Kruising with the Kostas

27 April 2012 | La Paz
20 April 2012 | Agua verde
13 April 2012 | Conception Bay
10 April 2012 | Santa Rosalia
06 April 2012 | Santa Rosalia
29 March 2012 | Ballandra 16mi N of Escondido
23 March 2012 | Puerto Ballendra
12 March 2012 | La Paz
04 March 2012 | La Paz
21 February 2012 | La Paz
12 February 2012 | La Paz area
05 February 2012 | La Paz area island
28 January 2012 | La Paz/Bahia San Gabriel
22 January 2012 | La Paz
18 January 2012 | La Paz
12 January 2012 | Muertos
07 January 2012 | what ever
06 January 2012 | Cabo
26 December 2011 | same
25 December 2011 | same!!!!!

CAAAABOOOOYEAHHHHH

06 January 2012 | Cabo
George Kosta


Well , we finally were able to leave Abreojos after our aborted attempt in the 30knt winds and big waves with water spraying all over the place, ugh! It had still been real windy in the morning and then one morning, I noticed the hatch above the bed was wet, signaling that the Santa Ana was over, so we were able to leave after being in this area for 6 nights! We headed for our next stop, Bahia San Juanico, 60mi south which took about 10hrs. Just before we arrived, I caught my first Yellowtail about 10lbs. We had some nice meals from it and the best ceviche ever! It was a nice place with some Americans living there but we had no internet service which seemed odd since we had it at some remote spots. Went into town a couple times and walked down the beach to look at a crazy beached whale boat. Had good surf there which attracts some of the Americans. Finally time to head to Mag Bay and the anchorage just 20mi north of it , Bahia Santa Maria about 95mi south. Since this was going to be a long one, we left about 2am so we would get there before dark. Well, we were disoriented trying to leave the bay in the dark, going in circles for a while, then got out on the ocean and were uncomfortable in the pitch blackness but finally got under way. Finally the sun came up making everything feel better, but a thick fog came in which lasted till noon, quite errie. I saw a blip on the radar and sure enough, a panga was out fishing in pea soup fog 10mi out from shore, crazy! I think we sailed for awhile but not long as the wind changed. We pretty much have motored all the way down. Since we left a little late and the distance was long to enter the bay and clear a nearby point/island, the sun set and it was completely dark as we were entering this large 10mi across bay. We were worried about running over a lobster pot float and getting it tangled in the prop as almost every bay we had been to had them when you got close and some are hard to see. So for the next 6mi ( 2hr at reduced speed ) we had spotlights in hand and using radar and chartplotter to see land and anything that may be in the way, very nerveracking! Oh, and at some places in Mexico, the charts in the chartplotter are not correct and you have to rely on the radar more so. Luckily the radar and the chartplotter were in agreement. Finally we heard surf and anchored 1/4mi from shore in 35ft to play it safe. When we woke up in the morning it was socked in fog, couldn't even see shore. We didn't go ashore here but it was another pretty, but desolate place. Nice sand dunes on shore though. Had to stay another day to avoid the fog. Next stop a short hop to the inside of Mag Bay to a spot called Belcher's Point which used to be a whaling center. Now there are pangas and tent's on shore for the fishermen to stay in. Also some old building remnants from a phosphorus plant which looked like stonehenge from the boat. We went ashore for a good long walk and got some shells and saw a dead dolphin on the beach. Caught a bunch of puffers which are posionous, luckily we didn't eat them! Had some foggy days here also and had to wait another day to make the long non-stop overnight trip to Cabo. We were running out of food also. Finally took off for Cabo at 6am which would get us there around 10am the following day. Had mild conditions motoring in the day and then night came. We were planning on having the moonlight help out but there were clouds blocking it most of the time and then it set around 2am. Now it was total blackness so I brought the tv/dvd player up to the cockpit and we watched Seinfeld episodes almost the whole 12hr while checking the radar every 15min. Neither of us slept so we were up apx 28hr. Getting close to Cabo, the sun rose which changes everything and we were so excited to be close to Cabo and people and food and drink and a boatyard. There were three cruise ships in the bay and it was so crowded coming into the harbor it really was a joke, insane. The engine had been running a bit hot lately and using more oil. I added about 16oz on the trip down to Cabo but as I found out when I checked it today, it was very low on oil. There is a boatyard here and I had a mechanic take off the exaust elbow, clean it out as it was fairly plugged up and he ran a rod in the heat exchanger to clean it out which should really help out with the overheating and also the oil usage. We were lucky to get it fixed so soon. I sat in on bongos with a really good Mexican band last night and it was really fun. Now we are trying to decide where to go next. Either up the inside baja coast to La Paz, or head across the sea of Cortez another over nighter, and get to the mainland and start heading south. I am really not looking forward to another overnighter but the moon is getting full so it will be brighter and will stay up longer, all night, so there is that to figure in. Cabo sure is a fun crazy place, party city. All the colorful buildings around the marina look cool. Kinda like Monaco, although I don't know what Manaco looks like. Doing laundry today, changed engine oil and coolant. Still haven't had a lobster yet but may here but prices are high, apx 40us a piece. See pic gallery and leave comments
Comments
Vessel Name: Appaloosa
Vessel Make/Model: Hunter 450 cc
Hailing Port: San Diego
Crew: George and Linda Kosta
About: husband and wife
Extra: We're both Pisces

Who: George and Linda Kosta
Port: San Diego