4.08.2016

November 2015 to April 2016
Well, it’s now April 2016, Deb is officially on Medicare, we’re still in Mexico (Mazatlan currently), and the Brainwaves blog is coming out of dormancy. Yes, yes, I am the lamest blogger ever. So, I’m going to play catch up by giving a synopsis of the last few months of our life on or near the waters of Mexico.

After leaving charming San Jose del Cabo (only a few miles from Cabo San Lucas, but light years away from that obnoxious place), in mid-November, we crossed after 2 nights of nice sailing to Punta de Mita, anchored there overnight, and then headed into Bahia Banderas and Nuevo Vallarta. Deb flew out of there to San Antonio for the wedding of her much-loved nephew Brian to the lovely Laura. Great to see so many friends and family, but ready to get back to Brainwaves. We tired quickly of the resort atmosphere of Paradise Village Marina, longing for more Mexican culture and food. A short sail took us to Marina Riviera Nayarit in La Cruz de Huanacaxtle, our new fave place on the west coast of Mexico. The marina is situated right in this wonderful little town, much interplay with the locals. It is an amazingly friendly place, with lots of great eateries (and drinkeries), a fantastic fish market every day,  a terrific market every Sunday, and an astonishing number of music venues. Music every night, ranging from Mexican folk to country to blues to rock and roll. All within an easy walk of the boat. Even after 4 months there, we were still finding new (to us) great places to eat or listen to music.  The cruising community there is very very social, there are lots of boat-schooled kids to keep things hopping, and the marina puts on so many talks, movies, bbqs, and parties that we were rapidly sucked into that place and ended up staying in that area until March. Jimbo did lots of beer can races on other boats and on Brainwaves. We also did the 3-day Banderas Bay Blast, which was—well—a blast, although racing your home is a bit like racing a Winnebago. There were many many Ha Ha folks in and out of there, plus fun year-rounders, and locals. Lots of opportunities to get to know a lot of terrific folks. Got to hear Eugenie Russell tell the story of the sinking of her J boat during a previous Ha Ha when a whale’s tail took out her rudder post. Also heard Dani’s story of crewing on a Pac Cup with a blind captain, then having to abandon the boat to a reef (with the blind captain in tow) in Hawai’i. So many stories from so many adventurers--- And so many connections to so many folks (many from Colorado.)
  
And speaking of Coloradans, we had a fun day successfully flying the repaired spinnaker of s/v Honu, a very comfy Island Packet, with Mike and Judy, originally from Grand Junction. Judy is my hero as she makes her OWN tonic concentrate and then just adds it to sparkling water (and gin, of course.) It is muy deliciosa and especially welcome in a country that sells only tonic sweetened with nasty nasty sucralose.
Bob, Kristen, Tyler and Riley came out for 9 days after Christmas. There was sailing, fishing, swimming, snorkeling, horseback riding with Riley, pickup soccer on the beach, and a little racing. Bob, Kristen, Tyler and Jim did a beer can race, and there were whales in the race course. Luckily they stayed out of the way so the crew didn’t have to diverge from the lay line, anathema to those competitive Brainard boys. One of the highlights for Tyler was going out with a group of kids, the oldest 12, to buy fireworks without any adults along. Yep, this is Mexico. The adults DID participate in the actual lighting of the explosives. Anyway, it was sooooo wonderful to have them aboard again---
While we did some a lot of dolphins and humpbacks early in the winter, the el Nino-induced record warm water, 2 degrees warmer than already warm water, drove those playful mammals farther north. It also changed the fishing profile for Banderas Bay, driving the big game fish farther north (as in California.) The warm waters did make for some nice swimming off the beach by the marina.
Another gorgeous day on Banderas Bay with Baja Besties Grant and David s/v Jean Butler
In early February, we ventured out of Banderas Bay, made a left at Cabo Corrientes, and sailed down to Bahia Chamela and the anchorage at Perula. Though our plans were not set, we arrived within 5 minutes of our Baja Besties, David and Grant of s/v Jean Butler. We headed out to a tiny anchorage between 2 uninhabited islands where we anchored in gorgeous blue water where we could see features on the  bottom in 30 feet of water. YES, PLEASE. Really fine snorkeling with all the usual reef critters,  and a fun sundowner party stuffed onto a small dinghy with Grand, David, and lots of snacks and bebidas. Aaah, I’ll take more of that.
The one ugly snag in an otherwise fine few months in La Cruz was Deb’s bout with a recalcitrant intestinal troll. Antibiotics did not work. Next was a trip to the doctor who proclaimed the bad guy was protozoal, but anti-worm meds did not work. Sooo, Deb found a doc who specialized in such issues and had worked with WHO on problematic parasites, did the full spate of tests, and found, as he suspected, that the annoying beastie was Homocystis hominis, which is in the algae family, is very tiny (i.e., goes through many filters), and spends much of its complex life cycle in a bomb-proof cyst form. UGH! The treatment was 3 weeks of some nastiness—iodine compound 3 times a day and powerful  anti-parasite meds, plus lots of probiotics to build the good guys back up. It was yucky but I could function just fine, and it cured me of that nasty beastie.  The worst part was no margaritas for a month (not from the tequila, but from the limes and the acid environment they produce.)
The boat troubles haven’t been too bad, considering that Brainwaves is, well, a boat. The biggest pain in the butt was diagnosing and fixing the wind speed indicator, which had been a chronic problem for months, with the attendant trips up the mast. Done.  Fixing the propane-powered outboard required a mule to bring parts from the US. Done. There was a scare from a rust-encrusted fitting at the top of the forestay, which is definitely not a part that you want to fail, which turned out to be cosmetic only, but required taking down the forestay to diagnose and remedy. Otherwise, it’s the usual body contortions to fix problems in tight, inconvenient spaces.
A too-short trip to CO at the end of February took us home to play with the neighbors and other friends, check out the enormous ponderosa the blew down onto the driveway (the driveway- blocking top of the tree and several huge branches that got knocked off other trees were dispatched by our super neighbors;  the rest of the tree will require the services of a pro this summer), and ski at Eldora with Kristen, Riley, and the friends they were visiting in CO. And then there’s the life administration stuff—Deb signing up for Medicare, taxes, mail, Christmas cards to read. It was great to be home—dishwasher, counter space, a stationary bed, snow, refrigeration! We are loving the cruising life, but do miss the mountains and the wonderful folks there.
In March, we said hasta la vista to friends doing the Pacific Puddle Jump (many thousands of miles of ocean from La Cruz to the South Seas.) It was hard for them to find a good time to leave as El Nino has played such havoc with the weather, and the trades had been so far west that it was going to take a lot of fuel (needed to get across the doldrums) to get to the wind. Maybe the new normal.
Despite only being in La Cruz for a few months, it was incredibly hard to say goodbye to that ultra-friendly and accommodating place and the marvelous folks there. However, near the end of March, we had a relatively good weather window and so headed out of Bahia Banderas, moving north on a VERY nice reach to Chacala, a small, beautiful bay, normally a sleepy little place. However, it was Semana Santa, when all of Mexico goes on spring break, so this village was inundated with thousands of people living out of hundreds of tents. Three bands, all of which we heard very clearly, played on the beach from afternoon until almost sunrise.  We only stayed overnight, but hope to return next season at a less noisy, crowded time. Our next stop after another exhilarating reach was Matanchen Bay, home to hundreds of ultra-cute bat rays and billions of jejenes (no see ums.) While we were prepared with netting and various bug sprays, we still ended up with hundreds of itchy, slow-healing  bites. A few of the nasty critters managed to stowaway and get a ride far from home to Mazatlan so they could continue to enjoy their meals at our expense. The locals in San Blas burn coconut husks to smoke them away, but that would probably not work too well on a sailboat.
BEER. Hopless beer. Getting used to it. Occasionally find a craft beer with hop tastiness. Colimita makes a good pale ale. Just ask for pah-lay ah-lay---
Matanchen Bay to Mazatlan went from a very nice reach to a beat, and just about doubled the distance we had to travel. We got in just after dark to Mazatlan’s VERY VERY narrow harbor entrance with a big swell running, so we stood off for almost 10 hours until sunrise to go in. As it was, we surfed a big wave at the entrance, with waves breaking on the sea wall a few yards away, then just scooted past the dredge that takes up half the already narrow channel. Good thing we stood off all night. We’re at El Cid Marina, part of a big resort, and so have access to pools,  bars, nice showers. It’s not very pretentious, and there are good eateries within walking distance. We bought shrimp from the shrimp ladies of Mazatlan, quite an experience there, an entire street with giant vats of icy water and shrimp. You can take your purchase to one of the eateries nearby, and they’ll prepare them for you—diablo yumminess. Also took in the Mercado Municipal, an enormous building housing vendors of an astonishing variety of stuff. There are whole pig heads, entire cows being cut up, every chicken part imaginable (or unimaginable), and the most delicious roasted coconut confections on earth. The first few days here had the city hosting the annual motorcycle rally—50,000 motos and 4-wheelers, noisy but fun.

Lots of friends have come into Mazatlan, especially happy to play with David and Grant from Jean Butler, Helen and Tom and sweet Daisy from Catatude, Steve and Lynn from  Bella Luna, John and Donna and little Lucy from Carmanah, the Wild Rumpus family and new friends, too. We’re looking at a weather window to cross to La Paz, about 250 miles, probably tomorrow 4/8, buddy boating with s/v Jean Butler. Tonight is a birthday celebration at Deb’s fave restaurant Topolo (so lovely, so delicious, and killer tamarind margaritas) with good friends because we’ll be somewhere between Mazatlan and La Paz on her 65th.