Life Aboard Kind of Magic
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Friday, May 30, 2014
Where is Kind of Magic? Regular Position Reports
******* Report #15: April 10, 2014 to May 28, 2014 - Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico and the USVI posted May 29, 2014, link is to the right. *******
We are not so great at keeping the Reports up to date, preferring to do one report about every month (or two when we are having too much fun!)
However, every time we change anchorages and move the boat we post a Position Report via our SSB (single side band) radio or when we have internet. We do this via the Winlink network (run by Ham radio operators for Hams) under our call sign ve0bg (the 0 is the number not letter.)
We have posted a link to our Position Reports on www.shiptrak.org and by entering our call sign (ve0bg) our list of past positions and our current position is posted. At the bottom is the log entries which are limited to 80 characters (Tweets are verbose!)
HOWEVER, we have been advised Shiptrak recently has been having problems (the problems are on that end not ours.) Thanks to our guru Ross, I have found out Winlink has a mirror site:
http://www2.winlink.org:8081/maps/PositionReports.aspx
and I have changed the link at the right on the blog to that site until Shiptrak sorts it all out.
This page lists ALL of the winlink ham members who have posted position reports in the past number of days (including us.) By entering our call sign (ve0bg, "0" being the number 0) in the top left corner all our past positions and our current position are reported. Holding the cursor over any position reveals our 80 character position report for that entry. ALSO, the map can be changed to satellite imagery and by drilling down a very good picture of our position can be seen. That's us waving!
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Report #15 April 10, 2014 to May 28, 2014; Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico and the USVI
Report #15: April 10, 2014 to May 28, 2014; Dominican
Republic to Puerto Rico and the USVI
Luperon
pics:
De La France Pizzeria - George (Pelican) & Marlene (Spray) and Blair |
motorcycles everywhere, here is the plantain (local - not gringo - bananas) delivery man |
BBQs for sale - top quality rebar and wheel rim assembly! |
double burner model bet this make way outlasts anything from Cdn Tire! |
JR's (owned by Gill, center whit shirt/cap) |
Natasha and Stephen (Turning Points) |
We took a trip to the south coast and visited Santo Domingo, roundtrip
about $21 each. The journey was as
entertaining as the destination. We got
up early one morning and George (Pelican) dinghied us to the town dock. From there we walked up to the guagua parking
lot and got in. 60 pesos each to Imbert,
done that. The car, an old Toyota Corolla,
had the driver and three passengers in the back (including Edi and I) and one
passenger in front. OK. Over the next 16 miles or so to Imbert, lots
of pickups and drop-offs, equilibrium being 4 passengers. Oh, oh.
Two more passenger. OK, let’s see
how we get 4 adults in the back and two in the front passenger seat! Right, let’s not forget the woman’s
toddler! Thankfully someone had a can
opener and we spilled out in Imbert!
Next, small bus to Santiago 110 pesos each, and LOTS of elbow room and
A/C even! Next, big bus to Santo Domingo two aside
seating and A/C, what luxury at 240 pesos each.
We spilled off in Santo Domingo and walked to the Zona Colonial ignoring
the suggestions that we would be “Safer” going by taxi. Well it was sunny and mid-day and we had been
sitting a lot so we had a nice 2 mile walk in and the neighbourhood really
wasn’t bad at all.
Oops, or is this Spadina and Dundas? |
We hit
Chinatown – every City seems to have one – and passed through into the Zona
Colonial. It was like hitting a town in
southern Spain. We walked and finally
settled on a hotel at $38/night – including a fridge and a/c. We unloaded the back pack and went out for
dinner.
We spent 3 nights there and just strolled the Zona and the waterfront, taking in the sights and sounds of this HUGE City.
how many dogs? |
The museum
was a nice stop and this guy was the high-light (pavo real – aka peacock – we also have met a catamaran in Luperon called Pavo Real!)
1700s border marker - France |
other way - Espaniola |
The plaza is the heart of the old town and the Catedral Primada de America backstops it all. This is the oldest operating church in the Western Hemisphere (there was an earlier one in Mexico that was replaced) although the interior is a bit shabby what with hundreds of years of wars and occupations (the English privateer – or pirate depending what side you want to take – used it as headquarters looted it.)
The
botanical gardens were a nice diversion and the private (unlicensed) taxi cost 300
pesos each way and entry was 100 pesos each.
We visited on a Monday, apparently a sort of holiday, as the gardens
were open and the little trolley ride was open but the restaurant etc were all
closed. One of the trolley attendants
ran out to get us some Cokes and water, very much appreciated. The Japanese gardens and the Orchid nursery
were the highlights.
turtles and coi |
This is a parkette we drove past and these are definitely the biggest "chi chi chia" pets ever!
if you go out in the woods tonight...
The Zona is the old colonial town at the waterfront and the modern City has spread all around it. Santo Domingo has everything and is the main centre for all medical tests – biopsies, xrays, blood tests, etc. The cruisers in Luperon get all their tests here and they say the cost is very inexpensive. Well, when a cruiser says it’s cheap, believe it! We found the main street with the labs and just about died laughing when we saw the same street was also the undertakers’ main digs too! Test results not so good? Let me show you some caskets!
Back to
Luperon and time to get the boat ready to move.
We called Pappo and got the diesel and gas topped and got 100 gallons of
water (at 10 pesos a gallon reverse osmosis sealed in the blue jugs –
DELIVERED! – that was about $22)
Luperon's baseball diamond - this house has prime "box seating" |
George (Pelican) and Edi |
The next day Pappo was organizing a run to the Gonzalo Waterfalls near Puerto Plata and we signed on with the company including Stephen and Natasha (Turning Points) and Marlene (Spray). The waterfalls are a series of waterfalls and rapids running down a very large hill (or very small mountain) and the tourists done helmets and lifejackets and walk up up for about 45 minutes. The full run of 21 falls starts at the top and half the group went up. Edi and Marlene only wanted to do the middle level starting at 12 (which the guide recommended) however we realized that the walk to 12 was almost all the way to the top for the 21! THEN, we walked DOWN to the start!
one way down - Blair's |
another way - Edi's |
The falls
are fantastic, there are jumps and slides and stretches of just waling knee and
waist deep in fresh – yes FRESH NOT
SALT!! – water. The slide portions are
actually quite smooth having been worn by a lot of water and quite a few
bottoms!
Everyone had
a great time and agreed it was a must do in the DR. Lunch was fine and the included cokes and
rums flowed like, well, a river.
Our weather
window was looking to open (winds of 20-25K from the east and 6-8 ft waves
reducing to 10K and 3-4 ft seas) and early April 21 we set out. Two boats (including Turning Points) had left
the previous night but we decided to wait a bit to let the seas calm. Ahead of us that morning were Lou and
Beverley (Suzanne) who we would meet in Culebra and Kokomo who we met at
customs in Mayaguez PR. The day was
sunny and the wind and seas were calm enough as we motorsailed smack into them,
making progress of about 3.5 knots. By
later afternoon though that had reversed and we were getting the stuffing
knocked out of us (a diurnal pattern wind as forecast was picking up.) Thankfully we were close enough to Rio San
Juan to nip in there and drop anchor for a few of hours. After a 3 hour break from 6-9pm for BBQ, swim
and rest, we were ready to go and the wind had dropped again and the seas were
down to 2-3 feet. The stars were
magnificent in a cloudless sky and we racked off the miles, rounding the
magnificent Cabo Samana at day break.
Our despacho
was for Samana but the sailing now was good, the seas acceptable and we pushed
on crossing the gulf of Samana and making our way southeast along the coast to
Punta Macao. We got in a little before
nightfall and made anchor about 6:30 pm.
The little cove there is well-protected from the prevailing winds and
seas and we slept very well. After a
swim the next morning the Commandante showed up at 7am in a commandeered
fisherman’s skiff and examined our papers.
We made it clear we skipped Samana and had stopped just for the night
and were leaving in “dos hora” for Puerto Rico and that was that. We gave the fisherman some pesos for his
trouble and the Armada waved goodbye. As
we were readying, s/v DEE pulled in and called us as we were pushing off asking
about paperwork and the fact that they (and we) never had our passports stamped
out. We agreed Puerto Rico would not
care and our despatch for Samana was all that was needed.
This resort complex is empty, a lot of construction incomplete. The golf course surrounding it is being watered. The entire complex is enormous and quite empty.
We set off
on a close reach for Mayaguez Puerto Rico at 7 am and made it in about
1am. The wind had kept shifting south as
we had to turn south and amazingly we stayed 60-70 degrees of the wind right
into Mayaguez even after we turned south past hourglass shoals and Isla
Desecheo. We finally got the rods
working and had the right lure and caught a 28-30" barracuda but threw him
back as we did not want to take a chance on getting ciguatera (a toxin without cure inducing malarial-like symptoms that
some fish including larger - 30"+ - barracuda may carry.)
We also saw a hump back whale about 500 feet
off our port, heading the opposite way. We
did get hammered by one squall in the final 20 miles or so but we had seen the
front coming and had everything reefed in plenty of time. Anchoring was just as easy as God (Bruce Van
Sant) had set out in Passages and we dropped the hook smack in between R8 and
R10 with Edi up on the bow illuminating the bouys with our trusty Maglite. We cracked a couple of cold beers and relaxed
a bit before tucking in.
The next
morning we dinghied over to the government dock and scaled the VERY high
concrete wall using a much needed tire as a step. A worker there said there was no fee (despite
the big official Port sign saying all boats and dinghies included must pay $25)
and he unlocked the gate for us and then explained the customs building
was about 2 miles away. We were carrying the raymarine radar scanner
to have it shipped from UPS and so we decided a cab was the way to go as
suggested. This fellow whipped out his
cell phone and called one for us, chatted a minute more and said welcome to
Puerto Rico. Puerto Rican
hospitality! The cab pulled up a few
minutes later and took us to the Customs house where we presented our papers
and passports and the Homeland Security / Border Protection / Customs (well
that’s what the signage says) agent took everything and had us sit down. He explained we needed exactly $19 and
directed us to a bank across the street for change. When we arrived back, the crew of Kokomo was
arriving having anchored in Boqueron and taxied up. We finished up and piled back in the cab and
took care of the raydome at UPS, stopping at Home Depot (boat stuff), K-Mart
(clothes, beach chairs and umbrella) cellphone simm chip and plan from
AT&T) and Pepboys (auto parts store – boat supplies.) WOW, just like being back in the “world”!
Back at the
government dock we ran into the crew of sv Dee who had just arrived. Joao and Kumploy and 15 month old Maria had
apparently left Punto Macao an hour after us and missed the wind shifts we had
enjoyed causing them to tack all day and night long and they had the squall
that we experienced not for a couple of hours but the whole night. They arrived 10 hours after us and were just
exhausted. We filled them in on the
clearing in process, directed them to the terminal worker and caught their
stray dinghy oar. Back to the boat we
squared things away and made for Puerto Real some 13 miles south getting in a
late in the afternoon.
The next
morning we made our way over the marine and checked out the neighbourhood. Puerto Real is very small, quiet and just
lovely. The cove is very protected and
the mouth is very shoal – following the private bouys is absolutely necessary. We stayed 2 nights, refueled and did the
laundry. We met Brit and Sue (Halcyon, a
42 Fontaine Pajot) and again Joao, Kumploy and little sweetie Maria (sv Dee)
and we all went out to the local restaurant – great seafood.
Joao is a writer for a sailing magazine in
Macao, working for the Chinese government.
He and his family are taking a year to celebrate the 500th
Anniversary of the Portguese opening of Macao.
Joao and Kumploy bought a 45’ Gulfstar in Luperon and is coming to Ponce
to have some work finished and then they are heading for Panama and Macao via
Kumploy’s home port in Thailand. Check
out their website at www.sailingdee.com. Dee is
Maria’s middle name and means good. Oh,
they also have their dog aboard. And we
all think we are just so busy.
Hmmm.
We pushed on
to Boqueron, just around the corner and discovered this just amazing
place. It is a little bit of Key West
with a huge dollop of Wasage Beach with a Puerto Rico flavour. The beach goes on and on (it is a National
Park) with speakers blaring music (latins love the music!) and the town is full
of street food vendors, bars, restaurants, shops etc. Monday through Thursday it is pretty tame but
come the weekend, the place rocks. The
anchorage is huge, the holding is fantastic and the sights, well, are amazing.
We stayed for 3 days just enjoying the beach atmosphere and pushed on around the corner anchoring under the lighthouse at Cabo Rojo. Mistake, rock and roll and little to see or do.
We stayed for 3 days just enjoying the beach atmosphere and pushed on around the corner anchoring under the lighthouse at Cabo Rojo. Mistake, rock and roll and little to see or do.
April 29 we pulled into La Parguera. This town is something special. The town is sheltered from the ocean by a series of lovely mangrove cayos and then the mangrove cayos are sheltered in turn by a whole series of reefs and shallows. We anchored beside a mangrove cayo and enjoyed the cool winds of the trades with almost no rock and roll and the most amazing views around. The next day, Richard and Louise (sv Plume) arrived. We had crossed paths with them starting at South Side Marina in TCI and through Luperon and we had seen them briefly in Boqueron.
prettiest iggy so far |
I really want to be a bus driver when I grow up! |
La Parguera
is sleepy Monday to Thursday and Friday throught Sunday it is this lively
little seaside town. The town is
sparkling, freshly painted, with a cute little downtown square and very clean
washrooms. Live music Thursday, Fridays,
Saturdays, Sundays and crafts stands and lots of people walking around from the
little ones to the older couples to the teens holding hands. It is a really nice place.
Moving on we
stopped at Punta Jacinto, a tiny little postage stamp town with a nice beach
and resort hotel where we had dinner.
Then we moved over the next day around the corner and anchored in front
of “Gilligan’s Island.” This is a
mangrove lined cayo with a tiny national park serviced by a little private
ferry from Punta Jacinto. Very picturesque,
especially as Plume sailed in. And we do
mean sailed – Richard and Louise hate turning the engine on and they are real
and true sailors.
We moved on
to Ponce and tucked in between the other anchored boats in from of the Ponce
Yacht Club. The harbour is now so
chocked with private mooring balls that there is virtually no room to
anchor. The guides are a bit out of
date. The music indeed blares from the
half dozen bars but again only on weekends.
The rock and roll was fairly bad and we decided to push on after just
the one night. We ran into Dee again and
waved and hollered to Maria as we left.
Highlight of Ponce! |
Next stop Salinas. Wow. This is an amazing little finger of completely protected harbour. The holding is super and there is still a lot of room around and between the private mooring balls. We stayed here for almost 2 weeks, enjoying the Marina de Salinas (water, diesel, laundry, bar and GREAT BBQ every Friday.) We met several cruisers including Dave and Jane from UK (on Greta May, a 45’ custom steel sloop) who gave us lots of tips for east and south and we filled them in on west and north. Little Playa de Salinas has the necessities – bars and restaurants and small groceria. Main town Salinas a couple of miles away has the big grocery store, gas stations and banks, a hardware store etc. Many cruisers spend hurricane season here for all the foregoing reasons and also because about 5 miles away around the corner to the east in the Bahia de Jobos are the Jobos hurricane holes, mangrove lined fingers where the boats can get 100% protection from any surge.
The harbour
was so safe and the boat so secure that we rented a car and did some
touring. Viejo (old) San Juan is
beautiful and we spent 3 days there. The
old Spanish forts are truly amazing, rivaling any that we have seen
elsewhere. They are National Park
monuments and are very well cared for.
maybe, maybe not but this place does make a great Pina Colada
We drove on to Fajardo and picked up an order at West Marine and also retrieved our repaired radar scanner (using West Marine as the ship to address.) We had intended to visit El Yunque national park, a rainforest, but unfortunately heavy rains closed the park during this period. This will be atop our list the next time we are passing.
GI Joe Iggy! |
Flags: Puerto Rico, Old Spanish flag, Stars & Strips |
maybe, maybe not but this place does make a great Pina Colada
We drove on to Fajardo and picked up an order at West Marine and also retrieved our repaired radar scanner (using West Marine as the ship to address.) We had intended to visit El Yunque national park, a rainforest, but unfortunately heavy rains closed the park during this period. This will be atop our list the next time we are passing.
Back to
Salinas we used the car to get jerry cans of diesel and gas and of course to
replenish the larder and beverage stores.
We also used the calm of the harbour to get the radar scanner remounted,
now off the appropriately named radar arch.
Not only working well, looks pretty good too! Hey Frank (Just Desserts), I remembered the
anti-drip loop! The cable clam is
working just great, thanks again.
Water gets into the fuel tank mostly from condensation but sometimes also from purchased diesel (marina tanks etc also get condensation and as they sell less than service stations we try to buy from service stations if there is one very close to carry our jerry cans.) An algae grows at the layer where diesel sits on the water (water is heavier and sinks to the bottom. This algae plugs fuel filters and fouls fuel injectors in the engine. So, we use additives - Biobor JF for the algae and Stanadyne for the water and to help prevent corrosion of the fuel tank.
We moved off
May 19 across the Bahia de Jobos and past the hurricane holes anchoring off
Punta Pozuelo where we saw 4 manatees.
We got up late and headed out about 2300 through the Boca de Infierno. Interesting name, any idea what it
means? Well, on our way over we had
scouted it out and almost went through it, dropping GPS waypoints in
preparation for our night passage. We
made for Vieques and arrived at about 9am on the west coast and anchored off
Green Beach, just south of Punta Arenas.
We stayed for a full day and night before moving on to Culebra and
enjoyed a great beam reach sail from Isobel Segunda across the channel to
Ensenada Honda, Culebra. We anchored
right in front of the town of Dewey in 15 feet and another great and
well-protected harbour.
Water gets into the fuel tank mostly from condensation but sometimes also from purchased diesel (marina tanks etc also get condensation and as they sell less than service stations we try to buy from service stations if there is one very close to carry our jerry cans.) An algae grows at the layer where diesel sits on the water (water is heavier and sinks to the bottom. This algae plugs fuel filters and fouls fuel injectors in the engine. So, we use additives - Biobor JF for the algae and Stanadyne for the water and to help prevent corrosion of the fuel tank.
bottoms up! |
Culebra,
together with neighbouring Culebrita and big Vieques, are the major components
of the Spanish Virgin Islands. The
islands are just lovely and what they don’t have (crowds and lots of Charter
boats) are nicely matched by what they do have (lots of prime anchorages,
sights, beaches, bars and restaurants.)
We enjoyed strolling around Dewey and hit Zaco’s Tacos, Heather’s Pizza,
Mamacita’s and the Dinghy Dock. There is
garbage disposal, a supermarket (small but very adequate) and a government dock
also. The anchorage is beautiful. We again met Plume who arrived a day after us
and anchored beside us and we met Jim and Linda (sv Double Trouble, a 30’
Chrylser TMI.) Jim is a handy guy and
he dropped off some of his homemade hot sauce (excellent!)
lift bridge no longer used |
Zaco's Tacos - great Mexican |
The Dinghy Dock |
We had a
beach holiday at Flamenco Beach, simply one of the most beautiful beaches in
the world. Some people camp here for
months during the winter. There are
washrooms and freshwater showers, kiosks selling food and beverage, and there
are loungers, chairs, umbrellas, snorkel gear etc for rent. Of course, most people (and they are mostly
Puerto Rican but tourists also) come for the day from Fajardo (which is only 45
minutes by car or bus to San Juan) on the main island via ferry ($2 each way) and then take a private bus ($3 each way) from the ferry dock to the beach.
We moved on to Culebrita, about 5 miles, and anchored May 24 off the northwest corner before moving into the main harbour at the end of the day. The next morning we were joined by two sailboats – including Plume! Then the conga line of motor boats started arrived to join the 25 or so that had spent the night. By early afternoon there were over 80 power boat ranging in size from 15’ inflatables to a 70’ motor yacht. The majority of the boats seemed to be Sport Fishers from about 25’-45’. It was quite a sight and very entertaining to watch. We walked the beach to get the other perspective.
Louise (Plume) and Edi |
After a couple of days we were off, following Plume, for the US Virgin Islands arriving and anchoring in St. Thomas Harbour, between King’s Wharf and the Cruise Ship dock.
sv Plume - 33' Hans Christian |
that's a boatload of boats |
To everyone
who got a video email from us around May 20, our apologies. It seems while using free wifi, probably at
Marina de Salinas, some malware managed to copy all of our emails and then send
out that infected email. We have changed
our passwords and run several different anti-virus programmes and hope we are
“clean” now. I am not sure but that may
also have something to do with our Shiptrak position reports. Our latest position reports after Salinas do
not seem to be recorded and there also seems to be many “garbage” position
reports as well. Not sure how to correct
this, but will start looking into it.
We are well and having fun and will be in the US Virgins for a little while. The we will be heading on to the BVIs before making the jump across the final challenge, the Anegada Passage, to St. Martin. Thanks for the emails, we enjoy hearing from everyone. We hear the sailing season is well underway up north, the ice have disappeared about last week? Ha-ha-ha! We mean that in the nicest way. At least it's been easy to get a cold beer, speaking of which... happy hour is starting and Edi is revving the outboard so we gotta go!
3500.3 NM / 4025.2
STM / 6594.2 KM under the hull
May 28,
2014: at anchor, St. Thomas Harbour, USVI; 9 ½ months out
Edi &
Blair, s/v Kind of Magic, clear
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