| From : | Ken Williams [kenw@talkspot.com] |
| Date : | Mon, 10 Mar 2008 20:36:41 -0600 |
| To : | kensblog@talkspot.com |
| Subject : | Update # 19 - Marina Club Las Barillas, El Salvador |
|
[El Salvador – 13
15.763N, 88 29.348W] The Marina Club Las Barillas,
in El Salvador, is not a standard marina, and I’ve never seen anything
like it. To arrive at the marina, you
are given a “meeting point,” which is two miles off shore, at 13
07N, 88 25W. The actual “marina” is 10 miles away, back a river. I contacted the marina via
sat phone, to schedule a pilot boat to meet us at 1:45pm. As we approached the
meeting point, we were greeted by an oncoming panga; our “pilot boat.”
We could see breaking waves
all along the coast. The purpose of the pilot boat was to guide us safely
through the waves and into the river. Jeff suggested I drive from “up top”
on the fly bridge, as I would better be able to see what was coming.
I’ve only run the boat
from the fly bridge for a brief period off the coast of Cabo. When choosing
equipment for the boat, I did not put a steering wheel on the fly bridge,
figuring I’d drive so little from up on top , that a little jog lever
would suffice. I also have the jog lever on the
three outside drive stations (port, starboard and in the cockpit). I’ve
tried driving with it, with mixed success. I over-steered once when anchoring
the boat in a crowded anchorage, so I’ve been avoiding the jog-wheel
rudder control. For those not familiar with these, instead of having a giant
steering wheel, I have a little knob which is labeled in degrees. I can turn it
to the precise number of degrees of rudder I’d like. For instance, I
could turn it slightly to the left to turn the rudder 5 degrees to port. I
haven’t missed the rudder control during mooring the boat, because I
always center the rudder, and just use the twin engines and the thrusters to
maneuver the boat. My first few minutes were a
bit of a fiasco, as I adjusted to the jog lever steering, and made an
accidental 90 degree turn. The guy in the panga wondered if he was in deep
trouble. Within a few minutes I got the hang of it, and now will look forward
to using it in the future. The major difference was that on the fly bridge I
put a rudder angle indicator, but did not do so on the other drive stations. It
made a huge difference. After this trip I’ll explore whether or not it is
possible to add a rudder angle indicator at each of the drive stations. I assumed we would be
crossing the waves, which never really happened. Instead, we found an opening
in the waves, and then turned to port, running for over a mile between the
breaking waves to my left side, and the shore on my right side.
We entered the mouth of the
river, which turned out to be very wide. After about five miles or so, I
decided to put the boat back on auto pilot, which turned out to be a mistake.
Almost immediately, we encountered a very tight turn. We were running at 9 knots,
and the auto pilot just couldn’t turn us fast enough. I quickly realized
this and flipped back to manual steering. Lesson learned. After about 90 minutes we
arrived at the Marina Club, which as I said, really isn’t a marina at
all. It’s like a beach club, with mooring buoys.
Tying off to a mooring buoy
was made much easier by our pilot boat. He positioned his panga at the mooring
buoy, and we threw him down a line, which he fastened to the buoy. He then went
around to the back of the boat, to take a second line, which he tied to another
buoy behind us.
I hadn’t realized how
strong the current was. When I tried to align the boat so that the stern was
pointed at the buoy behind us, it removed to budge. I had been moving at 9
knots for the past 10 miles, so I hadn’t noticed the effect of the
current, but suddenly, it was a major problem. I asked Jeff for assistance, and
he struggled at first, but then got the stern to swing around by using rudder,
thrusters, and the twin engines, all at maximum power. I later asked Herbierto,
the marina manager, how fast the current was. His response – 3 to 5
knots! We were very lucky to have arrived near a slack tide. If you are reading
this, and considering going into Marina Barillas – you may want to
consider timing your arrival to high slack. Within seconds of tying up we
were boarded by customs and immigration. They were very polite, but very
serious, and there were a lot of them! There were seven men standing in my
cockpit, some with guns. They asked for a tour of the boat. Roberta took half
the group downstairs, and I took the balance up to the pilot house. I relaxed a
little when the immigration guy studied Sans Souci’s helm for a bit, and
gave me a big thumbs up. The group asked that I
accompany them to shore with all of our paperwork to check into the country and
the marina. Here you see a picture of me (in the red shirt) feeling very
outnumbered on the immigration panga.
$50 and 30 minutes later, I
was back on the boat, all checked in. Marina Barillas Club is a
very cool place! They have good wireless internet, a nice pool, a nice store, a
decent restaurant, and a tremendous staff. They also have an air field. Roberta
and I had wanted to visit the Guatemalan city of Antigua while in Guatemala,
but we had bypassed Guatemala. Roberta asked the marina office whether or not
they could fly us to Antigua and they said “Yes!” It took a bit of
money (a bus tour is also available, but it is two days each way) and we were
on our way.
Antigua is a 500+ year old Spanish
colonial town. It sits in a high valley (5,000 feet), and is surrounded by
three volcanoes. We were quite surprised by
the town, and by Guatemala. Guatemala City where we landed was quite modern. Leaving
the airport I saw several American chains, including Dominos, Burger King, Taco
Bell, and even a Hooters! Although it seemed like a very modern city, I also
noted that all windows were barred, and all fences were topped by barbed wire. Antigua itself was very
charming, and we had a great hotel “El Palacio de Dona Leonor”
right in the center of town.
We were “lucky”
in that it was holy week, and the town was packed. We literally had to push our
way through the crowds at times.
The center square
A volcano behind the town
A little market
One of the many churches
Roberta, exploring an old church Antigua is a very
international town. We saw tourists from many countries, although not so many
from the US. The city seems to specialize in educational institutions. I was
told that there are over 50 Spanish language schools in town. We also saw a
university, cooking schools, dance schools, and technical schools. Roberta and
I seriously discussed coming back later this year, for a month, so that she
could work on her Spanish, and me on my French (we also discovered there is an
Alliance Française). There is a wide selection of restaurants. We had dinner at
a French restaurant the first night and at an Italian restaurant the second. We
also saw Thai, Japanese, Indian, Mediterranean, Mexican, Argentinean, Chinese
and of course Guatemalan restaurants. Speaking of “Spanish,”
Roberta speaks very good Spanish, and has been a tremendous help on this trip. This
brings up the question: “How would it be traveling south without a Spanish
speaker on board?” My guess is that it happens several times a day.
Roberta has certainly added value, but I would bet that very few boats have Spanish
speaking crew aboard. As we’ve traveled further south, we’ve
encountered fewer and fewer English speakers, and Roberta has had more
translation work to do. But, as I said, I am positive that a boat with no one
on board who speaks Spanish would get by with only minor discomfort. While we were visiting
Guatemala, the “crew” was back on the boat hard at work. They
changed the oil in the main engines and the 25kw generator, washed and fueled
the boat, shopped for provisions, and more. Did we feel guilty? Well… yes….
One interesting side story
from their shopping expedition: They went to a nearby town, where they said
only one store was open. It identified itself as being affiliated with Walmart.
They said it was a reasonably decent store, but noted that there was an armed
guard on every aisle (even a female armed guard in the makeup section), and
that they received some strange looks from the locals. We’re pretty far
off the normal tourist track here at Barillas. That’s it for this
update! I’m off to the office to check out. Tomorrow morning we will run
off shore from Nicaragua, headed for Costa Rica! -Ken Williams Nordhavn68.com
Ken, WE
are still enjoying your logs - they are great. In your
last log you mentioned not being sure if you had an adverse current. I suggest
carefully calibrating your log instrument so that it accurately displays your
speed through the water and then looking at the difference between the GPS
speed over the bottom and your LOG speed through the water as an accurate
reflection of an aiding or adverse current. Regards,
John H +++ I don’t have
anything that gives me speed through the water. It’s funny that with all
my fancy electronics that I don’t, but I didn’t think to ask for
it. A good idea! I’ll have to add that to my list when the boat gets back
to Seattle. -Ken W ------------------- Ken, I
was reading about the North Atlantic record-setting boat and learned that they used
French military night vision/FLIR equipment whose performance was
extraordinary. In the US, we can't get current military gear, but overseas,
military gear seems to be available. What I don't know is whether it is
affordable to people not part of an exotic syndicate. Still, interesting. Ron +++ It would be
interesting to know what they have. My night vision has two modes; light
amplification and thermal. There has been no moon the past few nights, so
we’ve been running in pitch black. The light amplification mode, which is
usually fairly good, has been worthless. The thermal mode looks for temperature
differences. As such, I suspect its range is limited. I’m guessing that
it only picks up items less than 100 yards. It does work well in pitch black
conditions, but only on things that are very close. I’ll google to see
what else might be available if I order from outside the US. Thanks! -Ken W ------------------- +++ The following message was sent
by Sonaia, who with Chris Samuelson, crossed the Atlantic with us in 2004. Ken, Congratulations, you made
Tehuantepec! Everything you described about T-Pec we got it up, close and
personal. The seas, winds of 50 knots on the nose, green water all over the place...the
lot. Chris set on the helm chair for 7 hours NO STOP and we never hugged a shore
so tightly and we hope never need to do it again. Another difference we had
from you was that it was only the two of us on board and you can bet that THAT
was a learning curve for both of us. I am very glad that you have made it
safely. Hiring crew to come with you on this potentially very difficult piece
of water was a very smart move. Sonaia Hermida, Goleen +++ I
don’t even want to think about Roberta and I alone on the boat in the
Tehuantepec. And, when you did it, Chris and you were new to the boat!
Amazing.. The crew has
been awesome, and I strongly recommend them -- but I’m really looking
forward to a week from now when we put them ashore and Roberta and I have a
month alone, just anchoring around Costa Rica. Wish you were
here! (or, us there!) -Ken W ------------------ Hi Ken, glad to hear you made it into port
safely. I have been in the engine room over the last few days and I think
running a T off the transmission coolers and water injectors you could safely
run on one engine and utilize the running engine to cool the other. I
have also contemplated doing this off this off the waterpumps on the engines
incase of a water pump or impeller problem. I am by know means a mechanic and I
will ask our mechanic about this when he's down next. How many Cruise
Aire system are you running on board, we are considering adding them when we
leave the PNW? My wife loves the decorating your wife did, thanks that will
cost me a few dollars! Have a great trip and look forward to any updates. Safe
sailing. Shane and Wendy +++ What kind of boat do you
have? Did we meet at Roche Harbor? I hope to be sitting in my slip at Roche in
about two months! One thing is clear … Roche Harbor is one of the best
marinas in the world. While in Seattle I’m going to try to do something
on the engine cooling issue. -Ken W |
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