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UNION
( ST-VINCENT GRENADINES)
Union was settled during the 18th and
19th centuries first by English, then
Scottish colonists. Just 17sq km, it was
both verdant and well tilled. Until the
end of the 19th century it boasted up to
5000 inhabitants. Then it was
completely abandoned.
Divided between the two villages of
Ashton in the SE and Clifton in the E,
only a few folk remain, most of them
fishermen or smallholders.
The population has grown naturally
to 2000 people but nothing much else
changed over the years until the end of
the 1960s and the arrival in Clifton of a
French béké from Martinique.
Clifton
The béké, André Beaufrand, is now part
of the legend of Clifton and it’s
development. After acquiring a plot of
marshy land to the east of Clifton, he
drained it and built a small airstrip and
then a house-cum-hotel. It was the birth
of the Anchorage Yacht Club and the
beginning of Clifton’s development as a
centre for tourism and sailing. With
access by air, a good anchorage for boats
and a hotel and restaurant to provide a
welcome, everything was in place to
make the Anchorage, only a few miles
from the Tobago Cays, a tourist focus
in the Grenadines. In the mid-80s André
and Simone Beaufrand took well-earned
retirement and their property was
bought by a genuine Austrian prince.
This scion of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire entrusted the management and
revamping of the Anchorage to
Charlotte Honnart. She restored the
complex in keeping with the charm of
its wonderful location, with bungalows
on the beach front and pontoons where
all the boats cruising the Grenadines
come to tie up. But Charlotte’s departure
brought a change in management and a
reduction of the Anchorage’s range of
activities. It is now run by the hotel
group Palm Island. Meanwhile, the
spotlight in Clifton has moved to Jean-
Marc Sailly’s Bougainvilla, a small
complex further W on the same side,
with a jetty and buildings including a
restaurant, guest rooms and the
charming boutique selling souvenirs and
books run by the omnipresent Charlotte
Honnart.
Because of all the tourist and yachting
development on Union during the past
few years, and the consequent increase
in air traffic, the government has improved Beaufrand’s tiny airstrip and
doubled the length of its runway by
extending out into the sea.
Unfortunately, instead of taking
advantage of these improvements, the
local airline companies have actually
reduced the number of direct flights
(particularly the ones going to
Martinique’s international airport),
because these routes are not profitable.
This in turn has made getting to this little
island in the middle of the Grenadines
more difficult all round. Nonetheless,
Clifton remains a busy destination for
yachts and for day charter boats taking
their daily groups of tourists to cruise
the crystal-clear waters of the Tobago
Cays with their reefs and corals. Among
the boats on offer are the maxicatamarans
chartered by the
Bougainvilla or the Scaramouche, a large
locally constructed schooner, rebuilt
authentically by Martin Janet, a
Scotsman by birth and Unionian by
adoption. In the evenings their crew members and visiting yachties meet up
at the Bougainvilla’s bar-restaurant or in
one of the village’s other establishments.
The small village of Clifton hasn’t been
left behind by the changes. Thanks to
local initiatives shops and small hotels
have been started up. Most of these line
the main street along the waterfront.
WiFi available. For some the local feel
of the village hotels is ample
compensation for their simplicity. The
restaurants are also charming with
seafood menus cooked to local recipes.
In the centre of this small village is the
new market with colourful huts offering
a wide variety of fruit and vegetables.
Nearby, the customs office, various
stores for provisions, the dock-side fish
market, a small post office, tourist
information and a bank complete the
village’s services. Bar the days when the
schooners and other coasters arrive from
St Vincent with their cargoes which liven
up the waterfront atmosphere, not a lot
goes on.

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Pilotage
Note
1.whether approaching Union’s E coast
from the S or the N, you should be very
wary of the numerous reefs around both
the main island and nearby Palm I.
Plenty of yachts have ended their days
here!
2. returning from the Tobago Cays, a late
landfall with the sun ahead dangerously
reduces visibility; night arrivals, despite
the buoyage (unreliable), aren’t
recommended for newcomers.
Clifton anchorage
This anchorage on the windward coast
is well protected by a reef barrier. In
principle access during daylight is easy
because the reef edges and the pass
towards the village are marked by
beacons. That said, any approach should
be made with care and for preference in
good visibility in order to spot the reef
surrounding the anchorage.

Approach from the NE (Tobago Cays) Steer 222° on which course you’ll see in
the distance the hill tops of Carriacou.
Once in the offing follow around the S end
of the extensive barrier reef that hems
Clifton in.
Approach from the S It’s best to pass W of
the isolated Grand de Coi, normally
marked by a beacon, in order to stay clear
of the reefs around Palm I.
There are two usable passes into the
anchorage at Clifton. The more W’ly
one towards the village is buoyed, the
other going behind Roundabout Reef is
not. If it’s your first approach, head for
the village jetty on 330°. Once inside you
can either anchor off the Bougainvilla’s
jetty, off the Anchorage Yacht Club or
further to windward in the lee of the
barrier reef once you’re past
Roundabout Reef. The second is less
crowded but further from the village.
You should think about an anchor
watch because the holding is unreliable,
especially off the docks. Snorkelling is
possible around the large coral reefs
nearby.
In the middle of the reefs is a tiny islet
called Green Island. A local has made
his home here amongst the sand and
rocks and he crafts simple handmade
goods for the few tourists that visit.
Further S is Happy Island, a manmade islet
built by another local. Using a huge
number of conch shells left over from
intensive fishing, he has built a bar right
in the middle of the the coral and the blue
sea (Janti VHF 16). Both islets can be
accessed by tender or simply by swimming.
You’ll need a flat bottomed, preferably
rigid, dinghy to negotiate the coral that
emerges from under the water. You can
also use a buoy, though you’ll need to
negotiate with the boat boys who will take
the opportunity to insistently suggest that
you also eat in one of the village
restaurants. It is a good idea to lock up if
you go ashore after dark; it pays to be
careful here.
The pontoons of the Bougainvilla
(VHF 16/68) and the anchorage have several visitors’ berths. You can water
ship. Fuel can be found at the tip of a
pontoon further S but it’s only available
for boats with <1·8m draught.
Ashore Clearance formalities are now
dealt with in a building near the village
dock. An office near the market covers
immigration. Clifton has a few basic boat
repair services. These include a mechanic
specialising in HB and inboards whose
workshop is en route to the airport.
More information about getting hold of
spares, and other services, can be found
at the Bougainvilla; a small holiday
complex whose restaurant terrace
overlooks the sea and an aquarium.
Minimarkets in the village are good for
re-provisioning as is the small local
market for essentials, though prices are
quite high (as in most of the Grenadines).
Fresh produce depends on local
fishermen or the arrival of the schooners
from St Vincent.
Other moorings in Union :
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