The following article was written by David Allester & Eileen Quinn for the Cruising Section of BoatUS.com on April 8, 2004. It is rewritten here with David, Eileen and BoatUS's permission and can be found on :
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When we went ashore after breakfast this morning, Percy was waiting for us under the casuarina trees on the beach. We pulled the dinghy up beside two derelict wood fishing boats. Hidden from view by the trees were two structures: one didn't have a roof and the other, believe it or not, had an airplane for a roof! Percy explained that he used to operate a beach resort, but a fire had seriously damaged the main building. He's now rebuilt its interior and only has the roof left to replace. Eventually, he'd like to add five more rooms. The other building is the Eagle's Nest bar, closed for now because it's being used to store the materials required to reconstruct the beach house. We asked the obvious question: How did the plane get on the bar's roof?
Percy Wilson has great plans for his Eagle's Nest bar. |
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Percy also owns Jamaica Cay, a small island 35 miles to the north. He's got even bigger plans for its future: several tourist cottages, a restaurant, bar, gift shop, two swimming pools, tennis courts, and a mini golf course. "I'm looking to create a nudist colony type environment aimed at the high end market." He admitted it's taken some time to develop the site, but said he hopes the first phase will open this fall. "Getting building materials down here is a real challenge, but I'm getting there."
We confessed we were a bit puzzled by Percy's ambitious plans given the sense of abandonment that seems to permeate the islands. He immediately brightened up. "This area has a great future. We have two of the best legal businesses possible, fishing and tourism. A fisherman can make $100,000 a year here. We're at the gateway to Cuba, it's only 60 miles away. When Cuba opens up, there will be all kinds of boat traffic through here. All we have to do is build the facilities and people will stop. I tell the other islanders that's what they should be doing with their money."
We looked at the roofless beach house, the bar with a slightly crunched airplane on top of it, and the beached fishing boats. The mile wide bay was empty except for "Little Gidding" and "Mars", a French sailboat with a young couple and their two sons on board. We plan to leave for Cuba tonight in order to make our landfall at Puerto de Vita in the morning light. "Mars" is going to follow as soon as they get a weather window that will take them all the way to Havana. We tried to imagine another George Town on Ragged Island. David turned to Percy. "We'll have a couple of cold beer at the Eagle's Nest the next time we come through," he promised.
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The webmaster has obtained approval from David and Eileen to publish the above.
![]() Another photo from Duncan Town, Ragged Island, Bahamas revealed the identity : N226 !
Martin Pole discovered this image on the following website: Now the mystery is reduced to: what happened between 1981 and 2002. And how did it become Percy Wilson's "Eagle's Nest Bar" ? |
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