BAREFOOT CAY RESORT ROATAN 🇭🇳 SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE
BAREFOOT CAY RESORT ROATAN 🇭🇳 SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE
16° 20.2383' N 086° 28.5366' W
Hello Ocean Posse ,
Thank you for your call on Tuesday, and for the information package... we’d love to participate, and would be happy to extend a 20% savings on dockage to the Ocean Posse!
Warmest regards,
Stephanie Bodden
Resort Director
Barefoot Cay Resort | Barefoot Divers
Roatan, Bay Islands
1-866-246-3706 (toll-free to Roatan)
+504-9967-3642 (local)
VHF: 18A (monitored 8am-4pm)
email: Stephanie@BarefootCay.com
Barefoot Cay Marina
MARINA SPECS
- Convenient south-central location on Roatan
- Marina layout comprised of U-shaped basin with sturdy concrete construction and stout cleats (358 total linear feet), plus wooden docks for additional moorage and for tying tenders (243 linear feet of dockspace)
- Draft allowance of up to 9 ft
- Boat launch ramp
- Purified water & shore power with 120V 30A & 240V 50A service; 100A service available in select locations
AMENITIES
- Complimentary Wi-Fi
- Restrooms with hot water showers
- Laundry service (priced per item)
- 24-hour security
- Restaurant & Bar
- PADI 5 Star Dive Center
- Spa
- Concierge desk
- Pool
- Palapa
- Immigration and Port Captain clearing services
- BIP (Bay Islands Petroleum) fuel dock located just East of the Cay
DISCOUNT OFFERED
20% savings on daily, weekly & monthly rates. Rates are per foot OAL (including extensions), and 15% sales tax applies
Published | With Savings | |
Daily | $2.00 | $1.60 |
Weekly | $10.00 | $8.00 |
Monthly Jun-Nov | $15.00 | $12.00 |
Monthly Dec-May | $22.50 | $18.00 |
VALUE-ADD
1 free welcome drink per person upon check-in at the marina
CLEARING FEES
$350 per vessel for up to 4 people (includes in and out); $50 per additional person. 15% sales tax applies.
ADDITIONAL INFO
- We’re located about 10 minutes east of Roatan’s international airport (RTB); direct flights are available from North America with several major carriers
- There’s a well-stocked grocery store in French Harbor called “Eldon’s Supermarket” about a 10-minute taxi ride away. Round trip taxi fare with one of our trusted drivers is only $20 (the driver waits while you shop!), or a “collectivo” taxi (non-private) is typically only a few dollars per person each way
- Car rentals, private taxi service, and spa appointments can be arranged through our front desk, as well as various offsite activities
- Roatan has many wonderful activities and excursions to experience. There are popular spots for tourists to visit on Roatan (West End, West Bay Beach), and interesting locales that are more off the beaten path (mangrove tour in Oak Ridge, Punta Gorda, Camp Bay Beach)... there are exciting adventures (parasailing and zip lining in West Bay), and laid back experiences (massages at our spa, Carambola botanical gardens)... there are activities for animal lovers (sloth sanctuary in French Cay, dolphin experiences at Anthony’s Key), and of course there are plenty of activities for ocean lovers (diving with our onsite dive center and snorkeling from the palapa). We do our best to tailor recommendations to individual tastes, so guests can feel free to drop by the front desk, and we’d be happy to discuss the various options available.
BRICK BAY ENTRANCE TO BAREFOOT CAY MARINA
The marina is most easily reached through the Brick Bay entrance with a turn east (as shown on the chart below, with coordinates listed). Enter keeping the outer stake close to starboard, then take the next two stakes to starboard (approximately 50 ft). There is deep water to the marina.
Access is also possible from the French Harbor entrance, however, due to a shoal northeast of Barefoot Cay, we suggest using the Brick Bay entrance
Approaches are only recommended during daylight hours, and we prefer that approaches be made only when we’re able to send a guide to pilot you through the channel (guides are available between 8am-4pm when arranged in advance)
Login to Good Nautical for the best route
SHELTER BAY MARINA 🇵🇦 SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE
SHELTER BAY MARINA SPONSORS THE OCEAN POSSE
09°22.085' N 079°57.0013' W
"As always Ocean Posse participants will be welcomed at Shelter Bay Marina.
From January 10 till May 31st.
15% discount form the transient rates which are, 1-7 nights, 7 to 14 nights, 15 to 30 nights and 31 to 90 nights,
The quick Haul out rate of $12.00 per feet and $16.00 per feet for Monos and Multis will be given for vessels doing work in the yard!!"
Juanjo Boschetti |
General Manager
email juanjo@shelterbaymarina.com
www.panamaposse.com/sponsors
Shelter Bay Marina Location & Safe way points:
SERVICE PROVIDERS
ELECTRICIAN
Lao Ing (Servicio Electrónicos Marcos) +507 6779 8843. He is Malaysian and speaks excellent Spanish.Logical worker and used my manuals and electronic diagrams. In short he is a breath of fresh air! His email is mams1713@gmail.com
RIGGER
TAXIS
ENGINE MECHANIC
SAIL LOFT
VICTRON
Cost of Living Index Mid 2020
Rank |
Country | Cost of Living Index |
1 | Bermuda | 147.77 |
2 | Switzerland | 125.69 |
3 | Norway | 96.8 |
4 | Iceland | 90.19 |
5 | Japan | 86.22 |
6 | Denmark | 85.02 |
7 | Luxembourg | 84.38 |
8 | Bahamas | 84.25 |
9 | Israel | 82.52 |
10 | Singapore | 81.13 |
11 | Barbados | 79.92 |
12 | Ireland | 78.07 |
13 | Hong Kong | 77.9 |
14 | France | 76.34 |
15 | South Korea | 75.93 |
16 | Australia | 75.89 |
17 | Netherlands | 74.63 |
18 | Seychelles | 74.41 |
19 | Belgium | 73.59 |
20 | Finland | 72.71 |
21 | United States | 72.47 |
22 | Sweden | 72.31 |
23 | New Zealand | 71.83 |
24 | Austria | 71.78 |
25 | Macao | 70.18 |
26 | Puerto Rico | 70.02 |
27 | Malta | 69.26 |
28 | Italy | 68.95 |
29 | Qatar | 67.54 |
30 | Germany | 66.34 |
31 | Canada | 66.18 |
32 | Libya | 66.06 |
33 | United Kingdom | 65.67 |
34 | Lebanon | 64.26 |
35 | United Arab Emirates | 62.98 |
36 | Taiwan | 61.95 |
37 | Cyprus | 59.93 |
38 | Bahrain | 58.36 |
39 | Greece | 57.5 |
40 | Trinidad And Tobago | 56.66 |
41 | Croatia | 56.31 |
42 | Spain | 55.27 |
43 | Slovenia | 55.17 |
44 | Panama | 55.02 |
45 | Palestine | 54.96 |
46 | Ethiopia | 54.86 |
47 | Jamaica | 54.36 |
48 | Costa Rica | 54.2 |
49 | Zimbabwe | 54.06 |
50 | Jordan | 53.4 |
51 | Belize | 53.08 |
52 | Estonia | 52.93 |
53 | Mauritius | 51.75 |
54 | Kuwait | 49.86 |
55 | Fiji | 49.65 |
56 | Portugal | 49.52 |
57 | Oman | 49.42 |
58 | Latvia | 49.18 |
59 | Saudi Arabia | 49.15 |
60 | Thailand | 48.97 |
61 | Suriname | 47.95 |
62 | Cambodia | 47.91 |
63 | Brunei | 47.49 |
64 | Slovakia | 46.8 |
65 | Uruguay | 46.66 |
66 | Chile | 45.43 |
67 | Czech Republic | 45.05 |
68 | El Salvador | 44.96 |
69 | Lithuania | 44.85 |
70 | Guatemala | 44.23 |
71 | Cuba | 43.85 |
72 | Nicaragua | 43.7 |
73 | Honduras | 42.73 |
74 | Dominican Republic | 41.76 |
75 | Ecuador | 40.62 |
76 | Hungary | 40.09 |
77 | Mozambique | 39.98 |
78 | China | 39.51 |
79 | Poland | 39.46 |
80 | Philippines | 39.25 |
81 | Botswana | 39.13 |
82 | Cameroon | 38.95 |
83 | Montenegro | 38.68 |
84 | Ghana | 38.52 |
85 | Iraq | 38.49 |
86 | Somalia | 38.48 |
87 | Iran | 38.47 |
88 | Myanmar | 38.47 |
89 | Bulgaria | 38.39 |
90 | Vietnam | 38.12 |
91 | Namibia | 38.12 |
92 | Malaysia | 38.09 |
93 | Kenya | 37.75 |
94 | Peru | 37.64 |
95 | South Africa | 37.52 |
96 | Serbia | 36.98 |
97 | Albania | 36.96 |
98 | Indonesia | 36.86 |
99 | Tanzania | 36.85 |
100 | Bosnia And Herzegovina | 36.57 |
101 | Romania | 36.23 |
102 | Rwanda | 36.21 |
103 | Bolivia | 36.02 |
104 | Morocco | 34.44 |
105 | Mongolia | 33.97 |
106 | Armenia | 33.71 |
107 | Russia | 33.66 |
108 | Moldova | 33.52 |
109 | Bangladesh | 33.41 |
110 | North Macedonia | 32.96 |
111 | Sri Lanka | 32.93 |
112 | Belarus | 32.63 |
113 | Turkey | 32.44 |
114 | Argentina | 31.18 |
115 | Azerbaijan | 31.14 |
116 | Kazakhstan | 31.01 |
117 | Brazil | 30.99 |
118 | Uganda | 30.96 |
119 | Mexico | 30.93 |
120 | Paraguay | 30.34 |
121 | Ukraine | 30.05 |
122 | Nigeria | 29.76 |
123 | Georgia | 29.71 |
124 | Egypt | 29.55 |
125 | Colombia | 29.02 |
126 | Algeria | 28.88 |
127 | Kosovo (Disputed Territory) | 28.42 |
128 | Nepal | 28.17 |
129 | Tunisia | 27.93 |
130 | Uzbekistan | 27.37 |
131 | Syria | 27.04 |
132 | Afghanistan | 26.71 |
133 | Kyrgyzstan | 24.7 |
134 | India | 24.12 |
135 | Pakistan | 21 |
source https://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/rankings_by_country.jsp
PIRATE CHOCOLATIER
A Pirate Botanist Helped Bring Hot Chocolate to England
William Hughes was a buccaneer with an early recipe for “the American Nectar.”
If you had met him the year his famous book was published, you might have mistaken William Hughes for a mild-mannered gardener. By that time, he had settled into his role at the country estate of the Viscountess Conway, a noblewoman and philosopher, and had published a book on grapevines. But the old man was more than a tottering plant enthusiast. When his treatise on New World botany, The American Physitian, dropped in 1672, its contents revealed a swashbuckling history.
“He was a pirate chocolatier,” says Marissa Nicosia, Assistant Professor of Renaissance Literature at Penn State Abington and co-founder of the Cooking in the Archives blog. Nicosia recently recreated Hughes’s hot chocolate recipe for the Folger Shakespeare Library’s “First Chefs” exhibition, a celebration of the first American culinary celebrities and the indigenous and African people who shaped American cooking.
William Hughes had not intended to become a chocolate celebrity. When the Englishman, who was a botanist by inclination, set out for the New World sometime in the 1630s or ‘40s, it’s possible he had never heard of cacao at all. “Britain was late to the game in terms of exploiting the resources in the Americas,” says Amanda Herbert, an Assistant Director at the Folger Shakespeare Library.
Hughes’s botanical studies, and his piracy, were a game of catch-up with the Spanish. His treatise on American botany, one of the first eyewitness English-language accounts of cacao planting and production, alerted the English of the New World resources they had yet to exploit. His notes on hot chocolate preparation, gleaned from encounters with indigenous, colonial European, and African Americans, helped bring the intoxicating brew, once regarded with wariness, to the tastebuds and imaginations of England’s upper classes.
But first, Hughes took to the high seas. He writes that he served on “his majesty’s ship of war,” a polite reference to privateering. At the time, English ships often had charters from the crown entitling them to capture and exploit ships from other countries, a kind of state-sanctioned piracy. Hughes’s ship privateered its way around the Caribbean, from Jamaica and Hispaniola to Florida. As a low-ranking sailor, Hughes was often stuck with the dangerous and tedious job of venturing out in a longboat to explore unknown coasts. But that gave him plenty of time to work on his passion project.
Hughes published his famous A treatise on American botany in 1672. Cooking in the Archives/Public Domain
Published decades after his return to England, The American Physitian includes notes on sugarcane (“both pleasant and profitable”), lime (“excellent good against the Scurvie”), and prickly pear (“if you suck large quantities of it, it coloureth the urine of a purple color”). But the longest entry of the book is dedicated to cacao, “that Fruit, which is the chiefest-ingredient of the deservedly-esteemed Drink called Chocolate.” This drink was so piquant and tempting, so symbolic of the lush riches of the New World, that Hughes dubbed it “the American nectar.”
While he was one of the first to write about it in English, Hughes wasn’t the first to bring chocolate into the European archive. That honor goes to Christopher Columbus himself, who, on his fourth voyage to the Americas, in 1502, encountered a boatful of indigenous people off the coast of Honduras. Their cargo contained a number of strange pods, which a stymied Columbus could only describe as almonds.
Indigenous Central Americans knew better. They had been consuming chocolate since at least 1400 BC. Pre-Columbian cultural artifacts are full of images and traces of cacao, which they fermented, crushed, and drank with hot water for special occasions. The Codex Zouche-Nuttall, a 14th-century document from the Mixtec people, depicts a couple marrying by sharing a frothing cup of the beverage. Scented with vanilla, honey, and other florals, colored red with annatto, and crowned with a signature crimson foam, cacao embodied life itself. “There was a lot of play around chocolate being like blood,” says Marcy Norton, Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, who wrote a book on chocolate.
Indigenous Americans also presented cacao to diplomatic guests. It was, perhaps, in this context that Europeans first encountered the drink. In 1518, a group of elite, likely Mayan-speaking Caribbean people presented a Spanish expedition with turkey stew, corn tortillas, and a cacao drink. The Europeans loved the turkey and tortillas, says Norton, but “the cacao drink was very strange to them.”
“Strange” is an understatement. At first, many Europeans simply couldn’t stand chocolate. Benzoni, an Italian traveler in 1500s Nicaragua, said that chocolate was more fit for pigs than humans. A Jesuit traveller in the 1500s compared the foam—one of the most important aspects of the beverage for indigenous Americans—to feces.
By the early 1600s, however, tastes were changing. Maybe it was because Spaniards had spent a century sipping chocolate in diplomatic meetings with indigenous leaders, part of the strategic military alliance that enabled European conquest. Maybe it was the addictive shock of caffeine in the era before coffee and tea captured Europe. Or maybe, as Norton argues, it was a result of the ever-permeable nature of colonial relationships, in which—without intending to, often without wanting to—the colonizer can’t help but take on the tastes and habits of the colonized.
Whatever it was, by the early 1600s, chocolate had seduced Spain. Sold from street carts and chocolate houses favored by missionaries, traders, and others embedded in Transatlantic networks, the frothy beverage enchanted Spaniards as much as its indigenous origins alarmed them. “There’s a lot of satirical and literary production where people are very playful about how taking chocolate makes you an idolator,” says Norton. The fear was real enough to prompt European doctors, priests, and scholars to debate at length how much chocolate was too much, and whether it could be drunk while fasting.
By the time Hughes traveled to the Americas, Spain and the New World were already connected by the habit of hot chocolate drinking, part of a new transatlantic culture forged by trade in sugar, spices, and human beings. Hughes’s description of common hot chocolate ingredients reflects this worldly milieu of traders and the spices they coveted. Variations of the beverage could include “milk, water, grated bread, sugar, maiz, egg, wheat flour, cassava, chili pepper, nutmeg, clove, cinnamon, musk, ambergris, cardamom, orange flower water, citrus peel, citrus and spice oils, achiote, vanilla, fennel, annis, black pepper, ground almonds, almond oil, rum, brandy, sack.”
The bitter undertones of cacao alluded to equally unsettling histories. By the time of Hughes’s voyage, the great pre-Columbian empires had all but fallen. Hundreds of thousands of Native Americans had been killed by European guns, forced labor, and disease. Thousands of enslaved Africans were being taken to American plantations to replace them. As a result of this violent, vibrant exchange, a new Mestizo culture was born, indigenous, African, and European all at once. These people in Empire’s margins—enslaved Africans coaxing sugarcane from island soil; Mestiza ladies mixing indigenous knowledge into chocolate for their Spanish employers or husbands—are the real authors of Hughes’s book.
As with many natural historians of the time, says Herbert of the Folger Shakespeare library, Hughes’s work “was an act of information possession.” His botanical buccaneering was a stand-in for the colonial project as a whole. Like all Europeans in the New World, he extracted resources and knowledge from lands and people that were not his to take. Yet this, says Norton, is the great irony of Europeans’ enduring obsession with cocoa. Hughes may have tried to possess American knowledge, but chocolate, and the indigenous traditions that created it, have possessed Europe ever since.
William Hughes’s Hot Chocolate
Adapted by Marissa Nicosia of Cooking in the Archives for the Folger Shakespeare Library’s “First Chefs” exhibition, part of the library’s ongoing “Before ‘Farm to Table’: Early Modern Foodways and Cultures” series.
Ingredients
This recipe makes two cups of hot chocolate mix.
- 1⁄4 cup cocoa nibs
- 3 1⁄2 ounces or 100 grams of a 70% dark chocolate bar, roughly chopped
- 1⁄2 cup cocoa powder
- 1⁄2 cup sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1⁄4 cup breadcrumbs or grated stale bread (optional for a thicker drink)
- 1⁄2 teaspoon chili flakes (substitute 1⁄2 teaspoon ground cinnamon for a less spicy drink)
- Milk (1 cup of milk to 3 tablespoons of finished mix)
Preparation
Toast the cocoa nibs in a shallow pan until they begin to look glossy and smell extra chocolatey. Combine all ingredients in a food processor, blender, or mortal and pestle. Blitz or grind until ingredients are combined into a loose mix. Heat the milk in a pan on the stove or in a heatproof container in a microwave. Stir in three tablespoons of mix for each cup of heated milk.
Notes
Hughes lists many other ingredients that indigenous Caribbean people as well as Spanish colonizers added to their hot chocolate. Starting with a base of grated cacao, they thickened it with cassava bread, maize flour, eggs, and/or milk, and flavored it with nutmeg, saffron, almond oil, sugar, pepper, cloves, vanilla, fennel seeds, anise seeds, lemon peel, cardamom, orange flower water, rum, brandy, and sherry. Adapt this hot chocolate to your taste by trying these other traditional flavorings.
SOURCE -> https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/who-invented-hot-chocolate
LOGISTICS
Getting parts in into a country can be expensive time consuming and challenging
Below are several freight companies customs clearing agencies for different areas who have been helpful in the past.
Most yacht parts are governed by customs rules and yacht in transit rules which vary from country to country.
LIST BY COUNTRY / AREA
MEXICO - ESTAFETA - slow but steady
COSTA RICA -
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO - PAS Cargo USA
CARIBBEAN - TROPICAL SHIPPING - FEDEX - DHL
PANAMA - MAILBOXES ETC
FLEET UPDATE 2020-05-31
- BIGGEST FISH CAUGHT AWARD and runners up
- HIGHEST WIND RECORDED AWARD
- BIGGEST MISHAP AWARD AKA THE CAPTAIN RON AWARD and runners up
- MOST UNWELCOME VISITOR ONBOARD AWARD and runners up
- SPEEDY GONZALEZ AWARD
- PANAMA POSSE YODA OF THE YEAR AWARD and runners up
- PICTURE OF THE YEAR AWARD and runners up
- GOOD SAMARITAN OF THE YEAR AWARD
- Marina Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua, Panama Posse Dinners
- ANNOUNCING the 19/20 PANAMA POSSE T-SHIRTS
- SIGN UP FOR NEXT SEASON
- Add you comments and findings to Good Nautical
- A special thank you to our sponsors
Panama Posse virtual final party smashing success and below are the winners of this years fleet awards
1) 🥥 BIGGEST FISH CAUGHT AWARD
PRIZE: one free week dockage at Marina Pez Vela, Costa Rica courtesy of MARINA PEZ VELA
WINNER: SEA LARKS
Jeff & Paula
SEA LARKS
Runner Up
SIRENA
Greg
SIRENA
Runner Up
REEF DANCER
Jerry & Debra
REEF DANCER
Runner up
SUSIMI
Hazel & Paul
SUSIMI
2) 🥥 HIGHEST WIND RECORDED AWARD
PRIZE: One week of Dockage at Marina Papagayo, Courtesy of Marina Papagayo, Costa Rica
WINNER: BLESSED LIFE
49 knots of wind recorded at Playa Cocos, Costa Rica
Bob and Margie
BLESSED LIFE
3) 🥥 BIGGEST MISHAP AWARD AKA THE CAPTAIN RON AWARD
PRIZE: one month of free mooring in El Salvador courtesy of Bill and Jean El Salvador
WINNER: MOONRISE
For their ordeal in reaching Marina Chahue from South of Acapulco
- oil sipping engine - how much oil can an engine burn over 200 nm ? answer - 1 liter per mile @ 4 knots
Stephen & Ana Veronica
MOONRISE
Runner Up
VOLARE - Exiting El Salvador with a splash
Jessica & Adam
VOLARE
Runner Up
GREENFLASH - kissing the dock in Costa Rica
Bob & Joan
GREEN FLASH
Runner Up
HALF MOON - Adventures in Anchoring in Zihuatanejo
Brain & Elizabeth
HALF MOON
Runner Up
HAPPY DANCE - Dripmore Shaft
Sue & Marty
HAPPY DANCE
Honorable Mention: Personal Head Injury in El Salvador
Matt & Britt
MALOLO
4) 🥥 MOST UNWELCOME VISITOR ONBOARD AWARD
PRIZE: 1.75 Liters of Flor de Caña Rum
Winner: JO
"Jay" & Kelley
JO
THISLDU
Garrett & Audrey
THISLDU
5) 🥥 SPEEDY GONZALEZ AWARD
Prize: One year full access to 330 Good Nautical's Global Regions
WINNER: TRANCE - sailing from Virigina to Oregon in 6 months
November 30th 2019 - Virginia
May 24th 2020 - Bodega Bay Northern California
Dan & Marlene
TRANCE
6) 🥥 PANAMA POSSE YODA OF THE YEAR AWARD
Prize: One week at Red Frog Marina courtesy of Red Frog Marina, Panama
Winner: AVANT
For his exceptional support and informational updates during the C19 Crisis and his tiredless support and satellite chartmaking for Open Cpn
Rob & Debra
AVANT
Runner Up: KNOT RIGHT
For being a positive force and his continued participation in the Panama Posse
Walt & Jearine
RUNNER UP
Runner Up: SEAGLUB
For committing to providing top swell forcasts, relevant weather information
Chris
SEAGLUB
9) 🥥 PICTURE OF THE YEAR AWARD
https://panamaposse.com/panama-posse-2019-2020-picture-of-the-year-entries
PRIZE: one free week stay at Marina Vista Mar, Panama, Courtesy of Marina Vista Mar, Panama
WINNER: ROSA LEE
Sunset by SV Rosa Lee
Gary
ROSA LEE
Runner Up: HALF MOON
Moonrise by SV Half Moon
Brain & Elizabeth
HALF MOON
Runner Up: ROSA LEE
Crossing the Bar
Gary
ROSA LEE
Honorable Mention: JEAN ANNE
Whalestale
Steve & Chelsea
JEAN ANNE
FYI Follow this link to listen to Steve's Awesome MIXES -> https://soundcloud.com/djlifeguard/
7) 🥥 GOOD SAMARITAN OF THE YEAR AWARD
PRIZE: Futue round of golf for 2 Barra de Navidad, MX
WINNER: HO'OKIPA
Lucky Chucky and Lisa made a special donation of 6000 Pesos
to the Barra Navidad Feed the locals Fundand as Wilderness Survival Experts
went digging deep into a foot to take a metal splinter out.
Lucky Chucky & Lisa
HO'OKIPA
8) Marina Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua, Panama Posse Dinners
Second Wind still at Marina Puesta del Sol where it will be for the summer. Here is a photo of six of the seven (so far) Saturday night dinners hosted by Roberto Membreño, owner of the marina and resort. Juanita Garcia Uriza, the resort manager, orchestrates these dinners. You can see that our numbers have been dwindling. They are the chronological order.
Vessels TALIESIN ROSE, GARGOYLE, SECOND WIND, HALF MOON, THISLDU
Taliesin Rose is currently in Barra de Navidad Mexico.
Thisludu are at their new home in Charleston, SC.
Laurin SECOND WIND
9) Panama Posse SWAG we will send one more email out as soon as the
2019-2020 Tshirts orde form with your vessle name will go live
( expect this to be in about 2 weeks )
10) sign up for next season-
here is the list of valiant entrants, explorers and adventurers
for the next season - to do so reply with "SIGN ME UP AGAIN"
https://panamaposse.com/2020-2021-vessels
Dietmar & Suzanne
CARINTHIA
11) Things you can do while sheltering in place ... Add you comments and findings to Good Nautical !!!
For the next 3 months you still have free access to Good Nautical so please add your findings.
If you sign up again for next season you will of course once again get access -
alternatively you can make an annual tax deductible donation and keep getting access
Log into Good Nautical and make your relevant comments in any of the places you have been
Please make your reports - simply ADD A NEW COMMENT in Good Nautical for each spot
12) And a final and very special thank you to our sponsors
- Marina Puerto Vallarta, Puerto Vallarta – Mexico
- Marina Puerto de La Navidad – Barra de Navidad – Mexico
- Marina Ixtapa, Ixtapa – Mexico
- La Marina Acapulco, Acapulco – Mexico
- Marina Chiapas – Mexico
- Marina Bahia del Sol – El Salvador
- La Palma Moorings – Bahia del Sol, El Salvador
- Marina Puesta del Sol – Nicaragua
- Marina Papagayo – Costa Rica
- Marina Pez Vela – Costa Rica
- Banana Bay Marina – Costa Rica
- Vista Mar Marina – Panama
- Shelter Bay Marina – Panama
- Red Frog Marina – Panama
- Bocas Marina – Panama
Official Panama Canal Agent
Official Panama Posse Ambassadors
- Jaime Figueroa Navarro – Panama
- Bill & Jean – El Salvador Rally, El Salvador
- Ralph Hewitt – Nicaragua
Panama Posse Partners
- Vicente’s Moorings – Acapulco – Mexico
- Discover Tours Chiapas – Mexico
- Park Avenue Villas – San Juan del Sur – Nicaragua
- Coconutz – Annual Papagayo Victory Party – Playa Cocos – Costa Rica
- Abernathy – Chandlery – Panama
- Advertising Partners – Las Vegas
- Safe-Esteem.com – Delaware
THANK YOU !
🇲🇽 COPPER CANON - BARRANCA DEL COBRE - EL CHEPE
🇲🇽 COPPER CANON - BARRANCA DEL COBRE - EL CHEPE
The Journey through the Copper Canyon by train is an experience of one of the most scenic train rides in the world. TAs El Chepe chugs along its 653 km (405 mi) of track, a journey which takes anywhere from 9 to 16 hours, it crosses over 37 bridges and through 86 tunnels. It crosses the Copper Canyon, called the Barranca del Cobre by Mexicans.
The Copper Canyon is one of Mexico's lesser-known gems. ...
is a group of six distinct canyons in the Sierra Madre Occidental in the southwestern part of the state of Chihuahua
It is 65,000 sqk / 25,000 sqm in size.
The canyons were formed by six rivers that drain the western side of the Sierra Tarahumara (a part of the Sierra Madre Occidental).
All six rivers merge into the Rio Fuerte and empty into the Gulf of California. The walls of the canyon are a copper/green color, which is the origin of the name.
The Spanish arrived in the Copper Canyon area in the 17th century and encountered the indigenous locals throughout Chihuahua. For these New Spanish, America was a new land to explore for gold and silver and also to spread Christianity. The New Spanish named the people "Tarahumara", they encountered derived from the word Rarámuri, which is what the indigenous people call their men.
During the 17th century, silver was discovered by the Hispanic in the land of the Tarahumara tribe. Some were enslaved for mining efforts. There were small uprisings by the Tarahumara, but to little avail. They eventually were forced off the more desirable lands and up into the canyon cliffs.
The full journey takes either nine or sixteen hours
If you travel on the Chepe Express (Los Mochis to Creel and vice versa), your journey time will be nine hours, with the train leaving from Los Mochis at either 6am or 3.50pm. On the Chepe Regional (Los Mochis to Chihuahua and vice versa), the journey is around 16 hours from start to finish and the train leaves either Los Mochis or Chihuahua at 6am.
CLIMATE
The alpine climate of the mountainous regions of Copper Canyon has moderate temperatures from October to November and March to April. The bottom of the canyons are humid and warm and remain that way throughout the year. During the warmest months, April through June, drought is a chronic problem with little rainfall until July when the rainy season begins.
🇨🇷 MANUEL ANTONIO PARK
Manuel Antonio National Park - Parque Nacional Manuel Antonio, is a quintesential Cosat Rican national park in the Central Pacific Conservation Area located on the Pacific coast a few miles south east of Quepos and Marina Pez Vela.
It was established in 1972 and considered the smallest of any Costa Rica national park. It is well known for its beautiful beaches and hiking trails. In 2011, Manuel Antonio was listed by Forbes as among the world's 12 most beautiful national parks.
The diversity of wildlife in its 6.83 km2 (3 sq mi) is unequaled with 109 species of mammals and 184 species of birds.
Dolphins can be observed there, as well as the occasional migrating whale
There are three-toed sloth and two-toed sloth are a major feature, as are three of Costa Rica's monkey species —
The mantled howler monkey
Central American squirrel monkey
Panamanian white-faced Capuchin monkey.
There are black spiny-tailed iguana, green iguana, common basilisk, white-nosed coati and many snake and bat species a
Included in the 184 bird species are toucans, woodpeckers, potoos, motmots, tanagers, turkey vulture, parakeets and hawks. .
FLEET UPDATE 2020-05-24
- Announcing End of Panama Posse 2019-2020 Season
- Highest Wind recorded
- Pictures of the Week
- Insuring with Novamar
- Nicaragua exit via Humanitarian Flight
- El Niño or La Niña - Climatology - OpenCPN - Predict Wind
- Country Updates
- Vessel Locations
- Calling on all West Coast Yacht Clubs
- Sign up for the next season
- Panama Posse Swag & T-Shirts of this adventure
- Reply to this email
- Opt-out
1) Announcing End of Panama Posse 2019-2020 Season
This is your second to last fleet update of the season !
The final celebration Saturday May 30, 2020 at 23:00 UTC via LINE
Everyone get's the mic and we'll tell our sea-tales
- have a few cocktails and relax and share
- we can even try turning on video if bandwidth permits it !
Among other things we announce the following awards
- please join and give us your words of wisdom
🥥 Picture of the Year
🥥 Biggest Fish caught
🥥 Highest Wind recorded
🥥 Biggest Mishap
🥥 Most un-welcomed visitor onboard
🥥 Speedy Gonzales award
🥥 Panama Posse YODA OF THE YEAR
2) Highest wind on record
This entry from Costa Rica shows 49 knots
Highest wind recorded. It was actually 52. Playa Del Cocos. Costa Rica
Bob and Margie
BLESSED LIFE
3) Pictures of the Week
Puerto Jimenez, Costa Rica
‘Wolfhound’, observing 'social distancing' … Anchored off Jimenez, Costa Rica
Steven, Louise & Sam
WOLFHOUND
Marina Pez Vela, Cost Rica
Bob and Margie
BLESSED LIFE
Barra de Navidad Lagoon, Mexico
Steve & Chelsea
JEAN ANNE
4) NOVAMAR INSURANCE
We are safe and sound in Santa Barbara after flying home from Barra one week ago.
Wanted to let you know that Novamar has stepped up and helped me with the option to leave our vessel in Barra di Navidad over the summer.
We dropped the hull value to reduce their risk and I am self insuring that portion not covered. The navigation area and the premium were a good
compromise to get Sea Larks covered for the next sailing season. I still may choose to go to California for the summer, but now have the option.
Not sure they would have allowed for this without the connection to Panama Posse and their being quite a few others in similar situations.
Morgan Wells, Broker for Novamar, was also helpful in getting this resolved in a timely manner.
Please forward to share my gratitude.
Cheers,
Jeffrey & Paula
Jeffrey & Paula
SEA LARKS
5) Nicaragua exit via Humanitarian Flight
"... it was a hell of an adventure ..."
Thisldu is through customs waiting on our flight! Flight was approved at 4pm yesterday and tickets were on sale shortly after. The embassy called us before sending out the email, but the flight is not limited to Americans and is completely full (300+ seats).
Flight scheduled for 10am.
Arrived at 7am behind ~75 people already waiting in line. Airport opened doors at 730. They moved the line of 300 people twice. 95% of people wearing masks. 915 they check in the first person. Computers are down and so are printers. Every ticket and luggage tag is hand written. Most payed for a seat assignment but all tickets say “open seating”. 12 now and we are through immigration waiting to board.
A total cluster *#%}@ but Ill sit on the toilet at this point.
To read Audrey's blog entry visit
https://www.thisldu.com/home/homecoming
Garrett & Audrey
THISLDU
6) El Niño or La Niña
U.S. forecaster sees 65% chance for no El Nino, no La Nina during summer months
https://reut.rs/2WYIsb9
In general, warm El Niño events are characterized by more tropical storms and hurricanes in the eastern Pacific and a decrease in the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. ... The increased wind shear helps to prevent tropical disturbances from developing into hurricanes.
During La Niña, westerly winds high in the atmosphere weaken. This results in an expanded area of low vertical wind shear, allowing more Atlantic hurricanes to develop during La Niña events. La Niña increases the number of hurricanes that develop and allows stronger hurricanes to form.
In opencpn install the Climatology plugin and you too can become a hurricane pathweather analyst
Or better yet - for professional weather - via our Panama Posse Sponsors
predictwind.com for a full offshore solution
7) Country Updates C19 Extraordinar Line Call
As of today here is where each country stands
MEXICO 65,856 7,179 ✝
- border closings between USA and Mexico but commercial entry permitted - outbound and inbound vessels still possible - certain ports are closed or locking down
https://mx.usembassy.gov/u-s-citizen-services/covid-19-information/
On April 21, the Mexican government announced the start of Phase 3 of the pandemic, meaning widespread community transmission, thousands of cases of infection, and increased numbers of patients requiring hospitalization.
Schools are closed until May 30 in most municipalities.
Non-essential activities have been suspended. Essential activities include medical services and supplies, public safety, fundamental economic functions, government social programs, and critical infrastructure.
Meetings of 100 participants or greater have been suspended.
Individuals should practice good hygiene such as frequent hand washing and social distancing.
Those not involved in essential activities should self-isolate at home.
People over age 60 or with high risk medical conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, lung disease, compromised immune system, pregnant, or post-partum should self-isolate at home.
States and municipalities may implement additional closings and restrictions on public gatherings, transportation, business operations, and government operations.
GUATEMALA 3,054 55✝
- full lock down - no entry permitted - Curfew extended to june 5th
Guatemala's Congress has voted to extend the current state of calamity until June 5 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. A
The Guatemalan government declared a “state of calamity” on March 5 and then extended the expiration of this declaration to June 5. Declaring a “state of calamity” allows the Guatemalan government to take exceptional measures to protect national security (similar to a “state of emergency” in the United States). Under a state of calamity, the Guatemalan government can authorize specific actions, such as
EL SALVADOR 1,915 35✝
full lock down - no entry permitted
El Salvadorian government extends COVID-19 lockdown restrictions until June 6
HONDURAS 3,743 174✝
Honduras - full lock down - no entry permitted
National Curfew Extended Until May 24
The Government of Honduras has extended the national curfew until Sunday, May 24 at 11:00 p.m. Under the latest order, circulation for shopping and essential activities is permitted on certain days based on national identity number.
The National Police announced banks, supermarkets, pharmacies, hardware stores, fruit and vegetable stands, and gas stations will be open Monday through Friday until 5:00 p.m. Shopping will be allowed from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. according to the last digit of an individual’s national identity card or passport number for non-Honduran citizens.
NICARAGUA 279 17✝
Nicaragua - closed
Nicaragua likely to maintain restrictions on international passenger flights and cross-border cargo transport through 09 Jun 2020 23:59 GMT.
The border with Costa Rica has also been closed for cargo transport since May 18. Hundreds of cargo trucks are stranded in Penas Blancas on the Nicaraguan side of the border.
Event: Several airlines have extended their suspension of regular service between Nicaragua and the United States. The following dates for resumption of service are current as of April 28, 2020 but could change:
* Aeromexico service suspended until June 01, 2020
* United Airlines service suspended until June 04, 2020
* Avianca Airlines service suspended until June 04, 2020
* Delta Airlines service suspended until June 13, 2020
* American Airlines service suspended until June 04, 2020
* Copa Airlines service suspended until June 01, 2020
* Spirit Airlines service suspended until July 05, 2020
COSTA RICA 930 10✝
The travel ban has been extended and the lockdown will last until at least June 15.
Costa Rica has announced that it will close its borders (land, air, and sea) to all foreign travelers entering between March 18 and June 15 (at midnight on both dates).
Visas are automatically extended to mid August
PANAMA 10,577 299✝
On May 15, the Government of Panama extended the suspension of international commercial passenger flights for an additional 30 days until June 22. The previous exceptions for cargo, humanitarian, medical supplies, medical evacuation, and vaccines remain in place.
May 18, exercises such as bicycling, running, and skating will now be permissible activities if done within one kilometer of your home, with a mask, and inside your two-hour window. Sundays will remain a day of total quarantine.
no entry permitted 14 day quarantine has been obtained by some in internal movements - curfew w 1 hour movement x day for mots with 30 minutes based on ID number and day - no alcohol sales -
restrictions - we do not - in Panama city have been breaking curfew - in particle - the area - show every single infected person - 20 km - from this location - feel rather safe here - stay on lock down - how - rhapsody - opening up as many curves violations -
The Embassy arranged for a commercially-operated humanitarian flight on May 8 for any U.S. citizen or other qualified traveler able to enter the United States who had expressed wishes to depart Panama. That flight is now full.
The Embassy is continuing its efforts to identify future flights. However, there are no other planned flights at this time. We encourage you to be prepared to remain in Panama for the next 30-60 days, or perhaps more.
For now, please closely monitor Spirit’s website (www.Spirit.com) for any openings due to cancelations on the May 8 flight from Panama City, Panama (PTY) to Ft. Lauderdale, FL, USA (FLL).
8) Vessel Locations and plans from the Saturday 24th Extraordinary 12th Line call
NAME | LOCATION | STAY IN PLACE | |
1 | BAJA FOG | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
John & Monique | |||
2 | ANGELIQUE OF VANCOUVER | Vessel is in Mazatlan | |
Mike & Jacquie | |||
3 | TALIESIN ROSE | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Victoria & Rowan | |||
4 | THISLDU | Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua | |
Garrett & Audrey | |||
5 | LUNA | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Bob & Kris | |||
9 | CARINTHIA | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Dietmar & Suzanne | |||
10 | SEAGLUB | Marina San Jose de Cabo - pretty full | |
Chris | |||
12 | JEAN ANNE | 5 boars in tenecatita - firefly | |
Steve & Chelsea | |||
13 | SINGULARITY | Vista Mar, Panama | |
Robert & Carol | |||
19 © | KNOT RIGHT | Vista Mar Marina, Panama - 2 healthstops on the way to the airport - had to stay outside - once inside - had to use sanitizer - heat check camera - | I'm flying repatriation flight - heading to virginia - june 22 airport is closed |
Walt & Jeariene | |||
20 © | COMPROMISE | no much new s- we are new chiapas - | |
Ronald & Karen | |||
22 | DUE WEST | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Kirk & Heidi | |||
23 | TOP CIDER | Chiapas, MX | |
Chuck & Sharon | |||
24 | RAIREVA | on dry land in arizona in mazatlan on the hard | |
Marek | |||
25 | HALF MOON | Nicaragua | |
Brain & Elizabeth | |||
26 | MADELEINE | Vessel in El Salvador | |
Huibert & Maaike | |||
27 | ANGELIQUE | telemar near cape canavral - anchor | |
Dan & Angela | |||
28 | JO | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Phillip Jay & Kelley | |||
29 | DELTA SWIZZLER | Barra de Navidad, MX | insurance - agent with jackline is a resident in boca del toro, |
Mark & Cindy | |||
30 | FIREFLY | Tenecatita, MX | |
Brenda & Ted | |||
34 | ONE LIFE | Barra | |
Doug & Mary | |||
37 | WISHLIST | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Chris | |||
40 | AVANT | Shelter Bay, Panama - post updated humanitarian flights - air canada - started to re-announce flights but - not this | canada is nice - meet with friends - all is well - slowly returning back to normal |
Rob & Debra | |||
48 © | DENOVO | Puerto Penasca - I am in Canada ? | |
Andre, Naomi & crew | |||
51 | GREEN FLASH | boat is in vista mar - we are in california - hoping to get to panama in june - ultimatly to get to shelter bay | |
Bob & Joan | |||
52 | BONZAI | South beach miami - restrictions arebeing lifted on Monday | tracking 7 vessels that are leaving honduras on route to the keys - anchored behind the tropical storm - - |
Don | |||
54 | STAND DOWN | Vista Mar, Panama | |
Richard & Nancy | |||
55 | SONAMARA | bocas del toro - all is well - easing of restrictions | issue without local flights - need to take a car 12 hour drive - copa airlines on july 3rd - local airport |
Louis & Patrice | |||
56 | NAMAHANA | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Curtis & Jill | |||
58 | KATHLEEN | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Robert & Karen | |||
59 | RAVEN | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Neil, Tammy, & Jan | |||
60 | BLUE OASIS | Blue Oasis - St Petersburg Fl on the hard- waiting next cruising season | |
Barry & Kathy | |||
62 | SHEARWATER | Belize | |
Pati & Eric | |||
63 | SECOND WIND | Puesta del Sol NIC | ;eave boat there and head to us jun 8 |
Laurin | |||
64 | SECRET WATER | En Route to Puerto Penasco | |
Annie & Chris & Crew | |||
65 | WOODWIND 1 | paradise village - all is well - 2 sets of rules - beaches are closed - able to walk around with masks - | |
Brian & Tracy | |||
67 | CHIMERA | Costa Rica | |
Dennis & Margaret | |||
69 | ALIZANN | approaching the yucatan channel - their plan is to go to deltaville virgina - put boat hard | |
Martin & Suzanne | |||
70 | FLOATING STONES | Currenty in brunswick georgia - made a decision - hoping to get cruising again - midst of boat cleaning | |
Bryan & Cheryl | |||
74 | MAISON DE SANTE | we are barra all well indefinatly - all is well nicole and I | |
Keenan & Nicole | |||
75 | BELLA SIRENA | Puerto Vallarta Marina Vallarta | |
Bryon | |||
80 | DAD’S DREAM | Vessel for Sale in Panama | |
Rick & Brenda | |||
81 | AY CARAMBA ! | On the Hard in the US | |
Juan & Michelle | |||
82 | BULA | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Kenny & Cari | |||
85 | FOLLOW YOU FOLLOW ME | San Diego | |
Allan & Rina | |||
86 | CONTEXT | san diego - vessels is panama | |
John | |||
88 © | SEA LARKS | Banana Bay Marina, CR | |
Jeffrey & Paula | |||
92 | BAIT ‘N SWITCH III | still in la - vessel is in Marina Papagayo - slice of good news - start to do the 2 year importation and a guy got the tip extended with a power - thank | |
John & Laurie | |||
94 © | MARIAH | En Route to Key West | |
Trish & John | |||
95 | WAVE DANCER | everything the same in florida in isolation - boat is well preserved in golfity | |
Vladimir & Galinda | |||
96 | MALOLO | Perula , mx - underway - left chamela - headigng north - to banderas bay - 5 botas anchored | |
Matt & Britt | |||
99 | HO’OKIPA | Barra de Navidad, MX | next foreseabel future |
Lisa & Lucky | |||
100 | VOLARE | Tenecatita, MX | |
Jessica & Adam | |||
109 | JOY | barra de navida, mx - | |
Jeff & Roxanne | |||
110 | KARVI | barra de navida, mx - | |
Dan & Nancy | |||
117 | PILIALOHA | we are in hawaii - lockdown has been extended to june 30th in hawaii - lowest cases of c19 in the country - 300 all arrivals must quarntine for 14 days - | few cases vessel is in chahue |
Rick & Maria | |||
121 | ANKYRIOS | Barra de Navidad | |
Dennis, Brandy & Crew | |||
124 © | INDEPENDENCE | in jupiter florida - after leaving roatan - is opening to all people on the island - made it to a restaurant - heading back to Bay | |
Larry & Jamie | |||
125 | LILY ROWAN | Marina Chahue | |
Jim & Zyanya | |||
129 © | NESHUMA | on the hard at mazatlan marina | |
Carl & Cynthia | |||
131 | MAR Y SOL | Marina Vallarta, MX | |
Bob & Marisol | |||
138 | BLESSED LIFE | Marina Pez Vela, Costa Rica - in quepos Costa Rica - immigration has extended the visas to august 18th stay witj boat in quepos farmers market - open things | |
Bob and Margie | |||
146 | ROSA-LEE | texas | vessel is in el salvador leave october |
Gary | |||
147 | GRASSHOPPER | chiappas - pool to be finished | |
Jeffrey & Cheri | |||
148 © | ELEVEN 11 | Barra de Navidad, MX | |
Tim, Kim & | |||
161 © | SPREZZATURA | buddy boating in Bocas - very nice - planning to leave on june 3rd flight to houston and heading to shelter bay | |
Eric | |||
171 | GenM | still in la paz - working away on the boat - in the heat - swapping vessel to cooling | stay at home to june 15th orders in la paz |
Marvin and Laurie | |||
173 © | BISOU | bocas del toro - been out for 10 days - government is talking about easing things up - take away only - hardware stores - opening in 14 days blovks | |
Robin and Tad | |||
176 | REEF DANCER | barra de navidad - trying to dive - too much swell - all well | |
Jerry & Debra | |||
179 | Seamantha | locked down in Colombia 3 or 4 weeklt flights to ft luderdale - humantarian flights | staying in carthagena |
9) Calling on all West Coast Yacht Clubs
If you are a member or have good relations with any West Coast Yacht Club please let us know we'd love to create a bigger liaison
with the Panama Posse and work on a graduation plan to get your Yacht Clubs Vessel to participate and plan for future Panama Posse Rally's.
10) Sign up for the next season 20-21 of the Panama Posse
- simply reply with "sign me up again"
Registration fees will stay at $100 for those who "re-posse" before July 31st, 2020
It all starts Dec 3rd 2020 at Barra de Navidad, MX
54 vessels are already signed up and for our kick of week schedule visit
11) Panama Posse Swag !
Is your vessels name on the back of the 2019-2020 T Shirt ?
We will open our T-shirt hats and Visor Swag upon completion of this season in June
- please confirm that your vessels name is on this list above
T Shirts, V-Shirts, Visors, Caps etc will be priced ~ 20 $ plus S/H
Stay tuned for our pre-order payment and full fillment process via squareup.
- basically we'll need your sizes quantities and ship to address
12) Please reply to this email with
– your updates
– contenders for picture of the week – links to your favorite SONGS
– relevant blog posts – and of course your valuable suggestions
and we’ll include it in the next FLEET UPDATE – Keep em ‘coming
The Panama Posse philosophy is to pass on nautical knowledge via the gestalt theory...
Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia
SV Carinthia
13) Opt-out from Fleet Updates simply reply with “REMOVE“