Weather Helmed

an adventure in renewing the spirit and living the dream…on a sailboat

Weather Helmed

Making “French Toasts”

May 11th, 2010 · Cheers!!, Debauchery, French Polynesia, Funny, Marquesas, Nuku Hiva

As you can imagine, after 25 days on a little boat out in the ocean, we were quite ready to get OFF the boat and get our feet on solid ground.  So, our first day in Nuku Hiva, Matt put the dinghy together and we went into town to get some dinner.  After getting some advice on ATM’s and restaurants from two other cruising guys, we ended up at a little pizza/seafood joint and ordered deux bieres et un pizza grand avec chorizo.  As we poured our beers and clicked glasses, we both had the thought that it would be nice to know some toasts.  Specifically, some toasts en Francais.  Alors, since I’m excited to be parlaying French again, here’s some I came up with. Please forgive any errors in grammar/spelling/conjugation, I am going for rhyme and humor 🙂

Embrassez la voile
Embrassez la mast
Embrassez le bateau
et embrassez mon a**!!

(Kiss the sail, kiss the mast, kiss the boat and kiss my a**!)

Neptune et le roi
de toutes dans la mer,
mais j’ai la victoire
parce que j’ai toutes les bieres!

(Neptune is the king of all that’s in the ocean, but I have the victory because I have all the beer!)

Toutes les personnes qui ont les bateaux sont feux
parce que les bateaux cassent toutes les fois
mon bateau est casse maintenant
et il est la raison que je bois

(All the people who have boats are crazy because boats break all the time.  My boat is broken right now, and that is the reason I drink)

Mon bateau casses toutes les jours
et aujourd’hui, il est sous la mer
mais je suis un/e homme/femme heureux,
dans la plage avec mon bière!

(My boat breaks all the time and today, it is under the sea, but I am a happy man/woman on the beach with my beer!)

And despite my total destruction of the beautiful french language, I received a compliment today from the guy with the hamburger truck.  He asked if we were Americans and we said yes, and he said, “Your french is very good.  You speak very good french, especially for an american.”  ha!  I’m hoping that our efforts will make us some friends and get us into some adventure 🙂

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WE DID IT!!! We are in the Marquesas!

May 9th, 2010 · Famous Firsts, First Mates, Our Route, Pacific Crossing, Passages

AAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH!!!!  WE MADE IT!!!!!!!  we are in the south pacific and holy smokes, i can’t believe we’re really here.

After 25  days at sea.

Lord have mercy, I am really really really really really glad to not be moving anymore!

I’ve wondered for days now how to write this post.  Honestly, I wish that I could regale you with crazy tales of all we experienced and how many cool things we saw.  But, all you people out there who were praying and hoping that “nothing would happen” to us, well, your prayers were answered a little too perfectly.  🙂

Fortunately and unfortunately, nothing really DID happen to us.  I mean, nothing.

We saw no wildlife that we hadn’t seen before – namely, the only things we saw out there in the great wide ocean were a handful of dolphins, some flying fish, a sea turtle and lots of boobie birds.  That’s it.  We did see a lot of small random glowing blobs in our wake at night, but it could have been trash for all we know.

We caught no fish.  Even though I faithfully offered three lines daily, regularly changed lures, put out “teasers,” etc., we did not even get a nibble.  At one point, I begged Matt to let me keep them out overnight because even if we did lose a lure (or all three), at least we would know that the Pacific was not completely empty.

We experienced no particularly bad weather. About ten days in, we hit the ITCZ, notorious for squalls and crazy rainstorms.  We almost always happened to be pointed directly at the blackest clouds on the horizon and yet, by the time we got there, the squall had moved on or had dissipated completely.  We had one or two rain showers during the trip, but even that was just your normal rain – we didn’t have any of those full-out downpours that we had heard about.  Every time it started to rain, I threw out a bin, hoping to get enough water so we could wash clothes with it, but never got enough to really do anything.

The weather thing actually got kind of ridiculous for a while…  Every day, we would download these weather faxes from NOAA via our SSB radio.  The weather faxes would show the current sea/wind conditions, and also provide 24-72 hour forecasts so you could know what to expect.  For about the first two weeks, and I’m not kidding, every. single. weather fax. we downloaded showed us to be in the one place on the entire map where there was no wind!!  At first it was frustrating, then it became annoying, then it became rage-inspiring, then it just became laughable.  No joke, we would get a fax and there would be wind arrows all around except in the one degree of lat/long where we were.


We did see beautiful sunrises and sunsets.  The sky out here is HUGE, stretching on forever, and just about everyday delivered a spectacular encounter with the sun.  I’ve seen more sunrises than I care to see again, ha, but it has been an awesome experience to watch the skies change each day.


We also have seen the bluest water you can imagine.  I never thought the ocean could be so blue and so clear.  We had three days right at the very beginning of the trip where we had no wind and were dead in the water.  Because there had been no wind for a few days before, the sea was completely calm, reflecting mirror images back at me.  One morning I dropped some pieces of potato overboard and watched them float down at least 20 feet.  It was amazing how clearly you could see them that far down.  I kept watching, hoping to see a crazy fish come out of the deep and eat them, but, as mentioned above, we saw no fish.  And I wish that I could adequately describe the color of the water.  It’s gorgeous.  I wish I could have bottled it up to take home with me, but, obviously, the color wouldn’t be the same.  The water was the purest, translucent, midnight blue.  Incredible. Some days, I just stared at the water because it really was beautiful simply in and of itself.

Other days I stared at the water because that was the only thing for miles around to look at.  🙂

We saw, too, every star in the sky.  Oh, how glorious the night sky is when it’s completely dark and there is no smog and absolutely nothing blocking your view!  It really is beyond spectacular.  If the ocean alone doesn’t make you feel like an insignificant little speck in the universe, the ocean and that enormous sky can make you doubt your existence all together.  It was so crazy to look up at night and see so many stars, a super bright milky way, dazzling planets… Moonrises, too, have become my new favorite thing.  It would be completely dark and then suddenly, out of nowhere, fiery orange flames peek over the horizon… or the moon winks out from behind a cloud. I’ve never been more aware of the sky.   Every once in a while, I have to admit, though, it did feel a little bit like the movie Truman’s World.  I felt like I was in a “snow globe” but with stars, not snow, raining down around me.

And, finally, on May 3, our 20th day at sea, we saw the Equator! 🙂  We crossed it around 5:00 in the morning while I was on watch.  I woke Matt up and we went on deck to watch the GPS turn to 00.00.00.  I tippled some Capt. Morgan to King Neptune and then Matt and I toasted with rum & jumex before he went back to bed.  It didn’t really change anything for us except that, after we crossed, we full-on hit the southern trade-winds, had magnificent, consistent wind and made no less than 140 miles everyday from there to Nuku Hiva.

The thing that has struck me most on this trip is that everyone who crosses the Pacific will essentially have the same physical experience with the elements.  Sometimes you have wind, sometimes you don’t.  Sometimes it rains, sometimes it’s so blazing hot you’re dumping sea water all over yourself. Sometimes the seas are calm, sometimes you have a 12 ft swell and wind chop coming from every direction.  Sometimes you’re sailing beautifully, sometimes you have to motor.  The thing that makes your experience truly unique is how you respond to these conditions – day in and day out, for a month.

We hit our low point about two weeks in, right in the middle of the doldrums.  I had been Miss Pollyanna Sunshine for a few days and Matt was, um, a little more grumpy.  But there came a day when Matt woke up to me cursing at the boat and I later woke up to him cursing at the boat and I thought – what kind of life is this?!?!  What are we doing?!?!  And it was clear that we were not happy.  A few days later, we got out of the ITCZ, had beautiful sunny skies, and were flying along at 7.0 knots and then life wasn’t looking so bad!

As for how I dealt with the conditions we encountered… I had good days and not so good days.  I actually really enjoyed the first couple of days when we were becalmed.  It was the most relaxed I had felt since we left San Francisco. For the next few days after we got some wind, it was fairly easy to be happy because the sailing and the boat motion was so comfortable.  However, that two week point is a killer.  I finally found some strength in an attitude of gratitude. Every time I went on watch, I spent the first 5-20 minutes praying and giving thanks for everything I could think of.  I tried to find ways to turn the negative into something positive:  the equivalent of painfully stubbing your toe but saying, thank God I have a toe to stub!
Focusing on things this way really helped me to stay more optimistic for almost the entire trip. Consequently, it also helped get me to a better place spiritually, which was one of the things I wanted to focus on while we were out here.  Double blessing. 🙂

I also spent a lot of time writing: journaling and actually writing stories.  None of the stories have anything to do with our trip, but it has been fun to re-discover my creative streak. I cut Matt’s hair one day (that was wild), read A LOT of books – almost a book a day, thought a lot about life, cooked a lot of food, and ate about 200 granola bars.

I only broke down and cried once.

To sum up the experience, on one hand it was a disappointment.  Not to be a downer, but I feel totally cheated that we didn’t see more wildlife!  Other boats reported seeing a fish-fight of a mahi-mahi, a dorado, and a shark (i think the mahi was on the line and the others were trying to get it?), a man’o’war being washed into a cockpit, a 200 lb. tuna followed our friends on IO and IO also got serenaded by a humpback whale!  I’m sorry, but a stupid flying fish falling into the cabin simply can’t compare.

But, at the same time, being out in the middle of the ocean, farther away from anything than I’ll be ever again, with the chance to think and write without too much distraction, it was awesome. It was much needed.  I think, too, it was a  good experience for our marriage.  We certainly saw different sides of each other and how we reacted to the various physical, mental and emotional adversity we dealt with. We saw new strengths and new weaknesses in one another, but still found a way to see through it all to the person we love.

I don’t feel like a legit sailor just because we sailed across an ocean.  (I really only changed the sails when Matt told me to or I felt like the boat absolutely needed it. Matt is the real sailor.)  Because we had such an easy passage, I almost feel like just about anyone could do what we did if you had slightly more than the most basic knowledge of sailing and navigation, common sense and a bit of luck.  Obviously, sailing skills will get you to your destination safely and in a reasonable amount of time, I don’t want to make light of their importance – I certainly could not have done this without Matt and his knowledge.  But I think the real tests of crossing are in overcoming the other physical, mental and emotional challenges of being at sea, alone, for so long, on a boat that is falling apart before your eyes, and staying sane despite the constant lack of sleep and frustrating issues you encounter.  I think that enduring those trials – and coming through with a smile on your face, saying you’re glad you did it – is how you truly earn your way into the great ranks of those who have successfully crossed the greatest expanse of open ocean in the world.

And that, my friends, is why I am getting a marquesan tattoo.

Much love from TAIOHAE BAY, NUKU HIVA, ILE MARQUISES, FRENCH POLYNESIA – THE SOUTH PACIFIC

WE MADE IT!!!!

Karen

**To read my daily journal from the trip, check out this page. I’m also working on getting some videos posted there – stay tuned!  Just have to find more reliable (and faster!) internet…

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This is it! We’re crossing the Pacific…

April 13th, 2010 · Famous Firsts, Our Route, Pacific Crossing, Passages

(Of course, I can’t post without writing something….)

For more information on the “Spot” thing I’m talking about and how you can check and see where we are/were, check out Matt’s blog.

I am really horrible with “goodbyes” and this isn’t even really a “goodbye!”  (um, did anyone notice how I *almost* started to cry at the end there??)  Anyway, a journey of this undertaking, and the fact that we won’t be in communication with any of you for at least 3 weeks, maybe up to 6, makes me feel all sad and like I need to go into a long diatribe about how much my friends and family mean to me, etc. etc. etc.  Anyway, I DO love you and I *will* see you again and I look forward to sharing our adventures with you when we are back in wifi-land, and hearing about yours.

Hopefully, though, next time you see me, I’ll have gotten rid of those hideous bikini top tan lines and will be dancing in coconuts and a grass skirt.. because, that is what true islanders wear, right??!?!

We appreciate your prayers and good wishes, and having everyone cheering us on really does mean A LOT.  More than I could express in any sort of a rational way 🙂

Ok, this is it.

Adios.

Syzygy out.

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Perspective

April 12th, 2010 · Words to Cling to

If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else’s, we’d grab ours back immediately.

Oy. A good reminder that we’ve got to keep it all in perspective.

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The dolphin that wouldn’t swim with me (in Tenacatita)

April 12th, 2010 · Funny, Life on the Boat, Mexico

“Oh, yeah, Tenacatita is great,” Louis says.  “It’s a beautiful little anchorage and if you swim out from your boat a ways, the dolphins will come swim with you.”

My eyes light up.  “REALLY?!”

“Yes!” Laura smiles.  “We had two bottlenose dolphins come right up to us when we were there.”

A few days later, Matt and I recalled this conversation on our way down the coast.  “Don’t get your hopes up, honey,” he says to me.

“I know, ” I sigh. “But still… swimming with dolphins in the wild… it would be a childhood dream come TRUE for me.”

See, from the time I knew what it was until I was a junior in high school, I wanted to be a marine biologist oceanographer, specializing in cetology, which is the study of whales and dolphins.  I was a little obsessed with all things dolphin. During junior high, my walls were covered with NKOTB posters and there, next to a life-size poster of Joey (he was so hot back then), were posters and cut-outs of dolphins.  I had an entire bookshelf dedicated to dolphin figurines, numerous stuffed dolphin toys, books about dolphins and even a dolphin kite.  At one point, I even figured out how to click my tongue to make what I believed to be “dolphin” sounds.  Once I realized that being a marine biologist would also necessarily include lots of classes on ocean geology and physics and science UGH, and when I realized that unless I worked for a zoo or the Navy, I really wouldn’t make any money, I kind of gave up on the cetologist dream.  BUT – I did not give up on my dreams of swimming with dolphins in the wild or kayaking in the midst of a pod of killer whales.

So, when we arrived in Tenacatita, I was on constant dolphin look-out.  We entered the anchorage, dropped the hook and spent the afternoon hanging around the boat.  Around 3:00pm, I spotted a dorsal fin arching out of the water near the bow of a nearby boat.  The dog on the boat was going crazy, barking and running circles around the deck.  “A dolphin!”  I shout, tearing off my shirt and shorts (bikini on, of course), kicking off my shoes and scrambling down the swim ladder into the water.  In the water, I swim out “a ways” from Syzygy and await my dream encounter.

Nothing.

I wait.  and wait. and wait.  All the while, the dolphin is still swimming lazily around the other boat.

“Go swim to it!”  Matt shouts to me from on deck.

“No!” I shout back.  “I want it to come to me!”  Part of my fantasy, is, after all, that the dolphin will love me and want to play with me as much as I want to play with it.

“Well then, make some noise!” Matt yells.

Self-conscious, I look around to see if anyone is watching suddenly-turned-five-years-old me make a fool of myself.  But, as Matt reminds me, this is my chance…

I duck my head underwater and make humming and oohing sounds.  I snap my fingers and clap my hands and kick my feet on the surface.  There’s no way the dolphin, fifty feet away, can NOT know that I’m here.

Still, no dolphin.

I see the fin again, still lingering near the neighboring boat.

“I guess it’s curious about the dog,” Matt shouts.

“But I’m way more fun than a dog!” I yell.

I continue treading water and moving farther and farther out until I begin to worry I might not have the energy to swim against the current back to the boat.  I had been out there for almost 45 minutes, less than 100 feet away from the dolphin, and the dolphin never came near me.

I repeated this activity at least once (sometimes three times) a day for three days and still the dolphin never came near our boat.  On the 4th day, the dolphin finally came within 10 feet of Syzygy and Matt and I both leapt into the water, talking sweetly to it, making noises and coaxing the dolphin however we could.  The dolphin, though, was totally uninterested in us and though he stayed near the boat, he always remained on the opposite side from us.

That night we had drinks with another cruising couple.  When we mentioned the dolphin, the woman said, “Oh, right.  That’s Nacho.  He’s around here all the time.  He’s a regular.”

“Just him?”  I asked.

“Yeah, we’ve only seen him around.  We haven’t seen any other dolphins… ”

Ah.  So now I knew why he wasn’t interested in playing with me.

The dolphin was depressed.

Dolphins are pod mammals and like to be with their friends. Nacho was sad and lonely and no matter how hard I tried to convince him that *I* was one of *them,* he was too downtrodden to see it.  Now it all made sense.

On our way down to Tenacatita, I had a night shift where a pod of about 30 dolphins swarmed the boat.  We were actually sailing along at about 5 knots and the dolphins took over the bow waves, playing and leaping out of the water, bumping into each other and flicking their tales as they jumped.  You could just see how happy they were.  Those dolphins would have played with me, I know.  But, I don’t think Matt would have been too happy to find me dragging behind the boat at 2 A.M.  *sigh*  One of these days…….

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Mexico Miscellaneous

April 11th, 2010 · Mexico, Random Thoughts

– As soon as we pulled into the La Cruz Marina last week, we started hearing this weird crackling noise, almost like it was starting to rain.  As we lay in bed that night, we realized it was thousands of tiny sea monsters either 1) eating away at stuff growing on our hull and/or 2) attaching themselves to the boat with a relatively loud sucking sound.  So, everyday, we listen, non-stop, to snap-crackle-pop rice krispies.

– Mexico is not cheap.  TACOS in Mexico are cheap, but that’s about it.  I’ve been hugely disappointed by how expensive things are here. I mean, yes, they’re slightly cheaper than the US, but I’ve spent my whole life hearing about how **cheap** things are in Mexico and now I’m here and I can’t find any cute sundresses under $20USD, I’ve spent way too much on stupid taxis (for grocery runs, etc), have been really shocked by some of the grocery store prices, and have yet to experience that “aieeeeee!!! I can’t believe I got this for that!” kind of cheap-o Mexico feeling.  People say we’re in the wrong place because we’re in the “touristy” part of Mexico.  But, really, where are you actually going to GO that isn’t touristy?  There’s a reason why people don’t go to middle-of-nowhere Mexico…  And, with a sailboat, we’re pretty limited in where we end up and, of course, where we end up is where all the beach resorts are and where there are tourists and lots of other cruisers and we get the Gringo prices and I end up with the feeling that the dollar, at it’s lame 1USD:11.8pesos exchange, isn’t really getting us that far.  Needless to say, I’m taco-ed out and Mexico’ed out and am ready to wake up in the beautiful South Pacific.

– On the bus the other day, I was in a horrible mood.  I was thinking about our temporary life here in La Cruz and initially became worried that I had lost my love of traveling. I found myself thinking, “It would be so much easier if they spoke english; their buses didn’t suck; it was cooler; I had a car; I didn’t have to interact with all these people…”  Aah!  I sounded so……. American.  BUT – then I recognized the DRASTIC difference between wandering around because you have nothing else to do and wandering around because you have a TASK to accomplish and projects to complete.  So, I reconciled my grumpiness with the fact that it’s really hard to get anything of significance done here when you are on a budget, on a timeline, and don’t really know where anything is that you need.  I DO like to travel, but I guess I prefer the traveling that doesn’t also coincide with WORK.

– When I look around La Cruz and see children walking barefoot on dirty, nasty dog and bug-infested, gnarly broken glassed cobble streets, I think, “Ugh. Why would you want to raise kids in this place?”  But then, at 9:00pm, a truck with tons of laughing kids in the back drives by on its way to the park for a local carnival where the kids will be eating cotton candy and jumping in the bounce house til 11 o’clock at night on a school night, and I think, “Hmm… maybe growing up in Mexico wouldn’t be so bad.”

JUMEX is AWESOME and that Lala boxed milk…. well, I hope Fedex delivers.

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And the Internet said, “Our people shall not thirst…”

April 10th, 2010 · Cheers!!, Debauchery, Pacific Crossing, Passages, Somebody likes us

A HUGE *HUGE* thank you to Karl P., Matt’s friend and former jefe, and Philip R., of the adventurous side of my family, for ensuring that we will not thirst on our way across the Pacific, or while we’re in French Polynesia, or probably for even months beyond that!!!

We’ll be thinking of you and your kind support and generosity for thousands of miles.

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Prepping for the South Pacific & Pacific Crossing – Provisioning Pt.1

April 8th, 2010 · About Money, Life on the Boat, Mexico, Passages

I still plan to add some more stuff about our spring break down in Tenacatita, but right now, getting ready for our Pacific Crossing is making me really really excited, so that’s what I’m going to write about….

While in La Cruz, we met an awesome younger couple – Mike & Hyo – aboard IO.  They left for the South Pacific last Sunday evening (you can read about their experiences on their blog).  Another group of new friends left soon after that.  Since then, we’ve been tracking them all via SSB radio nets, when boats can “check in” with each other and get updates on weather and everyone’s progress.  And, can I just say that everytime we hear one of them call in, Matt and I both get a little giddy.

“It’s IO! There’s Totem! Hey! It’s Capaz! Ah! I heard Mulan! Where are they???”

We quickly open our google earth charts and add a new marker to show where they are today as opposed to a few days ago.  It’s exciting to follow them across the Pacific.  Unfortunately, for all of you who care to know where WE will be, you won’t have the option of listening to us on the SSB or checking our blogs for updates, you’ll just have to cross your fingers, hope for the best, and patiently await our arrival in the Marquesas when we will flood our blog with updates from our passage.

One of the things you can be CERTAIN of, though, is that we are not going to starve.  Along with the $740 worth of food we bought at Costco back in the US, I just added to that stash several hundred dollars more of goods from another Costco run.

Tonight, I’m headed to a local bulk produce store to stock up on potatoes and onions and maybe some other stuff that should last us for a while.  Tomorrow, I head to Walmart for the things I couldn’t get at Costco, and Saturday or Sunday, I’ll head to Mega, a Mexican supermarket, for those things I can’t get at Walmart.  Sunday night, I’ll head to the bulk produce store again for the more sensitive fruits and veggies we’ll go through in the first couple of weeks.

Provisioning for something like this is a huge and intimidating undertaking.  No matter how many books I read about storing and caring for produce, putting together make-ahead mixes, trying to keep variety in your diet, etc., it’s still difficult to wrap my mind around buying food for two, then three (Jon joins us in June) people for 3-6 months.  Because, aside from fruits and vegetables and some snacky items, that’s what I’m aiming for.

Our meals this summer will consist almost entirely of canned foods, pasta and rice. I know, YUM.  We’re hoping that fresh sprouts (grown on the boat), fresh-baked bread, and lots of cold fruit juice (with or without rum and/or tequila) will keep things interesting.  We will, of course, indulge in some delicacies of the South Pacific, but those will be luxuries and not an everyday event.

Before moving onto the boat, I read a couple cruising books where the women kept detailed records of what they had, where it was, how much of it was left, and if they needed to get more.  I scoffed at their precise lists, declaring that I could never be so anal about our provisions.  Then we buy all this stuff and, five months later, I have no idea what we have or where it is.  Every time I cook, I have to open six cabinets and dig through three bins to figure out where I put that one can of whatever.  So, I began to understand the method to the madness.  Knowing that we will soon increase our provisions by ten-fold, I spent three hours last week going through almost all of our current provisions and made a list as to what we had, how much of it we had and where it was currently located.  Um, I’m a little embarrassed by how frequently I now refer to that list!  and I’m a little ashamed that I didn’t do it earlier.  🙂

Another thing I’ve done is gone through all the cookbooks we have on the boat (which, sadly, really aren’t that great), and created a list of things we can make with what we have.  One of the problems Matt and I ran into on our previous passage was a lack of creativity as to what to eat.  We would stare blankly into the cupboards asking each other, “what should we make? what do we eat?”  It was like we had never cooked before. We couldn’t come up with anything to make beyond pasta or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.  So, I started a list that we can refer to when our brains are tired.   For those soon-to-be or currently cruising, I’ll include a few things just to help inspire you 🙂

My list includes:

– stirfry with rice & tofu

– pasta with red/alfredo sauce

– pasta salad

– potato salad

– curry chicken/turkey with rice

– turkey potpie

– lentil hummus

– quiche

– eggs with hollandaise sauce

– roast beef with bearnaise sauce and rice

– crepes

– tuna and pineapple sandwiches

– beef stroganoff

– sausage in wine sauce

– salmon loaf with lemon sauce

– tuna casserole

– blueberry/cherry pie

Of course, everything is out of a can or a box, but whatever!  On one hand, it’s not exactly thrilling to think that we’ll be eating canned foods for the next couple of months, but at the same time, it certainly encourages creativity.  I am sort of looking forward to the challenge of making something new and delicious out of the same ingredients we’ve been eating for weeks…

BUT, if anyone has good recipes for canned chicken, canned roast beef, canned turkey, canned beans, canned vegetables, canned tuna, canned salmon, canned chipotle pork, canned tomatoes, or canned fruits, I’d appreciate some additional inspiration as to what to do with them. I have the “usual” recipes: pastas, casseroles, sandwiches, etc., but if you have something different and yummy, please please please share!!!!

I hope, too, that we can catch some fish while we’re out there to add some real excitement, but so far we haven’t had any luck and, honestly, I’m still not entirely sure I’m ok with bludgeoning a fish to death and then bleeding it over the side of the boat before I cut its guts out.  Matt is totally opposed to dealing with fish until they’re sushi-fied, so it’s all up to me.  Fun. I’m trying to sike myself up for it, but we’ll see.

But, all the provisioning aside, I’M GETTING REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY EXCITED.  If all goes well, we plan to leave on Tuesday!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Finally, a taste of Paradise – Bahia Tenacatita, MX

April 8th, 2010 · Beautiful, Mexico, Passages

Tenacatita is the first place we’ve been to, so far, where my first thought was NOT to get online and check email or facebook or post a blog.  No, instead, my first thoughts were – WOW.  THIS is what cruising is about…  why didn’t we come here first?!?!!?

Bahia Tenacatita is BEAUTIFUL.  Compared to all the other non-exotic ports we’ve checked out, Tenacatita is Heaven.  This “Gold Coast” of Mexico is easily the prettiest scenery we’ve seen on our whole trip.  The coastline is long stretches of white (gold?) sandy beaches, tall dramatic mountains and jagged rocks with spectacular breaking waves.

We originally thought the trip would take us just a day and a half – about 33 hours.  Buuuuttttt, per the norm, things didn’t go exactly as planned and Mother Nature had her way with us on the way down.  Thankfully, it wasn’t a BAD way, but we fought a 2 knot current most of the way once we left Banderas Bay and we had at most 5 knots of wind the entire time and it was pretty much always right in front of us.  So, sailing or even motoring upwind in five knots of wind with a decently strong current pushing you back, is not the easiest thing to do or the fastest way to get where you’re going.  Good thing we weren’t in a big hurry otherwise it could have been a very frustrating experience.  Jon was good-natured about it all, enjoying just being ON the boat outside of a marina, so I didn’t feel *too* bad about him spending his spring break on the water and not in a beautiful anchorage.

We had left La Cruz on Monday and we pulled into Bahia Tenacatita mid-afternoon on Wednesday after motoring for a good part of the night.  The bay was so pretty.  I wish I could explain to you the sense of happiness that filled both Matt and I as we motored into the anchorage.  It really felt like we were seeing the world in a new light, seeing the cruising life in a new light!  It was a revelation of, “Oh, so THIS is why people like to sail…”   It was a much needed insight into what our future might hold.

Unfortunately, we are simply too fortunate in that nothing really exciting happened to us.  The only things I have to share about our time down there are 1) antics during the Jungle River Dinghy Tour and; 2) the dolphin that wouldn’t swim with me.  Blah. But, I’ll post a few pictures for now and hopefully we’ll get some video uploaded soon from the dinghy excursion.  The most awesome thing, though, was how relaxing it was to be there.  I mean, I actually THOUGHT about stuff.  Like, deep thinking kind of thoughts.  Like, what is the meaning of life kind of thoughts.  The last time I did that sort of introspection was………………………………. college?  Anywho, it was fantastic to think again and to not feel like there was anything more to do but lay out on the foredeck and slather on the sunscreen.

Now, we are back in La Cruz and if all goes well, we are planning to head out on our big Pacific crossing sometime next week.  Starting tomorrow, we are in full-fledged final prep mode and I’m getting really excited.  I know everyone says that it’s a month of really boring days with the occasional exciting thirty seconds thrown in, and I’m sure we’ll experience nothing different, but, still, 3000+ miles of wide open sea?!?!?!  That will be as far away from it all as I’m sure I’ll ever get. Aieeee!!!

Bahia Tenacatita:

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Spring Break

March 29th, 2010 · Mexico, The Crew

Jon, one of the other boat owners, arrived from Colorado on Saturday to spend his spring break with us.  He showed up with two enormous bags of goodies for Matt and the boat.  It was like Christmas… if you count windvane parts, new hose, and mast track cars as presents.  But, Jon brought some *truly* fun stuff, too, like games and movies and a seed sprouter!

To make the most of his time here, we’ve decided to head south about 130 miles to a little place on Mexico’s “Gold Coast” called Tenacatita.  The best part of this plan is that we’ll get to snorkel at “the aquarium,” so named for the multitudes of fish there, and we will be going on a jungle river tour in our dinghy!!!!!!!  i’ve been wanting to see what the Mexican jungle is like, so this is a great way to experience some of it without having to go inland.  And, we hear there’s pretty good tacos at the end of the river.  🙂

Not sure if we’ll have internet access while we’re there, but I’ll be taking lots of pictures and will hopefully have fun stories to share when we get back.  I’m interested to see what it’s like since this is Holy Week and everyone in Mexico gets time off of work and it coincides with their schools’ spring break.  Should be a good time…

So many boats have left for the Pacific crossing and our new good friends on IO just left last night.  I’m getting really excited for it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hope everyone has a great week and – Happy Easter! 🙂

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