FLEET UPDATE 2020-03-08

  • A BIG THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS !
  • Picture of the Week - Panama Posse Crew in Chiapas, MX
  • Uninvited Visitors, Chiapas MX
  • Trouble in the Tehuantepec, MX
  • Bar Crossings, El Salvador
  • Road-trip in Central and Southern Mexico
  • Chiapas, MX Additional documentation for the in Mexican Exit Zarpe requirement
  • Sámara, Costa Rica
  • San Blas, Panama
  • San Andres, Providencia, Colombia
  • Papagayos, Nicaragua
  • Bio Security - increased inspections and scrutiny
  • 'tis the season for Long Lines
  • Line.me - live fleet line calls on Mondays
  • Good Nautical is Mobile Friendly
  • Season Finale May 30th at Vista Mar + report
  • Safe Esteem - get your free personal risk barometer app
  • Please reply to this email with any updates
  • Opt-Out

1) WE WANT TO OFFICIALLY THANK ALL OF OUR SPONSORS

And are delighted to have these key marinas supporting the Panama Posse.

  • Marina Puerto Vallarta, Puerto Vallarta – Mexico 
  • Marina Puerto de La Navidad – Barra de Navidad – Mexico 
  • Marina Ixtapa, Ixtapa – Mexico 
  • La Marina Acapulco, Acapulco – Mexico 
  • Marina Chiapas – Mexico 
  • Marina Bahia del Sol – El Salvador 
  • La Palma Moorings – Bahia del Sol, El Salvador 
  • Marina Puesta del Sol – Nicaragua 
  • Marina Papagayo – Costa Rica 
  • Marina Pez Vela – Costa Rica 
  • Banana Bay Marina – Costa Rica 
  • Vista Mar Marina – Panama 
  • Shelter Bay Marina – Panama 
  • Red Frog Marina – Panama 
  • Bocas Marina – Panama 
Panama
        Posse Burgee

Official Panama Canal Agent ( DISCOUNT !!! )

Official Panama Posse Ambassadors

Panama Posse Partners

2) Picture of the Week - Panama Posse Crew in Chiapas, MX

Picture
        of the week

Historically we refer to boat kids as (really good) Panama Posse CREW

Annie
Chris

Annie & Chris & CrewSECRET WATER

3) Uninvited Visitors, Chiapas MX

Hitchhikers
Garett
Audrey

We have arrived in Chiapas. 475nm and 75 hours after departing Acapulco. 180nm covered yesterday riding the 20 knot winds but the favorable current made up for the rough ride. Wind definitely wraps around point angel so if you have a window that is forecasting s/sw wind I recommend the B-line route as it will just build up as you follow the shore north, and the one foot on the beach route becomes counter intuitive. The wind dropped from 28 down to 20 once we got ~15 miles off shore, and gave us a beautiful broad reach averaging over 9knts the first 12 hours (our hull speed is about 6). Today we rested in light winds and prepped for a night time arrival. Navionics is spot on, and navigational lights and bouys are well placed and lit as this is a commercial port. The channel markers disappear after entering the last channel for Marina chiapas, but again can confirm navionics remained spot on. Whisky time.

THISLDU

4) Trouble in the  Tehuantepec, MX

If everyone didn’t already realise, I just wanted to say that this is a fantastic group to be part of and thank @Thisldu for coming to our rescue yesterday. Susimi is once again back in Marina Chiapas after getting 43 miles into out Tehuantepec crossing heading north we heard a strange noise coming from below the boat. We put it down to either catching a fishing line or a problem with our sail drive but either way we needed to get in the water and find out. Sails down and my partner, Paul jumps in. It didn’t take long to see that the zinc on the sail drive was just spinning when it should be held in place. Unfortunately we have to remove the prop to change the zinc so in 50 meters of water and 2 meter swells out there wasn’t the right place to do that. Knowing the Tehuantepec winds were coming in in about 24 hours we decided that without a motor in case we did any damage we should return to marina Chiapas under sail alone. @Thisldu must be psychic as about 10 minutes later called us on the vhf to see how our northbound crossing was going as they were heading south and knew we would be in the vicinity. They kept checking to see how we were going along the way but when the wind died in the evening about 30 miles from the marina we said they should go on and we would continue as fast as we could. It was a frustrating night with 1 - 2 kts of wind but at least we managed to keep the boat pointing towards the marina. 19 hours after deciding to turn back we were still six miles from the marina with no wind so winched the dinghy off the deck and winched the outboard down. We hip towed Susimi to the entrance where @Thisldu came out in their dinghy and made sure we negotiated all the bends safely into the marina slip. You can’t imagine how nice it was to be tied to that slip! Thanks again @Thisldu - you are stars!

Paul
Hazel

Paul & Hazel
SUSIMI

5) Bar Crossings, El Salvador

Rosa Lee

Rosa Lee safely in over the bar at Bahía Del Sol El Salvador !!

And Here is a quick 4 minute video link from SV Jean Anne on what crossing the bar can be like 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svqxUfq_Hc4&feature=youtu.be

Gary

Gary ROSA LEE

6) Roadtrip in Central and Southern Mexico

We’d originally planned to cross the Tehuantepec in January, but the weather had other ideas. So leaving the boat in Chiapas, we hit the road to meet friends in Puerto Vallarta.

Failing to understand the additional charges that would be assess at the airport counter, we booked our first rental on the Internet (18 Jan - 22 Jan). The all in rate turned out to be $55 per day even though we were quoted $6 on line.

For our second attempt at a rental, we first reviewed prices on the internet as a starting point, then called the companies at the airport to understand the full-price and negotiated a better rate (without giving a credit card details to reserve at Eurocar). On the day of pick-up, we negotiated the rate even further and ended up renting from Localiza. We paid $26 per day.

The whole community participates in weekend weddings in Oaxaca, with the party pouring out from the church into the streets.

We visited the following stops along the way.

Jan 18 San Cristobal

Jan 19 San Cristobal | Day trip to Chamula

Jan 20 San Cristobal | Day trip to Chamula

Jan 21 Day trip to Sumidero Canyon | Tuxtla Gutierez

Jan 22 Day trip to Chiapa de Corzo | Port Chiapas

Jan 23 Salina Cruz (I recommend Hotel Mision San José - price/quality)

Jan 24 Oaxaca,,Jan 25 Oaxaca

Jan 26 Tula

Jan 27 Tula

Jan 28 San Miguel de Allende

Jan 29 San Miguel de Allende

Jan 30 Puerta Vallarta

Jan 31 Puerta Vallara

Feb 01 Puerta Vallarta

Feb 02 Puerta Vallarta

Feb 03 Puerta Vallarta

Feb 04 Tlaquepaque

Feb 05 Guanajuato

Feb 06 Guanajuato

Feb 07 Day trip to Teotihuatican | San Sebastian  (I recommend Villa Las Campanas)

Feb 08 Mexico City

Feb 09 Oaxaca City

Feb 10 Day Trip to Yagul and Mezcal Distillery | Oaxaca City (eat at Casa Del Tule)

Feb 11 Day trip to Mitla | Salina Cruz

Feb 12 Port Chiapas

Map online at https://drive.google.com/open?id=1-VHzevXmauOA-CgboPO6FIiBmMu462Vy&usp=sharing

We loved the trip and would recommend every destination we visited.
We missed Monte Alban in Oaxaca this time around, but would add it to the list if you are in the area.

The best (price and quality) accommodation was the Hotel Mision San José in Salina Cruz. Not a very interesting town, but a perfect stop over en route from Chiapas to Oaxaca. Our favorite restaurant was Casa Del Tule near Oaxaca City serving local cuisines in a comfortable atmosphere for an incredibly low price. And should you find yourself in Teotihuacan, I highly recommend staying a night or two at the Villa Las Campanas. 

If you drive, take the toll-roads. They are deemed ‘safer’ and are speed bump  (toles) free. Our first day out, we took the back road to San Cristobal from Chiapas and experienced a speed bump almost every mile.

Lisa
Fabio

NOTE - The tourist office cautioned against driving to Palanque from San Cristobal given attacks on tourists along the road. 

Lisa & Captain Fabio
AMANDLA

7) Chiapas, MX
Additional documentation for the in Mexican Exit Zarpe requirements.

The Harbor Master in Chiapas under instruction from the MX MARIAN

is starting to ask for documentation with regards to your "seamanship" upon exit.

License

If you find yourself in this situation in need for a document you can obtain a Free document online via
http://www.boatus.org/california/

Takes a little time and stable internet but does the trick -
Any USCG / Captain License / RYA / US Sailing or ASA / CA Proof of Competency
document will also suffice

Samsara
        - COsta Rica

8) Sámara, Costa Rica

Dennis
Margaret

Beautiful Samara beach Costa Rica

Dennis & Margaret

CHIMERA

9) San Blas, Panama

Guna

Walt from Knot Right,  crewing on Context. Just dropped the hook in San Blas, Panama.
Dugout canoes approach to sell their wares. The Guna Yala deliver !

Walt & Jeariene

KNOT RIGHT

(note: from Amandla  Enjoy. Here is my (b)log entry from there if you need any ideas of where to visit
https://lisadorenfest.com/2020/01/18/sunday-evening-a-sail-through-the-san-blas/)

10) San Andres, Providencia, Colombia

sanandres

Bonzai was in San Andres for three weeks prior to New year's and in Providencia for the month of January.  In each case, it can be a pill to find a window to leave this time of year.  We only wanted to spend about a week on each Island. 
San Andres is like Oahu for Colombians and the anchorage is prone to dragging being open to the east behind the reef. 

Julian Watson is a great agent for San Andres. whatsapp +57 310 2340781

Providencia is like Kauai for Colombians. 
Little more laid back and remote.  Excellent holding and shelter in the anchorage. 
Alex Newball was an excellent agent. whatsapp +57 310 2138518

You are required to use an agent for both or either island.
It certainly does grease the wheels to send Julian or Alex your documents before leaving Panama.

Bonzai

DonBONZAI

11) Lake Arenal, Costa Rica

Costa Rica's largest lake, a popular spot for wind- & kitesurfing, offering scenic volcano views.

Blessed
      Life

But today we sailed on lake Arenal ! It was awesome. Ok - that’s with our kites of course!

Blessed
      Life
Bob
Margie

Bob and Margie

BLESSED LIFE

12) Papagayos, Nicaragua

Anduril

Northbound through the Papagayos

ALICE
GREG

Alice & Greg

ANDURIL

13) Bio Security - increased inspections and scrutiny

BioSecurity

Since COVID-19 - be prepared to be boarded, questioned and examined in most countries.
This is in El Salvador - expect similar situations in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua etc in the near future.
You are required upon entry to a new country to hoist the yellow Q-FLAG until you are cleared for Pratique by the authorities.
This is a longstanding maritime clearing process.

note: ROSA LEE - El Salvador has implemented a health check before you can come ashore.
We had to anchor just off of Bahía Del Sol and have our temperature taken and account for our last 2 weeks.

note: SANNA Breaking news here in Boca Chica, Panama

Although we have completed checkin procedures, we are still waiting for our cruising permit which we are told will be another 2-3 days. In conjunction with another sailboat checking out of Costa Rica at the same time here in Boca Chica, we have had to sign and agree additional paperwork and questionnaire forms relating to the Corona Virus. We have also endured a detailed vessel health inspection which, we have been told, is now mandatory for all vessels both private and commercial entering Panama from Costa Rica or any other country.

We have also had to provide additional detailed evidence of our and our vessel whereabouts during the past fifteen days in Costa Rica, showing domestic Zarpes, Costa Rican customs cruising permits for checkin and checkout, diesel receipts etc etc. Worryingly, if Costa Rica declares a corona outbreak then we have now been told we would either be refused entry or required to quarantine ourselves on our vessel for fourteen days, presumably flying a yellow quarantine flag. Also, if any crew member has joined a vessel within the past fourteen days from any infected country then they must be quarantined or refused entry - I’m not sure how that is gonna work tho.

It is our understanding from the health official who presented the additional documentation forms and notices (in Spanish), that Costa Rica and the C4 countries are about to declare the same protocol.

14) REMINDER 'tis the season for Long Lines

... I trust that sailors will not take my attached sketches as absolutes, but rather a documentation of my observations:  
After un-charted rocks and lightning, the thing that sends shivers up my spine is the thought of long lines. We have seen many, hit 4 or 5 and had to dive on the prop 3 times to cut loose/unwrap them from the shaft. Unfortunately the marking standard for these nuisances seems to vary from country to country. What we learned in one country caused us to hit lines in another country. For instance in Mexico we would run parallel to the long precession of spaced flags and do an end run around the last. When we tried this maneuver in Costa Rica we consistently hit the lines because in that country, it turns out, many of the fisherman only mark the middle of the line with a black flag. There are no end markers.Through our encounters with the lines and with one with a fisherman whose long line we had to cut off the prop we think we have learned a few things about these obstacles that we believe is worth sharing. I am sure there are other variations and not all fisherman follow these unwritten standards but it is at least a documentation of what we have experienced. I have attached the various marking conventions we have seen on our trip south. We are only in Costa Rica now so I am sure we will have more learning to do in Panama !

Mexico Long Line Observation
The long lines in Mexico were anywhere from ½ mile long to 4 miles long but seemed to be pretty consistently marked in the below manner. We did not encounter any at night. We do not know if this was dumb luck or if they were pulled in before nightfall. Perhaps someone else has more insight.

Mexican
      Longlines

Black Flags at various intervals up to several hundred yards apart. Last flag indicates end of line.
Intermediate floats: water bottles, milk juts, oil bottles, fishing floats etc. between flags.

Guatemala Long Line Observation
The long lines in were poorly marked and the black flags at each end not always easy to see. Any time we saw a floating plastic bottle ahead we approached with caution and a string of them indicated the presence of a line. Like Mexico, we did not encounter any at night. We averaged about 15 miles off-shore as we passed Guatemala.

Guatemala Longlines

Black Flag at both ends of line.

Intermediate floats: water bottles, milk juts, oil bottles, fishing floats etc. between flags. Spacing between floats was inconsistent with sometimes large spacings

Nicaragua Observations
We did not encounter any long lines off the coast of Nicaragua, however we encountered many fishing pangas both during the daytime and at night. They seemed to work in groups and I do not know what type of fishing equipment they were using. We passed well outside the mouth of the gulf of Fonseca , so perhaps there were longlines there; we do not know.

NIcaragua

note: Here is a long-line marker off the coast of Nicaragua

Costa Rica Long Line Observation#1
The long lines were marked in the middle with a single black flag and typically extended 1 kilometer in each direction from the flag (according to a fisherman whose line we ran over and tangled in our prop.) and there may or may not be a panga on station at one end of the line. We encountered quite a few lines, particularly outside the mouth of the Gulf of Nicoya. We day-hopped between anchorages in CR so we do not know if they are out at night.

CR
        2

Black Flag at center of 2 km long line.
Floats: water bottles, milk juts, oil bottles, fishing floats etc. with perhaps 40 to 50 meters between floats. The last float will be about 1 km from the flag. Watch out for a string of floats cut off from the main flag by another passing boat.

Costa Rica Observation#2
This line is only a couple of hundred meters long and drifts parallel to the wind. It usually has a large black flag and small black flag on a float on the downwind side and a small float on the upwind side. Usually a panga is on station at some point along the line. We are not sure if this is a net or line. This was only encountered in bays and close to shore

CR 2

Large black flag and small black flag a few meters away.
Floats: no observed intermediate floats; just the down-wind flag and an upwind float, mostly with a panga on station.

Costa Rica Observation#3
This line is only perhaps a hundred meters long and seems designed to drift perpendicular to the wind. It usually has a black or some other colored flag at each end and single float ½-way between. We do not know if this is a long-line or net. This was only encountered in bays and close to islands and shores.

CR 3

Black Flag on each end of line Floats: One intermediate float between flags.

Bob & Joan

Bob
Joan

GREEN FLASH

Line

15) Line.me - live fleet line calls on Mondays
 @ 15:45 UTC  Warm up  @ 16:00 UTC  Panama Posse call (mute your mikes)
 @ 16:30 UTC 
Counter Posse Call(mute your mikes)

 Remember to practice muting and un-muting your microphone 

MUTED
OPEN

GREENIS MUTED

White mike is OPEN & we can all hear you

– Register using your vessel name as the USERNAME (example Carinthia or CARINTHIA_Dietmar)
– the LINE system allows for up to 200 live conference call participants  !
Search for dietmarpetutschnig and become a friend wait and accept your panamaposse20192020 GROUP INVITEsend us your position via the message system and listen to the vessel check instab > +   Location  - adjust the blue marker - tap the grey box

16) GOOD NAUTICAL MOBILE FRIENDLY

Good Nautical is now mobile friendly (aka responsive)
so whip out all your cellphones and give it a tab

Good
        Nautical Mobile Friendly

17) For the regular Panama Posse here is your goal post  Vista Mar Marina, Panama
Sat May 30th, 2020  - Panama Posse finale Celebration at Vista Mar Marina, Panama

Vista
        Mar

ENDORSEMENT

Vista Mar Marina has been our home for the past 6 weeks. We have to say it’s been a great place for us to prepare to cross to French Polynesia. It is very close to Coronado, which has 4 major grocery stores with good provisioning options, there is an Abernathy, which is limited, but we’ve been able to find a few things that we needed. There is a Do it Center, a Novey, and a RIBA Smith which have been our home away from home.

VISTA
        MAR
VISTA MAR

If you are looking for a fancy marina with a resort and pool this is not the marina for you, but the price was right for us. We paid around $.40 a foot with our Panama Posse discount. There is a friendly group of permanent cruisers here trying to beef up the community and gain momentum with a cruisers net each morning. Cesare and his crew in the boat yard we’re amazing. If you plan to dry dock, it’s a fine place to do it, but not for larger boats (our opinion). Hope this helps in some way. Happy sailing

BILL
JULIANNE

Bill and JulianneEPIPHANY

Note: happy happy crossing !

Safe Esteem

18) Safe Esteem - get your free personal risk barometer app

Free to try for 6 months for all Panama Posse participants
- safe esteem is a barometer for personal risk and thanks to
Van - COO of safe-esteeem  who gave a very good travel risk presentation
during the safety seminars - you can use it for free to see how your risk score's change along the route.

To download go to https://www.safe-esteem.com/  
scroll down and use the invite code "PP1920"
This is a private beta release and currently only works on iphones.

SafeEsteem app

 “Safe-esteem is the map & compass to navigate risks in our life’s journey and provides a life risk barometer”

19) Please reply to this email with any updates - your vessel location -
contenders for picture of the week - your favorite song for our list -
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Update

The Panama Posse transfer of knowledge and learning process operates under the gestalt theory
We will not tell you what to do, when or how - we want you to to figure it out. YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Suzanne
Dietmar

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

Panama Posse BUrgee

20) opt-out from the Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"


FLEET UPDATE 2020-03-01

  1. SEVENSTAR YACHT TRANSPORT PARTNERS WITH THE PANAMA POSSE
  2. Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo MX
  3. Cruiser Safety Alert - CUSTOMS @ Border Town Talisman, Chiapas, MX *
  4. Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala
  5. Picture of the Week
  6. Punta Guiones, Costa Rica
  7. Vista Mar Marina Rates, Panama 
  8. Rounding of Punta Mala, PANAMA
  9. Passing Ships at night, Papagayo Winds
  10. Boca Chica, PANAMA
  11. About heading across the Pacific
  12. San Blas, Panama
  13. * Situational awareness levels
  14. Zihuatanejo, MX
  15. Notice to Mariners: Marina Ixtapa, Channel Closing
  16. Sailing into Playas Del Coco, Costa Rica
  17. Early Warning of new exit Requirements from Mexico in Chiapas
  18. Panama Canal, Successful Passage
  19. Boca Chica, Panama
  20. PANAMA CANAL, PANAMA 
  21. Satellite .mbtiles which work deliciously with OpenCPN 5.0+
  22. Please reply to this email
  23. Opt-Out 

1) We welcome our newest Sponsor
SEVENSTAR YACHT TRANSPORT PARTNERS WITH THE PANAMA POSSE
Sevenstar is proud to be the logistics partner of choice for the PANAMA POSSE fleet,
and will be providing tailored solutions from Golfito in Southern Costa Rico, Manzanillo, La Paz to Ensenada, Mexico and Victoria,Canada and beyond.

Kris
            - Seven Star Yacht Transport

For more information about how Sevenstar can help your extend your plans or return you back to
home base for the transport of your yacht, please contact Kris Caren kris@sevenstar-usa.com & mention the
Panama Posse and you'll get your discount as well For more information about PANAMA POSSE and Sevenstar Yacht Transport BV please visit the below websites:

https://panamaposse.com/
https://www.sevenstar-yacht-transport.com/

2) Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo MX
Independence (CounterPosse)  finally left Key West and made it to beautiful
Isla Mujeres
, Quintana Roo MX, where we enjoyed a beautiful sunrise (see attached photo.

Sunrise
Larry
Jamie

We are now in Puerta Aventuras and plan on being to Bay Islands Honduras by this weekend.

Larry & Jamie

INDEPENDENCE

Mexico

3) Cruiser Safety Alert - CUSTOMS @ Border Town Talisman, Chiapas, MX

This is Steve and Chelsea on s/v Jean Anne.
I'm writing to you this morning to please include an alert to all cruisers passing through Chiapas that they should be warned to avoid Talisman, Mexico (Mexico-Guatamala border crossing) under ALL circumstances.

Yesterday, Friday Feb. 28th, we needed to go to the Guatemalan border to deal with a VISA issue. We were told by the Marina Chiapas manager that his immigration friend recommended we go to the border - that the airport was not an option to get our issue resolved. Unaware of which crossing to go to, we headed to the more Northern border known as "Talisman".

When we arrived, we immediately encountered young Mexican men with fraudulant ID badges that attempted to sell us faked Visas. One man claiming to be a Mexican official (with an official, Mexican-sealed and stamped-looking badge) brought us into the correct immigration office, likely to gain our trust. We would learn hours later this man was NOT a Mexican official and was a fraud/criminal looking for money either via tip or by force.  It quickly became apparent that he was also working with at least six or more other males and was doing all of this criminal activity in open-sight on both sides of the border unabated.

While at the border, we were required to cross into Guatemala twice. As soon as we entered, it became obvious there was a significant criminal element working in coordination and absolutely no police presence at all.

A series of incidents occurred while we were at this crossing that could have very easily been life-threatening, including having our passports taken by these unknown men and finding ourselves literally surrounded by five men at one point.
We are warning all cruisers to avoid this border under ALL circumstances, unless escorted by an offical approved by the marina office. 

Steve & Chelsea

JEAN ANNE

(note: we know STEVE coming out of the law enforcement field has ample experience
Carinthia cancelled their tip in 2018 @ Talisman and it was an ok experience albeit slow
- when we went back to Mexico in 2019 the Marina Chiappas advised us
to not go to Talisman but
to opt for the Border crossing customs station at Ciudad Hidalgo, MX @ 14°40'37.9"N 92°08'57.1"W

This worked well but the situation is fluid in many parts due to the migrant crisis in Central America
so
in the area so PLEASE USE CAUTION -
situational awareness * - see item 10) - something we will add to next years safety seminar !

PEZ VELA

4) Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala

Update from Bait 'N' Switch:
Currently in Marina Papagayo, Costa Rica. The Papagayos are blowing! This update is about Puerto Quetzal, however.
Arrived Marina Pez Vela, Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala on Feb 11 at sunset. Radioed Capitan del Puerto on VHF 16 re arrival and they replied something about checkin on boat that evening. Soon after, an older guy named Miguel Oscar came with some papers to fill out. Turns out he was an agent--not an official. He then asked for $440 which he said included $300 for official visit, $90 for 3 passports and $50 for his services. He asked for the funds in cash, payable right away and proceeded to say it would help with the costs for his wife who had cancer and the therapy was expensive. (!?) We paid but made him sign something that he had received the funds and what they were for. We also asked what other costs there would be and he said only $20 for exit zarpe when we left. He went away with our passports and returned about 2 hours later with the Port Captain, immigration officer and customs officer and our 3 passports. All was fine.
We checked in with the marina the next day (Ivan Marroquin, cell +502-4873-7348) at a rate of $2/foot.  There were no services on shore (no wifi, no women's bathroom or shower) although there is water and power on the dock. We were the only transient boat amongst lots of charter sportfishing boats.
Upon checkout with the marina, Ivan (a helpful guy who also oversees the cruise terminal) called the agent who came by asked for the $20 plus $90 for 3 passports. We were very angry about the $90 and called Ivan to intercede and he did help. After a lot of back and forth, we paid the $20 and Miguel Oscar left with our 3 passports. He returned about 1.5 hours later with our passports and asked for $45 instead of $90. We asked for receipts for evertything but he said they were all back at the office. We reluctantly paid and learned a lesson--when using agent, get in writing in advance what it will cost to check in and out and demand receipts for everything. We also heard from an American guy who runs a sportfishing operation there that we don't have to use an agent. I'm not sure how to do it yourself, but I assume you'd need a cab to go to the various offices which are probably near the commercial harbor.
The good: A friend arranged a driver for us to Antigua (1.5 hours). They also have Uber in Guatemala which would have been cheaper.  Antigua is a beautiful Spanish colonial town with cobblestone streets surrounded by 3 volcanoes and well worth the visit. Lake Atitlan is also supposed to be very beautiful. Also, for those who love to fish, this is supposedly the sailfish capital of the world (thus the name "Pez Vela").
The bad: The expensive checkin process. Also, we were assigned an end tie on the floating dock and the surge is very strong. Overnight we popped one ball fender and lost another due to the intense surge.  The surge is manageable if you tie the boat using long lines and lots of fenders.  Being assigned a slip/mooring dock (tie off to pilings)  would have made the surge much more manageable. There is a lot of coal dust when it's windy as there are huge piles of coal at the marina destined for the power plants. (See coal piles behind marina in photo.) Still, we loved touring around Antigua area!
Laurie & John

Bait 'N' Switch III

Santa Maria
Bardin / Spielberg

5) Picture of the Week - Fuel dock at Marina Puerto de la Navidad, MX
500 year old fuel for their twin 350hp diesel engines first spotted in Chiapas a few weeks back.

This 200t spanish flagged replica of the Santa Maria is in the Costalegre area filming
an Amazon miniseries about the legendary Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés developed by Steven Spielberg.
and tapped Oscar-winning actor Javier Bardem to play the titular conquistador.

Chamela

Created and written by Steven Zaillian (Schindler’s List), the Cortes miniseries will follow Hernán Cortes as he leads a “rebellious expedition” to King Montezuma II’s Aztec empire. Cortes was famous for bringing about the fall of the Aztec Empire and leading the first phase of the colonization of the Americas by Spanish conquistadors.

The epicenter of the filming with lot's of local extras and help from the Panama Posse HQ marina is the backdrop around the Punta Perula / Chamela / Playa Pariso area.

http://www.goodnautical.com/gma/mexico-pacific?field_gma_value=MX-PAC
Here is the Good Nautical Anchorages map of the area.

Suzanne
Dietmar

Suzanne( took the picture) & Dietmar

CARINTHIA

6) Punta Guiones, Costa Rica

Punta
          guiones

Pilot whales playing off the bow in Punta Guiones, Costa Rica !

Pilot
          Whales

Still waiting for your ...

Susimi

Paul & Hazel

(headshots)

SUSIMI

7) Vista Mar Marina Rates, Panama

2020  Rates at Vista Mar Marina. I checked with Cesar to get the accurate information.
The rates below are the US dollar STANDARD rates as of Jan 2020.

Panama Posse 2020 gets a 25% discount off of those rates for a total length of stay of 3 months (90 days), starting the count of days when they arrive. 
Your payment must be calculated and paid on your arrival. So if you pay for a week, but stay for a month you do not get the monthly rate.
Since I've been here for 14 months, Cesar might have cut me a deal. But he mentioned that the 90 days do not have to be consecutive.

Vista Mar

The first number is the Monohull rate second number is Multihull rate.
These numbers are per foot with a minimum of 35 feet.

Up to 60 feet
0- 7 nights 0.75, 1.00
8 - 14 nights 0.70, 0.90
15 - 29 nights 0.65 0.80
Monthly (30 days) 0.55, 0.70
90 days and over0.50, 0.65

61 to 80 ft
0 - 7 nights 0.90, 1.15
8 - 14 nights 0.85, 1.10
15 - 29 nights 0.80, 1.00
Monthly rate (30 days) 0.75, 0.75
90 days and over 0.55, 0.70

81 to 100 ft is very similar, except and 0.05 to 0.10 on multi-hull only

My monthly electric is $20 just for the hook up. My usage was quite small.

I don't have numbers for usage or numbers for shorter terms than a month.

Walt
Jeariene

Water in Panama is potable

Now for some bad news.
The resort pool is owned and run by different people than the Marina. 
They want $75/person for one month access.
$25/person for one day.
Walt & JearieneKNOT RIGHT

8) Passing Ships at night, Papagayo Winds

Saltair3 passing SV Blessed Life off the coast of Nicaragua 20 nm north of SJDS in the heart of the papagayos with 11 knots of wind on a beam reach. Yes!  Hello Blessed Life. Perfect Wx window for this!
4 Posse boats at 11:00pm crossing through the non existent Papagayo winds (currently 8 knots of wind) all boats within 4 miles of each other and 25 nm north of SJDS. 3 heading north and one heading south.
SV Trance, SV Ankyrios
SV Saltair3 and SV Blessed Life. Pretty cool! Lots of fishermen out here too. Be aware and take care.

Brad
Cole
Krista


Brad, Cole & Krista


SALTAIR III

9) Boca Chica, PANAMA

Interim Port of Entry report at Boca Chica.  I’ll write a full report for GoodNautical when I have a little more information after we receive the cruising permit.

Carlos is the go-to guy here in Boca Chica.  He has a dock, boat ramp, and a few moorings.  He can also coordinate the officials from Pedregal.  Carlos is a get things done kind of guy and as ethical as the day is long!  His cell/whatsapp # is
+507 6600-6191

Our rowing dinghy can’t handle the current through the channel, so Carlos picked us up just before 8am and brought us to his place where the officials were waiting.

There were four officials.  Port Captain (Moises), Health inspector, Customs, and Immigration.

The fees totaled $167 because it was a festival holiday.  Non-holiday would be about $30 less.
The cruising permit is $185 and is delayed a bit because of the holiday.  We’ll get it by Thursday.

Diesel Fuel
We were charged $1.00 a litre for diesel, about $4.00 a gallon.
Street price on diesel in Panama seems to be about $3.75 or so, so that’s not a bad markup.
Pick up and Delivery of our jerry cans was an extra fee ($20.00 in our case).

Bob
Carol

Bob & Carol SINGULARITY

10) Rounding of Punta Mala, PANAMA

Punta
          Mala

Green flash and Avant rounding Punta Mala with 12 knots of wind from the north east!  What a beautiful thing!

11) About heading across the Pacific ...

The South Pacific Sailing Network is inviting all sailors heading to the Pacific Islands for a free informative
seminar about Tahiti Tonga Fiji and New Zealand at Shelter Bay Marina on March 1st 10 am to 2 pm.
Drinks will be offered

South
          Pacific Sailing

south-pacific-sailing.com

12) San Blas, Panama

San
          Blas
San
          Blas 2
Dan
Angela

Dan &  Angela
ANGELIQUE

*13) Situational awareness levels - (now you know):

For optimal situational awareness stay in Condition Yellow

6
            stages from
https://www.artofmanliness.com/articles/how-to-develop-the-situational-awareness-of-jason-bourne/

Could not find a better graphic with a mariner /
sailor but maybe we'll get some at the Party @ Vista Mar on May 30th ;-)

In a dynamic situation, situational awareness is embedded in a loop where the environment affects SA
and decisions made under a particular level of SA affect the environment

  • Learn to Predict Events
  • Identify Elements Around You
  • Trust Your Feelings
  • Limit Situational Overload
  • Avoid Complacency
  • Be Aware of Time
  • Begin to Evaluate and Understand Situations
  • Actively Prevent Fatigue

For more on this topic please head to
https://www.artofmanliness.com/articles/managing-stress-arousal-for-optimal-performance-a-guide-to-the-warrior-color-code/

14) Zihuatanejo, MX

Good
          Nauticcal Zihuatanejo

Cruisers - Welcome to Zihuatanejo      

Here are a few facts to help you out.

Report into the Port Captain to register

Information: listen to the morning Cruiser Net on VHF 22A at 8:30 every morning

Anchoring Protocol for Sailfest boats:

. …during Sailfest please mark your GPS anchor location and use just that spot. This allows Sunset Cruise boats to easily return to their spot at dusk plus allows the Panga guys to get familiar with where to find the boat. The anchorage will get crowded and it helps immensely if everyone stays in the same place.
Dinghy parking and Valet Service:

 on the beach to the right of the pier and before the fishing boats. Alfonso, Jesús, Mateo and whoever else greets the dinghies and watches them 24/7.....a great service. A minimum payment of 20 pesos in and 20 pesos out is suggested.
Concierge Service:

...Ismael and Hilda located beside the Tourist Welcome building. They can be called on VHF 65 and will deliver fuel, water, ice, beer, propane plus local knowledge like who to call for outboard repairs, diesel engine service, parts etc. Tel: 755 108-9161

Ismael and Hilda are our Amazon Mexico drop-off location.Full address is: Paseo de Pescador, No 1-B, Muelle, Col Centro, Zihuatanejo, Guererro 40880

Panga & Water Taxi:

 Coordinator- Jorge- looks after all the guest boarding for the on-the-water Sailfest events as well as providing taxi service from the pier to your boat. Jorge speaks English and can be called at: 755-111-0194. His boat is called 'Rumbo Sur'

Showers. Are available across from Ismael and Hilda's booth at the shore end of the pier…clean and well managed. Cost is: 15 pesos

Laundromat- self-service - located on Vicente Guerrero between Nicolas Bravo and Ejido St. (beside the Banamex)

There are several other laundry services available on La Boquita, which runs along the canal.

Banks:

– most banks Scotiabank, Bancomer, Banamex, Santander are all located on Benito Juarez. There is an Intercam on Morelos

Taxis – generally 35 pesos for the downtown central area, but may increase to 40 pesos to Mega, Sam’s, bus station

- 55 pesos to La Ropa, at night more for return

- 35 pesos Madera, 40 Madera uphill

- 85 pesos Ixtapa Playa Palmar

- 95 pesos Ixtapa Marina

Buses - generally 10 pesos to La Ropa, 9round town

- 14 to Ixtapa

Hospital/Doctors (just to mention a couple)

- Hospital de especialidades 544-7628

- Hospital Clinica Maciel 554-22380

Groceries –

- Merza on Ejido St, good for your basic staples

- Mercado main fruit and vegetable market on Benito Juarez

- Mega Soriana is walkable, by taking the footpath all along the canal.

- Bodega is on the main highway

- Sam’s Club is on the main highway

Liquor

- La Cava on the corner of Nicolas Bravo & Vicente Guerrero

- Andy’s on the opposite corner

- Merza has a selection of spirits

- Mega Soriana

Gas & Diesel

- closest Pemex is on Morales, which is at the top of Cinco de Mayo and to the left. Can be accessed by dinghy a short walk from the head of the Lagoon

Parts and repair supplies:

AutoZone store is on the main highway.

Small Marine Store on the main highway who can order from catalogs

Boat bottom cleaning Memo. 555 127 7446

Restaurants – too many to mention

Music – (a partial list...)

Rock & Roll
- Steve & Friends Thurs, Fri, Sat at Rossi’s on La Ropa

- Jimi Mamou at Daniel's Restaurant Wednesday and Friday

Mexican

- Juanito Zihua at Coconuts on Friday, Santa Prisca on Thursday afternoon (great pozole)

- Jose Luis Cobo plus Musicas en Fuga at El Canto de las Sirenas a special Monday night event from 6:00pm to 10:00

- Zihuana Band – Salsa at Restaurant El Pirata on La Ropa, every Sunday at 3

- Solo Tres – El Pirata Restauranton Playa La Ropa every  Wed at 3. Great harmonies from 3 of the best Zihua guitarists

Blues - Don Scott and Rosanne Licciardi at ------?  Restaurant, ------ night, and other venues around town

Website: Porlosninos Zihuatanejo

Facebook: Zihuatanejo-Sailfest

Groups - Zihuatanejo Let’s Chat

Thisldu Arrived this morning to Roqueta Island out side of Acapulco. Very protected but deep until pretty close to shore. Would be fantastic anchoring in 20 feet on sand but it’s stocked full of “mooring balls”. We dropped anchor and found good holding but was afraid of snagging a mooring line around our prop. Slept a few hours and woke up to a busy tourist spot with glass bottom boats filled to the brim with people, and a few boats pulling tubes wizzing by way to close. We were finally able to get ahold of Club De Yates harbor master Mary (her English is better than my Spanish but communicating over the phone was challenging. Note we did send an email yesterday but it bounced. Any way sh directed us to the fuel dock and then to the office for paperwork. For such a large facility and an important job, they have Mary in a tiny hard to find office just before the boat yard. The marina is mostly Mediterranean ties which we’ve never done before and dreaded with our full keel won’t steer in reverse beast, but were luck enough to get a side tie! The good news. The facilities are beautiful and we are paying $1.75/ft/ night which I think is reasonable, but we got our first night free from our Sausalito Yacht Club membership! I think reciprocity May very by club, but anything is better than nothing! Lastly Navionics charts aren’t even close so Ill try to add my track.

Thisldu Planning on heading south on Saturday after this TPecker chills out and MAYBE catch it’s up coming forecasted lull. (Yes I know it’s too early to plan on that but here’s to hoping!)

Garret
Audrey


Garrett & Audrey


THISLDU

15) Notice to Mariners: Marina Ixtapa, Channel Closing

Doug
Mary

For anyone intending to come into Marina Ixtapa for fuel or Moorage be aware.

The marina entrance channel will be totally closed- 24/7 - for dredging from March 2nd thru March 5th.
eopening the morning of March 6th.

Dough & Mary

ONE LIFE

Blessed Life sailing into Playa Cocos withthe Panama
            Posse

16) Sailing into Playas Del Coco, Costa Rica

Yeaaaa to Costa Rica. Thank you all Panama Posse for the ongoing intel to get here

Anchored in Pappagayos winds with 49 knots of wind
Line
Bob
Maergie

Chatter in LINE.me
Hi Greg- SV Blessed  Life watching right with you! That is directly in front of you -
Greg on SV Anduril is watching it gust to 45 knots in Playa Del Coco. 
Imagine what’s its doing in San Juan del sur, they are Really bad there!
Chimera also here in playa Cocos  the southern part of the bay .
Day 2 of this wind, stronger today than yesterday.
Looks like Monday till we see any improvement.
@SV Blessed Life we saw you coming in to Playa Coco with your spinnaker. You looked great!

Bob & Margie

BLESSED LIFE

17) Early Warning of new exit Requirements from Mexico in Chiapas

Ok- here's a new one. Apparently the port Capt in Chiapas now wants some type of a piece of paper that shows you are "qualified " to be the captain of your boat in order to leave Mexico, not needed on checking in. Two examples of what were accepted today 1) for someone else also checking out- membership in BoatUS or 2) for us, a certificate of achievement from 2012 for ASA 101! Not sure I would accept that from anyone as proof of any kind of competency, but it seemed to work here! None of this has been asked of us either checking in or any other port in Mexico, only as we go out the door!

(Note from ANGELIQUE: a USA state boating license works too. You can get Oregon’s on line for cheap )

Bob
Sarah

Bob & Sarah RHAPSODY

BLUE_OASIIS PANAMA CANAL
BLUE
            OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL
BLUE
            OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL Camera
BLUE
            OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL
BLUE
            OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL
BLUE
            OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL

18) Panama Canal, Successful Passage

BLUE OASIS - Panama Posse - PANAMA CANAL

Following a freighter into Pedro Miguel lock at dawn a few weeks ago.

Center chamber all the way through, total transit 13 hours.

Barry
Kathy

Barry & Kathy

BLUE OASIS

(note: CONGRATULATIONS )

Stand Down
Pedegral

19) Boca Chica, Panama

Carlos, son Simone and Rich aboard Stand Down.

Pedregal, Panama. Sarana waypoints are right on.
We left Boca Chica at lowtide in 14ft/60hp skiff .

Pedregal is very industrial. Marina is steel and disappointing.

Richard & Nancy
(no picture)

STAND DOWN

20) PANAMA CANAL, PANAMA

John
(no picture)CONTEXT

21) SATELLITE .mbtiles which work deliciously with OpenCPN 5.0+

Thanks to the incredible work by Rob from Avant we now have 50+Gig of mbtile satellite charts for the entire coastal route available -

Download the whole chart enchilada from http://route.panamaposse.com/charts/mbtiles_central_america/

If you are lucky to see Rob or Debra - buy 'em a beer / ice cream sundae - they deserve it having spend weeks compiling this info  !

Rob
Debra

SV AVANT

Rob & Debra

22) Please reply to this email with any updates - your vessel location -
contenders for picture of the week - your favorite song for our list -
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Update

The Panama Posse transfer of knowledge and learning process operates under the gestalt theory
We will not tell you what to do, when or how - we want you to to figure that out. YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Suzanne
Dietmar

Dietmar & Suzanne

CARINTHIA

Panama Posse BUrgee

23) opt-out from the Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"


SEVENSTAR PARTNERS WITH THE PANAMA POSSE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - Feb 25 2020

SEVENSTAR PARTNERS WITH THE PANAMA POSSE

Sevenstar is proud to be the logistics partner of choice for
the PANAMA POSSE fleet, and will be providing tailored
solutions from Golfito in Southern Costa Rico, Manzanillo, La
Paz to Ensenada, Mexico and Victoria,Canada.  They also
provide services in Papeete/Tahiti,  Auckland/New Zealand,
Sydney/Australia as well as East Coast ports and the
Caribbean.

Sevenstar Yacht Transport is the world’s leading provider of
yacht shipping services, with a global network of destinations
and a fleet of over 100 independent carriers. The company is
headquartered in Amsterdam, The Netherlands and runs a
worldwide network with offices in the United States, the UK,
Monaco, Australia and Turkey, together with agents in Germany,
Russia, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia,
Mexico, Gibraltar and the Caribbean. In October 2013 Sevenstar
assimilated with DYT Yacht Transport which manages two
semi-submersible vessels dedicated to float-on, float-off
yacht transport, making it a complimentary fit with
Sevenstar’s specialization in lift-on, lift-off yacht
transport.

The Panama Posse, started in 2017, has grown from 15 boats to
a fleet of 170 motor and sailing vessels from North and South
America, South Pacific and Europe.  The fleet, that travels to
seven countries between Mexico and Panama, has an online
network that receives 24/7 updated info on weather,
anchorages, marinas, check-in and clearing processes, boat
services, fuel stops, provisioning, cultural shore excursions
and group events.

“Our partnership with Sevenstar Yacht Transport adds a
tremendous options for the Panama Posse fleet in Mexico and
Central America who want to ship their boats back to their
home ports or to their next dream destination. For example if
you have sailed from Seattle, WA all the way down to Panama
you can now ship your vessel back to Victoria, BC and avoid a
long uphill beat.” says Dietmar Petutschnig, a founding member
of the Panama Posse.

Supporting the PANAMA POSSE locally is Sevenstar’s San Francisco representative Kris Caren, “We are excited to add the Panama Posse fleet to our rooster of partners including TransPac and other vessels interested in moving around the world aboard our transport ships.   We will provide Panama Posse members the top-level service that we are known for. “

For more information about how Sevenstar can help your extend your plans or return you back to home base for the transport of your yacht, please contact Kris Caren kris@sevenstar-usa.com & mention the Panama Posse and you'll get your discount as well

For more information about PANAMA POSSE and Sevenstar Yacht Transport BV please visit the below websites:

https://panamaposse.com/
https://www.sevenstar-yacht-transport.com/

SevenStar


FLEET UPDATE 2020-02-23

  • PUERTO ARMUELLES, PANAMA CLOSED
  • Catching up in Mexico 
  • Counterposse Woes, Panama
  • Trouble in Jimenez, Costa Rica
  • Lot's of whales @ Banderas Bay, Mexico & South
  • Reminder to join Panama Posse via LINE.me
  • Picture of the Week
  • Runner up - Picture of the week
  • Panama Posse Gathering at Marina Chahue, Mexico
  • Save the date - March 30th - Panama Posse 2020-2021 Presentation at Vallarta Yacht club, MX
  • Uninvited Visitor(s) Contest - Winner of the week
  • El Salvador, Nicaragua Update
  • OpenCPN
  • EMERGENCY CONTACT INFORMATION
  • Please reply 
  • Opt-Out

1) PUERTO ARMUELLES, PANAMA closed
and is no longer a POE Port of Entry / Exit for Panama -

Omar

Here is the last picture of Omar with MV Stand Down

CLOSED

Picture by Context

2) Catching up in Mexico

Thisldu
Garrett
Audrey

Garrett & Audrey
THISLDU

3) Counterposse Woes

We were on the hard in Vistamar, Panama for over 2 months due to a fuel injection pump, that needed to be rebuilt.  We were given a $600 estimate, and it ended up being triple the cost.  The local mechanic installed the pump and after testing it in the bay, we made our way to Costa Rica.  After the first day, we noticed two lines were leaking diesel fuel from the newly installed pump. We pulled into Golfito, Costa Rica and found Fernando and his son at Banana Bay Marina.  They did a wonderful job and saudered the cracks in the line for only $100!  We left the sweltering bay of Golfito the next day. Unfortunately, we noticed a 3rd line leaking, but this time it was spraying deisel all over at an alarming rate! We had just pulled into Manuel Antonio and thought we could fix it, so we anchored in the bay and enjoyed the park while the engine cooled.  After many attempts, we couldn't stop the leak, so we motored the few miles north to Quepos.  We are staying the night at Marina Pez Vela for $120/night...(thank you Panama Posse rate!). We just got a quote here to fix the leak for $690!  Yikes! Sooo, needless to say, my Husband, who is not a diesel mechanic, will be bringing the line into town tomorrow to a machine shop to have the work done for $30, we hope!  Crossing fingers! Despite the heat and engine issues, we are enjoying every minute in between! 

Eleven

 We were just in Golfito at Banana Bay.  We stopped off at Manuel Antonio ....a really pretty Anchorage.  If you find yourself there on a Monday, the park is closed, no one is there!  So, no fees to anchor.  We arrived Sunday late and went to the office to pay our anchor and park fees, but they require you to do it all via the bank just outside the gates, which closes at 3...the lady said, you're all good and didn't charge us for our stay. It's only $8 to anchor and $16 pp.  Saw monkeys and lots of people! Beautiful place, bit we enjoyed the privacy of anchoring on Monday. 🙂. Not sure where you are now, bit we hope to leave Quepos for Puntareas soon!

Eleven

We are in Quepos now getting one of our hard lines soldered.

Eleven

Marina mechanics wanted $690 to repair this crack. Yikes...
My Husband is getting it soldered right now at a machine shop in Quepos.  Crossing fingers this does the trick!!

Tim
Kim
Crew
Crew
Crew

Tim, Kim & Crew

ELEVEN 11

4) Trouble in Jimenez, Costa Rica

Anchored in Playa Arenita next to Jimenez. I went with the kids to run on the beach and
this small fishing boat told my husband that we couldn't anchor here that the bay and the beach were private and belonged to this sport fishing club!
Seriously? They even threatened him to calli the Coast Guard.
He knew they were talking nonsense and he was feeling sick. Now they are walking up and down their dock shinning a strong flash light onto us.
My understanding is that there are no private beaches in Costa Rica. (A bit of a laugh about the private bay!!).... This is an update on the anchoring area east of Jimenez, east of the Private Sportfishing club dock that belongs to Hotel Cocodrilo.
The anchorage is calm and safe in fine sand/mud. The beach slopes nicely like shown in navionics and is empty and wide in low tide. 
The owner of this hotel has claimed ownership of a big chunk of the bay
(basically all the length of beach and maybe a quarter mile from the water line to a red buoy that is not on the navigation charts and could be a hazard to mariners. Even locals are harassed when coming here.
So they have guards and they come to ask you to leave and threaten to call the Coast Guard. I asked for legal documents that say I can not anchored there but of course there  are none and all they sowed me was a  sketch map of the property that actually pointed free access to the beach!!
They indeed called the coast guard that told us the hotel pays for some rights like a marina. Yes of course, their dock and moorings but the whole bay???
I insisted I wanted to see a legal document that stated that I could not anchored there.
We ended having a chat and left.
You may wonder why I didnt move 1/2 a mile west! Well my husband was sick in bed and they kept flashing is all night and waking us up at 4 am. It was about principles. This is why we live this way isnt it? Not ethical with locals to close a whole bay so they can estate on their brochure that the bay is exclusive for guests and make $$$$$ out of a resource that belongs to all human beings ...

DIsputed
        Anchorage

Nick, Gema & Crew
MOIRA

Whale

5) Lot's of whales @ Banderas Bay & Tenecatitia Bay Mexico

This is the season for whales

Dietmar
Suzanne

Dietmar & SuzanneCARINTHIA

Line


6) Reminder to join Panama Posse  via LINE.me

the fastest way to get answers is via LINE.me - be sure to post your questions here

Rowan

7) PICTURE OF THE WEEK - Nicaragua

Rowan says "Nicaragua getting even better!"

Victoria, Rowan & Crew

Rowan
Victoria
Crew
Crew

TALIESIN ROSE

8) Runner up - Picture of the Week

At
        Anchor



John
(need your pictures)CONTEXT

9) Panama Posse Gathering at Marina Chahue, Mexico

Malolo

Jessica & Adam - Chelsea & Steve - Britt & Matt

Jessica
Adam
Chelsea
Steve
Malolo
Malolo

VOLARE, JEAN ANNE & MALOLO

Yacht Club

10) March 30th - Panama Posse 2020-2021 Presentation at Vallarta Yachtclub, MX
 
T
ime: 15:00 - 17:00
Location:  
Paradise Village Marina Paseo De Los Cocoteros N°001, 63732 Nuevo Vallarta, Nayarit MX
Who: Captain Dietmar, Suzanne & Captain Chris and surprise guests
20°41'35.2"N 105°17'36.1"W

Panama
        Posse
Neshuma

11) Uninvited Visitors Contest - Winner of the week

Santa
          Maria

and in utter irony speaking of  uninvited visitors

Christopher Columbus discovers Marina Chiapas feb 2020 aboard Santa María

Carl & Cynthia
(need your pictures)
NESHUMA

12) El Salvador, Nicaragua Update

Exit

Following a brief layover in El Salvador, Gargoyle and her crew braved the bar crossing, led by Bill and the pilot boat. After a night spent dodging the largest commercial fishing fleet we've seen since Oregon, we were forced to tuck into Isla Meanguerra' anchorage to wait out Papagayos. Seeing a brief weather window, Gargoyle then made a mad early morning dash across the Gulf of Fonseca with 35 to 45 knot plus winds on her beam making short but wild & wet work of the open water. Finally back in the shelter of the shoreline, we completed the journey down a scenic coastline to the delightful marina at Puesta del Sol with its amazing infinity pools.

Rum

Here we've enjoyed tours of Leon as well as the hospitality of the locals. Badaboom for the cheap beer and surfer vibe, Pedro's for the smoothies and of course Joe's for the barbecue with rice and plantains. A definite highlight of the trip has been the Flor de Caña tour. Thanks to new Counter-Posse friends Carl and Cynthia aboard SV Neshuma for the tip on the VIP tour, we now have engraved SV Gargoyle 18 year old Flor de Caña bottles in our collection. We can't wait to share when our paths cross again in the future! 

Flor
Carla
Kevin

Kevin & Carla

GARGOYLE

13) OpenCPN

Get satellite chartlets from www.panamaposse.com/open-cpn/  
Make chartlets https://panamaposse.com/opencpn-5-0-mbtiles/

OPenCpn

14)EMERGENCY CONTACT INFORMATION

MEDICAL REPATRIATION TO U.S.

DAN Boater (boating accident) (take from ship to nearest hospital/medical facility; limitation on amount but might get you all the way home). This is an annual membership fee service.
Emergency +1-919-667-9111
Information +1-919-490-2011

MEDJET Expat 180 Family Membership (any medical condition)(take from hospital/medical facility in foreign country to your home in U.S.). This is an annual membership fee service.
+1 205-595-6626
There are a number of Medical repatriation companies. Check your boat insurance, policy carefully as some policies do not contain any or sufficient medical repatriation expense.
Medjet and DAN Boater provide emergency information. There are a number of companies on the internet that are pay as you go and do not require that you purchase a membership that provide emergency information.

U.S. COAST GUARD EMERGENCY SSB CHANNELS
MHZ UTC time
4.125 2300-11
6.125 24 hr.
8.290 24 hr.
12.290 1100-2300

U.S. COAST GUARD EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBER
001 310 732 2046
HAM SSB NETS
World wide emergency Ham net: 14.313 24 hr.
Central America Ham net: 7.083 UTC time 1300

U.S. COAST GUARD RESCUE COORDINATION CENTER
    Rescue Coordination Center:  (510) 437-3701.  This is the number for group receiving EPIRB emergency beacon distress signals.  They will coordinate with local country Coast Guards if boater is outside of the U.S. and they have translators, as the numbers at the local country Coast Guards in Central America will speak Spanish.  They said it would be ok to call them in emergency.

CENTRAL AMERICA COUNTRY COAST GUARD CONTACT NUMBERS
    These numbers were given to me by the U.S. Coast Guard Rescue Coordination Center.  The individuals from these local Coast Guards will speak Spanish when you call them.  If you cannot communicate with them, the Rescue Coordination Center can call them, but that will take more time.

  El Salvadore Coast Guard:  (505) 22500210,   Extension 5103
    Nicaragua Coast Guard:      (504)22342507
    Costa Rica Coast Guard:      (506) 22314924
    Panama Coast Guard:           (507) 60451197

CALIFORNIA COAST GUARD OFFICES WHO COULD BE  called if you cannot reach rescue coordination center, however the local coast guards will likely just go through the Rescue Center:
    Coast Guard Sector LA/Long Beach:  310 521-3815
    Channel Islands office:  805 985-9822

VHF EMERGENCY CHANNEL FOR MAYDAY: 16

HAM SSB NETS

World wide emergency Ham net:  14.313    24 hr.
Pacific Seafares Net 14300 @ 0300 UTC 
Central America Ham net:  7.083   @ 1300 UTC

CENTRAL AMERICA EMBASSY CONTACT INFORMATION.  Go to www.usembassy.gov/ for further information.  For Central America embassies, emergency number is +1-202-501-4444, and press “0”,  from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. EST.  When dialing embassy numbers below probably start with “ +” depending on phone service.   

   MEXICO
    +52 55 5080-2000
    Paseo de la Reforma 305, Colonia Cuauhtenoc,     06500 Mexico, DF
  

GUATEMALA
    +502 2326 4000
    Avenida Reforma 7-01, Zona 10, Guatemala Cuidad, Guatemala

    EL SALVADOR
    +503 2501 2999
    Final Blvd. Santa Elena,     Antiguo Cuseatlan, La Libertad,     San Salvador   

    HONDURAS
    +504 2238 5114 (after hours X4100)
    +504 2236 9320 (per embassy website, but not communications received:  011-504 2236 9320)
    Avenida La Paz,     Tegucigalpa MDC, Honduras
 
    NICARGUA
    +505 2252-7100
    Kilometer 5.5 Carreter Sur, Managua, Nicagagua

    COSTA RICA
    +506 2519 2000
    Calle 98 Via 104, Pavas,     San Jose, Costa Rico

    PANAMA
    +507 317 5000
    Bldg 783, Demetrio Basilio Lakas Ave, Clayton, Panama

REPORT U.S. CITIZEN MISSING ABROAD:  1-888-407-4747

GLOBAL MARINE DISTRESS SAFETY SYSTEM:      1-888-407-4747, press “0” for overseas citizen emergency services.

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION MARITIME ADMINISTRATION, OFFICE OF MARITIME SECURITY. 

They provide information on piracy and safety and security, and you can sign up for alerts by going online.
    Emergency:  1-202-501-4444 (8-8 EST, M-F)

Stan
Diane

Stan & Diane

CROSSROADS

15) Please reply to this email with

– your updates
contenders for picture of the week links to your favorite SONGS
– relevant blog posts – and of course your valuable suggestions

and we’ll include it in the next FLEET UPDATE – Keep em ‘coming

Dietmar
Suzanne

The Panama Posse philosophy is to pass on nautical knowledge via the gestalt theory...

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

16) Opt-out from Fleet Updates simply reply with “REMOVE

Panama Posse Burgees

Sunset

FLEET UPDATE 2020-02-16

  • Head shots reminders
  • Huatulco, Mexico
  • Picture of the Week & Ordeal report of the week
  • Sail repair tip from Ullman Sails Puerto Vallarta, Mexico 
  • Marina Pez Vela, Haul-out, Quepos and Facilities, Costa Rica
  • El Salvador Bar Crossing, El Salvador 
  • Treasure Map of Golfito, Costa Rica
  • Shelter Bay Marina, Panama 
  • Uninvited Visitors -  Hitchhiker
  • Uninvited Visitors  -  Marine Leach 
  • Safety reminder
  • Line App Reminder every Monday live call at 16:00 UTC
  • Submit reports - As always - keep 'em coming
  • Opt Out

1) Head shots reminder

Debra
        !

Please email us your headshots :

AD ASTRA, BAD BUNNY, CONTEXT, CONVERGENCE, CYCLADES, DOTTIE SUE, ELSKA, EMMY KATE, ENTERPRISE III, EVIE, EVOLIAS,HERITAGE,IMPOSSIBLE DREAM, KJALOHA, KOUMBA BANG, LEILANI, MAKANI, MANUREVA, MAR Y SOL, NESHUMA, PILIALOHA, SALPARE, SEAQUEL, SEDNA VI, SHAZAM, SOL GOOD, SOUTHERN CROSS III, STAND DOWN, SUSIMI, TIDAL DANCER, TIVOLI, TRYST, WISHLIST, WOLFHOUND, ZARZAGAN

2) Huatulco, Mexico

Volare’s in Marina Chahue awaiting the 2nd window for TPec crossing so that we can explore the local area. 

Jean
      Anne

Here’s a picture I took of s/v Jean Anne as the sun rose over Jicaral anchorage. We were the only boats here.

Jessica & Adam

Adam
Jessica

VOLARE

3) Picture of the week

Annita in Marina Chahue hugging the used engine oil

so - we completed the last leg without incident and are now safely tied up in Huatulco.
This is a picture of Anita standing alongside the four barrels of engine oil Moonrise
requried to keep the engine lubricated for a little over 100 miles.
Quite the trip!

Thank-you again for the call out to the fleet and for your support,

Moonrise now holds the official Panama Posse record now for most engine oil used on a 100 nm trip
I thought that the fleet would appreciate some feedback on what we learned from our experience:
1. The Port Captains are no help. We presented ourselves at the Puerto Angel Port Captains office and advised them that we were mariners in dificulty and they essentially replied "not my problem". We pointed to their mission statement (on a poster on the wall), that suggested otherwise but they responded "maybe in the past but not now". Their job today is simply to 'control' who comes into the port.
2. Panga operators told us they have no respect for the Port Captains and expect no help from them. When one of them is in trouble they organize their own rescue (much in the tradition of volounteer lifeboat crews in the UK). Recently, a panga was swamped off Puerto Angel and they had thirty boats out all night looking for the crew (who were never found). They said the military will occasionally come out but mostly when it is too late and/or the story has made it into the newspapers.
3. Panga operators will extend assistance to cruising boats but most do not carry radios. One approached us and asked if we needed assistance simply because they saw our radar reflector twinkling in the sunlight and thought we were signaling them. Later at anchor, we waved one down and they gave us a ride through the surf to the beach. That same operator then drove us into town in his pick up to buy some oil and return us back through the surf. We would never have been able to carry that large a quantity of oil in our dingy nor would we have ever have been able to land safely (it was a surf resort). With local knowledge and a 50HP outboard, they had mastered how to safely transit the breaking surf zone.
4. None of the panga operators we asked was prepared to consider towing us, regardless of distance. They believe it is damaging to their outboard, which for them is their livelihood. The one single offer of a tow we had was for an eye watering sum and was not entirely credible as it was questionable whether they could safely carry that much fuel (for the round trip).
5. Most pangas never travel further than 12 miles from home (fuel is expensive and there is no need). Their local knowledge is therefore limited to a small radius and there are large gaps along the coast where no pangas operate.
6. We had a dingy, 6 HP outboard and plenty of gasoline and we have successfully side towed Moorise before. But, that was in calm conditions - in reality, we didnt feel comfortable doing so in a heavy swell and/or at night, so looked for alternatives. After this experience we may consider buying a larger, rigid floor dingy.
7. Obviously, we would have prefered to sail out of trouble but the winds were fickle. Leaving a safe anchorage to rely on marginal winds is a tough call, as you then place yourself at the mercy of local currents (which we never got to understand). Luckily, we were able to devise our limp home strategy, which gave us a margin of safety.
What might we do differently? Obviously, having a buddy boat with us would have made a world of difference. Otherwise, we have always been believers in simplicity and preventative maintenance but not everything can be foreseen. It looks as if our problem was a failed oil cooler (ie a break down of the wall, seperating oil from raw water). It so happens, we had examined our oil cooler only a month previously (shining a flash light through the tubes), without seeing anything troubling.
The mechanic here in Huatulco said he could weld up our oil cooler and get us on our way within days but we told him that, after this experience, we will opt for removing the engine and changing out every gasket, oil seal and vulnerable part - we do not want to go through a similar experience ever again!
Hope this summary is helpful.

Stephen & Annita

Stephen
Ana

MOONRISE

4) Sail repair tip from Ullman Sails Puerto Vallarta

Offshore Emergency Repairs

Be sure to have some of the basics onboard.  The new stitch-less systems are quite good and reliable. They save a lot of time and make repairs easier to do.

The best on the market is Dr Sails.  It is a 2-part flexible epoxy that sets in 20 minutes or less.  It comes with multiple tips so that you do not have to use entire container each time.

After following the manufactures instructions, I found an easier better way to use the product.

It is always a great idea to dry and clean the surfaces first.  We recommend rubbing alcohol since it will evaporate the salt water off of the surface. Dr Sails claims that it will stick to wet sails but I have not tested this theory.

Next layout as much of the repair as you can carefully aligning it as close to original as possible.  Tape this together as you go. 

Once tear is taped on one side, flip sail so that you are working on the side without the tape.

Cut your piece of Sailcloth that you are using for the repair.  Lay it out on top of tear making sure it fits properly and is trimmed to the size you need.  We recommend overlapping each side of the tear by 2”.

Tale the repair cloth, dispense the Dr Sails adhesive onto the piece in a zigzag pattern.  Using spreader (supplied with Dr. Sails) evenly spread adheasive over entire repair cloth piece.

Lay the piece over the tear pulling sail tight, press repair cloth down, using a long arm stapler staple in many places.

After approximately 20 minutes, remove staples , flip over remove tap, and your repair is complete.

Keys to have a long lasting and effective stitch-less repair.

  1. Take time to align as close as possible to original.  The better the alignment the better it will look when finished
  2. Keep sail as smooth and tight as possible when laying repair cloth down
  3. Do no more than 5’ at a time unless you are doing shore-side with a lot of room
  4. Set everything up ahead of time and work fast as adhesive will start to set if you take too much time
  5. Rub adhesive all the way to the edge of repair, even slightly more to keep edges from peeling up
  6. If tear goes to edge of sail wrap repair cloth around edge, this can be done in a second step
  7. Be sure to pull every staple, they rust and rust fast
  8. Have something to lay under repair while using adhesive, it will stick to your deck
Jason
Chuck
Sabine

Jason, Chuck & Sabine

Ullman Sails Puerto Vallarta
Av Estaciones 1099 Bucerias, Mexico, CA 63732
pv@ullmansails.com
+52-329-298 2558
https://puertovallarta.ullmansails.com

5) Marina Pez Vela, Haulout, Quepos and Facilities

On a windless overnight passage from the Gulf of Fonseca to San Juan del Sur back in November, the port engine on our Lagoon 380 cat suddenly made an odd sound and we lost propulsion. We spent a few weeks in San Juan del Sur and were able to determine the problem was somewhere in the lower unit of our saildrive which, unfortunately, required a haul out. With our 21.4’ beam there are only a handful of places that can haul us. Marina Pez Vela in Quepos, CR is one. They couldn’t schedule us until Jan 2 because they do not work for two weeks over Christmas and New Year’s holidays.

We had already checked into the country in Playas del Coco but if we hadn’t, Pez Vela charges a large agent fee ($400 I think I heard). Our initial impression of the shipyard was clean, professional, and very helpful as we were pulling in with little ability to maneuver at slow speeds. This was the first shipyard we had been to that actually put a diver in the water to verify the placement of the slings before hauling. The managers, Justin and James, were easy to work with. We spent 3 weeks in the yard. We opted not to do the work ourselves because they charge a daily fee if you do your own work or hire your own mechanic. But they also charge another daily fee just to be in the shipyard whether work is being done or not, and they were slow! They also do not allow you to live aboard while in the yard so there’s another expense of somewhere to stay. Once the necessary parts were determined, it was actually cheaper and much faster for Dennis to fly back to the US to pick them up.

We ended up having a few other preventative maintenance items taken care of as well, since we were waiting for the parts. We had the bottom paint done - completely stripped to the gelcoat, new barrier coat and a couple of layers. The workers damaged the diaphragms around the sail drives (which had been inspected immediately after haul out and determined they were in good condition). The diaphragms had gouges and chunks out of them, but Justin had no problem taking responsibility and covered the cost for the new diaphragms and labor. We had the rudders removed and bearings replaced. We also had a few cracks in the fiberglass repaired.

 

 

 

Pez Vela Haul out

Haul out Once Dennis came back with the parts it should have only taken a day or two to have everything back together. It was another week before we were back in the water. The days we sat there and no work was done were so frustrating. Thankfully Justin saw this and did not charge us for those days in the shipyard.

 

 

Bottom

New bottom paint. Waiting for final rudder placement just before splashing.

Quepos is a nice, little town and we met some wonderful people. If you make it to town, we highly recommend Zamir Pizza. They sold it by the slice or a whole pizza for a reasonable price and it was the best pizza we’ve had in a long time! El Santuario zip line tour was fabulous and they’ll even pick you up from the marina. There’s also a non-denominational church service at 9:30 on Sundays on the beach in the bay by Manual Antonio NP.

 

Manuel Antionio

Exploring Manuel Antonio NP

The anchorage just a few miles south of the marina was nice with a decent beach landing on the south side. It was a bit rolly in the early morning and evening when boats were leaving/returning to the marina. The marina wasn’t dinghy friendly though, so it’s not all that easy to replenish supplies from the anchorage. All in all, we were pleased with the work done at the shipyard, and we enjoyed our time in Quepos.

 

 

Church on the beach

Church on the beach

Dennis, Brandy & Crew

Dennis
Brandy
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew

ANKYRIOS

 

Dennis
Brandy
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew

ANKYRIOS

6) El Salvador, Bar Crossing

El
        Salvador Bar Crossing

Nobody mentioned that we would be surfing our sailboat over the bar! Yeaaa for Bill n Jean!

 

 

El
        Salvador Bar Crossing

Entering the Estuary

 

Anchored

 

Margie

Bob & Margie

Bob
Margie

BLESSED

Golfito

7) Treasure Map of Golfito, Costa Rica

 

Bob & Marisol(need headshot)
MAR Y SOL

Sunrise

8) Shelter Bay Marina, Panama

Bob & Margie

Bob
Margie

BLESSED

Caribbean Sunrise

 

 

Bob

 

View
          from the dock

View from the Dock of the Breakwater and Panama Canal Entrance

Dan
Angela

Dan & Angela

Dan
Angela

ANGELIQUE

9) Uninvited Visitors - Hitchhiker (this is a prize category this season)

Hitchhiker
Nick
Gemma

Nick & Gemma

Nick
Gemma

MOIRA

10) Uninvited Visitors - Marine Leach (this is a prize category this season)

Uninvited Visitors
Garreth
Audrey

Garreth & Audrey

Garreth
Audrey


THISLDU

11) Safety reminder

A strong dinghy lock and thick long cable

Season One of the Panama Posse took the brunt and we have identified areas which are prone to dinghy and outboard theft-

Garreth
Audrey

 

Lock

but as always bring your dingy and outboard up at night and lock it with a hard lock !

ABUS 92/65 Mono-block Brass Padlock
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005UMBCDW/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_kUZODbHH915CZ

12) Get on the LINE app !

Please make sure to sign up with Line.me so you can participate in our weekly LINE calls on Mondays; at 16:00 UTC
and be part of the 24/7 chatroom anytime
Once you have downloaded it - find dietmarpetutschnig ( carinthia ) and send a message

Garreth
Audrey

 

we'll add you to the 2019-2020 Panama Posse group

line.me

13) As always - keep 'em coming - reply with any relevant updates
- next update next Sunday

SV Carinthia

Dietmar
Suzanne

 

Dietmar
Suzanne

Dietmar & Suzanne

 

 

Panana Posse

14) to opt out - reply with opt out 


Set Breaks in Central America

FLEET UPDATE 2020-02-09

  • Marina Chahue Update
  • Gualdalajara & Tequila, Mexico
  • Offshore medical supplies
  • Panama Posse Gathering @ Marina Chiapas
  • Punta Mala, Panama
  • Tehuantepec
    Crossing
  • Picture of the Week 
  • Panama Posse Gathering in La Cruz, MX
  • Bahia del Sol, El Salvador
  • Cabeza Negra, MX
  • Updates
  • Opt-Out

1) Marina Chahue, MX

Jessica
Adam

UPDATE

Volare just entered Marina Chahué. We draw 7’.

 We entered at high tide which was +1.8’.

In the channel our depth gauge read 9.5’ at the lowest.
After the channel, approaching the marina we saw 8.5’.

The marina is charging our 44’, MX$396p a day, MX$2728p per
week, MX$7040 per month.
These prices are without power or water. To add those would be
15% more.

No possie discount... but at $20 USD per day ....
(note:
municipal marina ...)

Jessica & Adam

VOLARE

2) GUADALAJARA LAND EXCURSION:

While our alternator and mast stays are
being replaced, and we wait on parts from the USA, we rented a
car for a week and drove 5 hours from Puerto Vallarta through
the gorgeous and very safe mountains to Guadalajara…

Day 1 – we stopped on the way for lunch in
Tequila. The meal at Solar des las Animas was set your hair on
fire outstanding! The restaurant is on the main square and
part of the Solar des las Animas hotel, which is pretty fancy
5-star-ish.  Anyhoo, we
made a reservation of a room for later in the week. After
lunch, we did a recce around d town in preparation for later
in the week when we would take the Tequila Train from
Guadalajara back to Tequila, and then another day/overnight
visit on the way back to PV.  It’s
too hard to taste Tequila for 3 days in a row, so we broke it
up and that was just fine… Evening meal was at La Chata and
superb.

Day 2 – after checking into the historic
Hotel Morales, we took the hop-on-hop off bus around
Guadalajara. 
Great decision.  Cocktails
and dinner in Tlaquepaque neighborhood at Café Luna was YUM.

Lake

Day 3 – drove out an hour to Lake Chapala.
Visited the towns of Chapala and Ajijic.  Wonderful – think Lake
Tahoe meets the Chilean Lake District. Not too crowded, clean
and just nice. Cocktails in the church square was fun. We
stumbled into a Mexican funeral where half the people were on
horse, plus a marching band, and for every one shovel of dirt
onto the casket, there was a shot of tequila poured over the
casket. I wanna go like that!!!

Lake
            2
Tequila Train

Day 4 – took the 90-minute Herradura
Tequila Train to the Herradura Hacienda for a full 10-hour day
of education, touring the fabrication facility, tastings, a
sit-down fabulous meal for 1000 beautiful guests and the best
mariachi band I’ve every seen, plus some very talented and
sexy dancers.  The
train was a party train filled with
Mexico’s finest citizens and dressed for a very elegant
affair. Sexy.

Day 5 – rented bikes and rode out to Santo
Coyote restaurant for a big fat Mexican Brunch that cannot
be beat. Hit the MUSEO
DE LAS ARTES UNIVERSIDAD and caught
a brilliant Diego Rivera and Jose Orozco exhibit.  Had a late-night meal
at some taco joint that was overrated. Then we dialed in a
Tequila Bar on my TequilaMatch I-phone App. This turned out
to be the grooviest bar I’ve been to with a bunch of
hipsters, and a cool DJ spinning LPs. We got out of there
just barely before the sun came up.

Agave

Day 6 – Shopping for boat stuff. Dinner was
at El Diablo for thin pizza in the fancy neighborhood of
providencia, which we loved.

Cooking

Day 7 – drove back to Tequila and did a
private 3-hour tour and Fortaleza. Just an amazing old factory
that still can make some excellent juice. Sunset at the Solar
des las Animas hotel Sky Bar overlook the town of Tequila and
smelling the tequila cooking in the factory ovens was just
unforgettable. Our hotel room was a large gorgeous junior suit
for $165 USD and worth every penny.

Press
Oven
Burned
Process
Tequila

Day 8 – drove back to PV with nothing to
report, but just 8 tasty bottles of Tequila in the trunk😊

Lisa
Lucky

Lucky Chucky & Lisa

HO’OKIPA

3) Attached is a grid for offshore medical
supplies. If you like it, please post it

BRAND /
COMERCIAL NAME
INGREDIENTS USES AND DOSES NOTES / WARNIGS
PAIN KILLERS AND RELATED
BROSPINA
0.3 MG VIAL W/6
Buprenorphine (Sinthetic Morpine) injectable PAIN KILLER. Acute and severe pain like
Kindney stone, broken bones, extensive burns. 1 vial
intramuscular every 6 or 12 hours
Narcotic, may cause drowsiness. Caution if
patient is allergic to Codeine or Morphine
TYLEX
CD CAP.  30
capsules
Codeine / Paracetamol (like Tylenol III) PAIN KILER. Moderate to severe pain. Dose;
one e/ 6 or 8 hours
Narcotic, may cause drowsiness. Caution if
patient is allergic to Codeine or Morphine
ACTRON
600 MG CAPS
Ibuprofen 600 mg soft-gels  PAIN KILER. Mild to Moderate pain like
Headache, Sore throat. Dose; one e/ 6 or 12 hours. Also
effective for FEVER and Inflammation.
Non-narcotic pain killer, soft with stomach.
MOTRIN
JR JARABE INFANTIL
Ibuprofeno Childrens Liquid form PAIN KILER. Mild to Moderate pain like
Headache, Sore throat. Dose; one e/ 6 or 12 hours. Also
effective for FEVER and Inflammation.
 
NORFLEX
PLUS TAB 
Orfenadrina - Paracetamol Pain Killer and MUSCLE RELAXATIVE. Dose 1
tab 3 or 4 tabs a day
Well tolerated. May cause sleepiness
TYLEX
750 MG C/20 TAB.
Paracetamol (Acetaminophen, apap)
Extra-strengthened
PAIN KILER. Mild to Moderate pain like
Headache, Sore throat. Dose; one e/ 6 or 12 hours. Also
effective for FEVER
Best option for people allergic to Aspirine
and derivates)
       
ANXIETY AND SLEEP DISORDER
RIVOTRIL GOTAS Clonacepam liquid form ACUTE ANXIETY, Panic Atacks. Dose: 3-8 drops
en half-glass of water, 1 to 3 times a day 
Works fast. May cause drownisess and
sleepiness. May cause adiction
RIVOTRIL
COMPRIMIDOS 2 MG
Clonacepam con 30 o 100 por caja ANXIETY, INSOMNIA. Dose one tab. One-half
tablet to one full tablet one or 2 times a day
May cause drownisess and sleepiness. May
cause adiction
       
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
ACICLOVIR
TAB 400 MG
Acyclovir tablets for adults Antiviral Medication, usefull for all type
of Herpes infections like; Chiken Pox, Shingles,
Genitale Herpes and Mono. Dose: One tab. 3 or 4 times a
day
It is recommended for 5 to 14 days.
ACICLOVIR
CREMA
Acyclovir Topical cream Antiviral Medication, usefull to treat the
skin affection for Herpes Virus Infection like Mouth
Cold-Sore and genital lesions. Dose: Apply 3 or 4 times
a day direct in the skin lesions
 
GABIROL
CAPSULES. c/14
Rimantadine cap 100 mg  Antiviral Medication for all types of FLU.
Dose; one capsule 3 times a day for 5 dias
 
GABIROL
SOL. 120 ML
Rimantadine liquid form 120 ml Antiviral Medication for all types of FLU.
Dose; 5 cc, 3 times a day for 5 dias
 
GREMILTAL
CAPSULES
Oseltamivir 75 mg Best Anti-Flu medicine. Kills all infuenza
and seasonal flu. 
 
AMOBAY
CAPSULAS 500 mg
Amoxiciline capsules Bacterial Infections like Upper Respiratory
Infections like SINUS, PHARINGITYS and simple SKIN
INFECTIOUS skin infections. Dose: one capsule 3 times a
day
Peniciline Type. cautiion if allergic
AMOBAY
SUSP 250 mg  
Amoxiciline liquid form Bacterial Infections like Upper Respiratory
Infections like SINUS, MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS,
PHARYNGITIS and simple SKIN infections. Dose: 5 cc 3
times a day
Peniciline, cautiion if allergic
BACTRIM-
F COMPRIMIDOS
Trimetoprim / Sulfametoxazole tablets Bacterial Infections like Upper Respiratory
Infections like  MEDIAL
EAR INFECTIONS, PHARYNGITIS and simple SKIN infections
and UTI. Dose: One tab 2 times a day
Sulfa Type antibiotic. Good choice for
allergic to peniciline but not for those allergic to
Sulfa
BACTRIM
SUSPENSION
Trimetoprima / Sulfametoxazol liquid Bacterial Infections like Upper Respiratory
Infections like MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, PHARYNGITIS and
simple SKIN infections and UTI. Dose: 5-10 cc 2 times a
day
Sulfa Type antibiotic. Good choice for
allergic to peniciline but not for those allergic to
Sulfa
AUGMENTIN
12H Jr SUSP 400 MG
Amoxiciline + Clavulanic Acid Children
liquid form
MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, SINUS AND BEGINING
BROCHITIS, UNRINARY TRACT INFECTIOUS. Doses one every 12
hours for 10 days: (calculate 40 mg of Amoxicillin per
kilo, per day divided in 2 doses) 
Penicilin type, caution if allergic. Always
must be taken with food. Never with stomach empty.
AUGMENTIN
12 H TABLETAS (875/125 MG)
Amoxiciline + Clavulanic Acid Tablets MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, SINUS AND BEGINING
BROCHITIS, UNRINARY TRACT INFECTIOUS. Doses one every 12
hours for 10 days
Penicilin type, caution if allergic. Always
must be taken with food. Never with stomach empty.
AZITROMICINA
TAB 500 MG
Azitromicine 3 tab 500 mg MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, SINUS AND BEGINING
BROCHITIS, Traveler diarreha. Doses: One every 24 hours
for 3 days
Non-penicilin antibiotic, good choice for
those allergic to peniciline.
ADEL
SUSP 250
Claritromicine liquid 250 mg for Childrens MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, SINUS AND ACUTE
BROCHITIS, WHOOPING COUGH, SKIN INFECTIONS Doses: One
dose every 12 hours for 5-10 days. (Calculate:15 mg per
kilo per day divided in 2)
Non-penicilin antibiotic, good choice for
those allergic to peniciline.
ADEL
TABLETAS 500 MG
Claritromicina tab. 500 mg co 10 MEDIAL EAR INFECTIONS, SINUS AND ACUTE
BROCHITIS, WHOOPING COUGH, SKIN INFECTIONS Doses: One
dose every 12 hours for 5-10 days. 
Non-penicilin antibiotic, good choice for
those allergic to peniciline.
CIPROFLOX
CAPS 500 MG w/12 TABS
Ciprofloxacin 500 mg tabs For infections in URINARY TRACT AND
DIGESTIVE TRACT. Dose: 1 every 12 hours
DIARREHA 3-5 DAYS  FOR UTI 10 DAYS
TREATMENT
PIRIMIR
TAB 100 mh
Phenazopiridine  Antiseptic for the UTI. Controls the burning
- semsation. Dose; one tab 3 or 4 times a day
 
EVOCS
III TAB 500 MG w/7 unit
Levofloxacin tabs. Wide spectrum antibiotic for severe
infections like: BRONCHITIS, NEUMONIA, SALMONELLA,
INFECTION ON BONES, KIDNEY, UTI, INTESTINE. Dose: one a
day for 7 to 14 days
Non-penicilin antibiotic, good choice for
those allergic to peniciline. Restricted before 18
year-old.
SOPHIXIN  OFTALMICO   GTS Ciprofloxacine oftalmic / eye drops For mild to severe BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS.
Dose; 2 drops every 4-6 hours. 
Avoid to be used in childrens if possible
INFALIN
DUO GTS
Ciprofloxacine otic / ear drops (plus
cortisone)
For EXTERNAL EAR CHANEL INFECTION including
SWIMERS EAR. Dose; 15 drops 3 times a day
 
POLIXIN
GTS OFT
Polimixin-Bacitracin-Neomicin / eye drops For mild BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS. Dose; 2
drops every 4-6 hours. 
Specialy Usefull in childrens
MAXITROL
GTS OFTALMICA
Dexametasona / Fenilefrina / Neomicina For mild to severe BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
that requires Cortisone as an anti-inflammatory and
anti-allergic. Dose; 2 drops every 4-6 hours. 
Avoid use in childrens. Never extend the
treatmente more than 2 days.
MUPIROCINA  UNG Mupirocina ointment / topical Antibiotic for all type of SKIN INFECTIONS.
Dose; apply 1 to 3 times a day as needed
 
GYNO-DAKTARIN
- DUAL OV Y CRA 3 DIAS
Miconazol / Clotrimazol (cream y vaginal
supositories)
for YEAST INFECTION. Directions; one
supository a day for 3 days, cream in for external areas
 
       
COLD AND COUGH SYMPTOMATIC
HELPS
AMBROXOL
SOL.
Ambroxol  Sol
100 ml
Powerfull expectorant for PRODUCTIVE COUGH,
like in bronchitis. Dose: 10 cc 3 times a day
Very safe, no side effects
ALIREN
CAPSULES
Amantadin, clorpherinamine and paracetamol Antiviral Decongestant for COLD AND SINUS
symptoms. Dose; one tab 2 times a day
May Cause Sleepiness. Caution in Patient
with High Blood Pressure and heart conditions.
TESALON
CAPSULES
Benzonatato caps Effective Cough Supresant for DRY COUGH.
Dose; one o two capsules 3 times a day
 
SENSIBIT
D NF TAB 
Loratadina-paracetamol-fenilefrina Combination to kill all syntoms of FLU.
Dose: 2 tabletas 2 times a day
Safe for patients with high blood pressure
       
ANTIALERGIC, CORTISONE,
ANTIHISTAMINIC
DIPROSONE
CRA
Betametason cream Topical Cortisone for ECZEMA, REACTIVE
DERMATITIS. Dosis; apply in the affected areas 2 times a
day 
Caution in childrens
ELOMET
UNG OR LIQUID
Mometasone ointment and lotion Most Effective topicall Cortisone, with
minimal side effects. Ointment is for small areas,
lotion for extensive areas or hairy skin. Dose: apply 2
times a day
Safe in children
TRIDERM
CREMA
Betametason-Clotrimazol-Gentamicin Topical combination of Anti-inflammatory,
antibiotic and antifungal cream. For INFECTED
DERMATITIS, BURNS (1st and 2nd DEGREE). Dosis; Apply 2
or 3 time a day  
 
CETIRIZINA
TAB. 10 MG
Cetirizine tablets Oral Anti-histaminic for ALL TYPE OF
ALLERGIES. Dose: One a day by mouth 
Do not cause sleepiness. Safe for adults
with High Blood Pressure
BENADRYL
JBE
Difenhidramine Jbe. 120 ml Oral Anti-histaminic for ALL TYPE OF
ALLERGIES, also as a SLEEP AID and COUGH SUPRESANT.
Dose: One a tablet 3 times a day by mouth 
May Cause Sleepiness. Caution in Patient
with High Blood Pressure and heart conditions, Do not
use in children under 2 years-old.
BENADRYL
TAB
Difenhidramine tab 25 mg Oral Anti-histaminic for ALL TYPE OF
ALLERGIES, also as a SLEEP AID and COUGH SUPRESANT.
Dose: One a tablet 3 times a day by mouth 
May Cause Sleepiness. Caution in Patient
with High Blood Pressure and heart conditions, Do not
use in children under 2 years-old.
PREDNISONE
5 MG TAB
Prednisone tab Oral Steroid for SEVERE ALLERGIES. Dose: 4
tabs a day and reduce 50% of dose every 3 days. Never
extend the use of this for more than 25 days
 
       
STOMACH, AND DIGESTION
ISSUES
BUSCAPINA
DUO TAB, 
Butilhioscine / Paracetamol Abdominal Cramps reliever, usefull in
DIARREHA, MENSTRUAL CRAMPING. Dose: one 3 times a day
FOR 3-5 DAYS MAX
 
PLASIL
ENZIMATICO TAB
Methoclopramide,
Dimeticona/Pancreatina/Bilis de buey/Aspergilus Niger
grageas
Digestive enzymes for BAD DIGESTION
syndrome. Dose: one o two before every meal
 
FLEET
ENEMA RECTAL ADULTO
Fosfato de Sodio Enema In case of severe CONSTIPATION. Dose:
Intoduce the fluid by the rectum. Repeat in necessary
case
 
NOPAL
& LINAZA POWDER
Nopal Fiber and broken flat seed Natural Laxative with fiber to prevent and
treat CHRONIC CONSTIPATION. Dose; one or 2 spoons at bed
time every day
 
SENOSIAIN
SUPOSITORIOS ADULTO C/5
Glicerine Glicerine Supositories in case of
constipation. Dose; apply by rectum as need it. No
medicated
 
IMODIUM
GRA
Loperamida To reduce bowel movements like in DIARREHA.
Dose: one tab 3 or 4 times a day
Do not use if 
diarreha contens blood or there are fever.
RIOPAN
GEL FCO
Magaldrato / Dimeticona Effective Antiacid in case of ACIDITY AND
ACID REFLUX. Dose; 1-2 tablespoons
 
OMEPRAZOL
CAPS 20 
Omeprazol cap 20 mg  To reduce acidity production in case of
GASTRITIS OR STOMACH ULCERS. Dose; one capsules 2 times
a day for 2 weeks
 
BONADOXINA
GTS
Meclizina tab. 25 mg For NAUSEA, VERTIGO AND VOMITING. Dose; one
tab 3 times a day
 
BONADOXINA
TAB
Meclizina / Piridoxina For NAUSEA, VERTIGO AND VOMITING in
children. Dose; 10-20 drops 3 times a day
 
WOUND CARE SUPPLIES
MICRODACYN
60 SPRAY
Hiperoxidant 
Antiseptic
Kills all type of bacteria in skin and any
surface. Apply gently gets skin sterile for procedures,
prevent wound get infected. Does not requires rinse it
and can be used to rinse other antiseptics.
Perfect for people with allergy to iodine. 
YODOPOVIDONA
SOL.
Iodine in soap formulation To clean deeply severe wounds, Kills all
type of bacteria. 
Needs to be rinsed. Do not use in allergy to
Iodine
STERI-STRIP  Strips for wound closure Apply over clean and dry skin.   
STERILE
WATER FOR IRRIGATION
Sterile water 500 ml To clean and rinse wounds Once the bottle is open must be used within
one week. Sterile condition gone when is opened
AGUA
OXIGENADA 500 ML
Hydrogen Peroxyde To irrigate wounds   
STERILE
GAUZE 10 X 10
  To clean wounds and make wound dressing  
TRANSPORE
TAPE
Plastic porous tape Multiple uses  
MICROPORE
TAPE
Paper porous tape Mutiple uses  
ELASTIC
BANDAGES
Cotton Elastic Bansages in several sizes Multiple uses They are abvailabe in size (width): 5 cm,
7.5, 10 cm, 15 cm. 
WHITE
VINAGER  LT
Acetic Acid Use it as an organic solvet to treat
JellyFish bites
Use it diluted in 5 parts of plain water
ALCOHOL
GEL
Ethanol on gel Use it as an organic solvet to treat
JellyFish bites
Use it direct of affected area.
HOJAS
DE BISTURI
Esterile Surgical Blade Multiple uses VERY SHARP
GUANTES
ESTERILES LATEX
Esterril Latex Gloves Multiple uses they come in 3 sizes: small, medium and big
ARGENTAFIL  Silver Sulfatiazine (Silvadene) Antiseptic for wounds, burns, instruments
and surfaces
It is available is spray and cream.
XYLOCAINA
SPRAY OR PISACAINA SPRAY
Lidocaine Local Anesthetic for mucoses (mouth, nose,
ear, vagina, anus)
 
PISACAINA
2% VIALS 10 cc
Lidocaine Injectable local anesthetic  
PONTI
OFTENO SOL. GOTAS OFTALMICO
Tetracaine Local anesthetic for eye  
Lisa
Lucky

Lucky Chucky & Lisa

HO’OKIPA

4) Panama Posse Gathering @ Marina Chiapas

Panama
          Posse group
Sharon
Riley
Crew
Malolo
Malolo
Margie
Bob

Riley, Sharon & Crew | Matt & Britt  | Bob and
Margie

Azaya, Malolo & Blessed Life

5) Punta Mala, Panama
Punta Mala is well named. Beware
14 hours of crap head seas to make Vista Mar into the teeth of
the wind. It rarely relents.
Many waves over our 10’ deck. One green over the Flying
bridge. 80’ Hatteras.
We still were able to make 6 knots. Not fun.
Angelique is now at Flamenco. 5 power outages so far. $2.50 a
foot a day.

Punta
          Mala
Dan
Angela

Dan & Angela

ANGELIQUE

6) Tehuantepec
Crossing

Blessed Life
Blessed Life
Blessed Life
Blessed Life
Margie
Bob

SV Blessed Life in Marina Chiapas! A very good crossing.

Bob and Margie

BLESSED LIFE

Picture of the Week
Chris

7) PICTURE OF THE WEEK

Surf at Tenacatita, MX

Chris

SEAGLUB

La
              Cruz
Nicole
Keenan
Audrey
Garrett
Lisa
Lucky
Bob
Sarah
Suzanne

8) Panama Posse Gathering in La Cruz, MX


Keenan & Nicole, Garrett & Audrey, Lisa
& Lucky,
Sarah & Bob, Suzanne

MAISON DE SANTE, THISLDU,
HO’OKIPA, RHAPSODY,
Carinthia

Bahia del Sol

9) Bahía del Sol, El Slavador

Sunrise this morning   from Neshuma in Bahía del Sol.
Hanging with fellow Posse members Gargole and Wave Dancer.
Beautiful stopCarl & Cynthia

NESHUMA

10) Bahia Cabeza Negra, Mexico

Cabeza Negra

Heading South and anchored in Bahia Cabeza Negra last night,
49 NM South of Manzanillo.
Set main + stern anchors and had a smooth and calm night. 
After we set both anchors, a small fishing boat came up to us
from shore,
welcomed us and asked if we needed anything.
He spoke excellent English and he said to call on VHF channel
10 or 12 if we needed anything.

Our anchorage @ Cabeza Negra = 18°36'N 103°42'W

Jay
Kelley

Phillip Jay & KelleyJO

11) Please reply to this
email with

– your updates
contenders for picture of the week
links to your favorite SONGS
– relevant blog posts – and of course your
valuable suggestions

and we’ll include it in the next FLEET UPDATE
– Keep em ‘coming

Dietmar
Suzanne

The Panama Posse philosophy is to pass on nautical knowledge
via the gestalt theory...

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

12) Opt-out from Fleet
Updates simply reply with “REMOVE

Panama Posse Burgees

Jungle Anchorages in Central America

FLEET UPDATE 2020-02-02

  • Thanks to our Marinas Sponsors, Partners and Ambassadors
  • Picture of the Week - Sunrise in Chamela, MX
  • Additional Pictures - Amapala, Honduras
  • Fishing for the Dorado off Costa Rica
  • Watch out for Large Fish Pens near Quepos, Costa Rica
  • Los Haitises National Park, Dominican Republic
  • Costalegre, Mexico
  • Puerto Vicente, Guerrero, MX
  • Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua
  • SECURITY REMINDER
  • Longlines - what's your plan ?
  • Panama Posse Crew  
  • LINE.me - group calls every Monday at 16:00 UTC
  • Open CPN & Free .mbtiles for all Panama Posse participants
  • DANGER Marina Chahue, MX  - not dredged completely
  • Puerto Angel, MX
  • Anchoring in the dark with the help of Good Nautical, Acapulco MX
  • Save the Date May 30th 2020 - PANAMA POSSE FINALE PARTY @ VISTA MAR, PANAMA
  • Happy Sailing - send us updates
  • Opt Out

1) We want to thank all of our Sponsors Partners and Ambassadors 

Predict Wind

SPECIAL: Predict Wind has offered a 20% discount to the Panama Posse on new subscriptions and just launched their new tracking tool

https://www.predictwind.com/yb3i/

Official Panama Posse Sponsors

Official Panama Posse Marinas

  • Marina Puerto Vallarta, Puerto Vallarta – Mexico 
  • Marina Puerto de La Navidad – Barra de Navidad – Mexico 
  • Marina Ixtapa, Ixtapa – Mexico 
  • La Marina Acapulco, Acapulco – Mexico 
  • Marina Chiapas – Mexico 
  • Marina Bahia del Sol – El Salvador 
  • La Palma Moorings – Bahia del Sol, El Salvador 
  • Marina Puesta del Sol – Nicaragua 
  • Marina Papagayo – Costa Rica 
  • Marina Pez Vela – Costa Rica 
  • Banana Bay Marina – Costa Rica 
  • Vista Mar Marina – Panama 
  • Shelter Bay Marina – Panama 
  • Red Frog Marina – Panama 
  • Bocas Marina – Panama 

Official Panama Canal Agent

Official Panama Posse Ambassadors

Panama Posse Partners

2) PICTURES OF THE WEEK
Sunrise in Chamela, MX

Sunrise in Chamela

Gary Picture by Julie Burch
ROSA-LEE

3) Additional PICTURES
Amapala, Honduras

AZAYA

SV Azaya, traveled to Amapala, Honduras from Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua such a lovely welcome to Honduras


Riley, Sharon & Crew

Riley
Sharon
Crew

AZAYA
4) SMOOTH WATERS - Fishing for the Dorado off Costa Rica.

Angelique

Got a big one. Yummy

Dan
Angela

Dan & Angela

ANGELIQUE

5) WATCH OUT for Large Fish Pens near Quepos, Costa Rica
Transiting IVO Quepos CR note: large fish pens 9 25.2’N 84 16.8’W. Marked on Navionics but only at highest zoom.

Transiting IVO Quepos CR note: large fish pens 9 25.2’N
            84 16.8’W. Marked on Navionics but only at highest zoom.

note: Dangers are highly visible in Good Nautical at any zoom level

Dangers

Dennis, Brandy & Crew

Dennis
Brandy
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew
Crew

ANKYRIOS

Note 2 Good Nautical is now mobile friendly

6) Los Haitises National Park, Dominican Republic

AY
            CARAMBA !

Yesterday we visited the Caves in the Haitises National Park
It was cool! The anchorage here is good. Very pretty, excellent swell protection.
There is a short fetch for the prevailing easterly, so not a problem holding put,
but I'm looking forward to the wind laying down tonight. 

Ay
          Caramba

Only issue is too many jelly fish to swim,
and a skipper too lazy to take the dingy out to check out the Caño Hondo.

AY CARAMBA !

Juan & Michelle

7) Costalegre, Mexico

Chris

Look MOM - single-handed spinnaker run
Chris
SEAGLUB

8) Puerto Vicente, Guerrero, MX

JEAN
          ANNE,Steve & Chelsea
JEAN
          ANNE,Steve & Chelsea

JEAN ANNE

Steve & Chelsea

9) Good morning from Puesta del Sol, Nicaragua.  So good to see lots of Posse Boats here!

Talisien Rose
TALIESIN ROSE

Rowan Victoria & Crew

TALIESIN ROSE

10) IMPORTANT SECURITY REMINDER

 The state department has a new system to track US citizens:

"We encourage all U.S. citizens who are traveling abroad to
enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) to
receive Alerts and make it easier to locate you in an emergency.
https://step.state.gov/step/

Kind regards,

US EMBASSY

American Citizen Services Unit (ACS)

Always lock your dinghy - especially if you go on shore.
Tie it to a sturdy pole or tree and remove any valuables.

Thieves are opportunists may swim out to cut your dinghy's painter and
then use rocks on the beach to break off locks.
Please use a (PAD) lock with a difficult point of attack and a heavy chain

or re-in-forced stainless steel  wire - see a sample lock below.

 

Stan
Diane

CROSSROADS ( from last season )
SAFETY/SECURITY TELEPHONE NUMBERS
(Diane last season actually called every number)

U.S. COAST GUARD RESCUE COORDINATION CENTER
    Rescue Coordination Center:  (510) 437-3701.  This is the number for group receiving EPIRB emergency beacon distress signals.  They will coordinate with local country Coast Guards if boater is outside of the U.S. and they have translators, as the numbers at the local country Coast Guards in Central America will speak Spanish.  They said it would be ok to call them in emergency.

CENTRAL AMERICA COUNTRY COAST GUARD CONTACT NUMBERS
    These numbers were given to me by the U.S. Coast Guard Rescue Coordination Center.  The individuals from these local Coast Guards will speak Spanish when you call them.  If you cannot communicate with them, the Rescue Coordination Center can call them, but that will take more time.
 
  El Salvadore Coast Guard:  (505) 22500210,   Extension 5103
    Nicaragua Coast Guard:      (504)22342507
    Costa Rica Coast Guard:      (506) 22314924
    Panama Coast Guard:           (507) 60451197

CALIFORNIA COAST GUARD OFFICES WHO COULD BE  called if you cannot reach rescue coordination center, however the local coast guards will likely just go through the Rescue Center:
    Coast Guard Sector LA/Long Beach:  310 521-3815
    Channel Islands office:  805 985-9822

VHF EMERGENCY CHANNEL FOR MAYDAY: 16

U.S. COAST GUARD EMERGENCY SSB CHANNELS
MHZ                     UTC time
4.125        2300-11
6.125        24 hr.
8.290        24 hr.
12.290        1100-2300

HAM SSB NETS

World wide emergency Ham net:  14.313    24 hr.
Pacific Seafares Net 14300 @ 0300 UTC 
Central America Ham net:  7.083   UTC time 1300

CENTRAL AMERICA EMBASSY CONTACT INFORMATION.  Go to www.usembassy.gov/ for further information.  For Central America embassies, emergency number is +1-202-501-4444, and press “0”,  from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. EST.  When dialing embassy numbers below probably start with “ +” depending on phone service.   

    COSTA RICA
    +506 2519 2000
    Calle 98 Via 104, Pavas,     San Jose, Costa Rico

    EL SALVADOR
    +503 2501 2999
    Final Blvd. Santa Elena,     Antiguo Cuseatlan, La Libertad,     San Salvador   

    GUATEMALA
    +502 2326 4000
    Avenida Reforma 7-01, Zona 10, Guatemala Cuidad, Guatemala

    HONDURAS
    +504 2238 5114 (after hours X4100)
    +504 2236 9320 (per embassy website, but not communications received:  011-504 2236 9320)
    Avenida La Paz,     Tegucigalpa MDC, Honduras

    MEXICO
    +52 55 5080-2000
    Paseo de la Reforma 305, Colonia Cuauhtenoc,     06500 Mexico, DF

    NICARGUA
    +505 2252-7100
    Kilometer 5.5 Carreter Sur, Managua, Nicagagua

    PANAMA
    +507 317 5000
    Bldg 783, Demetrio Basilio Lakas Ave, Clayton, Panama

REPORT U.S. CITIZEN MISSING ABROAD:  1-888-407-4747

GLOBAL MARINE DISTRESS SAFETY SYSTEM:      1-888-407-4747, press “0” for overseas citizen emergency services.

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION MARITIME ADMINISTATION, OFFICE OF MARITIME SECURITY. 

They provide information on piracy and safety and security, and you can sign up for alerts by going online.
    Emergency:  1-202-501-4444 (8-8 EST, M-F)

Stan & Diane

CROSSROADS

11) LONGLINES - what's your plan ?

Picture of a Long Line @ 19° 04.435' N,  104° 42.369 W - they move from 100 feet off shore to up to 40 nm

Longlines

12) PANAMA POSSE - NEED CREW - SIGN UP AS CREW

We will email every crew to those vessels who have added themselves to
the "vessels looking for crew" list

To request crew go here https://panamaposse.com/crew

Crew
Crew 2

Results may vary ...


We will forward every email every of crew looking to join vessels to those who signed up looking for crew - if you know folks who want to become crew - send them to this link to sign up ->

https://panamaposse.com/crew-looking-for-a-vessel

YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Panama Posse
Line

13) Line.me
weekly Panama Posse conference calls on MONDAYS
@ 15:45 UTC   warm up
@ 16:00 UTC  all mikes on mute
@ 16:30 UTC  counter posse ( northbound )

Pending Line

Remember to practice muting and un-muting your mike

GREENIS MUTED - White mike is OPEN

MUTED
OPEN

– Register using your vessel name as the USERNAME (example Carinthia or CARINTHIA_Dietmar)
– the LINE system allows for up to 200 live conference call participants  !
Search for dietmarpetutschnig and send a messagewait and accept your panamaposse20192020 GROUP INVITEsend us your position via the message system and listen to the vessel check instab
>

Location 

Adjust the blue marker

tap the grey box 

14)  Free .mbtiles for all Panama Posse participants which work deliciously with OpenCPN 5.0

Thanks to the incredible work by Rob from Avant we now have 20+Gig of mbtile satellite charts for the entire coastal route available -

Download the whole chart enchilada from http://route.panamaposse.com/charts/mbtiles_central_america/

opencpn

If you are lucky to see Rob or Debra - buy 'em a beer / ice cream sundae
- they deserve it having spend weeks compiling this info  !

Rob
Debra

SV AVANT

Rob & Debra

15) Marina Chahue - Dredge is not complete !!!

Pilialoha was aground in Marina Chahue - Bottom Line up front: marina is serviceable to 6 ft keelboats if you come in at high tide. Wed 29 Jan - Immediately upon entering marina chahue basin from the access canal our 39 ft boat with 6 ft keel came to a soft stop. Depth gauge indicated 4 feet. After powering back and forth, left and right, we became unstuck and were able to proceed. In earlier calls to marina we were reassured first that there was 8 ft and then 3.5 meters throughout at low tide. So we went in confidently. Later saw that we went in 1.5 hour after low tide and depth was 2 ft 4 inches from mean. Depth gauge indicated 4 ft.  Marina staff shared that dredging company did not meet 3.5 meter requirement and there are several low spots. They are working with the company to address the issue at some unknown time.

Marina Chaue

Anchorage at Puerto Escondido, MX

Puerto Escondido
Puerto Escondido
Puerto Escondido
Puerto Escondido

Pilialoha anchored today in Puerto Angel on our way to Huatulco, after 45 hours of good winds.
Puerto Angel is gorgeous. We had to check in with Capitania de Puerto.

Lat 15 39.874 N
Lon 096 29.655 W
@ 30 ft

Rick & Maria

PILIALOHA

16) Anchoring in the dark with the help of Good Nautical, Acapulco MX

Pictures from Blessed LIfe

Yeaaa Good Nautical!
We are anchored in Acapulco at a lat /long spot posted in 2015. In the dark!

Yeaaa Good Nautical! We are anchored in Aculpulco at a
            lat /long spot posted in 2015. In the dark!

Bob & Margie

Bob
Margie

BLESSED LIFE

17) SAVE THE DATE
Panama Posse 2019-2020 Finale Party 
Saturday May 30th, 2020 

And of course the May 30th, 2020  Vista Mar  Panama Posse welcome party extravaganza !

Vista Mar Marina
Suzanne
Dietmar

18) HAPPY SAILING Please reply to this email with any 
updates
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Updates.
Please take pictures of your celebrations and excursions

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

19) Opt-out from Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"


FLEET UPDATE 2020-01-26

  • GYRE ALERT, Golfito, Costa Rica
  • GOOD NAUTICAL "DANGER CATEGORY"
  • YAMAHA Parts in ACAPULCO, MX
  • PICTURE OF THE WEEK
  • BAHIA SANTIAGO, MANZANILLO, MEXICO
  • DUTY FREE - GOLFITO, COSTA RICA
  • DISTILLERY, TENECATITA RIVER, MX
  • NORTHERN COSTA RICA
  • PANAMA CANAL
  • PANAMA CANAL
  • COUNTER POSSE PARTY @ VISTA MAR MARINA
  • VISTA MAR LOGISTICS, PANAMA
  • COSTA RICA PICTURES
  • BAHIA ELENA, COSTA RICA
  • LINE.me call Monday @ 16:00 UTC
  • REPLY
  • OPT-OUT

1) Gyre Alert, near Golfito, Costa Rica
When transiting Golfito - Armuelles (either way) watch carefully in the area of 8° 15.513' N  83° 5.165' W on the Costa Rica side of punta balsa as there is a ~2 mile diameter
tidal gyre filled with semi submerged debris. I suspect it moves n-s with the tides.
Anduril, who we were travelling in company with, struck a 2’ diameter 30’ long semi-submerged log
(thankfully with no damage) and we saw many other dangerously large pieces, all of which showed signs of long term immersion. 

Not sure how to enter a passage note in goodnautical. (Something not anchorage related). 
Thanks, Rob & Debra

Rob
Debra

AVANT

2) Good Nautical has just added a new category called Danger

said Gyre has been added !

They are now clearly marked - you can add dangers by simply double clicking
on the sat image at the location or clicking the ADD button - we'll add the dinghy theft areas from season 1 this week

Dangers are now a distinct category in Good Nautical

3) YAMAHA Parts in ACAPULCO, MX
This may be interesting to boats stopping in Acapulco.
There is a store near La Marina Acauplco that sells genuine Yamaha parts. 

Yamaha

Implementos el Pescador
+52 744 483 4359
http://implementoselpescador.com/
Velázquez de León 42, El Parazal, 39300 Acapulco de Juárez,
@  16°51'10.3"N 99°54'13.3"W

We did not go personally because the mechanic we hired was nice enough to go for us so
I cannot speak for the selection, but he was able to buy genuine Yamaha branded spark plugs right off the shelf.

Brian & Liz

Liz
Brian

HALF MOON 

3) PICTURES OF THE WEEK

SLATAIR III

Saltair III - Las Perlas, Panama
Brad, Krista & Cole

SALTAIR 3

Delta

Cindy & MarcDELTA SWIZZLER

4) Bahia Santiago (Manzanillo), México

Sunken

The vessel that sank in 1965 at Bahia de Santiago (Manzanillo) August 6th 1965, in Bahia Santiago (Manzanillo) México a cargo ship sank, it was owned by Naviera de California.
This big boat was built in UK by West Hartlepool and launched as Arguill. ,In 1940 it was sold to Compagnie du boleo and
named San Luciano.,Now this boat lies 9m underwater and it became a reef and home of several sea creatures.
Location: Almost 300 yards off the beach in Santiago Bay at "playa La Boquita" (Manzanillo) 

Sunset

Sunset while sailing between Lázaro Cárdenas and Isla Grande (Ixtapa)

Jim & Zyanya

Jim
Zyanya

LILY ROWAN

5) DUTY FREE - GOLFITO, COSTA RICA
Anduril and Avant enjoyed a day of duty free shopping in Golfito this week.  Here is the drill.   Take a taxi to the Duty Free Zone and present your passports at the ticket windows shown in the photograph.   You will each be given a free ticket authorizing purchases of up to 1,800,800 colones (about $3000 USD). The ticket is valid for the whole year starting the next day but can only be used for one shopping trip.  The 1 day wait is to show you have been in Golfito overnight.   If you just want to look without making a purchase just walk right in.   

Return the next day, or later.   When you make your purchases at the various shops, your ticket will be updated.  Present your used ticket at the Exit.  Greg and I put all our purchases on his ticket so we still have my ticket for when we return in a month.

Most of the shops sell large appliances and kitchenware.   There is also beer, wine, liquor, clothes, shoes, cosmetics, shampoo, and a very small selection of dry groceries. There were no cameras or cigarettes when we were there.

The discounts for the alcohol was less than half the regular price charged in super markets in Costa Rica.

Frontera Sauvignon Blanc - 2000 colones

Tanqueray Gin - 7076 colones

Jose Cuervo Tequila - 6274 colones

24 beer - about $10 USD

If you’re heading north, don’t forget to stock up on Tequila.   Bahia Del Sol is a great stop and tequila is always appreciated there.

Anduril

Ticket window

Loading up

It is a myth that all Canadians drink a lot.

Anduril 3

Best wine prices at Store # 22.

Duty Free Location
http://www.goodnautical.com/costa-rica/point-interest/duty-free-zone-and-shops
Greg
Alice

Greg & Alice

ANDURIL

6) Tenactita River, MX

Who knew....?  Up the Tenactita river there is a Raicilla distillery (tequila just not the same agave plant). These guys age the Raicilla for 17 years!! This stuff was great, call Alejandro to set up the free taxi at the end of the river, Pancho will pick you and give you the free tour and testing, then you can stay and eat some excellent food. They make money by you purchasing some of the Raicilla.

Raicilla
there

Chris

Chris

SEAGLUB

7) Northern Costa Rica

We departed Papagayo and spent one night at Playa Panama across the bay. There’s a resort there with a restaurant, but we didn’t go ashore.

We had already visited Tamarindo by land, so we anchored at Playa Grande where it was much quieter than over in the city.  We did enjoy Tamarindo when we went there. Lots of restaurants and Witch’s Rock has a brewery with great craft beers and live music on the weekend.

Next was Bahía Samara.  There are two anchorages.  The western one is easier to get into, but the reefs don’t do a good job of blocking the swells except at low tide.  The eastern one, which is marked in Navionics needs to be accessed via a channel between a reef and an island.  It’s not accessible from the main bay because it’s very shallow between the reef and the beach.  There were several restaurants ashore.

Bahía Ballena also has two anchorages, east & west.  Pick the one blocking the swells.  We anchored in the eastern one in about 17ft.

Bahía Herradura, which is only 20nm from Ballena is pretty crowded and we didn’t see anything on the beach.  Lots of condos and a private marina crowded with sport fishing boats.

Now we’re in Marina Pez Vela.  We’re not in any hurry and we’re studying Spanish, so we decided to take advantage of the Posse discount and spend up to a month here.
- Daily rate for 45ft is $127.12, Monthly $1,220.40 plus elect/water.
- Water is potable (~100ppm) but metered. 
- Lots of tours available either through the concierge or in Quepos. 
- Several restaurants at the marina, but no pool or Jacuzzi. 
- There’s a free shuttle to the park, but we haven’t checked it out yet.
- Wi-fi is free and good, but not great.  There’s a nice “Captain’s Lounge” and the wi-fi might be better there.
- Laundry is VERY expensive $5/kilo
- Propane can be filled but the store in Quepos has to send it out on a truck for fill, so it’s not a fast service.  We haven’t done it yet.
- Marina staff are very friendly and enthusiastic.
- FUEL at both Papagayo and Pez Vela was $3.84/gal after taxes & fees.

Playa Grande, Tamarindo 10-19.517’N, 85-51.114W ~30 ft.
If coming from north, don’t go in at an angle; there be rocks.
Bahía Samara 9-52.53’N, 85-31.686W ~20 ft.
Bahía Ballena 9-43.043N, 85-00.666W 17ft
Bahía Herradura 9-38.798N, 84-39.709W 36ft

Bob
Carol

Bob & Carol

SINGULARITY

Trance in the Canal

8) Panama Canal, PANAMA

In the Panama Canal this evening

The directions from the advisor ( Instructions from the Panama Posse  Canal Agent Erick )
are spot on, the only unexpected thing was the monkeys fist is only the size of a baseball. We thought it would be bigger.

Dan


Dan


TRANCE

9) Panama Canal, PANAMA

Destination

M/V Destination successfully transited canal Northbound Jan 13. According to authorities we were the first in history of canal to be measured, pay the fees and assigned a slot on a Saturday and travel thru the next Monday at 7am. Awesome experience. Glad to be in the Caribbean.

Destination
VISTA MAR PANAMA POSSE PARTY
POSSE

10) COUNTER POSSE PARTY @ VISTA MAR MARINA

ELEVEN 11
COMPROMISE
WILDEST DREAMS
SALTAIR 3
MORNING STAR
TRANCE
a.m.o.

11) Picture of Vista Mar Marina

VISTA MAR MARINA
Dan
Angela

Angela & Dan
ANGELIQUE

12) VISTA MAR LOGISTICS, PANAMA

Regarding Vista Mar shipping,  yes the local Mail Boxes etc is great and fast. But very costly if your delivery is heavy.  Delivery is sent to MBE in Miami and they fly it to Panama and MBE in Coronado picks it up. They handle handle the additional cost (air freight,  customs,  etc) and you get charged when you pick it up. I heard, but cannot remember, the name of a company in the US that you order everything through them, they will get it to you.  It might be called Marine Exchange.  Hopefully someone on hear can elaborate. But I do highly recommend MBE for lighter weight items.  It was soooooo easy.

Jeariene
Walt

Marine warehouse in Isla Perico on the Amador causeway coordinated several items purchased and shipped from the states for a very reasonable rate.  Arturo delivered 6 new batteries, a refrigerator and a new mast track to vista mar for $60 on top of that.  Arturo also advised me on how to deliver good via Yacht-in-Transit duty free, and we had a rudder bearing shipped in from Denmark, and a new Genoa shipped in from South Africa, costing $5 and $25 respectively to receive at aduanas in Flamenco Marina...Arturo also hooked me up with barrier coat and antifouling paints....highly recommend Marine Warehouse

Walt & Jeariene

KNOT RIGHT

SQUALLY

13) COSTA RICA PICTURES

Crew
Rowan
Victoria
Crew
Crew

Rowan, Victoria & Crew

TALIESIN ROSE

14) Bahía Elena, COSTA RICA

Neshuma sailed up from Elena yesterday. Beam reach the whole way. Didn't see anything over 33kts.
 Checked in on arrival though the port Captain wasn't here so have to get the National Zarpe today. Bahía Elena was a great stay. Very flat. No swell and no Park Rangers.    Stayed 2 days.   Watch for fisherman on the way up.   They're still out there in the high winds.

If you're wondering about the fishing  boats they were right off Cabo Santa Elena and also in and out of Bahia Santa Elena.    We cut direct to San Juan del Sur and there were 3 we went by in that direct line.
    The two bigger doats were  picking up in both cases at Cabo  around  1300.
   Just a heads up

Carl & Cynthia

NESHUMA

15)Line.me - live fleet line calls on Mondays

Line

 @ 15:45 UTC  Warm up  @ 16:00 UTC  Panama Posse call (mute your mikes)
 @ 16:30 UTC 
Counter Posse Call(mute your mikes)

 Remember to practice muting and un-muting your microphone 

MUTED
OPEN

GREENIS MUTED

White mike is OPEN & we can all hear you

– Register using your vessel name as the USERNAME (example Carinthia or CARINTHIA_Dietmar)
– the LINE system allows for up to 200 live conference call participants  !
Search for dietmarpetutschnig and become a friend wait and accept your panamaposse20192020 GROUP INVITEsend us your position via the message system and listen to the vessel check instab > +   Location  - adjust the blue marker - tap the grey box

16) Please reply to this email with any updates - your vessel location -
contenders for picture of the week - your favorite song for our list -
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Update

The Panama Posse transfer of knowledge and learning process operates under the gestalt theory
We will not tell you what to do, when or how - we want you to to figure it out. YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Suzanne
Dietmar

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

Panama Posse BUrgee

17) opt-out from the Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"


FLEET UPDATE 2020-01-19

  • PREDICT WIND - new Panama Posse Sponsor
  • PLEASE EMAIL US YOUR HEAD SHOTS - if you are on this list
  • BOCAS MARINA Panama  - new Panama Posse Marina Sponsor
  • TOURING COSTA RICA by car ...
  • PICTURES OF THE WEEK
  • SQUASH BLOSSOMS SEASON, MEXICO
  • PANAMA CANAL HIGH SEASON
  • PANAMA CANAL TIME LAPSE VIDEO
  • REMINDER A strong dinghy lock and thick long cable
  • WARNING: REEF JUST OUTSIDE SHELTER BAY MARINA, PANAMA
  • WEEKLY LINE.me call
  • UPDATES
  • OPT-OUT

1) We are very excited to announce that Predict Wind has come on board as an official sponsor of the  Panama Posse

Predict
          Wind

Predict Wind offers the Highest Resolution & Most Advanced Forecasts On The Web & Mobile with
outstanding Accuracy and has worldwide coverage.
below is a you tube video - and stay tuned for details
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeaBV1IpjMA

Additional Partners and Sponsors are:

Panama
          Posse

2) PLEASE EMAIL US YOUR HEAD SHOTS - if you are on this list

 simply reply with your lovely faces

APHRODITE
DUE WEST
ONE LIFE
WISHLIST
MAKANI
STAND DOWN
KOUMBA BANG
ENTERPRISE III
SALPARE
CONTEXT
CYCLADES
SEDNA VI
SEAQUEL
SOUTHERN CROSS III
PILIALOHA
HERITAGE
EVIE
SHAZAM
NESHUMA
ELSKA
SUSIMI
ALTERÉ
LEILANI

Bocas

3) BOCAS MARINA - Bocas del Toro, PANAMA has come on board as a new sponsorship marina

  • discounts on dockage
  • discounts on haul outs
  • discounts on fuel

For reservations and details please contact Luis Fabian
Cell # +507 66166000

Email: bocasyachtclub@yahoo.com
Web: http://www.bocasmarina.comwww.bocasboatyard.comwww.facebook.com/bocasmarina/Phone: +(507) 757-9800 Fax: +(507)757-9801

Bocas

4) Touring Costa Rica by car. Touring Costa Rica by car.  We rented a car here at Marina Papagayo for a week.  We found places to stay by browsing Google Maps and Booking.com and with Airbnb.  On the east coast, Limón is not worth a stop at all but Puerto Viejo de Talamanca was a very nice and quirky seaside village with a fabulous brewpub called Playa Negra Brewing.  
Then we stopped at Quepos and Golfito.  At Golfito, it turns out that Marina Village is completely closed and the reasons aren’t exactly clear.  Some say they’re renovating the docks and will reopen in a few months, others say they went belly-up.  There are two roads between San Jose and Golfito; the coast road and the inland road.  We highly recommend taking one down and the other back because the inland road was an amazingly fabulous drive with lots of beautiful scenery.
We found a great Airbnb just outside San Jose, in Curridabat for about $100.  It was called “Luxury Executive Apartment Curridabat” and it was so nice that we elected to spend a second night there.  The first time we used a car elevator to park!  Rather than drive downtown, we easily caught a bus on the main street and stayed long enough for the brewpubs to open at 18:00 and took an Uber back to the apartment.  We walked down Avenida Central with lots of shops and toured the National Museum.  Craic Irish Pub was great for atmosphere and draft beers, sadly, no Guinness though and no shepherd's pie.  Next door at Bar La Estación, the nachos looked especially good.  All-in-all, we don't think there's a really big draw in going to downtown San Jose. Although we did get to see the world’s ugliest building since the J. Edgar Hoover building - the new home of the Costa Rican Legislature.
Bob & Carol

Bob
Carol

SINGULARITY
NOTE: always lock your car, hide any valuables from plain sight and remove the rental car license plate frame5) PICTURES OF THE WEEK -
oh boy we have so many pictures of the week we can't call it so they all win !
Banana Bay, Golfito, Costa Rica Panama Posse Vessels Taliesin Rose, Anduril, Avant, Angelique, amo

Picture of the Week

Golfito taken by  TALIESIN ROSE

Passage


sunset taken by 
TALIESIN ROSE

Angelique - fish on

Dolphin pod playing in wake taken by  ANGELIQUE

Context

sunrise on passage towards Zihuatanejo taken by CONTEXT

Screen grab of video submitted by ONE LIFE



taken
          by ANDURIL


Golfito Anchorage - taken by  ANDURIL

taken by ANDURIL
Golfito Anchorage - taken by ANDURIL

Golfito  taken by  ANDURIL


Golfito Sunset  - taken by  ANDURIL

Thisldu

3 birds - taken by  THISLDU
6) SQUASH BLOSSOMS SEASON, MEXICO

In Mexico, flores de calabaza (squash blossoms) are most traditionally used in quesadillas. In Oaxaca especially, they’re a standard addition to the most basic quesadilla recipe of mild-flavored Oaxacan cheese and a few of the fresh flowers, cooked inside a handmade corn tortilla and served with an array of salsas.

In Mazatlán, I can find these for four or five months a year at my local farmers market, where they’re sold in a bag of 20 or so for around 80 pesos. In the U.S. squash blossoms are usually from zucchini; here – at least in Sinaloa — they tend to be from those odd, squiggly green-and-white striped squashes called simply calabaza that I’ve never seen or heard of north of the border.

Wherever they’re from, squash blossoms are delicate and won’t last more than a day or two in the refrigerator after they’re picked. Wash them gently in a bowl of cool water and allow them to drain on paper towels, patting them a bit.

Another note: you can substitute requesón for ricotta; it’s almost exactly the same consistency and flavor. Find it fresh from a local dairy or in the deli section at the grocery store, where you can buy however much you want.

Squash

Squash blossoms are a standard addition to quesadillas in Oaxaca. bon appetit

Quesadilla de Flor de Calabaza (Squash Flower Quesadilla)

If you have a comal and know how to use it, you won’t need the directions here on how to make a quesadilla. Otherwise, read on. Use handmade corn tortillas if you can.

  • 2 Tbsp. corn or olive oil
  • ½ white onion, thinly sliced
  • 2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
  • Salt
  • 2 oz. (about ½ cup) Oaxacan, Monterey Jack or other mild cheese, grated
  • 8-10 squash blossoms, stems and stamens removed
  • 4 corn tortillas

Heat oil in a large skillet, preferably cast iron, over medium heat. Cook onion and garlic, stirring occasionally, until soft and golden, 10–12 minutes; season with salt. Transfer to a small bowl and wipe skillet clean.

Heat a tortilla in the same skillet or on a comal over medium-high until golden brown but not crunchy on one side, about a minute. Turn tortilla over and scatter a quarter of the cheese over half of the toasted side. Arrange 2 squash blossoms and some of the onion mixture on top of cheese and fold tortilla in half to create a half-moon. Press down on it lightly to help tortilla adhere.

Continue cooking, turning once or twice and pressing occasionally, until cheese is melted and tortilla begins to brown and crisp in spots (turn down the heat if needed), about 3 minutes. Transfer to a plate. Repeat with remaining ingredients. – From Bon Appetit magazine

Squash Blossom Frittata

  • 12 eggs
  • 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan
  • 2 medium zucchini, rinsed and cut into 2-inch-long julienne strips (about 3 cups)
  • 3 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 onion, chopped fine
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1½ Tbsp. fresh thyme or basil leaves, minced
  • 6-8 zucchini blossoms, pistils removed if desired

In a bowl, whisk the eggs. Add ½ cup of the Parmesan and salt and pepper to taste, and whisk again until combined well. In a 12-inch, non-stick or cast-iron skillet, sauté zucchini in 2 Tbsp. of the oil over moderately high heat, stirring until softened, Using a slotted spoon, transfer to a small bowl.

Add remaining 1 Tbsp. oil to skillet and cook onion and bell pepper over moderate heat, stirring until softened. Add garlic and fresh herbs and cook for 1 minute. Add zucchini and salt and pepper, pour in the egg mixture, and arrange the zucchini blossoms decoratively on top.

Preheat broiler. Meanwhile, cook the frittata on stovetop over moderate heat, without stirring, for 12-15 minutes, or until the edge is set but the center is still soft, and sprinkle remaining ½ cup Parmesan over the top. Broil frittata under the broiler about 4 inches from the heat for 2-3 minutes, or until cheese is bubbling and golden.

Let cool in the skillet 5 minutes, run a thin knife around the edge, and slide the frittata onto a serving plate. Cut into wedges and serve warm or at room temperature. – From

Squash

Epicurious magazine

Baked Squash Blossoms with Apple, Honey & Ricotta

  • 1 lb.ricotta cheese or requesón
  • ¼ cup honey
  • 1 egg white
  • 12-15 squash blossoms
  • Half an apple, shredded
  • 1 whole egg, beaten with a tablespoon of water
  • 2 cups fine sugar cookie crumbs, like Marías

Preheat oven to 350 F. Combine cheese, honey and egg white, and then fold in apple.
Using a teaspoon, carefully stuff the squash blossoms about half full with the cheese mixture.
Twist top of blossom to seal. Brush each blossom with the egg wash, then roll in the crumbs
and place on a greased cookie sheet. Bake for 12-15 minutes, until lightly browned and crisp.
New York Magazine

Savory Stuffed Squash Blossoms

  • 12-15 fresh squash blossoms
  • 1 lb. ricotta or requesón cheese
  • 1 medium onion, chopped fine
  • ½ cup toasted almonds, finely chopped
  • ½ cup grated good Parmesan or asiago cheese
  • ½ tsp. each salt and pepper
  • 3 Tbsp. minced fresh basil
  • 3 Tbsp. minced fresh parsley or cilantro
  • 2 Tbsp. melted butter

Preheat oven to 350 F. Mix together all ingredients except the blossoms and butter.
Carefully stuff blossoms, being careful not to overfill. Arrange on cookie sheet, drizzle
with melted butter and bake for 15 minutes. Serve immediately plain or drizzled with marinara sauce.

Squash

story by Janet Blaser of Mazatlán, Sinaloa - mexiconewsdaily.com

7) High season for the Panama Canal, Panama

Canal

Info from our Sponsor Agent Erick Galvez

Erick

Associated Rates effective 1st January 2020 Transit tolls                      1,600.00 ( up to 65 ft length)
Transit inspection                  54.00
Transit Security fee              130.00
Canal EDCS-Check out           75.00
Fenders & lines rental             75.00 (not tires !!)
Bank charges                          60.00
Agent service Fee                  350.00

WITH A SPECIAL Panama Posse DISCOUNT   $125.00 ( thanks Erick )

Typical Ties ups below

Panama Canal

Erick Galvez Canal Agent
contact

info@centenarioconsulting.com
Centenario & Co.S.A. www.centenarioconsulting.com Cellphone/whatsapp +507 6676-1376

8) PANAMA CANAL TIME LAPSE

To watch a 17 minute time-lapse video of Panama Posse  Season 1 "WIND DANCER"
what it's like to go through the canal South to North  - follow this link !

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcUY8epFr-8&feature=youtu.be

Canal Video

9) REMINDER A strong dinghy lock and thick long cable !!!

Season One of the Panama Posse took the brunt of dinghy thefts and we have identified areas which are prone to dinghy and outboard theft.

Lock

Always bring your dingy and outboard up at night and lock it with a hard lock !

ABUS 92/65 Mono-block Brass Padlock
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005UMBCDW/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_kUZODbHH915CZ

Burgee

10)  WARNING: REEF JUST OUTSIDE SHELTER BAY MARINA, PANAMA


Reminder from 2017  Christian and Vibe, SY Danish Blue

We want to warn other sailors of the reef just outside Shelter Bay Marina, Colon, Panama.
It is not marked and it is very dangerous for sailors arriving at night.
In Shelter Bay Marina we have been told that our sailboat Danish Blue is just one out of 12-13 sailboats,
which have hit the reef within the last 3-4 years. Danish Blue has now been hauled out for almost
4 months to be repaired after lying on the reef for 12-13 hours.
A few days ago, another sailor hit the reef.
The reef is not marked physically in any way.
It can be seen in daylight, but when arriving at night, it is impossible to see the reef.
Also, we have several charts of the area around Shelter Bay Marina, one chart is Eric Bauhaus’.
None of the charts state that there is a reef just outside Shelter Bay Marina.
Instead, the charts state that there is 4,5-5 meters depth on the specific place of the reef.

The position of the reef is:
South to north:
09 22.1895 N 079 56.7121 W
09 22.2948 N 079 56.7436 W
East to west:
09 22.2767 N 079 56.6413 W
09 22.2612 N 079 56.7996 W

Be aware to follow the small green buoys parallel to the breakwater on port side when entering into Shelter Bay Marina –
they are not visible on the charts and they are difficult to see at night.
All the green buoys have to be followed on port side when arriving from the Panama Canal.
The depth on the other side of the green buoys cannot be trusted.

11) LINE.me  - 
Panama Posse Warm up     @ Monday's 15:45 UTC
Panama Posse Line Calls   
@  Monday's 16:00 UTC 
Counter Panama Posse
Line Calls  @  Monday's 16:30 UTC 
- go to https://line.me download the app for iOS or Android
- use your vessel name as your account name / display name
- search for dietmarpetutschnig ( carinthia ) and send a message with your vessel name
- you'll get an invite to join the PanamaPosse line group
- mute your mike ( green line through ) when you join the group call

Line

12) Please reply to this email with any updates - your vessel location -
contenders for picture of the week - your favorite song for our list -
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Update

The Panama Posse transfer of knowledge and learning process operates under the gestalt theory
We will not tell you what to do, when or how - we want you to to figure that out. YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Suzanne
Dietmar

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

Panama Posse BUrgee

13) opt-out from the Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"


Isla Cano

FLEET UPDATE 2019-12-28

  • Sponsors
  • Holiday's in Barra de Navidad, MX
  • Bocas del Toro Marina Parade, Panama PICTURE OF THE WEEK 
  • 2020 PANAMA CITY GUIDE for download
  • 2020 Barra de Navidad Guide for download by Tally from SV Raven
  • Bocas del Toro - Marina - Xmas Parade, Panama
  • SPHERES "bolas" @ Costa Rica at Isla de Caño
  • plundered notes on spheres
  • Cost Rica, Drake Bay
  • The world's noisiest land animals ...
  • Costa Rica Upper Golfo Dulce Anchorages near Golfito
  • LINE weekly call reminder
  • Updates
  • Opt-Out

1) the 2019-2020 Panama Posse is now at 140 vessels and growing and
A big thank you to all of our sponsors
- !

  • Marina Puerto Vallarta, Puerto Vallarta – Mexico 
  • Marina Puerto de La Navidad – Barra de Navidad – Mexico 
  • Marina Ixtapa, Ixtapa – Mexico 
  • La Marina Acapulco, Acapulco – Mexico 
  • Marina Chiapas – Mexico 
  • Marina Bahia del Sol – El Salvador 
  • La Palma Moorings – Bahia del Sol, El Salvador 
  • Marina Puesta del Sol – Nicaragua 
  • Marina Papagayo – Costa Rica 
  • Marina Pez Vela – Costa Rica 
  • Banana Bay Marina – Costa Rica 
  • Golfito Marina Village – Costa Rica 
  • Vista Mar Marina – Panama 
  • Shelter Bay Marina – Panama 
  • Red Frog Marina – Panama 

Official Panama Posse Sponsors

Official Panama Canal Agent

Official Panama Posse Ambassadors

Panama Posse Partners

2) Holiday's in Barra de Navidad, MX
Bookshelf sized decorations and lights on LUNA

Luna

BTW we have gone to Ramon's in Barra for most Seahawks games. They have 2 large TVs.
All of the fish dishes I've tried (grilled fish tacos, garlic mahi fillet dinner, whole snapper dinner, grilled shrimp tacos, octopus dinner) have been excellent!
Service is good, prices are right with each of the above less than 200 MXD pesos, and drink selection very good.

Location

Av. Miguel López de Legazpi # 262, Barra de Navidad, Jal., Mexico

19°12'13.5"N  104°41'02.1"W

Kris & Bob

Bob
Kris

LUNA3) Bocas del Toro Marina Parade, Panama 
- PICTURE OF THE WEEK

Xmas Boat

We had a great time participating in the Bocas del Toro Marina parade on Saturday December 21st.

Prizes

Free night stay in Marina and party afterwards also I included the prizes. Just to let you know.

Cockpit

Happy Holidays

Pati and Eric

Eric
Pati

SHEARWATER
4) 2020 PANAMA CITY GUIDE for dowload

https://panamaposse.com/panama-city-guide
4)   2020 BARRA DE NAVIDAD GUIDE
for download by Tally from SV Raven

Barra

https://panamaposse.com/barra-de-navidad-port-guide-by-tally-from-sv-ravenNeil, Tally, Jan

Neil
Tally
Jan

RAVEN
5) SPHERES "bolas"  Isla de Caño - Costa Rica
(a wild goose chase which will be rewarded with a bottle of rum !) As requested, I am forwarding some info on the spheres found on Isla Caño subsequent to my diving tour there.
There was not a lot of info available, but I did shoot the attached photos of signage on one of the hiking trails on the island and I spoke with the park ranger.

Isla Historiacla Chart

Apparently, the island served as a burial ground for prominent members of a civilization that resided in western mainland Costa Rica before the Spanish conquest.
The stones were brought to the island by these ancient mariners, not carved in place on the island. The significance of the stones is not known.

CANO

Bob Ritner

Bob
Joan

GREEN FLASH
Note:
Caño
get's an insane amount of ligthing strikes
maybe more than any other place in Central America
Starting from mid April through November

lights out

6) plundered notes about these spheres  from Adrián Badilla-  Archaeologist, Department of Anthropology and History
The stone spheres constitute one of the most unique elements of pre-Columbian Costa Rica and suggestive of the archeology of America. The stone spheres have been found in the southeast of Costa Rica, especially in the extensive alluvial plain formed by the Grande de Térraba and Sierpe rivers, but they are also found in the area of ​​Buenos Aires, Coto Brus, the intermontane valley of Pejibaye and the coastal area of ​​Golfito and Uvita including Caño Island. Its manufacture began in the Aguas Buenas Period (300 BC-800 AD), but it is in the Chiriqui Period (800-1500 AD) that the development and use boom takes place.

Since they began to be reported during the beginning of the activity of the Banana Company of Costa Rica (a subsidiary of the United Fruit Company) in the 1930s, many have cataloged them as a true enigma, generating various explanations and speculations, which It has caused an increase in interest in these particular pre-Columbian artifacts.

Spheres

Arranged below the surface

On the other hand, various archaeological studies carried out since the forties relate them to the human groups that inhabited the area before the arrival of the Europeans, explaining them within the sociocultural dynamics that these societies had, and not as a product of natural formations or as an element of unknown civilizations.

 Rounded rocks have been reported in other parts of the world, such as those known in Hunan (China), Zavidovice (Bosnia), Hulín (Czech Republic), South Island (New Zealand), Ahualulco - Sierra de Ameca (Jalisco / Mexico) ), Onoto (Venezuela), Ischigualasto Geopaleontological Park (Argentina), Piauí (Brazil). For some of these, their cultural affinity is under discussion or simply studies have grouped them as products of geological activity.

In addition, some spherical rocks have been found in archeological sites in Mesoamerica: Cerro de la Mesas, San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán and Izapa (Mexico), and Benque Viejo (Belize). These findings are isolated cases and have no cultural relationship with those evidenced in Costa Rica. It also highlights an isolated group on Easter Island (Chile).

In Costa Rica, small boulders have been recorded with some degree of sphericity at late sites, such as Orosí (Cartago), Papagayo (Culebra Bay), Platanillo (Reventazón River Basin), Ta´lari (Chirripó), La Fábrica ( Greece) and Las Mercedes (Central Caribbean). They were perhaps made from contacts or influence of societies in the South Pacific.
However, the stone spheres of southeastern Costa Rica have attributes that differentiate them and make them unique.

Spheres

A big one ( 10+ tons )

1. Its size. The size of the spheres ranges from a few centimeters to 2.5 meters and its weight ranges from a few kilos to 15 tons. Different sizes would have had different functions. Small spheres are associated with perhaps ceremonial structures, while those of greater monumentality were placed in open spaces and at the entrance of the main characters' homes.

2. Its almost perfect sphericity and surfaces with a fine finish. These finishes were the product of the work of specialists and not the result of natural events. They are sculptures, and as such they are identity artifacts

3. Presence of sets of spheres that sometimes form geometric figures or alignments. Doris Stone and Samuel Lothrop reported spheres forming clusters which could have an astronomical and ritual significance, associated with natural cycles and their relationship with the agricultural cycle, or other schedules of the groups that manufactured them. Currently, only two alignments with an east-west orientation are preserved at the Finca 6 site

4. Its association with other cultural elements (pottery, lithic artifacts, gold, architectural structures) within a complex system of social organization. The spheres were mainly used as rank symbols and identity elements supported by the contexts in which they have been found close to artificial constructions, mounds and squares. Investigations on the Finca 6 site have evidenced the use of the spheres: (a) forming two alignments in an open space, (b) placed at the entrance of artificial mounds that served as housing for the main characters, and (c) as an offering within a funeral structure. These spheres are in association with a local ceramic and statuary production.

The archaeological research activities carried out by the National Museum in sites with stone spheres seeks to exceed the simple descriptive and ordination level behind such a particular element in order to make effective a historical apprehension by recent societies. Stone spheres are not inert elements, they are heritage, objects with history

Locaitons

7) Drake Bay and the nearby location of one of the British pirate's fabled hidden treasures
Sir Francis Drake

1540 – 28 January 1596 was an English sea captain, privateer, trader,
naval officer and explorer of the Elizabethan era. ...
Drake's exploits made him a hero to the English, but his privateering
led the Spanish to brand him a pirate, known to them as El Draque.

- only a stone throw from Drake Bay  isIsla del Caño- Howler monkeys and much more ...
8) The world's noisiest land animals are
the howler monkeys (Alouatta) of Central and South America. 
They are also the loudest land animals on Earth, capable of bellowing at volumes
of 140 decibels, which is on the level of gunshots or firecrackers. The males have an enlarged bony structure
at the top of the windpipe which enables the sound to reverberate, and project their screams up to three miles
through dense rain forest.

Howler MOnkeys

Drake Bay Costa Rica - Anchor ⌖ 08° 41.807´ N 083° 39.959´ W @ 25 feet

Drake

Here is all the info
http://www.goodnautical.com/costa-rica/anchorage/drake-bay

Watch for breaking waves just south of the entrance – hence the dogleg to enter this bay via dinghy

Dingnhy drake bay

– Costa Rica dinghy landing area  @ 08° 41.7006 N 83° 40.4448 W
– bring a long non floating line and a dingy anchor – drop the anchor into the middle of the river mouth
( there are a lot of tour boats in here ) and you can tie up to the tour out fit and then push the dingy into the center
– when you return pull the dingy back to the dock with the long line
– as always lock it !

Here is a link to a great guide by SV LIquid on Drake's Bay
http://www.svliquid.com/bahiadrake.html

Marc
Laura

Marc & Laura

LIQUID

9) Costa Rica Upper Golfo Dulce all near Golfito
Several stunning anchorages in the
a pristine deep fjord cruising ground which we will return to again !

Punta Rincon - Anchorage @ 08° 41.764 N 083° 28.702 W -  24.00 ft - calm and 360 degree protection
( enter from center as the port side with the mangroves is very shallow  < 5 feet at low tide )

Bahia Rincon - N - In front of a lovely resort (please get us the contact info) Anchorage @ 8° 43.2163 N 83° 28.7257 W @ 24 feet

Monkey Bay - Stunning - Suzanne's favorite all year and we found it ourselves !
Saw Capuchin Monkeys on the Beach - Spider Monkeys in the tree tops  and heard amazing
amounts of Howler Monkeys with squadrons of Macaws flying by - absolute lovely lush and green backdrop !
Anchorage @ 08° 43.421 N 083° 28.009 W -  12.00 ft (at low tide )

Monkey Bay

Pargo's Cove - Anchorage @ 8° 44.014 N 83° 23.713 W in 10 feet at Low Tide - favor the center and don't go in too deep.
Still nicely tucked away - reefs on both side and lovely islets - and a flat inner sandy bay which we could careen our vessel on.

Pargo's Cove

OSA Wildlife Sanctuary - Animal Refuge - 2 hour tours $25 pp each day at 9 AM with Carol
Anchorage @ 8° 40.653 N 83° 19.5401 W @ 15 feet

Osa

Playa Cativo (5 star Eco Resort w/ pool wifi bar organic farm to table menu)
Anchorage @ 8° 40.2939 N 83° 18.4411 W - 15 feet

Cativo

Call ahead for Lunch or Dinner reservations - 
GM - Allen Mairena +506 8302-1195 / +506 2200-3131
www.playacativo.com

Bar

A neat lounge and lot's of blue butterflies

Keep in mind that the Fjord drops of quickly and deep
with each of these anchorages so you are anchoring on a shelf near shore.

Suzanne & Dietmar

Suzanne
Dietmar

CARINTHIA (2018)

10) LINE
Panama Posse Warm up     @ Monday's 15:45 UTC
Panama Posse Line Calls   
@  Monday's 16:00 UTC 
Counter Panama Posse
Line Calls  @  Monday's 16:30 UTC 
- go to https://line.me download the app for iOS or Android
- use your vessel name as your account name / display name
- search for dietmarpetutschnig ( carinthia ) and send a message with your vessel name
- you'll get an invite to join the PanamaPosse line group
- mute your mike ( green line through ) when you join the group call

Line

11) Please reply to this email with any updates - your vessel location -
contenders for picture of the week - your favorite song for our list -
and we'll include it in the next Fleet Update

The Panama Posse transfer of knowledge and learning process operates under the gestalt theory
We will not tell you what to do, when or how - we want you to to figure that out.
YOUR VESSEL YOUR CREW YOUR RESPONSIBILITY

Suzanne
Dietmar

Dietmar & Suzanne
SV Carinthia

Panama Posse BUrgee

12) opt-out from the Fleet Updates simply reply with "REMOVE"