s/v Libertad

26 May 2017
20 May 2017
18 May 2017 | Isla Providencia
18 May 2017 | Isla Providencia
17 May 2017 | Grand Cayman to Isla Providencia
16 May 2017 | Grand Cayman to Isla Providencia
09 May 2017 | Grand Cayman
04 May 2017 | Cienfuegos, Cuba
03 May 2017 | Jardines de la Reina, Cuba
02 May 2017 | Jardines de la Reina, Cuba
01 May 2017 | Jardines de la Reina, Cuba
28 April 2017 | Jardines de la Reina, Cuba
27 April 2017
26 April 2017 | Cayman Islands
20 April 2017
18 April 2017

Unloading Libertad in Ensenada

03 July 2017
We got word that the freighter would arrive in Ensenada the afternoon of July 1st and would thus be unloading early the next morning, depending on when they could get a spot at the commercial pier cleared.

Early morning on Fri. July 1, Dennis took the Amtrak train down to San Diego, a shuttle bus to the Mexican border, walked across the border-clearing into the country, and then boarded an ABC bus for the 90 minute ride down to Ensenada.

While enroute he got a message saying they had scheduled us to unload at 11am that day. Don't know what happened - perhaps the boat arrived a full day early, but there was no way Dennis would be in Ensenada until late in the afternoon. They said they would figure something out and rearrange us. But this took numerous phone calls and emails among Virginia, Dennis, and our assigned agent in Ensenada. When Dennis arrived Libertad had been unloaded and was sitting alongside the freighter. The water taxi dropped Dennis at our boat and left. Dennis could not reach anyone on the freighter to ask for them to untie our dock lines and he couldn't reach them from Libertad's deck. He even rapped on their hull with our plastic mallet to no avail. After another set of phone calls among Virginia (still back in Santa Barbara), Dennis, our agent, and various officials with the transport company, we finally got word to the freighter crew and someone dropped our lines.

This story could go on for pages, but the short story is that Dennis had to stay in Ensenada for a few days to make arrangements with the boatyard and customs officials on Monday. We had heard a lot of horror stories about expired Temporary Import Permits, and we were prepared with all the required backup documentation to get ours cancelled and a new one issued, but.....it turns out that when they put our 2004 permit in the system they transposed some of the number of the paper permit so this mismatch requires us to send a lot of paperwork to Mexico city and wait for them to cancel the old before we can get issued the new. Unbelievable. Since Dennis basically spent the full day with Customs on this issue (thank you to the Baja Naval spanish speaking staff member who accompanied Dennis on this all day errand), he got to San Diego very late in the day. He had missed the Amtrak train and Greyhound buses to Santa Barbara. He was only able to get as far as Los Angeles. Virginia met him downtown LA at 11pm at the Greyhound station and got him home safe, but a bit exhausted and crazed.

We are now awaiting a schedule from the boatyard for the TLC we want to do to Libertad before sailing her home to Santa Barbara. We will most likely be making a few trips back and forth to Ensenada before we have Libertad berthed in Santa Barbara.

Loading Libertad in Panama

16 June 2017
Virginia and Dennis Johns
We got a scheduled loading date from the freighter company and Dennis flew down to Panama on June 14 to load Libertad for its transport through the canal and up the west coast of Central America to Ensenada. He was able to get a round trip ticket from Santa Barbara to Panama City.

There was a bit of confusion caused by a lack of any communication with our assigned agent, but Dennis got the boat successfully loaded and flew home on June 15. There was a long delay in Houston which made him miss his Santa Barbara connection in LA. And his plane arrived so late that the Santa Barbara shuttle bus wasn't running. Virginia drove down to LAX and met him at 2 am. There was very little traffic on the road so the round trip was just about 4 hours. Not bad.

We were very happy that this got him home before June 20 when our Johns' family reunion started in the Santa Barbara area!

Home in Santa Barbara

26 May 2017
We flew home on Friday the 26th on a direct flight from Panama to Los Angeles. A 2 hour shuttle ride north got us into Santa Barbara about 10:30pm. Our son picked us up and delivered us home.

The transport company is updating us every few days and the date for loading Libertad in Panama has slipped a day or two since we arrived back home. So we are happy that we aren't sitting in the heat and humidity of Panama but instead are doing our waiting back home with family and friends. When we get a firm loading date, Dennis will take a quick round trip run to Panama to load Libertad on the freighter. He will then return home to be a part of the Johns family reunion while we await word of the arrival date of the freighter in Ensenada. We will take a train ride to San Diego and several buses across the border and down to Ensenada to meet Libertad.

For now we can enjoy visiting with our family and enjoying our home town.

All's well.

in Panama and Coming Home!

24 May 2017
We arrived here in Colon, Panama on Monday around 0900. As we noted in our short position reports, the first day of the passage was rough with big seas and all but Dennis got a bit seasick. The second day was much calmer - no wind so we had to motor, but seas flattened out and we all recovered and could eat a bit.
We were buddy boating with our friends on Kali Mera (Herbert and Tadeya from Vienna). We spoke 4 times each day on the radio. One time we used SSB as the VHF transmission was a bit noisy, but we are such similar boats that we were within VHF range the whole time. Their boat is an Amel Santorin, the newer version of our Maramu, so 46' ketch, like us. We enjoy this couple very much.

We immediately needed to get rolling with our agent in Panama to start the process of checking us in to Panama and arranging all the paperwork for putting Libertad on the freighter. When we met with him, some of the fees sounded a bit high, so we put him on hold. Now that we have talked with the transport company United Yacht Transport, who contracted with this agent, I think things will get more reasonable. We are waiting to hear back from the agent.


Yesterday we got the news that the freighter is delayed. It won't be leaving Everglades, Florida until June 7, and with a 3 day transport, it will arrive here June 10. We do not want to sit here in this heat and humidity for 2 more weeks, so we are flying home to Santa Barbara this Friday, May 26. Dennis will fly back here a couple days before transport loading and move Libertad over to the freighter by himself. We are in Shelter Bay Marina and they are supposedly loading in the anchorage just outside the marina. Then he will come back to Santa Barbara and await delivery of Libertad to Ensenada....no date estimated for that yet, but the freighter makes several stops between Panama and Ensenada (Costa Rica and La Paz) so it will take some time.

In the meantime, we are preparing the boat for transport, removing sails, lashing down kayaks, stowing dinghy, eating/giving away fresh food, laundry, etc. And we are enjoying meeting yet another great group of cruisers.

Thankfully the marina has a pool and about 4pm each day, when we can't take any more of the heat, we cool off up there. Yesterday we took the marina shuttle into Colon....not a place where we want to be walking around - looks very scary. It was an interesting ride as Colon city is across the canal from the marina. On the way over we took a bridge that opens up periodically between boats going through the canal. On the way back we took the car ferry that makes the crossing at specified times. That allowed us to see the new larger canal. Six of us took a taxi from the marina shuttle drop off point over to Immigration and Customs at the port. Then we took a taxi back to the mall/supermarket where the marina shuttle would meet us.

All's well. We are very anxious to be home and see family and friends!

day 2 enroute to Panama

21 May 2017
Virginia and Dennis Johns
It was a wild night, but this afternoon we got the calming of the winds that was predicted, which is also starting to flatten out the seas. We are feeling a bit better and even able to eat something. Of the four of us travelling in the two boats, only Dennis did not get any mal de mer...fortunately for Virginia as he is good about taking on her duties while she recovers! She was able to do her watches last night so he got some rest....can't really sleep with the boat rocking and rolling so much.

But things are calmer now, we are motor sailing a straight line to Colon and if things don't change we will be there in about 15-16 hours.

All's well aboard.

on to Panama

20 May 2017
Virginia and Dennis Johns
We left Isla Providencia at 11:00am. Weather reports were for some high winds and big seas for the first part of our trip and then little wind on the second day. First day has proven to match the reports - wild ride! A bit calmer right now, but doubtful that we'll get much sleep. Should arrive Colon, Panama Monday midday.

All's well aboard
Vessel Name: Libertad
Vessel Make/Model: Amel Maramu, 46'
Hailing Port: Santa Barbara, California
Crew: Dennis Johns, Virginia Johns
About:
We bought our Amel in 2000 and spent the next 11 years preparing for our retirement cruise - a westward circumnavigation. We are members of the Santa Barbara Sail and Power Squadron and have taken many of the USPS courses. [...]
Libertad's Photos - Brussels, Belgium
Photos 1 to 102 of 102 | Main
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Congress Column with King Leopold I on top commemorates creation of Belgium state.  Very near our apartment.
Old snuggled between new buildings
Cardinal Mercier statue by St. Michaels and St. Gudula cathedral.
Tree shadows on a building where there are no trees.
St. Michaels and St. Gudula cathedral
Stained glass window scene
Altar.
Beautiful cabinetry around massive organ
Statuary on columns
Imitates Paris’ Notre Dame architecture without flying buttresses.
Public lounge chairs in park
Cone-shaped impatiens arranagements
Theatre offering independent, non-mainstream films.
Huge glass-roofed shopping gallery near Grand Place.
Glass roof of Galeries Royales St. Hubert.
Pedestrian only cobblestone streets in downtown area.
Grand Place –City center plaza with all four sides of plaza in ornate architecture.  This building is the town hall –not a church!
Merchants became a powerful middle class and built residences here –The Guildhalls.
Hotel St. Michel
Town hall front door
Brasserie de l
Gilded statue of Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine atop the Maison des Brasseurs.
Museum of Brussels –close up of Gothic style
Museum of Brussels
Gilded guildhalls
Worked our way back to apartment through Park of Brussels (Warandepark).
Taking the shadiest paths
Felt like running through this fountain
Plenty of afternoon shade and benches for relaxing.
Lots of statuary in park
Belgian Parliament
La Brabanconne (national anthem) monument.
Interior decorations of Poechenellekelder (Puppet Museum and pub).
Poechenellekelder
Poechenellekelder
Manneken Pis across the street from our lunch spot (Poechenellekelder).  It’s small!
Another look at St. Michaels and St. Gudula cathedral –Gold St. George slaying dragon on spire.
Mayor of Brussels 1881-1899, Charles Buls in Agora Square where our tour began.
Chocolate and Beer Tour: National Basilica of the Sacred Heart.
Statue of Godfrey of Bouillon stands in front of Place Royale, fronted by the Church of Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg.
Paroisse Notre Dame au Sablon
Paroisse Notre Dame au Sablon (Church of Our Blessed Lady of the Sablon)
Paroisse Notre Dame au Sablon
Don’t look like chocolates do they?  Filled with a liqueur –sampled at Frederic Blondeel.
Neuhaus was the inventor of ‘filled chocolates’.
13th century wall of Brussels
Comic Strip Museum
One our favorites, Champagne Rose, is made by Neuhaus.
Theatre Royal De Toone is a puppet theatre established in 1830 and still performing.
Theatre Royal De Toone
On to the beer tasting.  This was “wheat” beer -wasn’t our favorite but was interesting.
Not all beer is yellow, this Oud Beersel actually had a fruity flavor.
Note the alcohol content, Virginia was buzzed after this one.
Abbey Ale is one of the more famous beers and only a limited amount is brewed annually.
Our guide really liked this Micro Brew but it had quite an aftertaste.
Our sixth sample –anyone counting?
Brussels actually has three peeing bronze statues –a little boy, a little girl, and a dog.
Brussels stock exchange –once was the financial hub of Europe.
There are éclairs and then there are Belgium éclairs.
Several neat alleys like this leading to our next tastings.
Virginia is down to only half a glass and Dennis is finishing off 1-1/2 bottles now.
Loved the shape of this bottle -not a big fan of dark beers but it was nice to compare it.
Last stop was everything you’d want a pub to be.
Cinquantennaire Park: Robert Schuman is regarded as the father of the European Union.
Harvest Time by G. Fontaine
We would have welcomed the shade of these trees but this was a cooler day –no shadows.
Belgian Beach Volleyball Championships –women not in the bikini’s seen in the banner.
Belgian Beach Volleyball Championships –women not in the bikini’s seen in the banner.
Cool and rainy, we didn’t watch for long.
P.H. van der Stappen’s sculpture, Builders of Cities.
Belgium’s triple arch entrance to Cinquantennaire Park.
The quadriga (Chariot of the gods or Victory)
The Reaper by Constantin Meunier
Greek-inspired element hidden in the trees
Anchoring one end of Cinquantennaire Park is this impressive building with the Royal Military Museum on one side of the arch and the Autoworld Museum on the other.
Mosaics inside the columns
This statue is labeled Namur which is a southern province of Belgium acquired by treaty.
This one is labeled Luxembourg which is another province acquired by treaty.
Autoworld: Two floors of one person’s car collection.
1904 Oldsmobile (note drip pan under engine –can’t keep some of the old ones from leaking.
1921 Ford Model T –First car to be mass (assembly line) produced.
1916 electric car by Detroit Electric with rechargeable batteries.
1926 Ford Model TT (Model T Truck).
1924 Ford Model TT Motorhome
1923 Dennis Fire Engine (British) -had to take a photo of it.  Apparently the company is still operating.
No one is going to steal that radiator and mount it on something else.
French comic strip artist Jean Graton created fictional race car driver Michel Vaillant in Brussels.
Place Sainte-Catherine where Vincent Van Gogh studied to be a Protestant pastor before pursuing art.
Close up of Statue of Godfrey of Bouillon in front of Place Royale
Mont des Arts as we approach the Museum of Musical Instruments
Museum of Musical Instruments –no photography allowed inside
Mont des Arts garden runs down towards Grand Place (town hall spire in background)
Clock with a saint at each hour
This guy turns to hit the bell with his cane to mark the hour
Unusual ‘pissing’ fountain
Camino de Santiago Pilgrimage marker
Toy Museum: Dennis itching to enter
A whole wall of rocking/rolling horses
Baby carriages and pedal cars
Toy theaters
Puppet theater
Miniature castles
 
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