| From : | Ken Williams [kenw@talkspot.com] |
| Date : | Wed, 26 Mar 2008 12:24:16 -0600 |
| To : | kensblog@talkspot.com |
| Subject : | Update # 22 - Hanging out in Costa Rica |
|
My apologies for taking so
long between updates. I’ve been somewhat lazy here in Costa Rica. The day after our arrival at
Los Suenos our crew flew home to Seattle. During the prior two weeks we had run
from Ixtapa Mexico to Los Suenos in Costa Rica, a distance of nearly 1,500
miles. The last few days, along the coast of Nicaragua, had been particularly
stressful.
As soon as the crew was off
the boat, Roberta and I went into total-relaxation mode. For almost a week, we
did nothing except play with our computers, and try out the different
restaurants in the area. We had lots of plans to drive around and explore, and
we did rent a car, but the farthest we reached was the little town of Jaco,
about 4 miles away.
Jaco, and its’ beach,
Play Herradura, have long been a popular surfing destination, appealing to a
very young crowd. On our way to Jaco we noted several surf schools, and as we
drove through Jaco we saw a number of bars. Were I twenty years younger
(and single) this could be a great little town. My goal for the day was to
find a water-front restaurant that would accept both us, and Shelby.
We’ve grown accustomed to Mexico, where Shelby is welcome at most
restaurants. We stopped at several outdoor restaurants, and were rejected.
Apparently, part of being eco-aware means not sharing your outdoor restaurant
with a dog. Finally we found a fancy lobster-restaurant, on the beach, where we
could sit at a table bordering the beach, with Shelby across the wall, on the
sand, technically not inside the restaurant, but next to us. To our
disappointment, the beach was quite littered, and kind of a dark mud-sand, not
the pretty white sand beach I had been seeking. Also disappointingly, there
aren’t really many restaurants on the beach. The town itself sits a block
back from the beach, and the beach doesn’t really have anything on it.
Although, signs were everywhere of condos being built on the beach. The next
time I see Jaco, it is likely to be wall to wall condos. Whether or not that is
progress, I’ll leave up to you to decide… Just as we were finally
getting over being lazy, I suddenly started feeling ill. For three days I felt
too sick to move. High fever, achy joints, and more (which I shall not
describe). As much as I like Los Suenos,
I must admit that there is a lot of surge in the marina. Perhaps it is smoother
deeper in the marina, but at our slip, on the “big boat” dock, the
surge is never-ending. Inside Sans Souci you hardly feel it, but outside, you can
watch the boats, even the giant Feadships, in constant motion. After about
three days a local, who we had hired to wash the boat, called my attention to
our lines. He pointed at one that was worn almost through! I have always heard
about checking your dock lines, and using anti-chafing gear, but until now, I’ve
never experienced a problem I was looking at a line that had been fine just
days before, and was now ruined. Macho, the boat washer said he had a friend
who could repair the line for $20. We retied the lines, with the assistance of
Macho, and a bit of backseat driving from crew on surrounding boats, only to
discover that every day or two, another line would be worn through. Macho’s
friend is now $60 richer, and I’m much smarter on the whole topic of anti
chafing gear (see the “email” section after my update). There was a bright spot in
the midst of this. Patrick and Susan Coonan, with their seven year old son
Jonathon, and their Nordhavn 43, came into the Los Suenos Marina for a few
days. It was Patrick and Susan’s anniversary and they wanted to be at Los
Suenos to celebrate. We were able to enjoy their company for a dinner. They are
headed to Golfito Costa Rica to load their boat on the same north bound freighter
as we are. As good as this dinner was, I
probably shouldn’t (but, will) mention another that was remarkable for a
completely different reason. Roberta and I wanted to celebrate our arrival in
Costa Rica and made dinner reservations at a fancy hotel, outside Los Suenos.
When seated, we were disappointed that the dining room had no view, but decided
“we see the water every day,” and ordered a nice bottle of wine. We
then were brought stale bread, and tiny, unappetizing appetizers. Each of us
had ordered a shrimp dish as our main course. It arrived before we could finish
our appetizers, and the shrimp had the rubbery raw, translucent,
appearance that neither of us likes. We started to send back the main courses,
but the dinner was just not going well, and I had doubts that the shrimp would
taste good raw or cooked. In a complete first for us, Roberta went to the car,
while I explained that my wife wasn’t feeling well, and we had to leave.
$160 dolllars later I joined her in the car, where we drove to an ice cream
parlor, and had a very delicious, but cold, dinner. We finally decided it was
time to head inland and see the country, or go to anchor, and anchoring won. We
decided on a week at anchor, after which we’d get serious about inland
touring. We left the marina at 6am. Our
goal was Isla Tortugas, a small island a short 25 or so miles across the bay
from Los Suenos. Inside the marina conditions had been dead calm, but once in
open water, things were a bit rougher. We had 15 knots of wind from the north,
hitting us on the starboard side. The seas were 3-4 foot white-capped chop. The
boat didn’t seem to notice the chop, so, no problem. What did seem to be
a problem was a large freighter which would be crossing in front of us,
arriving from the north. I wanted to work my way west, and slightly north. The
AIS system was telling me I would easily cross a half mile in front of the
freighter. More if I sped up. However, I have a healthy respect for freighters,
and decided slowing down to pass behind was the wiser answer. Actually, I would
need to slow down too much, so I decided to turn north, to pass behind the
freighter. To my north was a large fishing boat, moving west, at about 4 knots.
I would need to pass behind him, but how far behind him? From the binoculars it
looked like he might be pulling a net. I wish there were a course to take in
understanding commercial fishing. My guess is that he did indeed have a net,
and that it was being dragged 100-200 feet behind his boat, but guessing is not
good. To remove all doubt, I gave him a healthy mile of clearance before
passing behind him. The anchorage at Isla
Tortugas is described in the cruising guides as a “stunning” half-mile
wide white sand beach. I was looking forward to it! However, as we approached
the beach, it was becoming obvious that the north wind was not going to
subside, and the anchorage faces north. Anchoring would not be comfortable. Thus,
we started studying the guidebooks for an alternate better protected anchorage.
This was easily found, just
10 miles further north, at Islas Muertos. There, we found a large, shallow
(mostly around 9’ at low tide) bay which was well protected on almost all
sides. The cruising guides refer to a “yatista-friendly Sportfishing
resort” that is in the bay, but we couldn’t find it. In fact, we
didn’t see much of anything. We had the whole bay to ourselves!
When you find a great
anchorage, problems evaporate and life is good. We dropped the tender and the
swim ladder. It would have been nice to have clearer water and a white sand
beach, but we weren’t complaining. The water was 84 degrees, and the swimming
good. We explored various beaches on the tender, barbecued steaks on the back
deck, and enjoyed ourselves immensely. We have been told that we
should keep an eye on our tender around here; that there have been reports of
tenders being stolen. The right answer, if in doubt, is to put the tender back
on the deck of the boat at night. This isn’t difficult, but it also isn’t
easy. I decided we would be fine to leave the tender in the water, but tie it
tightly to the boat. I moved the tender to the side of Sans Souci, and tied it
using some line that came with our sea anchor. The line is nearly 1.5 inches
thick, and meant to hold Sans Souci in place in gale force wind and waves. I
supplemented this with our electronic dog alarm. For those of you who might
never have used one of these, it’s kind of cool. It’s slightly
bigger than an ipod, and is a motion detector. When it senses movement, it emits
a LOUD, very realistic sounding, mean dog barking sound. I figured
anyone approaching the tender might be scared away by the dog, and if not,
perhaps the giant rope holding the tender would make it more of a challenge
than would be worth their while. The tidal swing here is
ten feet. This can make it interesting if you try to land your tender on the
beach. Here we see my first experiment with anchoring the tender using a giant
bungie cord (the “anchor buddy”). We knew we were on a rising tide,
so I dropped anchor, and then motored the tender to shore. Roberta, Shelby and
I stepped off, and we watched the bungee cord immediately suck the tender back
to deeper water. After a half hour of exploring the beach the tender had moved
50 feet or so further out from shore, but it was just a matter of reeling it in
via a long rope.
One thing that was a bit
disappointing: The beach was covered with litter. We had planned only a single
night, but when you are having fun, why be in a hurry? And, for our second
night, we were finally able to anchor alongside a Nordhavn 40, Alanui, with Scott
and Marian Bulger. Both Paloma and Alanui were participants in the Fubar
(San Diego to La Paz Rally). We left San Diego together on Nov 7th,
but haven’t seen each other since Cabo. Scott will be traveling through
the Panama Canal to the Caribbean, and then up the east coast of the US. I was
looking forward to hanging out and hearing about Scott and Marion’s adventures,
but this was not to be. Marion apparently had the same crud as I had just
gotten over, so Scott and I swapped quick visits to each other’s boat, but
that was it. He left the next morning to go into Los Suenos for a couple nights
and then to head for the canal.
Whatever it was that I had,
and that Marion had, it suddenly decided to attack Roberta. On the morning we
were to leave our anchorage, Roberta was suddenly too sick to get out of bed. I
spent the day playing with my computer and had far more fun than her. I used
the little laptop-sized satellite internet bgan unit that gives me decent speed
internet, at a cost that is a tenth of what I’d pay on my Fleet 77. I’m
not looking forward to seeing the bill, but the bgan unit has definitely earned
its keep on this trip. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have satellite coverage
in Alaska, so I’ll be back to running slow and expensive. Oh well… The
good news is that although Roberta’s crud was worse than mine, it ended
much faster. After a day resting, she was ready to move on. The Coonans (Paloma) had said
that one of their favorite anchorages was at Naranjo, just 10 miles north of
us. The whole weeks forecast is for winds from the north. This was yesterday,
and the forecast called for 18 knot winds. The anchorage at Naranjo is open to
the north, but 5 miles away there is another anchorage which is shielded from
north winds, on the southern side of the island of Caballo. It was so calm at
Muertos that we decided “Let’s just try for Naranjo, and if we don’t
like the wind when we get there, we’ll hide out at Caballo.” This is exactly how it played
out, with a couple of added surprises. Between Muertos and Naranjo there was an
endless stream of nets in the water. Or, at least we think they were nets. All we
ever saw were floating bleach bottles, some black, and some white, black flags,
and red flags. Sometimes, the patterns were obvious, and it was possible to
guess at which markers were linked, but not always. We did our best zigzagging,
and went miles out of the way. We successfully traversed the mine field with no
ropes on our props. As we reached the main
east-west channel just south of Puntarenas (the big town around here), the wind
did indeed pickup. It was only 15 to 18 knots from the north, and the “fetch”
was only a mile or two, so one wouldn’t think there would be much in the
way of waves. Maybe it is just the shallow water, but we were suddenly in four
foot white-capped waves, once again on our starboard side. The stabilizers
handled it just fine. I’ve been watching the stabilizers closely. My
hydraulic system normally runs 125 degrees. All seems fine, but the temperature
lately has been running 142 degrees. There are no leaks, and the fluid level is
fine. Perhaps it is just the high water temperature (85 degrees), or perhaps
something more sinister? I don’t know. I’d like to blame the water
temperature, but we’ve been in warm water for weeks. Without the
stabilizers this particular run would be a lot less fun. As we approached Naranjo, it
did look like a good anchorage, but not in a north wind. We were going to need
our backup anchorage. To reach it we just needed to go 5 miles north across a
shallow 25 foot deep shoal. It felt a little strange to run so far, in such
shallow water, with such rough water. As we arrived, the water flattened
completely. Yay! We had to tuck in a little tighter to the island than I liked,
anchoring just 500 feet off shore. Also, we were dropping anchor in a very fast
current. I have no way of guessing the speed but would guess it as 3-5 knots.
The water was 20 feet deep, at
low tide, and with the current and wind, I decided to drop 150 feet of chain. The
current was strong enough that the chain, which normally hangs straight down,
was taut and stretched. The wind was still registering as 10-15 knots, so I was
curious to see which would have more “pull” – the current or
the wind. This was no competition. Current trumps wind. The boat would
generally turn to face the wind, but our physical location was determined by
the current. I mention this only because it put me to thinking. In terms of
pounds of pressure on an anchor: Which is more? Three knots of current, or 15
knots of wind? Here, I was watching it play out, and clearly, the current wins,
and it isn’t close. At times, the wind was directly counter to the
current, and it still wasn’t a contest. I’m not sure what the math
is, but my guess is that the strain on the anchor was more what one might see
in a 30-40 knot wind. Prior to this trip, I swapped
my anchor to an unusual choice; the Rocna anchor. It was a bit of a
controversial decision, in that I gave away my Nordhavn-recommended CQR anchor
to swap to a funny-looking anchor that few have heard of. People are always
asking me how it is working out, and I’ve always said the same thing: “I
don’t know.” You really don’t know what you have, or I least
I don’t know what I have, with an anchor until it has been tested in
tough conditions a few times. We have a fair amount of experience with
anchoring in ugly conditions. During our three summers in the Med, we often anchored
in 30+ knot winds, and even had a night with sustained winds over 55, and gusts
to 75 knots. I’m proud to say that we never dragged once our anchor was
properly set. There were times it took us a few tries to get the anchor
properly good and stuck, but once stuck, it stayed stuck.
I selected the Rocna based on
its reputation for easy setting, and its ability to reset itself quickly if it
drags. My initial interest came from reading an article about the Dashews
(popular boating authors) using it on their boat, and then another Nordhavn
owner, Scott Strickland, mentioned that the “roll bar” anchors had
suddenly become quite popular in the Med. After a bit of research, I decided to
give it a try.
Until now, we’ve been
lucky at anchor, and none of the conditions we’ve been in have “tested”
the anchor. Last night, I would consider as the first night where we were able
to give the Rocna a bit of a work out, and the results are far from conclusive.
The confusing looking diagram above is a picture taken from our Nobeltec
navigation screen. The red lines show the path traversed by our boat. The
current is flowing left and right in this diagram, and you can see here several
tide cycles, as the boat was pushed to the left by the current, and then to the
right. Land is 500 feet to the north, and the circular mark shows where I
dropped the anchor. At first, the boat was sitting to the far left on this
diagram, weaving back and forth normally, 110 feet from where I dropped anchor.
As the tide reversed, and started running left to right (in this diagram), you
can see where we started weaving back and forth on the far right. The bad news
is that the far right tracks are 190 feet from where I dropped anchor. I doubt
my 150 foot of chain stretched. My interpretation is that the Rocna broke
anchor, dragged about 30 feet, and reset itself. It is possible that I had more
chain out than I thought, but I don’t think so. The good news in this is
that the Rocna did what it was supposed to do. It dragged, and reset. I’ve
watched boats drag anchor, and watched them dragged onto the beach. This is
only one incident, and it is inconclusive, but it is encouraging. Assuming I’m
seeing what I think I’m seeing, I’m disappointed it didn’t
stick (this is a mud bottom, so it has a good excuse), but very happy that it reset
itself so neatly. One more story from our night
here at Caballo. Yesterday when we arrived, this was a deserted island. We saw
no one, and couldn’t imagine boats other than us crazy enough to be
running around in the wind and chop. Thus, I was a little sloppy with the
tender. I tied it alongside, but with a normal-sized line, and I didn’t
turn on the electric dog. Because of the strong current, Roberta and I decided
that we should check the anchor every couple of hours all night. At midnight,
Roberta was looking out the window, and noticed a panga, with only a flashlight
for light, circling our boat. They were clearly checking us out. Roberta woke
me, and we watched together as the panga made another circle. Through the
binoculars I could see that the panga had only a single man. Roberta wanted to
send a message that we were onboard and awake, so she lit the cockpit, and took
Shelby out for a minute to “use the restroom.” A few minutes
after she re-entered the boat, the panga went around behind us, backed off
about 200 feet, shut off all lights, and just sat there. Was it anchored? Was
he waiting for us to fall asleep? If it was indeed a tender thief, did I really
want to try to stop him? After discussing these questions, we decided it was
just a curious fisherman, who like us, wanted protection from the wind. After watching (on the radar,
and with night vision) for a while, it became obvious that the fisherman had
dropped anchor and gone to sleep. According to my math he was outside my swing
circle, but given the uncertain holding of my anchor, I wasn’t absolutely
positive. At 1am, the tide was changing, and I knew we were going to be
shifting his way, and would be establishing a much closer relationship. Exactly
how close was yet to be determined, and he clearly wasn’t worried about
it. He was happily asleep, in a completely dark tender. For the next hour, as the
current started moving, I watched as we drifted his direction, but the anchor
held, and he was fine. It is now morning, and our
friend has been joined by MANY more pangas. And, all the pangas have NETS! I’ve
been watching panga after panga set their nets around me. From where I’m
sitting it appears we are boxed in. I can count 12 pangas within the square
mile around me. One panga guy was close enough I could say “Buenos Dias”,
to which he pointed at his net, and said “Camarones”, the Spanish word
for shrimp. This confused me as I always thought shrimp crawled along the
bottom. Perhaps the net is dragging the bottom, and moving with the current?
Does this mean I can drive over it? So many questions….
Time to start thinking about
pulling anchor. That said, the wind is back to 14 knots. It looks calm here,
but I doubt Naranjo would be good for anchoring. It’s time for Roberta
and I to talk about “Where next?” Thank you, Ken Williams Sans Souci, www.nordavn68.com
I'm getting the Kaleidescape
put into our boat!! My question though +++ You'll love the Kaleidescape! It's expensive, but VERY
popular on our boat. We did a small APC, which sits next to the
Kaleidescape. I looked for a model number, but could just find the text:
"S20 Power Conditioner and Battery Backup". [Note: The Kaleidescape
is a DVD jukebox. It’s super-easy to use, and holds a thousand DVDs, and
many thousands of audio CDs. As I said – it is VERY popular onn Sans Souci. -------------------- On the Tender issue I have a Large Nautica Wide Body 15' Tender with 90 HP engine,
teak interior, navigation system, dive tank storage, and on on on,
very tricked out for long exploration trips and having fun, but
also a small 3.5 meter (11.5') AB with Aluminum bottom and 15 HP Yamaha 2
stroke. Its very light - tender is 130 lbs., engine is 79 lbs
plus the small fuel tank. Although its small it holds 6 people, will
plane off with 2-4 people, is relatively dry, is good in waves, and easy to
beach. Its used by the crew for washing the hull and getting supplies
etc. two people can easily drag it up or down a beach. Only issue
with it is that the Aluminum bottom requires it to be painted about 2x a
yr. Its perfect for beaching. Anything smaller is just too small. Richard A +++ I still haven’t
decided what we’re going to do, other than “something different”.
As soon as I get to Seattle, this will be a priority -------------------------
Ken, Do you have any old garden
hose? Cut it in 3 foot pieces and run your lines thru it so the cleat and rub
areas are in contact with the hose. You may need to change it out dependent on
surge and the thickness and quality of the hose. How are the Aere Fenders
doing? Have you had to put a little more air in them? Any abrasion of the
fender on the dock? Does it ever settle down or
is this surge typical? DS
------------- Ken, Here is what the owner of our
old boat has done to help with the surge. He has wrapped the line with small
diameter fire hose. He got it from a firefighter. Not sure of the diameter.
Next he attached a length of chain to the dock cleat and I think used a anchor
large anchor thimble through the chain and not sure about more fire hose. I
will get the exact way he set it up, but it did stop the chaffing. Check to see
if any of the boats have chain on the cleats and how they attached it. I
haven’t seen the setup, but only listened and thought it was a good idea. One other thing I have done
which has helped in a surge is to run 2 or even 3 lines from the same cleat to
the same cleat on the boat. That might help share the load. Good luck with the chaffing
and let me know what you see with the other boats. John +++ We’re at anchor
now, but heading back to Los Suenos sometime in the next few days. Towards the
end of being there before, I was much better at tying to counter the surge. We’ll
see what happens when I tie up this time, but I abandoned the short lines at
the corner on the stern, in favor of a two “V” lines going from the
center of the stern to the corners of the slip. This seemed to keep me stable
with less chafing. I also put much longer spring lines, and a lot of them. I
probably had four lines on each side of the boat. There’s one very cool
thing I should mention that Los Suenos has. The cleats can easily be
repositioned. They are mounted on rails, and can be slid to any position
easily. Once I understood this, I could move the cleats to where they worked
best. Perhaps I’m just kidding myself, but I think things will be much
better this time around.
Ken, I think I remember that Roberta said she did not want to
go to the Carib because "that is what everyone does". She is
correct, but there must be a good reason for so many people heading that way. In all seriousness, we really loved it and most of all
everything on that side is about the water. Stay safe. P.S. - Tell her it is the greatest place for dogs! Larry Biggs Motor Vessel NEXUS Nexus47.com +++ Roberta and I have a bit
of a battle going over “what comes next after Alaska.” Roberta is
an Indiana-Jones wannabee and excited by the idea of circumnavigating, whereas
I usually don’t like any idea that sounds too wild and crazy. We’ve
been discussing going to Japan via the Aleutians, along with another Nordhavn
62 (Grey Pearl), and that idea has the most momentum at this point. This would
position us nicely for an Indonesia rally that both Roberta and I want to do. We’ll
be seeing Grey Pearl soon and will start making decisions. +++ Larry and I swapped a
couple of emails on the topic of “why Sans Souci should head to the
Caribbean”. Larry is further north now, working his way south to the
canal. Here’s an excerpt from another of his emails: Ken: We are in tenacatita bay and will go to zwah in a day or
two. Hope all is well. Surfing to the beach is just one of the reasons we are
heading to the carib. We were surprisingly impressed with Panama as a cruising
destination. (We originally only thought of it as the canal location) We ended
up spending months in Panama at places like the Perles islands, San Blas
islands, Bocas del Toro, and Panama City. Others reasons we are heading back to the carib: • 100 foot visibility • 80 degree water • 80 degree air year round • Every island a different culture • Great food • Dingy docks everywhere • Sand no mud • Short legs • Lots of kids for Isabella • Great cruising community • Restaurants on the beach everywhere • Cell and internet almost everywhere • Easy flights in and out. • Most of all - cruising island to island beats
cruising the mainland Tell Roberta we said hey! --------------------------- I read your post and thought I
should mention - beware of “Logs” near rivers in Costa Rica –
there are crocodiles. You should check with locals to see what areas to
avoid. Dan +++ We haven’t seen any
crocodiles yet. In fact, we haven’t seen a monkey yet. There’s
a lot of Costa Rica we still need to see! As you said though, we have seen a
lot of branches in the water. We haven’t yet seen any serious logs
floating, and hope not too. Yesterday, we kept having to dodge to hit various
floating broken chairs and table parts. I don’t know why. ----------------------- Ken: Make sure if you get a rental
car to drive to the “Alligator Bridge”. Everyone knows Where it is
so just ask. At the risk of being politically incorrect, I suggest buying some
raw chicken parts with you and some fishing line. Tie the parts LOOSELY to the
line and dangle them over the alligators. They will go crazy and snap them up.
They have to be loose so the chicken comes off easily. Steve A +++ Roberta already fed the
alligators at the marina in Ixtapa. I’m thinking we’ve “scratched
that off our list.” Grin. |
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