Monday 20 February 2012


Cast off the dock lines friday and went to the next island over. Vieques. Went over with a family that are liveaboards here at the marina. They have a 65 foot expedition trawler. Its a stinkpot but they are very fun people. Their daughter is Paiges age.

James on the left already in the water, Paige in the middle and Alicia on the right. It looks like she is standing on a ledge but they all jumped from the top deck. This is the Harper family boat, Buccaneer.

Paige and Alicia relaxing after a tough day at the office.

Caught a little grouper night fishing.

The next night at sunset I was tossing a line off the stern. Tossing a lure the kids gave me for Xmas. I could see the lure coming to the boat when WHAM! Something really big and FAST hit it. Its rather light gear. 10 lb line and such. It ran off about 100 feet of line in about 1 second. I tightened up the drag a bit and POW, broke the line at the reel. The pole was completely bent over double. I cant believe it didn't break. Dawn was doing dished and she though we were shooting off fireworks it was so loud when it broke. I have no idea what I hooked into but it was big and very fast. Whole thing was maybe 3 seconds from start to finish. There is some monster out there with my brand new lure and about 150 feet of 10 lb line trailing it.

Now here is a good one........

We were snorkeling on Sunday. Trying out our spiffy new swim fins. Pretty nice. Lots of trutles and rays and such. I was hovering over a ray and yelled for Dawn to come over. She looked at it and said she was not a fan. When she looked up and was kicking down she kicked a manatee. We were in about 10 feet of water. The manatee was just sleeping I guess. I hadn't even noticed it. Looks like a giant boulder. And let me tell you something about manatees. THEY ARE HUGE! So this thing that looks like a giant grey minivan is right below Dawn as she puts he head back in the water. Its maybe 5 feet down from her coming out of a sand cloud it had kicked up when Dawn booted it. Dawn is screaming through her snorkel wa izz ii wa izz ii!       Bloody histerical!     A mannanee!    I yelled back through my snokel as the thing went right under me.  (You tend to lose the Ts and Ss when you comunicate through snorkel gear.)  Its easly 8 foot long. If you were to hug it your arms wouldnt even go 1/2 way around. Must weigh 500 pounds or more. Dawn is  flipping out at this point. The manatee just goes lumbering along.  I was laughing so hard I though I was going to drown myself. It was about 1/2 hour before we got Dawn peeled off the ceiling!

Paige snorkeling after the manatee incident. Also afraid of barracudas.
Sunset over Puerto Rico. This is about when the big fish stole my gear.

So now its Monday and were cruising back. Paige was in the saloon lying on the couch and Dawn is up front getting set to get out all the lines and fenders from the anchor locker. We are approaching the entrance to the harbor which is very narrow and ugly. I do not like going through that pass. I yell for Paige to come up and help Dawn with the gear. She got up to fast, and low on blood sugar. She comes out to the cockpit and faints dead away. I heard a thud and looked down and she is out cold under the table. Eyes open, glassed over, staring up. I am pretty much committed to the pass at this point. I doubt I could have turned around without grounding. I yell for Dawn to come back, that something is wrong with Paige. She starts to come around and Dawn gets her going on some juice. We surf 5 foot waves into the harbor. We are both shaking. Scared the @#$$# out of us. And still had to dock the boat which is enough of a hand shaker on its own.

Crash landed safely. Wasn't pretty and I lost a couple points on style but didn't break anything. Back on the dock for now.

M


Thursday 16 February 2012


Dawn tells me some one is saying I am behind in blogging. Truth is a lot of the time there really isn't much going on. Just ask Paige.   Or....  the little bored one, as we call her.   So this posting is going to be quite random.

BTW, one comment asked how americans are received here. Quite well we are finding. In general people are very friendly. Some speak some english. I think I got a marriage proposal at the Laundromat the other day. We were at a huge mall in San Juan and didn't see but maybe 2 or 3 american looking couples. And there were roughly 3.4 million people at that mall. Paige was all giddy. I was not.

So.....    off we go

Paige in the cart for the first day of volunteering at the school here. She works in the learning lab. Did you know that aspergers is the same in spanish as english? A little trivia for ya there.

Palmas Academy. Pre-K through 12. They will graduate 17 seniors this year. Big school eh?

Whats wrong with this woman? She is spray painting her name all over the island.
La Policia are looking for her!!

The wind is back but for the last couple of days its rained about 12 times a day. Makes for some spectacular rainbows. This is the marina club house. The pool, and Dawns favorite spot, are on the other side.



So whats that, you say? Well, its what you get to do when the @#$@$$ cooling fan goes out in your 12 volt charging system. And there is not one single 60mm 24V fan in all of Puerto Rico. Its a bloody $5 item. Cost me three times that in shipping from the states. But I bought 3 so if your ever in need of one I'm the guy. I also have a stock of 3 inch 24 volt fans as well. From a previous CF on one of the other charging systems. Boating is so much fun.



So whats that, you say?    Well, its the carburetors off a honda outboard motor.    So why is it on the table and not on a honda outboard motor like it should be.    Because its a piece of @#$#@#.  


I bought the honda because its very low emission, fuel efficient, bla bla save the planet and all that crap. What they don't tell you is one tank of bad gas and your carbs are totaled. Every orifice clogged. Every needle valve frozen. And guess what kind of gas you get in third world countries like Grenada?    Yup, the bad kind!    Honda will not even provide a parts list for a carb rebuild. The service tech told me your better off buying a factory tuned set of three rather than rebuilding. That of course coming from the guy selling the $700 frigging carburetors. When I get to it I'm going to tear this old one down and make my own damn parts list and rebuild it for a spare. Which I hope to never have to use because changing out the carbs while the motor is on the dingy is like doing dental work on a horse while your riding it! Oh yeah, and I dropped the vacuum advance unit right off the back of the motor and into 18 foot deep water and shilt at the bottom of crown bay. Had to cough up $50 to get a diver to go down and find it. Would have taken a month to get a replcement for it.

So if your still on board here you must really be having a slow day. The following is a story about the dead dingy motor and the misadventures of the fine ship and crew of ViVo. I posted it on a forum a while back. Here it is.


A story, a lesson, and maybe a chuckle.

So…  the story.

Making our way up from Grenada  on our cat with the Mrs. and some good friends for crew. Were in Carricou and it’s a Sunday, so nothing, I mean nothing, is open in the small town there.  Were cruising the dink up along the beautiful beach there and spot a likely beach bar. No dock. We swing out around a reef and the breakers there and head into shore to beach the dink.  Once on the beach we wander up to the shack and get 4 cold Caribs (local beer). All is good in paradise.

Till out of the corner of my eye I see the dink getting rolled by some rather large waves that have decided to check and see how well I had beached the dink. Not very well turns out. So, beers in hand, we run down and wrangle the dink back into submission on the beach. All good. Time for another one.

Having relaxed and completed our mission we shove off on the next big wave and head toward our boat out on a ball about a mile or so offshore and downwind. Down goes the trim, key the ignition. Nada. Grrrrr. Nada. I had been working through some old bad gas from Grenada. The usually very reliable Honda 30 had been grousing about the gas and not starting very easily. (Yes I had fuel preservative in it) So I figure its just a little tough to start and I probably flooded it with the engine being full up trim and rolling around like it did in the wave action.

Out come the paddles as I continue to try to sweet talk her into firing up. Now the rowing thing is somewhat less than popular with the gals. My buddy is on the bow yelling stroke stroke and the gals are not amused. We are blowing offshore and have our boat in our sites. If we run a straight shot we get right to the boat. Its blowing about 15-20. Going to take maybe an hour. If we drift port we blow through the channel and next stop is Mexico some months later. If we drift starboard we get to cross the reef. I can see egrets standing in about a foot of water on the reef so this is not a very viable route either. So the gals take turns overpowering each other and were going this way and that. While I crank away on it. No go.

We get about ½ way back and a couple fellows swing by and ask if were doing this for fun or do we need a tow. The gals didn’t think it to much fun and opted for the tow. I’m just ticked at my having tried to run off the old gas rather than giving it away. My buddy in the bow is kind of bummed that he doesn’t get to yell stroke stroke anymore. Anyway, made a couple new friends and shared a beer once we got back to the boat.

Then I tear into it. Convinced its flooded and bad gas I proceeded to start tearing down the engine. Got the air intake all opened up while my buddy is looking for some starting fluid that I’m sure I have in the stores. (Didn’t) By about this time I figure even if it did want to start I have probably run down the battery to a point where I am going to have a problem. The motor has an emergency pull start arraignment on it where you wrap a spare line on it and yank it till it runs out and you almost go overboard. No go. Because, of course, its flooded with bad gas.

Did I mention that I am 3 months into rehab for a torn rotator cuff repair of my left shoulder? If you have been through that one you know what I’m talking about. Being in excruciating pain is no excuse for the eventual outcome here but I’m using it anyway.     So….  Tug tug swear swear, no I don’t need any F#$%^ng help I can do it myself!      I’m the friggin captain!

So I drag out the old battery charger that I have buried on board and plug in the dink. Then it starts to rain. So I’m looking at an extension cord running down my wet deck into my wet aluminum dink floating in salt water when it occurs to me that I may in fact be violating some OSHA guidelines for safe operation of something or another.

So back into the dink to pull the battery for an overnight charge onboard. Now it’s dark and still raining. Let it sit overnight I declare. I’m sure it will start in the mooring. I’ve got it all opened up so it can air out some fumes. Into the Carib I go.

Next morning we put the battery back in and I sit down to try it again. It’s a jockey console setup with the ignition key on the right side of the consol. Turning the key I look down and have a flashback from the going ons the previous day.

Oh my good and gracious lord I declare out loud. Actually quite loud. The French boat next ball over looked over to see what the heck was going on. What, says the crew? I want you all to remember that I didn’t have to say anything about this I said. I could have just started up the motor and said that I fixed it. Y’all remember that. I didn’t have to say anything.

The dang key has a habit of dropping out of the lock under the weight of the float that I have attached to it. When it drops out you cant kill the engine. Unless you pull the lanyard with the kill clip on it. So were surfing onto the beach and I’m just about to kill the motor and full up trim when I looked down and….    No key.    So I quick yank the kill clip, trim up, and hit the sand.

So when I sit down and put the key in I notice that I am standing on the kill clip lanyard as it sits IN THE BOTTOM OF THE DINK. Where it has been resting happily since I yanked it the day before. I put the clip back on and vrrrrooom, she starts right up.

Made a couple new friends. I think the crew has forgiven me. Well one or two of them anyway. And RE-LEARNED an important lesson.

So…..   The lesson

START WITH THE SIMPLEST AND MOST OBVIOUS SOLUTION FIRST!!!

And I will never, ever, ever, make that mistake again.

That’s my story and I’m sticking to it. And if I provided a chuckle or two then my work here is done.

That should about do it for now.

peace

M

And now a word from my lovely partner.......

Mike is an excellent blogger...as you have notice Paige & I let him do most of the blogging. (all of it)

Just wanted to share my experience at Walmart. It was my 2nd trip to the local Walmart. I was feeling like I knew my way around. Mike and I get up early, 9, (ok not so early) on Sunday to make the trip. All I needed was some Valentines stuff. Mike drops me off I'm just going to run in. We notice people waiting to get in...its 10am. Go figure they do not open till 10 on Sunday. I find everything I need. Even found a magazine in english for Paige.


I get up to the check out and, no big long line, WOW! That never happens here. Then the checkout girl explains, in spanish of course, to the guy in front of me that although they open at 10 they cannot check anyone out till 11. Takes a while before they get someone with enough english to fill me in. But like they say down here.....   "hey, its Puerto Rico!"


D

Sunday 12 February 2012



Thursday after Paige did her school work we headed to Old San Juan. The GPS would not take the address of the place we were staying and the directions posted on the hotel website were ridiculous. All signs, when they have them, are in spanish. San Juan is like driving in chicago, in spanish, on amphetamines. They don't break the speed limit (very odd) but other than that there are really no rules. But we got there.


Once there its a pretty neat place. Its all basically inside of the original fort walls. Narrow cobblestone streets full of shops, cafes, bistros. Music everywhere, town square every few blocks. Great vibe. It would take you two years to try out every little restaurant there. We had some great food.



Stayed at a place called El Convecto (sp?). Several hundred year old building in the heart of Old San Juan. Feels like someplace Hemingway would dig. And maybe he did. Best Mohito you will ever have. And you will need one (actually two) by the time you drive there.





Did the shops. Oh what a thrill let me tell you. SSDS in espaniol. The girls digged it. I sat on benches. A lot.

Really?   I didn't even have to say it.

 Dawn in the Morning
A little cafe for lunch.

 I dont know who this guy is or what he did but he has little kids dancing on his head. ???


Q: How long will a british sports car last in a salt air environment?
A:   Not long man.   Not long.
In the afternoon and evening there was always something going on in the town squares. This was particularly colorful.
An honest to gosh pirate ship. For 10 bucks you can tour it. Note the radar dome. I'm thinking that was an add on eh?


Some of us liked the forts. They go back 450 years. Kind of boggles the mind a bit.

"Oh look..... another crumbling wall" says Paige. What a PITA.


Doing the dorky tourist thing.

Just plain old dork.
Going down the creepy staircase in the creepy old haunted fort.
Bet them old solders never had gals like this on the watch tower.




Wind died. Friggin HOT here now. Just got the AC working again this morning. We are going to need it for the next couple of days. The temp doesn't change but when you lose the breeze it gets ugly. Very popular with the mosquitos and noseeums though. Wa Wa, feel sorry for us yet.

All for now

M

Thursday 2 February 2012

Oh by the way this is my Fav spot at the marina.

View from the pool!!

D


Today is the 12th day of our adventure the 5th day in Puerto Rico.

Palmas del Mar is the name of the marina we are calling home. It is very nice I will post a shot of my favorite spot here. We have great boat neighbors that have been very helpful showing us around and driving us to places. They just happen to have a daughter the same age as Paige. Hopefully she will show Paige around some. It will be nice for Paige to have a bit of time away from Mike & I ....she is missing her friends a WHOLE BUNCH!!!!!!!!!!!

We have rented a car and a golf cart to get around. We use the golf cart to get around the gated community where there are several restaurants, some shopping, swimming pool, and a beach. The town we are close to is quite small. They just got a super Walmart. Got to love Wally World. Great for provisioning and a lot different than when we are down island where it's just small markets.

Oh ya, one of the best things about this marina is they do not have a  laundry you have to send it out!!
they wash...fold...and deliver it!!!!!!!

So far boat living is going good!!

D

We ventured out and went to the rain forest. Where they have....  of all things....  yup....  RAIN!

But it was a very beautiful area. Did some hikes and saw some cool (mucho frio) water falls. No monkeys though. Do love them monkeys.

Pretty waterfall!!!

Look Paige smiled!!

Dawn and Ryan.

Ryan is back in St Thomas now.

All for now. Have to fire up the barbie and grill some chix!

M