GODZILLA
Who would name a boat Godzilla?.?
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Tenacatita and the return north.....
I left Barra de Navidad late January for the trip to Tenacatita, having heard lots of wonderful things about this place. It's about 20 miles north of Manzanillo. It's a good size bay appx. 3x3 miles overall. During August of 2010 a developer in Guadalahara made a land-grab in one section of it , bulldozing palapa restaurants, small hotels and displacing all the locals and some expats who lived in particular portion of the bay. The main anchorage , 2 miles east, was not affected. There are still a few hotels around, plus one really good palapa restaurant.
Going ashore requires a beach landing here. Every day at 2 p.m. most of the cruisers gather for some beach games and social time at the beach palapa. As each dingy comes ashore thru the surf, they are given a grade as to how they landed. My personal scores will NOT be recounted here, LOL
One day, a fellow cruiser named Don (Aussie) set up a beach Cricket game and we all play on the beach. Interesting game, but I'm not sure how it would stack up with the origional!
On Friday afternoons there is a dingy raft-up where one person anchors their dingy and the rest tie up to them. It's quite a sight and sometimes there are 60 people, all tied together having a great time, talking about whatever the topic is for the day.
By early Febuary I was starting to feel the tug from home. Plus , someone had crashed into the fuel dock in Barra de Navidad so diesel fuel was only available at the Pemex station nearby. Since I need a LOT more than can be hauled in 5 gallon jugs, it was time to head north while I still had enough to return to Puerto Vallarta.
First I made the 30 mile run north back to Chamela on Super Bowl Sunday. While I wasn't able to watch the game, I DID follow it on-line. Amazing how technology was made this available, even while at sea!!! Next day I left at first light for Ipala, 47 miles further north. Ipala is , or was, a good place to anchor up for the day so that one could round Cabo Corrientes in the early morning, when wind and sea are calmest. So far the wnd had been fairly light, but there was a big swell from the north, which made the ride fairly uncomfortable.
When I arrived off Ipala at 2 p.m., I found the small cove completely filled with Oyster pens. It's a really small place to begin with and having all the pens there was NOT what I had hoped to find. That forced me to continue north toward the cape at the worst possible time of day.
As soon as I left Ipala the wind began to increase. I closed all windows and ports, went into the main cabin where the ride would be dryer and have less motion and crossed my fingers. I figured, since it was only 13 miles to the Cape, and I had little choice, that I'd just plow on. And plow I DID!!!
By the time I was 8 miles off the cape, Godzilla was pretending to be a submarine. Wind was gusting to 25 knots and the seas were very steep. Along here the wind is from the northwest, but the current is from the south. Not the worst seas i've encountered, but it was a rollercoaster ride for the next two hours.
As soon as I came level with the cape the seas and wind dropped and I altered course for La Cruz, arriving there just as the sun set. I radioed as I approached the jetty and the marina staff told me where an empty slip was. I was dead tired, but happy to be tied to a dock for a while!!!!
Going ashore requires a beach landing here. Every day at 2 p.m. most of the cruisers gather for some beach games and social time at the beach palapa. As each dingy comes ashore thru the surf, they are given a grade as to how they landed. My personal scores will NOT be recounted here, LOL
One day, a fellow cruiser named Don (Aussie) set up a beach Cricket game and we all play on the beach. Interesting game, but I'm not sure how it would stack up with the origional!
On Friday afternoons there is a dingy raft-up where one person anchors their dingy and the rest tie up to them. It's quite a sight and sometimes there are 60 people, all tied together having a great time, talking about whatever the topic is for the day.
By early Febuary I was starting to feel the tug from home. Plus , someone had crashed into the fuel dock in Barra de Navidad so diesel fuel was only available at the Pemex station nearby. Since I need a LOT more than can be hauled in 5 gallon jugs, it was time to head north while I still had enough to return to Puerto Vallarta.
First I made the 30 mile run north back to Chamela on Super Bowl Sunday. While I wasn't able to watch the game, I DID follow it on-line. Amazing how technology was made this available, even while at sea!!! Next day I left at first light for Ipala, 47 miles further north. Ipala is , or was, a good place to anchor up for the day so that one could round Cabo Corrientes in the early morning, when wind and sea are calmest. So far the wnd had been fairly light, but there was a big swell from the north, which made the ride fairly uncomfortable.
When I arrived off Ipala at 2 p.m., I found the small cove completely filled with Oyster pens. It's a really small place to begin with and having all the pens there was NOT what I had hoped to find. That forced me to continue north toward the cape at the worst possible time of day.
As soon as I left Ipala the wind began to increase. I closed all windows and ports, went into the main cabin where the ride would be dryer and have less motion and crossed my fingers. I figured, since it was only 13 miles to the Cape, and I had little choice, that I'd just plow on. And plow I DID!!!
By the time I was 8 miles off the cape, Godzilla was pretending to be a submarine. Wind was gusting to 25 knots and the seas were very steep. Along here the wind is from the northwest, but the current is from the south. Not the worst seas i've encountered, but it was a rollercoaster ride for the next two hours.
As soon as I came level with the cape the seas and wind dropped and I altered course for La Cruz, arriving there just as the sun set. I radioed as I approached the jetty and the marina staff told me where an empty slip was. I was dead tired, but happy to be tied to a dock for a while!!!!
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Tenacatita Pictures
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Barra de Navidad
For a long time I'd been hearing about Barra de Navidad and the adjacent lagoon. Mostly from friends who were cruising Mexico's Pacific coast. Since I had arrived in Puerto Vallarta, Barra was high on my list of places I wanted to visit. After my short stay in Chemela, I thought about going straight to Manzanillo , staying there a month or so, then work my way north as the season wore on. But Barra was to tempting, and Manzanillo and Tenacatita are really close. I figured I could make this area my home till it was time to find a place to summer over
Barra is an amazing place on several levels. First, the town is my favorite so far. Very cruiser friendly. It's very clean and the entire town is situated on a peninsula with easy access. There is a hotel on the water (The Sands) which lets cruisers dock their dingys near the pool. This a convienient place to get into town.Getting into the lagoon is a different matter!! The main entrance is well marked and deep. There is a marina ( the most expensive in all Mexico) a few hundred yards inside the jettys. After that it opens into a huge lagoon with a very narrow, unmarked channel. The channel is about 50' wide with shoal water on either side.
I came in with eyes glued to the depth sounder and found 16' at the entrance to the lagoon. As I entered the meter went quickly to 3 feet, with mud churning up in my wake.!!!! I backed off and called the anchored fleet on chnnel 22 (this is the cruisers channel) A fellow cruiser answered and gave me directions. I move over jsut a few feet from where I had been and saw 10' and moved ahead dead slow untill I was in the anchorage area. It seems a lot of boat go aground using this channel, so I did'nt feel too much the bone-head. I anchored among the sailboats and had 6' of water under the keel. One has to leave or enter at low tide to best be able to see the shoals. That way, if you get stuck in the mud, the tide will soon rise and release you. If you try on a high tide, you'll be stuck as the tide falls. Since I got here I have been mentally marking all the channels for when I exit.
Every morning about 9am the French Baker (Henri) comes around in a small boat selling things he has baked that morning. Fresh bread, pastires and anything you have ordered from the day before. He has a bakery shop in Barra and has been a wealth on information about where everything is in town.
| At anchor in the lagoon |
| The Sands Hotel and cruisers hang-out |
| Lagoon beach |
| Downtown Barra de Navidad |
| Henri, the French Baker |
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Heading south...Chemela
| At Anchor in Chemela |
| Incredible Beach |
| Is that a sunset.....or WHAT? |
After clearing the cape the seas remained the same but only came from the northwest. Even though I had the seas from astern, I could only make 6.5 knots. I figured there was a northbound current slowing me down. Thirteen hours later I sighted Punta Rivas, which is the entrance to Chamela Bay.
What a fantastic place. Chamela Bay is 2 miles wide and has several isands and great snorkeling areas. The water was clear down to about 25 feet. I anchored up off the little village with about a dozen sailboats late that afternoon and promptly crashed for a long sleep. The water was calm, so I had little motion.
The next day I figured to expolre a bit ashore. This requires a beach landing through the surf. I launched the dingy and rode up and down the coast a bit to see where the calmest place was to land. As I was cruising, I saw another inflatable heading for the beach moving fast. I laid off and watched him run his boat onto the beach on the back of a wave, turn around at the last minute and tilt his outboard up. As I was admiring his style, I heard something to my left. Turning my head, I realized I had drifted INSIDE the waves while watching the other dingy!..The wave rolled me over about 45 degrees and I thought I was going over for sure. At the last second I hit the throtte full on, spun my bow around and hit the beach at full speed right next to the guy I had been watching. Talk about a rush!! The other guy was watching me and he got a good laugh from my kamakazi landing. We helped each other pull our dingys up on the beach and he gace me a ride into town in his Jeep.
There wasn't a lot to see in the town. About 1/3 the size of Chacala. Mostly just a few palapa restaurants. I stopped into a little tienda (market) and then realized I had brought no cash with me from Puerto Vallarta!!. I had SOME food aboard, but not enough for the time I wanted to spend in Chemela and Tenacatita.
I ended up staying a day and a half, and left 1-12 with the plan to return to this pristine place on my way north later in the season.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Strangers in Paradise
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| No discharge sign in Chacala |
| 12-31-2010 in La Cruz |
After we picked up Ronelle at the airport we went shopping at Wal-Mart. Yep, this is the best place to provision. The girls went wild in the produce section while Alex and I exchanged knowing glances. A taxi full of groceries and back to the boat we went. After a fantasic Italian dinner overlooking the marina we all crashed.
The next morning, New Years Eve, we motored the five miles north to La Cruz where I got us a slip for the day/night so we could go into the small town there for some celebration. We had dinner at a local joint called Philo's. The owner is an Ex-pat that sailed into town one day and never left. La Cruz is very rustic, with cobble stone streets, friendly locals and sever nice restaurants. Philo also plays in the house band and Alex was interested in one of the players banging on a washboard. Complete with cymbols and cow bells. I expect he'll have one of his own soon enough. Philo's was packed with Ex-Pats that made even me feel young. We stayed till about 10-30 then walked back to the boat. We stayed up long enough to do the Happy New Year thing, then hit the sack so we could leave the next morning for Chacala.
Chacala is a small village about 60 miles north of Puerto Vallarta. It's name means " where there are Shrimp" in Nahuatl. In the 1980's Dr. Laura del Valle, a Zen Buddhist, built a lodge for medical
students to come and stay while helping the poor. It retains the rustic flavor, with cobblestone streets and open markets. We were there during the holidays, so it was packed with Mexican tourists. We explored the town a bit and Ronelle made an appointment at a spa for a massage at a place we had seen from the boat. Alex found some interesting photo opportunities (see pix).
Ronelle and Kaitlyn, being the more adventerous ones went snorkling several times. The water was a bit murky, about 73 F and calm for the most part. Alex threw iron at the local fish and caught a nice Bonita, which I quickly turned into Ceveche'.MMMMM!!!
| Iguanas in love.... |
| Crocs |
| Paradise Village Pool |
| Underwater grotto |
| Girls in the hot tub |
Everybody had a great time taking pictures poolside ( and underwater, thanks to Ronelle), walking on the beach, having our last supper at sunset, beachside. All quite serene and romantic. We all seemed to avoid talking about time running out.........
And then , suddenly it seemed, they were gone.................
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