Author Archives: A Family Afloat

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About A Family Afloat

I'm a mother of 3 amazing kids (currently 18, 13, and 8) and a wife of an amazing husband. We sailed our boat to Mexico with a sail plan of going around the world. In August, 2015 we cruised out "the Gate" of San Francisco and spent 2 months going down the coast of California and 2 years exploring Mexico. From Mexico, we sailed down to Costa Rica and Panama, then across to the Galapagos. We crossed the Pacific to French Polynesia In April, 2018, from the Galapagos. Now we have landed in New Zealand, have been based here for 2 years, and where we are open to stay for a little while...

Nina’s Mazatlán post

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A Family Afloat's avatarA family Afloat Nina

We have just left Mazatlán! Normally we anchor out in the anchorage, but Mazatlán’s anchorage is a bit of a crazy anchorage. It has theft so we decided not to anchor there. In Marina Mazatlán they have a pool, but only resort guests get to use it. When we were in La Cruz and we would tell our friends we are coming into the marina and they would say something like,”Really??” Or “Nice joke”. Staying in marinas do have their luxury like; showers, wifi, and you can hop onto the dock at any given moment, but when your neighbor finishes school at 10:00 and wants to play so, he knocks every ten minutes I just wanted to anchor out. Mazatlán had an amazing town(and not to mention mall). We got to go to the mall a few times, Ellamae and my favorite store was this cute pet store. They had…

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day 3 of passage across the Sea of Cortez

We left Mazatlán three days ago. The wind has been pretty light and not at all during parts of the night and for most today. By lunch time today, we still only had a slight breeze, so we decided to all hop in and swim with the boat! No Sharks were seen, yay. A refreshing way to break up the day. This was the first time we’ve jumped in underway. Taj even got in with a mask.

Emergency Haulout

We recently discovered a leak of unknown origin. Our first time discovering it was during our sail up from Chamela to Punta de Mita, of course, during the middle of the night. Our bilge was almost filled to the floor boards. Our bilge pump apparently was broken and we had no clue, because our bilge is normally dry. We hand pumped/bailed all the water out and looked for the source. We assumed it was coming in from the opening where our chain enters from the new windlass we installed in Barra. We forgot to place our plastic bag stuffing around it, we’d grown accustomed to pleasant down wind sails. The sail from Chamela to Punta Mita was upwind with a lot of water coming over the bow.

Arriving to the PV area, we thought we figure out and fixed the source. After a few days at anchor in Banderas Bay, we checked the bilge again. More water! Well, maybe its just water settling still? We bought a new bilge pump, installed it and checked again in a few days. And again more water, but less than before. The search for more leaks began. At the time we only found small possible sources and fixed them. Then we sailed upwind again toward Mazatlán. We discovered that when we are heeled over toward our Port side, our aft head draws in salt water. Urgh! So, we closed off that intake and added “fix the aft plumbing” to the list of possible leak sources. Unfortunately, that wasn’t the source either. By the time we arrived in Mazatlán, we were pumping out ~20 gal of salt water from our bilge a day!

Christian went through every system, tearing apart the boat looking for all possible leak sources. After two full days, he finally found a leak from our engine intake thru-hull. The strainer was broken and leaking. As he was trying the fix that, the whole part broke and our leak became worse! Thankfully, our friendly neighbors were around with extra sea-cocks and ideas to stop the leak until we can get it fixed. And thankfully we happened to be in a marina right next to the haul out yard. Unfortunately, it was the weekend and help and haul out wasn’t available until Tuesday. Our three day Mazatlán plan turned into a much longer stay than we we hoped for.

As we waited for three days to get hauled out, we kept the leak plugged with a plunger on the outside of our hull and a bung (wooden tapered plug) from the inside. And of course made the best of our time in Mazatlán (post about that to follow).

Tuesday, we hauled out for a few hours and fixed the engine intake through whole. I wish I could say “Yay!” Yes, we are happy, no more leak, but man was it more costly than we expected. We normally anchor out, so marina time is costly to begin with. Marina Mazatlán itself was even more expensive ($240 for 8 days)! The haul out itself was 6,000 pesos (roughly $345 USD), just for a few hours, in and out. Then we had to hire help, due to Fonatur haul out yard policy. Rick at Marine Services Mazatlán is a nice guy, but ouch, expensive and his workers are not very skilled. He charge $200 for his time, which included the wait time for unexpected haul out delays. I’m not one for writing bad reviews, but we were so disappointed in his work. Christian basically had to watch over the workers and relay the message to Rick that the work was not being done properly. They had to redo work and we were still charged for that time. And to top it off, after splashing the boat, the fitting were leaking! So Christian resealed it himself after returning to Marina Mazatlán. Christian notify Rick, and although apology was made, we still paid full labor fees.

Unfortunately resources here are limited, so if you are here and you need work done, then go for it, the work will get done and Rick will be happy to be of service. But if you are on a tight cruising budget and can wait to go somewhere else, we would recommend doing so.

Alas, our leak is fixed and we should be departing Mazatlán after 48 hours of waiting for the sealant to set. Stay tuned for a post of our fun Mazatlán activities. And sorry for any terminology errors, I wanted to get this post out before I procrastinated any longer. 🙂