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Learning about cruising, our Nordhavn and ourselves in Mexico

Kevin and I are sitting on an Alaska Airlines plane, flying north to Seattle as we write this blog post. We’ll be heading to the boat show, re-starting our Mexican tourist visas, picking up a slew of parts and things we think we can’t live without, and attending the annual Nordhavn party.  We’ll be on the ground in Seattle for approximately 60 hours total.  It’s exciting!  And a little weird.  We’ve been talking about what it will feel like to be back in the PNW, how we have changed and what we’ve learned since we have been cruising, and living, in Mexico. While we’ve only been in Mexico since late October, it feels like much longer.  So, we decided that this might be an interesting story to share.

What we’ve learned (a very abbreviated version)

Parts – a Favorite Topic

We spend a lot of time talking with sailors and other cruisers about parts, where to find parts, how to get parts to Mexico, and how much parts cost.  PARTS!  On the cruiser’s nets in the mornings, parts and fixing engines, A/C, refrigeration, sails (for the sailors), windlasses, etc. are constant topics.  In Banderas Bay there are some good options, and some incredible local resources and people with local knowledge.  That said, it is still a giant topic.  If you can find parts, or very specific consumables such as specific types of wax or fuel stabilizer, etc., they are much more expensive than at home. A review of items such as power cords or bilge pumps found prices that were 1.5x to 2x more than Fisheries Supply.

Just a shot of the oil, coolant and Stanadyne that we brought with us to Mexico (before we put it away!)

As such, the parts conversation continues.  Who is coming from the US who can bring us parts?  Does someone know someone who knows someone else who might be in PV sometime soon who can pick up the watermaker/toilet/generator part?  Ha!  We have a bag checked on this plane that only has other bags in it.  We’ll be coming home to Mexico with parts.  Lots of parts.

 Everything takes longer than you think.

While we don’t go to work and rarely do anything that resembles traditional career work, we are busy – every day.  It takes a lot of time to follow the marina/government protocols, care for the boat, provision, keep the dogs active, keep us out and walking off the tortillas, socializing, and arranging for next steps in travel, and generally in moving about at 8 knots.

Checking in and out of a port can take half a day, or more.  See our most recent story that covers this process here.

Eating out in a restaurant is a relaxed affair.  The Mexican people will never rush you, which is lovely, except if you are in a hurry.  But why be in a hurry afterall?  A lesson to be learned here.  Smile. Enjoy. Relax.  Talk to your friends, your table neighbors and the restaurant team – you might learn something.

Ignore the sweaty hair.  LOOK AT THOSE TACOS!

Life without a car is good.  But now and then it would make life easier.  Going to the grocery store (there isn’t one in La Cruz for example,) can take 3-4 hours to accomplish with Ubers, taxis, old lady carts and a compilation of re-usable bags.  I love my old lady cart by the way.  She’s red, of course, and Scott and Abby recently named her – The Red Snapper!

 

 We are spending less money overall, but not everything is inexpensive

At home in Seattle we could spend money so easily.  We could order freely on Amazon.  We could stop at Nordstrom or Whole Foods on the way home.  And there was just so much that was so easily available.  Well, in Mexico we aren’t spending much on shopping.  Outside of the occasional “oh that sundress is gorgeous” purchase, there isn’t a whole lot we buy. That said…

Swells. Not always so swell.

In the Pacific Northwest you can anchor in hundreds, perhaps thousands of beautiful calm bays, if you read the wind predictions correctly.  In the portions of Mexico we have cruised thus far (west coast of Baja, mainland in Banderas Bay and Costalegre), there aren’t absolutely tons of anchorages.  And the ones that do exist can be completely unusable, or uncomfortable if the ocean swell is coming into the anchorage, based on the current direction of the swells, the size of the swells or their ability to “wrap around” a point.  So far, Abreojos was the worst swelly anchorage, abated slightly by our flopper stopper.  Mag Bay, which is mostly protected, was fairly free of swells.  Chamela, south of Banderas Bay was a fairly quiet night – we didn’t even put out the flopper stopper.  At 3 am in Tenacatita I thought that I might fall out of bed foot first with the swells that rocked Red Rover.  “Gee, I’m sitting up in bed…”  The swells are simply something to get used to.  And we’re getting there! That said, we are spending more time in marinas than in anchorages thus far. We’re excited to get to the anchorages of the Sea of Cortez this spring.

Now, this photo was taken in British Columbia… but it is a shot of the flopper stopper.  We were learning how to deploy it in the photo. 

 How’s the boat doing and what’s on our new wish list?

I learned a funny phrase from the sailors the other day. A person who spends years working on their boat, only to never really sail, is called “a carpenter.”  That gave me a chuckle.  Of course, we spent three years working on Red Rover, and cruising, and working too.  We were ready when we headed south.  And, as a result, Red Rover is running SUPER well.  We’re really pleased.  Other than small issues here and there, things are going exceptionally well.

Some notes on what we’re really thankful for and what is now on our wish list.

Cheers to the….

What’s on the Wish List?

 How have we changed and what are we learning about ourselves and our cruising style?

We’re learning what our cruising style is

We would like to have a better balance of urban and remote destinations in our cruising.  That’s not really new, but we are busy reaffirming that assumption as we work our way around Mexico’s beautiful coastline. We are finding that we want to feel more connected to the people in each place we visit – not just the cruisers (who are awesome though!).  A part of that is learning more Spanish, which we are tackling with an immersive language school in La Paz in March.

 

Mileage is not a goal

We never really thought that racking up miles was one of our goals, but we have doubled down on this assumption.  We are enjoying taking our time, and in some cases, we wish we had been able to spend more time in some of the beautiful places and communities we have visited.  Owning a Nordhavn (to us) is not about going tens of thousands of miles a year.  It is about engaging with the people we meet in the places we go.  So we’ll go a little slower.  And enjoy the ride.

Be present.  Be nice.

Sitting on this plane, people around us are bitching about stupid things, and are being mean to one another.  Why is this necessary?

In Mexico, we have found such kindness.  From the Mexican people, the other cruisers, the sailors and the Nordhavn community.  Kindness and genuine interest.  Thoughtfulness and people who are truly present with one another.  They are not sucked into an electronic device 24/7.  They are not skeptical that someone’s nice hello is a cover-up for some covert thieving intent.  They are engaged in their life and in the community around them.

On Sundays, when the “land people” came to the La Cruz Sunday Market, they pushed their way to the front of the line, they were in a hurry, they were…. Rude.  Now this isn’t a slam on land people.  It is an observation on what we are doing to ourselves in today’s modern world.

We’ve slowed down. And we find that we’re so much better for it.  We start the morning slowly.  We sleep later, we enjoy our coffee, we walk the dogs and talk to our neighbors.  We try to be kind and thoughtful.  Our pace of life is healthier, and so are we.

Stress?

I went to a “Women Who Sail” event in La Cruz where one of the speakers talked about stress reduction.  And I had to think hard to determine the last time I felt truly stressed.  That’s a huge and awesome change for me and for both of us.  I went from being a driven entrepreneur who really didn’t sleep much at all (I worried instead) to a cruiser. We sleep longer, we talk to each other, we spend every day together and people keep commenting that we look 10 years younger.  That’s because we are happy.  And grateful for the ability to live our life this way.

We have a community.  And it is everywhere we go.

When we first left Seattle, I had a big concern about my long-time need to feel that I was “at home.”  Both of us need our time out, time to be at home and be still.  While the boat is certainly home, I always loved coming back to Shilshole and our community there.  I’ve come to find that this isn’t an issue anymore.  Home is wherever our home takes us.  We have a community – the community of cruising powerboats and sailors.  And we belong.  In particular, our Nordhavn community has a far and wide reach.  There is always a friend, old or new, in most every harbor.  The connection with the Nordhavn folks is somewhat immediate and it is very real.  And, it makes us always feel at home.

 

 

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