27 Aralık 2010 Pazartesi

Southbound at last!


The first week in November finally saw us depart Guaymas and start heading south, zig zag fashion between the Baja and the mainland, first to La Paz, then down the Mexican Pacific Coast.


With buffed topsides, we were finally good to go. Our splash down was not without incident as the lifter driver (who uses a remote control pad) was not quite on the ball, and neither were we! The lifter arrived early at the boat and neither of us was paying much attention. Bad move! Horacio tried to drive the lifter through our inner forestay!! He was underneath the stern of the boat operating the lifter!! Horacio's second mistake was getting the lifter out of horozontal balance when we were almost near splash down, causing us ot slip in the slings! Peter always ties the forward and aft slings together, then the forward sling back to the primary winch. A little nerve wracking! Thanks to Oscar (who had re-rigged for us last year), we had the repair done in a week and have a new inner forestay. The down side is we are still trying to get a cheque for the damage!!


As we still had some credit left from the hardstand, we were able to spend a few nights tied to the fuel dock. So our first night in the water, no wind, I awoke to the sound of the lines groaning under pressure. Waking Peter up and complaining that something is just not right, we both went for a look and could not believe our eyes….a rustly, old, very large trawler resting on us!!! Luckily for us it was against the dinghy (but not enough to damage it). We pulled ourselves forward then decided to go around into a slip. Peter walked the security guard around to the fuel dock and pointed out that ‘’el barco no capitano”. Trawler had made its way out into the bay with the ebb tide. Strange that it got away in the first place. Maybe someone had set it free?????

Our crossing to Bahia Concepcion (back to the Baja) was a non event in calm conditions, as was the rest of our sail to La Paz. We sat out two northerlies comfortably in Bahia Concepcion and behind Coronados, near Puerto Escondido. Being wiser this time around, we anchored in the Waiting Room in Escondido, rather than going inside to pay for the moorings. The usual cost for the Waiting Room anchorage (an old Caladera) is only a dollar or so a day, if you can find the small shed behind the anchorage open.

Our stop in La Paz was to pick up another solar panel (Kyocera 135) which we ordered on line from Kyocera in Mexicali who then delivered the panel for us to a company called Tecnosol. All worked well; we found their office, organised payment and the delivery to the marina for us. On our sail down to La Paz it became evident that both 8D batteries (AC Delco) we had purchased in Guaymas had failed! Luckily the warranty was with the manufacturers and not the retailer. So using our limited Spanish, we conveyed our problem to the supplier in La Paz, and within 2 hours they had tested the batteries, removed and replaced them making our 2 days in the marina worthwhile.

With another big norther approaching, we decided that the La Paz anchorage was not the place to be; Bahia de Muertos, (Bay of the Dead) some 45 miles south is a fantastic bay offering good protection from west through to NE winds. We smoked out of La Paz on a Coromuel, sailing peacefully through the notorious Lorenzo Channel and arriving at Muertos mid afternoon, motoring the last 10 miles.


Muertos is a wonderful anchorage in 30 knots of breeze, except for the sand blasting we got with it! Most of it was because of the building that is going on. Developers are trying to change its name to Bahia de los Sueno…Bay of Dreams. The previous name referred to the old mooring buoys left in the bay after the salt mine closed. They have since been removed. The bay has a beautiful sandy beach with a great restaurant in one corner and the most amazing boutique resort hotel (Gran Sueno) in the other, with an 18 hole golf course behind the sand dunes.


Being isolated, the resort is popular with celebrities. Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell were sitting in a golf cart about to depart when we walked by. Goldie’s voice in person is exactly how she sounds in her films! Later we had a few words with Kurt….remembering him from “Captain Ron”.


The owner of the resort is a very unassuming property developer from California, Steve, who must be ok as he welcomes ‘grotty yachties’ into the restaurant and allows us to wander around the resort. He has this fascinating train set, (an understatement) covering the whole upstairs floor of the restaurant. It is absolutely remarkable and worthy of a visit in itself.


We departed Muertos for Mazatlan on the mainland on the back of the norther, which although gave us a lumpy sea to start with, it enabled us to sail most of the 190 miles, covered in a little over 24 hours!! 15 to 20 knot NW winds saw us bounding along at 7 to 8 knots with the wind just abaft the beam! How could she not sail well being an Sparkman and Stephens?



An early morning approach to Mazatlan was well timed as we could see the fishing fleet out and easily avoided them. Mazatlan has a huge marina development in a western setting, but where is the fun in that? We anchored in the old harbour, along with a dozen or so other yachts. From here it is an easy bus ride into town. The major drawback is the smell from the sewage works if the wind is in the wrong direction (which it wasn’t). Some yachts avoid the port as they feel it is dirty, but compared to some of the Asian ports…no comparison. Mazatlan is an interesting town with the longest Malecon in Mexico adorned with yet more statues, interesting parks and many, many restaurants.



Strange skip in VHF was happening over the weeks we spent from our southern crossing to near Puerto Vallarta. We could hear and talk on VHF to other yachts in anchorages on the Baja, some 330 miles away! It was very confusing hearing all the VHF traffic on Ch 16 up and down the coast and even more amazing is how many yachties are awake at 0200 and calling other boats in marinas. We felt like telling them they should be in bed! We were allowed to be awake as we were on passage!!!

We had planned to stop at Isla Isabel to look at the birds, but having many yachts huddled in the rocky anchorage and only one spot left near the rocky shore, we opted to pass on by and sail the rest of the day to the beautiful Mantanchen Bay, near the old town of San Blas.

Although we did not hear the Bells of San Blas, we did see them. Henry Wordsworth Longfellow wrote a poem The Bells of San Blas.


Before the newer towns of Puerto Vallarta to the south and Mazatlan to the north, San Blas was THE town and gateway port up until the 1930’s, supporting over 30,000 people. From 1530, it became a Spanish occupation, with the occasional pirate ship seeking refuge in Mantanchen Bay. In 1768 New Spain developed San Blas as their Pacific Naval Port, with its estuary used for ship building and resupplying.



The Contaduria, built overlooking the ocean, served as both a fort and the accounting office for San Blas. Today, it’s a much smaller town with not a lot to show of its former glory.



How on earth did this Thai fishing boat make it all the way over to here??? We well remember these chaps!


Tourism is not a possibility here as there are many no seeums (Jejenes hay-hay-nas) that bite!! We took a panga up the Rio Tovara on a little jungle tour…….lots of baby crocodiles, iguanas that were well camouflaged, a small Boa Constrictor and turtles all sunning themselves.



Humpback whales are migrating south and congregate along the mainland bays. Every day we have seen these majestic animals breeching, fin slapping or just going quietly by. There have been a few that have been much larger than Stolen Kiss! Turtles surround us at sea and pods of dolphins come and play with us on the bow. Apparently dolphins guard the entrance to Banderas Bay as babies are born there all year round. Whales give birth in the bay as well. On our entrance and exit into the bay, we had some very large, ‘spotty’ dolphins check us out and escort us both in and out. In the stunning Tenacatita Bay further south near Bahia de Navidad, there are resident dolphins, one called Chippy (has a chip out of his fin) that likes to rub himself on your anchor chain. He greeted our arrival in this manner and gave Peter a bit of a fright as our chain started to rattle and shake as soon as our anchor hit the bottom!


Banderas Bay, with the towns of La Cruz and Puerto Vallarta is indeed a worthy stop and it was unfortunate we could not stop for a longer period. We opted to anchor off the older town of La Cruz, rather than go into the huge marina developments of Puerto Vallarta. In times of light northerlies, this worked for us. Apparently the anchorage can become very rolly!


La Cruz has a laid back ambience, with galleries focusing on the local Huichol Indian artifacts and some wonderful restaurants all along narrow cobbled streets that are so typical of the older Mexican towns. The Sunday Morning Market is a real must and the food is to die for! Generally food  on the mainland, is cheaper and higher quality than the Baja. Busses run past La Cruz and the very helpful drivers drop you off at the appropriate stops to catch another bus to the required destination. A little surf town on the north side of the point, Sayulito is so worth a visit.


Sunday December 12 was a big day out for us (in company with the Buena Vistas) as we first went to the morning market in La Cruz then caught the bus into the very cosmopolitan Puerto Vallarta. It was the last day of celebration of the Virgin of Guadalupe. The great mass of humanity filled the streets celebrating and all had to pass through the Cathedral. One Mexican gentleman explained to us non Catholics that a church celebrates Christ and a Cathedral the Virgin Mary, which explains the difference between the two.


Nearly every second shop offered Tequila tasting – free of course, to sucker you into Time Share properties. One could do a lot of damage to oneself in a few hours, not only with the Time share but with the Tequila!!

We found a great restaurant in the old town for lunch and just moseyed on through the crowd enjoying the festivities. The malecon was, as usual, the most entertaining area with amazing sand sculptures with artistic flare representing yet another way to making a living.






Catching the bus into town of course is a lot easier than finding the right one out, but many locals were always around to point us in the right direction.

Arrival back in La Cruz ensured time to listen to a great rock band in Ana Banana’s and just watch some old timers really enjoy their passion.

Around La Cruz there are many large Huanacaxtle Trees which gives La Cruz Huanacaxtle its proper name.


 As strange things happen at sea, a Compass 47 happened to come and anchor next to us. Peter recognised its name as it was on our short list when we were looking for boats. Not in the same league as a Hylas of course, but designed by Lavronos (who was designing boats in the early days with Sparkman and Stephens, she had good lines and is well built. She was purchased in Grenada and needs a lot more work than what we have done with our new Stolen Kiss. She was some what cheaper though, so you get what you pay for.


Peter had installed a Smart Regulator whilst we were moving about, which initially did not work. After much thought over 3 weeks and re-reading of the manual, he swapped a wire and hey presto, it works. Now our 90 amp alternator will charge the batteries at 80 amps and drop off accordingly as they charge. Magic!

We have managed to sail more than 60% of the distance, which is good, and the further south we have come, the more amazing the beautiful bays and interesting towns. After leaving Puerto Vallarta, we had a quiet sail around the infamous Cabo Corrientes, approaching and rounding the cape within a 2 mile radius (calm conditions, giving us a 1.5 knot positive current!) with so many large turtles floating in the current symmetrically around the cape, we first thought it was a net! Our planned morning departure was well planned as the NW sea breeze soon kicked in to 15 knots around noon, building south of the cape to 20 knots from the north, enabling a rolly but fast sail until around 2300 hours. As the Chemala anchorage is wide and free of obstructions, we entered there with radar and a setting moon at 0200 hours. Buena Vista was ahead of us and Nordsail 1, (Nordhaven 57 motorsailor) who chose to anchor in a marginal anchorage just south of the cape, came in later in the afternoon.

Tenacatita, a beautiful and protected Bay just south of Barra de Navidad was yet another wonderful bay to hang out in, with a long sandy beach, small tienda (however, western prices and menu) and a mangrove lined river which takes you to another beach back to the coast. This is currently closed as the owner has removed the long term squatters.


In order to get the right tide into the lagoon at Barra de Navidad, we three boats departed before O dark 30, relishing in the joys of cruising..the moon set and sun rise almost simultaneously!


Currently we are all in Bahia de Navidad, in a lagoon for xmas (how appropriate is that…navidad is Spanish for xmas!) with another 17 yachts at anchor and some in the marina. We found a small auto shop that fixed two of our 3 alternators and dropped off our mainsail for a small repair along the luff. One of the alternators we had ‘serviced’ in San Carlos, but never tried it! That is so San Carlos!! Peter went back to Puerto Vallarta for the day to pick up a sail batten that somehow popped out on our sail here. In all the cruising and racing miles we have done it has only happened once before..Hiker lost one, which is not surprising!


Barra de Navidad is another laid back town, with a large sandy beach stretching for 2 miles around the bay where another town, Melaque, lies at its northern end. There are many great restaurants and small shops servicing both Mexican and western tourists. The gringos here are apparently predominately snowbirds from Canada. At 80 cents for a beer, (Sol or Tecate) Peter is happy!! Every morning a French baker calls around the boats and offers all sorts of yummy delights. Warm, fresh baguettes, croissants, key lime pie, chocolate ginger pie, blueberry peach pie and quiches! Best not stay too long!!


From here we have an easy sail to Manzanillo, the major port and an interesting town, then a few overnighters down to Acapulco and on to Huatulco (wah-tul-co) where we will wait for a good weather window before crossing the Tehuantepec Gulf and down to El Salvador, only 998 miles further south!

It is most likely that we will leave Stolen Kiss there for the summer, up a river. El Salvador has really bounced into marinas and looking after yachties, chasing the big money from the Super Yachts. Good security is provided and we can leave sails, dinghy etc in a locked shed. Local currency is USD, which works for us! We will do a lot of land travel around Central America from there. On our return at the end of 2011, we will make our way down to Panama, perhaps Ecuador, then Galapagos and beyond!

21 Aralık 2010 Salı

Weather sites for Pacific Mexico and Baja

Although in each major centre where yachties gather there is a local Net of VHF 22 that gives weather for the local region. Whilst this is good, the scary thing is that there are many yachts that rely totally on such forecasts. Sites below will assist with gleaning information for yourselves.


Here are some sites to start with:

Big picture stuff

http://www.tropicalstormrisk.com/
Our favourite for tropical information.

http://www.eebmike.com/
Wonderful sat picture and graphics for tropical information and sea
temperature.

http://www.opc.ncep.noaa.gov/
Synoptic situation for Pacific and location of ITCZ

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ensocycle/enso_cycle.shtml

For information regarding the current El Nino/La Nina state and ENSO situation, which then leads into an indication of the hurricane season in the Pacific and Caribbean and conditions in north and south Pacific if you are heading west.

Small picture weather

Grib files from sailmail (at sea) and  http://www.grib.us/  (internet connection) are what we generally use, then match these with the synoptic situation.

http://www.sailflow.com/
Navigate to Sea of Cortez (Baja California) or wherever you are in the US. Sailflow was accurate in the north and south crossings in the Sea of Cortez. Excellent for swell predition.

http://www.buoyweather.com/
Excellent for 2 day forecast for wind and swell and can also sign up for weather for 7 day forecast and access via sailmail.

http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/
Another site for grib data information

http://www.wetsand.com/
Others use this and like it.

http://www.sonrisanet.org/
Geary does a great forecast for the inside and outside of the Baja and Mexican Pacific Coast. Weather is posted on this website and also given on Ham Net in the mornings. See below for Nets.

http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/goeswestpacusir.html
This is a great real time site using GOES imagery giving water vapour. Great to zoom in on Mexcio mainland for chubascos in the summer!!

http://www.clubcruceros.org/
More weather information on this site which is the local site for La Paz.

This site also gives information on times and frequencies for HF nets in the region

3 Kasım 2010 Çarşamba

Plans in the Sand

We splashed down on Guaymas on October 20 and have been putting Stolen Kiss back together again. Adding to our bits and pieces, Peter has done a fabulous job installing our new wind instruments and autopilot. Now we have wind speed..do we want to know how big the gusts are???? Wind direction is a bonus as we can't see the windex unless we stick our headws outside the bimini! We are cruisers now, remember!!! Thanks to Peter, as you could imagine, we  have the best trimmed cruising sails....many people comment on this!

We also have our new headsail and profurl to enjoy! Being actually able to furl the headsail in a growing breeze is a bonus! Our old headsail almost fell apart when we took it down in July. We were surprised that it did not blow itself out. The good bits are now our fore and aft deck covers.

On line, Peter found Stecktronics - a company that sells a LED anchor light and tri colour.  Its pretty neat as it only uses two wires, (which meant we could use the existing anchor light wires) and depending on how many times you flick the switch, you get your tri colour, anchor light on/off as normal, or on/off with sunlight! It also does disco style flash and SOS.

We have finally purchased and picked up our liferaft, going for the Viking, canister, hydrostatic release option for under $3000.  We also had to get a new inner forestay as the lifter driver tried to drive the lifter through it! Peter was just undoing the forestay...luckily. The marina is (hopefully) going to reimberse us. We breathed a sigh of relief when we had our last successful border crossing with our bits and pieces.

Our plan is to depart Guaymas by Nov 7 and head  over to the Baja and down to La Paz;  main purpose to pick up a second solar panel.  Then its back to the Mexican mainland and jump south...all the way to Huatulco, (just south of Acapulco), mostly day sailing. Then its waiting for an important weather window to cross the Gulf of Tehuantepec, which is one of the roughest seas in the world when a gale blows. Mountains are great weather blockers, except for when there is a gap!! We have to watch for building high pressures in the Gulf of Mexico. The winds can reach up to 60 knots, but the largest threat to safety are the short period waves. The tactic is one foot on the beach..which is long, sandy and flat apart from two river mouths.

Heading further south there are the other gap winds called Papagayo winds, which can be a little breezy at 50 knots. With clear skies, there is often no notice of these winds, except perhaps the sand and white water heading towards you if you are near the beach..so there will be no lazy days of sailing around these areas.

So why do we want to do this passage?? Good question!! Heading back into the tropics, there are some nice sandy beaches and interesting places to check out. Theoretically we should have nice northerly winds to push us down and as the ITCZ is its furtherest south in February, it should sit just north of the equator so once through it, we should not have far to go to Ecuador in the 15-25 knot SE breezes behind the it. Easy peasy in theory!

We have a few choices of where to leave Stolen Kiss next year, including Nicaragua, Coast Rica, Panama and Ecuador. Some haul out options and some in the water options. Ecuador is the most favoured at present as it gives us access to travel in South America and although on the equator, the Andes act as a rain shadow here and there are no hurricanes. Although getting the paper work for the Galapagos is lengthy and convoluted, it can be done.

We will do our usual and suck it and see!



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27 Ekim 2010 Çarşamba

Viva Las Vegas


Las Vegas is the showcase of western excesses at its best! Its draw on power alone is incredulous and with all that is Vegas, it’s absolutely fabulous, if not OTT!


The primary aim here is to fleece as much money out of the visitor as possible; even down to the design, smells and other visual senses to lure one into the pleasure pits. The bottom line is that every employee inside the casino you exchange words with, you tip 10-20%, which we guess is ok if you are on a winning streak! Jimmy Buffet’s Margaritaville, (a must for any parrot head!) has the smell of coconut oil to lure the senses!



Las Vegas has adopted and very much incorporated the notion that sex sells. Sin City it is, and anything goes. Even though alcohol consumption is encouraged, which flows through to street drinking, we were surprised to see that sobriety ruled!

The few locals that we did meet to chat to did not like living there, but there were also those who were out to entertain in a different way to make some money. There were many Mexicans lining the footpath along the central strip giving out cards (the size of a credit card) for girls. We figured they must get paid for the cards they give out, drawing your attention by the clicking sound made with their fingers on the corner of the cards. Although we found that to be the major annoyance, they were out there trying to make a living.


Peter drooled over the Ferraris through the window of the shop floor; inside was by appointment only and was not staffed. Immediate (conspicuous!) consumption if you happen to be a big winner…..speaking of which, if you were, anything up to 40-50% tax has to be paid before you received any of your winnings! Early morning in the strip was a little busy with joggers (who were not up gambling all night!) that run in and out of any building orifice they can find.

Nothing was original and travel was made easy as you could see all the sights of Europe in one day! A little odd sing the Eiffel Tower viewable from a Venetian Gondola! The Peter marvelled at the marble look-a-like concrete, appreciating the skill involved in such creations. At least time had been taken to acquire a degree of authenticity!




We met some interesting celebrities and Peter was able to have a little putt, receiving advice from those who know how to do it!



Somehow, I don't think Jenna would have been too interested in where we were off to next!


We spent a day wandering in and out of hotel lobbies; good for people watching and astounding decorations.  Being in a desert, flower scenes were supposed to soothe the senses and with The Bellagio having a more moveable feast with setting the spirit for fall as well as Halloween with their giant pumpkins.


Inside MGM another rainforest café (similar to the one in San Francisco) was a good place to hang out, with Peter being very brave! Even more unusual was the $9 million lion den that housed 6 lions. Mid-morning was obviously nap time!



If nothing else, the fountains outside the Bellagio were something to behold, coming on at sunset every 15 minutes in timing of wonderful classics like Sarah Brightman and Andrea Bocelli’s ‘Time to Say Goodbye’! There was also some great cowboy music in there as well.


Water features were popular throughout the strip, to take one’s mind off being in a desert. Nice grassed areas, on closer inspection, were artificial; a sensible approach and something that Perth should adopt!


We found the M&M shop (Didy..where are you??) and had to try the peanut butter flavour that Barns had alerted us to. Lots of cheap snacks were available to keep sugar levels up and gambling in action. Downtown in Fremont Street, the original gambling centre of Vegas, Peter opted to give his cholesterol a bit of a bash with deep fried Oreos whilst I went for the sedate (if not phallic) chocolate flavoured bananas! The malls there are under cover with various artists in residence, each with their own unique style. Individuals were commissioning art they wanted.


The Stratosphere, doubling as a revolving restaurant and a sky jump platform sat above all the hotels at 1,100 feet. People would wiz past the window whilst you were enjoying a meal. Great view during the day and perhaps even more so at night! As with many other cities in the US, any construction work came to a grinding halt with the financial crisis and Vegas was no exception with ugly concrete hotels in all states of completion. The skyline has been forever changing to make bigger, grander casino hotels with an even better theme than the last.


Whilst we have been in the US, we have heard more news than we care to. There is a lot of focus on Mexico and the Travel Warnings that have been issued by the US Homeland Security. Even though Nogales is mentioned, we have never had any border issues and are removed from any of the violence that has been reported, as are most of the Mexican people.