Acapulco, Huatulco… and an unexpected, possibly long-term, stop in Chiapas

Hola!

We cant believe we have already sailed the length of Mexico; where did the last two and a half months go?!? Here are some stats on our trip so far:

Number of Days: 82

Number of Nights spent under way: 16

Nautical miles traveled: 2613

Number of cervezas and margaritas it took to do it all… Quien sabe!

Number of diesel engines blown in the process… keep reading.

Acapulco

We spent three days in Acapulco laying pretty low. After the dinghy incedent in Zihuat, we were feeling a little gun-shy so we dished out the cash to stay in a marina. Acapulco is not the safest city these days, and its pretty run down. However, next to our marina there was some sort of members-only club with a gorgeous pool. Naturally, we invited ourselves in and made ourselves at home. We made friends with the bartenders and spent a good chunk of our time in Acapulco at the pool since it almost too hot to do much of anything else.

Pool complete with fountains, swim-up bar, and a lighthouse.

Chillaxin'

Turn my back on Elan for one minute... and he finds his way behind the bar...

View from the top of the lighthouse

We visited the pre-colonial fort, Fuerte de San Diego, which had a nice museum.

Fuerte de San Diego

Plaza inside the Fuerte with the beach and city skyline beyond.

Nice guns!

We went to see the Clavadistas at La Quebrada; incredible divers who first climb up a sheer cliff wall (in their speedos- no harness or safety gear) and then dive off. The dives got progressively more technical, the grand finale involved flaming torches on the way down. We watched from a restaurant across the divide.

They jump from up near the glowing light.

Our view from the restaurant

We also picked up our new dinghy tubes and spent most of our last day at the dock reassembling the silly thing… it was harder than it should have been. By the time we finished assembling our dinghy, it was well after dark, so we quickly took a cold hose dock “shower” and shoved off for Huatulco.

Buddy Boats!

 

Leaving Acapulco by moonlight- its said to look like a 'bowl of diamonds'.

Huatalco

What should have been a two night trip from Acapulco to Huatulco ended up being three nights. In our rush to leave Acapulco, we made a catastropic mistake… we didnt check our oil level. You know that part in the movie “Captain Ron” where he describes the motor of the boat something like: “these ol’ diesels are indestructible, as long as you add a quart of oil every day before you fire it up”. Yeah. Thats us. During the middle of the second night I heard the engine making a funny noise so we turned it off. Our “normal-for-a-4108” oil leak seemed to have accelerated and nearly ran dry. We topped off the oil and decided to sail the rest of the night to give the engine a break until we could re-evaluate during daylight hours. We fired it up the next morning and all seemed to be going well. Unfortunately our slow progress under sail that night meant that we passed our destination after sunset the next night. The accuracy of GPS isnt perfect; its never safe to enter an unfamiliar harbor at night (we have been anchoring on land according to our GPS quite a bit lately) so we decided to push on to Huatulco instead. Huatulco was only 40 miles past our original destination so we had to go as slow as possible to make sure we didnt arrive before sunrise. Wouldn’t you know that the one time we try to go SLOW on a sailboat that we have a favorable current rushing us right along at 3 knots. We dilly dallied best as we could and pulled into Huatulco just after day break.

Took this video of our dolphin friends: Dolphins en route to Huatulco.

The extra day at sea meant we arrived on a Friday, which didnt give us enough time to do our official check-out-of-Mexico rigamarole with the port captian, immigration, and customs before the weekend, so we spent the whole weekend there. Huatulco, or more specifically, Las Crucecitas, is a sweet town with very friendly people. We tried a Oaxacan specialty of dried grasshoppers and black mole.

Mezcal (its the Oaxacan version of tequila) worm to go along with the grasshoppers.

Elan and I also worked on several projects at the dock: we finished installing the dinghy wheels, we hacked up our old dinghy for patches, Elan mounted our second jerry can rack (yep- its officially a “cruising boat” with junk hanging all over 🙂 ), I sewed canvas covers for all of the jerry cans and I also modified our canvas dinghy cover to fit a little better. Its been in the high nineties, so its all hot work in the blazing sun.

Poor ol' dinghy in bits and pieces!

New jerry can rack (a la Elan) and jerry can covers (a la Ash).

We left on Monday night just after dark to set out across the Tehuanepec to El Salvador. The Tejuanepec is notorious for extremely high wind conditions, but we had a good 5 day weather window for a trip that should have only taken us three. Because we are in the skinniest part of Mexico, anytime the Gulf of Mexico winds blow, they funnel across Mexico to our side with such force that it actually lowers the level of the ocean.  Conventional wisdom says that in bad weather its better to head out to sea, but in this area the winds can blow out 200-300 miles out to sea, so most folks do the opposite- ride as close to shore as possible.  Our plan was to hug the coast about 1 mile offshore so that if it got too rough we could quickly dip into calmer waters near the coast. We didn’t plan to stop in Guatemala because the fees to import the boat are crazy high.

And now some very bad news…

We left Huatulco around sunset and early the next day we started having engine problems again. We babied it, we sailed, we tinkered… everything seemed to be going wrong at once. Our starter jammed, so Elan unjammed it, we had air in the fuel lines (we changed our fuel filters in Huatulco, so sometimes that happens) so Elan bled the fuel system, and finally based on sheer willpower, got it to fire back up again. It ran beautifully for about an hour and then out of the blue, just petered out slowly. We opened the engine compartment to find it plastered in oil and discovered a baseball sized hole in our engine block. Dang it. This engine is toast.

So there we were, in the middle of the Tehuanepec, about 120miles from the nearest port in either direction… and remember that we chose this time to cross the Tehuanepec because the wind was NOT blowing… which makes sailing a little difficult. We spent the next three nights and four days sailing when we could, drifting when we couldn’t, and praying that we could make it safely to a port. Its a little frustrating seeing 0.0 knots on the GPS when you know that you have a lot of work ahead of you that is going to slow down your trip, but what else could we do?? Our amazing, wonderful friends on Solent drifted along side us the entire time ready to bail us out of trouble if we needed it. We made it to the nearest port with a marina, Chiapas MX, 16 miles from the Guatemala boarder. Solent planned to launch their dinghy with their more powerful motor right near the channel entrance to tow us in, but at the last second they had a problem with their outboard and couldnt get to us. We quickly launched our own dinghy with our poor lil 6 horsepower motor to do the job. I rode in the dinghy and controlled speed while Elan steered Silver Lining over the bar and through the breaking waves at the channel entrance. We slowly made our way through the long channel, around the dredgers, and to the marina. The marina is brand new,  more empty than full, so we chose the easiest slip to get in to. I threw the dinghy in neutral, hopped on Silver, tossed the bow and stern lines to the dock hands waiting for us, then hopped back in the dinghy to kill the engine as we glided into our new home for the next month or so.

Dinghy strapped along side and towing.

We are totally bummed. When we set out on this adventure, we knew that part of an “adventure” meant accepting the rough times along with the amazing times. We knew that it wasnt going to be all margaritas and sunsets; we figured that issues like a blown engine or a ruined dinghy were possible, but we didn’t expect them both to happen within a 10 day period. Oh, and did I mention Elan broke his finger too?  Yeah. During our drifting, we happened through a big patch of floating nets which required more maneuverability to dodge around than we could handle with the sail, so we rigged up the dinghy to steers us around that too. As Elan set it up, he squashed his hand between the two boats. Ouch. We had it X-Ray’d today and the bones look ok, though his finger is certainly hanging at a funny angle. The docs said that regardless, the remedy would be to splint it, take anti-inflamatories, and not use it for two weeks. Hmmm… replace a 700lb engine without his right hand… we’ll see.

Moments after Elan squished his hand, a fishing panga came up along side us, as we were towing our boat, to ask us for food. We gave them what we could, figuring that if they had to ask, they must really need it. When a few minutes later another panga up along side, we wondered what we had started. To our surprise, they offered us 6 gigantic shrimp and wanted nothing in return. We passed them a few beers and then had fresh shrimp for lunch.

A tired Elan with broken finger and shrimp.

Apo is not so sure about these wiggly things...

 

As for the engine prospects, we wont know for sure until businesses open on Monday, but it looks like we may need to ship a new one down from the US. Shipping will be tricky… Anyone up for a cross-Mexico roadtrip?! Haha. The manager at our marina here suggested that, if we can get the engine to Texas, we slip the engine on one of the many banana trucks that transit from there to here. Oh, the conveniences of modern life!

In any case, this will be an expensive and time-costly incident. I think we’ll be lucky to get out of here in less than a month. But, what other option do we have? We aren’t ready to come home yet, we worked hard building the boat and scraping pennies together. It’s too soon to quit! It just may mean that our plan will look a little different than we originally thought. Maybe shorter. Maybe we stop and work somewhere along the way. Time will tell.

We are truly sad to have said goodbye to our friends on Solent so abruptly, but  seeing as how we’d all already officially checked out of Mexico, the paperwork would have been too complicated and expensive for them to “re-enter” Mexico just to say goodbye.  We will really miss you guys- you are the best! Thanks for the moral support, trouble shooting advice, shared ‘margititas’ and of course the ‘human krills’ along the way. Hopefully we’ll see you again in Panama!!!

So for now… Chiapas is home, sweet, home.

In my last post I mentioned that we planning to shave Apollo, here are the results – not bad considering! We left a little mowhawk to match his tough-guy attitude.

Gettin' buzzed!

Mowhawk!

Thats it for now. We’ll keep you posted on how the engine project is coming along!

A&E

 

 

La Cruz, Nuevo Vallarta, Ixtapa & Acapulco

Hi Everyone!

We have nearly travelled the length of Mexico now… just a few hundred more miles to El Salvador. Here’s what we’ve been up to….

Chacala

We left Mazatlan at daybreak for an overnight run to Chacala, a small village in a small but beautiful bay. For the first time, things are starting to look more tropical. Until now, we have only seen the dry deserty hills of Baja and the Sea of Cortez, so the lush jungle, palm trees and flowers is a new treat. We dinghied to shore and explored the town on foot. Although its a small village, because it was still Semana Santa, the beaches were quite crowded.

Yummy drinks on the beach at Chacala.

Pina Coladas

Walking through Chacala

Lee had to swim the dinghy out to make sure we didn't hit any swimming children.

We stayed one night and when we tried to pull up our anchor the next morning, we realized it had become tangled in a fisherman’s net. Elan had seen the young boy (he was maybe ten years old) dropping what we assumed was just a crab pot near our bow the night before. Elan figured that even if a crab pot got wound around the anchor chain it could be unwound in the morning, but a net is a little tricker.With the tide changes, current, etc during the night, the two became quite a tangled mess. I managed to carefully untangle it with no damage to anchor or net, and we were off on an uneventful motorsail to La Cruz.

A tangled mess- the milk jug is his bouy. 🙂

 

La Cruz

We anchored outside of the small town of La Cruz, which has quite a large sailor/cruiser population. Its a slow-paced, community in Banderas Bay, a short drive/sail from the hustle and bustle of Puerto Vallarta. We met up with a lady named “Zee” who Elan had chatted with on Cruisers Forum, who has been docked at the marina for about a month. She gave us a quick walking tour of town, and then parked us all down at Ana Banana’s Restaurant/Bar for dinner, margaritas, and a great live band. We spent the whole evening hanging out, chatting with other cruisers, dancing and we even wrote our boat names on the wall above the bar- the owner was the one who gave us the sharpie, so why not!!.

He's proud of our grafiti at Ana Bananas

Best buds

Fresh fish market in La Cruz

 

Nueva Vallarta

The next morning we zipped across the bay to a marina in Nueva Vallarta. This is only the second time we have stayed at a marina on our whole trip down, so we decided to treat ourselves to hot showers, shore power, and fresh water to wash the boat down (it needed a bath badly, everything including ourselves and the dog are pretty well salt encrusted by now 🙂 ). We stayed at Paradise Village, which gave us access to the pools, hottubs, restaurants, and tigers. Yes, there are tigers in a pen by the lobby – what marina would be complete without them?

Parrots at our marina

I feel bad that these guys have to be locked up.

We rented a couple of scooters for 24hrs, and had a blast riding all over the area. We rode out to the surf town of Sayulita, out to Punta Mita, through some jungly areas and into the city of Puerto Vallarta. Had I known that Punta Mita has a great little surf beach perfect for beginners like me, I would have camped out there for a few more days.

Good lookin' crew! Somewhere on Punta Mita.

En route to Nueva Vallarta

Driving in traffic was interesting to say the least, but we made it though unscathed, with the exception of Elan’s helmet which went flying off his head as we drove down the road, and found its way under a bus and into a ditch.  I scooped up the pieces, we tied it back on to Elan’s head with his sunglasses string and went merrily on our way (better than nothing, right?!) We took advantage of having transportation to buy some 8 foot stainless steel tubing for some boat projects, and strapped those on to the scooter too. Im sure we were a sight to see.

Elan’s helmet after it bounced under a bus – not too bad actually!

Later on, we took Solent’s dinghy up the estuary looking for crocodiles, but didn’t find any. As I hopped out of the dinghy to go to dinner at Fajita Republic (yummy fajita place) I accidentally dropped my camera into the bilge of the dinghy…. its been soaking in rice to dry out for over a week now, but its not looking good. I think we will soon be in the market for a new WATERPROOF camera. Bummer.

We looked for crocodiles in the estuary near our marina

Iguana

Watch out for crocs!

We also took advantage of dock space and fresh water at the marina to work on a few boat projects: Elan fixed our boom/mainsail which had stripped out of the mast, and I added our new vinyl graphics to the bow (Thanks Jake & Deja!).

Getting the graphics lined up and pressed on...

Ta-Da! Thanks Deja and Jake for making them for us!

 

Tenacatita

We motored overnight to a pretty bay called Tenacatita, and for the first time since leaving San Diego, the sun rose on a hazy day, and we have had a few more since then too. I think its mostly just the moisture in the air. We have been wearing full foul weather gear at night- not because its cold- but because everything gets positively drenched with the nighttime dew.

Just after dawn, as I was finishing up my night shift, I tossed a handline and fish lure out, just to help break up the boredom and was thrilled to catch our first non-bonito fish (we are tired of eating bonito!). I originally thought it was a yellow fin tuna because of its bright yellow tail and fins, but after a little research, I think it was actually a Crevelle Jack… a relative of the bonito. Ugh. I made fresh sushi with him, but the meat is tough and a very dark red. But he was pretty, and it was a nice change of pace anyway.

Reelin' him in

Crevale Jack

Our fresh sushi lunch!

At Tenacatita, we took the dinghy up yet another estuary in search of crocs, and still didn’t find any. 🙁 However it was a pretty drive.

Mangroves

Estuary dinghy trek

Hubs on the bow in the estuary.

No crocs in the estero, but we did see lots of these little tree climbing crabs!

 

Barra de Navidad

The next day, we made the short day hop to Barra de Navidad, a shallow inland bay with a fun beach town. On our way into the anchorage, we had to cross a sand bar (hence the name BARRA de Navidad), and, for the first time ever on our boat, we ran aground. Thankfully, it was just soft silty muck bottom, and we were going very slow, but we were wedged in pretty well. A nice teenage kid from another boat zipped over in his dinghy and helped push us off. He reminded me of my cousin Greg when he was that age, running around with any boat he could get his hands on…. and by the way…. HAPPY ENGAGEMENT Greg and Heather! Couldn’t be happier for you two!!!

Isla Grande by Ixtapa

On our way south, we saw SO many sea turtles lazily floating on the surface of the water. They seemed just as undisturbed by us motoring by as they were by the birds sitting on their backs. There are 5 or 6 different types of turtles in this area, and we are sure we saw at least two.

Turtle! Love these guys!

Just before arriving at Isla Grande, right outside of Ixtapa, we drove through hoards and hoards of glowing pink jellyfish. Not as charming as the turtles, especially after our stinging jellyfish experience at Ensenada Grande. These were small, about 3 inches each and if I had to guess, Id say there was at least one jellyfish per cube foot of water as deep, and as far as we could see for about 45 minutes. Swim anyone?

Jelly fish swarm

We had a rocky rolly night at Isla Grande, and decided to move on with out making the long dinghy ride to shore to explore the city of Ixtapa.

Zihuatenejo

Our overnight trip to Zihuatenejo was eventful to say the least. Off and on since Cabo, we have had engine overheating problems, and have tried everything we can think of to fix them; we removed the thermostat, we cleaned and flushed the raw water heat exchanger, installed a new temp gauge, and installed a new temp sender, but low and behold, we were still overheating. Suspicious that maybe the temp gauge and sender we had previously installed weren’t communicating properly, (we bought them separately) we bought a matched set gauge and sender in La Paz. Midway through our passage, Elan decided to kill the engine and make the swap right out in the middle of the ocean. Wouldn’t you know, as soon as we had the engine compartment open and torn apart, that a freighter would come bearing down on us. Im sure my panicked announcements of “6mi away!…. 4mi away!…. 2mi away!” weren’t helping Elan’s stress level, but after putting up a sail to luff in the non-existent breeze, it was the only thing I could think to do. 🙂 Elan expertly installed the new sender and gauge in a matter of minutes, but when I went to turn the key in the ignition to fire up and get out of dodge, the entire key assembly pulled out of the wall and crumbled in my hand. I couldn’t believe our luck. The freighter ended up passing about .5 miles off our bow, which is plenty of room (but at the same time, not nearly enough!!) and Elan casually showed me how to start the motor with a screwdriver. What a stud.

Perfect timing.

Just moments after getting back underway, we found ourselves being hailed by the Mexican Navy for a routine inspection. Great! They were friendly enough and surprisingly non-invasive in their search, but having 10 dudes in masks with machine guns stomping around the boat was unnerving. Thankfully Apollo, our fierce guard dog, didn’t bite a single one, and we passed our inspection with flying colors.

Navy boat leaving after our inspection.

Needless to say, we were very excited to get to Zihuatenejo, its a good sized town that cruisers consistently love. We agreed that it was a cute town, very clean, orderly, good variety of shops, etc…. however, we were devastated to return to our dinghy after breakfast the next day and find that someone had slashed a big hole in it with a knife. We are totally crushed. We both have traveled extensively abroad with the attitude that if you treat other people with respect and kindness, you can stay out of trouble even in less than perfect security situations. We have no idea what provoked this malicious act. From the looks of it, they cut a slice about 1 foot long and then ripped the hole to a total of about 4 feet. Its a three chambered boat, meant to float even if one tube is popped, but they managed to pop two of the three chambers. We did our best to patch it up on the beach, but its a frankenstein…. we are giving it a day or two to dry before testing it with air. At best, it will be a temporary fix. We informed the Port Captain and FONATUR, Mexico’s tourism dept, of the vandalism, and they all insisted that nothing like that could have ever happened in their town, and I generally got the impression that they wanted the whole thing swept under the rug as soon as possible. Tourism in Mexico has suffered a lot in the past few years due to bad PR about the drug wars, and Im sure they don’t want stories like ours making the record.

Ouch! This is the bigger of the two holes.

Our sad, sad dinghy patch job... fingers crossed it will hold for a few days.

However, our boat’s name is Silver Lining, and this story has one too. We contacted Walker Bay, the company that makes our dinghy, told them the sob story, and asked if there was any way (pretty, pretty please) that we could buy a cosmetically blemished dinghy for less than retail price, and have Elan’s sister Deja hand carry it to us when she visits us next month. To our astonishment and relief Walker Bay responded immediately and said that not only do they have a factory in Mexico, but they will sell us a replacement set of tubes at cost!! They are quick-shipping the tubes to us in Acapulco, and we should have them on Tuesday. What an amazing company (based in Yakima WA – huh, close to home!) and fabulous customer service – its the best possible outcome to this sad situation. Their response is a good reminder there are lots of good people out there in the world to offset the occasional jerk. This will still be an expensive hang-up, but its better than it could have been, and Deja- you are off the hook. 🙂

For as much as we looked forward to Zihuatenejo, we couldn’t shake that “I’ve just been violated” feeling and couldn’t wait to get out of there.

Acapulco

We made the overnight passage to Acapulco, and on the moonless night we had the most amazing phosphorescence I have ever seen. Every wave, bow splash, and turn of the prop left a glowing blue streak. While alone on night watch, looking out at the glowing streaks reaching as far as the eye can see, it was easy to imagine that each flash was a fish, or dolphin, or sea monster… hey, night watch goes by slowly without something to occupy your thoughts. 🙂 I had to laugh a little when I pumped the toilet and even saw the glow there in the salt water flush. I think that phosphorescence is caused by the same organism as red tide, and the water has certainly been reddish lately. The color of the water here at anchor in the bay at Acapulco is the most disturbing shade of dark red. In the last few days we have also seen a lot of coagulated oil floating on the surface of the ocean, and what could possibly be a bubbly white dispersant. I think large oil spills sometimes show up as a reddish color. We haven’t seen anything in the news indicating a spill near by, but Mexico’s fuel company, PEMEX, is a federal corporation, so if there was a spill, it may not make the news. Either way, I don’t think we’ll be swimming here.

Icky red water in Acapulco

On a happy note, our new temp gauge and sender fix, seems to have done the trick! The two previous ones, although new, weren’t purchased together, so they just weren’t communicating correctly. We haven’t actually been overheating at all- it was just sending an incorrect message. PHEW! We met a sailor in La Cruz who said she was the only one she’d ever met who’s boat didn’t overheat on the trip down Baja….. and thats because her temp gauge was broken. Haha. Well, either way, we are in good company.

Well, thats it for now, we’ll be here in Acapulco until our dinghy shows up, and then head to Huatalco, our last stop in Mexico before crossing the Tehuanepec and entering El Salvador.

I’m off to see how well I can butcher Apollo’s sweet curls in an attempt to cool him off- he needs it!

Hope you are all well, lots of love,

A&E

P.S. We need to add yet another great engagement notice and congratulations for this week! Congrats Bean and Trevor!!