We left Cozumel on Monday, March 23rd at 14:30 (2:30pm) and intended to travel to Panama via La Providentia and perhaps San Andreas, with an overnight stop at Swan Island (owned by Honduras but uninhabited, except by 6 navy guys).
Shelley at the helm... |
Our NEW outriggers! |
Our first catch off the new outrigger! |
beautiful sunsets |
As we passed the southern tip of Cozumel we knew things weren't going to be easy, as the wind was 15-20 knots out of the SSE.... the very direction we wanted to go.... We went on long tacks windward until midnight, the decided that with a 3 knot current also against us, this plan would take till Christmas to get anywhere.... We decided to pull in the jib and motorsail with the main & mizzen close hauled... At least we were going in he right general direction now....
Twenty-two hours later we began to hear a "chirping" noise from the freshwater pump on the engine... Instead on shutting down, we decided it wasn't too bad and we could continue on and monitor things closely.... About 6 hours later we knew we were in real (motor) trouble, as the bearing was completely gone and was destroying the pulley cover....
We shut the engine down and I spent about 4 hours replacing the water pump (we had a spare)... however the pulley cover was so damaged we could no longer run the engine...
At this juncture, we decided that since the wind was still SSE, we needed a new plan. La Providentia was not the kind of place where we thought we could get replacement parts, and getting to Panama (another 800 nautical miles) was risky with no engine....
We looked at what countries were a beam reach or better so we could sail all the way and flipped a coin between Grand Cayman Island (expensive) and Roatan, Honduras (Cheap)....
Roatan it was, and all day Wednesday we sailed at 6-7 knots with a sweet 15-20 knots of wind right on our beam.... During the day I spent about 6 hours building a spacer that might make the messed up pulley cover work with the new water pump.... It worked! But by now we were well on our way to Roatan and we are still not sure how long my "McGiver" fix was going to last... As night fell we anticipated arriving on Thursday morning sometime. We shortened all our sails anticipating the stronger winds predicted in our morning forecast.... Around 22:00 I went to bed and was woken by a bouncing boat at midnight. When I asked Shelley what the wind speed was she reported that the meter was reading 10 knots, with gusts to 12.... But she was a little suspicious it was broken.... when we measured the wind on our hand held wind meter, we confirmed our suspicions that the wing indicator on the boat was on the fritz.... The wind was blowing 25-30 with stronger gusts!
We scrambled and dropped the mizzen and almost completely furled the jib... We seemed OK, so Shelley went off watch. An hour later I saw a Cruise boat northbound on our AIS. I radioed them for updated weather and he told me the wind was steady 40's with gust to 45!
I rolled up the rest of the jib and put the second reef in the main.... Just after this we got knocked down for the first time... Everything from the port side, including our books, spare sails and folding bike (all bungied down) flew across the boat... Shelley was tossed out of bed and we did our best to tidy up... While we were tidying up we considered heaving too, but decided to press on...
With Shelley now up, I tried to catch an hours sleep, but wasn't down an hour when we got knocked down for the second time! Everything that flew before went again, and this time all my tools went flying as well.... This time we didn't tidy up.... Our reasoning was that if everything was already on the floor it could fall any farther....
A few hours later dawn came along with less wind... In the last few hours before we reached Roatan, we put back everything that flew, and made notes about how to improve our tie down system. We went back to full sails and entered Roatan under sunny skies and 15 - 20 knot winds...
After we arrived at Fantasy Island Resort, we were warmly greeted and settled in. A local agent charged us $40 and took care of ALL our Immigration and Customs... All we had to do was sleep on the boat....
It is now Saturday and our life is back to normal... The boat is getting cleaned up and we are loving this beautiful country... Following are a few photos from the last few days...
Our new home.... |
lots of critters |
A beautiful pool |
Our back yard.... |
This adventure of yours is something I'll never be able to do so I'm sailing vicariously through your posts. Thanks so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteAnita
Very cool safe travels to you both hope to see you missed you in Mexico we will be in Saba in the end of August first part of Septmeber if you are going to be around maybe we can hook up? Dirk and Carol Steinsiek
ReplyDeleteDirk, we would love to meet up, but Saba in in the hurricane one and we have to stay south of 10 degrees N. latitude. if you have any desire to go to Panama, let us know! Cheers...
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