Shenanigans on Shawnigan 01/27/2016

A day or week on Shawnigan with all its shenanigans anchored in Bahia Tenacatita:

We usually wake up with the sun, which lately occurs around 7:30 am. We seem to drag getting out of bed until 8:00 am. Tenacatita is a great anchorage for swimming, so I’ve been going for a swim first thing. Christian is left in charge of breakfast, coffee and getting the kids started with boat school. 

I hop in the water with just my suit and a rash guard to keep the jelly stings to a minimum. Lately I’ve been using my mask and snorkel instead of cap and goggles in order to admire the underwater scene more as I swim along and keep and eye out for sharks. I also enjoy being able to get my heart rate up and breath whenever I want.  Sometimes I prefer cap and goggles to get me into a more meditative swim. I notice that when I swim with cap and goggles I hold my breath with a meditative rhythm, with obvious benifits as well.  Yesterday, I swam over a school of 9 Southern Stingrays as well as multiple large Jacks and various other beautiful colored fish. My morning swim averages about 45 minutes. 

I make sure to return to the boat in time to catch “the net”. The Net is the morning VHF radio check in that occurs in popular cruising ports. Six days a week people alternate who takes the Net Controller roll. The last 5 days that we spent in Tenacatita the Net Controller position has been filled by various kids on boats. Nina did it twice! The Net is usually over by 9:30 and the kids are well into boat school. If there are other kid boats around like Tenacatita has been, our girls like to start school early, before Christian and I are out of bed, so that they can be ready to play by lunch time. Math and English and art are in the daily lesson plan. Science, history, foreign language and music are placed in on different days during the week. We have the kids alternate weeks on helping cook meals and they each have various boat cleaning duties that are completed before play time with other boat kids. 

Christian gets out for his time alone/exercise sometime after his coffee and breakfast. Tenacatita is lacking in surfing opportunities, so he’s been going free diving and spear fishing. One day he helped lead a class on knots for a group boat schooling lesson. He’s also been our coconut retriever. Coco frio is a favorite on our boat, especially a fresh picked one on a hot sunny day on the beach. What a rough life.  

We anchored in Tenacatita a few weeks ago, went to Barra Navidad for a week then returned to Tenacatita after hearing about all the kid boats that were reportedly anchored. Sure enough there were four other kid boats when we arrived and at one point a total of 13 kids! We also had a day were we counted 46 boats in the anchorage. Fun times! And thanks to the Mayor and his wife (Robert and Virginia Gleser), there are activities and raft ups to bring the boating community together. 

We met many wonderful sailors and a few that have already circumnavigated the world. One in particular just finished a 25 year circumnavigation, a couple named  Doreen and Michael Ferguson on SV St. Leger. Another couple, Monica and Jack, on junk rigged SV Bella Via turned out to know Christian’s dad Gene Lauducci. Gene had repaired their sails about 30 years ago when they sailed through Sausalito. They had so many great stories to share about Christian’s dad. I mentioned before “The Mayor” Robert and Virginia Gleser.  They also have a interesting story and a few books written (Harmony on the High Seas, and Tie-dye!, the How to Book)I was happy to have an extensive conversation with Virginia about “The Farm“, with which they helped form and worked closely with Ina May Gaskin, the midwife guru! Virginia wrote books about the farm as well as sailing. The couple also make beautiful tie-dyed pieces that they sell. One day, Virginia had a tie-dye workshop on the beach. The kids loved it. The sailing community can make the world seem small sometimes. We met a John and Donna on SV Carmanah (aka “The Tin Man). Turns out that he was the swim coach in Bainbridge Island and remembers my older cousin Joy Archer in the swim team. He also know Joy’s daughter Shayla, as she is quite a swimmer as well. Upon making the connection, John stated, “I see family resemblance! And watching you swim out in the anchorage, swimming must run in the family genes as well!” Small world! 

Other than that, we made daily trips to the beach and dinghy rides up the mangroves and a group trip to La Manzanilla to re-provision and hike to a water hole. That pretty much sums up our time in Bahia Tenacatita. We’re now back in Barra de Navidad, where wifi is more abundant and street tamales and tacos are amazing. Hopefully we can add a little more surf activity to our agenda. 

  

 Tie Dye with Virginia Gleser   

    
    
   

 

 Virginia and William from SV Agamére
   
 

Knot tying class:

   
   

     

  Casey on Chae Mi teaching knots

  

 SV Banyon girls

 

 Nina learning through leading

    

 
  
   
 

 Tenacatita The Mayor’s Dinghy Raft Up      

  Wild Rumpus, Agamere, Shawnigan 
   

 Kiwi 3

   
    
    
   

Bocce ball with coconuts  

 Full moon over Tenacatita  

Adios 2015, Feliz Año Nuevo 2016

01/01/2016: Adios 2015, Feliz Año Nuevo

What a year 2015 was. We started the year still living at Galilee Harbor, starting up boat school for both girls for the first time, me working full time at UCSF, and Christian plugging away at getting the final boat projects done and taking on full time child duty.

A few months later, March 1st, we left the harbor and lived on the hook around the Bay Area. We had pictured ourselves anchoring at Treasure Island and Aquatic Park more often. But as cruisers know, “plans change”, and we hadn’t even started cruising yet. We basically spent the next 6 months anchored in Sausalito. Most of our friends were there and our kids’ social life was there.

August 20th we left San Francisco Bay on our 40 foot Stevens sailboat. Leaving was a lot harder emotionally than expected, most in relation with the kids. After a few weeks, we settled into the cruising life. As we saw so many neat and beautiful things, met more cruisers and as the kids met more boat kids, the reality of how cool this actually is started to sink in. For me, it wasn’t until a few weeks after my last day at work (September 30th) and my work commute was done, I finally relaxed into cruising mode.

October 25th we found Emma in San Diego wanting to sail to Mexico on a different boat than she had originally planned. We scooped her up in a heartbeat. (So glad we did!)

November 2, with six people aboard, we left the United Sates and sailed to Mexico. This is when we really felt like we were sailing off! Having met a bunch of other people heading to Mexico and continued to meet people sailing down, our life in this new sailing community had started. We spent the whole month of November just sailing down Baja to Cabo San Lucas. Along the way we celebrated both Ellamae’s 8th birthday and Emma’s 22nd birthday. We somehow ended up buddy boated with three other boats. Casey on Chae Mi was intensional, but the two other “crazy Candians” Pete and Andrew just “sailed” in to place. Sadly the two Canadians did not continue with us after Baja. We miss them already!

December 11th marked our arrival to the mainland of Mexico. We sailed in to Banderas Bay (Puerto Vallarta area) just in time for Nina’s 13th birthday on the 12th. On our sail in we were greeted with a lovely squall. Intense downpour, wind on our nose, and lightning and thunder above our heads. An interesting greeting from Mexico to say the least. For the remainder of December we spent our time between Punta de Mita and La Cruz anchorages. We met a ton more kid boats and other cruisers as well. Many that are going to cross the Pacific Ocean this coming season and a few that plan on summering in the Sea of Cortez and crossing next season as we hope to do.

December 28 we left Banderas Bay and headed South. We hope to slowly sail to Barra de Navidad and then slowly make our way back to Banderas Bay by the end of March.

Accomplishments for 2015 in chronological order:

Started boat schooling!

Untied our dock lines!

Kept our anchor from sticking to San Francisco Bay’s anchorages!

Sailed out “The Gate” and turned left!

Stopped working!

Left United States!

Celebrated 3 birthdays within 1 month on our boat!

Spent 3 1/2 months just to get to the mainland of Mexico!

Broke and fixed our autopilot!

Met a lot of really cool people!

Spent less than $170 on mooring/dinghy dock fees since August ($0.00 on docking fees) !

Sailed ~1,500 miles!

40 days without a freshwater shower!

Continued South for more sailing fun!

We are looking forward to what 2016 has to offer and hope we get visitors along the way!

Happy New Year from Chamela, Jalisco, Mexico!