Saturday, February 28, 2015

To Ushuaia, Argentina

Last night we enjoyed pisco sours with Joyant and Storm Bay at the bar at Micalvi. During the night the winds kicked up and we were not sure if we would be able to go to Ushuaia but it calmed some in the morning.

We walked into town and had our passports stamped and the boarded a van for the 35+ Kim drive to Navarino at the west end of the island. We met Kamil from
Poland who is spending his vacation hiking in Chile. At one point the van stopped, the driver opened the hood and steam was pouring out. The driver was prepared with several bottles of water to pour into the radiator. At another stop he went and checked on his mother. After a 2 hour ride we arrived. At Navarino we boarded a ridged inflatable dingy for a bumpy ride with whitecaps across the Beagle Channel to Ushuaia. Put on your life vest and hold on! We have a few days here before we board the cruise ship to Antarctica.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Still waiting, but...

We are still at Puerto Williams, still waiting for a weather window.

Our friends on Karma Waters left a few days ago. They are from Australia and have a house in Yeppoon, which was damaged in the cyclone that hit there recently. They had some anxious moments waiting to hear from the caretaker. Apparently part of the roof is gone but otherwise, everything seems okay. They are pressing on to Valdivia to leave the boat before returning to Australia. We wish them good speed and safe travels.

Meanwhile Joyant and Storm Bay have arrived. We last saw Joyant in Puerto Montt and they have been carrying our Chilean chart book, which arrive after we left in December. We parted company with Storm Bay just after Puerto Aguirre. We are enjoying reconnecting, going out to dinner and showing them Puerto Williams, chuckle. Tonight we are having a progressive dinner, appetizers on Joyant, dinner on Storm Bay and dessert on Windarra.

We have been continually looking for weather windows for the Horn. Any possible ones we have seen are only for a few hours, not enough to go there and return safely. So we have decided to go somewhere else instead. Antarctica!

What you say? Can't go to the Horn but you can cross the Drake Passage and go to Antarctica on Windarra. Are you crazy? What are you thinking?

Well, we were able to book passage on the Quark Expeditions ship, the Sea Spirit for a 12 day trip. We leave Ushuaia on March 5 and return March 15. It will be fun having someone else worry about weather, standing watches, cooking, anchoring, etc. You can look it up on the web at www.freestyleadventuretravel.com. We may not be able to provide daily position updates but we will see what we can do. Windarra will remain at Puerto Williams at Club Naval de Micalvi. On Saturday, Feb. 28, we will stamp out of Chile, ride a van to Navarino, 35 km west of here and board a rigged inflatable boat for the trip across the Beagle Channel to Ushuaia where we will stay in a hostel and check out the sights before we board the ship on the afternoon of March 5.

oh boy!

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Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Puerto Williams

Yes we are still here at Puerto Williams, waiting for weather, as usual.

Puerto Williams is a town of about 2000 people, or should I say a Chilean Armada base with a small town around it. A large section of the housing is military, similar to what you would see in the US, as well as a special commissary for Armada personnel and their families only. The town has four small grocery stores, which provide the basics with frozen meat, fresh fruits and vegetables which are replenished by the supply boat on Saturdays. I am assuming this is from Punta Arenas, on the Chilean mainland. The stores also have liquor and wine.

We were able to find a woman who does laundry, but charges by item, not by kilo. Our two thirds full bag of laundry including jeans, shirts, underwear and socks cost 38,000 pesos or $61 USD, ouch. Needless to say, I did a few pieces of laundry by hand using the hot water in the showers on the Micalvi but it did take two days to dry. Yes, it is summer here but not always very warm.

Today we got some diesel from the Copec station. Francisco, who runs the Club Naval de Yate Micalvi, schlepped us and our 9 jerry jugs to the station to fill up. The diesel cost 625 pesos/liter. Unfortunately we could only make one trip as there is not enough diesel until Saturday and the same supply boat replenishes the supply. Francisco also took one of our propane tanks to be filled at 9am and no problems with our American fittings.

The town also has a few gift shops and one restaurant that serves the menu of the day for lunch. There are also some hostals which will serve dinner, reservations only, and again, only the entree of the day, no choice. The club has wifi but very slow. The museum up the street has much better wifi, so we walk up the hill and use it there. Our Entel phones work for internet as well and we have recharged a couple of time as 100MB gets used up fast.

Most of the streets in town are dirt and are torn up now as the public works projects to install new water pipes and pave the roads is in full swing. Another project is building a cruise ship dock and a small harbor. Both will be a great addition to the town and should bring in more tourist dollars. Many backpackers come here to trek across Isla Navarino. We even heard of one intrepid fellow that brought a surfboard so he could surf in the southern ocean. Getting here and away is difficult to and from Ushuaia as there is no regular service between Puerto Williams, Chile and Ushuaia, Argentina. There is a large rigged inflatable that goes sporadically between the town of Navarino, 30 km west via dirt road from Puerto Williams to Ushuaia, weather dependent. There is also a small air field with irregular, again, weather dependent, flights, at $125 USD per person one way, which is a little out of the backpacker budget. Many backpackers try to hitch rides with cruisers or charter boats going back and forth. This is okay but as a cruiser, you are responsible for this 'temporary crew member' so if you get to Ushuaia and they are not allowed into Argentina for some reason, you will need to turn around and take them back to Puerto Williams, 25 nautical miles away, independent of the weather.

Another colorful element of Puerto Williams is a small herd of horses that roam freely through town. They have a penchant for leaving road apples on the sidewalk instead of the dirt road, so you need to be alert. I am not sure who is responsible for them but they seem well cared for and do eat the weeds and such around town.

The Micalvi is a retired munitions carrier that was beached in a small cove to provide a place for smaller boats to tie to. The Micalvi provides fresh water, showers, sometimes hot, and 220v electricity, the later costing extra. Boats are rafted up, sometimes several deep on both sides but the inside is fairly shallow. There are sailboats here from France, Germany, The Netherlands, United States and sometimes elsewhere. On the Micalvi is a small bar that opens at 8 pm serving beer, wine, mixed drinks including pisco sours but no food that I know of. On the main floor the ceiling and walls are covered with flags and burgees from the world over. Rich and I posted our signed CYC burgee to add to the collection.

On Monday, there was a bit of drama as the sailboat, Berserk II with Jarle Andhoy departed, which meant that five boats had to either temporarily leave and go out into the main harbor or move aside until Berserk maneuvered its way out to the anchorage. When they departed on Tuesday, this new inexperienced crew included a cameraman and a rock star who wants to play for the penguins. They had spray painted 'Born Free' on one of the headsails and the cameraman was jumping from one boat to another to film the action. Jarle Andhoy is rather notorious for having gone multiple times to Antarctica, without permission and, in one case, three of his inexperienced crew members died, the sailboat was lost, while he and another person were attempting to drive to the South Pole on ATVs and had to be rescued. For more information, look him up on Google.

Frannie B and Limbo left for Ushuaia this past Friday. Frannie B was to leave today to head east in the Canal Beagle to wait for their weather window to go through Estrecho de Le Maire and head north to Mar del Plata, Argentina. We wish them well. Our friends on Joyant are to be here soon with Storm Bay of Hobart behind them.

If a weather window does not open soon we may go directly to Ushuaia. In the meantime we are chillin in Puerto Williams and there is snow in the lower hills.

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CYC burgee at Micalvi

Rich and I are members of the Corinthian Yacht Club of Seattle. We posted our burgee, signed and dated on the front of the bar at Club Naval de Yates Micalvi at Puerto Williams, Chile.

It is next to the burgee of Frannie B, signed by Ned, Carol and Rachel.

Cheers

Sunday, February 15, 2015

LMYC meeting

We held a short meeting in the bar. Here is a photo with our burgee in front of the Club Naval de Yates Micalvi, Puerto Williams, Chile.
Wish you were here to joint us

Elaine and Rich

Friday, February 13, 2015

Caleta Brecknock

While we were at Caleta Brecknock we had a brief break in the weather and we hiked up to the lake above the anchorage and took some photos. Here is Windarra with two French boats who were north bound. Rich standing by the lake which fed the waterfall where we got water to fill our tanks, 2 buckets at a time. A photo looking across the cove.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Civilization

Leaving Caleta Letier we had our first glimpse of Ushuaia, a city of 55,000. Puerto Williams is more a town of around 2000. They are in the process of building a cruise ship dock and a small yacht harbor.