Sea Rover is finally getting to really stretch her legs. She doesn't seem too happy about it though. Day 1 started with a required stop in Bahia Falsa to fix a blown hose in the watermaker system. This fix was certainly required as we were fully out of water. After that quick fix we left La Paz in the dark and started our slow bash north to get around the point and turn south. Big seas and wind on the nose made progress slow and when we finally were able to get the sails up disaster struck as the lazy jacks got tangled in the reefing lines preventing us from shortening sail. At the same time the bilge alarm was constantly going off so we had carnage down below and on deck making the captain wonder if he shouldn't call uncle and give up on the dream to go to South America. A quick use of the barf bucket cleared his head and the boat settled down with only occasional blips from the bilge alarm due to gravity having enough power to actually move the float high without any water. By 4 am Sea Rover was happily making progress south and the off watch came on deck bleary eyed and apprehensive not knowing what else would be thrown at them. Their fears were unfounded as the remainder of that watch was uneventful if not sort of pleasant.
Daylight brought on calm enough conditions in light breezes to contemplate finishing the Hydrovane setup in order to get off dependence off the autopilot. Alas this was not to be as the top of the head unit is completely frozen due to it's lack of use by the previous owner. Yet another job to tackle in the wonderfull anchorage of Frailes, hopefully our last stop before heading offshore from Cabo.
Stay tuned till tomorrow for another episode of Sea Rover vs Gary where the hero battles unprecedented odds to leave Mexico.
----------
radio email processed by SailMail
for information see: http://www.sailmail.com
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Friday, December 8, 2017
We wait....
Well, it's just been confirmed that I am the bad influence on the weather and not Karina. We have been sitting in La Paz for the past week and now that Sea Rover is checked out of the country, provisioned and put back together (more or less) we now need to wait for the weather.
Its currently blowing 30 knots in La Paz harbour, which for those who know the area is bad. Really Bad. Luckily this norther event didn't happen at the beginning of the week when we had the extreme tides otherwise Sea Rover would probably be uninhabitable.
Anyway, we hope to leave tomorrow morning on our big adventure. Having said that, we hoped we could leave today too. Keep an eye on the tracker, we'll be sure to activate it when we actually get out of here.
You can find where we are here:
Sea Rover InReach Tracker Page
Its currently blowing 30 knots in La Paz harbour, which for those who know the area is bad. Really Bad. Luckily this norther event didn't happen at the beginning of the week when we had the extreme tides otherwise Sea Rover would probably be uninhabitable.
Anyway, we hope to leave tomorrow morning on our big adventure. Having said that, we hoped we could leave today too. Keep an eye on the tracker, we'll be sure to activate it when we actually get out of here.
You can find where we are here:
Sea Rover InReach Tracker Page
Monday, November 27, 2017
It floats!
Hi everyone.
No time to post pictures but I figured it was important to update everyone on Sea Rover's status.
After a gruelling 2 month refit Sea Rover launched last Friday and is floating at the dock in Guaymas. Karina flew down to make sure I got everything done and has just arrived back in Vancouver where she will work till she joins us in the Galapagos.
We hope to head to La Paz tomorrow where we will pick up the remainder of our crew at the end of the week. We have an expected departure from Mexico planned for sometime next week.
Given we are leaving Mexico for a long series of offshore passages to Chile, we have made some changes in our communication gear. Stay tuned for updates on how to track us. You can always check out our "Where are We?" page for the latest on how to follow our progress in this year's adventure.
More posts are coming
Stay tuned.
No time to post pictures but I figured it was important to update everyone on Sea Rover's status.
After a gruelling 2 month refit Sea Rover launched last Friday and is floating at the dock in Guaymas. Karina flew down to make sure I got everything done and has just arrived back in Vancouver where she will work till she joins us in the Galapagos.
We hope to head to La Paz tomorrow where we will pick up the remainder of our crew at the end of the week. We have an expected departure from Mexico planned for sometime next week.
Given we are leaving Mexico for a long series of offshore passages to Chile, we have made some changes in our communication gear. Stay tuned for updates on how to track us. You can always check out our "Where are We?" page for the latest on how to follow our progress in this year's adventure.
More posts are coming
Stay tuned.
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Why We Love the Sea of Cortez
While we are really glad we spent time on the mainland
Mexican coast this year, we’ve been reminded these past two weeks of why we
love the Sea of Cortez.
1.
Mobula Rays
Mobula rays are a type of manta ray that frequent the waters
of the Sea of Cortez. Typically they
travel alone, and can often be seen leaping out of the water for reasons
unknown. Unfortunately there hasn’t been
a lot of research done on these wonderful creatures and so many of their
behaviours are a mystery. While we’ve
seen many rays in our 3 years in the Sea, this year was spectacular.
It turns out that April is ‘mating month’ and
so the rays have been congregating in huge groups. The group circles under the water while
several rays at a time leap out of the water and do a belly flop. We speculate that this is part of the mating
ritual – may the best belly flop win!
The rays then seem to pair off and there is a frenzy of activity on the
surface as they ‘chase’ each other around.
My friend Tanya and I happened upon one of these groups
while kayaking off of Isla Espiritu Santo a few weeks ago. Being pre-occupied, the rays let us get quite
close, while they traveled underwater in a tight circle. I kayaked into the middle of the fray and was
caught in the whirlpool caused by their circling. They spun my boat in slow circles for at
least 2 minutes. It was a magical
experience. Unfortunately neither of us
had brought our cameras with me that day...
![]() |
Rays underwater - the video is much better... |
As luck would have it, we’d been lucky enough to encounter a
number of these ray groupings over the last few weeks. It is just nice to sit and watch them, which
Gary and I have been able to do in pretty much every anchorage we’ve gone into
in the last 2 weeks.
2.
Grebes
Grebes are pretty common in the Sea of Cortez, but there
seem to be more of them than usual. They
have provided endless entertainment as we’ve watched them all dive as a group,
and come up as a group. Some of the
groups we’ve seen have been huge – up to several hundred birds.
3.
Dolphins
Despite all the dolphin shows we’ve been privy to in the
last 3 years, it is still a thrill when a pod stops by to play. Spinner dolphins are especially fun to watch
as they like to leap out of the water around the boat.
4.
Whales
We’ve been lucky in the whale department these last few
weeks as well. On a quiet motor a few
days ago we encountered a curious Minke whale.
He surfaced just off the port side and so we stopped the boat and
floated while he circled us 3 times. On
his last pass, he was less than a boat length away. While only about 30 feet or so, he was still
very impressive. I’m glad he was only
curious!
Minke Whale |
We’ve also seen a number of humpback whales on our trip
north. We’ve seen them leaping and
slapping the water with their fins. All
very cool.
5.
Turtles
This has been a great year for turtles. We’ve never seen so many, both in the south
and in the Sea! Every anchorage has had
at least 2 turtles swimming around. I spent one day trying to get a good picture
of one, but they are shy creatures.
Sorry, the picture here is the best I got.
6.
Expect the Unexpected
This morning the cry of gulls brought Gary and I up to the cockpit,
where we watched a couple of gulls force a vulture into the water. Vultures are not sea birds. They aren’t very good swimmers and can’t take
off from the water. So basically the
poor guy was screwed. The gulls
continued to dive bomb the poor thing while he bobbed in the water. He eventually doggy-paddled his was over to
our boat and seemed desperate to get out.
Gary got a bucket and I got into the dinghy. The vulture came right over to me and latched
onto the side of the bucket. I then
semi-scooped him out of the water while he clung to the side with his wings
spread wide for balance. The gulls
looked on in disgust.
Now what? I was
sitting in the dinghy with a huge vulture on the other side of a bucket from
me. I gently put the bucket in the
bottom of the dinghy. While he made a
move from the bucket to the dinghy seat, I made a hasty retreat. He then sat on the dinghy seat looking
pathetic for the next few hours while his feathers dried. The gulls were incredibly persistent and
continued to dive bomb him at regular intervals. If we heard them coming, either Gary or I
would go and stand on deck, which would deter the gulls from a full
attack. I don’t think we made any gull
friends today.
After about 3 hours he did a test flight and landed on the
solar panel. After a quick thank you, he
took off for shore, with about 5 gulls in hot pursuit. The gulls forced him back into the water just
as he got to shore, but he managed to crawl up onto the rocks. The last we saw he was cowering beside a rock
while the gulls continued to harass him.
The lesson here: don’t
piss off a gull. They know how to hold
grudges.
7.
Interesting Sites
We toured 2 separate abandoned salt mines over the last two
weeks. We enjoyed poking through the old
buildings and looking at the abandoned equipment. Both mines closed in the 1980’s and it was
amazing just how poorly the buildings have fared. A good reminder that everything returns to
dust at the end of the day...
8.
Breath Taking Scenery
It’s the Sea of Cortez... Need I say more?
Our time here is almost up.
Tomorrow we will cross the Sea of Cortez back to Guyamas, where we will
work furiously for the next week to put the boat to bed for another year.
Overall it has been a great season. We travelled to some wonderful new areas,
swam in warm waters, made new friends, experienced a ton of wildlife and
traveled some major distances (roughly 3300 nm). Unfortunately we didn’t end up sailing as
much as we’d have liked, but the gentler weather we experienced instead has
been a nice change. We’ll definitely
miss Mexico next year when we leave to explore countries further south.
Sunday, April 2, 2017
Our First Sewing Project - 18 Months in the Making
After our first year of Cruising, Gary decided we would buy
a sewing machine and start making “useful things” for the boat. The first project he had in mind was
replacing our ageing stack pack (the bag that holds the main sail on the boom
and protects it from UV). I thought this
was kind of ambitious for people who’d never touched a sewing machine before,
but agreed we should give it a try.
So much material... so little space |
First things first.
We needed a sewing machine. And
not just any machine, but one that would sew sail cloth and multiple layers of
heavy duty canvas material. As you can
imagine, there aren’t very many machines that fit the bill. While most Cruisers spend the big bucks and
buy a Sailrite machine, Gary didn’t want to spend the mucho dinero required to
purchase one (they almost never come up for sale second hand, and if they do,
they are sold instantly). Instead, he
began scouring all the sewing shops in Vancouver for the right machine. It turns out that shopping for a sewing
machine as a man has its challenges. In
every store we went into the sales staff would immediately try to talk to me,
not him! I’d stare at them blankly and
then Gary would start talking the sewing machine lingo, saying things like “does
it have a pressure foot?” and the sales staff’s eyes would widen in shock... It was an entertaining time.
After much searching, he settled on a 1940’s vintage German-made
Pfaff 130. She is a beauty – black and
sleek, but obviously likes her beer and bratwursts, as she is a hefty one. I can barely lift her. Even though she was built in the 40’s she
came with an electric foot pedal. We
thought this was great until Gary used it for the first time and it started to
smoke in our living room... So, his first task in his new career as a ‘sewing
machine repair man’ was to re-wire the foot pedal.
Making fasteners |
Gary then spent the summer searching the internet and buying
all the materials we’d need to build our stack pack. Even though we didn’t buy a Sailrite machine,
we spent many dineros buying all the bits and pieces from them that would be required
to complete the project. There were
zippers, fasteners, the material itself, the instruction manual, basting tape,
pins, needles for the machine, velcro, webbing, the list went on and on. We bundled everything into boxes and drove it
down to the boat in Mexico.
November 2015: The
project began. We used one of the big empty
rooms at the Marina Fonatur in Guaymas to spread the material and cut out the
pattern following the directions in the Sailrite “how to make a stack pack”
manual. We measured, basted, and
cut. Then we started to sew. And sew she did! In fact, she sewed so fast that you couldn’t
feed the material into the machine fast enough!
Since we were dealing with 18 foot long pieces of material (and doing
the sewing in the salon area of our boat), this was a problem. It didn’t matter what Gary tried, the speed
was either dead slow (hand cranking the wheel) or lightening fast. It turns out Gary is like my mother and you
don’t want to be near him when he has a sewing machine in front of him.
Needless to say, I started to question whether we should have just had a canvas
maker make the stack pack for us...Nevertheless, he persevered and managed to
get about half way through the project by the end of the season.
Summer 2016: Over the
winter Gary had investigated ways to make the machine run slower (ie, in
control!). A friend of ours had a
similar problem and had added an extra gear to the machine. We got the name of the guy who did the work
and Gary contacted him when we got back to BC. The guy was based in Duncan, so Gary put the
sewing machine in a rolly suitcase and wheeled it onto the ferry and over to
the island. He borrowed my parents car
and delivered it to the shop. The guy
added the extra gear, and it worked like a charm.
Winter 2017: It look
us a while to get back to the project this year. We spent a day in Guaymas in November cutting
out the final pieces we needed, but now we were down to the hard part. Joining the 2 pieces together (of course we
didn’t end up following the pattern), fitting it to the sail, and adding all
the bits and pieces required to attach it to the boom. The priority of the project increased in
January when the old stack pack finally blew apart in spectacular fashion. So in early March we decided the job had to
get finished.
Adding the fiddly bits |
We pulled out the machine and tried the sew the first seam,
only to discover that the machine had completely seized up over the season and
wouldn’t move! Gary reprised his role as
‘sewing machine repair man’ and spent a day taking it apart, oiling everything
and then putting it back together.
Miraculously, it worked!
We then got sidetracked with things like sailing north, but
finally managed to get back to the project this week. It took us a day to join the critical front
and back pieces together (I was quite proud of us at the end of that), and then
it took us a day to mock up how it would fit on the boom. We took final measurements, and spent 9 hours
on Friday doing all the fiddly bits.
Gary doesn’t do well with fiddly things, so I ended up helping on the
machine (usually he doesn’t let me touch his baby). By 6pm it was done.
Doesn't this look like fun? |
Now the install. Conditions
weren’t exactly conducive to trying to do anything on deck, but we both just
wanted to get it done. The south wind
was howling in the anchorage and it took 2 of us to stop the stack pack from
being blown overboard. Gary then broke 2
drill bits and 4 screws trying to install 2 fasteners on the end of the boom... While we battled with the cover, Sea Rover
waltzed all over the La Paz anchorage as the tide changed and the wind started
to fight against the current. Finally, well
after the sun had said goodnight, the install was complete.
It looks pretty good if I do say so myself, especially for 2
newbies who really didn’t know what they were doing. There are still a few tweaks to make, but we’ll
live with it for the rest of the season and make some changes next year.
The finished product |
For the first time ever we are a fully colour coordinated
boat, as our bimini, genoa UV strip and stack pack are all grey to match our
decks. I made the mistake of pointing
out that all the fenders that hang off the back of the boat are still blue...and
I think that planted the seed in Gary’s mind as to our next sewing project – grey
fender covers! Aaagggghhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Friday, March 24, 2017
The Zen (Not) of Passage-Making North
Old 1700 Church in San Blas |
We broke the passage into 3 sections:
Leg One: A long day sail up to the town of San Blas, 60 nm
north of La Cruz
We arrived at the river mouth at about 9pm and so had to
negotiate the river bar and very shallow depths in the dark. Our plan was to follow our old track on the
chart plotter from when were where last there in December/January. Unfortunately it appears that in the last 2
months the Navy had moved one of the channel buoys… you guessed it, to directly
onto the path of our old track! This
caused a few moments of hysterics while I yelled at Gary to turn
hard to starboard and he resolutely continued on the ‘track’. The mounting panic in my voice obviously had
an effect as he did finally turn to starboard… and we cleared the buoy by about
2 feet.
Blue-footed Booby |
Leg Two: A long day
sail out to Isla Isabel, 40 nm NW of San Blas
We spent the morning motoring in calm seas while dodging
long lines. The winds then blew between
7 and 13 knots all afternoon from the exact direction we were trying to go, but
we had a beautiful sail almost all the way there. We had to turn on the motor for the last 2
miles as the island seemed to have a force field around it. No matter what tack we were on, we kept
getting headed away from the island… Thank god for Myrtle (our trusty diesel
engine). Upon arrival, Gary jumped in
the water to survey the bottom for a sandy spot to anchor (the bottom tends to
be mostly anchor-eating rock piles and so some reconnaissance was required). We had the hook down and set just as the sun
went down.
Baby Boobies at Isla Isabel |
In the afternoon I coaxed Gary into the water for what will probably be our last warm water snorkel of the year. The visibility was incredible and we were rewarded by swimming with literally hundreds of fish and one turtle.
Twin Boobies |
The only downside to the island was the seas and swell. Isla Isabel has 2 very exposed anchorages and
so is susceptible to the whims of the ocean.
Conditions were extremely calm during our time there, but a slight SW
swell made it uncomfortable, to say the least.
We kept joking that is was like we were already on passage! Still worth the stop though.
Leg Three: Isla
Isabel to La Paz, 310 nm
As going north in strong winds is very difficult because of
the short, choppy seas that you have to beat into, we agreed to do the passage
in calm conditions. This weather window was
as calm as it ever gets. There had been
no systems in the Sea of Cortez for over a week, and there was no big ocean
swell coming into the area. Most of the
boats travelling north chose this week to do the crossing. We knew it was going to be a light air
passage, but we agreed to sail whenever we could make over 3 knots per hour,
and to motor the rest of the time.
We left Isla Isabel and immediately put up the sails as there was a bit of wind. Unfortunately the wind was directly on the nose… But, we sailed anyway and slowly tacked our way up towards Mazatlan. I think Gary was hoping to sail the entire way to La Paz, but after 13 hours of sailing that day and only moving 25 nm in the correct direction towards La Paz (out of 310 nm), it soon became clear that it was going to take us a lifetime to actually sail there.
We left Isla Isabel and immediately put up the sails as there was a bit of wind. Unfortunately the wind was directly on the nose… But, we sailed anyway and slowly tacked our way up towards Mazatlan. I think Gary was hoping to sail the entire way to La Paz, but after 13 hours of sailing that day and only moving 25 nm in the correct direction towards La Paz (out of 310 nm), it soon became clear that it was going to take us a lifetime to actually sail there.
I’m all about progress on a passage. Yes, I try to be Zen about it - after all, we
take our house with us when we sail and so have everything that we need to
live. But I just can’t get past not making
way towards our destination. So I guess
I need to work on the Zen-thing…
Pod of Pantropical Dolphins on Passage |
We had originally planned on stopping at an anchorage called Muertos, about 60 nm south of La Paz, but as we were going to get there after dark and we now had enough diesel in the tank to make it, we decided to keep going overnight all the way to La Paz. We actually had a great sail up Cerralvo Channel and added another 20nm of sailing towards our destination. We arrived in La Paz by 8am.
Overall the passage took 72 hours. 48 hours of them were under power (contributing to 240nm towards our destination) and 24 were under sail (contributing to 55nm towards our destination). We basically used an entire tank of fuel to get us from La Cruz to La Paz. Unheard of for us. Gary is horrified over what this does to our sailing/motoring numbers this year, but I’m just happy we got here in 3 days versus 10. Three days was definitely long enough.
We are now in La Paz, anchored in our usual spot off of the
main marina. We must be back in the Sea
as the water temperature is down to 21oC, we’ve had to put on sweaters during
the day, and it is blowing like hell (yup, a Norther).
We will be in La Paz for 10 days or so finishing up some
boat projects (like the stack pack for the mainsail we started sewing last
year). We will leave La Paz April 1st
and sail with some friends from Vancouver who have rented a catamaran for a
week. We will then continue north up
towards Guaymas and put the boat to bed by the end of April. Hopefully we’ll start to see some southerly
winds by the time we have to head north.
Fingers crossed. Myrtle could use
a break.
Monday, March 13, 2017
The Perfect Combination...
...Warm Weather, Warm Seas and Gentle Winds
Part One:
After a cold and windy season in the Sea of
Cortez last year we decided to travel south in search of warmer weather and
warmer seas. I’m happy to announce that
we have been successful in our quest and have spent the last 3 months on the
Mexican mainland coast between San Blas and Manzanillo.
We arrived in the area mid-December, and
after a quick trip to La Cruz (near Puerto Vallarta) to visit friends, headed
up to the town of San Blas. We spent a
week working on the boat and exploring this lovely little Mexican town. While we were there I convinced Gary to do an
inland river to tour to see the crocodiles that populate the area. The tour did not disappoint! We saw several baby crocs as well as a couple
of the big boys. The tour turned around
at a crocodile reserve where you could get up close and personal with your
favourite croc with nothing but a chain link fence between you and the
beast. You could even pet them if you
wished…
We left the boat at the marina in San Blas
and flew home to Vancouver for a cold, snowy Christmas. Gary returned in early January, while I
suffered through the horrendous weather in the Pacific NW for another month. I was certainly happy to return to the boat
at the end of January!
Barra de Navidad from the Hotel/Marina |
Hotel Attached to the Marina in Barra |
I met up with Gary in a town called Barra
de Navidad. It is a wonderful place just north of Manzanillo. It is the
only completely protected anchorage on the mainland Mexican coast. In addition, it has a fabulous marina
attached to a world class hotel. As the two halves of the town are located on either side of the lagoon, there is a flotilla of water taxis that service the area. While they are there primarily to take the locals from one part of town to another, they will also take the Cruisers into town or back to the boat for a very reasonable fee (about $1 per trip). Very convenient! We
split our time between the calm lagoon anchorage and the marina, where we
enjoyed the pool facilities to their max.
It was expensive, but worth it!
One
of the best things about Barra is the French Baker who sells his goodies from
his panga 5 days a week. He visits both the
marina and the anchorage, which was both a good and bad thing, as we ate way
too many chocolate croissants while we were there!
Chocolate Croissants, Anyone? |
My friend Libby joined us for a week in
early February. We enjoyed the marina
for a few days and then sailed up to a bay called Tenacatita, about 15nm north
of Barra. We put Libby to work doing
some boat jobs (thanks for the anchor chain splice and winch cleaning Libby!)
but also spent a few days snorkeling and enjoying the beach. We survived several surf landings and didn’t
manage to break her this year (except for a slightly damaged toe). At some point she'll forgive Gary for the long walk into Colimilla when we could have taken a water taxi...
Guest-Labour |
We decided Barra would be our turn-around
point for the year. We spent about a week back in Tenacatita after
Libby left enjoying the daily routine of surf landing the dinghy to get to shore,
walking the beach, playing bocce and hanging out at the palapa restaurant on
the beach with all the other Cruisers.
Then a big up-welling from the ocean brought in a nasty algae bloom and
dropped the water temperature by 4oC. Clearly
it was time to start heading north back to the Sea of Cortez.
Part Two: The Slow Trip North Begins
Blow Hole in Paraiso |
We left Tenacatita during a period of
unsettled weather. Strong southerly
winds, huge seas and thunderstorms were forecast. While everyone headed south back to Barra for protection from the ‘storm’, we of course went north. Luckily the ‘storm’ didn’t end up traveling
as far south as originally predicted and so we were able to spend 2 nights in a
‘calm weather only’ anchorage called Paraiso.
Gary and Karen had stopped in this anchorage on one of their awful sails
south the month before, and had spent a very uncomfortable night in this very
tight spot with 2 other boats. They
also had our famous ‘no water through the engine’ issue on the way into the bay
and so had to sail-to-anchor as the conditions were too rough to attempt to fix
the issue in the open ocean. Now, this
anchorage is small. When we entered the
bay under very calm conditions I was worried we wouldn’t have enough room to
turn the boat around without running into the rock reefs on either side of the
bay. Needless to say I felt pretty sick
looking at Gary and Karen's sail track from the previous month on our chart plotter... It is a testament to Gary’s good sailing
skills that they and Sear Rover made it into the anchorage unscathed!
Sea Foam in Paraiso |
Despite the presence of a small hotel on
the beach, the anchorage has a very remote feeling to it. It is fairly open to the swell and so the
waves tend to crash on the rocks surrounding the bay and on the beach. As we were the only boat in the bay we were
able to set a stern anchor to keep us pointed into the swell at all times. As a result, we spent 2 pretty comfortable
days exploring the area. We kayaked and
snorkeled, enjoyed a wonderful sunset and watched the bioluminescence in the
water, as well as a lightening storm off in the distance.
We felt like we were the only people on the
coast (which we pretty much were as everyone else was in Barra or in Puerto
Vallarta). It was quite magical.Unsettled Weather in Paraiso |
Dinner on the Beach in Perula |
From Paraiso we moved on to a bay called
Chamela, the last anchorage before you have to round Cabo Corrientes. Being a Cape, Corrientes tends to have big
winds and uncomfortable seas associated with it. We liked Chamela so much we ended up spending
a week there. We made daily trips into
the town of Perula for ice cream, despite the dinghy surf landing it required. We almost flipped the dinghy upside down on
several occasions, but luckily only managed to either fill the dinghy with
water or get very, very wet. All in all
it was pretty fun.
Hungry Hermits |
As conditions were calm we spent one day
anchored in a set of islands in the bay with the crews of Kialoa (Tanya) and
Seadra (Ed). Kayaking around the island
with Tanya, dinner on the beach, watching thousands of hermit crabs pick apart a tortilla chip, and seeing an octopus while snorkeling were
the highlights. What an amazing place.
All too soon it was time to head north back
up to Puerto Vallarta. For once we
managed to pick the right weather window and had a good upwind sail almost all
the way to Cabo Corrientes. We even
heard whales calling through the hull! The
conditions couldn’t have been more calm going around the notorious Cape at
midnight. It was like glass. The wind then picked up enough to enable us
to sail up Banderas Bay. We arrived and
anchored in La Cruz at dawn.
We’ve been based in La Cruz for the last 2
weeks. My sister rented a condo in
nearby Bucerias and invited my parents down for the week so we hung out with
them and did boat jobs (never ending).
As La Cruz is a pretty rolly anchorage, especially in the afternoon,
we’ve been treating ourselves to a week in the marina. It made it much easier to get the family on
board. We are now just waiting for some
repair work on our genoa to be completed (hopefully on tomorrow??), and we will
start the long trek north back up to La Paz and then Guaymas. Only 750 nm to go!
Impressions of Mainland Mexico:
Despite being lovely and warm, with
predictable afternoon winds and calm nights, the mainland Mexican coast is a
challenging place to Cruise. Unlike the
Sea of Cortez, there are very few truly protected anchorages. Most anchorages are fully open to the Pacific
Ocean. This makes for some absolutely
stunning beaches, but means the anchorages are rolly and going to shore requires
a surf landing in the dinghy. At anchor,
the boat never stops moving. While this
motion doesn’t bother me, it drives Gary bananas. After a horrendous January battling contrary
winds and rolly seas, Gary was pretty much done with this coast. Luckily a few weeks of calm seas in Barra de
Navidad, plus improvements to our “flopper stoppers” (which do just that – stop
the boat from flopping from side-to-side at anchor) have helped to change his
perspective and he has grown to like it here as much as I do. The weather helps too.
We used to think that all the sailors that
came to this coast for the winter were ‘wussy’ and that we were the tough ones by staying in
the Sea of Cortez all season. While the
Sea of Cortez certainly has its challenges, travelling 900nm south and then
900nm north again 3 months later isn’t that easy either, as we are now
discovering.
Overall, we are both glad we made the
effort to come to this coast. It has
been a really rewarding trip. We will certainly miss the warm water, sunshine and easy lifestyle next year when we leave Mexico
for waters further afield...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)