Cruising Active Transport

We circumnavigated between 2008 and 2014. After sailing to Alaska we ended up in Seattle for four years.

19 September 2018
08 August 2018 | Marina del Rey
23 July 2018 | Marina del Rey
22 July 2018 | 25 miles west of Cambria
21 July 2018 | Crossing Monterey Bay
21 July 2018 | South of the Golden Gate
16 July 2018
14 July 2018 | Grand Marina
14 July 2018 | San Francisco Bay
13 July 2018 | Point Arena
12 July 2018 | Thirty Miles NW of Humbolt Bay, CA
11 July 2018 | Crescent City
09 July 2018 | Thirty five miles WNW of Reedsport, Oregon
08 July 2018 | Forty Miles West of Columbia River Entrance
07 July 2018 | Neah Bay
04 July 2018
03 July 2018 | Port Angeles City Floats

Youtube Video of our Voyage

19 September 2018
John
I just added a link to a youtube video of a google earth animation that shows the route we took around the world. The route for our circumnavigation is in red. Our subsequent voyage to Alaska and then Seattle is in Yellow.

Settling in at Marina del Rey

08 August 2018 | Marina del Rey
John
We have been here in Los Angeles for two weeks, at this point, and life has settled into familiar routines.

We bought a car. We got a 2012 Honda Civic that runs on compressed natural gas. Almost all the airport shuttles use CNG for fuel so there are quite a few fueling stations nearby.

CNG and Electric vehicles are the only ones that are allowed to use the car pool lanes with only 1 person in the car. They used to allow hybrid vehicles to use those lanes but ended that program when Toyota sold thousands of Prius cars just so their owners could get the magic sticker that entitled them to use the carpool lanes. The carpool lanes became so crowded that their original purpose, of encouraging car pooling, was negated.

We have both ordered bicycles. Neither has shown up yet but we expect them to be very useful here in Marina del Rey because parking can be a real problem in the shopping plazas like the one where we have to go to pick up our mail.

The bicycle trails are well developed in this part of Los Angeles. It is possible to ride all the way to Malibu on bike trails and there are a lot of cultural activities that we will be able to bike to. We are going to see Shakespeare by the Sea this Saturday evening at Pollywog park in Manhattan Beach. We are seeing "The Merry Wives of Winsor" which is Shakespeare's take on "Housewives of Beverly Hills."

We have also bought tickets to a couple of events at the Hollywood Bowl this month. The first is a performance by the LA Symphony. dorected by Dutamel and with Itzhak Perlman on the violin. The, later in the month we are going to a performance of Carmina Burana.

The Hollywood bowl is a wonderful venue for big performances. It's way too big for a lot of things but it is very nice to have your picnic dinner and wine before the performance starts.

LA has so much going on that we could spend a fortune on everything that is worth seeing.

We have been having a heat wave but here on the edge of the ocean we have cooling breezes most of the day.

Shawn has actively started looking for a job and has a lot of leads on really interesting opportunities. A couple of the jobs he has looked at are in Santa Monica which is so close that his commute would consist of a 25 minute bike ride along the beach.

Im adding a satellite view of Marina del Rey that I snagged from google earth. At the bottom are some of the runways at LAX. Any of our international friends with layovers at LAX can easily come visit us. Give us enough warning and we will pick you up. Visiting some place like Venice Beach would be a lot more fun that sitting in the airport.

The blue dot in the marina is our slip.

We are tied up in MDR

23 July 2018 | Marina del Rey
John
After a bumpy ride around Point Conception last night we made it to marina del Rey around 5 PM this afternoon.

It was a motor boat trip the whole way.

After a couple of tries we got docked with the help of our friend Cecile who was sitting on her boat waiting for us and then did her Vanna White imitation to show us to our slip.

Tomorrow we will be occupied with errands like getting a mailbox, getting driver's licenses, picking up a rental car, etc.

At the fuel dock in Oakland Shawn's shorts got caught on the lifeline and it ripped the pocket off. His cell phone was in the pocket and it had a pocket on the back that contained his driver's license and credit cards. So replacing all that stuff will be among the errands we have to deal with.

Our friend Cecile, who has her sailboat next to our old slip in Seattle, is coming by in a few minutes so we can go get some supper. I ate the last of our KFC this morning (aka the Breakfast of Champions)
Vessel Name: Active Transport
Vessel Make/Model: Tayana 37 PH
Hailing Port: Seattle, Washington
Crew: John and Shawn
About:
John and Shawn left San Francisco in September of 2008 to sail around the world. They completed their circumnavigation when the came out of the Panama Canal in late October 2013. From there they sailed to Mexico, out to Hawaii and up to Kodiak, Alaska. [...]
Extra:
This blog is intended for friends and family who may or may not be sailors. It is not intended to provide technical details of any of the boat's systems. Its purpose is to keep friends up-to-date on our progress and, whereabouts Following the completion of our circumnavigation our blog entries [...]
Active Transport's Photos - Etosha Game Park
Photos 1 to 20 of 20 | Cruising Active Transport (Main)
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We were in the park less than 5 minutes when we saw our first lions.  The one in this photo was part of a pride of about 6 young males who were playing king of the hill on a pile of gravel in the road we were on.  The lighting was really good for this shot and it
This guy is the king of the hill.  He is on top of a gravel pile in the middle of the road that was obviously intended for us in filling the many potholes along this particular stretch of road.  He was gnawing on a bone most of the time but occasionally looked up to check out the $50,000 in fancy camera equipment in the three vehicles parked near him.
Another one of the young male lions who was part of the gravel pile gang.
Another view of the king
This lion picture was one we took on the other side of the park but this seemed like the most logical place to put it.
You will see a disproportionate number of giraffe photos on our blog.  I really like them.  They are so highly evolved for the niche they fill in nature.  I think they are the mammals who moved into the slot previously occupied by the brontosaurus.
This giraffe was not the least bit afraid of us and let us get quite close without bounding off into the bush.  This is a close as we got because I did not want to scare him off.
There is nothing remotely like this animal among living species.
While giraffe
This is a Damara dik-dik.  It is a tiny deer like animal that only stands about two feet high at his shoulders.  I guess the big eyes are for better spotting lions.  This one was less than a quarter of a mile from the pride of lions in the previous photos.  On the other hand maybe these creatures are not beefy enough to be worth the lion
The ubiquitous Impala is definitely a big part of the food chain.  Based on the number of young we saw in the herd in Etosha and South Africa I
This is a Leopard tortoise.  He just wandered across the road in front of us and kept going on his tortoise business without paying us any heed.
The park we were able to access is around the south rim of the Etosha pan which is a dry salt lake of more than 4700 square kilometers. One the edges of the pan in some areas we saw skeletons of antelope that were run down by lions.
So perfectly adapted for what it needs to do.  Giraffes are the subject of study by medical researchers who would like to know how they can have high blood pressure and not have strokes all the time.  It takes a lot of blood pressure to get blood to that second story brain.
In Etoshsa we were able to observe giraffes in groups and see them actually loping across the plain.  In South Africa the jungle was more dense and we only saw them as individuals.
We did not see any herds of elephants in Etosha.  We were told we were there at the wrong time of the year.  During the dry season the elephants migrate north and out of Namibia.  The few straggles were drawn on the man made waterholes which is why we got to see a few
Another giraffe heading for the protection of the Bush
This is a Wildebeest.
This is a jackal
Among the many  strong arguments against "intelligent design"  the ostrich has to be one of the best.  Only evolution could have produced such a goofy animal that is so well adapted for it place in nature. We got to see a herd of these critters wader across several miles of flat grassland during the hours we were in the park.  They spend a lot of time panting to keep cool.
 
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On the hook in Tomales Bay

Who: John and Shawn
Port: Seattle, Washington