Baja Haha XXX

November 2024
  • Steve Broyles
San Diego to Cabo San Lucas, BCS on the Tao Neutrino Baca lagi
  • Steve Broyles

Senarai negara

  • Mexico Mexico
  • Amerika Syarikat Amerika Syarikat
Kategori
Pantai, Menyelam, Perjalanan kumpulan, Menumpang, Berpesta, Fotografi, Berlayar, Bersiar-siar
  • 5.6rbbatu perjalanan
Cara pengangkutan
  • Berlayar3,692kilometer
  • Penerbangan1,401kilometer
  • Berjalan-kilometer
  • Pendakian-kilometer
  • Basikal-kilometer
  • Motosikal-kilometer
  • Tuk Tuk-kilometer
  • Kereta-kilometer
  • Keretapi-kilometer
  • Bas-kilometer
  • Camper-kilometer
  • Karavan-kilometer
  • 4x4-kilometer
  • Berenang-kilometer
  • Mendayung-kilometer
  • Motobot-kilometer
  • Rumah bot-kilometer
  • Feri-kilometer
  • Kapal pesiar-kilometer
  • Kuda-kilometer
  • Bermain ski-kilometer
  • Tumpang-kilometer
  • Cable car-kilometer
  • Helikopter-kilometer
  • Kaki Ayam-kilometer
  • 18footprint
  • 14hari
  • 78gambar
  • 0suka
  • Our fisherman neighbors
    Boats and the townSunriseDonn at the helmPart of the fleet

    Underway Again

    9 November 2024, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F

    Saturday morning we arose with calm airs and glassy seas.

    We 'enjoyed' music from the local bar until fairly late at night, then some tremendous ranchera music from a nearby fishing boat as the workers loaded it predawn.

    My favorite: Obla-di Obla-da in Spanish with trumpets, accordians, and many guitars. It worked surprisingly well, actually.

    After the 8am VHF all-fleet check-in we wrapped up our preparations, weighed anchor, and waved goodbye to the fine folks of Bahia Tortuga.

    Being amongst 100+ cruising sailboats in full sunshine as we swarmed out of the mouth of the bay was inspiring. Truly a beautiful sight to behold. I don't think I captured it well but hopefully somebody had a drone flying. It's tough to be a photographer and a helmsmen at the same time!
    Baca lagi

  • Water

    9 November 2024, North Pacific Ocean ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    One of the luxuries we enjoy aboard the Tao Neutrino is a water maker (desal plant). It means we can shower and generally act as if we aren't afloat at sea in some ways.

    It does require maintenance, however, so I volunteered to change some wretchedly stinky filters while we were in calm water.

    Totally worth it.
    Baca lagi

  • Not All Easy

    9 November 2024, North Pacific Ocean ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    Donn (our captain) shared a good perspective on his blog

    https://medium.com/@donn.denman/is-this-the-rig…

    Sometimes 3 adults living in 36x10 ft isn't all agreements and happiness.Baca lagi

  • Sayin Hi to TorridonAnother gratuitous spinnaker/moon photo

    Downwind Moon Up

    9 November 2024, North Pacific Ocean ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    5knots over water with just a spinnaker while the sun drops and the moon pops.

    Life is good.

    The night watch at 3AM was full of meteors: I counted 15 in less than an hour, streaking gloriously across the brilliance of the Milky Way.

    I don't recall if these are perseids or leonids or ? Maybe I'll call them Birthdayids as I see them most years in the time just before I finish another lap.
    Baca lagi

  • Splash!

    10 November 2024, North Pacific Ocean ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    It had been about a week since I've been in the water. I think that the last time I've gone a week without being in a natural body of water or a swimming pool was probably sometime last November, in South Africa (because swimming with hippos is something you can do, Once).

    Anyhow
    It's a very-low wind day and the sea isa balmy 69°F (20ish °C). We were juuust about bestilled at 2.5kts so the rest of my crew very generously agreed to drop our limp foresail and keep an eye on me while I popped in to see if perchance we had a mahi underneath. We did not. Or we did, and I scared it away by jumping in. Either way: I got a chqnce to splash around in warm (for me) water that's a few hundred feet deep, very blue and clear, with no land in sight.

    Why that last bit is so pleasing to me is a complete mystery but I do absolutely love the sense of being entirely aquatic: just me and the Blue.

    I'm also pleased to confirm to myself that I can easily keep pace with the boat at ~1 knot (with fins). I'd like to try 2 or 3 and see how that goes. But also that doing a drop past a few yards is vaguely terrifying in that I can easily imagine the boat continuing on with me lost in the wake: yikes!

    The swim felt fantastic and I emerged well rinsed in both body and soul.
    Baca lagi

  • Fleet by nightAuthentic Pacifico boxes make me smileDonn inspecting the engineMorning fog

    Timing and Lighting

    12–14 Nov 2024, Mexico ⋅ 🌬 70 °F

    We had two long and gentle days of light (8-10kts) wind from Bahia Tortugas to Bahia Santa Maria.

    Now that I'm in a great spot for spearfishing with time to fish.... It's a zesty 15kt with gusts near 20.

    Phooey.

    On the plus side, the weather makes for spectacular sunrises/sets! And rest is good, too.

    Being in Bahia Santa Maria is restful and included recreation, minor repairs, and very welcome sleep.

    Frustratingly, the 2 nights there had a more or less constant 20 knot wind. Glorious sailing weather! Absolute crap for spearfishing, dinghy-ing, and not-that-ideal for beach frolics.

    Of course the morning of departure the wind was off and a heavy fog replaced it. Sigh.
    Baca lagi

  • Murphy, you rascal!

    13 November 2024, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 61 °F

    When we stopped in Bahia Tortugas one of the attractions was the fuel dock.

    It's a long ways from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas and having some diesel can help speed up the low-wind parts, recharge batteries, and most importantly allow navigation in anchoring/docking or when evading obstacles (like storms, for instance).

    So we were happy to pour ~25 gallons of our reserve fuel into the tank and send our spiffy yellow diesel cans in to the dock with our crewmember Zack for a refill.

    He hadn't heard the oft repeated reality that Bahia Tortugas doesn't accept credit cards (they don't, anywhere) and so had to run back to the boat while the cans were getting filled, to get cash. <Insert ominous tone> Leaving the cans unattended </tone>

    None of us really noticed that the final cash price was lower than what we had expected, or at least didn't have an appropriate alarm response. Surely Zack, who never let's an opportunity pass to remind us of his vast martime experience, was capable of buying fuel. Probably just a language mismatch.

    So we lashed out happy yellow (prominantly marked "Diesel") cans to the rail and headed to Bahia Santa Maria.

    We burned some fuel along the way, as one does.

    After two nights in B. Santa Maria we woke early to fuel up and head south.

    Upon starting the transfer pump Zack (to his great credit) noticed that the fuel was oddly clear vs. pinkish and *stopped the pump*

    Thank goodness for that important moment/decision. This was a ligit critical turning point in the story.

    I'll skip to the punchline: we got 25 gallons of gasoline. The sensation we had is best summarized by "Fuck" (with a downward intonation resonant of dismay and frustration).

    Obviously it is the fuel dock's fault and anyone could've made the mistake of not double checking (in fact all three of us did NOT double check). But the mistake remains very inconvenient and a testament to Murphy's presence on Sea as well as Land (and south of the border, too. Aside: does Mexico have a name for Murphy? Worthy of learning)

    And most of the fleet was already out of the Bay by the time we had checked all the cans (and double checked them, because: Disbelief).

    Luckily, and in the ancient tradition of maritime mutual aid, The Second Wind came to help us. We traded 5 gal of useless-to-us gasoline for 5 gal of precious diesel.

    We showered them with gratitude and almost all of our stores of chocolate. I miss the chocolate more than I thought I would, to be honest.

    Thus greatly reassured - 5 gal gets us about 50 nautical miles at a fairly fast 5kts and we had more than 10gal in the tank with about 150 total nm to travel, presumably under sail for at least _some_ of the journey, we set forth.

    Good lessons were presented in this experience. I am certain that this scenario will not play out in my future experience as I'll surely tell the tale to everyone headed to the fuel dock, forever (sorry in advance, my future crewmates!).

    Onward! Adventure!
    Baca lagi

  • Dinghy on walkabout
    Tied to a random mooring buoy near the sleeping sailboatsIn this pic I'm completely drenched from going forward to fix something but still having fun!

    Beating Up Past Cerralvo

    17 November 2024, Mexico ⋅ 🌬 68 °F

    51 so far is rough

    4am wakeup
    0445 departure
    We found a wandering dinghy 2 miles offshore and towed it back into a choppy mess of black heaving sea and wind in our teeth. It was the only decent thing to do but consumed 90 minutes and no little bit of effort. The dinghy owner radioed us as we re-departed and showered us with gratitude, and it's notable how much that helps make the effort feel less heavy.

    The "10-15" mph wind forecast was wildly inaccurate. We have been closer to 20 all day, with gusts over 25. Bumpy too. But Tao Neutrino handles well and it's sunny/warm. The passing views are beautiful to enjoy - desert landscape plunges down steep temporarily green hills directly to a cerulean sea.

    We are likely adjusting our destination to avoid sailing past nightfall into an unfamiliar harbor, but it'll depend on if the wind shifts and by how much. Such is sailing! Weather and Tide wait for no man.
    Baca lagi