When we updated you (about a month ago), we were enjoying
the peaceful solitude of Chacala, a small village between Mazatlan and Puerto
Vallarta. Chacala provided our first
taste of what felt to us like “real” cruising (ie “this is what we left home for”) – we were
in a small place (the twelve boats anchored with us were some kind of local
record), we spent our days homeschooling in one of the palapas (thatched roofed
restaurants) that lined the beach, the kids tried their hands at boogie boarding (with surf big enough to thrill them, but not too scary for Mom to watch!), and for once, we found ourselves relaxing and sharing stories with other
cruisers.
It was a far cry from the days in marinas that had preceded
it, where we were working hard to beat the clock to be ready to go
south. It also turned out to be a far
cry from the last four weeks, where we were in another marina, again working to beat the clock so that we could be “anchored out” for
Christmas.
The short story is that we made it. Here is the long story …
The short story is that we made it. Here is the long story …
Before leaving San Diego, we booked eight days at Paradise
Village, a resort marina in Nuevo Vallarta.
With pools, waterslides, tigers, parrots, daily yoga, and recommendations for tradespeople, it had
something for each of us. We knew that
we would have to do some work on the
boat (in fact we had a list of jobs we planned to do), but as ever, we had underestimated how much.
We got our first clue that our “holiday” in the marina
wouldn’t be quite what we had expected when our high water alarm went off about
three hours before our destination. Max
checked down below, and found water and smoke (an odd combination to say the
least) when he opened the compartment behind our bunk in the aft cabin. Once we had shut down the engine and he could
look at it more closely, he found that we were taking on water around our
exhaust pipe. Thankfully, the leak was
slow, and once we shut the engine down, the boat sat high enough in the water
that we had time to think through our response.
Taking stock, the biggest surprise was that it was neither night time
nor rough seas. It was mid-afternoon and
dead calm – not the usual time for things to go wrong! Our resident gymnast (aka Frank) climbed over
the pushpit, down the transom, and pushed one of our cool spongy damage control plugs into the exhaust
pipe and then Max got to work with Rescue
Tape and wrapped the now cool exhaust pipe with it. We were relieved that the repair held, and we made it slowly to
Paradise Village. The marina
office recommended a Canadian (from Kitimat BC) mechanic called Jack, and we now have a shiny new (fabricated for us) stainless steel exhaust pipe. It even has a rubber flap to keep seawater out in following seas, the search for which was the source
of much wasted time before we left Seattle when hunted fruitlessly search for
a flap to fit our old exhaust pipe. Of
course, the new exhaust pipe meant several days of sleeping with a hole in our
transom, several days of the boat smelling of fibreglass, and various poses of
boat yoga as Max worked with Jack and his Frank (not to be confused with our
Frank) and the fabricator to reconnect our engine to the outside world.
Once the new exhaust pipe was in place, it was time to
re-align the shaft. Max had contemplated
taking on this job by himself, but we decided to ask Jack and Frank for assistance. Suffice to say that it took the three of them
all day to complete the job, Jack had to go out twice to buy new tools, and it
was just as well that I took the kids to the pool during the job, or they would
have learned an entire new vocabulary of words to express frustration! Sometimes it is good to ask for assistance!
With our exhaust and shaft in place, the next priority was
to investigate the source of the burnt-out 200A fuse that had slowed our
departure from Cabo San Lucas a few weeks earlier.
We had been running on our #2 Alternator (160 A) since then without incident,
but we wanted our redundancy and capacity back.
Within seconds of running up the engine on our #1 alternator, the
familiar burning smell filled the cabin, and the alternator was too hot to
touch – we had our culprit! Thankfully,
Jack knew of an alternator shop that he trusted to do quick work, and we had
our alternator back (insides completely replaced) the following day. This was good because the following day was three
days before Christmas, and we had children reminding us frequently that they wanted to be anchored out for Christmas. Max also got the grey water system
working again, rebuilt the manual bilge pump and convinced the electric
bilge pump to work again. The electric bilge pump and float switch will
be replaced once Frank shows up with supplies from Canada. The excel spreadsheet of projects still covers several pages ...
Shortly before leaving San Diego, we faced a question common
to every walk of life, but particularly applicable to cruisers – fix or
replace? In our case, it was to do with
our aged (but solid) refrigeration system.
We went with the “fix” option, but we had still been unhappy with the
amount of power it drew and the amount of time it had to run every day. We couldn’t do much about the power draw, but
the daily heating/cooling cycle was something we could influence. When we found out that a friend of ours was
heading to the hardware store to buy 1” thick pink foam for his fridge, we shared
the rental car and the insulation board.
Given that the job required patience and clean hands, we decided that it
would be mine to do … so I spent a day cutting jigsaw puzzle pieces and fitting
them into the freezer. It’s not pretty,
but we have gone from running 30-45 min every 1.5-2 hours to 15 min every three
hours. This makes such a difference when
we need to generate all the power that we use (and since our fridge draws 30
Amps, it is not a trivial thing to reduce its pull on our batteries).
Of course, it was not all maintenance and greasy hands (just
mostly). Max and I had the chance to go to
a Mexican Fiesta (with tickets won on stage at a 3-second karaoke contest …
long story), as a family, we helped to launch baby turtle hatchlings into the ocean, visited tigers and parrots, and even to go to church during advent, where we learned
about families living and working at the local landfill who now have a reason
for hope thanks to some volunteers from Canada and the States.(http://www.familiesatthedump.org/).
Being in one place for awhile also meant we got to spend time with some of our neighbours. Richard and Elaine in Windarra (http://svwindarra.blogspot.mx/) have been mentors to us since we started getting ready to cruise. They also have a Stevens 47 but have had the boat for 12 years, cruised extensively and as two Boeing engineers have a very thoughtful approach to setting up their boat. They visited us in Seattle but it was a treat to spend time with them on their boat to accelerate our learning curve (and drink their G&T's). Many of our friends from the Ha Ha were also there. With Phil from Silhouette we shared a rental car and reprovisioned at Cosco and stocked up on fishing lures and some boat supplies at one the large boating store in Puerto Vallarata.
Being in one place for awhile also meant we got to spend time with some of our neighbours. Richard and Elaine in Windarra (http://svwindarra.blogspot.mx/) have been mentors to us since we started getting ready to cruise. They also have a Stevens 47 but have had the boat for 12 years, cruised extensively and as two Boeing engineers have a very thoughtful approach to setting up their boat. They visited us in Seattle but it was a treat to spend time with them on their boat to accelerate our learning curve (and drink their G&T's). Many of our friends from the Ha Ha were also there. With Phil from Silhouette we shared a rental car and reprovisioned at Cosco and stocked up on fishing lures and some boat supplies at one the large boating store in Puerto Vallarata.
Finally, days after we had first thought we might leave Paradise Village, we set off on the afternoon of 23 Dec (our
only real deadline was to be anchored out for Christmas, remember) for La Cruz,
six miles and a world away. La Cruz is
kind like a mix of the two worlds we have seen so far – much more built up than
Chacala, but nothing like Paradise Village.
La Cruz is still an active fishing town, and when the new marina was
built a few years ago, they worked closely with local fishing community to provide a
daily fish market and a weekly artisan market (looking forward to this on
Sunday!). We are going to be here for a couple
of weeks at least. The plan is to relax, let our souls catch up, do the minimum of maintenance that we can, and generally spend time as a family. The location of our "Christmas holiday" is different from other years, but the intent is the same :)
Now let's wander through the month with some photos ... starting in (or according to our GPS on) Isla Isabela. Much of the chart data is off by a mile or so so careful visual or radar navigation is the order of the day when close. At anchor the GPS regularly shows us half a mile inland.
Here is one who got away ... literally. We hooked our first Dorado enroute to Isla Isabela, took its picture, even videoed it, but it got away before we could net it and land it on the deck. Too bad, because they are great to BBQ. We had learned a few things since then, so the next one we hook will have more of a fight to escape from us!
After our Dorado escaped, we caught three good-sized (over 24" long) Tuna (Bonito/Skipjack) in the following hour, so it was still a good day of fishing :)
Mom always gets the job of filleting the fish...
Isla Isabela is famous for the blue-footed boobies and frigate birds that roost there. The air was constantly full of them.
Now let's wander through the month with some photos ... starting in (or according to our GPS on) Isla Isabela. Much of the chart data is off by a mile or so so careful visual or radar navigation is the order of the day when close. At anchor the GPS regularly shows us half a mile inland.
Here is one who got away ... literally. We hooked our first Dorado enroute to Isla Isabela, took its picture, even videoed it, but it got away before we could net it and land it on the deck. Too bad, because they are great to BBQ. We had learned a few things since then, so the next one we hook will have more of a fight to escape from us!
After our Dorado escaped, we caught three good-sized (over 24" long) Tuna (Bonito/Skipjack) in the following hour, so it was still a good day of fishing :)
Mom always gets the job of filleting the fish...
Isla Isabela is famous for the blue-footed boobies and frigate birds that roost there. The air was constantly full of them.
They are not particularly afraid of humans, and let people approach their nests very closely for photos.
At the center of Isla Isabela is a volcanic crater lake (Lago Cráter). We hiked there, but it sure wasn't a place to swim (the island is basically a big bird cage and all the run-off goes to the crater lake...)
After our hike, we had a chance to play on the beach with our friends from the other two boats in the anchorage
Hermit crab!
The
anchorage was rocky and we did not have a particularly secure spot, so Max had stayed on the boat when the rest of us
went ashore. Here are the kayakers returning.
The water at Isla Isabela was incredibly clear - we could see (and try to avoid) the rocks on the bottom when we anchored.
Johnathan and Frank enjoying a snack of kiwis.
Johnathan studying up on Pacific Mexico. The anchorage at Isla Isabella is visible in the background.
Cold water and fresh limes ... crafted by Victoria ... yummy!
After a day at anchor at Isla Isabela, we set off on a night passage for Chacala, where we arrived just after daybreak the following day. Now here is a view worth selling your house and leaving home for (the green-roofed building was our "school" for the week) ...
The palapas provided a great place to relax and watch the sun go down ...
The view from the dingy beach path. We could sometimes bring our dingy right to the main beach, but when the surf got too big (evidenced by waves taller than people and/or other boats swamping their dingies) we would bring our dingy to a little inlet around the corner and walk to the beach. Much less drama that way!
Victoria still loves to draw ... this lovely sketch was done on a day when Mom thought we were studying Math!
Max and the kids returning home towing the new surf board we were given ...
... and Johnathan trying it out with Frank.
Our favourite taco shop in Chicala.
Once we got to Paradise Village, it was time to decorate for Christmas ... our mast, Frank's sleeping bag, and Victoria and Johnathan's ingenuity provided us with a tree...
Mexican Fiesta night at Paradise Village!
And the silly hats on the kids' heads the next morning
A couple of shots of iguanas at Paradise Village. One morning we spotted six iguanas in this bush!
A few shots of the baby Olive Ridley turtles (day-old hatchlings). We rubbed our hands with wet sand to remove our human smells, then we let them go near the waterline at sunset ...
The next day, we studied a little more about them during our school time, and made some out of beeswax. We have also heard a lot about missing snow this year ...
Victoria's handy-work - a vase of flowers.
Our school room in Paradise Village (the hotel lobby), and a picture of the new generation of writer at work (photo by Johnathan)
A view of the back of our fridge compressor ... the funny smell at night and the non-starting compressor in the morning were the clues we had to go on to find out why wirenuts are no longer "code" on a sailboat! All wire nuts have been replaced with proper connectors. These ones were hidden in the electric motor.
The view inside one corner of our freezer. The new pink foam means that our fridge runs soooo much less than it used to (which means that our engine also runs sooo much less than it used to!)
Repairs done, we made it to La Cruz in time for sunset on Dec 23 - with time to finish our shopping on Christmas Eve ... our usual just-in-time project management at its best!
Ready for Santa!
Lots of lights so Santa can find our boat
Sunrise on Christmas morning (at anchor at La Cruz). Victoria woke up early to take this picture, but she waited until almost 8am to wake the rest of the family. (Thank you Victoria!)
We have enjoyed our first few days in La Cruz, with watching sealife from the cockpit (dolphins, rays, and even a whale who passed through one night), fishing (there are loads of sardines taking refuge from the pelicans and boobies under our boat, and the kids lean over and catch them with their little nets), and paddling (Max, Victoria and Johnathan entered a fun paddling competition last evening at the local marina). We'll be here til Frank comes back in January, then we'll head back to Paradise Village for more repairs and school work.
Today we are going for a day-sail to run our engine, charge our batteries (with solar, wind, and our improved refrigeration, we haven't run it since we arrived on 23 Dec - six days ago!), and maybe even see the whales that come here to have their calves.
~Liz
Thanks for the update post Liz. We last saw you entering Banderas Bay after your high water alarm excitement. The kids look like they had a wonderful Christmas!
ReplyDeleteShindig is in Las Hadas for New Years and will start moving slowly North soon. We hope to see you along the way.
Rob/Nancy
What a wonderful life. I have been following you since the beginning or your trek, and the envy grows :)
ReplyDeleteHave a great new year and thanks for the updates.
Jim in Ottawa
Glad to see you guys had success and made a BIG improvement on your freezer and fridge. Wish I could say the same.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you guys had success and made a BIG improvement to your freezer and fridge. Wish I could say the same.
ReplyDeleteI *love* that you have a favourite taco shop because
ReplyDelete(a) it means that are several shops, and
(b) you've tried them, and
(c) that you've sampled enough to decide on a favourite!
I remember fondly the street stand tacos from Tijuana.
Hello from Victoria, to Victoria and Jonathan. It was great to see you two on the dock at La Cruz Marina on Feb. 1 for my birthday!.
ReplyDeleteKeep smiling and don't get too far behind on your school work (yeh, ...right!). And don't forget the sunscreen!
Joe