Archive for December, 2004

30th of December 2004

No it is not what you might think at first. The bar in Livingston is
famous amongst sailors that want to go up the Rio Dulce. It is a sandbar,
just in front of Livingston in the mouth of the river. It is 6 feet deep
and that can be a problem for sailboat with a draft of 6 foot or more.
There is sometimes a buoy but from there on you have to go more or less a
straight direction. It can be a bit annoying, because you don’t have much
water under your keel to cross the bar.


We arrived tired, cold and wet at the outer edge of the bar at 1.00
o’clock at night. The visibility was poor and I decided to drop the anchor
and wait for the early morning to enter Livingston.


We had a nightcap and were very happy that we finally arrived at
Livingston. The anchor hold perfectly and we had a typical sleep after
being at sea for a couple of days. That is a good deep sleep. Windshifts
and rain squalls were still there as latent alarms, but as soon as I
realized we were at anchor before the bar in Livingston, a was fast asleep
again.


In the morning at 6.00 o’clock the fishermen came back from sea and made
a lot of noise to find out if we were ok or if they could earn 50 dollars
to tow us in. We could have slept another half day but not with the
attention of the fishing float coming in.
So we slowly ate some breakfast and prepared to cross the bar and anchor in
Livingston to start the check-in procedure.


At 8.00 o’clock a French aluminum boat was circling around us. They
wanted all kind of information about the bar, the check in-procedure and
more info about the Rio Dulce. Two male persons, one spoke only french and
the other spoke dutch too.


We lifted the anchor and took them with us over the bar to my preferred
anchor-spot close to the nice hotel with ownership/management in
Belgium/Guatemalan hands.


Officially you have to call the authorities on channel 16 and then wait
till they come to your boat. I never have the patience to do that. I tried
it the first time I came into the Rio Dulce, but when they didn’t respond I
did my own “tramite” in town. That is what we did on this rainy day too and
the officials were happy to stay dry inside.
In two hours we were legal in Guatemala and 500Q (70$ US) poorer.


We got to know our colleague sailors as Michel the French captain/owner
of the boat and Karel, his dutch mate.


They left Havana and stayed 3 days at anchor in the Mexican Chinchorros
atoll, about the same time we were at anchor for Xmas in Baia de
l’Ascencion. They spend last night in the bay of Puerto Barrios. Michel was
in a hurry as he had to catch a plane from Havana to Paris the 6th of Jan.,
Karel planned to stay for a month in Guatemala.


After a breakfast/lunch in Livingston we went back to the boat to
prepare the trip up the river the next day.



IMG_24041.jpg
Livingston, view from the boat.


I discovered a completely dirty filter and clogged fuel-lines from both
tanks. I would have to repair that first before going to the Rio Dulce. I
had a number of options with my two tanks, one empty and one full, each
about 40 gallons.


  • I could clean the line of the full tank

  • I could buy some new lines if available in Livingston

  • I could fill a jerrycan with fuel and make a provisional rigging
    with the jerrycan in the cockpit.



I discussed my plans with Michel who was a mechanic by profession. He
came with a fourth solution. He would be happy to tow me to the Rio. I
think he found it useful to have a friend with knowledge about the Rio
while arriving there. I said I would think about it and would give him my
decision early next morning.


We had a good dinner and some wine in the hotel/restaurant and went
early to bed.



<<Sunsets at SeaThe preparation of a concert>>

IMG_2406.jpg

28th of December 2004

A small collection of sunsets we had when we were at sea

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26th of December 2004

5th day from Isla Mujeres, on our way again


Weather:

They still are talking that the front is stalled, we should get NE wind
15 knots. The front seems to stay with us. We are not happy about this. It
is wet, gusty and not stable.


At 12.00 we decided to leave. The wind was out of the NE finally, around
20 knots.


During the night we passed between Chinchorro and the Mexican mainland.
The wind was up to 25 knots out of the NE. Steep waves because of wind
against current. Not a pleasant night. It even happened that the wind was
dead from behind, and with the steep waves it was a rather tricky thing to
get the boat balanced and have some speed. I tried everything even the try
sail. That was on for a couple of hours until the wind diminished. After
that back to second reef in the main and stay sail.
The most uncomfortable thing was that with the wind aback, the rain entered
the cockpit-hatch and the navigation charts got wet on the navigation
table. The navigation office was temporarily moved to the ‘Japanese bed’.


In short: not much rest, tense all the time.



<<Depart from Bahia de l’Ascencion direction GuatemalaSunsets at Sea>>

26th of December 2004

5th day from Isla Mujeres, on our way again


Weather:

They still are talking that the front is stalled, we should get NE wind
15 knots. The front seems to stay with us. We are not happy about this. It
is wet, gusty and not stable.


At 12.00 we decided to leave. The wind was out of the NE finally, around
20 knots.


During the night we passed between Chinchorro and the Mexican mainland.
The wind was up to 25 knots out of the NE. Steep waves because of wind
against current. Not a pleasant night. It even happened that the wind was
dead from behind, and with the steep waves it was a rather tricky thing to
get the boat balanced and have some speed. I tried everything even the try
sail. That was on for a couple of hours until the wind diminished. After
that back to second reef in the main and stay sail.
The most uncomfortable thing was that with the wind aback, the rain entered
the cockpit-hatch and the navigation charts got wet on the navigation
table. The navigation office was temporarily moved to the ‘Japanese bed’.


In short: not much rest, tense all the time.


<<Bahia de l’Asencion, another day at anchorDepart from Bahia de l’Ascencion direction Guatemala>>

26th of December 2004

5th day from Isla Mujeres, on our way again

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25th of December 2004

4th day from Isla, another day in Baia de l’Ascencion


weather:

They say now that the front is right were we are. The wind is still from
the NW and increasing.


We had a nice relaxing day. Didn’t do much more then swim around the
boat and read a bit. Nobody in the world disturbed us. And this is Christmas!


We heard some people on the VHF at Chinchorro. Later it turned out to be
Michel and Karel, the ones that towed us up the river in Livingston to the
Rio Dulce. They were wondering how long this front would stay.



<<Bahia de l’Asencion, another day at anchorDepart from Bahia de l’Ascencion direction Guatemala>>

25th of December 2004

4th day from Isla, another day in Baia de l’Ascencion

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25th of December 2004

4th day from Isla, another day in Baia de l’Ascencion


weather:

They say now that the front is right were we are. The wind is still from
the NW and increasing.


We had a nice relaxing day. Didn’t do much more then swim around the
boat and read a bit. Nobody in the world disturbed us. And this is Christmas!


We heard some people on the VHF at Chinchorro. Later it turned out to be
Michel and Karel, the ones that towed us up the river in Livingston to the
Rio Dulce. They were wondering how long this front would stay.


<<Tacking on the same spotBahia de l’Asencion, another day at anchor>>

24th of December 2004

23 December 2004, Tacking around Bahia de l’Ascencion


Weatherprognostics:


NE wind with a front coming and staying on top of us.


We tacked and tacked the whole day and made no progress to the South.
The wind was straight south, precisely the way we wanted to go and there
was no way we could overcome the current of 2 knots. During the night the
winds started to increase.


That tacking should not be taken light. We tack every 6 hours or so. So we
go for 20 miles and try it on the other side. It is for sure not like in a
dinghy-race. The only goal is to make miles to where the wind is blowing
from. We use our wind vane to steer and calculate when we finally tack. I
can tell you, it is no fun to see that you are doing 80 degrees to
windward. (90 degrees to windward would be precisely neutral, no progress
at all). Most of the time this is when the wind is blowing 25 to 30 knots
and the current is against the wind. You will get very nasty seas. You
survive but it is not comfortable. It is surviving.

Also there is a lot of noise when this happens, the boat pinches. Sometimes
there is a wave that takes away all the speed you got. Then you go again
slowly. (Nobody is at the tiller, this is all done by wind vane). Most
depressing is to see the GPS ‘course made good’ or something like that.
That you are going backwards. This, with all the noise, the waves, the
whole uncomfortable way of going makes you think you are doing something
fundamentally wrong. Nobody told me that this could happen??!! What am I
doing wrong?

You are doing nothing wrong, you just have bad luck with the combination of
‘type of boat’, ‘wind’, ‘current’ and more of those variables.

When it is the ‘surviving mood’, one thing is important. To save energy of
the crew. Don’t do anything. Just sleep, eat and check what is needed to
check. Then sleep again. You will need your energy for something later on.
Of course, a nice meal will enhance the mood of the crew much more then
whatever else. But save your energy for later. Too many errors are made
just because people were too tired. They fall overboard, make wrong
decisions, have bad equilibrium, are in a bad mood. Being tired is why most
accidents happen.


3th day out of Isla Mujeres, 24th of December 2004


Weatherprognostics:


The front stays on top of us for the coming days. Winds are said to be
from the NE but in reality they are from the way we want to go, meaning
from the South to SouthWest.


We tacked on the same spot as the two days before. Finally we decided to
enter Bahia de l’Ascencion to have a good rest. Why would we just tack and
tack without making any progress? We might as well drop the anchor and rest
a bit. It was Vivian that came with this idea. It just took me 2 days to
accept it. I believed the weather-prognosis, Vivian looked at our real
progress. I counter force with force, Vivian is more in using the force
that is there. A good combination, we look at all the different angles.

We caught a beautiful Dorada just before coming into the Baia de Ascencion.
IMG_18071.jpg
We made a safe landfall around 14.00, including a nice fish for Xmas.


IMG_18081.jpg

At anchor the wind started to increase and we dragged a bit. We re
anchored in a grassy spot and after I dove down to check the anchor I
decided to re anchor once more. We finally found a sandy spot to drop the
anchor. At night the winds were from the NW and the seas were relatively
choppy as we didn’t have much protection from the NW side.
I thought about leaving as the winds from the NW were ideal to our planned
course. I dismissed the idea, going to open waters when it is getting dark
and crossing the reefs, I didn’t have the guts for that. I thought it
better to be at anchor and have a good night sleep. Maybe I was kind of
lazy, after the anchor finally hold.


We had a wonderful dinner of the fish and a salad. More then enough. We
wondered what would have happened to Sirena and at times, out of pure
nostalgia I tried to make contact with Sirena, to no avail. We were
anchored sound and safe. We slept well.



<<Second day after leaving Isla Mujeres to GuatemalaBahia de l’Asencion, another day at anchor>>

23rd of December 2004

2e day at sea after Isla Mujeres

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