FLEET UPDATE 2018-02-09
1) Wildest Dreams – Welcome to the Panama Posse 
    
Hola from sunny Zihuatanejo! We just signed on to the posse and
      hope to get to know many of you as we travel. Our home, Wildest
      Dreams is a Choey Lee 47 Sea Master Long Range Cruiser (trawler).
      We’ve cruised from Mazatlan to Alaska and back.
      We will take our time cruising Central America before crossing
      through the canal. We love to socialize, explore, travel and play.
      We hope to make friends with like minded cruisers for cost sharing
      and security. 
    We leave Zihau Feb 15, weather permitting. We plan to stop for
      the El Salvador rally in April. We do not want to go through the
      canal this year.
     We want to leisurely explore south of El Salvador in the late
      fall/winter. Then possibly Equador before going through the canal.
    We would love to catch up to a group heading to Acapulco and
      Huatulco.
    

2) Annapurna – Chiapas 
    
Road trip! Coffee plantation in El Salvador. 
      Proprietor Daniel speaks excellent English and he us a true artist
      with a capacino and a great baristo.

3) Panama Posse – Bahia del Sol – El Salvador 
       
      Five boats departed Bahia this morning, Respite, Sea Glass, Easy,
      Sine Timore, and Danika. 
      – Source Bill & Jean  Salvador Rally

4) Avant   – Chiapas 
    Another lovely potluck at marina Chiapas for panama posse members
    and fellow travelers.

5) Volante III Tehuantpec crossing 
    Shearwater and Volante III did the Tehuantpec crossing and are
    safely in Puerto Chiapas. 
    The Tehuantpec crosssing was a boater’s dream crossing. We had no
    wind and flat seas at Salina Cruz. 
    The following day, we had about 15 knots of wind for a wonderful
    sail during the afternoon. 
    Fred Again is behind us and should be here soon.
6) Liquid & Carinthia – San Juan del Sur – Nicaragua 
    Anchored in a windy Papagayo prone area with gusts into the
    upper 30’s Local Currency 31 Cordoba = 1 USD
    We plan to barhop in this town as it is full of restaurants surf
    bars etc etc – 
    “when surfers and backpacker run out of money in Costa Rica – they
    come to SJDS…”






7) EASY – PANAMA  info
      
    … my friends sent me this message. I’m passing it on… Mike 
    Panama bound, Shawnigan asked me to let you know Bahia Honda @ 7
    45.880n, 81 32.406w also known as Bahia Chinche
    is lovely and welcomes cruisers.  Anchor in Domingo in front of
    Domingo’s house. 
    He and his family love to trade goods for fruit or you can just buy
    from him and his son Kennedy.
    
8) S/V Anila – El Salvador
    
Hello,
S/V Anila is currently in El Salvador at Bahia Del Sol. Arrived Feb 2 along with a few others. Had an easy bar crossing. Love the hospitality of Bill and Jean! They are very helpful and everyone enjoyed the pupusas.
We flew back to the states for a week but when we return on Feb 12, we will be heading for Costa Rica. Weโre looking for tips and suggestions for land-based tours.
While itโs good to see friends and family back
      in Seattle area, we miss the warmth!
    ~Satin and Dave
9) JULIA MAX – Costa Rica 
    This a.m. we were breezing along at hull speed trying to figure out
    how to slow the boat down more so missed the Posse morning net. We
    finally got it dialed into these 20-28 knot winds at 60 degrees just
    as you described: reefed mizzen and triple reefed jib. Pretty
    exciting and scary at times. We hove to to take down the main which
    helped a lot. The seas have been relatively calm close into shore.
    After 3 hours of really white knuckle sailing, things are calming
    down for the present and we’re shaking out reefs. 
    Our snorkeling spot at Catalina Islands looked way too rough on the
    seaward side and there were fishing boats all over the anchorage
    area. So we headed into Portrero. Nothing much there. We got in the
    water to cool off and enjoyed watching the tourists going sailing in
    the heavy afternoon winds on big catamarans. Looked like they were
    having fun. A sloop went out with guests and hardly heeled over at
    all but went very slowly, triple reefed main and handkerchief jib.
    Interesting. Winds were up this morning at 7:30 as we we rounded the
    headland out of the bay. So we’ve been having one of those lovely
    sailing days like the ones you had across the Tehuanapec. We’ve
    never had the boat up at hull speed before but that WAS a little
    scary. We now have 1.5 kts current against us. We’re trying to make
    Carrello by mid-afternoon where we’ll stay a couple of days before
    heading all the way around to Ballena Bay. That is another birding
    spot. We will try to get on a birding tour as a day trip if we feel
    the boat would be safe there. Hope Mike on Easy is doing OK. With
    the big winds, we’re wondering how he’s doing.
    
    –Sue and George
    A heads-up to everyone coming down the Costa Rica coast line. Punta
    Guiones at 09 54.3N/085 42.5W, we were less than 3 miles off-shore
    when we noticed an extensive calm area between white-horses on
    either side. We had noticed a comment on our Navionics chartplotter
    showing ‘breakers’ reported back in 1929 (09 52.55N/085 40.995W). As
    we approached the calm area between the mainland shallows and the
    chop on the east side of the calm area, we were leery, and watched
    our depth sounder which was reporting 200+ feet. The depth went from
    200+ to 19 feet in about ten seconds. I turned away from the calm
    area sharply! There was no current on this side. But looking over an
    expanse of at least 1-2 miles of calm seas between white-horses, we
    reversed our course heading north to do an end around north of the
    calm seas. We headed out to safe waters (09 51.49N/085 41.82W) that
    were 3+ miles off Punta Guiones, as one of the Cruising Guides
    suggested. Out on the west side of the calm waters, the current was
    running northerly between 1.5-2.0 knots. So the current was causing
    some of the chop. But I believe there is a massive underwater
    structure off the point that hasn’t been charted. Beware. Also in
    close to shore there is an uncharted sandbar that is very visible
    just off the Point. So remember 3.3 miles off shore around Punta
    Guiones. As we get used to running close to shore, sometimes our
    guard is down.
    
    –George and Sue sv Julia Max
10) Welcome to the Posse SV DANIKA 
    
    Jason & Jenn

11) Shearwater 
    Hola Panama Posse, 
    We left Huatulco at 9am on Sunday and arrived in Chiapas this
    morning at 7:30. 
    We had a good crossing pretty much no wind on Sunday but 10 to 18kts
    for 4 hours out of the South East. 
13) TAPPAN ZEE
    Hi folks.
    Tappan Zee is in Acapulco for a few days before heading to Huatulco.
    We are enjoying Acapulco. As has been noted before, Vicente is a
    wonderfully upbeat, helpful resource in this city. He and his son
    seem to be around all the time in the marina area of Aca. We are not
    staying on a buoy because we donโt have a bowsprit to hold it away
    from our hull, but we have hired Vicente for his support.
    We have a question for the the group. I have researched and read all
    the posts here and in Southbound yahoo group about liability
    insurance and I still have questions.
    Tappan Zee carries Mexican liability insurance and self-insures for
    the rest. We looked into extending our liability insurance into
    Central America and were quoted a price of $1,000 plus a haulout and
    survey. We do not have a house or car so an umbrella policy is not
    possible. The quote is from IMIS, Jackline Insurance. For a second
    quote, I called Novamar in Puerto Vallarta and spoke with the head
    insurance agent and he told me that they do not offer Central
    America liability ins., only Mexican. So, the question is, do any of
    you have experience staying at marinas South of Mexico without
    showing or having liability insurance? Do the marinas ask for it?
    Thanks in advance for your responses.
    Annie and Tom ( sailcoast34@gmail.com ) 
14) MV Crossroads – Costa Rica
    We are busy touring inland in the Monteverde Cloud Forest. 
    Onward to Arenaul Volcano and La Fortuna tomorrow. 
    The boatโs in Quepos. Hope you catch up with us! We miss the Posse!
    Cheers,
    Stan & Diane
    M/V CrossRoads
15) “boat”keeping items 
    – please send in your fleet updates 
    – OUR MISSION  and therefor YOUR MISSION  is to make it easier for
    everyone in the Panama Posse 
    – share relevant info and keep a good log on obstacles – contacts –
    anchorages – tours -rates etc. 
The following vessels still need to send in their pictures – 
    UTOPIA
    COLMENA
    WINDS OF THE WORLD
    TOTEM
    SALT
    SEA CASA
    CHANTEY
    DADโS DREAM
    TRUE BLUE
    SAMAYA
    SEPTEMBER SONG
    REBELLIOUS
    ISLEรA
    SANS FRONTIERES
    MORA
16) SSB Panama Posse net daily at (:15 local time / 15:15
    UTC – 8294 / 7 USB SSB 
    Keep ’em coming 
    Panama Posse 
