What I’ve learned

We have been traveling for 13 months now, give or take a few days. Well over half that time has been outside the U.S. Three months in Canada, the rest of the time has been in Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Belize.

Below are five things I’ve learned in that time.

1. The global price of shitty local beer is about a one U.S. dollar.
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2. People, no matter where you go, no matter what country you are in are incredibly friendly. And for the most part will go out of their way to help you out. This includes my home country.
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3. The people in the next country over the border are all thieves, and are not to be trusted. Just ask anyone in the country you are currently in. :)
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4. 20 minutes. That is about when the next bus will come along, or how long you have to walk to get to where you want to go. I have not yet figured out how much time 20 minutes is exactly. But it seems to be somewhere between 5 minutes before you asked and up to 3 hours from that point. **See rule 1**
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5. Seriously…..manana…..
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Posted in Adventures, Big trips | 4 Comments

It’s been a year and a day!!!!

Holy crap…I missed it by a day. On May 11th last year CB and I cut our dock lines and set sail. We have travelled around 3500 miles up and around Vancouver island with M/V Andante and S/V Hello World, we set sail….errr motor from Port Angeles with Mikey Bamboo and headed to San Francisco sailing under the Golden Gate Bridge, traveled the coast of California and held out our worst storm yet at anchor off Santa Cruz Island in 50 knots of wind and we spent some time in San Diego visiting with family before heading across our second border into Mexico. 6 months of this year at float were spent in Mexico checking out all the amazing towns and keeping the economy stable by eating more than our fair share of street tacos. We first started on the Baja Sur Penninsula and then crossed to the mainland (Bay of Banderas…PV to all you land based folks) with Jason & Julia from S/V Danika…who were hijacked for that crossing :-) We upped our surfing skills at Punta de Mita where we surfed usually two times per day for almost a month. In late February we set off to explore the Gold Coast of Mexico and made numerous stops…Barra de Navidad, Z-waaaat and Puerto Escondido being some of the highlights. We checked out of Mexico in Hualtuco and crossed the treacherous Tehuanapec zone (we basically motored), got attacked by bees off Guatemala (I’m still recovering mentally from that ;-)) and floated across a very tame bar into Bahia Del Sur, El Salvador, and notched up our 3rd country of this trip. We are spending the summer in El Salvador then will continue our travels south to Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama beofre crossing to the Galapagos and then on to the next adventure…CROSSING THE PACIFIC to the south pacific islands.

We have sailed far less than we thought, used way more diesel than expected…but it has all been worth it. This adventure is so amazing and it will only get better and better as we travel on. We have met amazing cruisers that have become fast friends. We have also had to say goodbye to many of those friends…knowing we may never see them again. That has become the hardest part of cruising. You make such quick and solid friendships out here and when the seasons change you loose those friendships to different plans and directions of travel. We sailed down most of the Pacific coast and Mexico mainland with Brad & Joanne on S/V Loukia…we thought we would be going the same way, until Panama, but they got an opportunity to work for the summer and headed back to Canada…we miss them terribly. Erlin on S/V Ventured is from Seattle and we met up with him in Ensenada…we spent 6 months cruising with him and he is now in Chiapis, Mexico where he will leave his boat for the summer…we may see him again if he crosses to the South Paciific next year…hint hint hint! S/V Unleashed left with us from Seattle…same dock…they are now back in the states for the summer while their boat gets a facelift in Mazatlan. We had to say goodbye to them in Tenacatita Mexico.There are so many others that we met and then went our seperate ways…we wish you all safe travels where ever you may be. On the other hand people do catch up to you from your past…two boats we knew from earlier travels will be coming into Bahia Del Sur in the next week and we will have fun reuniting with them. This is the circle of cruising!

We may come up with a numbers blog soon…but that sounds like a lot of work :-)

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Local Knowledge.

This post might actually be useful.

Thought I would write a quick post about Internet access while traveling through Mexico and Central America.

When we first took on on this trip last May, disconnecting from phone/email/web/twitter/facebook…was a bit of a welcome relief. Nice little break from all that crap.

We still would sniff around for the occasional free Wifi connection or in some case, not free or really all that well secured. But now that we’ve been traveling for almost a year now. Access to reliable internet is nice to have and to be honest so god damn useful. So how do we do it?

I’ll not cover access in the states, that’s a given. I’m gonna talk about access in Mexico and Central America.

This is not all inclusive, it’s what I have used and know about personally.

Mexico:
We got a “Banda Ancha” USB stick from TelCel(www.telcel.com). When we were there it cost $28usd for 5GB of data that had to be used up within 30 days. You had to use it or lose it.

Getting a Banda Ancha in Mexico is simple. Go to just about any modest sized town and go to a TelCel store. They seemed to be everywhere. Even some small towns will have an CyberCafe (internet cafe) that usually sells them as well.

The Banda Ancha is really just a USB stick, similar to a large thumbdrive with a SIM card stuffed in it. So you are using 3G or 4G cell towers for web access. So connection is pretty much everywhere.

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At the TelCel store they will ask if you have a Mac or PC and if it is a PC they will ask what OS. They have to get you the right USB stick. Most Windows versions are supported. At the time I got mine, I was running Windows 8.1(almost as bad as Windows ME). They said it was not supported, but I ignored them and it ran fine for me.

The cost of the USB stick and simcard is typically around $25usd(spring 2014). With that you usually get 1 to 1.5GB of free data at 3G speeds, depending on the promotion at the time. I also found that randomly I’d get a text from TelCel with free offers like “free internet access this weekend” or “Navigate Facebook Free”.

When your data us used up, simply go to www.telcel.com, create an account and login. You pick a new data plan and continue on. I got the biggest package they offered for prepaid which was 5GB for 30 days at roughly $28usd. You can also go to any TelCel store and recharge (recargar) them there.

The process in Central America is roughly the same. Except you have more choices and it’s a little cheaper and faster. I’ll repeat that since that is not a sentence you normally read. You have more choices and it’s a little cheaper and faster.

The three companies I know of are Claro, Digicel, and Tigo. I can only tell you about Claro, since that is the company we use. The main reason we went with Claro is that the SIMcard will work here in El Salvador and in Nicaragua, Honduras, Panama, and a number of other S. American countries. It will not work in Costa Rica. They have their own thing going on there apparently.

The process is the basically the same. Find a store, get a pre-paid (prepago) account set up. Some people will tell you that you have to have your Passport with you to set this up, but we used our Washington State drivers license with no problem. All they seem to want is an official looking document number to put on their application forms.

As you will find out, as long as you can fill out the full form (no matter if the info is correct or not) they are happy. This seems to apply to anything, from SIM cards to clearing customs. Just fill in the blanks and move along *STAMP STAMP STAMP* Gracias, Buenas Dias.

The initial cost for the USB stick was $25usd which included 5GB of 4G data for 15 days. After that it is $28 dollars for 8GB of data for 30 days at 4G speeds. I had to get creative to use up 5gb of data in 2 weeks. Streaming movies, skype, craploads of email, general websurfing downloading movies, it’s all nice and fast.

This random picture of Space Jesus guarding a bus is for you to enjoy because I have data to spare.

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Three gringos walk into a bar…

Stop me if you’ve heard this one.

The day started out innocently enough. Tawn decided she wanted to take the bus to town and get some fresh veggies. We called our buddy Josh on the radio and made plans to head out around 10am…ish.

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Blah, blah, blah bus ride to town.

The joke around here is:
Q: How many people can you fit on a bus in El Salvador?
A: One more!

Me and Josh head to the Claro (Central American Phone/internet company) store and get him setup with an internet chip. I’d gotten one a few days before so I knew the process.

Tawn went next door to a grocery store to get some veggies. Apparently, “veggies” is Tawn slang for wine. Cause that is all she bought….wine.

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Walking back to the bus station I suddenly(luckily) remembered that I needed to pick up a machete and scabbard. We ask the guy at the hardware store where we find such a thing. Being in El Salvador, this is really not that odd of a request.

We find the machete place and as I’m looking around for the perfect machete and scabbard, Josh and Tawn are asking the guy at the shop were the closest bar is.

He seemed to be slightly befuddled by this question. He kept telling us to go the the tienda (store) to get beer. Josh kept saying, “No we want to go to a bar and have a beer” (in spanish).

He says “There are no bars in town”.

We are like…..”whuuut??”

After a few more seconds of thought he kinda crinkles up his brow and says “Uh…there is the “billiards” place around the corner”.

He did not have the type of machete I wanted, so we headed for the bar.

Josh and Tawn walk up to a door that looks like it might be the right place. I went next door since I spotted another machete shop with an even better selection than the previous place. They really do love their machetes down here.

I find my machete and bad ass leather scabbard and head next door to the bar.

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Tawn chilling around town with my new machete

I would not have been the least bit surprised if I saw a sweaty Jean-Claude Von Damme or Sylvester Stallion circa 1987 sitting at a table in this place, sharpening a knife or some other cheesy ’80s action movie cliche. Dirt floor. Ramshackle, cobbled together everything. Sagging corrugated tin roof….perfect actually.

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Click that pic to get the full panoramic effect.
I see Tawn and Josh sitting a shitty, dirty table, on some rickety chairs next to another table with four or five guys sitting around watching two guys play some sort of card game for cash.

Randomly walking about the place are six or seven chickens, two roosters and a few dirty pigeons. A couple of the chickens are noisily pecking the shit out of a couple crushed Styrofoam cups in the middle of the floor right next to our table.

There is a odd scrawny fellow whistling at a small green bird in a cage. It was almost as if they finished filming the movie “Blood Sport”, but didn’t take down the bar set and the extras just sorta hung around for the next decade or two.

The “bartender” brought us a plate of some sort of very sour fruit with salt on it. At first I was not sure what it was and asked him “Que es esta?”. He points to a rather large tree that is growing out of a pile of rubble near the back of the place through a huge hole in the roof and says….”Mango”.

Of course. Locally sourced, organic….how nice.

By the way, if you think salted pretzels make you wanna drink more beer. Try unripe mangoes and salt….sheesh.

We tuck in to the mangoes and order another round of beer, but our attention keeps being pulled to the other side of the bar. There is a “wall” slapped together with some old 2x4s, sticks and metal roofing. The wall hides that part of the room from the front door and the rest of the bar. There are eight or so guys all gathered around behind the wall. We cannot tell what they are up to, but we can hear coins clinking about and it has that feel that there is some sort of wagering going on.

We toss a few ideas back and forth of what we think is happening, but between the three of us we never felt like we really figured it out. We ruled out cock fighting…..way to mellow. No tell tell chicken sounds. I’ve never seen a cockfight, but I’m pretty sure I’d know one if I heard it.

Curiosity gets the better of me. I get up and wander over.

In my head I had a mental picture of some dude wearing a grimy tank top and a bandanna with a cigarette hanging out of the corner of his mouth doing that rapid fire knife between the fingers thing and the rest of the guys betting on the outcome. I was picturing maybe Steven Segal.

Walking around the wall I see they are all standing around a beatup, waist high table with a 6 inch boarder around it. There is of course the requisite old shitty flickering florescent light hanging precariously above. On the table top there is some money scattered about and one of the guys has a very small plastic cup in his hand. The cup was just like one of those little cups you get at a doctors office when you have to take pills.

Just as I get to the table, “little cup guy” gives the cup a shake and tosses the contents on the table. Bouncing across the table are two of the absolute smallest pair of dice I have ever seen in my life. I am not exaggerating when I say they were at most 1/8 of an inch in size. It was smaller than a pea, like maybe two lentels stuck together.

I was not prepared for this. Honestly, I was taken slightly aback. A guy with a knife trying to not stab his hand….Yep. Cockfighting…sure. Some sort of midget fight….or something….OK. But tiny, tiny dice….how do you prepare for something like that?

The guy with the cup ask if I want to play. I tell him I don’t know the rules and he gives me a quick run down. It was basically a simplified version of craps. I passed, but stayed and watched for a bit.

After a few minutes I wander back to our table, we pay our tab, and head out past the guys working at the door and out to the street.

Walking back to the bus stop, we start talking about the bar. The conversation went something along the lines of:

“What the fuck?”
“That was really weird”
“What the fuck?”
“Why were those dice so tiny”
“What was wrong with that one chicken’s head and was that a laminated poster of Patrick Swayze on the wall?”
“Did that just happen?”
“Seriously, what the fuck?”

We decided that the dice game was some sort of illegal gambling. The guys at the front door were there to keep a look out.

I kept thinking to myself. “I should go to the store and buy those guys a proper set of dice”. I pictured my self some sort of hero, swooping in and dropping some regulation size dice on them. They’d be like, “Damn, thank you strange Gringo”….then it hit us.

The dice were so god damn tiny (seriously 1/8 inch) so that if the police decided to bust them, they only had to drop them on the floor and the chickens and roosters would peck them up and the evidence would be gone. “Nothing illegal happening here officer”.

It was all very surreal. But the beer was super cold.

We just found out last night while have a few beer with a local guy that sometimes the dice are made out of teeth (the story just keeps getting better) and are in fact that small so they can be tossed and lost easily.

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