Welcome to Vagari’s 7th winter of sailing. We have put 8,000 miles under Vagari’s keel during those cruises but this year like last year won’t be a high mileage year. We just don’t have the lust for the long cruises that we did when we started cruising but we still enjoy living on board and sailing near our homeport. Welcome aboard! We hope you enjoy our blog. Your comments, questions and suggestions are appreciated and encouraged.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Friday, April 24, 2009

Pot Luck Sunday Brunch At The Hidden Port Yacht Club

Sunset from the North Anchorage at Isla Monserrate





Sunrise on the same mountains in the sunset photos


Beach rocks


The cactus meet the sea at the north anchorage

Yellow Stone On Isla Monserrate




The name is not from the flintstones

Hiking Up "Steinbeck Canyon"







This canyon is three miles East of our anchorage. Steinback's "Sea of Cortez" is a short of great read. It's about his trip around the sea on a boat in the 1950's



Tuesday, April 21, 2009

We Have No Plans And We Are Sticking To Them

Interesting day cruising (4/20/09 Monday) The forecast was for good NW winds in the morning dropping in the afternoon then becoming light SE sometime tomorrow.

We left at 9:30 for an island 17 nm to our SE that has a good anchorage in both the N and S sides. It was a great day, mostly sailing, motoring just when in the lee of an island. We sailed between two and six kts per hour.

Of course with the NW wind we went to the South anchorage planning to move to the North side the next day. We approached our anchorage sailing at 6 kts with the wind slightly behind us. We rolled in the headsail then Rhea turned Vagari around into the wind so I could take the big mainsail down. As I worked on the sail Rhea keep turning the boat to face the wind. We ended up heading SE into the wind. Now the SE waves and wind are going right into our planned anchorage. Not good.

No problemo. Just go back four miles to the North anchorage. But wait, we could both see that back a mile or two there was still a good NW breeze. The next good anchorage was 13 miles away and usually crowded so it was unlikely that we could get a decent spot to drop our anchor.

Decision time. The South anchorage is small with rock reefs on both sides and it has a very narrow area of anchoring depth bottom with a steep drop off on the seaside. We had not spent a night there previously.

The North anchorage has a huge anchoring depth self and we have spent two enjoyable nights there two years ago.

By the time we motored four miles North the wind had almost died and all we had to contend with was the waves left over from the daytime NW winds. We are rocking and rolling a little as I write this.

(Tuesday AM) The "swell swells" decreased during the evening and we were fine.

Posted via Ham Radio from Isla Monserrate 25 deg. 41 min. N 111 deg 02 min W
23hrs UTC 4/21/09

Friday, April 17, 2009

100 Year Old House (2)




The lady who lives in this house came out as I was taking this picture and said in English and Spanish how beautiful the wood was. She also wanted me to take a photo of her old dog. Could you refuse? There are no trees in this part of the Baja so this wood came from France as ballast in clipper ships returning for another load of copper.

More Sleeping Dogs





I woke him up


Slag from the smelter was loaded from this structure onto a boat for dumping outside the harbor. At first I thought the black sand was from volcanic rock.

Some More of Santa Rosalia (5)