - It has it all. 

Dominica

What it doesn’t have are services, restaurants, fuel docks, or supply shops. You are on your own. So bring what you need, and stay as long as you can. We grabbed a mooring ball in Portsmouth bay for $10 a night, where the PAY (Portsmouth Association of Yacht Services) will come out to the boat and give you anything you need, and help you check in.  We rented a car from a local company (that we had to swap out three times because they were not in great shape - Old cars imported from Japan), they also drive on the British side of the road (in Dominica). Its like driving in the game “crazy taxi”. We drove all over the island over 5 days. 

Dominica Hot Springs
Dominica waves

We went to visit Titou gorge where they filmed parts of the Pirates of the Caribbean

Titou Gorge

Overall, Dominica gets a 10/10 for us. We will be back to this island before our cruising career is over. Its got so much to offer, and so much that we haven’t seen, for a small island.  Our provisions were running low so it was time to carry on. We made our way to Martinique from here, where we knew we could provision. And provision we did. Wine, cheese, butter, oh my. The French have food nailed down. We were here during a summer festival and I have never seen so many boats on the move, ever. 

Martinique

Martinique was the busiest place we’d ever been. The bays were full, with hundreds if not thousands of boats. It was way too busy for us. And they’re very not dog friendly. So after we provisioned, we carried on down to Grenada. We skipped St. Lucia for safety concerns, and therefore had to skip St. Vincent and the Grenadines due to our dog and rabies rules. That, and its been hit hard by Beryl at this point. 

Grenada became our home for about a month and a half while we waited for hurricane season to subside slightly. The next stop after this was Bonaire, so hurricanes weren’t a big concern. We met up with friends, enjoyed copious wing nights, went snorkeling, and hauled out because we had won a free haul out from Spice Island Marine at the Young Cruisers Association Cruisers Awards. We were here for Carnival which was amazing. 

Carnival Oil
Carnival Fire show

We had tried out all the anchorages and there was a weather window coming. It was September at this point, so it was time to carry on to Bonaire. After a sporty 3 day sail downwind (oh how nice it was to go downwind finally, after beating our way east all the way to Dominica), we arrived in Bonaire. The water clarity blew our minds.

Bonaire water clarity blew our minds
Bonaire beach time

 However, the lack of Starlink was frustrating after having it for so long. So back to a cell phone data plan we went, we spent our days snorkeling and swimming. We rented a car and drove around the whole island, stopping to feed the roadside donkeys apples and carrots. 

 

 

 

Donkeys lean in for some apples and carrots

Bonaire was definitely another highlight. The freediving and snorkeling is amazing. Its everything its cracked up to be. 

We skipped Curacao and headed to Aruba to meet friends and for my parents to fly in. We loved Aruba - Dove on a shipwreck, swam with turtles, went out to fantastic restaurants, played some slot machines, had some pool days at the Hyatt pool, and even found a Canadian bar that had Poutine and took Canadian money! 

Now here we are in Cartagena once again, having crossed our track when we left 8 months ago, so very happy we traveled where we did and saw what we saw. The experiences will stick with us forever, and we hope to go back to some of the islands once again in the future. Now, its time to go back to San Blas one more time before we prepare for our grand adventure across the Pacific! 

 

SY JUBEL 🇨🇦 Leah & Kyle - Gulfstar 44'

THANK YOU FOR SHARING YOUR HIGHLIGHTS FROM YOUR 8 MONTH CARIBBEAN LOOP

 

JUBEL


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