Friday, June 27, 2008

Coron

Hi Everyone,

5:49 pm Thursday June 27

We were safe and snug in Illultuk Bay, Calauit Island Busuanga. Only problem was that we ran out of fruit and veggies but had plenty of everything else. I made bread and brownies! Our last two nights we had dinner with Carol and Brian who are cruisers from New Zealand. They had fruit and veggies so we contributed the meat and wine and brownies. They came Monday and we all toured the Safari Park together. It was great company and we had fed some animals. When we get to somewhere that has wifi and we have lots of time, maybe I can send some photos finally.

We will spend tomorrow in Coron.11' 59" 751 N 120' 11" 899 E are the coordinates.

For everyone who worried, sorry! Our friend Carol who lives in Manila had us covered!

Ru

Monday, June 23, 2008

Typhoon

Hi Everyone,

You all have had way more news about the typhoon than we did. Our info just shows wind and waves for our location and in the area we will travel when the seas again are calm and we leave here. We are in Busuanga Province / Calauit Island / Illultuk town. We are in a very protected cove and there are enough friendly banca folks going by that if we really needed contact with people they would try to help. As it is, we have plenty of food, water, electricity and enough old Red Sox DVD's from the "04" and "07" playoffs and world series to last 'til October! I do miss being able to check on them. Carol was texting me scores and Harriet now keeps me posted. Our friend Carol is keeping a close eye on us. Randal and I have no doubt she would rescue us in a New York minute if we needed it.
As it is, we are having a lovely time. I am painting and reading; baking bread, doing laundry and cleaning and enjoying the quiet away from karaoke and the PG banca ferry traffic. If we just had some fresh fruit and veggies I'd be happy as a clam. Because of the wind generated from typhoon weather we have a nice breeze and are comfortably cool for the first time in almost two years! I had on a long sleeved shirt yesterday. We probably have another 3 or 4 days as the seas calm. That will give us time to see the Safari Park game reserve here and explore the bay and check out the entrance reef too. It is why we came after all.

Sorry if we made you all worry. There is no cell phone tower and no WIFI. This very slow radio wave email with no web surfing possible may be more typical than my being able to be online on a regular basis. Just go by the old adage, "no news is good news." I do have lots of photos and stories to share and am exploring with our friend Audrey to set up a real web page. So that's it. We really are in a lovely protected spot.

Ru

Safe and Sound

Hi Everyone,

Randal and I are safe, dry, and waiting out the bad weather in Illutuk Bay, Calauit Island, Busuanga. This is a very protected cove and one of the best typhoon anchorages in the Philippines. We are not in the direct path of the typhoon but are getting strong winds and rain. The seas outside the bay have to calm before we will leave so we may be here another week. There is not a cell phone tower with SMART, (our phone service) so we can just communicate with a very slow email which is transmitted through Brunei. Email goes through our single sideband radio which bounces off the atmosphere. Sun spots can block it and radio traffic can make it very slow. We are about 500 ft from shore where there are some small native homes. There are other similar homes dotted around the bay as well so we aren't marooned out here alone. Small bancas go by and we wave and they wave. There is a wildlife preserve here and as soon as the weather is good enough we will go for a tour. While on Romblon Island we met a Brit, Tony Parkinson who helped establish the preserve when Marcos was president of the Philippines. It was originally a way to save threatened species. Tony is a very interesting man who can tell you about David Attenborough, Joy Adamson, Diane Fossey because he knew them. While on Romblon our guide took us to meet Tony and see the spectacular view from his home.

Our new, huge, wonderful anchor is doing a super job and we are making a giant doodle on the chart plotter as it captures the boat's swings around on it. If I ever get to have wifi again, I'll try to send a photo.

We are surrounded by the preserve lands and small mountains (blocking the wind) and, other than the wind, it is very quite. Randal and I have watched the last game of the 04 and 07 World Series that I have on DVD. We run the genset to generate power but use it sparingly though I have done laundry and will bake bread this morning. If we just had some fresh fruit and veggies it would be just grand!

This is definitely a lesson in weather. You do what it says! The sun is coming out!!!

Ru

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Paradise Islands

From Randal:
We had an uneventful passage today of 46 NM that took eight hours and thirty minutes. Some of that time was searching for the perfect anchorage at our destination. We chose a place in 55' of water between a peaceful little fishing village and an island that protects us from any ocean swells. The village has about 12 huts, some with the roofs coming apart. I can only assume the habitants died or moved and now their home is in shambles. These huts are framed up with bamboo. The floor is several feet off the ground and they all have grass roofs. There are chickens and children running around in equal number. The chickens crow and the children laugh and play.

Earlier I saw about six older children walking up the beach in defiance of their surrounding just like teenagers anywhere around the world. There was a dog carrying something in it's mouth but I could not tell what it was. There are young women washing clothes in buckets and at least one man boarded his banca and rowed out to the island to hunt for something on the beach at low tide. I saw him when he went back ashore and if he was carrying anything it could be concealed in his hands.

After anchoring Ruth went for a swim behind the boat and said she could see the bottom even though we are in 55'. Didn't take her long to get her fill and she came back aboard, showered, and warmed us some veggie soup. We hadn't had much for lunch and now that the passage was over, were both hungry.

If I didn't mention it, this is paradise. The temperature outside the boat seems cool compared to the temperature inside the boat. The engine room, which is centrally located under the pilothouse, gets to 120 degrees F during a passage and keeps the boat very warm all night. Of course in the early morning it starts to become comfortable but then we start the engine and do it all over again. That is why staying for several days in one location is so attractive. The second night and there after is very pleasant.
We had to force ourselves to leave Romblon.
From Ru:
We did go from Romblon to Looc Bay on Tablas, to Ilin Island and now we are here on Tara Island, population very tiny and remote. But NO KARAOKE!!!! We will be at the Safari Park tomorrow. Not sure when we will have wifi again. For Thursday evening (Philippines time), we've anchored somewhere off Tara Island, somewhere about 4 miles from these coordinates 12 15.193' N, 120 26.450' E. Google Earth doesn't seem to mark where Tara Island is. At 7PM, we're ready to sleep, it is real dark and quiet. In the past, sometimes where we have docked, there's lots of noise from Karaoke singing. So, quiet is good.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Hello from Romblon

We are on Romblon Island and in Romblon town. Romblon is known for its marble and we will go on a tour this morning to see some of the quarry/factories. Romblon hasn't become a tourist destination yet and it's very nice and the biggest place we have been since Subic. Weather has been lovely. We were invaded by young children Sunday morning just as we were in China. They stayed for cookies, Mountain Dew and to get flag bandanas. Sweet cute polite kids. In the afternoon boat friends Chris and Mylin drove us up to their lovely mountain home overlooking the bay and their sailboat. On our first day out from Puerto Galera we saw wonderful magical dolphins, me for the first time.
Got to go. Not sure when I can email again.
Ru

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Coco Beach Island Resort

June 10, 2008


We left Sabang and took the one road that really leads anywhere; the ridge road back to Puerto Galera from Sabang. Many people take bancas to get between places along the coast and “driving” to Coco Beach we found out why. We turned off the ridge into the woods onto a bumpy dirt road. We stopped at a sign nailed onto a palm tree indicating Coco Beach was down a dirt path into the woods. Dante parked our red minitruck and we all got out. With Dante as our leader we started down the path into the woods towards Coco Beach.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Leaving Puerto Galera

Hi Everyone,
Looks like we will be leaving Puerto Galera early tomorrow morning and heading to Marinduque , Romblon, Santa Fe, Mangarin Bay and onwards. Not sure when I will email again. I will text our friend Carol and ask her to email my sister Harriet who can let you know we are moving along. We will also try out our sailmail if we can’t find any wifi and we really need to email. I am way behind on writing up our Puerto Galera adventure and hope to do some today.
I will send out an email when we can receive email again. We will check one more time this evening, but after that it might be a bit.
Randal checked the weather and it predicts calm seas with tiny waves for the area we will cruise. Last November when we were here with Nick and Zaida we had bumpy seas back and forth from Marinduque to Puerto Galera so had to layover in Marinduque and skip our trip to Romblon. There were little stingy things in the water in Marinduque so we couldn’t even swim. Now with our new wetsuits, that won’t be a problem though I think we won’t have time in Marinduque since it is just an overnight anchorage between here and Romblon for us. Romblon is known for its marble work so that should be interesting.
Ru

SCUBA on our own

Hi All,

Our equipment test went fine. We did a different kind of dive today, no tests, just float along with the underwater current. The tricky part was to follow our leader Jamie and not bang into any of the coral formations. But Jamie was a good leader and I trusted him. He had a job watching both Randal and me since we are still learning to stay at a specific level. Everyone is supposed to just follow the leader but he kept having to come back to get Randal or me to make sure where we were. I hadn't cleaned my mask's original film off well enough so my visibility wasn't as good as it could have been. The current was moving us fast enough that you couldn't really look long enough at anything so that was a bit disappointing. But all the gear worked well. After that we had to pack up all of the gear and get it back to DoraMac. Randal hired a small banca. There are no roads through Sabang so no way, by vehicle, to get the gear back to the one road out of town. The banca man, not much bigger than I am, carried most of the stuff onto the boat. Then he carried Randal piggyback onto the boat so Randal wouldn't have to walk through the water in his socks and sandals. There was a ladder from the boat into the shallow water and he carried Randal to the point where he could step onto the ladder without walking through the water. It almost worked and looked very funny.

We started off back to DoraMac. Our first stop was at Coco Beach Resort to donate some of our "already read" books. We had met a very interesting Dutch man who has helped develop the resort's coconut product line so that local families can earn a living making and packaging the products. I'll write more about him when I continue the story of our adventures with Carol. Then we continued to DoraMac with one short stop for fuel to put into the banca's small engine. When we got to DoraMac I was even more impressed with our banca driver who perfectly maneuvered his banca to the foot of our swim platform. He again carried most of the gear off his banca onto our boat. Randal paid him 300 pesos, 50 more than the 250 we had agreed on. It was totally worth it. (About $7.00)

As soon as we had gotten some of the gear settled, Randal put his back on and went under DoraMac to clean the prop. It took about 20 minutes since most of the gunk had been scrapped off in Subic. It was a bit disconcerting to have Randal down under the boat alone but I could see his bubble floating up to the surface. We had tied a line under the boat near the prop so he could pull himself to the surface if need be. But we had learned the basics and he was fine. And even though we had never learned to dive under objects which does take more training, the boat is not a large area, so okay.


Hanging to dry behind the cockpit.


Two tanks to use and 2 for spares


Now we just have to find someplace to store it all. That might be harder than the underwater mask removal!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

hello

Hi Everyone,
I am sending this myself from the Rock nRoll Cafe. Tomorrow Randal and I go on a real dive and we'll use our own equipment to test it out. No tasks to practice, just follow the dive leader and look at fish.
Today was frst day of school here. It was so cute. Kids looked so full of promise. Sad since there is not so much opportunity. They had uniforms and funky backpacks. The big ones held the hand of the little ones and everyone looked happy! It was the end of the school day; so maybe that was why all the smiles.
Will work on sending more photos of our adventures with Carol.
Go Sox! Go Celtics!
Ru

Monday, June 9, 2008

Puerto Galera Tour

Puerto Galera with Carol # 1

Randal is in the galley making us our first pineapple shake. I just tried it and you can almost imagine rum in it: it tastes just like one of those wonderful bar drinks with the little umbrella and cherries hanging from it. Yum! One day I’ll be brave enough to make us avocado shakes.

We just had the best weekend visit with our friend Carol Carino. She came to visit and she took us on a tour of Puerto Galera! We visited Escarceo Point Lighthouse, Coco Beach Resort, Tamaraw Falls, Calapan, Ponderosa Golf Course, White Beach and had a special breakfast and tour of The Moorings, a hotel and resort just up the hill from the Puerto Galera Yacht Club. Carol had stayed with us in Subic Bay when we were tied to the pier, but was afraid that the boat motion here would make her seasick. So she stayed at The Moorings and asked them to provide her with a car and driver. The “car” was a converted mini pickup truck with two benches set up in back. It was bright red inside and out, cute and actually quite comfortable. And we covered some really bumpy, hilly terrain. Between us, Carol and I took hundreds of photos. My favorite is the one where I made friends with a water buffalo! Carol took lots of photos of that and some video too. The pictures from the top of the old Escarceo Point Lighthouse are neat too. And then there are the ones from the VM restaurant in White Beach where Carol and I had really great Halo Halos. We saw beautiful scenery, ate too much food, and had an altogether wonderful time that was way too short.

Carol came Saturday late morning. Her driver, Michael, took her from Makati to Batangas where she caught a morning banca ferry to Puerto Galera.

After she checked into The Moorings and got settled she had her driver take her to Muelle Pier. Earlier in the morning Randal had gone to Sabang to pay for our Scuba outfits and was on the pier in the Rock N’Roll CafĂ© at the computer. He stayed there, but Carol took the service boat to DoraMac to bring us some vitamins. She had been kind enough to bring us a gift of Caltrate for me and Cardio vitamins for both of us. Carol wants us to stay healthy! About 11 she and I took the service boat back to the pier and we made our plan for the day. In trying to plan for Carol’s visit I had read about the Escarceo Lighthouse just outside of Sabang. Amazingly in our prior trips I hadn’t walked there. It is slightly uphill and about a mile out of Sabang the opposite direction from Puerto Galera. Carol’s driver Dante knew the area and took us there on our way to lunch in Sabang. The landscape and 360 view was lovely.

See my pictures;
Tabblo: Puerto Galera Tour
Then it was back to Sabang and lunch at Portofino.

After lunch we went off on another adventure, to Coco Beach Island Resort. Coco Beach is between Sabang and Puerto Galera so was on our way home. It was supposed to be a nice place to swim so we thought we would check it out for another day. It was much more interesting than a simple resort. More like a socially responsible resort that was trying to maintain the environment and offering good work to local families. I’ll tell you about it next email.

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac



Saturday, June 7, 2008

hello

Hi everyone,
I'm using the rock n roll bar computer. Letters are worn from some of the keys so ignore spellng. I can stll receve emal normally at my regular address. I have asked my sister to forward the group emails because of an a problem with part of my email from Outlook Express, not web Yahoo. Complcated to explain. Bottom lne is I can receve emal. (I key doesn't work well.)
Our friend Carol Carino is here vsiting and we are doing site seeing for a few days so I wll have some interesting stuff to share next week when I have tme. Also, we bought the whole scuba outfit!
Tme to go!
Ru

Thursday, June 5, 2008

SCUBA

SCUBA

As of about 2 pm this afternoon, Randal and I are certified Open Water divers. I would like to have opened with something more profound about the beauty of undersea exploration. But the truth is most of the course was a profound struggle for me. The actual swimming around underwater looking at neat stuff was fine. It was everything else that was really hard for me. Hard enough that at one point Simon was making me tell him why I was doing the course, for me or for Randal. Simon was our instructor and the question was asked because I was stumped at a very important part of the training. If I couldn’t do it, I couldn’t go on to complete the course. No way around it.

The course to become an Open Water diver is the first level of Scuba diving. You only are advised to go down to the depth of 60 feet. If you only go down that far, you don’t run into the issues that deeper dives can have, like decompression sickness. You also aren’t trained for high altitude dives or really cold water diving. We are certified as beginner divers who can do recreational dives to see fish, coral reefs, and what is hanging onto our propeller or anchor. Those were our goals. Simple. Reaching them, not so simple.

Of the two of us, I’m the one who really likes being in the water. If there is a chance to swim, I’ll go in. I grew up by the ocean. Randal grew up in the mountains and can swim, but it isn’t just great fun for him. But, of the two of us, he had the easier time learning the basics of SCUBA. The tanks, regulators (breathing apparatus,) underwater compass all made sense to him almost instantly. I still need to be told lots of the steps to hook up the equipment and take it apart. By the 4th day I was better than the first, but not competent, not yet. I even managed to put my leg through the arm of the wet suit preparing for dive 3. And our 4th day, I put the suit on backwards, at least as far as I could before Randal pointed out what I had done. That wasn’t so bad to undo. But getting my leg out of the sleeve was a real task. These suits fit snug as it is, so the sleeve was way tighter than the leg. I can laugh now. Then I was hot and stuck! Simon was kind enough to say he had seen it all before. He also said some folks had quit the course when asked for whom they were doing it. Simon looks like a British version of Matt Lauer of the Today Show.

Over the 4 day course we had to learn emergency procedures. How to drop off your weight belt with one hand; how to take off and put on your BCD vest underwater (vest that holds the tank and every other piece of equipment and helps you go up, down, or float around.) We had to learn to switch from our main regulator to an alternate regulator, our own and our diving buddy’s. We had to simulate being out of air and take our buddy’s alternate regulator. To teach us what it would feel like to be out of air, Simon turned off our air supply from the tank to the regulator. Randal went first. He did fine. I didn’t even let Simon get half way with turning it off before I made the out of air motion and grabbed for Randal’s alternate air supply. I felt like I was out of air. None of the tasks that got between me and my supply of air were easy for me. And it is air, not oxygen in those tanks. Filled they weigh 20 lbs though felt like 200 to me wearing it and my 12lb weight belt out of the water back to the dive shop.

We did class work, beach work, and a dive each of the first two days. Each dive itself was about 45 minutes. Randal and I got to Action Divers at 9 am in the morning. The first day we ate lunch about 2:30pm. The second day it was 4 o’clock before we ate lunch! Full days. I was totally exhausted at the end of day 2. We also then had to walk the mile from the shop to catch a jeepney from Sabang back to PG. Very tired. Our 3rd and 4th dives were several days later. Randal had developed an ear infection. No diving with ear infections. He put in ear drops and took amoxicillin and we were able to resume diving 6 days later. I honestly felt as if the reprieve were over. Our 3rd dive was the watershed for me. It was do the emergency tasks that scared me, or quit. There was no way around it To pass the course you have to be able to deal with water filling your face mask or even losing your face mask. You can’t just pop up to the surface, fix it all and go back down. And you can’t hold your breath while you replace your mask. That actually would make it easier so you don’t accidently breathe in through your nose. You have to keep breathing through your regulator and not breathe in through your nose at the same time. You can NEVER HOLD YOUR BREATH WHILE SCUBA DIVING. The air in your lungs compresses as you go down. It expands as you go up. If you hold your breath and go up, your lungs over expand and cause significant problems. Plus, it might take a bit of time for you or your dive buddy to find your mask. And, you may be down too far to just shoot up, while exhaling, without hurting your ears or causing other problems. EXHALING IS NOT HOLDING YOUR BREATH. And besides all of the safety issues, you don’t want to waste the time or air. Your dive buddy has to stay with you so would have to go up too. Lots of reasons why you have to deal with the mask skill. I struggled and struggled. When our friend Audrey took us for a scuba lesson in Subic, she tried to teach me to clear my mask. It is very helpful for snorkeling too. I couldn’t do it. Even though Audrey is a professional dive instructor, she didn’t push it; we were just there for an introduction to diving, not a real course. With Simon we had to try it during dive day 2, but only to begin to try. I actually didn’t understand how it worked so was doing it wrong. Simon showed me and Randal practiced with me on our boat. I even practiced with my snorkel, putting my face in the water with no mask and breathing through my mouth (snorkel) and not also up my nose. I got one tiny, very tiny bit better. Yesterday, dive day 3, it all came to a head. I couldn’t fill my mask and clear it. Each time I would try I’d get water up my nose or down my throat. I would shoot to the surface and yank off my mask. Simon would have to come up. Randal too. Randal to check on me. Simon to make me go down and try it again. Simon actually let me get away with only half filling my mask. But then we had to take the mask completely off and replace it. At that point my nose and throat still burned and I just wanted to cry. I wanted Simon to say, I could skip it, but I would have to learn on my own. Simon couldn’t do that. He is a professional dive instructor and we were doing this for certification. Randal was able to do it. He tried to help me. Simon told me I could do it. Any time I questioned equipment or anything, Simon said it was just because I was nervous and if I would just relax and do it, it would be fine. (I do think the regulator mouth piece was too big, but I obviously could use it.) Simon bases much of his teaching on the belief that people take the course because they want to dive and will do what it takes to learn, conquer any fear and learn any skill. If one can’t learn a skill, they just don’t want to enough. There is much truth in that. The confrontation came after I had taken off my mask, replaced it, cleared it and then shot to the surface and whipped off my mask. Simon was really frustrated that I could do it, but not stop panicking anyway. “Why are you doing this course? In your heart do you want to dive? Do you want to explore the ocean bottom and see fish and things? Or are you just doing it for Randal?” “If in your heart you want to dive, you’ll conquer your fears.” Simon asked me these questions to make me decide what I wanted to do, keep going, do the skill, and dive? Or did I want to quit? I certainly wanted to quit trying to learn that mask skill. But I knew I wanted to keep going, not just for Randal. But I couldn’t promise Simon that I could take off and replace my mask. I could hardly breathe at that point. I just wanted to cry. That had happened at Outward Bound one time when I was faced with a physical challenge that scared me. I stopped to cry for a bit, got it out of my system, started to breathe normally again and went on. I did the same thing, cried a bit. Put my mask back on, went down and found a way I could do it. It involved holding my nose part of the time. But I got my mask off, back on and cleared and stayed at the bottom. I felt like a kid who had cried about getting a shot and then it really didn’t hurt. I felt both successful and foolish that it had taken me so long with such a struggle. Simon dealt with it. He told me that people have stopped the course at the point when he asks them that question. I really do want to dive to clean our boat bottom, free snagged anchors and even see some neat fish and things. Not just for Randal. We did a dive and practiced other skills like going to the surface when almost out of air so just exhaling and not inhaling at all. That dive was 45 minutes also and then we had to walk forever back to the dive shop through the low tide. I thought my knees would buckle from the weight. When my friend Martha and I walked the Coastal Path in Wales we carried at least twenty pounds, all day for 3 days up and down hills and that didn’t seem so heavy. This partly empty tank weighed a ton. While we were taking apart the equipment and rinsing it in fresh water, Simon told us our 4th dive would be from a boat and we would learn new skills and do the mask removal again. I wasted time worrying about it all night and all the next morning until I actually did it during the dive and it was fine!

Yesterday was our 4th and final dive. It was the day I made sure I didn’t put my leg in the sleeve; instead I put the suit on backwards and had to change it around. It is like pulling on a very thick, wet, too small bathing suit that covers you whole body. Trying to pull it up over my hips and butt was a real challenge. We got our tanks ready and I remembered half of the steps, put on our booties and weight belts and, since it was a boat dive, climbed up the ladder into the banca that would take us about 10 minutes out to a cove for our dive. My friend Shelly Shuster said she fell off the ladder getting onto the boat for her 4th dive. I could see how it happened and almost did the same thing but for the boat person hanging onto me for dear life. You walk up a steep narrow ladder while wearing your weight belt. When we got to our dive spot, we anchored and put on our BCD and mask. Sticking our tank and butts over the side, one at a time we fell a few feet backwards down into the water. Doable, though I think I forgot to pump up my BCD as full as I should have. You keep one hand on your mask and regulator so they stay put and one hand behind your head in case you bang into something. I don’t remember having my hand behind my head, but I know I had my hand on my mask and regulator because they stayed put. Our next task was to learn to use our underwater compass. Randal got an A+, I got a D+ but I have an idea how to do better. Then we did an emergency ascent with Randal breathing from my alternate regulator. That was fine. Then we had to do the mask task. I did it first try with my convoluted nose holding method. I kept my eyes open so I could see what I was doing and that works better for me. You can’t see clearly of course, but well enough to make it less scary. Then we went for a dive to practice buoyancy. You use your inflatable/deflatable vest, weights, and your breath to keep yourself in place and not float away or float to the bottom or surface. Your weights are fixed but you can use your vest or breath. If you start to sink you inhale deeply and inflate your lungs. If you rise too high you exhale a lot more than you breathe in. It does work, though takes lots of practice. We practiced for about 30 minutes of that and then it was time to get back into the boat. I was actually sorry the dive ended, amazing since I had been dreading it earlier in the day.

Back at the dive shop I stayed in my wetsuit so Randal could take a photo. I have kind of a dazed expression and you can see the impression of the mask on my face. There was just too much activity with another boat of divers coming back for me to take a photo totally suited up. We changed and finished our final log entry. Simon filled out our temporary certification and we were done! Certified. Even me! Thanks Simon.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

quick hello

Hi Everyone,
Just a quick check in. Randal and I have been busy with our SCUBA course and amazingly enough, we finished today. I say amazing because I didn't think I could take off and replace my mask underwater. I did!
I'll write it all up and send a few photos soon.
Still in Puerto Galera PG.
Ru

Sunday, June 1, 2008

(**&%*$&%$#^%@$^blog problems!!!!

Hi Everyone,

Saturday, May 31, 2008

I am sitting in the Rock N’ Roll Bar fighting with my email, my new blog, and following the Red Sox. I could tell you that my lucky red Red Sox ring broke and that’s why they aren’t doing so well lately. But it broke after they started losing. And I did lose my Red Sox hat in 2007 in Sai Kung the day before we left to come to the Philippines; Sox won the Series in ‘07’ so it’s not the fault of the ring.

I am realizing just how spoiled I got when we were attached to the docks at Hebe Haven and even more in Subic. In lots of ways it was just like living at home without TV. And even then we could get one channel with Grey’s Anatomy, Desperate Housewives and the Gilmore Girls till it ended. We had AC and unlimited water. You stepped off the boat onto the dock and could be on your way. Very different when you cruise. You have to provide everything for yourself.
We have to make our own power, water, and transport ourselves from boat to shore. There really isn’t enough power to run the AC, so we don’t. I don’t mind, but Randal suffers from the night heat. You have to think before you use anything that drains a lot of power, even our electric kettle. We can make enough water fairly easily so that’s good.

Because it is the “slow season” here the service boat has limited hours. Sunday through Friday it runs from 8am to 9am and then from noon to 9pm at night. If you miss it, you swim back to the boat. Remember when Randal missed the last boat back at Christmas time? Only the goodness of a few hearts got him back to our boat that night. Friday it runs from 8 am to 10 pm and Saturday from 8 am till 9 pm. Randal is also dinghy captain and he doesn’t want to mess with it, so we aren’t. We really haven’t needed it yet; our schedule matches the service boats. We have to be in Sabang for our SCUBA class by 9 am so have to catch the early service boat anyway. Scuba class lasts from 9 until late afternoon. Other days it’s nice to have the quiet morning on the boat to read, paint or even swim around the boat area. Randal works on boat things and I do laundry if the genset is running to charge the battery bank.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

After my internet session and after the 10th inning of the Sox Orioles game, Randal came back from getting a shave. It was his turn with the computer so I went off to the town center. It is just about a half mile walk along the main road that curves and goes down the hill to the row of shops and activity. I stopped in one of the little office/school supply shops for a notebook. I have decided to go back to keeping a paper journal; power and wifi being iffy. Just a pen and sunlight are needed for that and no power crashes can lose everything you just struggled to write. There is just something more fun about pen and paper anyway. I ended up buying 3 smallish notebooks for a total of 67 pesos. The last time we checked in Sabang it was about 43.20 peso to the dollar. It has gone up a tad. Not much money to us, but I thought that it would be a luxury to some school kids here to have more than one. Not that most of the kids look “poor.” They all seem energetic and happy and just the right size. Filipino women are my height or shorter than I am. None of them seems to weigh even 100 lbs. I stopped to try on a top the other day and it needed about another half yard of material to fit me. First the adorable “small” Muslim woman said it fit because it was “an extra large.” Then she told me leaving half of my top half uncovered was the style. Not my style…. I was trying it on over a tank top so maybe that was the problem. Maybe I’ll get one for when we are making a passage and there will be no one to see anyway.
At the small supermarket I bought some more amoxicillin, no prescription needed. Randal is taking it for his ear infection. One does tend to self medicate when cruising. Especially on a long 5 to 15 day passage, there is no other choice. He is improving and the swelling on the side of his face is going down. But still no diving today either. I bought some Ritz like crackers and some other cracker that resembles a saltine and some brown bread. It was bread delivery day so it was available. Since it is the off season, bread and yogurt don’t disappear in 20 minutes from being shelved. And the market isles were not jammed packed. Last December, between the heat and the crowds it was quite awful to shop. And truly hard to find bread. I headed back to the pier stopping to find where the post office was located. It was closed with no hours posted. I’ll have to check during the week. As I was walking, I spotted the most pathetic dog. Its hips were rubbed raw and it was very thin. I thought, no pretty scenery or inexpensive trinkets or moorings can make up for how sadly the dogs and cats are treated. They aren’t mistreated, but totally neglected if they are strays. There is no neutering so lots of unwanted pets. Not that there are roving packs of animals. I am afraid to think why that might be. But just too many mangy skinny looking dogs and cats. It puts me off. I couldn’t think of how to rescue the poor dog; we can’t possibly take an animal. So I walked back to the pier and found Randal still on the computer. I left him there, stopped at Brettos for yogurt and caught the service boat back to DoraMac. I finished my painting and wrote in my new journal. When Randal returned it was time for mango shakes. I also started cooking vegetable soup, the best way I know to use vegetables before they can go bad. I even threw in a half cup of rice that cooked as the soup simmered. Pretty good stuff, and healthy!

Jan from south of Copenhagen stopped to visit about sunset. Randal met Jan at the Classic Club Thursday. Jan is an experience diver so after a tour of DoraMac, we talked diving for a bit. Then Jan was off to his boat and Randal and I tested the veggie soup. By 8:30 Randal was off to sleep and I read for a bit more. By 9pm I was ready to call it a day too.