Showing posts with label Isla Contadora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Isla Contadora. Show all posts

Monday, September 10, 2012

Photos: Shakedown in the Las Perlas


We humans are naturally drawn to open country -- to the open sea and sky. 
   It's where everything comes clear. 



The view from our beach towel on Isla Chapera in the Las Perlas Islands 


     I think the word "adventure" is overused. For me, it's when everything goes wrong -- THAT is when the adventure truly starts.  After months of work on the dock in Panama City repairing Espiritu after her lightning strike, Chris and I finally untied the dock lines and set her free.  We set sail for the Las Perlas Islands, 30 miles away. Happily, the old girl took to the water without a care in the world -- as if nothing had ever happened.

  They say the ocean has healing powers, as well as the wind and the sun. I should say so! A few glitches remained with the SSB, VHF and auto pilot, and we almost hit another floating tree (welcome to Central America during the rainy season) but we were so happy to be back on the water where we belong. :-)




Our first stop: Isla Contadora




        We grabbed a map and eagerly went ashore to explore Contadora's winding pathways.
                    Chris: "I know there's a beautiful beach here somewhere..."



And just like THAT, we were in the jungle! 


We were shocked when a deer bounced across our path. A deer on a tropical island? 




Chris strolls along one of Contadora's clean, cared for roads




          This "For Sale" sign is completely covered with newly-grown foliage.  If you want to sell your property in Central America, you've gotta prune the vines around your sign a couple of times a week!





           People do live on Contadora. I'm always amazed when people feel the need to build a
          pool when you've got crystal-clear 84 degree water on the beach just outside the door!




Wow -- that must have been quite the storm!



One of Contadora's inviting beaches

                                         


This roadside wildflower seems to be exploding with joy, like a Chinese fireworks display




              Village tiendas in Latin America often call themselves the charmingly oxymoronic
                         "Mini  supermarket." There are three itty-bitty ones on Contadora.
                                     This one is "smally" but we wouldn't call it "Blandy." :-)


Vines, vines, vines everywhere!
 


You know you're in the tropics when wild pineapples are your flotsam and jetsam



A Panamanian couple next to us on this beach played Jack Johnson on their stereo -- how perfect is that?



They say that silence is the language of God



The Travelocity gnome was here?





There are lots of dive shops on Contadora



Bear Grylls of "Man vs. Wild" dove here



Check mate!




                   After a couple of lovely days and nights at Contadora, a storm came in which
                  made the anchorage untenable, so we pulled and motored over to the gorgeous
                             anchorage between Mago Mago and Chapera Islands.



OK, after 11 months of hard work and sacrifice heading south, we've finally arrived. :-) 


                   We swam and snorkeled the reefs full of parrotfish, angelfish, barracudas,
               rays and even a sea snake or two.


50 foot visibility greeted us when we snorkeled the reefs of the Perlas



    Several adult and youngster humpbacks swam, breached, flapped, fed and played all around the anchorage during our stay. One came right up next to the anchored Espiritu (within 5 feet), popped up as if to say "Hey, mate!" and then ambled on.

   As we snorkeled and swam, we were stunned to find that we could hear the nearby humpback whales singing. We looked at each other in disbelieving awe.

 The Greeks spoke of different types of time. There is Chronos time, or chronological time. And then there is Kairos time, which literally translates as "in between time" -- where time seems to slow down along with our pulse and lowering blood pressure.

   This is what we experienced here at Chapera.

  Our friends Larry and Sandy aboard I Yam What I Yam soon arrived in the anchorage. Together we jumped in the dinghy with plans to circumnavigate Mago Mago, with stops for snorkeling along the way.

 The seas were flat calm as usual as we putted along in the dinghy.




Suddenly, out of nowhere two 15 foot breaking pipeline-type waves suddenly appeared and rocketed over the reef shown above. They just missed us.  Later, back at anchor, the tides came and went like rushing rivers, nearly dislodging our anchors. We thought all of this was strange but didn't think anything of it.

 We found out two days later that a 7.5 earthquake had struck just offshore of neighboring Costa Rica, and there was a tsunami warning issued.

 Well. If those waves had hit us noone would have died, but we would have been violently tossed into the sea -- AGAIN -- by our dinghy. LOL...

 Anyway, we heard there were no fatalities due to the quake, and no major tsunami resulted.

 After several idyllic days here in the Las Perlas, we settled in for our last evening aboard Espiritu before we would head home to Panama City at first light.

 After dinner, we turned on the politically-incorrect but hilarious farce "Tropic Thunder."




      Almost immediately, a pretty violent lightning storm blew in, so we watched "Tropic Thunder" while REAL tropic thunder pounded around us.

        We should have figured that turning on "Tropic Thunder" might have been a bad omen. Just two nights ago, I Yam What I Yam turned on "Hackers" and -- I kid you not -- it fried their hard drive.

  You can't make this stuff up, people!

  Anyway, things continued to decopensate in the anchorage, as the storm tried to toss Espiritu onto the dark beach, which now in the black of night and in the midst of the lightning, thunder, rain, wind and waves, suddenly didn't look as inviting as it had merely hours before.

 So we pulled anchor in the middle of the cacophany and headed to sea. This is something that non-sailors can never understand. But if you're at anchor in a bad storm, sometimes at sea is the safest place to be.

 So we headed home to Panama City, and arrived at our mooring at the Balboa Yacht Club the next morning.

Moorings at the Panama City Balboa Yacht Club



We're poised at the mouth of the Bridge of the Americas and the Panama Canal. Next up: onward and finally through the canal to the Atlantic Ocean! 



  Onward...

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

New photos: Tribal Council on Survivor Island, Panama

Beautiful Mago Mago Island in the Last Perlas Islands ("Pearl Island" in English),
site of the 2003 season of the CBS series "Survivor."


  While Chris stayed aboard Espiritu to continue her repairs, I was treated to a two night sailing trip to the Las Perlas Islands with our good friends Howard and Lynn aboard Swift Current.



The Last Perlas Islands are a mere 30 miles south of Panama City.
But with their pristine beauty and isolation, they may as well be thousands of miles away


     Many of our cruising friends whom have sailed south with us from Mexico and through central America have gone directly through the Canal to the Caribbean, skipping these islands entirely.

Honestly, it's a head scratcher. But, we all do crazy things that noone else understands, right?  
               My aim here is to make sure that noone else makes the same mistake.


Our first stop: Isla Contadora


 After being nearly capsized aboard our dinghy several times at the surf beaches of Costa Rica, beaching the dinghy here was a real pleasure. Yes, it's as calm as it looks, folks.

 FUN FACT: Isla Contadora became the new home of The exiled Shah of Iran after he was ousted out of his home country by the Iranian Revolution back in the late '70's. We never saw him during our trip, since we're pretty sure he's dead. But I kept my eyes peeled just in case.


We saw Abe Vigoda in an Upper West Side coffee shop a couple of years ago,
 and we thought HE was dead, too. So one never knows. 

     



The bustling beach of Isla Contadora





OK, we can live with this!




                    Isla Contadora is the most populated of all of the Las Perlas. There are a few charming waterfront establishments such as this one, the "Restaurant Romantico." Interestingly, many of the businesses on the island have the word "Romantico" built within the name. And why not?



It's golf carts only on the winding roads of Isla Contadora

                               


Orchids take root on the telephone wires




                     Even the weeds are beautiful here! If you look carefully, you'll see a
                    garden variety chain-link fence being overtaken by the flora and fauna...




               We looked for Turtle and Ari aboard this yacht named Entourage, but they
             stayed inside the cabin...probably watching satellite TV in the air conditioning. :-/




Flowers grow right out of the sidewalk on Contadora



Aerial view of the island

                                               


And like literally every little town in Latin America, there's a soccer field

             

       On day two we pulled anchor with our friends aboard Rapscullion and Precious Metal and
                     headed to the nearby islands of Isla Chapera and Mogo Mogo.




Aerial view of the islands





                                 Yes, "Survivor" was here, back when it was still cool (IMHO).
             We stopped watching it after the novelty wore off within the first couple of seasons.



I'm pretty sure this is what heaven looks like




We snorkeled this thriving reef in 85 degree water. Swift Current sits at anchor in the distance. 




We took the dink and went ashore on Survivor Island (Mogo Mogo).
No sign of Jeff Probst or Elizabeth Hasselbeck...



...but I think I might have smelled the remnants of Rupert...




Rupert and Zach Galafanikis: separated at birth?


Anyway, a big hug and special thanks to our wonderful friends Howard and Lynn, who generously took me along for this trip to the islands.


Are they cute, or what? 



So Chris and I remain here in the Flamenco Marina in Panama City working to restore Espiritu to her previous glory so that we can continue our sailing adventure. More to follow...