Showing posts with label Bahia del Sol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bahia del Sol. Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2012

New El Salvador photo round-up

The capital city of San Salvador rests in the shadow of the El Salvador volcano



Chris in the center of San Salvador



Another view of the volcano which looms over the city



The latest stop in our tour of Latin American "Costco" stores. This one was in San Salvador. And yes, once again, it looks exactly like the ones in the states. Freaky!



Salvadorian nuns enjoying the ever-popular Costco pizza and Coke




OK, this Spanish speaking San Salvador Costco customer was kind enough to model his donated American t-shirt. I admit, I have no idea what this means. The best guess we could come up with is this shirt was printed for Bay Area Notre Dame fans to wear on game day. Any other ideas? 





Yet another view of the San Salvador volcano looming over the city. I admit, I'm a bit obsessed with it, I guess. The next step for me will be obsessively building mud models of it, a-la Richard Dreyfuss in "Close Encounters." 




We toured the National Museum in San Salvador where we saw this giant Civil War mural. Note the thousands of graves in the distance on the left. Even more provocative is the murdered Archbishop Romero on the right, flanked by a cartoonish image of the Pope and a rather macabre looking Uncle Sam literally "sticking his nose in where it doesn't belong." Yikes. 




Yet another view of the volcano. This one is from the National Museum downtown. As I write this, I'm humming the "Close Encounters" theme in my head. Be afraid...be very afraid... (LOL)




These two little guys live in the trees around the Bahis del Sol hotel.
 They happily come down for a visit when the locals feed them peanuts.



San Salvador has FIVE American-style malls. As you can see above, like Costco,
 it looks exactly like the ones in the states. 



Here's a testament to how much Salvadorians love their soccer. The mob scene above was around an electronics store in the mall. It was a live televised soccer game, but the participants weren't from El Salvador or even Latin America! It was Spain vs. England.  I had to laugh when Chris gave an alternative theory for the soccer mania above: it was bored husbands stuck in the mall, looking for any diversion while their wives shopped. Ha! Some things are the same wherever you go! :-) 




Scene from the San Salvador mall food court: "Burger King: La Casa del Whopper!"




Notice how most of the popular magazines are American ones (only in Spanish). Evidence is everywhere here that American culture, for better for worse, is still the most admired and most aspired to for hipness and sophisticated style. 





Outside of the big city, it's a different story.  This caged monkey was right in the middle of a roadside restaurant in a rural area. OK, now THIS is not a scene you routinely see in the states!   



Nor is this sign on a small restaurant, which states: "Do not carry firearms here." (OK, we won't!)




This is an all-too-common scene in El Salvador. Someone's dream of a "Coffee Cake" coffee boutique fell on very hard times. The poverty is shocking at times.




Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Have you ever wondered what 75 knots of wind feels like?


Yeah. I know. Neither have I. That's 80+ miles per hour.

Well, be careful what you (don't) wish for...

It all started innocently enough.

It was last saturday night here in our little El Salvador estuary. Chris and I had just finished a nice pasta dinner aboard Espiritu.

Off to the north, a lightning storm flashed. We sat in the cockpit and settled in for the show, which happens many nights now that we are in the tropics.




    As often happens, the breeze gently rose as the squall approached the mooring field. There are about 15 sailboats out here. There are another 10 boats anchored, with the last 15 on the small dock at the marina.

     The wind rose to about 20 knots, and the rain began to fall. We figured the small storm cell was blowing through.

    And then...and then...the wind didn't back down. It picked up. Alot (By now, the sky was pitch black -- except for the lightning, that is).

    We started moving through the cabin making sure all of the hatches were closed. A moment later, we heard a voice on the VHF announce: "Hello, fellow cruisers, I just clocked 35 knots."

   Yeah, yeah, we know.  The wind, rain and waves all increased exponentially.

   After we were sure everything was battened down, we heard another female voice on the radio announce: "Well, we just clocked 45 knots. (silence) Oh God, oh God, OH GOD!!!!!!!!"

 Then silence.

  I rolled my eyes in frustration as did everyone else in the fleet. This wasn't helping.

  Suddenly Espiritu heeled way over.

Oh, so THAT'S what she was talking about!

  We popped out into the covered cockpit and observed the increasing pandemonium going on around us.

  Voice on radio: "Uh, OK, look out, everybody, because Sundancer has just blown their mooring. Blithe Spirit, they're heading right for you."

  We peered into the worstening storm and could see nothing.

   Only a few nights earlier another boat had snapped it's mooring and washed up on the mud after a teeny-tiny squall blew through, much smaller than this one.

Taking Flight on the rocks


       Voice on radio: "OK, I've got 55 knots, gusting to 75. Panache is dragging his anchor, and so is Tolerance."

       I popped out into the cockpit again to assess the situation. We did not appear to be dragging YET. Our dinghy and motor had flipped over, but as it was still attached to the boat there was nothing to be done about that right now. Too dangerous.

    "OK, Santos' catamaran has just lost his mizzen mast." someone muttered on the radio, sounding a bit in shock by this time.

     I peered out into the now hurricane force storm to look for any other boats which might be hurtling towards us. I was shocked to see a darkened Talaria hurtling past us into the blackness.

   I jumped onto the radio: "Talaria, Talaria, are you on board?"   No answer. I didn't know where Rick and Deena were -- if they were ashore or even on their boat, which was now careening towards the mouth of the estuary as far as I could tell.

  Another voice assured us that Rick and Deena were indeed aboard Talaria, but they were unable to answer the radio, as they were too busy trying to save their freaking boat which had sprung it's freaking mooring in a pitch black hurricane and was now heading almost out to sea!

  Good Lord.

  Molly from Knee Deep came on the radio and calmly announced: "We've sprung our mooring and we're now motoring." Considering she and Ben have two small boys on board, their steadiness under pressure was impressive, indeed.

  The hurricane force anarchy continued outside.

   This was so surreal. Only 10 minutes earlier we were relaxing in our warm, dry cockpit in post-prandial bliss. And now this.

You know what was going through my mind during the worst of it?  "Nobody's going to die here. We can all swim. Worst case scenario, a boat sinks and the occupants swim to shore. There may be damage, but nobody's going to die."

   Sounds crazy, but this little mantra actually HELPED.

   Another voice came on saying: "Uh, the dock is coming apart. We've sprung 3 out of 4 lines and are only holding onto the dock with one line."

  Sigh.

   Finally, finally, the chaos began to ease. It was passing, thank God.

  Later, since we don't have any Fritz Coleman or Johnny Mountain out here to help us with the weather, we all put our heads together and theorized that this was a microburst.

 The crazy thing is this: the locals swear nothing even remotely like this has ever occurred here. Ever. No hurricanes. No nothing.

    Later, we compounded the damage:

1) Talaria collided with Hotspur after bursting their moorings -- they both suffered severe damage to their hull, dinghy davits, lifelines, stanchions and solar panels.

 2) It's a funny story about Panache: the skipper Zach was having dinner aboard Bella Star in the marina when the storm hit. He, Aaron and Nicole watched in shock and horror as his boat (and floating home!) dragged right past them during the worst of it. Just when they feared it would drag all the way out to sea, Panache stopped and the anchor caught, right next to the marina;

 3) There was much ripped canvas, dozens of shoes and gas cans lost overboard, power lines were knocked down, hundreds of trees fell, and Santos' mizzen mast was lost;

4) A fishing boat flipped in the storm, and some brave sailors rescued them in their small inflatable dinghy;

5) The marina dock here was destroyed in parts. It held together, though!

 6) Tolerance, which dragged it's anchor, smashed repeated against a cement piling, and is now a complete loss.


Tolerance was broken down and sold for scraps after the damage incurred during the storm

   As for Espiritu, all we lost was a shoe which flew out of our capsized dinghy/motor. We were very, very lucky.

  My thoughts after the storm went to the locals who live nearby and on the island in the estuary. These people live very, very simply -- without electricity or running water.

 I've been volunteering at the tiny school on the island during my stay here.



                
       They are so grateful for any help and attention that we give them. It is pure joy to spend time with them and to help them with their basic math and language skills -- or just to play and laugh with them.





         After the storm, I asked them about the "tormento" (Spanish for "storm" -- great word, huh?). They fell silent, and their eyes were as big and shimmering as fresh plums.

   I asked about their homes. A tree fell through the roof of one of them, but the villagers replaced the palm frond roof the next day. Noone was hurt.



        The thing about these children -- and about the Salvadorians in general, is this: they're resilient.

Which is interesting, because "resilience" is something I've been in search of for myself. It's a muscle I've been working to strengthen. And the island children teach me by example every day.




 When you live simply, without many expensive material possessions, and when you are part of a community that helps one other, when natural disasters strike, unless someone gets swept out to sea it's usually not a big deal.

  The homes are simple, so they're easy to rebuild. And everyone helps one another.

  It's enough to make a gringo THINK, you know?


  
      
     

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

New photo round-up/El Salvador


                       A friendly San Salvador policeman shows off his fancy cop duds.
                                                          Note the Nazi-esque knickers!




        We were stunned to find this pine forest halfway up the volcano Santa Ana. Who knew there were pine forests in the tropics? They were so beautiful and really reminded us of home in the American West.



                                    This cool treehouse was at the volcano national park entry area.




         Here's another cool treehouse. This one is on the Isla Cordoncillo, right next to our mooring.





                 Check out this cool playground, also on the volcano national park grounds.
  It had a sign that said "Para ninos solamente." (Children ONLY!)   Aw, shucks! Lucky kids!




                            This billboard ad in San Salvador advertises American-style homes.




         This is the pool here at Bahia del Sol where the cruisers hang out every day. For $14.00 a week               per couple we can use the pool, the showers and the internet. As you can imagine,  some sailors plan on                   staying here for months!




                 Now here's a lawn jockey you probably wouldn't see in the states (that's a beer bottle in his hand, in case you can't make it out) -- if you dared put this on your lawn in the U.S. the "politically correct police" would drag you down to the squadroom for serious questioning!



               This is our lovely little mooring field here in Costa del Sol, El Salvador.
                           At $100.00 a month, as you can imagine, it's very popular!





                         Chris peruses the rickety (but charming) dinghy dock onto Isla Cordondillo




                     Another beautiful tropical sunset in the estuary...









Saturday, March 31, 2012

Welcome to El Salvador!



Chris and I arrived here in El Salvador 2 days ago and are happily moored in the estuary outside of the Bahia del Sol hotel, which sponsors the Cruisers Rally to El Salvador (and yes, we are participants).

There are 20-30 sailboats here participating in the 6 week rally.


Chris enjoying Bahis del Sol's impressive ocean view


 Rally participants get to use the hotel pool, showers and Wifi for $14 dollars a week, and we booked a mooring bucket for 30 days for $100 bucks.

Pretty sweet!

But before we can enjoy the benefits of the El Salvador Rally, first we sailors must earn our keep by "crossing the bar" from the ocean into the estuary. This bar causes pretty righteous waves which normally any sailboat would avoid as if it's life depended on it. But the marina has a professional guide who leads us in and through the waves via jet ski.



            This is our friends on "Taking Flight" crossing the bar over a particularly harrowing set. For you non-sailors: keep in mind that sailboats and actual breaking waves are never -- EVER -- supposed to be uttered in the same sentence or the same paragraph, even.





            I was a pretty major "Gilligans Island" afficionado in my day, so you can imagine my confusion when I found the S.S. Minnow washed up on this El Salvador beach. I could swear she ended up on an "uncharted desert isle" somewhere near Hawaii...




The estuary really has that "Central American" feel



Young men deliver water from village to village in crayola-box jugs

Finding ourselves low on provisions, this morning we jumped in the dinghy and rode 4 miles through a winding mangrove forest to the little town of La Herredura for the saturday market.



Typical scene on the dinghy ride to Herradura




         This pack of six -- COUNT 'EM -- SIX! -- wild dogs which greeted us on the street in La Herradura trumped anything we saw in Mexico. P.S. They were ALL growling menacingly. And just a few feet up the street:




            ...little baby Maria lies happily on the sidewalk while her young mom peddles her wares nearby. I know, I know...(sigh)...welcome to El Salvador!


  When the average American thinks of El Salvador, one word usually springs to mind:

  War.

  As opposed to Mexico, which but for the occasional regional uprising has been relatively peaceful for generations, the people of El Salvador have suffered greatly at the hands of military dictators as well as violent revolutionaries.

 Although the war has been over for years, there is a sense of world weariness in this small country that I simply didn't experience in Mexico.

In addition, there is very little tourism here in El Salvador (although that is slowly changing). In fact, their main source of income is remittances (money sent home) from Salvadorian citizens working abroad in the U.S. and other western countries.






      Interestingly, ultra-frilly (some would say "tacky") aprons are de-riguer for the ladies of La Herradura. Note in this photo above all three women are wearing them. They are apparently worn mostly as fashion, because even women who did not serve food wore them proudly.



A Salvadorian woman graciously displays her ultra-frilly apron
(apparently clashing with the top is not really an issue or a concern



This sweet lady wore an actual working apron to cover her prized Salvadorian fashion apron. Is this purplexing fashion trend prevalent all over El Salvador, or simply here in La Herradura? 




Even the town Catholic church wore frilly aprons! Six, to be exact. 



And speaking of fashion, this Jesus inside the same church had an interesting,
Gene Simmons/KISS-esque 80's style flowing rock'n'roll mane


And on the other side of the main sanctuary, Jesus #2 had an almost gang-like facial tattoo of thorns 'round his head, and lots and lots of mascara. I found him a tad disturbing. 




        Oh, my. This extremely sweet Salvadorian lady provided me with my next installment of "Innocent Salvadorians who unknowingly wear mildly (or in this case, extremely) inappropriate donated American t-shirts." Sigh. With the prevalence of sex trafficking throughout the 3rd world, this scene was a pretty sad sight...



              ...but then there was this savvy grandma, whom I suspect may know full well the translation of her donated American t-shirt with the words "Compost happens" emblazoned across the front.


So here we are in El Salvador!

Our plans include visiting San Salvador (the capital) and a trip inland to climb a volcano or two.