Monday, February 25, 2008

Some Pictures...

Finally, since we've got "broadband", I've uploaded a few pictures. Proof for the fish stories... Click for a larger view.













- Maurice
s/v Océalys
LaPaz, Baja California Sur

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Estamos en La Paz

Estamos en La Paz!

We are now in La Paz where we have to refill on food and other stuff. We found a beautiful bay - Puerto Ballandra, right before La Paz - full of brillant, sandy beaches so we stayed few days there before going to the big (!) city. We spent few days at Cabo on our way up. The coast is striking but what a zoo!!!! The boat traffic is insane and the prices are through the roof. However, the kids loved the beach because - I am quoting them - "there were a lot of people" !

We are all happy to finally get some warm and sunny weather on the Sea of Cortez. We are now in T-shirt and shorts. The sea life is amazing: lots of whales and dolphins. The kids became
experts at spotting them. Fishing is excellent and we got some huge fish: a 25 pound red snapper that Maurice got spear fishing and which was delicious; and a 42 pound yellow tail we got trolling with a fishing line! The kids are really excited when it comes to fishing. Massimo is getting pretty good at choosing the right lures.

Overall, life is good and we love our boat! She is strong and very comfortable.

Some of you asked what was a typical day on board. In fact, time is an interesting notion on board: our days are organized around eating times and sleeping time! Everything else depends on the weather. I guess we are back to the basics of life: good food, good weather and
when at least one of these conditions are fulfilled some love!! If we are sailing, we start our day pretty early to leave the anchorage as soon as possible. Then, we eat our breakfast and we start School. Usually, it lasts 2 or 3 hours. Of course if Maurice needs me for a maneuver I drop everything and go help him. Massimo and Annabelle are both doing very well at school and they are making a lot of progress. Massimo is strating to read and he likes the French
program. I do both the English and the French curriculums. However, I have to be on top of Massimo constantly to stay focused.... oh well, at least, if I don't feel like teaching one day I just say that it is the weekend.
Then, the kids play together for a while. They mainly invent games and play Legos. One of the favorites of the moment is that they pretend to be on a boat and there is an emergency, meaning the boat is sinking!
They take all the sleeping bags they can find to make the boat and they scream orders to save it...

After lunch, it is nap time / DVD time.... everybody relaxes. Usually, we arrive at the next anchorage in the afternoon that way we have some time to start exploring the new spot. All that depends if the weather is good or not. If we are not sailing, we go to the beach or we go spear fishing with the dinghy. We have also been eating a lot of lobsters that we
exchange against toys / sweets / cokes and other "luxury" goods with the local fishermen.
As we start our day with the sunrise, we finish it with the sunset and everybody is ready to go to bed at 7pm!
So far, we only had to sail twice during the night. The routine is then very different. The kids go to sleep and we start our watches. Maurice starts at 6 pm and we take 4 hour watches. At first, I was apprehensive about the night sailing but then the second night went very well. I only saw one boat compared to the previous sailing night when I saw 1 cruise ship, 1 cargo and several fishing boats; way too much traffic for me! Also, a lot of dolphins came to keep me company
and it was amazing. During the night, you see them very well underwater with the phosphorescence. They look like glowing green torpedoes.
Anyway, time flies by and it feels like we left yesterday. It has already been more than a month.

Another important point in our adventure, we finally tried our washing machine and I love it! At first, Maurice wanted to get rid of it to save some weight. I almost agreed but thankfully, Isabella, my mother- in-law told me to keep it and see how it worked out. I am so grateful to her that she gave me that advice. It saves me so much work. The washing machine works very well and we will surely keep it!

Next, we'll go up to Loreto where our friends Candace, Nathan and their kids will meet us for a week on board. Then, Isabella and Ugo will join us in Loreto come back down with us to La Paz. We are all very excited to get some visits! We haven't met too many people on
other boats yet. Once we met a couple on another boat, Massimo and Annabelle were so happy to talk to new afces and they kept asking when our "friends form the other boat" will come back to see us.

We are still planning to cross the Pacific to the Marquesas at the beginning of April. Stay tuned.

et maintenant en francais:

Nous sommes arrives a La Paz! C'est une des plus grandes villes de Baja California - moins grand que La Rochelle - et egalement le repere des "naviguateurs". Les marinas sont pleines et les gens diverses. Des notre arrivee, un zodiac est venu nous accoster. C'etait des francais qui avait repere notre Catana et son drapeau francais et venaient nous saluer! Avant d'arriver dans la "grande" ville, nous avons trouve une superbe petite Baie - Puerto Ballandra -avec ses plages christallines de sable fin. A la vue de ce tableau, nous avons jete l'ancre et sommes restes quelques jours. Maurice a du plonger pour changer les anodes de l'helice et j'ai emmene les enfants en expedition sur ces plages magnifiques. Cela valait le detour.En descendant la cote, nous nous sommes egalement arrete a Cabo mais seulement quelques jours. Les paysages sont extraordinaires mais c'est un vrai zoo touristique! Je n'ai jamais vu une circulation de bateaux
aussi intense. Les enfants ont eux adore car, et je les quote, " il y avait plein de gens sur la plage" !!

Nous avons maintenant notre petit rythme et les journees defilent a toute allure.
Lorsque nous naviguons, nous levons l'ancre assez tot histoire d'arriver au prochain mouillage encore en plein jour. Apres le petit- dej, commence L'ecole pour les enfants si le temps le permet. bien sur, si Maurice a besoin de moi pour une manoeuvre, l'ecole s'interromp et reprend plus tard. Cela dure en general 2 a 3 heures dependant de l'humeur de tout le monde! Je fait le cursus anglais et francais avec le Cned. Massimo aime bien le programme francais et tous les 2 parlent de plus en plus francais meme si ils se parlent toujours
anglais entre eux. Ils font beaucoup de progres. Massimo commence a lire en anglais.
Puis les enfants sont livres a eux-memes et jouent ensemble. Pour le moment, leur principales occupations sont les jeux de role et les Legos. Leur jeu de role favoris est de pretendre qu'ils sont dans un bateau et qu'ils sont en train de couler!!! Ils ramassent tous les duvets qu'ils trouvent a bord pour faire le bateau et ils crient des ordres a leurs peluches pour evacuer le navire en ordre!!! Si nous ne naviguons pas, nous partons a la plage ou a la peche avec le zodiac au moins une fois dans la journee. Nous nous levons et couchons comme les poules: tout le monde est pret a se lover dans son lit a 7 heure. Nous sommes en general pas mal creves de nos journees.

Y a pas a dire, le grand air ca fatigue! Lorque nous devons naviguer de nuit, nos quarts commencent a 6 heure et durent 4 heures. Maurice prend le premier. Au debut, j'apprehendait les quarts de nuit surtout que la premiere nuit, la circulation etait assez intense: cruise ship, cargo et pecheurs. Beaucoup trop pour moi! La seconde nuit a ete beaucoup plus sereine d'autant plus que des dauphins sont venus me tenir compagnie et c'etait extraordinaire de
les voir nager sous l'eau grace a la fluorescence.

Je reserve un paragraphe special a la peche, histoire de faire baver certains lecteurs/lectrices - notamment mon frere! Au debut, nous attrapions essentiellement des bonites que Maurice
n'aime pas tellement alors nous les relachions, au grand regret de Massimo! Lorsque la temperature a monte, Maurice a commence a plonger en libre. A sa premiere plongee, apres 20 minutes, il nous a sorti un Red Snapper de 25 pounds - 12 kilos! Quand Maurice plonge, je le suis en zodiac avec les enfants et ce jour la, ils furent legerement apeures du monstre qui leur arrivait sur les pieds. Le Red Snapper est un poisson delicieux et nous l'avons partage avec
un des autres bateaux qui etait au meme mouillage. Les enfants etaient ravis de voir debarquer de nouvelles tetes a bord. Ils n'arretaient pas de parler et de raonter leur vie. Plusieurs jours apres, Massimo me demandait encore quand "nos nouveaux amis" allaient revenir nous
rendre visite. Deux jours apres, nous avons attrape a la traine un Yellow Tail de 42
pounds ou 20 kilos: une grosse bete. La aussi, nous avons partage la prise avec d'autres bateaux. Bref, je suis bien contente d'avoir un congel!

La vie marine est ici incroyable et nous voyons beaucoup de baleines et de dauphins. Les enfants sont devenus experts a reperer le jet des baleines.

Voila, en gros tout va bein et nous apprecions pleinement notre nouvelle vie. Ocealys est un super bateau, solide et comfortable, elle nous mene ou nous le voulons.

Nous remonterons jusqu'a Loreto ou ous allons commencer a recevoir de la visite. Nous sommes tous tres contents de revoir nos amis et famille.

Stay tuned pour le prochain episode!

Sophie, Maurice, Massimo et Annabelle

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Now We're Cruising

Yesterday we completed our first overnight crossing. We left Bahia
Asuncion and about 190 miles later arrived here at Bahia Santa Maria,
just north of Bahia Magdalena on the Western Baja coast. This is our
last stop before arriving in Cabo San Lucas. It's a huge bay lined
with a 9 mile beach. We're mounting an expedition to go explore it
this morning if we can figure out a way to get the dinghy safely
across the surf breaking on the shore...

So far the anchorages have been getting better and better, the weather
a little sweeter- not so cold anymore. We had a memorable stop at Isla
Cedros. The anchorage was exposed and rolly, but the island is
beautiful and we were just a couple of hundred yards off a series of
small, rocky beaches that were home to Sea Lion and Elephant Seal
rookeries. There were lots of baby Elephant Seals there and between
the expected honking of the adults they would scream and wail in an
astonishingly human voice. At night it sounded like there was an
asylum ashore full of crazies screaming their heads off. It was so
weird it was more funny than annoying.

A local fisherman came by and gave us 8 lobsters for some granola
bars, a plastic truck
and 4 cans of Coke. Needless to say we had a right feast, and the kids
decided whether or not they like lobster (one does, the other doesn't).

Then, in the middle of the night I woke up with a terrified start. The
kind you have when you think there's been an earthquake, or you've had
too much Thai food for dinner. I jumped out of our bunk and heard it
again- a great hammering on the bottom of the hull. Holy shit! We're
aground... I scrambled on deck and all around could hear loud
breathing. A quick look and we obviously weren't any nearer to shore
than we should be, but we were surrounded by young Sea Lions playing
with the boat. Somehow they found great entertainment in going under
the boat and blowing huge bubbles- which, when they hit the hull, make
the aforementioned thunderous scary noise. They made up for the
indiscretion the next morning when, as we were pulling out of the bay,
they swam within inches of the transoms and the kids got to wave
goodbye to them while looking right in their eyes.

We're still easing into the rhythm and activities that make up our
new, very different life. Sophie's getting the kids used to a regular
school schedule. Annabelle is taking to it, Massimo, like me when I
was his age, is not. It's a question of threats, bribes and brute
force to get him to concentrate, but even with that, he's progressing
faster than he would at school. In a couple of months he'll be
reading. He caught his first fish, and he's learning how to steer the
outboard on the dinghy. Pretty sure they don't cover that in
Kindergarten.

We're still concentrating on getting South, so we spend most of our
time at sea, although we're starting to slow down a bit and enjoying
the scenery. I still have projects on the boat- some new and some
maintenance. The other day during a passage one of the engines sprang
a major oil leak and sprayed it's entire contents all over the machine
room and into the bilge. Luckily it was a 15 minute fix, and several
hours of cleaning up... Otherwise Océalys is doing well. We just
logged our first 1000 miles and we continue remarking what a great
boat she is.

Tomorrow we leave for another overnight trip to Cabo. We will have to
check in with the Port Captain there, buy a few groceries, then we'll
head up towards LaPaz. Once we round the corner into the Sea of Cortez
we'll be doing some some diving and spearfishing, and hopefully
settling more into the cruising rhythm.

You can always send us email at ocealys *at* ocens *dot* net (written
out to avoid spam bots- replace with "@" and "." And it is spelled
"ocens", not "oceans").
Bandwith is very expensive for us, so please don't send images, HTML
emails, or enclosures. Messages larger than 50K will not come through.

We'll post some images as soon as we have Internet access...

-maurice

s/v OCÉALYS
via SATCOM