Kids, Don't Try This At Home!

Hi, and welcome to the adventures of "Triton", a 45' Robertson & Caine Leopard catamaran we purchased in July of 2007, in Tortola, in the British Virgin Islands. We sailed her back to Emeryville, California, located in the lovely San Francisco East Bay area, worked a few more years, then set off cruising in the fall of 2014. This journal is the story of our ongoing adventure, the folks we've met along the way, and the hardships and joys of that journey. Please read along and let us know what you think!

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here to start from the very beginning of the entire adventure. You can navigate from post to post simply by clicking the NEXT or PREVIOUS phrases at the top or bottom of each page. To find out what we've been fixing, changing, upgrading, click on the Triton Boat Work link under Related Websites. If you want to subscribe to this blog (and get emails letting you know whenever we update it) just click on the icon that says "subscribe to: posts (atom)" at the bottom of each page.

Showing posts with label Puerto Vallarta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puerto Vallarta. Show all posts

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Marina Puerto Vallarta...looks better at night.

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Dear Reader,

Well, we've been in Puerto Vallarta for almost a week now, and staying at Marina Puerto Vallarta, the main marina in town. Aside from the many fabulous cruisers we've met on the dock here, I don't have a lot to recommend about this particular marina, except maybe the sunsets. It is definitely a marina that looks better in the dark.

It is very well protected, but the harbor waters are quite dirty, with dead fish, oil slicks and condoms floating about. At times it smells of sewage, and it isn't uncommon to see any of it bobbing in the water just off the docks. The dock slips are very, very run down. Many of the dock works are broken apart, with missing electrical outlets, non-working faucets and numerous deck cleats ripped out. There is only one shower facility, which was on the other side of the harbor, and very badly maintained as well. It would be understandable if it were cheap, but it has been one of the most expensive places we've been yet. If it weren't for the fact that it was convenient for AnnMarie to fly down for the weekend, we would never have stayed here. I'm told it was once a beautiful harbor, with great facilities, but it has seen better days. Supposedly there are new owners and they will be upgrading the entire facility, but this is Mexico, where you need an archaeologist to measure that kind of progress. We spoke with quite a number of other cruisers who all thought that the area's other marinas were better. We haven't been, but I wouldn't be surprised.

The marina itself is a sort of giant cul-de-sac, surrounded by a brick boardwalk that is lined with restaurants, tourist shops, adventure guides and sports bars. About midway along is a very large pseudo light house, with a small bar on top that looks out over a 360 degree view of the harbor and town. There is an elevator that takes you up to it, but it only fits two people at a time. The light house has that quaint architecture that gives one the impression it was built by the lowest bidder. The building appears to have been retrofitted with a steel superstructure inside it. I'm sure it is all perfectly safe, and done to the highest engineering standards. They probably even used real steel. I'd just rather not be in it when the big quake hits.

Behind and above the store fronts lining the marina are high rise condominiums. In front of the stores are barkers. You know the type, usually found in front of some carny tent or strip joint trying to induce you inside. They start the pitch with "HELLO MY FRIEND, THOSE ARE GREAT SHOES YOU ARE WEARING", referring to the the fact that I don't care that my plastic Crocs don't match [I go by thickness not color] and then should you be fool hardy enough to respond in any manner you will be offered hundreds of dollars, or an amazing experience, or great deal, or the absolutely best food in all of Mexico. Every thirty yards or so there is someone standing outside a shop while trying to sell you land, boat tours, dinner aboard a pirate ship, jungle excursions, zip line rides through the rain forest, time share condominiums and meals at the various restaurants that surround the marina. Oh, and an amazing collection of schlock. We couldn't find a single useful item in this store, but there were six other stores with exactly the same inventory. And it was all made in China. Grandma would be so proud.

It is also populated with very, very expensive mega yachts, top end fishing boats and very fat, dumpy, cigar smoking middle aged American men, with very young, improbably large breasted trophy wives. We've seen more "bolt ons" in the last six days than you could shake a bra at. Robinson and I have taken to sitting in the restaurants and playing a game we call "Love or Money?". As each couple wanders buy we try to guess the motivation behind the twenty five year old runway model snuggling along side the sixty year old, bald waddler with a dart player's physique. Love doesn't come up a lot, but we could be wrong. Maybe it's just sour grapes on our part, but perhaps wintering a multi-million dollar yacht in a nice climate can make up for a lot on the physical side. Not surprisingly, there are also numerous strip clubs just outside the marina along the main drag, just in case it doesn't.

Oh, and there are several wireless providers available within the marina. Unfortunately, I chose "PVAIRPATH", which turned out to be a huge mistake. It was $10.00USD a day, was very often down, and when it was up the transfer rates were pathetic. On top of that, they prohibited the use of VOIP (voice over internet protocol) so using Skype was not allowed. Even if you did, the quality of the connection was so bad as to make it worthless. Some of the other cruisers suggested using some of the local coffee shop's free hot spots, but their speeds weren't good enough to get something accomplished. It was fine if all you wanted to do was the occasional email, but worthless for doing any actual work, downloading files of and size, and especially frustrating uploading images to your blog. Unless you got up at six A.M., when it worked great for about forty seven minutes, you couldn't do anything productive across their net.

We should have left this morning, but we didn't. The surprise birthday party they sprung on me last night went quite late, there was much carousing, imbibing, and far too little sleep for us to just jump up and go. Hah! Robinson didn't wake up until two, and spoke using only vowels for the first two hours of consciousness. Well, we say consciousness, but it was really only brain stem activity. I'm sure a medical practitioner would have at least looked for a DNR, but unless you needed to hold something from blowing away, he wasn't much good for anything. We spoke very, very loudly to him, yelling at his left ear, to help him understand anything we needed to communicate. Pay backs are a bitch.

Well, we couldn't do much else, so instead, we took off an extra day to recover any braincells that survived, and finish repairing, restocking and refilling everything we needed for our trek up to Mazatlan. We had originally planned on leaving straight for Cabo San Lucas from here, but the winds would have been against us, so we decided to motor north to Mazatlan, check in with the Port Captain there, and have Robert taken off the crew list. He booked a flight to fly back to Nicaragua on Saturday, so we figured we had plenty of time to get there and handle any paper work before sending him off to the airport. He is shown here making a face. He does that a lot. We think he might have Tourette syndrome. Or maybe brain damage. Or is just goofy. It's hard to tell with the English.

In the meantime, Robert and I decided to go into the main part of town to see the Festival De Guadeloupe. Puerto Vallarta runs along the coast, with a numerous small and large rock outcropping just off the surf zone. Although the locals we encountered in the marina were pretty reserved, once outside the marina, the folks we met were very nice, helpful and friendly. There is a long cement walkway that runs along the beach front. It is lined with restaurants and shops, and no end of bizarre and somewhat tasteless bronze sculptures. These seem to be pandemic to the inside coast of the mainland as we've encountered them everywhere; apparently someone's cousin got the government contract, and then said to their brother "Jose, quick, we need a thousand nautical statues for tourists to look at! Get that sculptor friend of yours who always forgets to take his medication and tell him the skies the limit." Just beyond the walk way it drops down to a narrow, sandy beach where people build enormous and quite elaborate sand sculptures. Some of them were really quite impressive. Apparently making sand sculptures has really caught on here, and there are competitions and amazing amounts of effort put into them. So far we've seen them on almost every tourist beach we've come to. My favorite was a woman on a couch, holding her breast, while an artist draws her picture. The fact that its a naked woman holding a breast has nothing to do with why I like it so much. Its the artistic inspiration. No really. Honest.

We took a bus from the marina into the town square, then walked along the seaside, gawking at the very bad statues, ugly Americans and other oddities. It was a strange mixture of classical Mexican culture and American trailer trash. For instance, I'm not sure why, but there was a life sized statue of an elephant on the roof of one of the restaurants. There was one block that had a taco shop, an ice cream parlor, a Hooters restaurant, a Domino's pizza, a Mexican Naval Museum and a Starbucks coffee shop across the street. It made me sad to realize this was our contribution to world culture. As we walked along we found a tattoo parlor, which I dragged Robert into, hoping to convince him to get the word "MOM" written on his shoulder, I just know his parents would have wanted him to. Mostly I just wanted to watch him being polite to the shop owner, who foolishly assumed there was more than a snowball's chance in Hell of that ever happening.

We also found a McDonalds, with a life sized Ronald The Clown on a park bench inside it. Robert was also kind enough to point out the "Now Hiring" sign which stipulated that Mikey D wanted you, provided you were between the ages of sixteen and fifty and willing to work for sixteen cents an hour. Robert suggested I put in an application now, because I'd be too old the next time I came through here. He has a very mean sense of humor, and whatever moral qualms I might have had before he left, I now felt better for having putting those fish guts in the bottom of his backpack.

Eventually we reached the town center, which is dominated by a large cathedral with an giant bell tower. There was an enormous crowd milling about, with a queue several blocks long of parishioners waiting to get into the church. They lined the entire side street, several blocks deep, and slowly shuffled along before eventually filing into the temple doors. The church itself was quite ornate, internally balconied, lined with stained glass windows several stories high and trimmed with rococo woodwork overlaid with gold leaf. It reminded me of my days back at Catholic boarding school. There were even nuns wearing the traditional habit, choir boys and alter boys in white smocks, and a priest that looked like he'd walked out of Central Casting.

The bell tower must have had twenty different bells of various shapes, tones and sizes. Every few minutes they would ring all of them, which was deafening. Apparently the "procession" had just happened and we'd missed it. Like all town fairs everywhere, those who had taken part in it were walking around afterward still dressed in elaborate costumes while sipping cans of soda and smoking cigarettes. We wandered about the town square, took photos of the adorable children dressed up in traditional Frito Bandito garb, ate sidewalk vendor food and generally milled about.

There was also an amazing "Pro Life" display just outside the entrance, showing, supposedly, the life sized versions of a fetus during the various stages of development. I think this was intended as some sort of anti-abortion poster, but it was pretty surreal right outside the entrance way to the church. The really scary bit was that the four week old version looked just like Robinson when we left this morning. He had said he would meet us at the square, but he never showed up. Eventually we tired of waiting for him, had seen most of what the town had to offer visitors, and decided to grab a bus back.

The mass transit seemed like a pretty decent setup, although we were riding on what amounted to old school buses from the states. There were lots of them, if a bit crowed at times, but they seemed to be going everywhere we wanted to. Bus rides were fifty cents and ours came with its own musical entertainment. Apparently busking on public transportation is not only legit here, but encouraged, and we rode back to the marina listening to some pretty decent mariachi music. We passed a Home Depot, a Walmart, and several other "big box" chain stores including the Mexican version of West Marine, which was located less than a block from the marina. The store is relatively new, the prices are very good, there isn't much stock, but it was the largest chandler I've come across yet in Mexico. American pop culture is encroaching here, and no doubt in another twenty years it will be hard to tell the difference between here and any strip mall in Walnut Creek.

Robinson was still asleep when we returned, so we banged around and made as much noise as possible. We got the boat packed up and ready to go, had dinner that night at one of the local restaurants, and I worked furiously trying to get as much of the blog caught up to date, despite the lousy internet connection. We leave for Mazatlan tomorrow morning, providing no one else has a party before then.

Cheers for now!

Robb

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Sunday, December 9, 2007

Thar She Blows!

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Whales, Captain! Whales off the starboard bow!!

We are just approaching the lighthouse south of the point and saw blow spouts off our bow. A sleek pod of Humpback whales, perhaps eight or more, were working their way across our path. We were amazed and excited, and very lucky to have seen them this early in the season.


We slowed our speed and grabbed our cameras, each of us clicking away as they got within thirty yards of our boat. Robert snapped a beautiful shot of a tail clearing the water, and Robinson snagged the shot of two breaching together. We could hear the slap as its tail hit the water, and the pop and swish of their lungs as they exhaled, blowing water ten feet into the air. It was a rare sight and one many folks pay considerable amounts of money to witness.

We slowed to a stop, and watched for several minutes as as they swam past, going off to whatever it is that preoccupies Humpback enough to cause them to swim thousands of miles at a time. According to the folks in P.V., this is where they mate, the Sea of Cortez being a sort of a "Club Med" for whales, where singles meet and greet. I'm not surprised at all, given what the turtles have been getting up to. I can only imagine why the dolphins are grinning so much. Maybe P.V. is a "get lucky" kind of place, I know the crew is looking forward to getting here, and AnnMarie is scheduled to meet me here this weekend!

We rounded the cape just as the winds and sea started to pick up, but as we head into the bay we got further and further out of the Northerlies and things started to calm down. We were all a bit anxious to get onto land, as we'd been bashing up the coast for longer than was comfortable, and we were all looking forward to a quiet berth and a good meal. Unfortunately, we were still several hours away from Marina Puerto Vallarta, and the time seemed to drag on as we approached.

The bay was flat, the winds were light and it was very sunny and bright as we approached the entrance to the marina. There is a long and narrow channel you follow to get into this marina, with numerous docks and boats at anchor along the way. We pulled in two a large circular marina with docks going off in all directions. We couldn't figure out where to go, so we tied up to one of the vacant end ties (the furthest most part of the dock that faces the water) and walked around looking for the harbor office.

It was three o'clock, and it was closed for siesta until four. We sat down at a near by restaurant and relaxed over burgers and fries. They weren't very good burgers, nor fries, but after Nicaragua, they tasted great. The entire harbor is ringed with tall condos, with store fronts opening out on to the sidewalk that runs around the water's edge. We waited until the office reopened, then asked about a slip. The woman who worked in the office was, as are most of the Mexican women down here, quite attractive. She smiled warmly at Robinson, who did all the talking.

They had a vacancy large enough for our catamaran, which was actually two slips next to each other, over at M dock. We motored over there, and as we negotiated our way in, noticed some folks sitting out on their boat, two slips over, called "Fire Escape". "You folks need a hand?" they asked. "Sure thing!" we yelled back, and they dashed over to take a line as we backed Triton into the slip. Their names were Randy and Margan, and they have just started their cruising adventure on their Island Packet. Randy just retired from the Canadian fire services, and Margan was an avid bicyclist from Colorado, and were traveling with Randy's ten year old son Mitchell, and their dog.

We were then joined by Joe from "Ziagara Due", a spectacularly pretty stink pot (we don't hold it against him) as well. Everyone pitched in, without the slightest hesitation. They offered advice on where to find things, rides into town, and cold beers for our arrival. Not what you'd expect from strangers back home, but it is typical of the cruising community.

We thanked them for all their help, and they invited us to a dock party that was happening later that day. Apparently once a week or so, Scott on Christina, a spacious DownEaster 38, drags out his deep fryer, and everyone brings some beer and fish, or potatoes, or whatever they'd like battered, and hangs out to chat.

We brought some watermelon that needed eating, and as the sun went down we got to meet our new neighbors. It was a delightful way to arrive and our spirits were much improved for the experience.

I have to admit I'm always surprised at how tight the sailing community is, especially in foreign ports. I guess I shouldn't be, but we've had nothing be great hospitality since we got here. I'm yet to meet anyone, regardless of the price of their boat, who hasn't been outgoing, cheerful and friendly. You may not hang out with them, but we just haven't run into many folks with their nose in the air.

The next day, Joe graciously offered to drive us to the Port Captain's office (which was only a block away) and the supermarket. We checked in (again taking less than ten minutes) and there were no fees or other complications. Mexico has really improved its cruising rules and I believe it will greatly encourage more tourists to discover what an amazing and beautiful country it is. Maybe that isn't a good thing, as more Americans means more American stores (there is a Walmart within a few blocks) and it probably means less diversification, but in a global market I think this kind of change is inevitable.

The supermarket was no different than any you'd find in California, with the exception that there were far less yuppies looking for dates, everything was spelled wrong, and they sold Cactus in the vegetable isle. The check out baggers were all wearing red Santa hats, which, coupled with the bright green trim on the checkout counters, added an odd, almost surreal holiday effect. Especially since it was about ninety degrees out. "It's Beginning to Look a lot like Christmas" kept running through my head.

We bought several shopping carts worth of food, seltzer and octopus, loaded them into Joe's car and headed back to the boat. It took several trips to get everything aboard, and put away, but eventually we got settled in and could relax. I spoke with AnnMarie on the SatPhone the night before and made sure she was on track to meet us here. She was bringing down two sacks full of equipment and food, and the SailRite sewing machine. We had ripped the jib and trampoline coming up the coast and would need it to repair them.

I went to pick her up on Friday at the airport. It was less than five blocks away and the taxi ride there cost four dollars. I waited no more than ten minutes for her to clear customs, and there were no problems getting in. Getting a taxi back out was quite different. They wanted over twenty dollars. We argued with them, but they have a captured market and its a racket. We grabbed our stuff and lugged it a block away, and paid six bucks to take us back. Still a ripoff, but we didn't want to keep dragging a heavy sewing machine any further.

It was wonderful seeing her, and we spent most of the next three days not seeing the sights, not experiencing P.V. and not getting out of bed. Neither of us felt at all deprived by this. She didn't even go swimming. About the most touristy thing we did was walk along the sidewalk and take a picture of what is either a marina repair man or a lizard. It is hard to tell because they both move at about the same pace. I think its a lizard, because the repair men don't seem to have opposable thumbs.

We did go for dinner on Saturday evening with both Robs, Randy & Margan, and Erik, an American who has been traveling for a bit through Mexico and picking up work where ever he can. We've eaten at a few of the restaurants along the esplanade, but our favorite is a place quite close to our slip, where their specialty is octopus. You would think I'd eventually grow tired of it, but it remains my favorite comfort food. Afterward Randy, Margan, AnnMarie and I went for drinks at the lighthouse, the tall circular building that overlooks the entire marina. P.V. doesn't really have that great a skyline, but we had a really nice time chatting and watching the boats. Later that night AnnMarie and I sat on Triton and cuddled. It was a beautiful, romantic night, and we held each other and snuggled. Life is good.

Ann left on Sunday afternoon, it was much too brief a stay, but she needed to get back to work. That evening Robinson, Robert and I sewed the sail and the tramp. The machine worked beautifully and I was amazed at how effortless it was to repair everything. I only wish I'd brought this down from the very beginning. As it was, Ann had a hell of a time lugging it around the various airports, and it would probably have been damaged or "lost" if we'd shipped it, but it's great to have now.

Tomorrow is my fiftieth birthday, which I'm not looking forward to and hoping to ignore. Time seems to have sped up, and I find myself looking in the mirror at my father and wondering how I managed to live this long. I've certainly had a great time so far, and will do my best to continue in that vein or die trying.

Until then, I wish everyone a happy holiday season and hope to see you all by next year!

Cheers,

Robb


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