Monday, September 24, 2007

17. San Carlos, Beautiful Country


Sept. 4th - Sept. 25th: Aside from the heat and humidity (intense), San Carlos has been a beautiful place to stay. They waters are spectacularly blue, the desert is as green as we've ever seen, and the people are wonderfully friendly.

The picture from the left is the entrance into the harbor of Marina Real, San Carlos.


Okay, so we had to have one picture from the day of the hurricane. The picture to the right is the sky after the hurricane had mostly past. Diane and I were feeling pretty good, so we walked out to the beach and captured this image.







Here's Diane enjoying the "post run" dip in the Bay. By the way, this bay "Algodones" was used in the film "Catch 22". It is beautiful.







Now, before you can swim, you gotta do the run. Here's Bill at the tail end of the daily run:








And finally, so you don't think that San Carlos is all about heavy running and swimming; here's a couple of pictures of "The Soggy Peso Bar" at the old Club Med:












We will be headed to the more remote areas of the Sea of Cortez so will not likely be doing any updates for about 6 weeks. Take care!

Saturday, September 8, 2007

16. It's Tricky Tracking Henriette

Sept. 5th: We arrived in San Carlos on Tuesday evening and made the decision to stay in a hotel; Hotel Creston. Wirewalker was "disassembled" as part of the preparations for storing her, and we were a bit tired from travelling ... the hotel sounded good.

We woke up on Wednesday morning (the 5th) and there was very little wind and a light sprinkle going on. Hey, looks like we're going to be spared Henriette! I checked the 8:00 am update from National Hurricane Center and it showed the storm would come ashore about Topolobampo, about 200 miles south of here. That makes it easier for us!

We checked out of the hotel and went to the boat. By 11:00 am the winds had started to pick up and it was raining harder but we figured we'd be fine to stay aboard. Our ride back to town left at 11:30 am, so we were here! No backing down.

Well, we pulled in the 11:00 am NHC update and it showed the storm coming much further north. Uh-oh. By 1:00 pm the winds were blowing 30 - 35 kts. so we put an additional line from our boat in the dock ashore and around a tree. We were not planning to go anywhere!

By 2:00 pm, Bill took the 1/2 mile walk to the marina office (closed, but if you go in the bathroom, you can pick up the wireless internet signal!). The winds were howling and hail was coming down. The computer was in a waterproof bag and Bill was wearing his wetsuit and his foul weather jacket.

The 2:00 pm update showed the storm now closing on Guaymas (just south of San Carlos). That was easy to tell, even without the weather update! The thing of most importance was, when would it pass?

About4:00 pm, things started calming down a bit. Bill took another walk to the office at 5:00 pm and the NHC update said the storm was just south of Guaymas and would come ashore in the next couple of hours. That didn't make sense with the winds starting to lighten up a bit. When Bill went outside, the winds had clocked around to the north, which can only happen if the storm is past you on the land side! Yippee! We should be okay!

Bill got the 8:00 pm update, just to be sure and Diane and Bill had an excellent pasta dinner (only thing on the boat) and a rum and Crystal lite (only thing on the boat).

The pictures, below, show the NHC projected tracks every 3 hours. The lesson here; take precautions ahead of time and don't take weather predictions as gospel. They're only guidance.








Monday, September 3, 2007

15. Return to San Carlos T - 1 day


Sept. 3, 2007:


So our bags are packed and we're ready to go. The flight leaves tomorrow at 7:15 am (Sept. 4th).

The only problem is that our welcoming committee is Hurricane Henriette! What's up with that? We'd been following this system since it first showed up on the Navy weather database, over a week ago. Three days ago, it showed up on the National Hurricane Center site, but was targetted to skirt the outside of Baja ... then just barely cross the Baja ... and now it's gonna cut right across and head to San Carlos/Guaymas where Wirewalker is.

The consolation is that the projected winds when it reaches San Carlos are 50 kts. or less. While unpleasant, these are manageable winds. Our plans are to head out tomorrow, spend 24 hours retighting lines, etc., then spend the night in a nice safe hotel room.

If you're interested in tracking the weather, there are many, many sites that can help. Here are a few:

The Navy database:
https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/wxmap_cgi/cgi-bin/wxmap_DOD_area.cgi
?area=ngp_tropepac

The National Hurricane Center:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/

Sailflow (very good localized model for winds):
http://www.sailflow.com/windandwhere.iws?regionID=130®ion
ProductID=29&timeoffset=0

More when we get there.