When we last left our intrepid cruisers, that is – us, we were still in La Cruz entertaining the likes of Tannika and Mathieu and, of course, Monte. That was almost a month ago. It came time to bust ass to Barra de Navidad so we could connect with Vanessa and Melannie, who were going to be there for a Sensory Awareness workshop lead by Lee Klinger Lesser. The reason we had to move quickly was because, sadly, almost as soon as Vanessa landed in Manzanillo, her mom landed in the hospital in Iowa with serious health issues; her survival was tenuous. We made it to Barra by way of Paraiso, where we connected with Tom and Barb aboard S/V Ellie for a night, and dropped the hook in the Barra lagoon for what would be a nice long stay in the sweet town of Barra de Navidad.
We managed to eek out just over a week with Vanessa before she, in fact, had to leave for Iowa to help see her mom through her illness (as of this post, her mom is still toughing it out! Go, Mom!). During our time in Barra together, we watched many sunsets; drank a few margaritas; held our own Women’s March on January 21 (there were four of us, not millions); frequented many of the local restaurants; spent time with many of her sensing companions; and went back and forth over whether or not I would actually attend the sensing workshop the following week (I did). But alas, Melannie arrived on the 27th, and the next day Vanessa had to leave. Our time together was wonderful, and we’re so glad we made it down the coast for a visit.
During our stay in Barra and in between workshop sessions, we did a few boat projects (replaced our wind instrument, thanks to Jenn and Jason, who bought and brought the part from La Cruz); took a few side trips to look for whales and make water (Cuastecomates and what we’ve dubbed Commando Cove); goofed around with Tom and Barb; went for long walks; ate Thrifty ice cream almost daily; went on the never-ending search for good wifi;Â rode the Taxi Aquatico between the lagoon and Barra about a million times; enjoyed buying pastries from the French Baker, who made his way through the marina and anchorage each morning (except Tuesdays and Wednesdays, because, let’s face it, the French need to sleep, too); and reconnected with Jenn and Jason aboard S/V Danika for the Super Bowl and other fun stuff, like pool-poaching at the fancy-schmancy Isla Navidad Resort.
It’s time to move on again. We need to be back to Puerto Vallarta by the beginning of March to meet up with Rand’s bro and sis-in-law, Tobin and Gretchen, respectively. We’re also going to connect with our friend Ryan, who will be sailing down with Thad and Kristin aboard S/V She’s No Lady once T/K return from Canada (FINALLY!!). Apologies for the lack of detail, but we’ll let the photos speak for themselves.
- Monte visits us in La Cruz
- The PV city front
- A busy port
- Last sunrise over La Cruz for a while
- Cold again as we head south
- Sunrise over Chamela
- Paraiso!
- S/V Ellie in Paraiso
- Entrance to Paraiso
- What is that thing?
- Colorful development along Costalegre
- Ship grounded during Hurricane Patricia in 2014
- An ominous sight
- Finally warm as we head into Barra de Navidad
- Rising Sun
- All 430+ feet of her
- The Barra coast
- More of Barra
- A lot of religious symbols in Mexico
- Recognition of the important relationship between Mexico and the Philipines
- The lagoon side of Barra de Navidad
- Mariachi-panga madness
- They were actually making music
- Angel wings in Barra
- Many murals in Barra
- And perros
- A beach front restaurant lost in Patricia
- Love this — the woman working the coco had to be 80+ ears old. You go, girl.
- More murals
- Classic Mexico
- This wall at the entrance of Barra captures the city’s history
- Loaded up
- A lovely Barra neighborhood
- Vacant lot
- The terminus of one of three canals
- Zoom in on the sign
- Hmmm
- So many buildings in Barra (and Mexico, in general) in this unfinished state
- The canals from the unfinished building in previous pic
- A Barra storefront
- Coco boys
- Hotel Barra at sunset
- Rand had the place to himself
- No caption needed
- Barra beach
- Bait shack in the Barra lagoon
- Turkey vultures warming up after a cold, damp night
- Preparing for the day
- Banana man
- Huh?
- The huge acacia
- The view from our walkabout
- A random homestead
- Vaca palapa
- An old cemetery on the outskirts of Barra
- Grave decorations are often wrapped in plastic
- A cherry Coke offering
- The cemetery
- Boat yard?
- Tortillaria
- Waiting for tortillas
- A roosting spot in the lagoon
- Low tide in the lagoon opens up a lot of real estate
- View from the Isla Navidad resort
- Surf at the Barra malecon
- Slow business day
- Net fishing in the lagoon
- On the malecon with Tom and Barb
- A stroll on the beach in Melaque
- From Melaque to Barra
- Morning dinghy ride into town
- A view from the dinghy “dock” at the Sands Hotel
- Tom and Barb on the Taxi Aquatico
- FL from above
- Imagine the next three photos as part of a panoramic…
- Low light timer photo 🙂
- Side trip to the cove with no name to make water and swim
- Turkey and black vultures havin’ at it
- Sunset over newly named Commando Cove
- More of the sunset
- And even more of the sunset (what does one do with so many sunset photos?!)
- Reunited with Jason and Jenn for the Super Bowl
- This dude was doing laps around the streets of Barra, blaring classic American rock
- The beautiful, unswimmable lagoon
- Pool poaching at Isla Navidad resort (P/C Jenn)
- Headed to Melaque to get money and wifi
- Awesome bus driver – driving a vehicle with a torn apart dash board
- Ahhhh Mexico
- Bingo! at La Sirenita in Melaque
8 Comments
So wonderful to spend time with you and Randy (and friends) in Barra! Mom is holding steady right now. Thank you for all of your love and support!
We love you, Vanessa, and are pulling for your Mom’s recovery!
It’s true, Lou. We’re livin’ the dream! Hi to your beautiful wife!
And just think, I planned NEPA training today! Bet you’re so jealous 😉
OMG. Soooo jealous. (Not.)
Randy,
Enjoyed your blog and look forward to more postings.
We have a mutual friend or he is my broker as we look for our cat. I would love to hear more about your ability to work via wifi or??? I’m struggling with wrapping my head around this aspect.
Cheers
Glad you’re enjoying the blog! The wifi is a challenge in most places (as evidenced by our slow response), but so far Randy has been able to keep up. Well, perhaps a questionnaire to his clients is warranted. Ha!
Sounds and looks like you two are having a fantastic adventure! Keep the fun blog posts and pics coming.