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Sailing

September 12, 2019 by Carl Strange

Galapagos Islands (#3)

20 May

We’re heading for the Marquesas on Monday. We should be reaching the Marquesas in early June. With our leisurely schedule, it will be a couple of months before we are in the Societies – Bora Bora, Tahiti, etc. That would put us there in August or so. Any further thoughts about chartering a boat in the area and cruising around with us for a week or two? [We were never able to make this happen — such a loss…EVK]

Our plans seem to be shaping up along the following lines. After sailing around French Polynesia we’ll swing through the Cook Islands. The anchorages there are miserable but the people and their continuing Polynesian culture are not to be missed. After that, it’s a quick swing through Tonga on our way to New Zealand. We’ll arrive there in late October, just before the onset of cyclone season. Hopefully, we’ll find a marina near Auckland and put Rebecca in school for six months or so. That will give her some socialization while we do boat projects – new cushions, carpet, rigging, etc. We’ll base out of NZ for three years or so enjoying 1000 nautical mile trips (reaches both ways) to Tonga, Fiji, and the area. After that…

25 May 00° 58S / 090° 58W

Puerto Villamil, Isla Isabela (yep, only one ‘l’)  This tiny little town, with dirt roads and mixed architectures, offers the last anchorage and chance for fuel. After hearing reports of calm winds for hundreds of miles along our route we decided to stop here and wait for a bit of breeze.
Our “to-do” list is fairly short and all of the tools are stored so there aren’t any major projects underway. We’ll take it very easy here and save our energy for the 3000-mile trip to the Marquesas. Friends on S/V Aureo departed a week and a half ago and are experiencing a perfect weather window. They crossed the halfway mark yesterday and are on schedule for a 20-day crossing. Hopefully, our patience will be rewarded with the same excellent passage time.

Yesterday our pumpkin from Panama turned into a couple of loaves of bread. The remainder will make today’s soup. A stalk of a hundred or so green bananas is hanging from the stern rail. As promised they are beginning to ripen from the top down. The nice lady in the market neglected to mention that once the process started the entire stalk would ripen in three or four days. Looks like a menu of banana smoothies, banana bread, Bananas Foster, and baked bananas for a few days. Perhaps we’ll put a dozen or so through the blender with a bit of milk, ice, and rum and invite friends over for sundowners.

It’s a rough life here. Cool evening breezes, friendly people, sea lions and penguins, and a beach BBQ scheduled for Sunday evening. Still, the Port Captain will limit our stay to a few days, and visions of grass skirts beckon. We will move on in a few days.

[Note from Eric: in 1997, one of our instructors, Carl Strange, and his wife set off to sail the world.  Everyone wanted to know what was happening with Carl, Karen, and later with the addition of their new crew member, Rebecca.  So, we started to publish “The Strange Chronicles” so everyone could travel with them.  I was looking through some old files and found the Chronicles.  I started rereading them and decided it would be fun to republish some excerpts from them. They are an insight to the cruising lifestyle.]

Puerto Villamil Isla Isabela

Located on the southeastern coast of Isabela. Puerto Villamil is the main settlement area on Isabela. A small peaceful town with a laid-back atmosphere offers quite a different experience than the tourist shops on Puerto Ayora.

Villamil and the neighboring settlement of Santo Tomas were founded in 1897 by Antonio Gil. Villamil began as the center of a lime production operation. The lime produced by burning coral found off Isabela. Santo Tomas served as a sulfur mine and coffee plantation. The ventures were only somewhat profitable due to water limitations.

Together Villamil and Santo Tomas now have a population of approximately 1000 people. There are a variety of rooms available for visitors and equipment and supplies available for those climbing the nearby Sierra Negra Volcano.

Villamil is often considered the most beautiful site in the Galapagos with its long white sand, palm-lined beaches. Behind Villamil are several brackish water lagoons where Pink Flamingoes, Common Stilts, Whimbrels, White-Cheeked Pintails, and Gallinules are usually seen. The lagoons are nesting areas between November – April. The beaches and lagoons near Villamil are home to the best migratory bird viewing in the Galapagos.

[From www.galapagosonline.com]

Carl Strange Avatar
Carl and his wife Karen set-off on a journey around the world on-board their sailboat S/V Enchante. Along the way, they had a lot of adventures and in Aruba, a new member of their crew was born. Now a family of three with Rebecca’s birth, they sailed the Caribbean and the Pacific experiencing life along the way.

Filed Under: Pacific, Sailing, Travel Tagged With: Cruising, Marquesas, S/V Enchante, Sailing Leave a Comment

September 5, 2019 by Carl Strange

Galapagos Islands – Our First Stop in the Pacific (#2)

8 May 2002 Wednesday 02 20 N / 082 45 W

Underway towards the Galapagos It’s been a long, slow day of rain, rain, rain, and the winds have come from every direction. Thankfully, there hasn’t been too much wind so the seas are relatively calm. We continue to work our way south hoping to find the SE trade winds. It’s a frustrating business since we’re not really certain what weather system we’ll find. One thing is for sure, our best bet is to push south and get out of the doldrums as soon as possible.

Another boat in our little flotilla announced on the evening SSB radio net that they had given up on making the Galapagos and were heading to the town of Manta in Ecuador. They had a smaller boat with little freeboard and were spending more time plowing through the waves rather than riding over them. They also have a more limited fuel range and couldn’t afford to continue motoring looking for favorable winds. They’ll fuel up, rest, and be underway again in a few days.

We were entertained by another large pod of dolphins this afternoon. These are different than the ones we’re familiar with in the Caribbean. They had much darker bodies with red or pink bellies. Like their Caribbean cousins, the smaller ones delighted in jumping to impress us.

It’s early evening and the clouds have completely obscured the stars so it will be a long night. After a few days, the magic of phosphorescence glittering on the wave tops, sparkling in our wake, and swirling down the head when it’s flushed becomes routine. Perhaps a flying fish will smack into the cockpit and spook me like one did last night!
Time to go stare into the darkness for a couple of hours before waking Karen.

10 May 2002

Our radio connections from Panama were really bad and transmissions were slow even for text messages. We did shoot a bunch of pictures of the canal transit but haven’t done anything about narrowing down the selection or editing. All we’ve been doing is napping, reading, and standing our two-hour watches. The transit did go well since we hooked up with a Kiwi and Oz boat, scheduled ourselves to go through as a raft and repeatedly refused to schedule changes. It didn’t hurt that the guy at the scheduling office was originally from New Zealand. The lady who served as our contact for the three boats constantly schmoozed him on the telephone. The canal constantly rescheduled yachts at the last minute to fit us around large boats. We suspect several of the boats that were shuffled during the last few days before our transit were bumped so we could stick to our scheduled date. Of course, we dummied up about it all around the Panama Yacht Club.

I worked on a realistic view of the city of Colon. But honestly, it was so depressing and negative that I didn’t want to post it. The place burned down at one point during the build of the canal. Historical reports say it made a big improvement in the health and lifestyle of the area. From our point of view, it’s time for another razing. One doesn’t dare leave the fenced compound of the yacht club without being in a cab. We knew of several muggings during the time we were there. Happily, our regular cab drivers had grown up in the city and took good care of us. After we got to know one of them well enough to invite him and his wife to join us for dinner, we asked if he was safe walking around the main parts of the city at night.

“Absolutely not!”, was his firm reply. He said the security guards posted at the entrance of every shop make it relatively safe for locals during the day. When the stores close and the guards go home he heads for the safety of his neighborhood.

We’ll be in Galapagos for a week or so.

11 May 2002 (Saturday) 00 00 N / 087 25 W

Rebecca Crossing the Equator


We crossed the equator today at 1815 GMT (1315 local). Rebecca, our five-year-old representative of Neptune, was mistress of ceremonies. She wore her official robe, shell necklaces, and crown and carried her trident. As we crossed the equator she supervised the popping of a cork on a bottle of champagne. Three glasses were poured – one for each parent and one for Rebecca to pour into the sea as an offering to King Neptune. After pouring his drink, she offered him several pieces of bread (a bit stale perhaps) for a meal. The stale bread may have put him off a bit since S/V Enchante’ rocked and spilled the two remaining glasses of champagne! We refilled our glasses, toasted the South Pacific, and finished the rest of the bottle. Little Neptune joined the toasts with a glass of her favorite beverage – apple juice.

Rebecca’s command for calm seas was almost immediately granted and a few minutes after entering the South Pacific we’re motoring in order to make it to the Galapagos before sunset Sunday. Be careful what you wish for!

14 May 2002

We anchored in the Galapagos this afternoon, right behind friends on S/V Aureo with the lady suffering from nausea after diving. We’d been in SSB contact but I didn’t want to discuss her problem over a radio net. They led us through the check-in procedure, showed us the laundry, and shared lunch with us (Goodness the bottles of beer are large here. And I was trying to keep up with a Kiwi!)

They are departing tomorrow for the Marquesas so we invited them over for sundowners and a chat. She read your reply and we discussed it. As a PADI kind of gal, she hadn’t really thought much about breathing patterns. We discussed the “meditation, yoga” pattern and the fact that her “low air consumption” might be a sign of poor breathing practices. It sunk in that, since she always had air remaining after diving with a group, she might as well burn it during the dive.
She also said her regulator is fairly old and hasn’t been serviced in ages. She wasn’t particularly conscious of misting or saltwater inhalation. Then again, cruisers taste salt all day long and wouldn’t think it out of the ordinary.

All of her air has come from proper dive shops and she didn’t bring a cylinder on their “around the world in 14 months” cruise. A “once around quickly” might be something for others to consider. Much less of a complete lifestyle change than selling everything, shutting down the shop and cruising for fifteen to twenty years.
A report on the Galapagos will follow – we’re just getting adjusted to the sounds and smells of land and long, uninterrupted periods of sleep.

A Quick Recipe from the galley of S/V Enchante’

Caponata

Here’s something to impress your party guests – should you actually be willing to share it!

  • 1/3 + 1/3 C olive oil
  • 1   large eggplant, cut into 1/2″ cubes
  • 2   onions, diced
  • 1 C celery, diced
  • 1 lb canned tomatoes
  • 1/3 C wine vinegar
  • 1 T sugar
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp pepper
  • 1/4 tsp cayenne
  • 1 can green olives, chopped
  • 2 T   capers
  • 1 T   caper juice
  • 1     lemon/lime juice

Sauté eggplant in 1/3 C olive oil for 5 minutes. Remove from pan. Sauté onions in 1/3 C olive oil until Transparent. Add celery and canned tomatoes. Cook for 15 minutes until sauce is reduced. Add eggplant, vinegar, sugar, salt, pepper and cayenne. Cook covered for 5 minutes. Add green olives, capers, and caper juice. Cook uncovered for 10 minutes. Add lemon/lime juice. Allow to cool. Refrigerate for at least 24 hours before serving.

[Note from Eric: in 1997, one of our instructors, Carl Strange and his wife set off to sail the world.  Everyone wanted to know what was happening with Carl, Karen and later with the addition of their new crew member, Rebecca.  So, we started to publish “The Strange Chronicles” so everyone could travel with them.  I was looking through some old files and found the Chronicles.  I started rereading them and decided it would be fun to republish some excerpts from them. They are an insight to the cruising lifestyle.]


 

Carl Strange Avatar
Carl and his wife Karen set-off on a journey around the world on-board their sailboat S/V Enchante. Along the way, they had a lot of adventures and in Aruba, a new member of their crew was born. Now a family of three with Rebecca’s birth, they sailed the Caribbean and the Pacific experiencing life along the way.

Filed Under: Pacific, Sailing, Travel Tagged With: Enchante, Galapagos, S/V Enchante, Sailing, Strange Chronicles Leave a Comment

August 29, 2019 by Carl Strange

Panama Bound (#1)

15 March 2002 13°07N / 071°46W

Headed towards the Panama Canal. This is an area of unusually high winds and seas so we’ve been waiting for a decent weather window for days hoping to have an easy trip. Twelve hours into the trip we ran out of wind and turned south towards the Colombian coast hoping to find it again.
0100 Local Time – Getting any sleep during the first night of a trip is hard for both of us. I’m in the back cabin, dozing fitfully in my carefully arranged nest of pillows that help stop the rolling. It’s two hours into my three-hour off-watch period and I’m finally getting snatches of sleep when a large wave breaks just at our stern and throws a few buckets of seawater through the hatch. This soaks the curtain, sheets, a couple of pillows and me. I yell for help. Karen strips the bed, rolls everything into a ball, and sends me back to bed saying we’ll deal with the mess in the morning..

0300 Local – I’ve been on watch for an hour now, sitting in our well-protected cockpit. The rolling isn’t so noticeable when you’re not trying to sleep. The early morning skies are gorgeous with Sagittarius and the Southern Cross high in the southern sky. In the middle of this uneventful watch, a flying fish buzzed past my head, flew down the companionway, and onto the floor under the Nav. station. I wasn’t sure what had happened till I heard the desperate flopping of the fish on the clean carpet. I threw the fish and loose scales overboard, wiped up the mess, poured a cup of coffee and went back on watch.

Karen on the bow of Enchante


0730 Local – Up early to enjoy the beginning of a beautiful, cool morning. We jibed in light winds and the gooseneck fitting on the main boom broke – before my first cup of coffee! It took three hours to get the main sail down and the broken boom and sail securely tied along the side deck. It would have gone a lot quicker if the topping lift hadn’t managed to snag the main halyard requiring a trip to the top of the mast. I don’t mind going up in a calm anchorage, but the top of the mast swings wildly offshore. Back on deck, after dropping the sail, I sat and enjoyed a large glass of water before I calmed down enough to help Karen clean up the mess of lines, blocks and heavy sail and boom. This fitting was replaced two years ago by an experienced, high-priced rigger in Houston. Half of his rivets in the fitting missed the boom. When we reach Panama I’ll order the parts and do the job myself.

Meanwhile, we’re continuing on in light airs. This long-distance cruising is rough!

19 March 2002 In Panama!

W E MADE IT!!! We arrived in Panama this morning. Had to slow down yesterday because we were going to make a nighttime landfall and we avoided that at all costs. We are anchored in the area known as the flats. Lots of rolling from the tug boats and pilot boats coming through. “Flats” must have been a euphemism. “Yacht Club” is another euphemism. We took a quick tour around there with the boat. Tomorrow, we’ll go in and put our names on the list so we can get a slip. It might not be much, but hopefully, it will make getting work done on the boom easier. We’d like to get it fixed here instead of the Pedro Miguel Yacht Club because that would mean doing 2/3 of the transit with the boom and sail in the way.

14 April 2002

Your email arrived on the same day as one saying our parts have been shipped. The $190 FedEx charge helped push this project to the usual $1000 (1 Boat Bill) range. Hopefully, everything will match Isomat’s catalog dimensions. Knowing it’s on the way, we’ll start the process of having the boat measured and scheduling our transit. Our transit should be one week or so after starting the paperwork.
Last week I went through as a line handler on another boat. The locks are very impressive but not nearly as large as I expected. Our raft of two boats tied alongside a tug and shared the three up locks with a huge container. After a long motor across Gatun Lake we rafted back together and locked down the center chamber in front of another container ship. Interestingly, sailboats cross the lake as quickly as large ships. We get to take shortcuts outside the main channel, don’t have to reduce speed when passing dredging operations, and don’t need the assistance of tugs for the tight turns going into the lock area.

I worked on a letter describing the city of Colon but haven’t finished. On the plus side, there are some very nice locals and excellent Chinese food is cheap!

Hopefully, we’ll get everything together and be on our way to the Marquesas in a couple of weeks. 

[Note from Eric: in 1997, one of our instructors, Carl Strange and his wife set off to sail the world.  Everyone wanted to know what was happening with Carl, Karen and later with the addition of their new crew member, Rebecca.  So, we started to publish “The Strange Chronicles” so everyone could travel with them.  I was looking through some old files and found the Chronicles.  I started rereading them and decided it would be fun to republish some excerpts from them. They are an insight to the cruising lifestyle.]

Carl Strange Avatar
Carl and his wife Karen set-off on a journey around the world on-board their sailboat S/V Enchante. Along the way, they had a lot of adventures and in Aruba, a new member of their crew was born. Now a family of three with Rebecca’s birth, they sailed the Caribbean and the Pacific experiencing life along the way.

Filed Under: Caribbean, Sailing Tagged With: Enchante, Panama, S/V Enchante, Sailing, Travel Leave a Comment

October 21, 2011 by Eric Keibler

2011 Harvest Moon Regatta

Sailors aboard ArtemisYou may not have realized it but last week, was the 25th sailing of the Harvest Moon Regatta, a sailing race from Galveston to Port Aransas Texas. The annual event draws sailors from all over the area to compete for the coveted Bacardi Cup and a host of other prizes. This year’s event saw 188 boats start from the Flagship Hotel pier in Galveston begin jockeying for position. Colourful spinnakers flew and the offshore racing club fleet surged off in the moderate winds.
Unfortunately, the winds were destined not to hold and they became progressively lighter. What is normally a beam reach, (c), to broad reach, (d), to Port Aransas, turned out to be a very broad reach, (d), to a run, (e), requiring many boats to sail wing on wing.
While this meant a slow sail to Port Aransas, the night was beautiful. There was a spectacular moon rise and the stars were incredible. It was a beautiful night to be offshore and away from the city lights.
Ashton, Drew Trent, Doug Markem, and I joined another of our clients, Bob Thompson, on his boat Artemis. We finished the race in a flurry of activity but unfortunately, we did not finish fast enough to place in our group but we were there early enough to enjoy the party with all the Bacardi rum you can drink. Of course, in previous years, Bob’s son Steven was heard to comment that at times the party was not “pretty” – too many drunk old people.
The party was fun and then it was back to sailing the next day for the return trip home. It was a fun trip and a great reason to be out on the water! Thank you for the sail Bob! We are ready for next year!!!!
We put a video together highlighting some of the weekend’s events. Please tell us what you think!

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Filed Under: Digital, Gulf Diving, Photography, Travel Tagged With: Harvest Moon Regatta, Sailing

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