Thursday, December 20, 2012

San Juanico (Scorpion Bay)

Bahia San Juanico - Scorpion Bay
12/5 
After a long but fast nightsail we pulled in Bahia San Juanico “scorpion bay” ahead of schedule at 5:00AM. We decided not to pull in and drop anchor until at least the break of dawn. Because this place is a famous surf spot with 6 points of a phenomenon of a wave I was worried about shoals and possible breakers. So we cut it wide and did a couple big circles yelling at the sky. It worked and the sun came up. What a beautiful harbor. The biggest and baddest one yet! The way the waves roll in here is something you can not explain, and photographs barely do any justice. If you travel to baja, this is a must go destination. The town has a large percentage of white people from California. A lot of local surfers. It’s a Company based town, they all share power which is turned off in the afternoon to conserve. They also have a community garden. I would love to find somewhere like this to live but way farther south and with a left point break instead of a right! We went to shore and were recommended to eat/use wifi at El Burro. While we’re sitting there a british woman walks up to us, “are you michael, michael, and claire?” “uhhhh ya?? Do we know you?” and at first I thought ‘sweet dreams’ had sent her because something was wrong with our boat. But it turns out our friends Marc and Colleen had met her in El Salvador last year. Well they were watching our Spot tracker and saw we were almost to Scorpion Bay, where Robin (our new british traveling friend) is housesitting. She sat and chatted with us for a while. Oh by the way if you haven’t figured it out ‘sweet dreams’ is convoying with us at the same pace. We’ve decided to keep it slow and relaxing lately. Enjoy the scenes and culture without beating the hell out of ourselves for 3 days straight on the water. 12/7 we’re still in Scorpion bay. I longboarded 2nd point and got a few realllly long rides, just under a minute long. And this is a ‘no good swell’ time for them. I also skimmed at 1st point which was pretty fun backside liners and I think at the tip of the point there could easily be a sider with the correct swell (south swell, sometimes west will do). Like I said these photographs do this place NO justice. When it’s pumping you can easily get a ride from 3rd or 4th point all the way to the panga beach past 1st point. And I’ve heard rumors of a few people riding the entire 6 points. Which would be like 4 miles or something. I of course believe them. We saw Robin out for a walk on the beach and started talking about dinner plans, we invited her to the boat but she lured us in with her beautiful house and free internet. We had just went to the local farmers market that morning and bought a bunch of fresh produce, a whole chicken, and my dad caught over two dozen spanish mackerel. So we went back to shore and delivered some fish to people who had helped us out with some problems we had with our dinghy outboard and headed over to Robin’s house. We had a feast and updated a backed up blog post. 12/8 Sara and John swam over from ‘sweet dreams’ with their scuba gear and started scrubbing the bottom of our boat. Claire and I made apple cinnamon rice cakes for breakfast with last nights leftover brown rice. Then we hopped in with our flippers and helped finish scrubbing. Our new paint job from Easter is holding up great! 12/9 we decided to dinghy over to the shrimp boats and try and haggle for some. We’ve heard of some impressive barters and thought we’d give it a shot. And boy did we... First off the boat was a beautiful scene. Full wooden deck with piles of different size shrimp, heads on, heads off, deveined, etc. With plenty of crew and their wicker baskets and small wooden stools sorting and doing their thing. So, we ended up trading... A pack of matches, a used lighter, a used deck of cards, a t-shirt, 2 condoms, and a pair of claire’s pink daisy dukes for a 5 gallon bucket of fresh, still kickin’ head-on! (con cabezas) That night was jon’s birthday (from ‘sweet dreams’) so we packed up and headed to a secluded beach for another camp out. This time we were smart and brought more blankets and I made a separate mini fire next to our tent to keep us warmer. Next morning we took a walk down past the arroyo and found some sweet shells and a pretty impressive surf break. 12/11 we pulled up the anchor at 11:00AM with 95 miles to Bahia Santa Maria ahead of us. ‘Sweet Dreams’ was planning on being right behind us but they radioed saying they were having engine problems and we saw them behind us limping around. Then they radioed saying they had a small electrical fire and decided to hold off on their departure and stay back to sort things out. Also, last night our radar reflector halyard snapped from chaffing and fell with a loud bang as it bounced down all the rigging and slammed the deck. In the morning, I hoisted Claire up to the spreaders in the bosun’s chair. So proud of her! She ran the halyard back through it’s little holes and down so we could re-tie it all back together. We left with light winds on the bow so no sails up for a little while. Got up to a good sail in the afternoon. Dropped the mainsail at 16:00. Left the jib up and kept good speed. In the night you could hear the dolphins clicking and squealing under the boat as they followed with us. 19:30 with 50 miles left to Maria. 23:00 wind switched off the land, good speed, 5-6kts through the night. Warm wind. 7:40 five miles left to go. Beautiful sunrise. Took the jib down so we could head straight into the wind and the bay without being hassled off course.


caught one while i was taking the photo. nonstop, i think he caught the whole school of spanish mackerel.


scrubbin


first flounder of the trip


john, espi, sara, claire, and michael

splendid isolation and sweet dreams

sara and claire talking about girl stuff

christina and noah slack lining

gathering for our bonfire

christina and sara


notice everyone has their eyes locked to their bacon wrapped hotdogs



constellations = our tv

the mackerel bones pulled right out and the skin held the flesh. 
cooked over the fire and simple and to eat.

our campsite nestled between knobby sand dunes and a separate fire to keep us warm

i thought this looked like a tribal head with crazy hair

they had blue crabs. this guy was running around doing the cha-cha pinch


almost stepped on this




you know youre getting to tropical waters when you find weird shells


arroyo







making chinese food. rice, sesame broccoli, lobster, shrimp, pork, orange soy glaze


we make our own bread now. SUPER easy and delicious.


thats my girl. straight south. skillet n shrimps






nice mug








ron coming in under sail


pfffffffffffff



i got a few of these on my 9ft. longboard that lasted at least a minute.
i rode one from the point all the way to shore whistling the entire time, only person out. paradise.


shrimpers we traded with






lookin for boat parts



skim liners


step on skim liner






local farmers market


working on the outboard

noah slacklining


we helped ron fix his outboard too. 
a caviar jar lid and some spongebob duct tape and he was back in business.

ron stepped on and did the whole thing first try!


conversing about life


ron's 'mar de luz' with the sunset






dad and robin

claire on the phone and cooking dinner




yawn

ahhhh nap



teaching pina the secret recipes

grass fed t-bone. a big to do in the states, nothing special here.



:)

camping in style





6 comments:

  1. beautiful views , great food

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  2. That siamese pointy clam thing is weird! That beach is crazy with the multiple wave points coming in one after another. The panoramic shots and the sunrise(I think? sunset?) are amazing! Really beautiful sights you're seeing! Glad to see all the fresh fruits and veggies so you don't get scurvy! And Claire's baking talents :) Pina's yawning face pic is cute!

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  3. just checking if this comes through..xoxo

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  4. i did it ...some timea i amaze myself.....lol....i am loving the adventurous photos, friends , foods, and sailing along....looks like a ways to get to your destination......glad to be able to stay in touch,....Merry Christmas Lil Michael, Claire and Pina....Happy Sailing...love and miss ya ...stay safe and enjoy....it just has to be an amazing trip...

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  5. This was my favorite of places we stopped at..Where else can you trade 15 minutes of snorkel,mask and fin use to help out a local get a rope out of the wheel of a shrimp boat..reward..3 Langosta's/Lobster.Next a pair of Claire's pink Daisy Dukes,T shirt,pack of gum,lighter,2 condoms= 1/2 bucket of shrimp.Michael also traded 3 AAA& 3 AA batteries for 4 lobster at the next port.

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  6. He does look like a tribal head! My mom would have brought it home!

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