Sunday, July 21, 2013

Back to Seattle

We are currently on the train from Vancouver, BC, back to Seattle. We had a great time visiting with my cousin, Bari, and husband, Bob. They picked us up at the train station late on Wednesday and despite it being an arrival late in the evening we talked to the wee hours in the morning. During our time in Vancouver we waked around Yaletown and stopped for 'small bites' at a restaurant with tables on the sidewalk and visited the market at Granville Island for fresh ingredients for dinner.

Bari and Bob checking out the tomatoes
 
On Friday, Bob and Bari drove us out to Port Coquilam to the Force10 distributor. We have a Force10, 3 burner Gimbaled stove with oven on Windarra that we installed during our refit in 2000. It has served us well but we have been having problems with broiler and the oven temperature control. Rich had talked to them on the phone in the past but the answer of just replace the entire unit is not practical for us, especially sine the boat is now in Ecuador. Rich was able to talk to someone knowledgable about our unit and our experience /problem face to face. We learned what size thumb drills to use to clean the orifcies to maximize the flow of gas, to use some WD40 to help with the temperature control and how to remove the broiler to clean it. Unfortunately the oven/broiler temperature control is not a replaceable unit so if it fails we may indeed have to replace the entire stove. We hope this doesn't happen but now we are more knowledgeable at least. This itself made the drive worth the time for us.

In 2010, Rich and I sailed to Haida Gwaii on Windarra. You may look back through the blog and see our entrees. We enjoy the visit and learning about the Haida. Many of the artifacts such as totem poles, lodge poles, bent wood boxes and other items at housed at the Museum of Anthropology on the University of British Columbia campus in Vancouver. The four of us went to the museum on Saturday. We saw carvings and jewelry by Bill Reid, a famous and talented Haida artist. One feels a little mixed about seeing all the items at the museum. Yes, they are being preserved and enjoyed by a larger audience here in Vancouver but I also thought that some of the items belong in Haida Gwaii.

 
The museum also had artifacts from another indigenous people's from Canada and around the world. There was an exhibit of Iranian and Iraqi art that was very thought provoking, as well as an exhibit of ceramics from Europe, including stove tiles, delfware, and porcelain. I learned that Bellamine jugs from Germany engraved with the face of an old man with a beard, was a derogatory reference to a Cardinal Bellarmine, who was strongly opposed to the reformation in Germany by Martin Luther and others. In Tacoma, where I grew up there was a Catholic boys school, named Bellarmine. It has since gone Co-Ed.

We want to thank Bob and Bari for their hospitality and for being such great hosts.

Sent from SV Windarra iPad

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

New Jersey to Portland

Rich and I traveled in Mexico, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama and Ecuador without getting sick or having problems with the food or water. We return to the United States and in less than a week we get sick. Granted we were visiting Jesse and he had a cold but it is interesting. Jesse had just started a new in Connecticut and a whole new germ pool. Anyway, we have sniffles and a hacking cough but we seem to be close to the end of it.

Before we left New Jersey, we had dinner with Rich's cousin, Alyce, her husband, Michael, and their daughter, Megan. Last year we had spent time with Alyce in Ocean City.  We also visited with Wilda and Jim Conor in Ocean City and had dinner with Jim and Jeanne. Due to our colds we did not visit anyone less that we had planned to.

Saturday we flew to Portland, via Minneapolis. We tried hard not to infect the rest of the passengers. Both flights were full but we lucked out and had an empty seat next to us on the flight from Minneapolis. Sarah picked us up at the airport and delivered us to our hotel. She has been kind enough to schlep us around Portland so we may do some shopping. There are just something that you can't buy very easily in Central America.

Tomorrow we will take the train to Vancouver, BC, Canada.


Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Newport, Rhode Island, Mystic Connecticut and Runnemede, New Jersey

On Monday morning, Jesse got up early to drive to his job in Groton. Rich and I left at the same time and after a stop for coffee at Starbuck's we drove east to Newport, Rhode Island. While the America's Cup races are just starting in San Francisco, on the other side of the United States, Newport was once the home of the America's Cup. One of the main streets is called America's Cup Avenue. It has a long tradition of sailing and boating. Rich and I walked along the waterfront and stopped for lunch.

I am posing in front of one of the classic boats that take tourists out for tours

Power boaters have creative names for their crafts.

One of the small homes in the area.
 
After lunch we drove around the area and followed the sign that said, "Mansions". These homes are gorgeous. The styles range from Victorian to Georgian to French Chateau. Most have manicured gardens and lawns and could sleep a small family of 20 or more. They were fun to look at but I am glad I don't have to maintain them!
 
 On our way back to New Haven we also stopped at Mystic, Connecticut. This was a ship building center and also the home of the Mystic Pizza shop that was the inspiration for the movie of the same name.. It professes that its pizza is a slice of heaven. We will take their word for it as we did not stop for a slice.
 
Today we drove south to Runnemede, New Jersey to visit with friends and family before flying to the west coast. Rich and I stopped by Marino's for a cheese steak sandwich and a hoagie. Rich and the owner exchanged names of friends from high school looking for common aquaintances. I think this is an east coast thing.
 
As I type this, Rich is napping. Since Jesse is in a new job he is also in a new germ pool and got a cold. During our visit, Rich caught his cold. We were able to travel in central America and not get sick but returning to the US is different matter. I hope he recovers soon.


Saturday, July 6, 2013

Philadelphia, Wyckoff and New Haven

On Thursday we visited with Rich's mother, Mary, brother, Jim and Jim's wife, Jeanne. Mary is almost 92 and is getting frail. In the evening we went out to dinner with Jim and Jeaane.

On Friday morning we visited with Mary and Jeanne before driving up to Wyckoff to visit with my cousin, Steph and her husband, Bill. Their daughter, Anneliese, is now living in New York City, so we missed seeing her, but my aunt Bert, Steph's mother joined us for dinner. We had a great time catching up on each other's lived since we saw them last year before returning to Mexico in October 2012. They told us about Hurricane Sandy and how they were affected.

Steph and Bill Mayo

This morning after a leisurely breakfast with Steph and Bill we drove up to New Haven, CT. Jesse and Rae just moved here from Portland. Rae will be starting graduate school at Yale in September. Jesse just started a new job in Groton. They bought a Prius to replace the old Taurus that they sold to Jesse's friend, Ryan, before they left Portland. They live in a building that was once Yale faculty housing, so it has plenty of old world charm. We helped Jesse put together their dining room table.

Their apartment is on the second floor to the left of the blue door
 
 
Jesse and Rich
 
Tomorrow we might do some exploring of the area. This is my first time in Connecticut, being a West coast girl.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

More Guayaquil

Last night we had dinner with Emma. She has been living in Ecuador for about 6 years and the last 3 in Guayaquil. She met us at our hotel and we walked to the Malecon, about 3 blocks from our hotel. The Malecon was developed in 2000 and it is a great addition to the city. It borders the river and stretches about a mile. It has shops, restaurants, places to sit, ponds, statues, fountains, playgrounds, etc. It is a vibrant place with lots of activity and plenty of security to keep it that we.

We walked to a restaurant called Resaca, which is Spanish for hangover and even though it was two for one happy hour when we arrived, we all escaped a hangover the next morning. We had a great meal and wonderful conversation with Emma about Ecuador. She gave us suggestions for what to do and what to see. Thank you, Emma.

In the morning after breakfast we went to the park across the street to see the large iguanas. They are land iguanas and they have the run of the park. Opposite the hotel across the park is a cathedral. Originally built of wood in 1547, it later burned down and was rebuilt in 1948 and has been renovated since.
The Cathedral across the park from the hotel

One of the downtown land iguanas
 
As we walked towards the Malecon we passed the government building that is an example of European architecture. Looking at it you could imagine you were in Europe, not South America. Rich and I walked from one end of the Malecon to the other and then down to the Mercado de Artisans to buy a few souvenirs before heading back to our hotel.

Rich on the Malecon

We had a late night flight to Miami so we got a bite to eat before getting a taxi to the airport, for $4. We had to wait until 8pm before the American Airlines ticket counter opened and we could check our baggage and go through security. There was a large duty free shop but we passed on that, including the alpaca ponchos. It was too hot for that.

Our flight to Miami was uneventful but not very restful. Despite having to cart our bags clear to the other end of the airport to check them in for our flight to Philadelphia and the 3 hour delay due to a bird strike issue with the plane, we did make it, but tired.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Guayaquil, Ecuador

02 11.718 S, 79 52.971 W, Guayaquil

The last couple of days we have been preparing to leave Windarra while we do some traveling. We topped off the fuel and the water on board and removed stuff from on deck such as the head sails, jack lines, preventer lines, the smaller solar panels, life ring, stern reel, cockpit cushions, barbeque, etc and stowed it all below. We also put the dingy on the davits and the outboard on the stern rail and locked them as well as the lazarettes. We took our forward sunshade and put it over the dodger and Bimini to help protect the canvas. It was a big job.

This morning, Chuck of SV Jacaranda ferried us to the dock with our duffel bags and we got a taxi to the bus station, which is up river from Puerto Amistad. We arrived shortly after 9:00 am and bought tickets for the 9:30 am bus to Guayaquil, 2 tickets for $14. We used small wire ties to 'lock' our bags. I had hoped to carry our backpacks onto the bus but no joy, so the backpacks and duffel bags were checked into the baggage compartment and we boarded the bus and had seats in the front row on the opposite from the driver. This is good and bad. You get to see more than just your side window, but you also see the oncoming traffic as the bus driver passes on turns and no passing zones, etc. there were a few close calls. The bus stopped for diesel and then at the bus stations of Portoviejo and Jipajapa. It also made a few stops along the road to let off a passenger or two. At one town, a fellow go on the bus with a tray of something. They were like corn meal tamales with cheese inside. Not bad but a little dry.

We passed fields of corn and rice along with orchards of mangos and plantains. At the beginning the villages were few and far between, small rustic shacks on stilts mostly of bamboo. As we went along, red brick or cinder block was the material of choice but most were raised so that the living area was on the second floor and underneath was storage and a shady locate to hang hammocks. The dogs looked like the dogs of Mexico of 10-12 years ago. It is a crude measurement of the poverty level.

The bus station in Guayaquil is huge. As buses are the main mode of transportation, the station was similar to a train station in a major metropolitan city in the US. The difference is there are many bus companies in the same station providing travel throughout Ecuador and other parts of South America.

Our taxi to the Hotel Continental in the downtown area cost $4 for. 15 minute trip. Across the street is the Parque Bolivar. Guayaquil is the only city in the world that had land iguanas, some over 3 feet long and they hang out in this park. On the other side of the park is the cathedral, originally built in 1547 of wood but was destroyed by fire and rebuild of stone in 1948.

Restored government building lit at night

Tonight we are meeting Emma, Reg and Phoebe's daughter who lives here in Guayaquil. Looking forward to learning more about the city and Ecuador.