Looking Back on the Magic Sail Cayman Moments of 2014

2014 was an exceptional year for Sail Cayman. We met new families and friends, we said hello to returning families, couples and travelling groups, we wiped a tear at a couple of engagements on board, we laughed and giggled with groups who joined us on snorkeling charters to Stingray City and snorkel charters to the barrier reef and starfish beach. Then off course there were the obligatory private charters to Rum Point and Kaibo for world famous Cayman mudslides. Sail Cayman loved every moment of it.

So without further ado!

January

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7 Life-Changing Lessons You Learn when You Live on a Caribbean Island

Sail Cayman has been based in the Cayman Islands for well over 20 years. Ask us any day if we would like to leave and the answer, without hesitation, would be a very firm ‘no’.

So when Sail Cayman stumbled across this article which was published on the Huffington Post and written by Amanda Walkins, we simply had to share it as the article and writer captures life on an island spot on.

Lessons are learned every day — or at least they should be. Whether positive or negative, life is full of daily experiences that change us and affect us. Living on an island in the Caribbean for two years has taught me many valuable lessons I may not have learned living Stateside. In case you aren’t currently basking in tropical sunshine like me, allow me to impart some of my newfound wisdom.

Lesson #1
Electricity is overrated. The thought of being without power for hours or days at a time probably would have shocked me before I lived here. Now that I’ve been through a few rainy seasons when power outages are fairly common, I can say from experience that living without power for extended periods of time is not going to kill you. Yes, I have all my electronics here: laptop, iPhone, Kindle, you name it. I’m not living off the grid. So when the power goes out and I have no internet and no means of “entertainment,” I suddenly remember what it is to just breathe. And relax. And hear nothing but the waves and the wind. And I remember that the world keeps spinning regardless of how much or little I do every hour. Power outages are excellent opportunities to disconnect and reflect. And you know what else happens when the power is off? You talk. You actually put the phone away and you talk to the person next to you. Without distractions. When is the last time you did that with any regularity? It’s a reality check. (Sail Cayman must add here that, in Grand Cayman, power outages are extremely rare, but good times talking to friends whilst on the beach or on one of our boats never gets old).

Lesson #2
The Rolling Stones were right. “You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometimes, you just might find you get what you need.” Sometimes you go to the supermarket and there is no chicken, or bread, or milk, or tomatoes…or whatever it is that you wanted and intended to get. Sometimes you just can’t find that part to fix your kitchen appliance. Or that specific light bulb to fit into your favorite lamp. You can’t always find what you want on an island, but you can find the things you need. And you can get really creative in the process! New culinary concoctions are a favorite pastime here, or “kitchen-sink” meals. Buen provecho!

Lesson #3
You don’t need it. While I just told you about getting what you need, the definition of need has changed for many people. We often say that we need things, when in reality they are superfluous. “Needs” and “Wants” are entirely different, but they’re often intermixed and confused. You don’t need new clothes. You might want some, but unless your current clothes are literally falling apart at the seams, you are not in need. Stains happen, holes happen, and wearing the same thing several times a week is not a sign of impending doom. When you’re not inundated with commercials telling you what you’re lacking, you tend not to notice what you or anybody is else wearing. You also don’t notice what type of phone they have. Or whether or not they own a vehicle. While I can only speak for the expat community in my adopted island, we just don’t give a damn. We’ve adjusted to know that we might not find what we want, but we don’t need it anyway. That knowledge is incredibly liberating.

Lesson #4
Seasonal eating is always best. I used to live in Washington, DC where farmers’ markets were the norm, but I still had every type of food at my fingertips. On an island where shipments don’t always arrive, it’s best to rely on what’s locally available as much as possible. Eating seasonally is healthier, it’s cheaper, and it’s so much more exciting. Flavors are more vibrant and fruits are juicier. Nothing beats picking fresh cashew fruits off a tree to suck on their sweet nectar. Nothing beats eating fresh lobster tails just caught that day by local fishermen. The anticipation is palpable as new fruit seasons approach and different fishing seasons come up. When you drive around the island in early spring, keep the windows down to fill your car with the flowery scent of mango. It will fill your lungs with joy. Feel free to stop on the side of the road and snag one off the tree, too. Nobody will sue you, I promise.

Lesson #5
Time is a concept, not a dictator. “Island Time” is a real thing, but it should not be solely for islands. We love watching tourists adjust to relaxation over the week or two they spend here. You can see a physical change in people as they take the watch off, leave the phone in the hotel room, and forget about where they “have to be” or are “supposed to be.” Scheduling every minute of a day makes you ask where the years went. When the sun rises, a new day begins. When it sets, a new night begins. It’s as simple as that. The sun doesn’t live by the clock and you don’t need to either. That realization can change your entire life.

Lesson #6
As writer Karen Blixen (pen name Isak Dinesen) wrote,”I know the cure for everything: Salt water…in one form or another. Sweat, tears, or the salt sea.” There’s nothing that one or all of those can’t fix. Breathing in salt air daily is refreshing to the soul and reminds you that you’re alive. After breathing city air for several years, I think I’m gaining back time lost on my life by living on the beach now. The healing qualities of nature cannot be overrated.

Lesson #7
Nobody ever said, “I really regret that time I spent relaxing on the beach.” (Except for people who got really badly sunburned, but even that should be, “I really regret being lazy and not putting on sunscreen.” Just saying. It’s the tropics, people. If your pasty white skin hasn’t seen the light of day in a while, cover it up before we mistake you for a lobster…in which case, please refer back to eating seasonally and cross your fingers it isn’t lobster season.) Nobody regrets time they’ve spent enjoying life, time they’ve spent connecting with loved ones, or time they’ve spent unhurried and unburdened. Refer back to the lessons I’ve learned about island time, disconnecting to reconnect with people, and understanding needs versus wants. The world is going to keep spinning. What you do with your time on it will not change that fact. You can’t make it spin any faster or slower, so just enjoy the ride. I’m enjoying mine on a beach chair facing the endless sea. And I don’t regret any of it.

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Starfish Beach Stingray City sunset2

And then the Stars came to the Beach

Probably the best thing about a snorkeling charter with Sail Cayman, other than the attentive personal service and a boat all to yourself, family and friends, is the fact that we take you to where YOU want to go. It is with this in mind that Sail Cayman would like to suggest Starfish Beach as one of your stops during your boat charter.

Starfish Beach is one of those magic places that even Cayman Islands residents keep going back to on lazy Saturdays and Sundays. Easter weekend, the only time when camping is actually legal in Cayman, finds beach and nature lovers camping at Starfish Beach. The rest of the year this pristine sandy peninsula of white beach provides a quiet and peaceful place and the ideal Caribbean getaway with oodles of paradise charm.

How do you get to Starfish Beach? Well that’s easy as it’s only a 15 minute boat ride with Sail Cayman’s speedy power boats, Lazy Daz and The RIB. Our luxury yachts, Nauti Gal and Splendour In The Wind will get you there by chilled out wind power and anchor just offshore in order to protect their keels. Lazy Daz and the RIB can beach in knee deep water from where you can wade to shore, frosty in hand.

Crystal clear water, palm trees swaying in the wind, a sunny and soft sandy beach, what more could you want…maybe just some sunblock Sail Cayman would suggest, we bring the rest!

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What you Need to Know about Lionfish and How You Can Help

This article was published in the New York Times and because the threat of the ever growing evasive lionfish species become more prominent throughout the Caribbean we here at Sail Cayman felt it was imperative to share. Orneil, one of our Sail Cayman Captains is an avid lionfish hunter who participates in regular lionfish hunts throughout the Cayman Islands. So when you do come visit us in the Cayman Islands and when you do see lionfish on the menu, please order it, eat it and enjoy it and know that you are doing your share to make a difference.

MIAMI — They eat anything that fits in their mouths. They reproduce copiously and adapt effortlessly. And they have become as ubiquitous and pesky as rats — only prettier and more conniving.

Nearly three decades after a lone venomous lionfish was spotted in the ocean off Broward County — posing as a bit of eye candy back then and nothing more — the species has invaded the Southern seaboard, staking a particular claim on Florida, as well as the Gulf Coast, the Caribbean, and even parts of South America. Spreading gradually at first, and then frenetically from 2005 onward, lionfish have become the most numerous marine nonnative invasive species in the world, scientists said. Along the way, the predators, which hail from the other side of the world and can grow here to 20 inches long, are wreaking havoc on delicate reefs and probably further depleting precious snapper and grouper stocks.

There is no stopping them now, salt-water experts said. But hoping to at least slow them down, marine biologists and government agencies have been intensifying efforts recently to spearfish them out of certain areas that harbor fragile reefs and figure out how they became a threat so quickly and so successfully in the Atlantic Ocean.

Most recently, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission voted in June to ban as of Aug. 1 the importation of lionfish, and this month to prohibit the breeding of the fish in the state, steps that marine experts said will serve to focus attention on the severity of the problem. The commission had already lifted fishing licensing requirements to hunt lionfish and even started an app so that people can report lionfish sightings.

“Eradication is not on the table, but local control has proven to be very effective,” said Lad Akins, special projects director for the Reef Environmental Education Foundation, a grass-roots organization helping to curb the proliferation of lionfish. “They are what many people call a near-perfect invader.”

Figuring out how to combat them —what works, what does not — has been an exercise in both imagination and frustration. The lionfish derbies, or rodeos, seem to have the best success rate. Groups of divers gather for a day of spearfishing; last week, 22 divers, some from as far away as Texas, strapped on tanks in the Florida Keys and speared 573 lionfish in one day. There is talk of offering bounties, as one university in Mississippi did to create incentives, but money is scarce.

Then there is the gourmet approach. Some Florida restaurants are now buying lionfish, which are light and flaky when cooked, not unlike snapper, and serving them to diners. Once there is a large enough market for them, scientists said, fishermen will pay attention and help haul them out of the sea.

But there are problems there, too.

“The tricky part is catching them — traditional fisheries use hook and line and that doesn’t seem to be effective with lionfish,” said Maia McGuire, a marine biologist at the University of Florida. “Divers with spear guns, they catch and catch and catch; it’s labor intensive and requires divers, gear and boats.”

Being as wily as they are, lionfish do not typically swim in schools, making them difficult to sweep up with traditional fishing nets. And they have somehow adapted to deep waters — a submarine found some of them 1,000 feet below the surface of the sea, which is too deep for divers.

Traps offer some hope, scientists said; lobster fishermen in the Keys have noticed lionfish in their traps. Work is underway to build traps just for lionfish, which would make it easier for fishermen to catch and sell them.

Scientists are also finding some comfort in the fact that merely limiting the number of lionfish on a reef — as opposed to culling them all — will allow the reef and its fish to recover, said Stephanie Green, a marine ecologist at Oregon State University who is conducting a study of such efforts.

Lionfish do not belong in the Atlantic Ocean. They wound up there when people bought them to glam up their aquariums and eventually freed them in the ocean, probably thinking they were doing a good deed, scientists said. Their true home is the Pacific and Indian Oceans, where they do not pose a problem, most likely because they are eaten by more powerful predators that keep the population in check. Here, the predators seemed befuddled by them. They either steer clear or are enticed a little too close by their orange-stripe colors and Lady Gaga-like appearance.

“Our native species don’t know who they are,” said Matthew Johnston, a research scientist at Nova Southeastern University in Florida. “I’ve seen pictures of juvenile fish trying to hide within their tentacles. They think they are shelters — and then they just eat them. It’s a pretty bad deal.”

And eat they do. Mr. Johnston described lionfish as gluttonous, because studies have shown that they can stuff 50 or 60 baby fish into their stomachs. They even have big layers of stomach fat, the result of so much overindulgence, he added. But, as committed survivalists, they also can make do without food for long spells.

There is little likelihood of extinction. When one dies, gazillions more take their place. Female lionfish are built for spawning; they each release two million eggs a year. By the time scientists here sorted all this out, their numbers were headed toward infinity.

“They can spawn as frequently as every four days, which is really crazy,” Ms. McGuire said, then wondered, “Are we going to end up with reefs just covered with lionfish?”

The Simple Splendour of a Very Different Kind of Engagement

Daniel contacted Neil from Sail Cayman and asked us to help him set up a surprise engagement on Splendour In The Wind.

Now Neil  is all over surprises. He loves setting them up as much as he likes to get them! Next Daniel contacted Irene from Deep Blue Images so she could capture the magic moment when Daniel popped the question in the water at Stingray City.

As you can see from these photos Daniel and Valerie had a great time and Daniel’s surprise worked out perfectly.

Congratulations from Sail Cayman Daniel and Valerie. Thank you for choosing Sail Cayman, we loved having you on board and we look forward to having you back for your honeymoon!

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Planning is Prudent!

Have you looked at the calendar, sighed, gulped and wondered to yourself….how did I get here? You have probably just had a great summer, you’ve just put the kids back in school, you are enjoying the piece and quiet but deep down inside you’re already planning your next vacation and dreaming of getting away from it all and ‘it all’ could refer to several feet of snow in your front yard or an icy wind blowing a gale at 5am when you are miserably scraping the ice from your windshield and trying to warm up the car.

It’s around this time you start surfing the web, don’t surf too far….type in www.sailcayman.com and start dreaming and making your next trip a reality. Sail Cayman has FOUR reasons why we can make your winter painless. We have FOUR reasons why your vacation memories will last you through the toughest winter;

Reason 1; Splendour In The Wind: At 47ft this luxury yacht makes sailing figments of your imagination very real. Enough space for 12 passengers with 3 cabins, 3 marine bathrooms and a stunning teak interior, a shaded cockpit, a huge deck filled with sun and plenty of space to just lie back and chill-out adds luxury to your vacation without the price tag you would expect.

Splendour anchored at Stingray City

Splendour anchored at Stingray City

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reason 2; NautiGal: Adorable at 44ft, yet spacious and fun, this girl provides a small group’s dream day of sailing to your destination of choice. Arrive in style and sail away leaving the others behind, envious and wishing they were you.

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Reason 3; Lazy Daz: Fast is the first word that comes to mind, then shaded, marine head, comfort, ample space, fishing, go where you want to, jump into clear blue water from the roof and keep your frosties cold! Think….this is how I’m getting there and back!

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Reason 4; The RIB: Think endless fun as you zip past everyone else in the yellowest, brightest and ‘go anywhere’ boat you have ever come across! RIB stands for Rigid Inflatable Boat. The adventure starts from the minute you get on and stays with you long after you get off and right through a long cold winter!

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Sail Cayman has just returned from vacation to Ireland, the boats have all been hauled, serviced and rigged, the G&T is fully stocked, the ice is full to the top, simply make your reservation here: Please make my vacation awesome!

 

Sailing Thoughts

Sail Cayman has been pondering a blog topic for a couple of weeks now. We ran aground, so to speak, but then we found this quote by none other than J.F. Kennedy (or his legendary speech writers if you choose to be pedantic) and Sail Cayman came up with a topic called “Sailing Thoughts”. JFK really had a way with words…and women, but let’s just stick to sailing in this blog OK?

I really don’t know why it is that all of us are so committed to the sea, except I think it is because in addition to the fact that the sea changes and the light changes, and ships change, it is because we all came from the sea. And it is an interesting biological fact that all of us have in our veins the exact same percentage of salt in our blood that exists in the ocean, and, therefore, we have salt in our blood, in our sweat, in our tears. We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch it we are going back from whence we came.”
J. F. K.

JFK

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It is this quote that prompted Sail Cayman to Google more sailing thoughts and here they are. Sail Cayman pays homage right here to the sailors/writers and adventurers, both men and women, who pinned these quotes as we think that they have nailed the feeling, the awesomeness and the pure wonder of sailing better than Sail Cayman ever could.

“Twenty years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than those you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from safe harbor. Catch the wind in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”
Mark Twain

“A bad day sailing is 100 times better than a good day at work” Anonymous

“Sailing requires the management of all the systems on the boat, plus all the controls on the boat, while assessing the weather and navigation. It’s planning everything to a fine level of detail and making the required adjustments all at the same time things are changing” Anonymous

“If you want to know what sailing is all about, just get in the shower with your clothes on, turn on the cold water, and eat a soggy peanut butter sandwich. While you’re doing all this, drop a $100 down the drain every 2 minutes” Anonymous

“Now I’m sick of a life that is too complicated. I want to wear shorts year round. I want to swim in the morning. I want to fish. I want to shop for fresh food in small markets. I don’t want to work my butt off to make payments and then pay for insurance and cleaning and maintenance and upgrades for things that I really don’t need to survive. I am cold and tired and I need a break. I don’t want my job anymore. I want to laugh with my family in the sun. I want freedom.” Anonymous

“If a man is to be obsessed by something, I suppose a boat is as good as anything, perhaps a bit better than most”
E.B. White

“Would you get bored of cruising?” One of the replies stuck out in my mind. The poster said “I got bored…but it took six years. Best six years of my life! Nothing has to be forever to be worth doing!” In my mind that is perfect! Anonymous

“The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.”
William Arthur Ward

“How inappropriate to call this planet Earth when clearly it is Ocean.”
Arthur Clarke 

“Any damn fool can navigate the world sober. It takes a really good sailor to do it drunk.”
Sir Francis Chichester

“Sailors, with their built in sense of order, service and discipline, should really be running the world.”
Nicholas Monsarrat

“To deal with men is as fine an art as it is to deal with ships. Both men and ships live in an unstable element, are subject to subtle and powerful influences, and want to have their merits understood rather than their faults found out […] After all, the art of handling ships is finer, perhaps, than the art of handling men.”
Joseph Conrad

“I was born in the breezes, and I had studied the sea as perhaps few men have studied it, neglecting all else.”
Joshua Slocum

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“Borders? I have never seen one. But I have heard they exist in the minds of some people.”
Thor Heyerdahl

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“Wherever we want to go, we go. That’s what a ship is, you know. It’s not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails; that’s what a ship needs. But what a ship is…what she really is…is freedom.” Jack Sparrow

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And so it is with these profound sailing thoughts that Sail Cayman leaves you…but just before you go, we would like to put one last thought into your mind; “When will you make it your turn to take yourself sailing, to taste just a small thrill of adventure, to feel the wind in your hair, to look up and see the sails full of wind, to steady yourself against the keeled-over yacht, to hear  the ropes as they run through the rigging and then to turn your face to the sun and know that you are EXACTLY where you want to be?….When?

 

 

 

Rum, Rumpoint and Fun in the Sun

Sail Cayman talks about our charter destinations to Stingray City and Starfish Beach on our Facebook and Twitter platforms often. But we just realized that we owe you, our avid followers, friends and future and current clients a piece of history…in this instance the history of one of Grand Cayman’s greatest destinations….Rum Point!

Rum Point is named after the remnants of rum barrels once washed ashore from floundering ships. Rum Point has been a favourite gathering spot for locals as far back as anyone Sail Cayman asked can remember. With a natural point of sand that reaches into clear blue, warm and above all shallow waters Rum Point used to serve lobster nightly (they even apologized  back then as it was the only meal on the menu…..imagine that!) Besides lobster was easier to lay hands on than having to travel into town to purchase beef!

Ralph Coatsworth was the first man to have a commercial vision for Rum Point. He was on his way back from Trinidad to Montreal and fell in love with this piece of paradise. Ralph developed the Rum Point Club which included a hotel, bar and restaurant which back then, was powered by candle light and kerosene and only required 4 employees.

In 1994 a group of investors purchased Rum Point Club, they made improvements but ensured that the island atmosphere and quality of the destination remained.

Today Sail Cayman can drop anchor with Lazy Daz and The RIB extremely close to the Rum Point beach and our guests can literally walk to shore to enjoy the best and arguably most famous menu item…the much sought after Mudslide!

RPoint entry RumPointAerial1 RP sunset Rumpoint signs RPoint Snorkeling sign rum point mudslide

Splendid times on Splendour in the Wind.

Captain Neil from Sail Cayman has had a busy couple of weeks on Splendour in the Wind hosting sailing charters on Grand Cayman’s north sound. In one of our recent posts  we blogged about a family that had a great day out with Neil introducing them to stingrays and taking them snorkeling on the barrier reef.

This past week Neil played host to a group of friends from New Orleans…the group of ladies planned an all girls trip to Grand Cayman and booked a sailing and snorkeling charter with Sail Cayman.

At 47ft, this Beneteau offers ample space, both below and above deck. With 3 cabins, one of them ensuite in the bow of Splendour of the Wind, and with full A/C below deck, a full galley perfect for prepping appetizers and a 2nd marine bathroom, comfort is Splendour’s middle name. Above deck, Splendour has a shaded cockpit also with comfortable seating, in fact Splendour can accommodate up to 12 passengers easily.

All the Sail Cayman captains have excellent choice in music, but feel free to bring your iPad, iPhone or Android and we will be happy to enjoy your music.

As no sailing charter would be complete without a couple of frosties, Splendour has a fridge and cooler.

The most important thing to remember though is that Splendour takes you on a beautiful charter in the lap of comfort and luxury. In fact, Sail Cayman is really keen on doing an extended charter to Little Cayman, maybe even Cayman Brac…we just need the passengers who wants to sign up and are ready for an adventure, a very comfortable adventure!

Keen and curious? Contact Neil ASAP, he can’t dream of a better way to spend his summer….sailing!

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Feeling the Sting with Lionfish

Lionfish started appearing on Cayman’s Reefs around 2009 and have since grown into a huge problem for Cayman’s reef life. So “How did they get here? How did they make it to an island in the middle of the Caribbean and where did they come from?”

While no one knows exactly how these voracious eaters arrived in the Atlantic (they are indigenous to the Red Sea for example where they have natural predators), the most common thoughts are:

  1. Accidental or intentional release of aquarium fish into the marine environment.
  2. Transport of the species in the ballast water of ships.
  3. The only confirmed release was during Hurricane Andrew in 1992 when 6 lionfish were liberated from an aquarium into Biscayne Bay.

Sadly Lionfish have now been documented along the entire US East Coast from Florida to as far north as Massachusetts, east to Bermuda and south throughout the Bahamas and in other Caribbean nations such as Turks and Caicos, Jamaica and Cuba in depths ranging from 2 to 500 feet!  Here’s what we know about Lionfish:

  1. They are voracious predators that will eat juvenile fish and crustaceans (shrimps, lobsters, etc.) in large quantities.
  2. Here in the Cayman Islands they have no natural predators but the Nassau Groupers in Little Cayman, for example, are fast getting used to being fed Lionfish by divers who hunt Lionfish weekly. 
  3. Lionfish have venomous spines which deter predators and can cause extremely painful wounds in humans.
  4. Lionfish are capable of reproducing monthly from about one year old  and can produce an astounding 30,000 eggs each month!
  5. Lionfish grow incredibly fast, in fact they outgrow most native species with whom they compete for food and space.

Sadly Lionfish are prolific on Cayman’s Reefs and have made a meal of way too many of our reef fish. Dive Operators throughout the Cayman Islands have made weekly and monthly efforts by organizing successful Lionfish hunts. In turn local restaurants have been proactive in creating truly delicious meals out of Lionfish. 

Sail Cayman’s very own Orneil Galbraith has been an avid Lionfish hunter and have twice this year won the prize for most fish caught or biggest fish caught. We are proud of Orneil’s efforts and encourage everyone to take part in the fight against this invasive species, even if you don’t hunt, you can still spot the fish and let the hunters do the catching. Every fish caught is one less on our reefs and only with concerted efforts will the Cayman Islands be able to save their reefs and reef fish from Lionfish.

So Sail Cayman says; “Go Orneil GO!”

Follow Sail Cayman on Facebook for updates on Orneil’s lionfish catching adventures…

LionFish_Diagram

What you need to know about Lionfish anatomy

Orneil and lionfish

Removing poisonous spines

Lionfish weigh in

Catch of the day

Lionfish winners

Orneil’s winning team

Lionfish Sandwich

Delicious and freshly caught

Lionfish ceviche

Lionfish Ceviche