Hurricane season is June to Nov.- let's SPLASH WYUNA
in the waters of Puerto Rico
(PR, Spanish virgin islands).
(PR, Spanish virgin islands).
We had a short stay in LA, to wander
the art and sculpture garden of the stone galleries of the Getty Museum plus take an historic architectural
tour of the stunning hand built Craft Houses of Pasadena - a movement of the early 1900 to bring back rustic living in cities!
Anxious to climb aboard WYUNA on the hard stand, we arrived the 6 Dec. in Fajardo, at Puerto Del Ray Marina to don gloves for the clean up and restarts; 5 days later we tired of
doing jobs so booked the enormous travel lift . To our relief the driver took WYUNA to the dock with 3 belts under her hull, after a visit by police about our missing dinghy outboard engine.
Ahhh, deep breath. Bruce helmed her with 2ft either side, to
the marina berth. Hurray!
Our first night we partied free with 100 boaters at the marina to PR music and pig on a spit. Then headed next day to BIG US supers; Sam’s Club, Costco and West Marine to stow WYUNA with 6mths food, 6 new batteries and a new 15 hp outboard– in 26c humid winter heat!
Our first night we partied free with 100 boaters at the marina to PR music and pig on a spit. Then headed next day to BIG US supers; Sam’s Club, Costco and West Marine to stow WYUNA with 6mths food, 6 new batteries and a new 15 hp outboard– in 26c humid winter heat!
Cruisers step 1: share the adventures
We cracked the local Don Q rum for Mojitos to
celebrate with our sail mates Roni and James, for them helping us get back on water.
The very good news for us is they’re cruising
a similar route like to share ripping yarns, have sailed the Bahamas banks and
reefs and can duck dive snorkel til they DROP in the Caribbean Sea.
Step 2: : be friendly to strangers
Our season begun in familiar seas, sailing to Culebra Island
before Xmas, with no plans for January. Within
24hrs of mooring in Honda Ensenada, instead of feeling lonely, we met other
cruisers and invited our neighbours by dinghy (who to our
surprise came) for Xmas eve drinks.
One joy of cruising for us is meeting liveonboard workers,
kite boarders, NASA IT programmers, peace corps adventurers and die hard sailors who believe
living on water is even better than Noah’s Ark.
US ‘seasonal blow-ins’ had a warm welcome from
Culebra cruisers, who are chilled out unless a storm is coming. Thanks again to Roni and James we joined them and their friends for a fun Xmas
BYO lunch on our back patio. Between 8 of us we drew on 37 years of Caribbean yachting tales, true or hearsay, of shark sightings, romances, natural wonders ...yes you can guess the rest!
Happy New Year *
Step 4: carry a torch at all times
"It's TOO good to be true, NYE fireworks are exploding around the bay." When the lights went out at Susie’s restaurant we lit the bar with torches for the barmaid to mix our margaritas. Along with others we waved hands to the music and went off to the street party for live Latino dancing. They love fast beat , loud, non- stop salsa with hips bouncing – (better we tap than attempt daggy dancing) - and we loved being amongst them.
Step 4: carry a torch at all times
"It's TOO good to be true, NYE fireworks are exploding around the bay." When the lights went out at Susie’s restaurant we lit the bar with torches for the barmaid to mix our margaritas. Along with others we waved hands to the music and went off to the street party for live Latino dancing. They love fast beat , loud, non- stop salsa with hips bouncing – (better we tap than attempt daggy dancing) - and we loved being amongst them.
After a month we were desperate to jump in for a swim at a
peaceful anchorage. Culebrans are proud of their natural wildlife, working hard
to regrow marine reefs and fish life with water temps rising, so offer free
moorings. We sailed 5 miles, moored and duck dived at
Pt Tamarindo a beach with idyllic vistas of small islets. The water shone under the
moon-light, coral gardens with soft leaf fans wavered in the current. Coloured blue tang and stoplight parrot fish
fed in the day.
Yeah this is the cruising life …afloat on blue water ringing reefs.
Yeah this is the cruising life …afloat on blue water ringing reefs.
Step 6: sail off the beaten route
Our next island hop was to Vieques another
Spanish island, til 2003 it was a US military bombing practice base
until a local was killed and protesters gained agreement for closure. Thus not surprising it's not a popular sail destination. The new Garmin blue chart did help with unusual
navigation - umm where do we drop the anchor away from unexploded ammunition?
"NO l'm definitely not swimming where the 27yr old got bitten by a 6ft shark swimming in the world’s largest bioluminescent bay.” Our first swim was a brush with a large 15 inch moonlight jelly fish. Out we quickly jumped!
"NO l'm definitely not swimming where the 27yr old got bitten by a 6ft shark swimming in the world’s largest bioluminescent bay.” Our first swim was a brush with a large 15 inch moonlight jelly fish. Out we quickly jumped!
Culebrita island national marine park is a favourite bay we revisited for a few days to swim, hike, snorkel and see the old ruined Spanish lighthouse - it's beautiful, uninhabited for 500 years and a P.Rican weekend place to escape to.
Step 7: go where the wind takes us
On our longest passages so far, to Vieques and ST John’s, US Virgin Islands, winds have hit over 20knt sailing to
windward. Damn it we don’t like tacking
ALL day, and not reaching our waypoint because of wind changes. The US national parks are pristine here and so are the dreamy
turquoise white sand beaches. Below we swim with beautiful spotted eagle rays as
they glide past and stay away from big southern rays….....much prefer to shadow
a green turtle any day!
Next .....Sail along new coasts for the thrills of open waters and skies
Next .....Sail along new coasts for the thrills of open waters and skies
At last we’re on route, getting excited to sail hop the 100
mile south coast of PR next week, and make the passage west to the east coast of the Dominican
Republic where we will meet R&J to arrive for the whale season in February. That’s of course if we are in the lap of the easterly
winds and can scream along running with the headsail full and even lay the waypoint.
Wish us luck on that one!!!
Wish us luck on that one!!!
Fantastic blog guys; it sounds great! Regards to Roni and James. We're on the countdown now.....
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