Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Club Nautico and Stone Island

We all take turns dropping the dinghy. (It seems to be Bryan’s turn an awful lot of the time.) The trick is to swing it up and then out. You win if it stays dry inside.
P1020133

P1020134
P1020135

The next day, we were excited to go to the central market, but it was Sunday and we didn’t want to walk all the way there only to find out that it was closed.
We poked around in the morning, on the boat and on the internet,
P1020136

and then walked the mile into the main plaza. We found an ATM and wandered around the periphery of the fancy restaurants looking for something affordable. We spotted a wood oven in a back parking lot (controlled fire at a restaurant is a good sign) and walked around the block to find the front of the restaurant it was serving. It turned out to be another branch of La Mona, the pizza place we’d eaten at in New Mazatlan. We try to find unique places to eat along the way, but the price was right and the food was good, so we stopped in again. I was glad I’d learned how to order a 1/2 and 1/2 pizza!
On our way back, we stopped at a small store and picked up a few groceries and some pastries for breakfast. We grabbed a few for dessert too, and a quart of cold milk to drink with them.
P1020141

Without refrigeration on the boat, cold milk is a special treat, but we have to drink it all right away. In fact, we have to finish most foods right away. Some leftovers keep OK (fried macaroni and cheese for breakfast is a new favorite), but other things don’t. Even crackers and cookies often go stale right away in the damp air. More than ever now, eating is a family occasion. If we open a package of oreos (here they come in small sleeves, like Ritz crackers) we just dole them out and eat them all. There are never any complaints. I’ve gotten good at judging how much to cook and Meira, who is still growing, is good at eating the last of the food from anybody’s plate. If you come to visit us, you might want to hold onto your plate while you eat:-)
Monday morning, we set off for the market. We rowed in, secured the dinghy, and walked the mile into Oldtown. We walked past the tour boat docks, through the industrial port and turned left into a residential area. We peeked through wrought iron fences into beautiful courtyards. Christmas decorations hung incongruously near tropical flowers. We scurried across a busy highway, across the median to the sidewalk on the other side. Each side of the highway was one-way only, but more than once, I saw a taxi reversing against the flow of traffic. Safely into the slender streets of Oldtown, we walked on north past the main plaza, across toward the cathedral, and into the market itself. The blocks around the market were a blaze of color and noise. Traffic fought street vendors for space on the roads and pedestrians zipped through the spaces between. The market itself, a city block of stalls and booths, was just as raucous.
P1020145

Who needs automatic sprayers to keep your produce fresh when you’ve got a squirt bottle and an industrious little girl?
P1020149

Clearly, bottle-cap checkers is serious business
P1020151

We soon figured out the system—souvenirs in the stalls to the west; meat in the center; fruit, tortillas, and cheese to the east. Scattered here and there were lunch counters with tacos, hamburgers, and fresh drinks.
P1020142

We wandered for a while and then found a place to eat. The tacos were amazing and the licuados (fresh fruit smoothies) even better.
P1020144

We had to laugh when we saw the sign proclaiming careful cleanliness of ice and water displayed next to the live parakeet hanging over the blender.
P1020148

We found a few things we’d been wanting—Hannah and I bought traditional dresses, Meira picked up a leather bracelet, and Bryan got a new belt.
P1020154

I picked out some produce, cheese, and tortillas (we decided against buying one of the many whole pigs’ heads sitting out on ice.)
P1020150

P1020152

I braved the public restrooms, paid for a handful of toilet paper, and walked confidently…toward the men’s room. The attendant gestured frantically and I got the point.
On our way back, we stopped at a fabric store for some cloth to make a cockpit sunshade.
P1020153

We’d poked our heads in on the way, but hadn’t wanted to carry several meters of stiff fabric around the crowded market. We found what we wanted, found someone to cut it for us and made it through the complicated process of checking out—pay here, but take your receipt around to the back of the counter to pick up your bagged fabric. Though we were never out of sight of the workers or our fabric, our receipts were double checked at each stop, first the cut slip, then the actual receipt. Someone stamped one of them with a big blue stamp and we were free to go.
In the US, I’m not much of a mall shopper. But I spend a lot of time at grocery stores and farmers markets to get the food and household goods my family needs, navigating the stores and aisles with others who are doing the same. Here, I really enjoy the challenge of shopping. Sometimes, I work to find what I want, other times I make do with what I can find. It takes extra math to figure out if we’re getting a good deal, and I’m getting a little better at haggling if it’s necessary (not as often as you might think). Though much about the process is different, the goal is the same, and a similar sort of community forms as I interact with the women at the cheese counter or bump elbows with the women at the produce stall. (Maybe, after months of navigating the male-heavy world of sailors, I’m just happy to relax in a primarily female circle again.) Back on the boat, we put away our finds, made a simple dinner of beans and rice (with cheese! What a treat!) and pulled out the laptop for family movie night.
The next morning, we loaded up the backpacks for a trip to the grocery store. The market had been nice, but we hadn’t done a real provisioning trip since San Diego and the shelves were getting a little bare. We tried to find the bus to Mega, a huge grocery superstore. A couple of taxi drivers overheard me asking for directions to the bus and when their price came down enough, we hopped aboard. We rode along the water, past a line of tiny, colorful stalls and beachside restaurants to the enormous Mega. We stood around in the entryway for a minute until we realized the store was upstairs. We grabbed a cart and wheeled it onto the flat escalator—no stairs, just a moving sidewalk at an angle. The wheels locked onto the surface (maybe a magnet? Maybe a belt brake or tip brake? Meira and Bryan investigated quickly but the ride wasn’t long enough to figure out the mechanism.)
We wandered the store until we were all tired and cranky, bought some food at the deli counter, and found some tables outside for a picnic. Just before we hopped into a taxi for the ride back, our friends from Valus Valeo came rushing up. They’d spotted us on their way up the escalator and came down to say hi. We made tentative plans to meet in the plaza after dinner for a New Years Eve dessert celebration.
We balanced our groceries in a golf cart taxi and rode back to the boat. The security guard opened the gate for us and the driver pulled through and backed up (very, very close!) to the steps at the top of the dinghy dock. We transferred the groceries to the dinghy, paid the driver, and rowed back to the boat, That night, we walked back into town. We were a little late getting started; a rain shower came through and we opted to wait it out. But we knew where we wanted to eat. On our walks, we kept passing a busy taqueria and we had plans to get some cheap food there before meeting our friends. We headed straight there and…it was closed for the holiday. As we walked around town, it seemed the same was true all over. Any cheap little restaurant was closed, the spendy ones on the plaza hadn’t opened yet—the  waiters were bustling about trying to protect the fancy table settings from the damp—and it was starting to rain again. We walked increasingly larger circles around the plaza, ducking under an overhang when the warm rain grew heavy. Every so often, we popped back into the plaza to see if our friends were waiting for us. We finally gave up on meeting them, but I didn’t feel quite ready to give up on the evening altogether and head back to the boat. It just felt like something else was about to happen.
All of a sudden, Bryan and I had the same idea—“What if we went..?” “How far is it to walk to…?”—we turned and headed for the waterfront development. Surely something there would be open. We walked the 7 blocks down to the water, amazed at the girls’ good attitudes despite the rain, their hunger, and the uncertainty. We emerged onto the main road near the beach toward the south end of all the development. We started to head north, but spotted some tables out on the sidewalk just a block or so to the south. We headed that way to check it out and were walking through, trying to see what was on the other side when—“LiLo!” Our friends from Valus Valeo had followed the same itinerary of wandering the plaza and finally heading for the beach. They’d found the restaurant a few minutes before and were just waiting for their food. We shoved another table up, shifted the already giggling girls to the spots at the end, and settled in for a effervescent evening. 
P1020156
P1020157
P1020158

The long-suffering proprietor kicked us out a few minutes before 10. “It’s a special night for me too,” he said. Our friends caught a taxi to their end of town and we walked the sparkling streets back through the plaza (no longer dripping wet but full of lively energy) to the dinghy and rowed out to our quiet home. We rang in the new year by the ship’s clock but it was a few minutes fast, and as we were all brushing our teeth and getting ready for bed, we heard the city erupt with noise. We poked our heads out to see the fireworks and then cuddled up for “the best sleep all year.”
Our plan for the next day was a very short hop out the breakwater and around the other side to Stone Island. Bryan declared that Hannah would serve as captain for the 30 minute trip. She willingly accepted the challenge (and gratefully accepted a navigation briefing from me, the “navigation officer.”) We started the engine and Hannah started hauling in our rode. About 90 feet before the anchor broke the surface, the rode pulled up taut, caught on something on the bottom about 25 feet down. We tried winching. We tried slacking the rode and pulling it in again. We thought about calling a friend who dives. We tried motoring in circles, first this way, then that way. Every few minutes something would work its way loose and we could pull in a little more rode. For more than an hour, we hauled and motored and spun, like a kid twisting on a swing set, and finally…the rode was free. We spotted some grease marks where the line had been stuck and Bryan theorized that we’d been caught on an old engine block someone had tossed out to serve as a makeshift mooring. When we finally got to the actual anchor, it was set very firmly too. After all my concern about our anchor here, this was one place we weren’t going anywhere!
Hannah directed me (also the “communications officer”) to call traffic control and as soon as we received permission to leave, she guided LiLo safely out, past several unmarked rocks, into the anchorage on the other side. She worked with Bryan to get our anchor set well and gladly relinquished command of the vessel.
We’d planned to go to shore right away, but our fouled anchor had taken most of our time and all our energy. In the heat of the afternoon, Bryan and Meira jumped in over the side and snorkeled around the boat for a few minutes.
P1020160

P1020161

Hannah and I were happy to just sit aboard and take in the sights and sounds—swimmers and kayakers frolicking in the waves, pangas towing inflatable “banana boats” through the surf, horses cantering across the sand, and mariachi music floating out from the palapas on the shore.
P1020165

The next morning, the view was completely changed. We couldn’t see anybody out on the beach and the tide was in so high, the waves were lapping at the beach-front restaurants. We tried to get a weather report from the cruisers’ radio net in the morning, but were too far away to pick up the weak signal. After breakfast, a trio from a neighboring boat came by on their swimming tour of the bay. They climbed up our swim ladder and sat in our cockpit for a short visit before heading off to another boat. They too had been hoping to get a weather forecast before heading out to Isla Isabel. We promised to relay across any info we got.
At low tide the day before, there had been a little slip of beach on the island in the bay, Isla Cardones. We planned to land Rover there on the sand for some snorkeling around the rocks.
P1020167

Today, at high tide, we couldn’t see any sand, just sharp points of rock in the surf. We took our time getting ourselves together and by the time we were ready, Bryan could see a little sand through the binoculars. We dropped the dinghy and rowed over. The surf landing was easy and the snorkeling fun.
P1020171

Vacationers in rented kayaks came and went on the tiny beach. Just as we were getting ready to head back, a couple in a tandem kayak had a rough surf landing. The woman pulled the kayak out of the water while the man waded in for some shoes trying to make their escape. When he got back to shore, he was missing his wedding ring. He didn’t know if he’d lost it wading or in the initial crash landing. We quickly offered our snorkel equipment for the search, but the sand was deep and the surf turbulent. Everyone knew the chances were slim to none. He waded out into the swell and Meira jumped in closer to shore while the rest of us waited on the beach for them to give up the nearly-hopeless endeavor. Just a couple of minutes later, Meira called out, “I think I found it!” Instead of sinking into the sand, the ring had settled into a crevice in the rock where her quick eyes spotted the sparkle. We rowed back out through the surf, energized by our part in making someone’s day.
P1020174

We’d planned to leave that afternoon for Isla Isabel, an easy overnight run. The island is a world heritage site, protected for it’s abundant bird population, and nicknamed “The Galapagos of Mexico.” But the anchorages there aren’t very well protected and, because of the rocky bottom, are known for their iffy holding and tendency to snag anchors. We debated about staying another day to explore Isla de los Chivos (the island of the goats) and the palapas on the main beach. We’d just decided to head out anyway, when our swimming friends from the neighboring boat motored by on their way out to Isla Isabel too. We called over, “Did you ever hear the weather?” And they responded, “It’s blowing 8 knots right now.” With that good reminder that a weather forecast is not the same thing as the actual weather, we took off too, hoping to get a couple of calm days to explore the unique island we’d heard so much about.
P1020176

More from Mazatlan

Christmas was a little different this year. Some family traditions travel well, though. We still slept in as usual (yay for a family of 4 night-owls!) We always have to wait for something before we can open our stockings. Some years, we have to wait for Bryan’s coffee or my tea. Other years, we parents feel compelled to brush our teeth and put in contacts first. This year, we were all ready…and the camera battery died. We plugged it in and twiddled our thumbs for a few minutes but we just couldn’t wait! We finally agreed we could re-stuff the “stockings” later, stage another picture and fool our memories into thinking we had it all together on Christmas morning.
P1020040

I was just a little apprehensive about Christmas this year. The girls aren’t greedy about holidays, but we’ve always celebrated with multiple family members and, especially after losing Splitpea earlier in the month, I was a little concerned that this Christmas wouldn’t feel like enough. Not enough family, not enough parties. Not enough candles and music, cookies and cocoa, and yes…not enough gifts. I can respect those who chose to forgo gifts at Christmastime to keep the focus on the gift of the Christ child. But we still find meaning in the practice of giving and receiving gifts. It’s nice to be thought of, nice to think of others, a good practice in receiving grace. But—you probably could have told me this—I shouldn’t have worried.
P1020047

The girls were overjoyed with the few gifts we’d managed to tuck away (I’d been sleeping with several for weeks) and those they bought for each other. Meira calligraphied special notes for each of us and somehow in all the bustle, Bryan even managed to pick up a few things for our stockings (new dishtowels for me and candy for everyone, including himself, since he knew I hadn’t made it to the store.) and a couple of lovely pieces of traditional silver jewelry for me.
P1020042

In the afternoon, we pulled away from the dock and motored a couple of miles to nearby Isla Venados.
P1020048

P1020050

We anchored a little ways down the beach from a couple of day-tour catamarans and dinghied in for some snorkeling.
P1020103

We’d heard the snorkeling here wasn’t the greatest,but it was plenty good enough for us.
P1020055

P1020057

P1020059

P1020086

P1020073

Bryan and Meira even swam back to the boat while Hannah and I rowed Rover alongside them to warn off any nearby vessels.
P1020068

There is a reef just off the point near the entrance to the marina. Our first day into Mazatlan, I’d spotted a buoy marking the end of the reef and guided Bryan safely past it. But on Christmas, as we drove out to the island, and again on the way back, I searched the sea for the marker. I would have sworn I saw a buoy that first day, but if it had ever been there, it wasn’t there anymore. I was so confused, but figured I must have mistaken a splashing wave for a marker. That night, on a late night stroll, we spotted the buoy sitting on the wharf. We asked a nearby security guard what had happened and initially, I thought he was saying they brought it in because big seas were predicted. That seemed like a bad time to pull in an important marker. But Bryan was pretty sure he said it broke loose in big seas and they found it floating and hauled it in. That made way more sense. I was glad we didn’t need it to find our way back in safely.
We drove back into our slip with just enough time to get a pie in the oven and cook some potatoes, our promised contribution to Christmas dinner with our friend, Will.
Will had cooked up some Mexican mystery meat sausages and traditional German green cabbage. We brought salt potatoes and apple pie. We slid in around his festive table and enjoyed celebrating the evening together. Apparently our travels were a bit confusing to Santa, as he had left some gifts for the girls on Will’s boat by mistake:-)
The next few days are a bit fuzzy. Wandering down to the pools in between boat chores is a lovely way to relax but doesn’t make for riveting narrative. We all agreed we needed a little vacation from our adventure. We’d considered leaving on the 26th, but ended up staying a couple of extra days.
P1020107
We've had several visits from these enormous moths

We didn’t relax the whole time though. Some repairs are easier at a dock, especially at a dock with nearby toilets. The day after Christmas, the whole family pitched in to help clean and repair the holding tank vent.
P1020106
Here's Meira wedged into the hanging locker

The next morning we did several loads of laundry before breaking for the afternoon. We’d watched the water ferry whiz back and forth from the fuel dock to the beach dock on the other side of the estuary, but the 27th, our last day in Marina El Cid, we finally rode across.
P1020110

P1020114

P1020115

The beach was glorious, with gentle seashell-to-the-ear surf sounds. Bryan and Meira went body surfing in their clothes and Hannah and I laid on the beach chairs and let the warm breeze float away the last of our stress.
P1020116
P1020120

P1020121

Just before sunset, we ferried back, piled into Rover and rowed up inside the bay.
P1020122

P1020124

A friend had sent us an e-mail introduction to a specific boat in one of the inner marinas and we thought we’d ask around to see if we could meet them. We wandered around the marina, and just about the time it got too dark to see, a helpful boater put out a call on the radio and heard back that the boat had left just the morning before. We’ll keep our eyes out. If they’re headed south, we’ll probably see them along the way somewhere.
P1020126

We settled for a pizza dinner at La Mona, a wood-fired pizza joint. Our waiter was helpful, teaching me how to order 1/2 and 1/2 in Spanish, and the pizza—prosciutto, pineapple, shrimp, and coconut—was unusual, but fabulous. As we were walking back to the dinghy, Bryan pointed out the shopping center he’d biked to a few days before. We needed a few things to tide us over until we could get to a market in Oldtown Mazatlan and it wasn’t very far away as the crow flies. We decided we were all up for the walk. We picked our way through a brambly lot, across a parking lot and a 4 lane-highway to the cobblestone sidewalk on the other side. We ducked under the strange trees along the edge of the road and walked in rhythm to some cricket-y bugs in the fields to our left, chirping even louder than the noisy traffic on our right.
We finally made it to the store, a Walmart, of all places. We shopped mostly based on weight (Only Bryan had a backpack for heavy food. The rest of us had to carry back the lighter stuff in plastic bags.) but we also took some time to find rashguard shirts for the crew. A couple days of snorkeling (and a little bit of Christmas money) had encouraged us to splurge on long sleeved swim shirts and shorts. We haven’t tried them yet, but look forward to the added protection from rocks and reefs (and jellyfish!) and the little bit of extra warmth they will offer. Even here where the water is warm, it’s nice to have a little help retaining body heat over a long day in the ocean.
The bakery area was a little confusing, but thanks to the multiple Mexican-style groceries in our area in Oregon, we figured it out right away. All the baked goods sit out in the open and customers take a tray and some tongs from a central stash and wander around selecting way more pastries than they can eat. Hmmm, maybe that’s just us.
We finished our shopping and found a place on a curb to sit and eat some fortification for the walk (and the row) back.
P1020129

We walked quickly past the tempting row of taxi cabs and made it back to the boat before anyone started to have a meltdown.
The row back in the dark was peaceful and easy, with an ebbing current helping us along. Pleasant chatter accompanied us for a while and then faded into the stillness of the evening, night birds and dipping oars the only sounds. We dropped the girls and the groceries off at the boat and rowed back across to the main wharf for our laundry. It was quicker and easier to row across than to walk around and walk it back. A boating neighbor met us back on our dock. He’d seen us rowing in the estuary, but when he spotted some strange lights on shore and our dinghy missing from the boat, he wanted to make sure we’d made it back OK. We’re used to the independent attitude necessary for this kind of travel, but it’s nice to have someone keeping an eye out for us.
The next morning, we finished up the last of our at-the-dock chores and checked out. On our way out, we stopped by the fuel dock for gas. Getting into the dock was easy, but before we could leave, a fishing boat came in behind us and another one tucked into the impossibly small space in front of us, avoiding the rock wall at the inner end of the dock, but banging his bow-hung anchor into ours several times in the process. Meira jumped down to fend off like the experienced sailor she’s become. Just feet in front of that boat, some officials pulled up to the rocks at the base of the seawall and someone lowered the wayward buoy down into their panga. In the meantime, the water taxi continued its regular runs back and forth across the water, pulling up to the end of the fuel dock to take on and let off passengers and another fishing boat pulled up close on our port quarter to stake their claim on our spot. We tried to organize a do-si-do with the boat behind us, to give us a better shot at a clear exit, but finally decided just head out sideways and hope we could turn around before running aground or hitting another boat in the busy harbor. Bryan got some help pushing the bow off the dock and Meira retrieved the boat hook from the volunteer dockhand as I drove us away, trusting the impatient boat waiting for our spot at the dock to back out of our way.
After all that excitement, we were glad we only had a few miles to motor. The ocean was calm and beautiful and we all wanted to be out enjoying the sun. It was a good thing we had several people out on watch. Partway to our new anchorage, we spotted what looked like a swimmer in the middle of the channel. We slowed down and eased closer in case someone needed help. Sure enough, there was someone in the water, no dive marker or float to make him more visible, just a swimmer all in black wearing a cowboy hat and floating around in the ocean. We hollered to him in English and Spanish and he hollered back, “Estoy bien!” “I’m fine!”
We planned to anchor near Club Nautico, just inside the commercial harbor’s breakwater. It’s not really a marina, but they have a dinghy dock (with a security guard), wireless internet, and basic bathroom facilities (Rumor has it the showers are cold. We opted not to find out for ourselves.) The opening in the harbor jetties is just big enough for the big cargo ships and cruise ships, so even the smallest vessels are required to call traffic control to obtain permission to enter or leave the port to make sure they don’t try to move through at the same time as one of the big guys. Though I try to at least start in-person conversations in Spanish, only switching to English if it seems necessary (in person, it’s pretty obvious I’m not a native Spanish speaker), on the radio, I’ve gotten myself in trouble when my initial Spanish fooled someone into thinking I understand more than I do. So I tried to hail traffic control several times in English, and only then switched to Spanish. They responded, but didn’t seem to be either allowing us in or prohibiting us. I called again, repeating my request and adding the now-traditional, “Lo siento, no hablo mucho espanol.” Finally, I heard what I needed to hear, “Yes, you may enter.” We slipped through the breakwater without any trouble and into the sizable anchorage on the other side. It took a while to get our anchor set. We’d heard the muddy bottom here has a way of turning to jello if the wind picks up, so we let our anchor sink for a few minutes before setting it hard with the engine.
P1020132

While we’d moved the boat to Club Nautico, Bryan’s family had gathered for their Christmas celebration. So as soon as our anchor was set, Bryan and I hopped in the dinghy and rowed to shore to see if we could find some internet access to call them.
P1020139_thumb

The night watchman gave us the info we needed to use the dinghy dock, but we couldn’t get internet until the next day. We rowed by a neighbor boat on our way back to LiLo and accepted their offer to come aboard and chat for a while. We called the girls on the VHF and they gave us permission to stay out past curfew:-) They had all the cabin lights on and even remembered to flip on our LED mast-head anchor light. We rowed back in the dark to the warm glow of home.