Category Archives: Puerto Galera

transit to Puerto galera

We left Subic Bay Friday, May 23, and arrived here in Puerto Galera Saturday afternoon.

clip_image002 Himilo Cove
Two day passage from heaven. The first day was very smooth and we arrived in
Himilo Cove at 3:15 PM after shoving off the Subic Bay dock at 7:00 AM. We
left Himilo at 7:00 Saturday morning and arrived here at Puerto Galera at
3:30 in the afternoon. The water was so smooth at times you could hardly
tell you were on a boat.

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We rigged up a sun shade and had dolphins swim Since we spend the day on the fly bridge

with us. We are in the fly bridge the entire trip. bring up drinks and snacks!

clip_image007 This line of banca acted like they would cross our bow. They needed to turn or I needed to turn. We had the right of way and were bigger so they turned.

clip_image009 A floating homestead!

Randal continues…”Sunday I found the dive shack I had been in contact with and signed up
for our diving certification class. I brought home one manual for each of us
and a DVD to watch. Our three or four day class starts tomorrow. We have to
watch the DVD, read the (240 page) book and take an exam, then it’s into the water for
personal instruction from a Brit named Simon who I met yesterday too.
We found a wifi source that reached the boat but we had to go into town and find
the shop and pay them for passwords to use it. It was expensive, 50 P
$1.17) per hour. You get a little piece of paper with the user key and
password. Each piece allows one hour of usage or 125 MB which ever comes
first. It also expires two days after you sign in. Sounds like a westerner
set it up rather than a Filipino. We tried it yesterday and it does work.
They told us it works 24/7 but it is not available this morning and I have a
feeling it works their business hours which are 7:00 AM to 10:00 PM. (Correct.)
Today is a study day, we have to read the 240 page book, take the quizzes at
the end of each chapter, and be prepared to take the exam when we arrive at
the dive shop Tuesday. I have a feeling the DVD is a repeat of the book.
Ruth has contacted a lady friend she made when we were here during Christmas
and has made an appointment to go see her. Nancy paints and her and Ruth hit
it off right away. She and her husband have a house and a boat here and Ruth
is going to see her house for the first time. There is a pictures of her and her
husband in Ruth’s email from Christmas. Her husband was wearing a kilt.

There is a big difference from what we are now doing to what we were doing (in Hong Kong and Subic Bay.) Before we were in a safe marina with sea walls protecting you from the waves
of the bay which were naturally protected from the waves of the ocean. We
were attached to a dock and we could walk right off the boat and be on land.
We were attached to shore electricity so no worries about usage; we ran the
A/C all the time. We had a water hose on the dock so no need to worry about
water usage either. Our main concern was getting the boat ready for
cruising.
Now our day is much different. We are very careful of the electricity and
water we use, no waste. We can have no A/C unless we are running the
gen-set. (So very little A/C.) We are anchored out in the cove and have to hail the service boat
on the VHF radio to come pick us up to go to shore and bring us back again.
If there was no service boat, and it is rare there is one, we would have to
launch the dinghy and go where we wanted to go. (We aren’t sure about leaving the dinghy at the pier while we go off, so we aren’t using it to get to town.)We watch the battery monitor and when it gets down to about 60% we will have to start the gen-set to charge the batteries, heat water and make water with the watermaker. This will be the time for doing any cooking in the microwave and washing clothes as well. We can make water, wash clothes, and use the
microwave off the inverter with current supplied by the batteries but they
deplete them so fast that it’s better to do it while the genny is running as
it supplies an excess of electricity than what the battery charger can use.
We can also do all these things while underway ( cruising) since I installed that big
140 amp alternator on the main engine. While underway the engine heats the
water in the water heater by circulating engine coolant through it.
Our plan is to run the gen-set every other day for about two hours. I think
this will do the trick but we will have to experiment to see. The watermaker makes 25
gallons per hour so that means we will be producing an average of 25 gallons per day
and I’m sure we use more than that. Since we can make water while underway, if we
enter an anchorage with nearly full tanks we should be okay if we don’t stay too long. The
water tanks hold 250 gallons.
One of the things I did during our first visit to PG was join the Classic Club. The CC meets
every Thursday for drinks and lunch and the bill is split. No women allowed.
New members and returning members are introduced and there is a lot made
over the fact that this is the 695th continuous meeting, da da da. There are no
visitors because when you attend the first time you are a member. There are
no dues, no bylaws, none of most things associated with clubs and
organization. The guy who owns the dive shop where we will get our
certification heads the thing up and arranges the place where we will have
the lunches. I told him yesterday that I would surely be there this
Thursday. Ruth reminded me just now that Thursday is our anniversary. Oh
well, I’ll have to propose a toast to her for letting me come.”

Randal

(my comments are in parentheses.)

So Randal is off to CC. I am going to spend the afternoon painting and worrying about the Red Sox! I am more worried about them than about having to take off my face mask underwater during our next SCUBA class. You must take off and replace your mask, breathe through the regulator with your mouth and not breathe in through your nose. So far, not breathing through my nose is not a task I have mastered when we are learning to empty our masks of water. I practiced a bit this morning, but I still can’t do it well.

In her book, The House of the Spirits, in the chapter “At Home With the Spirits,” Isabel Allende talks about travel memories. “the person doesn’t bring back the month; the person brings back the big strokes, the brilliant colors, the intense experiences, and in a week you have forgotten how uncomfortable you were and the mosquitoes. You only remember those things that eventually you write about.”

Here is a photo of Tuesday evening.

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Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

#end

Scuba and visit to Nancy

Hi Everyone,

Survived the first SCUBA class. The actually time we spent swimming underwater looking at the reef and tiny rainbow colored fish and purple coral and neon blue starfish was great. The time yanking on a cumbersome wetsuit, getting on the vest and tanks and booties while slowly overheating….not so fun. Then my regulator wouldn’t stay in my mouth where it belonged and I almost truly gave up on the whole thing. Really. But then we had an exercise where we switched from our main regulator, (mouth piece through which you get air) to our alternate regulator. Mine alternate worked better for me and things improved greatly. I stopped panicking and started breathing and began to remember the fun I’d had in Subic with Audrey during our first SCUBA outing.

We swam around for about 30 minutes in water that was about 15 ft deep. Though we are in the tropics, I did need the wet suit in the water or I would have gotten cold. Hard to believe since I had grown up with New England Atlantic Ocean water. If I weren’t too lazy I could get out my SCUBA text and tell you how many degrees of change there is as you dive…but I am SCUBA texted out for the time being. Actually we are supposed to be reading Chapters 4 and 5 right now. But I spent most of Sunday night and Monday afternoon and evening learning SCUBA stuff and I need a break. I did go visit my great pal Nancy Cannell and her husband Geoff at their beautiful home on top of a mountain overlooking the sea. It is just a 10 minute drive from town and up a scary mountain road, but it is the perfect home. Comfortable, light, light, light!!! and lovely and inviting and informally formal and just perfect. They love living on their boat here in PG, but I might have to be dragged away from that house if I had the choice. Lots of big spaces, lots of small cozy spaces and all open to the light. And of course there is a pool, small garden area with a pool and fountain and a rooftop set with chairs, tables and a 360 degree view. Did I take thousands of photos? I had my camera and intended to. But Nancy and I had such a great time just seeing the house and talking and talking and talking, that the photos just weren’t that important. We didn’t even mess around with art! That’s how fun it was to just be together and talk.

It is 6:48 pm and feels like midnight. We were up at 5 am, out at 8 am and in SCUBA class from 9 am till almost 2 pm. Then we walked across the beaches to catch the jeepney from Sabang back to PG. Then we walked through PG back to the pier to catch the service boat back to DoraMac. Now I have to go read chapter 4! So goodnight. And GO SOX!!!!

Ru

cruising life

Hi Everyone,

  We bought some Internet Time cards from KrisNee Cafe.  We can us the time on the boat between 7am and 10pm (their definition of 24 hour service.)  It does let me send from Outlook, but only to individuals.

  Randal signed us up for the SCUBA course and that will be all day for 3 or 4 days.  The “learn on your own” text book has 250 pages and it took me a while to get through the first 50 and take the little quizzes.  And I already knew lots of the info because our friend Audrey had loaned us her dive instruction videos and had taught us lots of the basic stuff.  So for the next few days I won’t be traipsing around town anyway so not much to email about.  It will keep my mind off the fact that the Sox can’t seem to win a game outside of Fenway Park. 

  This morning I am going to visit my PG friends Nancy and Geoff Cannell.  I’ll take the service boat to the pier and Geoff will come get me and drive me to their home.  It is just a 10 minute drive, but I’m not so sure where it is up one of the small mountains behind town.  Nancy and I will spend the morning talking about art and local PG gossip.

   I think Randal and I haven’t quite made it to “cruisers” yet.  We still miss the “sometimes” instant 24 hour wifi.  We miss the luxury of being plugged into the marina power and water.   No AC here on the mooring and we have to be a little careful with water though Randal says the water maker will work fine.  I take a wait and see attitude.  We could get water from shore in giant plastic water holders.  And I am sure we will one day.  We just are more used to the cushy cruising life.  Jane and Tony came aboard Saturday and eyed our washer/dryer and roominess.  They have a catamaran sailboat with no washing machine and definitely no trash compactor.  Jane washes daily by hand.  But they are as happy as we are to be learning to be cruisers.  It is definitely a transition.  In Hamilo Cove it was quiet and cool.  Here in PG it is less cool because we have our bow cover on and starting about 5 am bancas go by in and out of town.  We fall asleep to the kareoke bar in town…water carries the sound.  But early in the morning, we can hear the birds sing and the rooster crow.

  I’m off to get ready for my visit to Nancy.

Ru

here in pg

Randal and I arrived at PG about 3:30pm this afternoon.  Seas were smooth and we averaged better than 6 knots and only used 25.7 gallons of fuel to go over 100 miles.

Old friends Chris and Mylene stopped by on their way from shore to their sailboat.  New friends Tony and Jane stopped by on their way from shore to their catamaran.  We are going to have dinner with Jane and Tony in a bit.  We’ll have to eat fast; the service boat ends at 9pm 

Randal and I are sharing my computer right now.  We are plugged in at the Rock N’ Roll Bar.

So that’s it. 

Ru

Hello

Hi Everyone,

  Again, just a quick note. 

My Outlook Email send feature won’t work in Puerto Galera. Jane, who we met yesterday, says her Outlook won’t send either. We can both receive, but not send. My web Yahoo won’t do photos. So I will just post the photos to www.doramac.blogspot.com and email you to tell you when I have a new posting. Not ideal, but maybe the only way.

As I said yesterday, our trip down was very pleasant and calm seas. We anchored in Himilo Cove Friday night and our new anchor caught and held perfectly. However, when we went to bring it up, its swivel had it turned wrong way around so Randal had to mess with the boat hook and while he was doing that we almost backed into shallow water. A learning experience. Other than that, totally smooth cruising. We did have to change course one time for a huge ferry coming towards us. Size takes right of way. While I was driving a line of three bancas (all smaller than doraMac) was aiming to cross our bow, I kept my course and they had to change and pass in back of us. Luckily they changed course soon enough so I didn’t have to get Randal to leave his fishing gear and come back to the flybridge to give me advice. If I had been unsure, I just would have changed my course and been done with it. We caught no fish anyway. And now that we have our Paravane fish that work, we will hopefully never need them.

Not actually sure when I will post to the doramac blog.  but I will let you know.

Hard to believe that I miss the Subic Bay wifi!

Ru

Last pictures from Puerto Galera

A mixture of photos from Puerto Galera.  I still have lots more, but this is enough for you to get the flavor of the place.   

clip_image001  Randal and I wanted to practice with the dinghy and also with our snorkels. 

We lowered the dinghy from the back of the boat, lowered the motor, attached it all together and were off around the cove and then across the way to snorkel.  You can see Doramac off in the top right hand corner just next to a sail boat.  Even though we were just across the way, Randal brought his phone. Just in case?   I was snorkeling away when Randal got my attention to tell me that he had forgotten to take his phone from his pocket.  Since this outing was no longer fun, we got back into the dinghy and motored back to the boat.  But all’s well that ends ok, and Randal has a “newish” phone and his SIM card still works so he has access to all of the info stored on his soggy phone.  Buying a new phone involved several trips to the phone shop that kept selling old phones as new phones.  Randal’s first phone said, I love you Frank, or something like that when he turned it on, so it was replaced with another “newish phone” that didn’t say hello to anyone.

clip_image002  New Year’s Eve.  Nessie,  and Geoffrey and Nancy Cannell.  Nancy is my newest art buddy!  We spent a lovely afternoon on her boat “doing art.”  I learned about pastels and we had a great time.  Nancy and I have been sharing our attempts of the same Sabang window and it has been fun and a great way to learn.  Nancy is from Maine but is not a Red Sox fan.  She is a Yankee fan!  I really really like her anyway!  See, it can happen.  Nancy doesn’t love having her photo taken and this doesn’t come close to doing her justice.  But it is the only one I have.  Maybe I’ll get her to pose next trip.

clip_image003 Because of a family honor bestowed on a distant uncle, Geoff has a family tartan.  He looked very handsome in it too.

clip_image004  A photo of the Puerto Galera Yacht Club bar and restaurant.  They do a barbecue every Friday night and new people are introduced and everyone is quite welcoming.  We have been to the barbecue 3 times so we are “old people” now. 

clip_image005  Along the path from Sabang to Small Lalaguna vendors sell beads and shells and such.  I loved how this women looked.  I haven’t mixed plaids and stripes since my Outward Bound days when clean and dry, or at least dry was the only fashion requirement.  But I like these combinations.  You may see me in mixed plaids and wilder colors. 

clip_image006  The shop where my flour sack clothes were made.

clip_image007  They finished up my shorts while I waited.

clip_image008  He and I were fascinated with each other.  His mom was sewing my shorts. 

A candy bar and a teddy bear, life used to be so simple.

clip_image009  Sometimes we would see boats not so much bigger than these out, way far out, in the ocean during our passages.   Randal is reading Guns Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond.  It is a history of mankind in about 500 pages.  Randal says it is the most difficult and most rewarding book he has read.  And he has read Stephen Ambrose and David McCullough and Richard Feynman so that tells you something about this book.  Anyway, in the book Diamond tells about tribes in New Guinea that made round bottom dugouts.  To prevent roll they added these outrigger arms.  You could probably guess the reasons, but that one is official.  Diamond won the Pulitzer for the book.

clip_image010  Sunrise in Puerto Galera.  Lovely!

Except when these bancas passed by early in the morning, late at night and so close you could shake hands with the passengers.  The really large ones were noisy and created waves.  A little nosy too!  But lovely!!

Jeepney ride in Puerto Galera

We’re going for a jeepney ride from Puerto Galera to Sabang.    It will cost you 7 pesos or about 15 cents. 

clip_image001  We’ll walk away from the pier along the main street into town a short distance to the jeepney stop.

clip_image002  It isn’t often that you see an empty jeepney. This one was off duty parked on a side street.  Randal and I have to bend over and duck down to get in.  But once inside  you can sit up straight.

clip_image003  When every inch of seat space and floor space is full,  that’s when the jeepney leaves for Sabang.

clip_image004  There are also passengers who will ride up front with the driver. 

clip_image005  This jeepney is just starting to fill up.

clip_image006  This lady and her stuff will get on.  You can see the “jeep terminal clock” across the road on the tree.

clip_image007  And finally with passengers sitting on the rear door and hanging on the back, it’s time to go…..along the “under construction” road to Sabang. Watch your head over the bumpy part, there is very little head room.   Randal and I took the jeepney back and forth to Sabang the first time we went there.  I think the jeepneys are fun.  You pass your pesos up to the driver by handing it to the passengers closest to him.  It’s kind of an honor system, but it seems to work. 

Puerto Galera Paintings

Hi Everyone,

  I made a great pal in Puerto Galera and we inspired each other to get out the paints. (More about Nancy in emails to follow.) 

I did one of a fruit seller and then my version of Muelle pier as seen from our boat.  We were moored far enough out to make it all look like a jumble of colors! 

So here they are!

clip_image001  Fruit Seller watercolor made to look like oil paints!

clip_image002 Muelle pier.  I will look to see if I have a real photo, but his one is more fun!!  Lots of sail boats and bancas with their spidery arms.  I wasn’t sure if I was finished with it, but Nancy said, “Stop!”  so I did.  Thanks Nancy!

Puerto Galera Photos # 1

Hi Everyone,

  Happy New Year.

Randal and I are back in Subic Bay.  We left Puerto Galera about 5:30 am New Year’s Day and arrived back at the SBYC Jan 2nd about 3:20 pm.  We anchored overnight at Hamilo Cove which offers a good but tricky anchorage and a wonderful evening star show.  I saw a “falling star” or comet or something shoot across the sky.  With no city lights and a quarter moon, the stars were very vivid.  I looked at them several times during the night as I checked to see if the anchor was dragging.  Randal had set the radar alarm and he was sleeping in the cockpit to keep watch.  But I did evening checks also; taking the opportunity to see the stars. The waters of Hamilo Cove were calm enough for me to finish the beef stew I had started cooking in Puerto Galera and that was our dinner with a few cookies.  An old grandma and her grandson came by banca to ask if we wanted to buy some fish.  I thanked them, but said we didn’t need any.  

The seas for both days were listed as moderate to rough on the Philippines weather page.  I don’t have the experience to judge, but they seemed pretty more than moderate to me.  We were sprayed over the flybridge several times; not the bow, but way up on the flybridge.  The cruise from PG to Hamilo Cove rolled us side to side which really scares me.  The cruise from Hamilo Cove across Manila Bay was more bow to stern with some swells rolling us both bow to stern and side to side.  But with the mainsail up the 2nd day, the side to side roll wasn’t so bad and I thought driving was fun!  Ride’m cowboy!  I was really sort of scared at first, but then when I saw the side roll was reduced, I trusted us to stay up right and relaxed.  A seasoned sailor probably would have thought neither day rough, but my experience is too limited.  Between the sound of the wind and the rolling seas and swells, I felt like a scene from Captains Courageous or something. 

I did take hundreds of photos while we were in PG and will just pick the ones form each day’s walk to share.  Still probably way too many, but there you are.  They’re in the order that I took them during the day.

clip_image001  This is an island ferry! 

We thought about taking one to the nearby port city of Batangas 40 minutes by ferry, but didn’t this trip.  Maybe next time.

clip_image002  The image of Puerto Galera!  Guys sitting in one of the bars along the pier drinking bear…for breakfast!  Lots of beer and lots of cigarettes.   Germans, Aussies, Brits,  Asians.   Few Americans.  It was always a surprise to see a western face speaking a language other than English. 

clip_image003  Leaving the pier and walking up to the main road into town.  Left at the intersection took you around the curve into town or to the road to Sabang.  Right at the corner took you to White Beach.  I walked the 6 kilometers back from Sabang one day.  Randal and I took a tricycle cab to White Beach. 

clip_image004  Laundry shop in town.  I did 2 loads on the boat while we were in PG and now have about 5 since we are home!  Some folks on older sail boat we met here have just buckets for laundry, so I feel really lucky to have the machine. 

clip_image005  This is the shop on main street PG where I bought my flour sack shorts and top. 

clip_image006  Side street off the main street.  I liked the dog!

clip_image007  Another dog; another bar.

clip_image008  The end of the town.

clip_image009  The “non-tourist” side of PG.

clip_image010 Instead of cars, bancas are the means of travel.

clip_image011  We first took a jeepney to Sabang.  This is the Jeepney stop.  The clock actually tells the correct time. 

First Solo Passage

Hi Everyone,

  Thursday Randal and I will do our first passage ALONE!!!  We will be retracing the route to Puerto Galera that we took with Nick and Zaida in the beginning of December.  We will cruise south to Puerto Galera with one overnight anchor in Hamilo Cove, south of Manila.    It will be about 8 hours of cruising each day.   Olongapo, Manila and Puerto Galera are on the map. Subic is just above the word Olongapo.  We cross by Manila Bay but don’t go into it. It get a bit choppy at that point since we are further from land.

  Olongapo is in the lower southwest part of the top island and Puerto Galera is on Mindoro.  I am sure I helped numerous students do reports on the Philippines and other countries in Southeast Asia; but only now am I actually learning something myself. 

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The images on the post card are: 1. Paoay Church, Bocos:  2. Beaches of Pagudpud:  3. Vigan, a Spanish heritage city:  4.Hundred Islands National Park, Pangasinan:  5. Century old Banaue Rice Terrace:

6. Center of Mt. Pinatubo, Pampanga:  7. Taoist Ma-Cho Chinese Temple in San Fernando, La Union:  8. Mayon Volcano, Albay   Randal and I have not seen many of these sights but hopefully we will. 

The copyright of this post card and the images belong to www.phillippinespostcards.com  so it might not make in onto my web journal.  But you can find maps of Luzon on the web or at your local library. 

Hopefully the weather there won’t cause anyone problems.  We are having bright sunny skies and less humid weather.  It will remain like this until March.  We do have what are called “Christmas Winds.”  They may make our cruise a little slower and bouncier, but not give us any real problems.  My next email will be from an Internet Cafe in Puerto Galera.