Tuesday, January 19, 2010

RESTING AT CLUB DE PESCA, Cartegena, Columbia January 19, 2010

Club de Pesca, Cartegena, Colombia January 22, 2010


January 12th, Sea Star entered her new temporary home in beautiful Club de Pesca Marina. We are stern into the concrete fixed dock and tied to two pilings from the bow. We are in the marina for a few weeks to have Sea Star, who was looking a bit grungy, cleaned as there is fresh water and electricity available here. There are industrious workers who clean and polish very nicely. The man we hired, Estuardo, has children in the Univercidad de Cartagena and works for a modest amount per day. Sea Star has not looked this clean and shiny outside since we stopped in Maryland at Gratitude Yachting Center. We have other things to work out, too. Should Dan have arthoscopic surgery and if so, where?
Where will Sea Star sail to next? and do BMW motorcycles have more fun? These issues will be discussed in later postings, maybe.


We continue to enjoy the city sights, sounds and activities. There are always festivals and fiestas in Columbia. One of the larger ones is later next month in a city named Barranchilla. It's supposed to be a wild three-day festival. We think we will go for a day as it is obvious that every hotel, motel (we've learned about them), and Bed and Breakfast type place has either been priced WAY out of our league or was "unavailable" for the time of the festival. What the proprietors seem to do is not take reservations, and then just charge whatever price they want to to some lucky hotel seeker. I'm really looking forward to a great parade and show and a long day!

Throughout the month of January there has been a fabulous Music Festival, a classical music program with the theme “La Magia de Mozart”, involving entertainers, many well known world-wide. The concerts were held in or near magnificent architectural backdrops; churches, halls and in beautiful outside venues in the Walled City. A lovelier backdrop it’s hard to imagine.

San Pedro’s Plaza includes what used to be San Pedro’s convent, the beautiful church, what looked like some apartments above a large restaurant restored to Colonial splendor, and in another building on the other side of the square is the Museum of Modern Art. The square still contained its Christmas lighting and during the concert the video recorders and perhaps TV cameras provided plenty of light to see the performances as well as the crowds.

The concerts were magical! Dan and I attended one of the 10:30 at night ones that included famous Columbianos; a guitar soloist Ricardo Cobo, followed by the Bahia Trio with a lively Caribbean beat, and a rowdy, fun, small orchestra of eight called Porto Candelaria who actually played (among other instruments) the plastic bottle! With the encores the music went on to 12:30 AM! Remember-cruiser midnight is 8:30, so we were tired but that was a January highlight for both of us!!

At other concerts, a group from the London Symphony has performed as well as Sahnghai Quartet, celloist Alisa Weilerstein, violinist Bella Hristove and many others, for free or close to free.


The last night of the festival I decided I did not see as many of the performances as I had hoped to. That night, with a friend, I attended the Mozart Requiem,K 626 with four wonderful soloists and the London Symphony. As before there were plastic chairs, maybe 500 of them in the square totally filled with concert goers, mostly Columbianos, and hundreds more of us hoping to hear the concert were standing next to the fencing around and behind those seated. The people were dressed in their finery and all, especially the women, looked gorgeous and entry was free.

The Requiem music was very moving, but the irrepressible spirit of Cartagena kept popping through in the more subdued parts. There was a Marimba Band with drums and flutes marching in a nearby street on one side of the open square where the outdoor concert was on—then on the other side a salsa club’s music was spilling into the street. The professionals never lost a beat nor let their eyes wander to the distractions. The piece was strong enough to overshadow the other sounds for the most part, and the eleven bongs of the church bell added to the dirge at 11:00PM.


From our berth at Club de Pesca it is an easy walk to the Old City and every time I go, there is more to discover. There are vendors, exclusive shops, at least four museums (we haven’t had energy to hit one yet), exciting plazas and restaurants of all types and prices. Cartagena is known for its emeralds and as you pass store windows, the jewelry gleams. We did explore one museum where very old emerald pieces were displayed as well as cave walls recreated so that the visitor would get the idea of how the various kinds of emeralds are mined.

There is an interesting mix of old and new here. Along the one half mile of waterfront is a meandering brick walkway where people stroll and powerwalk or lounge on the park benches during the day and later the wide walkway is use for running and in-line-skating classes for the kids, and baby stroller walking. In the evening there might be street music for the adults that we can hear from our boats. This area is new and park-like and contrasts with the streets of the Manga area where the marinas are located and we mariners are cautioned about pick-pockets and worse. We have not felt in the least threatened but about once a week a dingy and motor is stolen and you hear of some crime.


The brick walk described above meanders along the Porto de Cartagena, the cruise ship tourist stop, the anchorage to Club Nautico and through a city park, to an old fort finally arriving at Club de Pesca-


Quite near, a short taxi ride that costs $5,000 pesos-about US $2.50 there are two malls to rival those in the US where the shopping is great and the food court, intriguing. We were able to see the new movie “Avitar” in 3D. Another of the areas of Cartagena is Boca Grande where the high rise buildings you see in my pictures of the anchorage are located and many rich Colombianos have condos. This is the area where cruisers often need to go for Doctor visits. There are modern dentists’ offices, lots of specialty doctors such as plastic surgeons, orthopedists and laser eye clinics. Many cruisers feel the out of pocket cost is manageable and the care is superior to their US facilities, so they chose to have their care in Colombia. We are all astounded when the doctors freely give out their cell numbers and when you call- they actually answer and speak to you directly to make appointments and such.

Some things are expensive but some are very cheap. Cruisers here are getting all kinds of work completed as needed for reasonable prices. Some have added inside woodwork in boats, hard dodgers, or canvas projects such as biminis. Some have pulled their boats out of the water and redone the hulls or painted, others have pulled all their chain and anchors and regalvanized them. We haven’t needed too do much. We have had some electrical work completed, replacing the cable up the mast to install our new radome, replacing our VHF radio mic in the cockpit and installing a remote for the Sirrius radio- all due to the lightning strike back in July.


What is next? We’re not sure yet. We’ll be here a while and perhaps go on a trip to a lovely island where we can SWIM again, the Rosarios. At the Rosarios you can snorkel, see an aquarium that is reported to be great and there is an aviary that has many species of birds-so we’ll see when we feel like getting off the dock and going! It’s fine for now while we sort out some things that still need doing. Meanwhile our Spanish is improving a bit-geeze it's hard work to learn and retain a language. At the dock we run our air conditioning. It's hot in Cartagena during the day. The boat heats up until breathing becomes difficult, then we close up and put on the AC for relief. Later in the day the breeze comes back and the nights are usually comfortable to sleep.

Here are some pics of the activities we have been doing lately. Sorry about the quality of some.

More sights - Cartagena

Monday, January 4, 2010

AFTER CHRISTMAS & NEW YEARS January 4, 2010

Christmas came in Cartagena and the bangs and flashes were seen and heard all the way to Ano Neuvo and beyond- at 2:00AM and 3:00AM this morning, January 4, intensive fireworks were heard from the town near the anchorage yet again! I think the first fireworks to welcome Christmas were on December 7th.

Leading up to Christmas there were the fireworks, and beautiful light displays containing pouffy ribbons and bows and lighted blow-up characters that we walked and saw, especially in Old Town. The people were very friendly and jovial, (maybe a tad enubriated) everywhere-though liquor is expensive here.

Cruisers did their part to celebrate and uphold their home traditions. Some cruisers had family or friends visit over the holidays but most of us just got together and had fun.

On December 19th there was the Christmas Ball with DJ music and an attempt at Salsa dancing by Gringos in a converted hamburger haven-you'd be surprised what a little green cellophane can do for a place!

On December 24th Sea Star got together with friends on Cabaret, Foreiner and Endorfin for a Christmas buffet on Cabaret's upper deck.(they're a motor trawler) I made artichoke-cheese dip and a pork shoulder I thought was a ham to contribute. (Damn, I really have to learn more Spanish)

December 25th at 4:30PM we were on our way to the Christmas dinner planned and organized (kinda like hearding cats!)by again, Cabaret.
Since the Club Nautico did not have a space- or a place- remember my last set of photos of deconstruction? Suzi and John found a place at a backpacker hotel and the planning began.

The food cooked and brought by the cruisers was excellent. There were many kinds of salads and vegetables: my green lime jello salad, tossed salads, Waldorf Salads, tubuli salad, yams, sweet potato, squash, mixed brocalli and califlower. Dan and I served maybe 75 people. I served the mashed potatoes. Each cruiser was to bring food for 15 people, so all I had to do was shuffle pretty bowls. Dan and Bill had to serve turkey. They were told not to honor requests--but everyone got what they wanted and there was enough for seconds--then free for all!

After dinner part of our entertainment was a "treasure of the bildge" gift exchange. Cruisers grab something from the boat, wrap it and hope somebody takes it home, so it's not on your boat any more. People are given a number when a gift is put on the table. Numbers are drawn at random and when your number is called you can open a new gift from the gift pile or grab one someone else has opened (and maybe stashed away).

My first choice was some DVD's, then it was exchanged for vanilla body lotion, but finally I came away with two brass hooks to install on Sea Star and a darling little girl was thrilled to open my donation of a red dish towel and Christmas snowman pate' spreader! The gift everyone wanted was T49, a spray can of corrosion block, or a 12 volt clip on cabin fan. The last gift that noone wanted and so it caused lots of trading was cigars! A good time was had by all who understood the game or played fairly. Those EU sailors really didn't know what hit them!

The rest of the evening we tried a Christmas sing along and a pair of cruisers who play instruments and sing well, entertained us.
Others who did not sing so well but did have the urge to belt it out were passed the mike. Suzi from Cabaret and Kerry from Coconut teamed up on Proud Mary, Miguel who hadn't touched his guitar since the sixties tried to remember the chords to folk songs and Mark played bongos. Then we all grabbed out still unwashed dishes and hailed taxis to return to our boats.

As for Christmas morning when Santa should have come, well.. what he brought was lovely barnacles! Neither head (toilet) would hold its vaccuum charge. It required Dan going into the not so clean water with a screwdriver to push off the little devils, and cleaning the discharge where barnacles had grown and plugged the outlet.


So.. we had the boat apart anyway and started running the cables for the new digital radar and Clarion radio remote that had been damaged by lightning way back in July. The path the wires had to be fed through by a metal wire snake was from the pedistle outside, into the lazarette, down into the aft cabin and under two lockers, over the engine compartment, under the floor near the sink, through two totally stuffed compartments under the sink and under the generator and up through the shelf, into the electronics boards. This took two full days and the sorting of those lockers still isn't completed!
There are a few pics of the condition of our boat on Christmas day!

Ano Neuevo is as important a time in Colombia as in the US. We had looked into going out to a restaurant where there would be local music. There were many places advertised but the cost was as much as in the US probably $150.00 a couple or more for the evening. Our young twenty-five year old Spanish teacher suggested that we all visit his home town of Turbaco and go to a bullfight, have a wonderful dinner, listen to live music and attend the yearly fiesta on the Plaza and all this would be less money and more fun. We were certainly game especially when Oscar suggested he would meet us and get us on the correct bus. We decided to stay the night as there were hotels in this town of 100,000 people.

And that is what we did! The bullfight movie shows some short clips I took and meshed together using a program. I was entranced by the beautiful children. The parents seemed very indulgent and the kids were fed and bought anything they wanted. Of course there were charactors in the rickety and bouncy stands and men went by and up the stairs constantly hawking food, beer, bottles of rum, sodas, cowboy hats and woven blankets to shake and wave! The band played, the townspeople (men) went into the ring and all hell broke lose. Whose counting-but we saw at least one major goring and a few run-overs. Here the bulls do not die-they are run into the ring for about five minutes so we saw as many as 10 bulls. A few were stuck by the long lances of the horseman and they bled but we were assured they were all ok.

After the fight we spent the evening in the Plaza. It was a relatively early evening back to our wonderful hotel as the Columbians go home at 11:00PM so as to spend the midnight time with family, at least in this town.

The last set of pics is of the Casa de la Abuela- "Grandma's House" with it's wonderful view of the fireworks all the way from Cartagena to Turbaco. The Casa had its own zoo- so that's where the animal pics came from.

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL

Christmas and New Years