Giving Back While Cruising: Helping the animals in La Paz, Mexico
I turned on the headlights and drove slowly out of the colonia on the outskirts of La Paz. It was after 10:00 p.m. and the
I turned on the headlights and drove slowly out of the colonia on the outskirts of La Paz. It was after 10:00 p.m. and the
At first, Thomas R. Spencer didn’t think much about it when he saw tax agents come into the Coral Marina more than three months ago,
You may recall that Del Viento, in defiance of all the logic and common sense we solicited, sailed south from San Diego with a broken
I imagine that for many, the allure of the cruising life is ease, not ease in the sense of push-button powered winches, but ease in the sense of idleness, of an empty hammock strung between palms.
A cruising diesel mechanic saves a Mexican village’s New Year’s party.
Update on the impounded yacht debacle in Mexico
I’ve shared our past year throughout, in pictures and words, but following is a digest of stats and impressions.
The latest regarding the boat-impounding situation in Mexico
Since we started cruising, there have been many imperatives to go, go, go. We spent much of our first cruising year working on the boat,
We’re leaving San Diego as we came, our boom broken. We’re going to try to get it repaired in Mexico. Absurd? Crazy? Maybe. I can’t
Anchoring lessons are learned, some the hard way, when a freak winter storm blows into Mexico’s Bahía de Banderas.
You often hear folks claim that the trip from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas is so easy that anyone can make it on a 55-gallon drum. Of course, this means it is an inherently difficult passage when heading the other direction.
I turned on the headlights and drove slowly out of the colonia on the outskirts of La Paz. It was after 10:00 p.m. and the
At first, Thomas R. Spencer didn’t think much about it when he saw tax agents come into the Coral Marina more than three months ago,
You may recall that Del Viento, in defiance of all the logic and common sense we solicited, sailed south from San Diego with a broken
I imagine that for many, the allure of the cruising life is ease, not ease in the sense of push-button powered winches, but ease in the sense of idleness, of an empty hammock strung between palms.
A cruising diesel mechanic saves a Mexican village’s New Year’s party.
Update on the impounded yacht debacle in Mexico
I’ve shared our past year throughout, in pictures and words, but following is a digest of stats and impressions.
The latest regarding the boat-impounding situation in Mexico
Since we started cruising, there have been many imperatives to go, go, go. We spent much of our first cruising year working on the boat,
We’re leaving San Diego as we came, our boom broken. We’re going to try to get it repaired in Mexico. Absurd? Crazy? Maybe. I can’t
Anchoring lessons are learned, some the hard way, when a freak winter storm blows into Mexico’s Bahía de Banderas.
You often hear folks claim that the trip from San Diego to Cabo San Lucas is so easy that anyone can make it on a 55-gallon drum. Of course, this means it is an inherently difficult passage when heading the other direction.
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