The ruined church on the hill that held
Longfellow's Bells of San Blas.
The "new" church that replaced the
church on the hill.
This newest church that replaced the "new" church
next door.
Every wife deserves a ride like this from
her hubby.
It was a crazy busy day in the
town square and we saw all
kinds of folks...
A mural depicts the town of San Blas.
The guys liked the cannons at the fort.
The Belle of the Ball preps for her
15th birthday.
A path over a ridge on Isla Isabel
led to a frigate bird rookery.
A frigate bird keeps an eye on me, his red pouch
deflated.
A frigate bird chick huddles on its nest.
Two frigate bird eggs resemble
chicken eggs.
A pale headed & dark faced
brown booby on a cliff.
A dark headed brown booby
Booby chicks.
A blue footed booby!
Yep, those are blue feet.
The blue footed booby blocks the path
and tells me to go home.
A colorful snake winds around a
tree trunk.
The flock waits for handouts from the fishermen.
How we look after an overnight passage.
San Blas & Isla Isabel, Mexico
Early April, 2011 - We left the crowd of cruisers in La Cruz and eagerly looked forward to more quiet anchorages on our way
north to Mazatlán. The winds were in our favor and we had two glorious days of sailing, stopping for an overnight at Isla Peña.
The second morning was sunny and warm with a light breeze, and the boat danced easily on its course. We were both
somewhere out there in daydream land when suddenly we heard an enormous splash. Leaping to our feet we watched a
humpback whale shoot straight up out of the water, turn, and fall crashing back down on its side.
When a much smaller whale tail flapped nearby, we realized this was a mother
with a baby. A few moments later the whale surged out of the sea again, this
time doing a full twist before falling back into the depths. A little ways away the
smaller tail waved again.
Our second night we stopped at Ensenada
Mantachén, a large bay that looked at first like an
ideal spot to spend a few days.
It is a short
bus ride from
the little community of Mantachén into the town
of San Blas, which is famous for inspiring
Longfellow's poem The Bells of San Blas.
Reading that wistful poem made us curious
about the ruined church on the hill whose once
clanging bells are now muted and "green with
mould and rust." At one time they symbolized a
dark era of conquest, when Spain ruled and "the
world with faith was filled." But now the bells
stand silent, reminding us of "an age that is
fading fast" while "the world rolls into light."
We walked through the ruins of the church on
the hill, and then explored the ruins of the "new"
church down in the town. The new church has
been replaced by another even newer church
next door. This newest church is where today's
faithful go to worship.
San Blas was very busy on the day of our visit.
Citizens, government officials and armed
soldiers filled the town square. I asked several
people what was going on but didn't fully understand the
explanations. I think it was some kind of survey of the local people to
determine their standard of living. As tourists, we simply enjoyed
watching the scene.
Up on the hill by the old church
stands an old fort that we explored
with friends. The cannons were fun
for the guys. More fun for us gals
was seeing a young girl getting
photos taken for her "quinceañera,"
or 15th birthday. This is a very
important milestone birthday for
Mexican girls, a kind of "coming
out," and it is celebrated with a
huge party and a fantastic prom
dress.
Many small towns exude charm and make visitors feel welcome and
safe, but San Blas is not that way. As one fellow cruiser put it, "I wouldn't go out after dark
here." At the beach palapa restaurant in Mantachén the owner even wore a sidearm. We
had been put on guard immediately upon arrival at the Matanchén anchorage when a group
of cruisers pulled alongside our boat in their dinghy and said, "Make sure you lock your
outboard at night. There have been some outboard and dinghy thefts in the last few
weeks." We put cable locks on everything on deck but slept fitfully. Mark bolted out of bed
at 2:30 a.m. when he heard people on a panga nearby tapping on the panga's hull. They
appeared to be fishing, so he went back to sleep. Next morning our friends discovered their
Mercury 9.9 hp outboard had been stolen. They had raised their dinghy in its davits so it
was 6 feet off the water, but they hadn't locked the outboard. It seemed to us that this theft
had been carefully orchestrated and must have involved more than one person.
We had planned the next day to go on an estuary tour that many other visitors to the area
have raved about, but we had a sour taste in our mouths after that episode and we left right
away.
Isla Isabel waited peacefully on the horizon for us, just 50 or so miles away to the north. No
sooner had we dropped the hook than the couple on the neighboring sailboat swung by and
invited us to go ashore with them. Stepping out of the dink onto the beach we found
ourselves in the middle of a fish camp. A row of pangas sat on the beach in front of a row
of shacks, and piles of fishing nets filled the space in between.
A friendly fisherman guided us to a
path that goes to the interior of the
island, and after climbing up and
over a ridge we found ourselves in
the heart of a frigate bird rookery.
A canopy of short trees formed a
roof above us, and on every
branch a frigate bird hunched over
an impossibly rickety little nest.
The chicks were nearly full-sized,
but their feathers weren't fully
grown in yet, and they had that
goofy look of pre-adolescents
everywhere.
The ground was thick with guano, and we danced around
looking up at the undersides of the birds while ducking in fear
that we might become targets for droppings. I found the
remains of a few chicks that must have fallen out of their nests
a while ago, and we found two unhatched eggs. They were
the size of chicken eggs, but they were heavy. No doubt each
one held a well formed chick that didn't make it out in time.
We followed the path up another hill and emerged onto the
cliffs that line the edge of the island. In front of us, blocking the
way, were legions of boobies. They stared at us with quiet
curiosity, watching our every move, but showed no particular
signs of fear or of getting out of the way.
We had seen our first boobies several months earlier when
we sailed into Manzanillo Bay. It had been late afternoon and
lines of them were commuting back home to roost. We
weren't sure what kind of bird they were, but we started
calling them "tuxedo birds" because of the way they dressed.
Seeing them so close
now I realized there are
several variations. Some
have light colored heads
with a dark face and
some have dark colored
heads with a light face.
But all the chicks were
fluffy and cute.
We pressed on through
the crowd along the edge
of the cliff, and each
parent/chick pair backed away a little as we went by. Then
we turned a corner, and faced an unusually obstinate
booby. This one had blue feet!
Apparently the
Galápagos islands are
not the only habitat in
the world where blue
footed boobies live, and this little mom was doing her
darndest to make sure her species thrived here on Isla
Isabel.
She stood her ground as we
approached, effectively blocking her
chick and the path with a very
impressive display. She fluffed up her
feathers, made all kinds of noises and
generally told us to back off.
A few quick photos and we did as we were told, tromping back down the hill into the frigate
bird colony and back to the beach.
Mark is a woodsman at heart, and he spotted an unusual snake in a tree. We tried to
remember the rhyme about the color patterns on coral colored snakes, "Red touch yellow,
kill a fellow," or something like that, but we couldn't quite remember how it went. We later
found the coral snake rhyme online and discovered our little guy was a milk snake.
After all this exotica it
seemed rather pedestrian to
watch the congregation of
seagulls and pelicans lining
up for scraps from the
fishermen. But I still love
these guys too. These gulls
make a cry that sounds like,
"Ow ow ow," as if someone
is pinching them mercilessly.
While at San Blas we visited the cultural center which has a gallery with
a handful of paintings in it. One in particular caught my eye because it
shows the exact expression we have on our faces whenever we do an
overnight passage on the boat. The trip from Isla Isabel to Mazatlan is
90 miles, just long enough to require an overnight. Fortunately we were
able to sail almost the entire way rather than run the engine. However,
the wind was right on the nose, so we had to tack back and forth in a
zig-zag pattern for 20 hours. The wind also changed strength every
hour, which required us to reef and unreef the sails repeatedly so the
boat could take advantage of the wind rather than the other way around.
By the end of the night we actually looked a bit worse than the guy in
this painting.
Find San Blas and Isla Isabel on Mexico Maps
Mazatlan – A Little Strange
Rock formation at Isla Isabel.
Sunset at sea after leaving Isla Isabel.
A scum line of foam stretches
between Groovy and our neighbor.
Dinks line up on the beach as the owners stop for
shrimp & garlic pizza.
A perfect beach for toddlers and dinghy landings.
A water taxi arrives to take us to
downtown Mazatlan.
Mazatlan's malecon.
Unusual monuments along the
malecon.
Exotic modern architecture.
Stately antique architecture.
Mazatlan's town square has an odd excess of
shoe shiners.
Renovated buildings brighten some spots.
Elaborate antique wrought iron gates remind us that
Mazatlan has battled crime for eons.
Renovations on one side of the street distract your
gaze away from...
...unrenovated buildings across the street.
Groovy's window dips face down into the
turquoise Sea of Cortez.
The kayak begs to go for a ride...
...and what a great ride it is.
Bleached coral twigs lie in the sand.
Mansions sprout along this quiet and remote bay.
We've arrived.
Matazatlan, Mexico
Early April, 2011 - It is a 90 mile run from Isla Isabel to Mazatlan, but with the wind
directly on our nose the whole way, we knew we could easily cover as much as 140
miles tacking back and forth by the time we got there. So we left shortly after dawn,
anticipating 24 hours in transit. Sure enough, we sailed all but the last ten miles,
witnessing both a stunning sunset and a pretty sunrise before we arrived at the Stone
Island anchorage just outside of the entrance to Mazatlan harbor.
We had been warned about
fishing long-line nets ages
ago, but in our 2,200 miles of
sailing along the Mexican
coast for the past four
months we hadn't seen any
until we had approached Isla
Isabel a few days earlier.
They are poorly marked, usually with a small black buoy flying a black
triangular pennant a foot or two off the water. Generally, about 100
feet from the pennant buoy there will be a soda pop bottle or other
small buoy that marks the end of the long-line net. Somewhere out in
the distance, 1/4 mile or more away, there will be another pennant
buoy. If there is a plastic bottle bobbing near that one, then that
marks the other end of the long-line, and you need to go around the whole thing or get caught in the net. Sometimes the long-
lines can extend for several miles, with small black buoys placed every 200 feet or so along the entire length of the net.
As we approached Mazatlan we found ourselves in totally flat calm water in mid-
morning. Rather drowsy from sailing all night, we were shocked awake when a
pennant buoy slipped right by the boat. We barely missed the end of the long-line net.
Suddenly wide awake, we were astonished to find one long-line net after another
blocking our way for the entire 10 mile approach to the harbor. We had been tacking
all night long as we sailed, and now we found ourselves zig-zagging all over the sea
while under power to avoid these crazy nets.
We settled into the scenic Stone Island anchorage just outside the mouth of Mazatlan
harbor but were discouraged to find ourselves in a scum line that connected Groovy to
the next boat in the anchorage with a ragged film of foam. To keep our spirits up, we
reminded ourselves that the Huichol people believe all animal life springs from this
foam, as the foam is the Sun God's very fertile saliva.
There is a small beach
around the corner from the
anchorage where we
discovered the most delicious
shrimp and garlic pizza in a
casual beach palapa. This
pretty beach has the
sweetest and gentlest waves and is ideal for toddlers and dinghy
landings. Our kayak took its place on the shore alongside the other
dinghies from our neighboring cruisers.
The beach was serene and peaceful most days, seeming a
world apart from the very busy city that lay just beyond.
From Stone Island we
took a water taxi across
Mazatlan Harbor to the
edge of Old Town. This
made getting to and from
the city of Mazatlan a kayak-walk-water taxi affair, but it also placed us in a pretty
setting far from the urban challenges that make up Mazatlan.
A walk along the city's
malecon, or boardwalk,
revealed a waterfront that
could be very attractive.
There is a long beach,
some unusual homes
perched on impossible
cliffs, and some unique statues
and monuments.
However, Mazatlan is not a
friendly place. For the first
time in Mexico a bus driver
tried to cheat us when he made change,
giving us 25 pesos in change rather than the
40 he owed us. It took three refusals of his
token offers of small coins to get the total we
were due, and he offered no apology.
Similarly, where other Mexicans in other
places happily smile and wave when they
pass, here we found downcast eyes and
solemn expressions. It is not a happy city.
We had heard mixed reviews of Mazatlan
before we arrived, with most people saying
they hadn't liked it. However a few were very
enthusiastic about the Old Town architecture.
The cathedral was impressive.
More impressive to us, however, was that the
town square was filled with shoe-shiners. On
each of the four sidewalks surrounding
the square we found two or three shoe-
shine people, for a total of 10 or 12
around the square. They laughed when
we pointed at our Keene sandals -- no
sales there -- but we had never seen
such a high density of people shining
shoes for a living.
At one time Mazatlan was prosperous,
and quite a few ornate buildings have
been renovated. There is a tiny half-
block sized park that is surrounded by
brightly painted renovated buildings. A
few three- and four-table restaurants
catering to gringo tourists spill out onto
the sidewalk. Another
cobbled street sports a brief row of antique buildings whose imposing
wrought iron gates over the doors and windows are reminders that
even in wealthier times this city was gripped by crime. Unfortunately,
renovation is only skin deep. Across the street from one architectural
make-over was another building begging for repair.
We heard rumors that an American tourist in Mazatlan had
recently been caught in the cross-fire of drug-related gang
violence and killed, leading the cruise ships to reroute their
cruises away from this city.
The many busted up buildings, the endless graffiti all over town and the
truckload of soldiers patrolling the supermarket parking lot where we
went shopping all seemed to support the sad story that there is a very
dark side to this city.
It didn't help when a taxi driver told us to be sure never to walk through
the neighborhood next to where he dropped us off, as it was the worst of
the drug and gang infested neighborhoods.
Waking up to dense pea soup fog three days in a row did nothing to
lighten our mood, and on the fourth morning we left well before dawn to
make our trek across the Sea of Cortez to the southeastern tip of the
Baja peninsua.
Mazatlan to Bahia Los Muertos is a 190 mile journey, and for us it was
largely upwind. We motored along overnight. Just like four months
earlier, we listened to the nutty fishermen calling each other all night long on the VHF radio. Paying no attention to the
international regulations regarding the strict use of Channel 16 as a hailing channel only, these guys held long conversations
with each other, broadcast favorite songs, whistled at each other, yelled, and teased each other all night long. It makes for a
strange moonless night at sea when invisible waves noisily lick the hull while crazy Mexican fishermen cat-call each other on
the radio at the top of their lungs between playing snippets of Tina Turner and Mexican mariachi music.
All night long we impatiently watched the wind gauge, waiting for the wind to slide off our nose just enough so we could sail.
The moment finally came on our second morning as the sun was rising, and we got in 7 hours of sprightly sailing.
What a joy it was, as the boat heeled over in the brilliant sparkling
morning seas, suddenly to see bright turquoise water. Due to all
the red tide and estuary run-off this year, the ocean along the
Mexican Pacific coast had ranged from grey-green to brown to
burgundy. I was so thrilled by the color of the water streaming by
our hull as we approached the Los Muertos anchorage that I
quickly got some photos of our cabin window submerged in the
beautiful water, even though having the window face down in the
water meant it was well past the time to reef the sails and stop
heeling so much!
Not only was the water at Los Muertos a spectacular color, but the
anchorage was calm. We jumped in the kayak as soon as the
anchor was down. Calm, clear, pretty water surrounded us, and
we were like two happy kids paddling around.
There were lots of dark patches in the water, and we soon
discovered these were coral heads. What a surprise. On the
beach there were lots of little branches of bleached coral resting in
the sand.
Los Muertos is a large bay with little development, but the waterfront
mansions are on their way. A growing development at one end has
beautiful condos and a few fantastic homes. The guidebook's
mention of an RV park is long outdated, as not one of the people we
met on shore had ever known of RVs coming this way.
A little more research on our part and we discovered that at
one time this area was a boondocker's paradise. RVs would
line up right along the shore where the golf course now
sprawls.
Times change, but after leaving Mazatlan and making our
second Sea of Cortez crossing, Mark had no doubt about
where we were standing: Paradise.
After a few days of resting in this relaxing bay, we sailed
around the corner of the Baja peninsula into the bustling
town of La Paz.
Find Mazatlan and Los Muertos on Mexico Maps
PV: La Cruz & Sayulita – Cruisers, Surfers & Fun Loving Mexicans
Marina Nayarit at La Cruz de
Huanacaxtle.
Cobbled streets of La Cruz.
Mark buys some Sierra at the local fish market.
The Vancouver Sailing Academy was in residence for a week of training.
The March 11 tsunami destroyed a dock at Marina Narayit.
The whale attack resulted in a bent
strut and missing propellor.
Huichol Galeria at the Octopus's Garden.
Huichol yarn art. Yarn is pressed into a wax backing.
Like their yarn art, Huichol bead art involves
pressing beads into a wax backing, sometimes
on a sculpture as with this jaguar.
Alvaro Ortiz works on a sun and moon.
The finished product a few hours later.
Bead bracelets and necklaces come off
of small looms like this one.
Huanacaxtle pods, or "ears" in
Nahuatl.
God one-upped the devil and
shaped the Cuastecomate tree's
leaves like crosses.
Sayulita's campground was teeming with surfer dudes and dudettes.
Sayulita's surf beach.
The tsunami nearly sent the public bathrooms into
the drink.
Hot bikini babes everywhere.
Surf and surfing are the heart of Sayulita.
Like father like son.
Leaf art on exhibit at
Sayulita's Huichol
gallery.
Leaf carving.
The pros show us how to get a big heavy
panga off the beach into the surf.
An iguana poses at Marina Vallarta.
...all done posing.
A pile of dough sits at the top of
a tortilla machine.
We join a group of Mexicans in a dusty yard for beers and
"pollo asado."
Gilberto shares his beer with a bull.
Marciela is the perfect young hostess.
Baby Juliana is at the center of it all.
La Cruz de Huanacaxtle, Nayarit, Mexico
Late March, 2011 - Cruisers gathered in Bahía Chamela for days, waiting for the
right weather to make the overnight passage north around Cabo Corrientes ("Cape
of Currents") to the Puerto Vallarta area. This cape is known for being treacherous
at times, willfully dishing out strong currents, powerful winds and contrary wave
patterns and offering nowhere to hide. We got lucky. The wind was perfect, and we
had a delightful sail all afternoon and all night long. It was the best sailing we've had
in Mexico yet. We arrived in Banderas Bay ("Flag Bay") in utter pitch dark with no
moon and no horizon to be seen anywhere, flying along at 7.5 knots into black
oblivion, relying on our radar to show us all obstacles.
Suddenly the radar screen was filled with green dots. Bogies everywhere! Looking
around, a huge fleet of commercial fishing boats surrounded us, their lights filling the
inky night air like bright pin pricks. One large boat was bearing down on us with
such speed we could clearly see the fishing booms lit up on either side. We threw
on every light on our boat to make sure they saw us and tacked outta there in a
hurry. Just then a cruise ship appeared, blazing across the radar screen at full
speed. It loomed on the water as it passed us, a christmas tree of party lights and
good times steaming by. Back on the radar screen, a line of fellow cruising sailboats
that had crept around the cape under power made a ragged line of dots. They
hailed each other repeatedly on the radio, keeping tabs on who was where in line
and how things were going on each others' boats. This bay was a busy place.
As the sun rose the wind
died and the boats disappeared, but a multitude of voices filled the
radio waves. Banderas Bay is 20 miles wide with 60 miles of
shoreline, and as we motored across the glassy water we listened
to two different cruisers' nets on the radio, each originating in
separate marinas on the bay. We heard well over 100 boat names
checking in, along with another 30 or so vendors pitching their
services. Despite the suddenly still air and sunny waters around us,
I felt like we were arriving at JFK.
Puerto Vallarta was the original heart of the bay, but the area has
grown so much that there are now several hearts. None of them
has an anchorage, however, just pricey marinas, so we stayed on
the outskirts of it all at La Cruz de Huanacaxtle (pronounced
"wanna-cox-lay").
As we dropped the hook among 35 other boats and
dinghied ashore into the pin cushion of sailboat
masts at the new Marina Nayarit at La Cruz, my
impression changed from JFK airport to San Diego
South. Swank amenities for boaters abound,
accompanied by equally swank prices.
The daily schedule of organized entertainment is long, and the pace
of life is fast, with yoga classes, art classes, sailing academies for kids
during the days, followed by marina hosted movie nights, restaurant
hosted meat loaf nights, and live music at many venues. And this is
just one of the four major marinas in the area.
We finally found a tiny hint of Mexico across from the marina
at a small upscale fish market, and we enjoyed watching an
expert fillet three Sierras. These are beautiful silver mackerel
covered with golden polka dots.
Over in the boatyard
we found the final
chapter of Luffin' It,
the boat that had been
struck by a whale back in Tenacatita (bottom of page). The propellor strut was bent,
the prop was gone, and the starboard side of the hull suffered huge cracks in the
fiberglass. The boat was considered a total loss by the insurance company. Watch out
for those whales!
The town of La Cruz
itself is just a
nondescript dusty
stretch of charmless
cobblestone streets.
However, the tight-knit
sailing community and plethora of gringo bars makes it a
favorite for many cruisers. We enjoyed an afternoon at The
Octopus's Garden where a courtyard is shaded by an
enormous huanacaxtle tree and an ex-pat Frenchman roasts
and grinds his own French roast coffee while overseeing a
small gallery of Huichol art.
The Huichol (who call themselves the Wixaritari, or "the
people") are one of the few indigenous groups that
survived the Spanish conquests. 16,000 of them retain
their language, religion and culture to this day.
One of their beliefs is that their father, the sun, created all the creatures of
the earth, including people, from his saliva which is red sea foam. We feel
like experts on sea foam now, since we have seen a lot of it over the past
few months, especially when the red tide blooms begin to wane. Little
foamy blobs and all kinds of flotsam float around in the foam, and as it
ages it coagulates and gets stringy and sticky, like phlegm. Red tides have
happened for eons, but it is refreshing to know that at least one culture has
been able to find not only a kind of beauty in it but a purpose for it too.
We stopped to chat with Alvaro Ortiz one morning, a Huichol artist who sits quietly
creating beautiful beaded works by a coffee shop many days. Like so many indigenous
people who set up shop on folding tables to sell their wares to tourists, it was easy to
dismiss him, and most people brushed by him with hardly a glance in his direction.
As we chatted in simple Spanish, he
opened a notebook showing newspaper
clippings of his amazing work. He was one
of eight Huichol artists who decorated a
VW bug with their bead art a few years
ago. The photos featured him at the wheel,
and the car is now on a traveling exhibit
across Europe.
He has recently been commissioned by the
Mexican government to decorate a piano
with Huichol bead art too. Besides
traditional craftwork, he is an accomplished
musician as well. In April he will be giving a
concert of classical piano, traditional Huichol
flute and operatic songs, and he is currently
composing an opera.
This kind of renaissance skill is hard to find in these days of ultra-specialization, and we
talked a bit about that. "In my culture, to be an artist and musician and composer is not
unusual," he explained. "But in the modern world most people are very limited." It is
also easy to shrug off street hawkers as one step above beggars. We bumped into him
later at a market. Dressed in conventional western clothes, he looked like any other well
dressed Mexican.
Back in the Octopus's Garden, the French owner of the Galería Huichol explained to us
that the huanacaxtle tree shading his courtyard is named for its ear-shaped pod:
"huanacaxtle" means "ear" in the indigenous language Nahuatl. It is one of the few
specimens of this enormous tree remaining in this town that bears its name, La Cruz de
Huanacaxtle. A cross ("La Cruz") made of its wood stands in the center of town. He
went on to explain that the Cuastecomate tree, for which the Bahía Cuastecomate
between Barra de Navidad and Tenacatita is named, also has a unique story.
Apparently the devil and God both contributed to
the creation of the Cuastecomate tree. The devil
created a spider's web of ugly criss-crossing
branches with weird hard tennis ball sized fruit
growing right out of the branches. God threw his
blessing on the tree by gracing it with cross-shaped
leaves.
We found a bit
more of the
devil's and God's
work nearby at
Sayulita. This is
a hippie surfing town that is the opposite of La Cruz.
Rather than grey haired retired cruisers enjoying
sedate organized activities, this place was humming
with the buzz of twenty-something surfers. A
campground in the middle of town was home for a lot
of them, and a stroll through it revealed the gritty life
of young backpackers out on a surfing safari. Tents
were jammed together cheek-by-jowel, and as noon
neared the kids were still walking around in sandy pj's
with slitted sleepy eyes.
The tsunami had left a set of public bathrooms in the lurch,
but brought in a surf break that still seemed to be pounding.
Hot babes in bikinis were all over town, and everyone had
wet hair and sandy feet from playing in the waves.
Non-surfers can learn the
moves from an array of surf
shops, surf instructors and
surf rental places all over
the beach, and one dad was giving his young
son a quickie lesson on a roller board.
In town we found another Huichol art gallery
that was featuring a new art form: carved
leaves. Leaves of all kinds had been
surgically cut along the veins to create
silhouettes of people and animals.
After struggling with dinghy launches and
landings on this crazy surf-pounded Pacific
coast, it was fun to watch the professionals
do it. A couple had hired a panga for a
tour, and it took no less than a five people
to get the boat into the water after a pickup
truck pushed it down from the high water
mark. Timing the waves carefully, they got
off with just one little hop over a wave. The
panga before that -- and before I had my
camera in hand -- had gone completely
airborne three times as it flew over the
crashing surf to deeper water.
La Cruz is a 30
minute bus ride from
downtown Puerto
Vallarta, and we
took the wild city bus
one day. There are
many different
buses, and being
new to the area we
did not realize that
some are express and others go through the back barrios. What a
surprise to get into the outer parts of urban Puerto Vallarta and see
the dusty shacks that house many local residents. A man herded
twenty pigs across the bus's path at one point, and there were
cows and chickens in many yards. Once we got to Marina Vallarta,
however, the world of high end luxury engulfed us once again.
What fun to see an iguana perched along the rocks overlooking the
boats. He posed for a while, looking like a sculpture planted there
for effect. He drew a chuckle from everyone when he crawled
away across the sidewalk towards the row of shops.
Back in La Cruz we were missing
the simplicity of the little Mexican
towns that have hosted us for the
past few months. Joining the
cruisers for tacos at a featureless
gringo hangout called "Tacos on
the Street" and bar-hopping at
cruiser bars where I found bathrooms labeled "Ladies" because no Mexican women ever uses
them, we had a good time but could have easily been in Austin, Texas where Americans enjoy
a nightly live music scene that is every bit as active as in La Cruz/Puerto Vallarta.
We finally found the homeyness we were looking for when we wandered into the streets at the
farther end of town. We watched a man loading dough into a tortilla machine and sampled his
delicious "totopos." These are deep fried corn tortilla chips that make a yummy snack.
A little further on we bought a
"pollo asado," which is chicken
grilled street-side. These delicious
chickens are opened
up and cooked flat,
looking like roadkill
spread across the grill.
We were asked if we
wanted to take it with
us or eat it there in the
dusty yard behind the
grill. We peered out
back and looked at the
group of Mexican men
drinking beer at a folding table. Roosters and chickens squawked and scratched
at their feet while a large bull chewed its cud in the corner. "We'll eat here!" we
both grinned. A rip-roaring Spanglish conversation ensued as we sat down with
Hugo, Joel and Gilberto and shared a few beers at their table. We toasted each other and
life, and watched in amusement as Gilberto wandered over to the bull and held out his
beer for it to drink. Between the bull's slurps, Gilberto took a swig now and then, while a
toddler bounced and cooed in a swing between us all. We knew enough of each other's
languages to talk in simple terms about the joys of grandkids, the perils of sailing, the heat
of living in Phoenix and the contentedness of their life in La Cruz.
This strange town, Banderas Bay, and the
Puerto Vallarta area in general hadn't really
appealed to us until that moment.
Suddenly, sitting in tottering plastic chairs
under the shade of a big tree at a rickety
table while our sandals scuffled the soft dirt
at our feet, we felt La Cruz had reached our hearts. Listening to the hearty
laughter of these rugged, burly men as they teased each other and us in
whatever mixture of language we could share, we felt welcomed. All the while
the mom worked her grill and sold chickens to passersby, and her sweet seven-
year-old daughter played perfect hostess to us all, giggling shyly as we asked
her basic questions with a poor Spanish accent and iffy grammar.
Before long it was time to move on, and we soon made our way north towards Mazatlan via San Blas and Isla Isabel.
Find La Cruz (Puerto Vallarta) on Mexico Maps
Costalegre: Chamela Bay Islands – Remote Getaway
Score!!
The rookies take the game!!
Dinghy group lands on the beach in La Manzanilla.
A steaming cauldron keeps a
dog's attention.
Concrete is mixed by hand.
Post-red tide scum creates patterns on the water.
Pelicans dive for supper.
Mark gets a good look at his catch.
Thick fog greets us in the morning.
A river of water isolates a favorite cruiser restaurant.
Chamela's three little islands are a great hideaway.
There's nothing like an uninhabited tropical island.
Hermit crabs dashed urgently
all over the sand.
Island paradise.
Lots of cactus lined the shore.
Craggy rocks and tidepools grabbed our attention.
The water seems clear enough to
clean the bottom of the hull.
See you down under!
Chamela Bay & Islands, Jalisco, Mexico
Mid-March, 2011 - Despite the drawbacks of red tide, jelly fish blooms and land disputes,
the anchorage at Tenacatita held us in its grasp for ten happy days. Old time cruisers
who had been coming to Tenacatita for years initiated games of Bocce ball on the beach,
they encouraged cruisers to gather for beers at the beachfront palapa restaurant La
Vena, and they organized group dinghy provisioning
trips across the bay to the village of La Manzanilla.
Beginners luck prevailed for us in Bocce ball, and we
nailed a few throws to win the first game.
Dinghy landings in this bay are quite a challenge,
because of the pounding waves and surf on the beach.
We hitched rides with friends several times to learn the
technique for landing the dink and launching it again
later without getting too wet. We learned that waves
come in sets, often 6 or 7 at a time, and the trick is to
wait until a set has passed to make your move. You get a total of about 15 seconds to ride
behind the last wave to shore or to jump in the dink and start the outboard during a launch
off the beach. One false move by a passenger, or an unexpectedly stalled engine, or a
miscalculation of when the last wave has actually passed can spell the difference between
being wet up to your shorts or flipping the dinghy entirely and getting drenched head to toe.
We watched in amazement from the beach as one
seasoned pro accidentally flipped his dinghy during a
launch when his inexperienced passenger took too long to
climb into the boat. The dinghy hit a huge oncoming wave
and flew straight up in the air like a rocket, landing upside
down in the surf. Workers from the restaurant dashed
down to the beach carrying a five gallon jug of fresh water
to flush the outboard engine while cruisers searched the
waves for lost cargo. Fortunately the outboard responded
to the treatment, most items were found, and the dinghy
was soon re-launched without mishap.
La Manzanilla on the far side of the bay is a small
seaside village, and we enjoyed watching the locals
going about their daily activities. Two men stirred a
cauldron filled with ham hocks (hooves included),
while a dog waited patiently.
There was plenty of construction going on, all done
by hand. We watched one worker shovel gravel into
a bucket on the street and then hoist it to the roof of
a building using a rope and pulley system. Water
was then hoisted in another bucket, and the worker
on the roof mixed and poured the concrete by hand.
In another area we watched a worker mix his
concrete in a little pile of gravel right on the street.
This may not produce the highest grade concrete,
but there is a quiet calm and pride in the way these
men go about their work.
Out in the bay the red tide began to go through its lifecycle phases.
First the water turned from beet red to murky brown to grey green.
Then a huge blanket of foam formed in the middle of the bay.
Several hundred feet across, the foam began as a solid sheet of tiny
white bubbles and then began to dissipate into elaborate patterns as
the current ebbed and flowed beneath it.
The pelicans had no qualms about
the water quality, and they dove for
fish each afternoon. They looked like
flying knives being hurled into the
water. I tried in desperation to get a
picture of one just at the moment of
impact when their wings are pressed
tightly against their bodies, but I
never quite caught it.
One morning we awoke to a pan-pan call on the
radio. This is an emergency alert for anyone within
earshot, and as I laid in bed with my eyes closed
debating how we'd spend our day I heard, "Japan has had a massive earthquake
and a tsunami is headed this way. It will arrive here in two hours." That got me out
of bed in a hurry! Pre-coffee and still half-dressed in pj's, we hauled the anchor and
dashed out of the anchorage. A fishing panga was nearby and we waved them over
to pass on the warning. I hated the thought that they might fish by the rocks all
morning and never know what hit them.
Out on the open water we were able to connect to the internet, sort of. If I stood in
the cockpit holding the laptop over my head with the USB antenna pointed towards
shore, I could download a page in about 3 to 5 minutes. This was just enough to get some Google News reports detailing the
unfolding disaster. Meanwhile the radio was abuzz with cruiser chatter. People were sharing information they were receiving
from single side band radio broadcasts, from cell phone calls to friends and family on the west coast and from the internet.
We soon realized the predicted time for the arrival of the wave was 1:45 pm, not 10:45 a.m. as we were first told, and the
effects could last up to nine hours after the intial wave hit.
This meant a long day of sailing. We had planned to stay in Tenacatita for a few more days, but once we were out in the
ocean it made more sense to travel up the coast a bit to Chamela Bay.
Almost the entire cruising fleet joined us in the open water, and a huge game of musical chairs ensued. Just about everyone
changed anchorages and moved north or south to the next spot on their itinerary along the coast.
Out on the water the regular ocean swell was running about five
feet, so the five foot tsunami waves were undetectable. Our
biggest challenge was trying to determine whether the waves
had arrived on shore or not, and whether or not it was safe to go
in to anchor. Once the initial waves had hit California and then
Cabo San Lucas, all new internet reporting ceased. The
Mexican news stories were only about warnings, not about
actual wave arrivals in the various ports nor about damage, so
we had no idea what the status was along our coast.
However, the air was warm and the breeze too light to sail
much, so Mark lazily dropped a handline over the side of the
boat as we motored along. Within an hour the line suddenly
went taut and then limp. He brought it in to find that a huge fish
had struck and broken the clasp holding the leader line to the
handline. Somewhere out there a fish was swimming around
with a six inch blue feather lure hanging out of its mouth while
fifty feet of nylon leader trailed behind him. Darn!
He quickly found another lure with a stronger clasp and thicker leader line, and threw it over the side. Wham! Another fish
was on the hook. Holy cow. Mark has trailed handlines up and down this entire coast with only one catch so far. And now
within minutes he had two, with the one that got away being (undoubtedly) one of the biggest fish in the ocean. Was the
tsunami herding the fish somehow? Whatever the cause, he hauled the fish in and we had a good look at it. It was beautiful:
big and silver with bright yellow fins and tail. Unfortunately, it was the inedible Jack Crevalle, or "toro" in Spanish, a fish that
has meat so red and bloody that it is considered inedible. Toros have big puppy dog eyes, though, and this guy was staring
up at Mark in stark terror. He quickly unhooked the lure from its mouth and we could feel his utter relief as he swam off into
the depths.
We pulled into Chamela Bay around 5:00 p.m., thinking the worst of the waves must have passed. As we lowered the anchor
over the flat sand bottom, I watched the depth gauge read a steady 22 to 23 feet and then suddenly dip to 14 feet and then
rise again to 22 feet. Within seconds I heard an enormous crash of a mammoth wave pounding the shore, and I turned to see
its foaming mass sweep well past the highest tide mark on the beach.
Our radio instantly crackled to life as a friend of ours used her hand-held radio to describe the utter pandemonium she was
seeing on the beach. Mark had to calm me down a bit, as I started to rant, but no waves quite that big rolled through after
that. However, all was not right in the water. Every boat in the anchorage did steady 360 degree turns around its anchor,
completing a full turn every minute or two. After a few clockwise turns the boats would all begin to turn counterclockwise as
their hulls followed the pull of the ocean surge washing in and out of the bay.
The next morning we woke to thick fog, the first we had
seen since we were in Chamela Bay four months earlier.
The scene around us had an eerie glow.
We walked along the shore later in the day. The ghost town
feeling that Chamela Bay had had in November still
persisted, especially now that the fleet of fishing pangas had
been dragged high onto the beach out of reach of the
tsunami waves.
A little restaurant at one end of the beach was stranded
by the tsunami. Usually a path through soft sand leads
to this building, but the tsunami swell was continuing to
disturb the peace a day or two after the first waves
arrived. A steady river of water washed to and fro in an
estuary, making access to the restaurant a dicey affair
that included wading in water up to your shorts.
Elsewhere around Chamela Bay little had changed. More flowers
seemed to be in bloom, but the pretty little waterfront RV park was
totally empty now.
We decided to take Groovy out into the bay for a few days where three
small uninhabited islands huddle together. There are several
anchoring spots out there, and we found it to be a cozy, hidden
paradise.
As we dropped the hook we heard the loud and rather
urgent cries of hundreds of pelicans roosting in the trees
on the shore. These islands are an ecological preserve
zone, and pelicans rule.
We took the dinghy ashore and stood in awe watching two different
species of pelicans engaging in what can only be described as a
springtime orgy. Throaty groans, flapping wings, and awkward
physical postures gave the rugged shore an emotional vibe that
made us feel we were intruding on the most intimate of erotic
moments.
Averting our eyes from these
impassioned birds, we found
a host of hermit crabs
scurrying across the sand.
They crawled over each
other and tapped on each
other's shells. These little
guys were inhabiting a huge
variety of shells, and one or
two were running around
naked looking for a new home.
The water was a
gorgeous shade of
blue, a welcome
change from the post-
red tide grey-green
that filled Chamela's
main anchorage.
Around the beach there were cactus and palm trees, and stubby little deciduous trees
too. But it was the tide pools that really got our attention. The waves sloshed in and out
with a vengeance, but a few were out of reach of the surf, and life in those pools was
calm and serene.
Back on the boat it
seemed we were in the
perfect place to have a look at the underside of our
hull. We had been cleaning it every week or so
down in Zihuatanejo where the water was warm
and the barnacles grew quickly. Since we had
been up north of Manzanillo, however, we hadn't
had a chance to give it a good look or a good scrub
because of the murky water.
Mark tackled the lowest parts of the hull and keel
with his scuba gear while I held my breath with a
snorkel and popped the offending barnacles off the
higher parts of the hull. The water wasn't exactly
clear, and while we were in it a new wave of post-
red tide scum floated by. Suddenly the water was
full of white puffy stringy stuff, and we quickly
wrapped up our work. Unfortunately, the waves
were surging so vigorously that at one point each
of us accidentally gulped a huge mouthful of water.
Over the following days we both
went through a series of weird symptoms, starting with sore shoulders
followed by swollen glands in our necks and nasty head aches. Mine
ended with a round of vomiting, while Mark was nauseous for two days.
After a week the symptoms passed. My advice to anyone following in
our path: don't drink water tainted by red tide.
Chamela Bay is the last good anchorage along the coast heading north
before the much feared Cabo Corrientes where high winds and
conflicting swell can make for a miserable passage. The bright lights of
Puerto Vallarta lie beyond that point, but it is a 100 mile trip to get there,
so boats gather in Chamela Bay and watch the weather forecasts like
hawks, waiting for the best 24 hours to make the trip. Before long we
got our chance, and we dashed out of the bay towards the Puerto
Vallarta suburb of La Cruz de Huanacaxtle.
Find Chamela on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on the "Mexican Riviera" (northern Pacific coast) to see more cruising posts from this area!
Costalegre: Tenacatita – Not Heavenly for Cruisers Any More
Cuastecomate, the "Secret Anchorage."
A Mexican Navy ship approaches.
A tender of Mexican Navy men circles Groovy.
The Mexican Navy boards Groovy.
It was a routine and courteous inspection.
Red tide surrounds us as we motor into Tenacatita.
Red tide fills the anchorage.
A carpet of jelly fish surrounds us.
The Blue Bay Resort is the only resort at this end of the bay.
Chippy the dolphin.
Beginning of the "Jungle Tour."
The mangroves quickly close in.
Thick jungle brush reflects in the
glassy water.
Our friends are the only other river tourists.
The old dinghy landing at the end of the jungle tour.
"Luffin It" is pushed into the anchorage
after a whale strike.
La Manzanilla is a cute small town.
Lots of little grocery stores have all the
provisions you need.
Loaded down with
provisions.
Ahh... so much easier to have a local panga run your errands for you.
A dinghy raft-up offers hints of Tenacatita's former glory.
Tenacatita Bay, Jalisco, Mexico
Early March, 2011 - After a week of laid back
decadence at Barra de Navidad, complete with
French baked goods, flat calm nights and civilized
water taxi rides to shore, we moved a few miles north
to Cuastecomate. This small anchorage lies between
the two large and very popular anchorages of Barra de
Navidad and Tenacatita, and in the past was
apparently neither well documented nor well-known, so
it was nicknamed the "Secret Anchorage." With the
publication this year of Pacific Mexico, a new cruising
guide for this area, the cat is out of the bag, as the
GPS coordinates for the anchorage are given along
with an enticing description..
There was just one other sailboat in the anchorage when we arrived, along with a
Mexican Navy ship sitting quietly in the middle of the bay. As we began to anchor we
noticed the Navy ship drawing closer. Once we got the anchor down and began to get
settled, the Navy ship launched five men in a tender that soon circled our boat. They
asked permission to board Groovy. Just a week earlier four Americans had been killed
on their sailboat off of Somalia. This was geographically very far from Mexico but, as
fellow cruisers, the event felt close enough in spirit to make me suddenly feel quite
vulnerable as a camouflage suited soldier climbed up our swimstep carrying a machine
gun.
He walked forward to our bow and stood watch, while two other Navy men in bullet-
proof vests climbed aboard and settled into our cockpit. Intimidating as it was for a few
moments, this visit was both friendly and routine.
With the taste of almond croissants still on our lips and the sun
sparkling on the water all around the boat, I thought we made an
odd assortment on board Groovy. Mark was dressed for another
day of vacation in running shorts, bare feet and no shirt, while the
Navy men were dressed for an armed conflict, complete with heavy
boots. The tender with the two remaining men moved away from
our boat and hovered nearby, one of the men resting his machine
gun across his lap.
They were extremely gracious, speaking to us in simple Spanish once I
revealed I was willing to practice my language skills with them. They
merely wanted to see our boat papers and passports and to verify that
we didn't have any drugs on board or any extra passengers who were
not documented on our crew list.
I asked them a little about their work and learned we were the second
boat they had boarded that day, the first being the other sailboat in this
little anchorage. The day before they had inspected four boats. They
regularly patrol the 150 miles between Puerto Vallarta and Barra de
Navidad, rotating shifts of days or weeks spent aboard the ship followed
by time at home with their families. "It's hard on family life and hard on
your marriage," we all agreed. In the ensuing days we found many
other boats had been similarly boarded this year, although in prior years
it was not a common occurrance in this area.
Their inspection was more thorough and detailed than
any of the many US border patrol checkpoints we have
driven through towing our fifth wheel on the US
interstates. There we have always been waved
through without even having to slow down below 10
mph, despite towing an enormous trailer.
We were given two forms to sign, one written in English
and one in Spanish. The English language form was a
waiver absolving the Mexican Navy of any responsibility
if we ever asked them for a tow and they damaged our
boat. Fair enough. To my utter surprise, the Spanish
language form was an evaluation of the boarding process. I looked at them with a lopsided grin: "This form evaluates your
performance today?!" They nodded, smiling. "It is for your boss?!" More nods and grins. Polite young men all of them, they
deserved the highest rating in every category.
Before leaving, the Mexican Navy men reassured us that if we ever had any trouble or needed them in any way, we should call
them on the radio on VHF Channel 16. What a contrast to the way I was so rudely dressed down by the San Diego Harbor
Police for screwing up the sign-in procedures at San Diego's transient cruiser's dock, or the way the US Coast Guard yelled at
us through a megaphone because we had not written "T/T Groovy" on the bow of our dinghy.
Cuastecomate is known for its beautiful snorkeling spots, but
remnants of a recent red tide removed any thoughts of swimming.
Two days later when we motored into Tenacatita Bay we saw the
most expansive red tide to date. The entire bay, several miles
across, was filled with tea colored water. The stunning shade was
toned down a bit from the ruby red wine color that fellow cruisers
reported seeing the day before.
How sad. Blue Bay -- Tenacatita's other name -- often has water
that is gin clear and bright turquoise. The snorkeling off of one
point is so stunning that the cove is nicknamed "The Aquarium." In
the past cruisers have moved in here for a month or more at a time
for a spell of life in Paradise, going so far as to have weekly
scheduled events and an elected "mayor" of the anchorage.
Not so this year. At no time during our stay did we have the least
desire to put even a toe in the water. After red tide algae dies off,
thick rivers of brown foam begin to form. Zig-zagging scum lines lie
along the boundaries between current flows, and in places the foam
gathers into potato sized balls that punctuate the scum lines with little
brown puffs. Leaving the bay for a daysail one day, we returned to
the anchorage through line after line of brown scum.
Not only was the red tide a
shock, but a jellyfish bloom
stunned us as well. We had
sailed through miles of baby
jellyfish a week or so earlier,
hanging over the rails in amazement as the boat parted waves that were thick with two
inch long baby jellies that lay in layers below the surface. All babies grow up, and one
morning in Tenacatita we awoke to find the boat sitting in a carpet of adult jellyfish.
They surrounded the boat so densely that it seemed you could walk across them.
After the hundred foot diameter carpet of jellies floated through the anchorage,
engulfing each boat in its path, it finally landed on the beach in front of the Blue Bay
Resort. Thousands of jelly fish blanketed the sand for an afternoon. As the tide went
out, the jellies were left high and dry, and they died.
Tenacatita was suffering this year in other ways
besides the red tide and the jellyfish. During a
land dispute along one of the bay's beaches last
August, 150 Jalisco State Police evicted 800
people who lived and worked there. All their
homes, restaurants and a hotel were bulldozed in preparation for the construction of a huge beachfront resort. During our
stay the construction had not yet begun, but the land was actively patrolled by armed security guards. Cruisers who had
arrived earlier in the season had been shooed off the beach and out of that anchorage.
One Tenacatita resident rose above all these depressing changes, however,
putting up with the strange water and turning a blind eye to the land dispute
around the corner. Famed resident Chippy the dolphin has been loved by
cruisers for years, and we found him lolling around the anchorage, showing his
notched dorsal fin every time he surfaced through the water. He happily
scratched his back on the boats' anchor chains as he always has.
Tenacatita features a "Jungle River Dinghy
Tour" that meanders up a lush estuary, and this
self-guided tour has actually benefitted from the
land dispute, as it is rarely traveled now. You
have to brave some crashing surf and shallows
to get the dink into the estuary, but once inside you are in
a world apart.
The estuary tour begins as a calm river between thick
mangrove sides that twists and turns as it takes you
upriver. Snowy egrets and other leggy fowl peer out at
you as you pass, and they don't flinch, even at the sound
of the dinghy's outboard.
In places the water
was so calm that
the foliage formed
a perfect reflection
in its depths.
Before the land dispute,
this estuary led to the
backside of the community
of homes, restaurants and
stores that has since been
bulldozed out of existence.
In those days it was heavily
traveled, and apparently
the animals were not quite
as easy to see.
We passed an iguana sunning himself on
the branches of a mangrove and we saw
several raccoon-like coatimundi
scampering overhead. One coatimundi
stopped and stared at us long enough to
get some photos, but darned if all the pics
of him didn't turn out completely blurry.
Only one other
boat shared the
estuary with us
that day, friends of
ours from another
cruising boat.
The estuary narrows
dramatically, to the
point where you can
pull yourself along
by grabbing the branches overhead. In places the dink can barely
squeeze through, as the mangroves close in on either side and
you have to duck the overhead jungle canopy.
At the far end, the estuary opened to a very small and shallow
lagoon, and we found the dock where cruisers used to land their
dinghies. The silhouette of an armed guard in the distance kept
us from attempting to land, and we returned through the thick
mangroves to the bay.
This all added up to plenty of excitement for a few days' stay in Tenacatita, but a Mayday call
on the radio late one afternoon pumped our adrenaline up another notch. A whale had
attacked the 36' sailboat "Luffin' It" just outside the anchorage. Mark and four other cruisers
responded to the call, zipping out to the terrified couple in three dinghies. They had been sailing along quietly when a whale
appeared out of nowhere and bashed the port side of the boat, knocking it over 45 degrees. He repeated this bashing on the
starboard side and then got beneath the boat and began thrashing his tail, damaging the rudder and bending the propellor
shaft in the process. The boat began taking on water, which prompted their Mayday call.
The rescuers used the most powerful dinghy to push the boat into the
anchorage, as the sailboat's engine could barely run due to the bent
prop shaft. After saying a round of "thank yous" to the rescuers before
settling in for the night to a humming bilge pump, the couple shocked
us all when they motored out of the anchorage the next morning,
putting up the sails as they rounded the point en route to Puerto
Vallarta for repairs 130 miles away.
The main anchorage at Tenacatita is near
a small beach palapa restaurant, but there
are no stores nearby. All provisioning must
be done far across the bay in the town of
La Manzanilla. One morning a group of
cruisers took their dinghies to the town
across the bay, and we walked around the
cute village. Loading up on fruits and
veggies in several of the many small
markets, I soon looked like a pack mule.
How funny to return to the anchorage later in the day, covered with salt spray from the lively dinghy ride and happily worn out
from a day of shopping, to find the megayacht anchored behind us had called a panga to run their errands and bring them all
the provisions they needed. We watched the uniformed crew serving the two couples aboard and marveled at the many ways
you can live a life.
Our low brow boating life is a pretty good one, though, and one
afternoon the cruisers all gathered for a dinghy raft up.
Everyone brought an appetizer to share and the dishes
circulated from boat to boat. Our friend Bill was elected Mayor
of the Anchorage, and he gave a rousing speech in praise of
the folks who had helped with the rescue of the whale struck
boat a few days earlier. In the odd way of Tenacatita this year,
however, the anchorage that had harbored 22 boats for one
busy night was down to just 6 by the next afternoon, as there is
little to hold people here this season. However, because we
are rarely ones to move quickly, we stayed a full week before
venturing on to Bahía Chamela and its beautiful islands.
Find Tenacatita on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on Mexico's North Pacific Coast to see more posts from this area!
Costalegre: Barra de Navidad – Upstairs / Downstairs
Barra de Navidad has a narrow and shallow entrance channel.
Fishermen cast nets in the lagoon.
The serenity in Barra's lagoon is a big contrast to most Pacific coast anchorages.
The French Baker makes his rounds.
Emeric delivers croissants, quiches and
baguettes right to your boat!
Barra's pier.
The Grand Bay Resort overlooks the lagoon.
"Las Sirenas" ("The Mermaids").
View across the water taxi piers.
Barra is loaded with cute little eateries.
Unlike other Mexican towns we've visited, almost all
tourists here during our stay were gringos.
How about a meal looking through the branches of an
enomous piñata decorated tree?
A 1921 sloop in the lagoon.
A restaurant's mascot macaw
blushes as I snap his photo.
Mark finds the Beatles in Mexico once again.
Many of Barra's front
doors are very ornate.
The lagoon has many
species of long legged
fishing birds.
One of many boat-in palapa restaurants on the lagoon.
Water taxis ferry visitors all over the lagoon.
Happy Valentine's Day.
The Grand Bay Resort proudly overlooks the gritty,
quirky town of Barra.
Approaching the Grand Bay you suddenly feel a little out
of place in a bathing suit and flip flops.
Hammocks by the lagoon shore.
Overlooking the marina to the cruising boats in the
lagoon anchorage beyond.
A yacht traverses the narrow channel.
A McGregor 26 (without its mast) slides past us at a fast clip.
Dinghies scramble to save a sailboat from an unattended Offshore
48' power yacht that's suddenly on the loose.
A frustrated couple spends the day off-kilter on a
beached sailboat.
Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, Mexico
Mid-February, 2011 - After the gentility of the Las Hadas
Resort in Manzanillo and the sweeping waves and beach
scene of Playa La Boquita in Santiago Bay, we were
surprised to find yet another totally contrasting lifestyle just
25 miles up the coast in the eclectic hideaway of Barra de
Navidad. Pulling into the anchorage, we felt like we were
landing on another planet. For starters, the anchorage is
an almost fully enclosed lagoon, and to enter it requires
motoring down a very narrow and very shallow channel.
Fortunately the GPS waypoints given in the guidebook are
accurate, as the channel is marked with buoys for only half its
length, and the chartplotter is off by about a mile. In these waters,
being off by 100 feet will put you hard aground.
But the real surprise lay inside the anchorage: 50 cruising boats
were crammed into the lagoon. Until now, every anchorage we
had been in had hosted fewer than twenty boats. What a crazy
zoo scene this was! To top that off, being low tide, everywhere we looked for a spot to drop the anchor we had just inches of
water under the keel. The lagoon's water is extremely silty, and you can barely see your toes when your legs are in water up
to your knees, so there was no way to tell the depth other than trust the boat's depth sounder. In such a shallow and tightly
packed anchorage it made sense to let out just 50' or so of anchor chain. A neighbor quickly set us straight however,
informing us that boats drag regularly through the soft mud and that everyone around us had 100' of chain out, despite being
in less than 10' of water.
Once the anchor was down, the sun began to drop low in the sky. We kicked back in the cockpit and watched flocks of long
legged birds commuting home to roost while fishermen cast their nets behind the boat. A chorus of lagoon bird songs filled
the air as they settled into the surrounding mangroves.
The next morning I poked my head out of the companionway to see a picture that for
all the world looked like one of the many beautiful anchorages in Maine where I grew
up cruising years ago. Most Pacific coast anchorages are defined by mountains and
waves, making for dramatic scenery and often dramatic rolly nights. In contrast, this
anchorage was as flat calm as could be and was rimmed by low lying trees. The boats
were all well behaved, lined up with military precision, facing the gently rising tide with
dignity. This is nothing like most Pacific coast anchorages where the boats tend to
pitch and roll, swinging in different directions, often quite wildly, challenging each other
to see which one can be the buckingest bronco of them all.
Suddenly the radio came alive with chatter; it was Barra's morning VHF cruiser's net.
For a full twenty minutes cruisers ran through the roll call of all the boats arriving,
departing or staying put in one of several anchorages in the area. As soon as the net
ended, all fifty boats in Barra began hailing each other at once, making plans for
daytrips ashore, plans to meet in future harbors or plans for cocktails and dinners
together later in the day. In the midst of all this conversation a heavily accented voice broke into the fray, announcing, "This is
ze French Baker and I am entering ze lagoon now." A child's voice called out,
"French Baker, French Baker, we would like two chocolate pies." The accented
voice answered, "I have only one." "We'll take it!" came the happy reply.
Emeric Fiegen, a Frenchman who now hails from Canada, came to Barra years
ago and in 2003 created a unique niche for himself in this ex-pat community.
Opening "El Horno Frances" (The French Bakery), he sells French baked goods
out of a shop onshore and also out of a panga that he personally drives around
the lagoon each morning. Offering quiches, croissants, baguettes and other
delicacies, he does a brisk business and is always sold out by the time he gets
to the far side of the anchorage. This, unfortunately, was where we were
located, so we quickly learned we needed to email him our order the night
before. After months of tacos, burritos and hot sauces it sure was a treat to sink
our teeth into chocolate croissants and miniature bacon and cheese quiches.
Barra de Navidad is a unique gringo hangout. The town
hovers along one side of the lagoon, its small streets teeming
with cute tourist shops, charming outdoor restaurants, cheap
hotels and North American retirees escaping the cold winters
back home. The mood is laid back and slightly gritty, with flip
flops and beachwear being the accepted attire.
A pretty pier extends along
one side of the lagoon's
entrance channel, leading
strollers out to views of the
bay and beach on the
ocean side of town. On the
opposite side of the lagoon's channel the imposing Grand Bay Resort rises out of the
mangroves, offering high class and high dollar vacations to the younger still-employed (and
well-employed) set.
Cruisers stay in Barra for weeks
and even months each winter,
charmed by the convenient and
pleasing town, the picturesque
anchorage, and calm nights. Some
sneak swims at the Grand Bay
Resort's beautiful pool (after a fine luncheon), and everyone winds up
at the Sands Hotel's pool or pool bar at some time, as that
establishment openly welcomes cruisers.
The social scene
in the lagoon is
intense. It is an
easy dinghy ride
to visit your
neighbor for
happy hour,
and there are
a seemingly
infinite number
of places to
explore with
friends ashore.
All conversations
on the radio are
public, so
everyone's business is quickly well known. The kids on two boats were the cutest to
listen to. As they made plans to visit each other, the parents were consulted in the
background: which boat, at what time, and with whose dinghy would they would get
together to play?
Sometimes this public forum
can get a little awkward.
Two women discussed the
dishes each would bring to a
dinner party and wondered
aloud whether or not to invite a third
boat that neither one was convinced
had arrived in Barra yet: "I think I
saw them in the lagoon but they
aren't due for another week..." "I
have enough salad for all of us..."
"Okay, but I'm sure they would have
called us by now if they were here..."
Two men troubleshot a plumbing problem in detail: "You gotta turn that pipe 180 degrees."
"Yeah, but that sucker won't turn..." They had forgotten to take their conversation to a
separate channel, away from the channel where boats hail each other, so they were soon
interrupted by a voice saying: "Attention Fleet: Which restaurant has the best burger in
town?" "La Oficina" came the reply. "La Casina?" "No, La Oficina..."
Three boats were awaiting a mutual friend arriving from the airport. A
comedy of errors ensued as the guest arrived with a hand-held VHF radio,
but because he was standing in the Grand Bay's lobby behind the massive
concrete structures of the resort, he was unable to hear any of the boats
responding to his calls from the lagoon. For twenty minutes he hailed
three boats in the lagoon and they hailed back, to no avail. Finally one
boat took a dinghy ashore and met the poor fellow in person in the lobby.
We took the kayak out on Valentine's Day for a quiet morning ride but found
so much to see that we didn't get back to the boat until almost dark. First the
various long legged birds of the lagoon caught our eye. The mangroves are
thick and the water is loaded with fish, making it an ideal location for birds to
quietly stalk their prey.
Along one edge of the lagoon there are a series of boat-in eateries
you can get to either by water taxi or with your own dinghy. Several
restaurants seemed immensely popular and patrons filled every waterfront
seat.
Being our anniversary as well as Valentine's Day, we wanted to find
a quieter more romantic spot. Fortina's fit the bill perfectly. We
pulled the kayak onto their little beach and followed the sand right
to a table overlooking the water. What an ideal spot to while away
the afternoon and reflect on the happy years we have spent in each
other's company.
On another day we took the kayak over to the dinghy dock at the
Grand Bay Resort and wandered through the beautiful grounds.
Manicured landscaping, even the jungle kind on the edges of the
golf course, define the fringes of this resort. A row of hammocks
on a beach fronting the lagoon look out on a private island, and
everything about the resort oozes elegance.
We found a balcony overlooking the marina and the lagoon anchorage
in the distance beyond, and we watched a megayacht navigate the
skinny lagoon entrance channel past one of the resort's pretty outdoor
restaurants. From simple beer and tacos on plastic chairs along the
lagoon's edge to haute cuisine in a stunning setting at the Grand Bay,
Barra de Navidad has everything a gringo escaping reality in Mexico
might want.
But living there in
the lagoon on a
boat can bring
reality back to you
in a heartbeat.
One morning,
while sampling
almond croissants
from the French Baker and pondering the unusual wind shift we were
seeing, panicky voices on the radio abruptly brought us to our senses.
"Attention Fleet: a McGregor 26 is dragging through the anchorage on the
north side of the lagoon." We turned our heads and there it was, moving
at a fast clip right past us.
In an instant five dinghies rushed over to the wayward boat.
No one was on board, but the fast acting men in the dinks
quickly brought the boat to heel, deploying a second anchor
they found stored in one of the boat's lockers. We hadn't yet
assembled our dink and put it in the water, so we watched all
the action feeling rather useless.
No sooner had the McGregor 26 settled down than another
call went out on the radio. "Attention Barra Fleet: I've gone
aground." The wind shift had caught one sailor by surprise
and moved his boat onto a sandbar that had been a safe 50
feet away from him for the past few days.
Unfortunately, being a full moon, the tide was going to be the lowest of
the month that afternoon, and for six hours the boat laid further and
further over on its side while the owners crawled around on the high side
making the best of a bad situation. Luckily, the soft mud bottom insured
that no damage was done to the boat. At the tide's lowest point we
dropped a line over the side of our boat and measured 6' 8" of water --
and we draw 6' 6".
A friend stopped by in his dinghy, and we began discussing the morning's
crazy events when we noticed the 48' Offshore motor yacht anchored
behind us was suddenly much further away than it had been for the past
few days. It was dragging too, with no one on board! A large sailboat
was directly in its path, and the sailboat's crew were all on deck, madly
putting fenders out to save their boat from the impending collision.
Again the radio burst to life and dinghies zoomed to the scene from all corners of the lagoon. In 15 quick minutes the dinghies
pushed the boat to a safe spot and redeployed the anchor. There was a lesson in that escapade for everyone in the lagoon,
as the wheelhouse on the boat was locked, so there was no way to start the engine and move the boat under its own power.
Fortunately, the dinghies had strong enough outboards to keep the boat from crashing into the sailboat and to push it to a new
location despite the high wind. A call soon went out to the fleet reminding us all to leave the keys in the ignition when we went
ashore so that others trying to save our boats could do so easily. This, of course, was quite a contrast to the instructions we
had also all received to raise our dinghies and lock our
outboards each night since several outboard motors had
been stolen in this anchorage over the past two seasons.
Hmmm... lock the car but leave the house key in the front
door of your home... Such are the funny contrasts of this
quirky town.
We could have easily stayed in Barra de Navidad for a
month, along with many other boats in the fleet who kept
delaying their departure day after day, but we felt an urge
to see some new things. So after a week we made our
way a few miles north towards Tenacatita.
Find Barra de Navidad on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on the Mexican Riviera (northern Pacific coast) to see more posts from this area!
Costalegre: Las Hadas Resort Anchorage – Beautiful!
Las Hadas Resort.
"The Fairies" ("Las Hadas").
Las Hadas Resort and the marina basin.
Manzanillo's main port is on the horizon.
Las Hadas.
Barceló Resort and Playa Salahua.
Las Hadas Resort.
Playa La Audiencia.
Las Hadas Anchorage.
Groovy hangs out by the 18th hole.
Iguana sunning on the rocks.
Monkeys at the back of a restaurant.
Whimsically pruned bushes line the waterfront.
A tribute to a bygone era of
seafaring.
Corn tortilla "factory."
Street percussion.
Pineapples are tossed and loaded onto a handcart.
A wheelbarrow load of body parts goes to market.
Xilonen V, a 162' megayacht fills the marina.
The megayacht dwarfs the boats
on either side.
Fellow Hobie riders.
Ready for the brochure.
Hobies lined up on Playa La Escondida ("Hidden Beach")
A slot canyon in the ocean.
Las Hadas Anchorage, Manzanillo, Colima Mexico
Early February, 2011 - Las Hadas Resort at the northwest end of Manzanillo Bay is so
picture perfect that anyone with even the simplest camera in hand will find it easy to
take perfect pictures. We enjoyed this spot so much we couldn't stay away. For
several weeks we alternated between this breathtaking cove, embraced by the
enchanting Las Hadas resort, and the soaring openness of the expansive anchorage
over at Playa La Boquita a few miles away in Bahía Santiago. Motoring from one
anchorage to the other, we would take advantage of having the engine running both to
make fresh water and to heat the water in our hot water tank. On a few occasions we
had a blistering sail when the afternoon winds kicked up. Groovy heeled nicely while
the knot meter park itself in the mid-8's.
Las Hadas begs to be explored on foot,
and with each foray onto the cobbled
paths that climb the steep hillsides, we
found more discoveries. "Las Hadas"
means "The Fairies" (the origins of the
resort's name are explained here), and
we found two rather stern looking fairies
just beyond an underpass leading to the
resort's front door. I'm not sure if these
two gals were knighting
some obedient resort
workers or granting
three wishes to
incoming guests.
Hiking further up the hill, the views grow ever larger, until you can
see clear across the resort, it's anchorage and the marina to the
smoke stacks of Manzanillo far across the bay. The road twists
and turns in exhilarating switchbacks that leave walkers panting
and some bus riders wishing they had worn seasickness bracelets.
Next door to Las Hadas is the Barceló Karmina Palace resort. It is
much more modern and swank, offering visitors a truly high end lap
of luxury. But its mammoth marble and glass-filled foyers and grand
open spaces lack the otherworldly prettiness, coziness and charm of
Las Hadas. As we trudged higher and higher over the hilly peaks we
paused to catch our breath and marvel at the beauty spread out
below us.
The Las Hadas
anchorage is rimmed with restaurants overlooking the
cove. One has a huge sign offering discounts to
boaters (along with their wifi password), and we
treated ourselves to an afternoon of gazing out at the
anchorage and Manzanillo's busy port across the bay.
Banana boats, water skiers and jet skis zig-zagged
among the boats, throwing white wake patterns
everywhere.
We discovered the source of all this action on the water was
Mexico's Constitution Day weekend. It seemed that half of the
huge inland city of Guadalajara had come to vacation on this bay.
This national holiday celebrates the signing and approval of
Mexico's constitution on February 5th, 1917 and, like the Fourth
of July, is clearly fully worthy of an afternoon of being towed at full
speed across the water followed by a raucous evening of happy
partying to loud music.
While walking the beach we
came across an iguana
sunning himself on the rocks.
Just a few weeks later we
discovered these guys can
swim, and we watched one
make its way across a
stretch of calm water, its
head bobbing up every so
often to get some air and
look around.
This is an easy climate for keeping
an exotic pet caged outdoors, and
we have seen loads of parrots,
parakeets, canaries and doves
caged outside all kinds of stores from flower shops to small groceries
to beachwear boutiques. The squawk of a macaw drew us to the back
of a restaurant we were passing, and to our surprise, in addition to the
huge colorful birds, we found three large cages filled with monkeys.
They nimbly and silently climbed up and down the cage bars and
nibbled on fruits while staring us down.
The resorts and villas around Las
Hadas and Sanitago are the most
scenic parts of Manzanillo, but we took
the bus into the more gritty downtown area for a change of pace. Manzanillo is a bustling port
with an urban heart, however whimsy and history can still be found. The road leading into
town is lined with creatively pruned bushes, and we passed bushes shaped as hearts and
anchors and dogs. A ficus tree pruned to look like a small boat caught my eye, as did the
bronze sculpture of a seaman at the helm of ship from another era. Four hundred years ago
the Spanish used ports along this southern Pacific coast of Mexico as a link for trading goods
with the orient via Manila in the Phillipines.
I have gradually come to realize that
Mexico is a true blend of indigenous
Indian and foreign Spanish heritage,
beautifully expressed by the rich dark
complexions and lively Spanish
language of the people we encounter.
At one street corner in Manzanillo I said
something to a street vendor-beggar in
my passable American accented
Spanish, and she shook her head at me with that blank look of "No hablo
español" that is so familiar on gringo faces here. There are pockets of
people throughout Mexico, especially in the southern areas, who speak
only their indigenous language, not Spanish.
Music is a universal language, however, and we found street musicians playing
wonderful tunes and rhythms on xylophone and drums.
Growing up and living in
the sanitized world of
saran wrapped
supermarket products
that have been delivered
by tractor trailers on the
interstates, it is always
surprising to encounter
other methods of food
distribution. Here on the
streets of Manzanillo we
watched three people
unload a pickup truck full
of pineapples into crates on
a handcart to roll into the central
market. They tossed the
pineapples to each other with
ease. Does our food really get
thrown around like that? A little
further on, another wheelbarrow
full of what appeared to be
lambs' heads, shanks and
backbones was ready to be
rolled into the market as well.
At the far opposite end of the reality scale, a megayacht pulled into the
Las Hadas marina, dwarfing all the boats around it. Xilonen V is 162 feet
long, and when it was med-moored to its spot (tied to the docks at the
stern with a bow anchor thrown into the middle of the marina basin), the
bow of the ship was plunk in the center of the marina.
We had seen a couple float by the back of our boat on matching yellow
inflatable Hobie kayaks, just like ours, and we joined them to get a closer
look at this megayacht. Xilonen V is staffed by a captain and crew of
11 people, and three of them were busy polishing the decks when we
floated by. Of course all we could really see up close from our vantage
point was the waterline!
Lots of cruisers carry a hard-shell kayak or two on their
deck, but we haven't seen any other inflatable Hobies.
These new friends of ours have a condo in the area, and
when they bought their Hobies their neighbors all
thought they were so cool that they bought Hobies too. Now the
building's kayak rack is filled with seven bright yellow inflatable
Hobie kayaks. It looks like the final inspection and shipping
department at the Hobie factory.
We landed the kayaks on a private little beach, Playa La Escondida
("Hidden Beach") around the corner from the resort and took some
photos we thought worthy of a Hobie ad.
At one end of the little beach there is a kind of slot canyon that fills with
swishing waves as the tide rises and falls. When the water swept back to
reveal the soft sand bottom, I walked in a little ways. Suddenly a wave
roared in behind me and rushed around my legs and out the other side,
nearly knocking me off my feet.
It was finally time to venture to some new grounds, so at long last we left
Manzanillo Bay and putted 25 miles north to Barra de Navidad. More and
more cruisers had started reaching this part of the coast during their winter's
cruising in Mexico, and on that brief trip we saw five other sailboats, a record.
Find Manzanillo on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on the "Mexican Riviera" (northern Pacific coast) to see more cruising posts from this area!
Costalegre: Manzanillo Bay – Inspiring Entrepreneurs in Mexico!
Beach villas on Playa La Boquita, Santiago.
Beach palapas on Playa La Boquita, Santiago.
Casa Los Pelicanos.
Gold and black sand swirl together.
View from the Oasis.
Humback whale breaching.
Whale headstand.
Las Hadas Resort comes into view.
Cobbled waterfront paths, Las Hadas.
Soccer stars from Chivas.
Polka-dotted puffer fish.
Evening on the Las Hadas marina docks.
Agutsín and son León of Frida's
restaurant.
León dressed for work.
Inside Auto Zone.
Cihuatlán's Cathedral.
Ready for Christmas.
Chebio's shop.
Shop music.
Mark & Chebio check out the
alternator.
Ismael translates for us all.
Little crooner.
New copper stator and old burnt one.
Mark watches Chebio's quick, skilled hands.
Chebio has the worst looking but best
running car in town.
Mark and our helper/guide Ismael.
Manzanillo Bay - Santiago & Las Hadas - Two Mexican Entrepreneurs and One Hot Sauce!
Mid-December, 2011 - We finally tore ourselves away from the beautiful gringo-filled
vacationland of Paradise Village in Puerto Vallarta and sailed and motored for 27 hours
around Cabo Corrientes to Manzanillo Bay on the famed Gold Coast or Costalegre. We
pulled into Santiago Bay at dawn and were greeted with the familiar thick, moisture-filled air.
Hurricane Jova had
hit this coast very
hard two months
before our arrival and
it seemed that many of the umbrellas along the beach
were new with vibrant colors.
It was a neat feeling to return to a familiar place, and memories of
our time spent here last year came flooding back over the next few
days. The tuba player that strolls this beach was still here, and my
favorite beach villa, Casa Pelicanos, was still decked out with
beautiful flowers.
The sand still had its lovely gold and back swirl patterns, and the Oasis
restaurant overlooking the beach where we celebrated my birthday last
February was still pumping out the tunes and burgers like something out of
a beach vacation magazine.
The only huge difference was that we were the only boat in
the entire bay. Last year we were one of two dozen boats.
This year we could drop the hook anywhere we wanted.
We left Santiago for the quick jaunt across the bay to Las Hadas resort.
It was a quiet morning and we were puttering along under power making
water and kind of half day-dreaming when an enormous splash jolted us
both to our feet. "Did you see that?" We said in unison, wide-eyed. We
both grabbed binoculars and scanned the sea when a humpback whale
suddenly burst out of the water and fell back with a crash.
He was right between us
and the shore, and he was
having a whale of a time,
shooting up in the air like a
rocket and then falling onto
his back.
After a series of breaches he started doing
headstands, waving his tail and slapping it on the
water ferociously. These guys are huge
creatures, and that tail has some power. We
wondered if he was just having a little fun playing
in the morning hours or if he was communicating
something to a buddy or perhaps to us.
I have no idea, but after a
while he disappeared and the
gorgeous Las Hadas Resort came into view around the corner. Again
the memories from last year came flooding back and we anchored and
took the kayak ashore feeling like we were coming home.
You can't go home again, though, and both the port captain
Adrien and the fuel dock operator Polo that we had
befriended last year had moved on to other jobs. Las Hadas
Resort is in transition, searching for new management, and it
was very quiet. Just six boats were in the beautiful little
anchorage, and two of those were unoccupied.
Wandering the brick paths up and down
and around Las Hadas is a joy, and we
spent a few hours strolling around the
grounds and enjoying the lovely pool.
We were treated to the presence of two major soccer teams in
residence during our stay. The boys from the Guadalajara based
Atlas and Chivas teams jogged the paths, did exercises on the
beach, and performed soccer drills on a field at the edge of the
golf course. Best of all was when they ambled around shirtless
after their workouts. Fox Sports was hanging around too, setting
up their portable cameras to catch glimpses of these celebrities
during their pre-season training.
We never saw the boys swimming, but down by the dinghy dock
the water was so clear that we watched a polka-dotted puffer fish
swimming around. It was amazing to get a clear photo of him
from above the water without even needing an underwater
camera.
The dock along the Las Hadas marina has several pretty outdoor eateries, ranging from a
simple table and chairs outside a convenience store where the locals enjoy a cheap beer
after work to the more elaborate fine dining offered by a high end Italian restaurant. At
either end of the spectrum, this is a gorgeous place to while away the late afternoon and
early evening hours.
One of the highlights for us here
last year was meeting the new
owner of Frida's Restaurant whose
family makes the best hot sauce
we have ever tasted. Frida Kahlo
was a surrealist Mexican artist of
German descent whose self-
imposted solitude spawned
endless self-portraits. This
restaurant was named for her
before new owner Agustín took
over last year. One of her famous
quotes is on the wall: "I intended
to drown my sorrows but the
bastards learned to swim."
On lucky days patrons of Frida's are treated to the unmatched
service offered by Agustín's six-year-old son León. This little boy
takes his work extremely seriously. Although dad Agustín prefers
more casual attire, son León likes to come to work in a freshly
pressed white shirt, a jacket and tie. Much to his dad's surprise,
he even sports a little cologne. School was out for the holidays, so we were
fortunate to see this unique youngster once again.
Little León is extremely professional and takes his patrons' orders and delivers their
food with pride and care. Last year one of the waiters started chatting with us in a
very familiar way while we were eating, and little León wasn't happy with this casual
closeness and even said so to his dad. In his mind guests are guests and servers
are servers. We all got a huge (muffled) laugh about this. León is a rare, sweet
and special boy.
Agustín's aunt and uncle make La Tía hot sauce, a delicious hot sauce that is made
without vinegar, giving it a special flare. It can be found at the mercado in neighboring
Santiago, but Agustín was kind enough to bring a few extra bottles with him one night so
we could buy them.
We spent a few more days at Las Hadas, soaking up its unusual and creative air. Finally
we were ready to leave, and at 5:00 a.m. one morning we pulled out in the dark to head to Zihuatanejo Bay 185
miles to the southeast. Four miles out the low battery light came on and we smelled a horrific smell of
something burning in the engine compartment. We stopped dead in our tracks and began troubleshooting.
Flashlights, ammeter and noses on full alert, we realized this was a bigger problem than could be solved while
bobbing out in the bay between the freighters, and we turned around.
We have never had a boat problem that crippled our ability to travel, and we didn't dare think
about how this crisis would unfold. Mark quickly removed the alternator and we took off with it in
the kayak to the dinghy dock and grabbed a cab to the nearest Auto Zone to have it tested.
Unfortunately the computers at Auto Zone were down and it took a long time for the store
manager to rifle through all the alternators on the shelf to find one with the same connections as
ours so he could enter the right codes on the testing machine to test it.
While we were waiting a fellow in line at the register introduced himself as Ismael and said he
knew an alternator guru in Cihuatlán, about an hour away by car. Ismael told us he knew of this
guy because he owned a bus line with Mercedes diesel buses and he always had this guy fix his
alternators and work on his bus engines. Once our alternator test was finally completed and the
screen showed large red letters saying "Falló" ("Failed") we hopped in Ismael's truck and drove
off to Cihuatlán with him.
On our way there we drove along a
five mile section of highway that had
been underwater when the rivers flooded during
Hurricane Jova. Ismael had gone fishing the day
after the storm and the ocean was filled with cattle
and farm animals that had been swept away out of
the grazing fields. Over 1,000 cattle were lost. The
locals are working hard to recover. The banana
trees were trimmed back right after the storm and
now were in full leaf and very healthy. The vast
stands of palm trees were also fine. But there were
marks on the buildings in downtown Cihuatlán of
where the water had risen to about 7'.
Now, however, Cihuatlán was getting ready for
Christmas, and the decorations gave it a festive air.
At last we arrived at the master's shop. Chebio has been rebuilding alternators
and working on car electrical systems for his entire life, initially under the
tutelage of his very skilled father who opened the shop over fifty years ago.
The shop is largely outdoors and strewn with dusty parts like a junk yard. Along
with the busy hum of machinery and hard working mechanics, a rooster
punctuated the air with his cock-a-doodle-doos from the roof
of a car and in a nearby tree.
As soon as we met Chebio we knew were in the presence of a
highly skilled mechanic. He moved with the confidence and
ease of a master, despite near constant interruptions from
customers and mechanics looking for his expertise.
Throughout all this seeming chaos
his elderly father sat back and
watched the scene, collecting
money from clients and enjoying
the hubbub of his very successful
shop. The young mechanics called
Chebio "Maestro" meaning
"Master" or "Teacher."
I did my best to explain our
problems to Chebio in Spanish, but
our guide Ismael jumped in to act
as official translator to make sure nothing was lost in the translation.
Chebio explained to us that he needed to take the alternator apart
and then see if he had or could acquire the replacement parts to
make it work. "Give me 30 minutes," he said, so we took off for lunch
at nearby "Tacos Johny," a wonderful little restaurant. Between bites of awesome 8 peso ($0.60)
carne asada tacos, we listened to the crooning of a young boy standing on a chair and then heard
our guide Ismael's amazing life story.
He became the man of his family at age 3 when his
father left. Determined to make a better life, he
ventured to Nogales at age 14, knowing no English,
and worked in a restaurant without pay until the
owners saw what a great job he did and put him on
the payroll. Continuing this method of making
himself invaluable before trying to reap any
rewards, he ultimately became the owner of a very
profitable framing company, opened three
successful Mexican restaurants and owned homes
in Montana and Colorado Springs. A century ago
his tale would have been hailed as the ultimate
American immigrant success story, and he would
have been revered as a mentor by younger
generations.
Instead, after over 20 years in the US, rather than trying to jump the high hurdles
blocking his path to remain in America legally--and in all likelihood continue to build
companies and create jobs for people--he returned to Mexico with a fortune in cash.
He proceeded to buy a slew of rental properties in the towns around his family homestead. Then
he built a local bus line with a fleet of buses.
His story was truly inspiring but it was sad at the same time. As we sat in this classic Mexican semi-outdoor
eatery that exudes the most wonderful homeyness, friendliness and familiarity, I asked him if he
had ever been homesick for Mexico while living and making his fortune in the US. "All the time," he said
quietly. Caught between two countries, he still owns houses in the US, and his American wife, who is afraid
of life in Mexico, lives in Montana while he remains in Mexico. That seems a sad outcome for an impressive
Horatio Alger type of story and dramatic rise from rags to riches.
We returned to Chebio's shop to find that by some miracle he had the stator we needed in stock. It was a
perfect fit and was his only one. However, the alternator needed a new regulator too, and that required a trip elsewhere.
Chebio took off in his trusty car that appears to be falling apart but has the best running engine in town. He returned half an
hour later with the necessary regulator. Another hour or two of work, during which time he had to explain to quite a few
customers that their projects would be delayed because of ours, and he got the alternator back together again and fully tested.
It was a great scene. The rooster crowed, Chebio's dad sat back with a
satisfied smile watching his son at work, and a cluster of younger men gathered
around to soak up whatever bits of wisdom they could from the master. The
outdoor shop and tools were rudimentary at best, but the job was very well
done. Chebio used a kitchen knife and a light bulb, among other things, to
complete his alternator tests.
When all was said and done, he charged us 750
pesos ($53) for the project, of which 550 pesos
($42) was for parts. We were stunned. This
meant he valued four hours of his time on a Saturday at just $11 total. We paid him a lot more
than he asked, and he was as thrilled with our payment as we were with his work. It took two
cab rides and a bus ride to get back to Las Hadas. Topping off our colorful day, the bus stalled
on a hill and, to cheers from its occupants, the driver finally got it started again by popping the
clutch while sliding backwards downhill. Mark installed the alternator in no time, and it worked
perfectly. Next morning at 5:00 a.m. we were off on our 27 hour motorboat ride to Zihuatanejo.
Often in this strange life of cruising and
full-time travel we place ourselves in the
hands of fate without any idea how
things will turn out. We had woken up
this morning prepared for an overnight
sail to Z-town and instead were rewarded with one of the most amazing
experiences we have had to date. The seeming disaster of a dead
alternator put us shoulder to shoulder with two of the finest and most
generous men we have met: our guide Ismael and guru-mechanic
Chebio of Cihuatlán.
Costalegre: Manzanillo’s Santiago & Playa La Boquita – Beach Fun!
Sunrise.
A sea turtle drifts by.
Mom enjoys a brilliant sail.
Villas on Playa La Boquita in Santiago Bay.
Playa La Boquita.
Black and brown patterned sand yields gold in bright sunlight.
Looking out at the anchorage.
A tuba player could be heard
every afternoon throughout
the anchorage.
Umbrellas line the shores of the estuary.
A footbridge crossed to Las Palmas resort.
Manicured lawns bring a special kind of serenity.
Canoes wait for passengers.
A panga in the mangroves.
81 is the new 18.
Mark talks "bike shop" with the locals.
The Santiago Flea Market offers tourist souvenirs.
Mexican sinks.
Horseback riding on the beach.
A frigate bird takes a close
look at us.
The Oasis gave me a perfect birthday moment.
La Boquita Anchorage in Santiago, Colima, Mexico
Late January, 2011 - We left Zihuatanejo and took our time returning north to Manzanillo.
This 200 mile stretch of coastline is very remote, and for four days of motoring and three
nights at anchor we saw only a handful of boats: tankers on the horizon by day and fellow
cruisers tucked in beside us by night. As the guidebooks warn, the three anchorages along
here are very rolly, as they are open to the full brunt of the Pacific Ocean's waves coming to
shore from thousands of miles out. Despite our best efforts to keep the bow of the boat into
the waves by setting a stern anchor in addition to our bow anchor, we found that the
crosswinds on the beam of the boat were so powerful overnight that our anchoring gear
strained and groaned in too much discomfort to make it worthwhile.
Heaving a big sigh, we let the boat swing freely each
night and, as expected, it chose to angle itself
beam-to against the swell, setting up a terrific side-
to-side roll that kept us rolling in our bunk all night.
One by one we found the various round and
cylindrical items throughout the boat that rolled back
and forth with a thud or clank on each side. A
canister in a locker here, a beer can in the fridge
there, a broom handle over there. Quieting
these relentless noises made for a lot of
detective work in the wee hours of the night.
The up-side of all this sleeplessness,
however, was that we were awake before
dawn each day, and we saw some stunning
sunrises.
Mexico's wind gods like to play with cruising
sailors, and they offer little but whispering
zephyrs each day along this coast. At night
they howl ferociously, however. Hour after hour
they shake the rigging like prisoners rattling their cell bars. But at the first hint of sunlight
everything stops. Just like that. Acting like guilty children, as if nothing happened, they offer
the merest exhales once again, laughing silently as we curse yet another day of motoring.
Preferring to travel in daylight, we motored pretty much the entire way. We were frustrated to
be cruising in a built-to-sail motorboat. Again, however, there was a silver lining. This coast
is loaded with turtles, and the calm seas gave us a chance to get a really good look at a few
as they drifted past our hull.
Ever the adventurer, my mom had been eagerly awaiting a chance escape the steady
procession of New England blizzards to try the cruising lifestyle on her daughter's boat. We
swept her up in Manzanillo and took a sail to neighboring Santiago bay. To our amazement,
the capricious winds blew perfectly that afternoon, and we had a glorious romp across the
wide bay. Manzanillo's expansive bay is perfect for daysailing, and we took full advantage.
Once the anchor was down around the corner off Playa La Boquita in
Santiago Bay, we took the dinghy ashore to check out the beach. The
beach is almost four miles long, and is quite wide, fairly flat and stroked
endlessly by large, fluffy waves. About a third of the beach is lined by
beautiful villas that belong to the huge gated community Club Santiago.
Each home is more lovely than the last, and the cruisers gaze at
the large flower filled balconies and picture windows with as
much admiration (and possibly envy) as the vacationers do
looking out at the yachts swinging in the bay.
The beach is filled with a
mixture of brown and black
sand that makes fantastic
patterns as the waves wash
in and out. From certain
angles the sand glittered
brilliant gold too, making it
seem as though a little bit of
panning might help out the
cruising kitty. Our eyes
were cast down at the
patterns at our feet as
much as they scanned the
colorful views around us.
From the boat we had
heard the oom-pah of a
tuba, and once ashore
we had to go find the
source. It didn't take
long. A tuba player and
his little band were
walking up and down
the line of umbrellas at
the public access end of
the beach, offering
songs to anyone willing to part with
a few pesos.
At the furthest west end of the
beach we discovered a little estuary,
and we followed it slightly inland. A
small bridge took us
over the water, where
a beautiful resort, Las
Palmas, was waiting
on the other side.
Perfectly manicured
lawns and shrubbery
offered a feeling of
utter peace and
tranquility. We could
easily imagine
overworked executives
coming here to escape
the responsibilities of a
stressed life. The only
sounds were birds
chirping in the trees;
the rustle of the palm
leaves were like a
chorus of librarians whispering "shhh."
Even the pound of the surf and
excitement of the rugged sandy beach
just over the little footbridge seemed a
world away.
Canoes were ready for guests by the
shore, and a panga that could host a
guided tour was hidden in the
mangroves.
Spirits sky high, we returned to the boat
where we found, to our utter shock, the
water was crystal clear. Our
guidebooks have lauded the crystalline waters of many anchorages throughout our stay on
the Pacific coast of Mexico, but this year those waters have eluded us. Wave after wave of
burgundy, yellow and forest green colored "red tide" has filled every bay, cove and even
the open ocean, making it impossible to see more than a few feet into the water. Suddenly
being able to see clearly 20 feet below the boat had us all jumping into our swimsuits in
one motion. Mark was over the side with a woosh, and mom was right behind. What a role
model she is, announcing "81 is the new 18" and taking to the water like a 10-
year-old. The aqua-cize classes have paid off in spades, and she demonstrated
her moves, making light of the very strong current that threatened to whisk us all
away from the boat if we weren't careful.
On another day we wandered into Santiago itself where a large enclosed public
market offers everything from fresh produce to sweet smelling straw baskets to
freshly filleted fish. The streets around the market are filled with little shops, and
Mark found friends at the local bike shop, trying in his best Spanish to explain that
he used to have a bike shop in his garage too.
Every Saturday the town hosts a large flea market. This turned out
to be more of a tourist-oriented enterprise than we expected, but it
was fun to wander among all the brightly painted ceramics and
beautifully carved wood pieces. Pale sunburned gringos lined up on
one side of the flea market to find souvenirs for loved ones at home
while a few locals roamed on the other side, sifting through the
bargain clothing offerings to find more practical fare.
Taking the dinghy along La
Boquita beach, we saw groups
of horseback riders along the
water's edge. Following their
tracks in the sand later it
seemed they paralleled the
weaving water line perfectly,
never getting their hooves wet.
At one end of the anchorage lies San Luciano a 300'
long steel cargo ship that sank in a 1959 hurricane.
What remains is just a skeleton, but the birds love the
remnants of the masts that stick up above the waves.
We have watched frigate birds soaring high over our
boat, masters of the sky, and at times of the smaller
birds nearby. Now we had a chance to see the face of
one up close.
Back on the beach on my birthday, we asked both fellow
cruisers and land dwellers where a good spot would be to
celebrate turning 51. Everyone pointed to The Oasis, and
we spent a lovely afternoon perched on their balcony looking
out over the pounding surf.
To one side of the view, the boats in the anchorage stood
out in brilliant white relief against the towering dark mountain
behind them. On the other side we could see the little white
villas on the backside of Las Hadas resort. It was a perfect
birthday moment, and I couldn't help myself as I said to
Mark, "It's like we're living in the pages of some glossy
magazine called Perfect Vacation Hideaways." With that in
mind, we decided we would stay in the Manzanillo area a
little longer.
Find Santiago (Manzanillo) on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on the "Mexican Riviera" (northern Pacific coast) to see more cruising posts from this area!
Zihuatanejo – A Fun Town
Beautiful villas line Zihuatanejo's shore.
Pangas on Playa Principal (Principal Beach)
Dinghy valet service.
Z-town has a waterfront walking district.
There are hundreds of outdoor eateries.
Palms sway in the sand on Playa Principal.
The waterfront park got a bandstand...
...and in no time it was finished.
Plants and brick pavers were ready to go....
...and suddenly a garden sprouted.
Fishermen sell their fish from coolers.
Fresh caught fish ready for the skillet.
Hundreds of waste bins are lined up to be assembled
and distributed around town.
Looking down on Las Gatas from a beautiful
restaurant on the hilltop.
Toddlers love the beach.
Walking onto Playa La Ropa,
"Cothes Beach."
The views are beautiful at every turn.
Each resort and villa is unique.
Looking down at the Zihuatanejo anchorage.
New sculptures have been placed
all around town.
Zihua has its touristy side
on the waterfront...
Local kids have a happy hour all their own.
What a toilet!
Fresh fruits and veggies at the large central market.
Fresh chicken presented differently than we are used to.
Christmas piñatas were a hot selling item, and this
gal made them right there.
Ixtapa.
Rafa's Bar, before the rowdy cruisers showed up on
Christmas Eve.
Mike paddles his dinghy, a bright red canoe, past his
trimaran "Spirit of Adventure."
Zihuatanejo, Mexico (1)
Late December, 2010 - Finally saturated with playing on the beach
and in the water at Isla Ixtapa, we motored ten short miles to
Zihuatanejo. This once sleepy fishing village is now a tourist town
with a charming waterfront walking district. A hippy hangout some
years back, Zihua still retains its laid back pace.
Despite being right next door to the very sophisticated and built up
town of Ixtapa, and despite playing host to the occasional cruise
ship, Zihuatanejo is enchanting.
Arriving in the harbor during the late afternoon, we anchored in
front of a string of beautiful villas. A fleet of pangas lined the
shore, and as we landed the dinghy a man came running towards
us shouting "I help you I help you!" It turned out that a group of
enterprising young men have created an informal dinghy valet
service here in Z-town. Working for tips, they help the cruisers
drag their dinks high enough onto the beach to avoid floating away
at high tide. They keep an eye on the boats while the owners go
off into town and then help drag the dink back into the water when
the owners return, even if they don't return until well after dark.
This service is not entirely needed, as all the cruisers can
handle their dinghies on this short beach without assistance.
But it does make for a friendly welcome into town, and it is
nice to know that someone is keeping an eye on your dinghy
while you go about your business on shore.
What a surprise greeted us when we took our first walk in this
town. We had read a lot about Zihuatanejo in years past, and
knew it was a favorite cruiser hangout. But other than its
frequent descriptions as "friendly," "charming" and "a little
quirky," we didn't know what to expect.
What we discovered is that this town is an eclectic cross
between San Diego's upscale Seaport Village and a classic,
bustling, dusty Mexican town. It has a wonderful air of cute
trendiness but has managed not to lose its authentic feeling of
Mexico.
The brick sidewalks, open store fronts and countless
sidewalk eateries stretched lazily before us while we strolled
along.
The town is currently undergoing an extensive renovation, and all the streets along the waterfront have been converted to a
walking area where cars are not allowed. Meticulous attention to detail has been lavished on every storefront and building.
Posts and pillars supporting western style storefront walkways were wrapped with decorative rope, and all the walking areas
were covered with patterns of brick pavers.
A small park along the middle of the beach features a basketball court and bandstand, both of which came to life while we
were there. The workers sweated steadily from before dawn until many hours after sundown, working under floodlights in the
dark, to make sure the park renovation was finished and ready for the holidays. During our stay a garden of hibiscus flowers
and palms sprouted up, fully formed and blooming, at one end of the park. The garden featured wonderful sculptures of
crocodiles, cormorants and iguanas, each standing in very realistic poses.
Along the beachfront there is an open air fish market where fresh
caught fish is sold out of coolers that have just been unloaded from
the fishing pangas. Fish of all shapes and sizes are laid out on
display or kept on ice in the coolers.
One afternoon the park was suddenly filled with rows and rows
of not-yet-assembled trash cans. To one side were three brand
new garbage trucks. The money that the government had
given Zihuatanejo for their facelift was being well spent, and we
heard a rumor that on New Year's Day the governor of the state
of Guerrero was going to come to town to check it all out.
Tourism is the lifeblood of this little town, and in this neck of the
woods that means there are lots of timeshares and timeshare
presentations. Walking up the very steep hill between Madera
Beach and La Ropa Beach, a van stopped next to us and a kid
hopped out and asked if we wanted a ride to the top. Sure! It
was a steep hill, and we and our friends were all sweating
bullets. The air conditioned van ride to the top was great, but
we discovered what they were really after was for us to tour a
new condo timeshare development in exchange for breakfast at
a posh hilltop restaurant. We took a few photos from this
breathtaking spot, but after much discussion with the
saleswoman and the sales manager, we decided against the tour.
Back down on Playa La Ropa ("Clothes Beach," so
named because a long ago shipwreck deposited lots of
clothes on the beach), we joined the vacationers playing
in the sun.
The beach was filled with parasailors, catamarans, kids making sand castles and couples
strolling hand-in-hand. Everyone was enjoying Christmas vacation.
We wandered up and over the steep hill separating Playa
La Ropa from Playa Madera and got a glimpse of the
anchorage from high up.
Zihuatanejo has a large ex-
pat community, and one of
the favorite hangouts is
Zorro's, a bar run by a
Canadian couple. The table
next to ours was filled with
local kids playing at being
grown-ups.
Mexico is known for
lovely painted
ceramics, but Mark
and I were both
very surprised when
we ducked into the restrooms
at one establishment. We
passed the camera back and
forth between the mens room
and ladies room to get pictures
of the fancy toilets!
Behind all the bright and
colorful tourist come-ons in the
waterfront walking district,
Zihuatanejo reveals its true
Mexican soul in the central
public market just a few streets
back from the
beach. Taking
up a full city block, this crowded and cramped series of indoor
walkways and shops offers everything imaginable for sale.
Fruit stalls, poultry stalls, meat sellers and spice sellers are all lined up
in impossibly tight spacing, along with straw hat sellers, dime store junk
sellers and bootleg DVD vendors. Turning sideways to pass other
shoppers, we gaped as we passed a display of whole chickens splayed
on their backs, heads lolling off the edge of the table and feet sticking
up in the air.
It seemed we were in the "real" Mexico. Women stood
patiently in line at each stall, waiting to fill their sacks with the
makings of a large family Christmas dinner.
Christmas piñatas were on display
too, and we passed a woman
making them from scratch. Each
one was built around a ceramic
pot that would later be cracked
open by blindfolded kids wielding
baseball bats.
Besides the lively, touristy waterfront and the gritty, rich-smelling public market, what
made Zihuatanejo special for us was the spontaneous friendships we formed. New
friends we met on the beach invited us to spend Christmas at their condo overlooking
Ixtapa's fabulous beach. What a delight to spend such an intimate holiday with new-
found friends.
A whole community of friendships sprang up between the boats anchored in the bay
during the days leading up to Christmas. We had heard that there was usually a
cruisers net on the VHF radio every morning in the wintertime. After not hearing
anything on the radio for a few mornings, I jumped in and got it started.
This gave everyone a forum to meet each other, and in no time we had
organized a Christmas Eve gathering at Rafa's Bar, a restaurant
traditionally patronized by the cruisers back when it was owned by a
guy named Rick. Rafa was thrilled when the entire cruising community
showed up in his bar in the early afternoon of Christmas Eve and
stayed until dark. It was no surprise that they did, as Mark had talked
him into offering 10 peso beers (80 cents) to the cruisers all afternoon.
Most of the cruisers are folks like ourselves, graying a bit around the
edges and living a life they have dreamed of and planned on for years.
The boats have been carefully chosen and are well equipped, with an
emphasis on comfort -- at least as much comfort as can be had in a
small space wobbling around on the ocean.
Our cruising friend Mike, however, is different. Just 25 years old, he
lives on an older trimaran that doesn't have a working engine. "I'm
living on a loaf of bread and a huge hunk of cheese," he told me. We
first met him when he was drifting down the coast about 50 miles north
of Manzanillo. Arriving two days after us ("No wind, man!"), he was
triumphant to have broken away from the grind and gone sailing,
despite parents who wanted him to come home and get a real job.
Referring to his fellow cruisers (many of whom are older than his
parents) as "bro" and "dude," and wearing his baseball cap backwards
over his long locks, he is living a life many of us dreamed of at 25 but
didn't quite have the guts to try.
Zihuatanejo welcomed 2011 with fireworks on both beaches, and a
few days later the group of cruisers began to disperse. About half
were headed south towards Central America, but our course would
keep us in Zihuatanejo/Ixtapa for another few weeks.
Find Zihuatanejo on Mexico Maps
Visit Anchorages on Mexico's Southern Pacific Coast
to see more cruising posts from this area!
