8/20/04 – A Familiar Four Days. We arrived in Boqueron, Puerto Rico early this Thursday morning. Our intention was to stay in Boqueron long enough to take care of business, check in with U.S. Customs and Immigration, fill up our propane tanks, shop for provisions and do a few loads of laundry.
A trip to Mayaguez was required to check in with Customs. According to a few guidebooks we had read, as U.S. citizens we were only required to call into a toll-free number upon returning to U.S. waters. I dutifully called into the Mayaguez U.S. Customs office and was told we all needed to travel to the office to present ourselves, our passports and our vessel documentation to the Customs and Immigration officials for review. I was a little perplexed by this and made another call to the San Juan office to reconfirm the information I received from the Mayaguez office. Sure enough, this was the new policy and we would be required to make the 30 minute trip to Mayaquez by Publico.
Publicos or “public cars” are Puerto Rico’s car service and the only way to get between most metropolitan areas and towns. These are mostly eight passenger vans and are shared by up to eight people. The more people that share the van, the cheaper the ride. Ron hired Raul’s Publico to take us to Mayaguez Saturday to meet with the Immigration officials. We were a bit dubious that the office would be open on a Saturday, but Raul had assured us it would be, so we all took the ride to Mayaguez.
Like other Puerto Ricans we were to meet, Raul had spent 40 years living and working in the Bronx, at Columbia University. That explained why he gave me a funny look the first few times I thanked him in Spanish. But I guess I should have been tipped off by the Spanish-with-a-Bronx accent he had.
We shared our Publico ride with Bruce, another cruiser. Haley recognized Bruce from Luperon. She said she had seen him on the docks at the marina. It turns out Bruce was in Luperon and had arrived in Boqueron the same day we did. Bruce had sailed straight from Luperon in two and one-half days. A Canadian and former cruiser, he had taken a job in Santiago, DR, as a chiropractor where he lived for three years with his wife and three boys. They had returned to Canada while Bruce moved the boat farther south and east (his family doesn’t like the long hauls) and would join him in November to begin another year of cruising.
When Ron learned Bruce was a chiropractor, he asked about a shoulder problem he was having. Bruce deemed the problem as “easy to fix” and made a house call to Irie later in the day. Sure enough, after a few disturbing “cracks,” Ron was readjusted and his shoulder has been fine ever since.
Mayaguez is a large industrial city and the official port of entry for the western end of Puerto Rico. It is probably where our Cuban friends from Mona Island were taken to be processed by U.S. Immigration officials as illegal aliens. It is also has large canning plants where vast amounts of foods, especially fish and tomatoes, are canned and exported all over the world. Therefore, I suspect we will be filling our holds with tuna and tomatoes, along with other canned goods, before we leave Puerto Rico.
It was fairly easy to predict that the offices were closed and we had taken a long, hot ride in Raul’s van for nothing. To make up for it, he dropped us off at a large, modern supermarket where we shopped for American groceries to our hearts’ content. I bought steaks, and that night we had what I called our “Welcome Back to America” dinner of steak, mashed potatoes and salad.
Back in Boqueron, we spent most of our days unwinding and exploring the town. Boqueron was what I called “Bridgeport, CT – with a nicer beach.” The beach was actually quite nice, with a half mile, crescent-shaped, palm-tree lined, white sand beach. Bridgeport was home to many Puerto Ricans, at least when I was living there in the 1960s and 1970s. Ron and I walked the beach one morning to find Puerto Rican families having picnics with the men standing up to their waists in water with Medalla beers in their hands. It was probably more reminiscent of Sherwood Island State Park in Westport, CT, where I remember going as a child and seeing the Puerto Rican families gathering for huge weekend picnics at the shelters along the shore.
The town of Boqueron itself has narrow, winding streets lined with restaurants, bars and street vendors selling clams and oysters on the half shell and Medalla beers, of course. Medalla is Puerto Rico’s version of Miller Lite. It’s not that bad, and at a buck for a 10 ounce can, it’s a deal. Boqueron heats up quite a bit on a weekend night. Some call it a tropical hot spot, the Latin version of Key West or Fire Island. I’ve been to both and I would say it falls short of either, at least in the off season.
Haley and I spent one morning in the coin Laundromat where we were entertained and serenaded by an older Puerto Rican man doing his laundry. We didn’t get his name, but we did get his life story. He had immigrated to Puerto Rico from Spain in the mid-seventies and fell in love with San Juan because it looked so much like a European city. After finishing his university studies in San Juan, he went to the Bronx and worked there until his retirement several years ago. He said he left all of his friends and family behind in the Bronx when he came back to his beloved Puerto Rico, and when he misses everybody “too much,” he goes back for a visit. He loves America, he said, and then he sang us a few stanzas of “God Bless America” and remarked how he loved to sing this song anytime he was at Yankee Stadium. Our laundry was folded and it was time to go. He shook my hand warmly and told me to “have a good life, darling – you only get to live once.”
Which is a good point, and why we decided to take this trip in the first place. It’s easy to drift through the day-to-day routine without thinking much about the end game. And then wake up to find out life has zoomed by. So far, we have found the trip to provide us with a real adventure. And life has been slowed down and we have been given the chance to spend some quality time together. Life slows down rather naturally when you’re traveling on a sailboat, and only making six knots.
We arrived back at the boat right before it began raining. Rain. Not something we had seen, except for a few squalls while underway, for more than five minutes at a time. It looked like this time we were in for a few hours of steady rain. At least that’s what the NOAA weather channel on our VHF radio had told us. Another perk for being back in U.S. waters. We had actually started hearing these reports in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. They were broadcasted continually in Spanish and English. We would still rely on the daily downloads of the Caribbean Offshore Marine Forecast from the National Weather Service in Miami, FL, for planning our passages.
The rain began to fall heavily and steadily. This was our big chance. I had read a lot about how it was possible to fill your tanks with rain water if you had a good rain catchment system. Rain catchment had become a bit of an obsession with me, and a bit of a joke with the rest of the family. A half inch of rainfall drops nearly 100 gallons of water on the deck of a 35-foot boat, one book said. But it had hardly rained in the two months we had been cruising. And you have to have an adequate way to catch all of this water, and we had none – except two very determined young girls. And that proved to be enough. Nina had been afraid of rainstorms, especially any that involved even a hint of thunder. But her excitement over the prospect of collecting gobs of fresh water helped her to overcome her fears. Before I knew it, there she was, donning her slicker and swim goggles and rushing to the topside of the boat. She and Haley held buckets under the flow of water from the top deck gutters to catch a whopping fifteen gallons of water. Hardly the one hundred we had dreamed of, but enough to suit our needs. We all frolicked in the rain and broke out the deck soap and brushes and gave Irie the topside cleaning she deserved after delivering all of us safely to Puerto Rico.
(We decided to put off checking in with U.S. Customs and Immigrations until our arrival in Ponce.)
8/24/04 – Oil Slick Calm. Our departure from Boqueron would be later in the afternoon. Another relief. I was not a big fan of the early morning departures. The malaise of the morning always turned into just plain queasy for me, and I would often find myself lying down before too long. I had tried everything; coffee, no coffee, full breakfast, light breakfast. Nothing seemed to work, except getting to the afternoon.
Haley and I returned to do one last load of laundry at the coin Laundromat in town. Our clothes had come out so squeaky clean, we decided to empty the boat and give nearly everything a good wash. The water was definitely better in Puerto Rico than it had been in the Dominican Republic. The Dominican Republic’s water was often brackish and anemic in its flow. We suspect that water will be scarce again on many of the smaller islands in the Eastern Caribbean. As we shared our mango smoothie, we took a moment to appreciate the bounty of water as it filled the washing machine tub.
We weighed anchor late that afternoon to our first stop, Cabo Rojo, or “Red Cape.” A short five-mile sail in oil slick calm conditions. This would be the first of many short hops along the southern coast of Puerto Rico. Except for this one, most of our short hops would occur in the early morning hours. Unlike the larger, more mountainous island of the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico does not provide you with much of a night lee, or calming of winds during the nighttime hours. Therefore, to avoid taking the trade winds on the nose, you must travel mostly in the early morning hours, before the trade winds pipe up.
We anchored under the lighthouse at Cabo Rojo. Built in 1881, the Red Cape Lighthouse stood majestically above us on the red-hued limestone cliffs, like a monument to all of the mariners who have navigated the Mona Passage between the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico.
We were disappointed to see dinner-plate-size jellyfish in the water. These were the first jellyfish we had seen on our trip and it foiled our chance to jump in and take a pre-dinner swim.
As the sun set, we noticed we were dragging on our anchor a little. We had a feeling the anchorage holding was questionable when we first tried to set our anchor and we hadn’t felt it stick. By nightfall, we had recognized we had dragged a lot and we decided we needed to up anchor and try it again. We struggled for an hour setting and resetting, until we felt we had it right. I became frustrated over the whole exercise. Ron’s said you should expect that from time to time you will drag on your anchor and will have to reset it. It is all a part of the challenge of being out here and nothing to get worked up over. We finished up our anchoring and found the girls fast asleep in the main salon. Now, that’s the relaxed attitude Ron was talking about!
I guess our anchor was really well set, because the next morning we had a hard time weighing it.
8/25/04 – Bioluminescence? Our next hop was to La Parguera, a funky little seaside town built inside the protection of extensive coral reefs and mangrove canals, bays and islands or cays (pronounced “keys”). Colorful clapboard cottages with big wraparound porches built on stilts in the water lined the canals where Puerto Rican families spend their weekends.
That evening, we decided to venture out in the dark to check out La Parguera’s biggest tourist attraction, Bahia Fosforescente or Bioluminescent Bay. Tour boats regularly make a nighttime trip in glass bottom boats through narrow canals to these bioluminescent bays to view the microorganism “light show.” We made the trip in our dinghy, and navigated there with the help of our hand-held GPS. Haley manned the flashlight at the bow and Nina assumed her usual role of “safety officer,” shouting out reminders such as “Dad, look out for the buoys” . . . ”Dad, any boats ahead?”. . . “Who’s got the dinghy painter?” The dinghy painter is the rope attached to the front of your dinghy that you use to tie it off to a dock or to your boat. Nina begins every dinghy ride by asking, “Who’s got the dinghy painter?” We’ve all come to expect it and if she forgets to say it (this is rare), I often find myself saying, “I have the painter,” anyway.
Two miles and several tour boat wakes later, we were in the bay, but the bioluminescent organisms were NOT. Although fruitless in terms of the lack of natural wonder at our destination, the journey, a long, fast, dark, bumpy dinghy ride had marked an important milestone in our adventure. How long we had come from our short, slow, day-lit, and smooth dinghy rides in George Town that were always “too fast,” “too bumpy” and “too splashy.” On our ride back from the bay, both Haley and Nina hung on with one hand and excitedly read our speed off the GPS – 12 knots.
The next morning, Ron took advantage of the windy conditions in the anchorage and wind surfed. He had rigged his sail in Boqueron, and it had traveled with us, lashed to the trampolines. I finally made contact with a contractor in Fajardo, PR. They were available to haul and bottom paint Irie, but not until September 27. During the course of my conversation with the contractor, she made mention of a new storm, Hurricane Frances. We had gotten away from listening to the longer range forecasts and hadn’t heard of yet another hurricane brewing in the Atlantic. That evening, we downloaded the Caribbean Offshore Marine Forecast from our online weather service. It did indeed talk about Hurricane Frances and showed a projected track east of Puerto Rico. Of course, it was still early and the projected track was close enough to Puerto Rico to warrant a serious discussion about where we would go in case the storm came our way.
La Parguera’s bioluminescent bays were also very good hurricane holes. But we had heard they get pretty chock full of the boats moved from the local marina during storms. We were also on our way to Puerto Rico’s best hurricane hole, Salinas. Salinas was about 50 miles east of our current location. If we had to, we could travel east into the trade winds and get to the Salinas hurricane holes in 10 or 12 hours. We made a decision to continue east to our next stop, Guanica and Gilligan’s Island, and turn around and come back to the bioluminescent bays of La Paguera if we found ourselves threatened by Hurricane Frances.
8/27/04 – Marianne or Ginger? A “three hour cruise” landed us at our next anchorage near a few small cays behind Punta Ballena (Whale Point). The largest of these was a mangrove and sand cay called “Gilligan’s Island.” It was named Gilligan’s Island back in the 1970s by locals who thought it resembled the island from the popular TV show of the same name. We dropped our hook in a well-protected spot near the entrance to the beach at Punta Ballena. A small cut that leads out to a coral break and the ocean allows us to hear, but not to feel, the breaking waves on the reef. This makes our already delightful anchorage even more enjoyable.
Gilligan’s Island is part of a United Nations Biosphere reserve in Guanica, PR. The rest of the dry scrub forest reserve lies on the hillsides above the mangrove cays and makes up more than 1,000 acres of public-use land. The forest is a microclimate of sorts which can be attributed to the Central Mountains. This mountain range exhausts most tropical systems before they are delivered to the area and thus rainfall is limited to less than 35 inches a year. The consequences of this arid climate could be seen in the large varieties of cactus and stunted, twisted trees growing on the hillsides above our anchorage.
Except for the mob scene of bathers on the weekend, we had the anchorage and all of the canals and lagoons around the mangrove cars to ourselves. There was a public beach on Gilligan’s Island and it was serviced by a ferry that ran only on the weekends. Sometimes, the small, colorful ferry would pass by Irie, just to have a look. We visited Gilligan’s on a weekend day and found it to be very crowded, but had fun snorkeling the mangrove canals to the ocean. All kinds of tropical fish darted in and out of the thick mangrove tree roots as we floated effortlessly under the canopy of the mangroves on a loop from the bay to the ocean.
The mangrove bays and canals of Guanica were ideal for ocean kayaking. All of us, including the girls, were out a few times a day, exploring the canals and islands around our anchorage. One afternoon, as I was practicing my paddling, a man and a woman in a motorboat came by and began circumnavigating Irie. After learning they were interested in purchasing a catamaran in the next year, we invited them aboard to take a look at Irie. And what a coincidence that Irie will be up for sale next year. Jacques liked her so much he asked us to take his email and phone number and contact us when we were ready to sell her.
As it turned out, Jacques lived in one of the 20 homes built on the hillside high above our anchorage in a house that we admired since our arrival in Guanica. His was a magnificent three-story gable roof house with wood shuttered windows and doors and wraparound decks. We visited him at his beautiful home a few days later and enjoyed wine and cheese on his coral tiled deck overlooking our anchorage. In keeping with our “Small World” theme, Jacques was an architect (it should be no surprise he designed his spectacular home) and had studied at Yale University in New Haven, CT. Not only that, after he graduated, he lived and worked in New Haven and worked with Speigel and Zamecnik, a structural engineering firm co-owned by Ron’s Uncle. We had a lovely, early evening with Jacques and his family, reminiscing about the New Haven area, especially the pizza. He preferred Pepe’s Pizza over Sally’s and, as we do, loves a good “white clam pie” (pizza topped with clams sauteed in olive oil, garlic and parsley), only available in New Haven, we think. We are sure to see Jacques again on our return to Puerto Rico next spring for we would not think of missing the chance to stay at Guanica a second time and visit with a man so pleasant and friendly.
The latest weather report showed Hurricane Frances moving more north and east of Puerto Rico and would not have a major impact on Puerto Rico. Frances was an enormous storm and could have gobbled up the little island of Puerto Rico. We would continue to study her progress just in case.
8/30/04 – School Daze. Today was the first day of school for the Oleynik girls aboard Irie. And they greeted it with MUCH enthusiasm, like any first day of school. But this would be like no other. No bus to catch, no new teachers to meet, no other student to greet. We sprinkled the beginnings with the familiar rituals of gathering books and supplies, packing up backpacks and taking the first day of school picture. Although instead of the standing in front of the bus, they sat on Irie’s stern for this year’s picture.
Ron and I decided we would alternate days teaching Haley and Nina. I would teach Haley Science and Math while Ron taught Nina Language Arts and Social Studies. On alternate days, I would teach Nina Science and Math and Ron would teach Haley English and History. We would have at least two hours of instruction, five days a week. Haley’s program was almost entirely self study, whereas Nina’s was more of a hands-on learning experience that required much more parental involvement. Therefore, they were good complements.
We had selected the Oak Meadow home schooling program for our studies this year. This program, based out of Putney, VT, provided us with the most flexibility for our floating classroom. Many programs require you to mail or e-mail work back to education counselors for evaluation. Oak Meadow did not have this requirement. It also allowed us to pick and choose Haley’s six grade course work to best match Arlington County’s six grade curriculum. Nina’s was a very standard third grade program, so I purchased it in its entirety.
School was immediately followed by lunch and recess to deserted Ballena beach. Ballena beach curves around a point to where the beach is no longer protected by coral breaks. Waves break, creating large surf and making it a popular body and board surfing spot most of the year. It also turns this unprotected section of the beach into what Haley and I referred to as the “world’s largest free shopping mall.”
Haley and I spent hours combing the beach for free treasures. I think Haley enjoyed scavenging the beach more than going to a shopping mall. We had a few things in mind, like a 5-gallon bucket, but were satisfied to pick up several items we found a use for on the boat: dishwashing liquid squirt containers we use as liquid soap dispensers, a center console cup holder we use in the cockpit for the same, a jug for water storage and a few sand toys. I cannot tell you how many plastic bottles and containers littered this beach, especially soda and liquid beach bottles. There were hundreds on this mile stretch of beach. Plastic containers float and thus are probably washing up on beaches all over the world. It was overwhelming. I was so disgusted, it made me want to swear off any product packaged in plastic (impossible). So we did our small part by recycling a few items and putting them to good use aboard Irie. So do your part and keep recycling your plastic, as I know you all do.
I also picked up a solid mahogany table leg. Ron groaned and rolled his eyes as I loaded it into the dinghy. Back on Irie, I quickly stowed it in a cockpit locker. I’m not sure what I will do with it (any suggestions?), but I really like its shape and felt compelled to cart it away. There was also enough driftwood to build a house or the largest bonfire ever burned. We took a few small interesting pieces of driftwood, one of which was used to create a sailboat for one of Haley’s Social Studies projects.
9/1/04 – A Gift From Frances. The predictions showed Frances passing well north of Puerto Rico. She was a large and powerful storm, a Category 4 hurricane, as she skirted the island. The day before the skies had that “big storm’s a comin’” look about them – an eerie pale yellow – the air became thick with humidity and the winds died. Frances had knocked out the trades. The large storm sat in the trade wind’s path – those pesky, persistent easterly winds that had made our trip to east more of motor and less of a sail.
Six days after entering this lovely anchorage in Guanica, we weighed anchor and set sail for Ponce, PR. Ponce, 15 miles east of Guanica, had a large yachting center and was chock full of “Big Box” stores and chandleries (marine stores). We had talked about taking a slip once we arrived to simpify our re-provisioning.
But Frances had given us the gift of steady southerly winds, which powered us to Salinas, 30 miles away. We did make a brief stop a Caya de Muertes (Coffin Island) for lunch and a swim. Caya de Muertes gets its name because from the big island of Puerto Rico, it looks like a man lying in a coffin. And later, as we traveled along the shore by car, we saw the man in his coffin.